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William Hepworth Dixon, White Conquest: Volume 1 2 0 Browse Search
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William Hepworth Dixon, White Conquest: Volume 1, Chapter 31: Red and Black. (search)
rson or the signature of a clerk. For twenty dollars you can buy a girl, and claim, through her, adoption by the tribe. Is the adoption easy? Very easy. As a rule, the adoption goes with the Indian girl. If any Bad face makes a row, a keg of whisky sets things straight. Whisky is King. Nearer to Red River, in a green bottom, with a wooded ridge on either side, we find a White ranch; a house with fence and garden, in which a Pale-face lives with his Indian bride. The man is Bob Reams, a brother of the American sculptress Vinnie Reams. Bob came into this valley, bought a Chickasaw wife, and settled in the tribe, where he has managed to annex no little of the soil. The valley bears his name. Iis wife, whom he delights to call the Princess, is a tall, lithe woman; and his Mestizo son, Young Bob, has wild antelope eyes. Squaw Reams is said to put on war-paint now and then. Some months ago Bob got into trouble at a whisky bar, and was lodged in jail, on which his Princ