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Show IsTRANGE AS IT SEEMS By John Hlx OH ft rre-MVfViTW)M(W5f I W uTk rtcoM-b-to'c uuh6 Z UMfrMjps of "S pop, ma X J fWW 5f Vt rWW met gt 1 VJU Uptr Bumf, MiRt VWfn NL. -" &$f?i2ik J A f JU MOHH UKU6T YTP-'f V Zt rMlt PmPJHOCtfSWXtfPHOfotHVtO KhASKs . itxffis rrm mMu- h tea wp aoeeofMWt&a.! r, , HMW eU UPlHtOPtMlMi rjfTPEJX 0f1rWRU6W1rltVlKteR -' V V. f iJf t? -t; Kttp our-tnt 00- sK It-lO-TT K3ma aa tB- THE GENERAL'S LEU . . . Antonio Lopei de Santa Anna joined his country's army at IS, and by auccessiva steps became Mexico's minister of war, commander-in-chief of the army and, in 1833, president. Santa Anna lived in the United States for a while, later returning to Mexico where he lived in retirement until 1838. In this year he offered bis services to Mexico against the French, on December S successfully defending the city of Vera Crux against them. Santa Anna received a bad leg injury in this batle, and in 1842 an aggravation of the wound necessitated the amputation of his left leg below the knee. It was buried with great ceremony beneath a magnificent magnifi-cent monument at Monga de Clavo. near Vera Cruz, and on September 26, 1843, it was removed to Mexico City. Attended by a large military procession, headed by Santa Anna himself, the leg was carried to the cemetery of Santa Paula in a small urn and reinterred amid splendid ceremony. In 1876 he died in Mexico City, a poor and disconsolate man. (Copyright, 1937, for The Telegram) |