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An ear was parched by thrusting a stick into the cob, and holding it over the coals

An ear was parched by thrusting a stick into the cob, and holding it over the coals.jpg After a council with Hood and Polk, Johnston abandoned the Cassville positionThumbnailsAn earthen pot full of water stood by one of the posts near the fireAfter a council with Hood and Polk, Johnston abandoned the Cassville positionThumbnailsAn earthen pot full of water stood by one of the posts near the fireAfter a council with Hood and Polk, Johnston abandoned the Cassville positionThumbnailsAn earthen pot full of water stood by one of the posts near the fireAfter a council with Hood and Polk, Johnston abandoned the Cassville positionThumbnailsAn earthen pot full of water stood by one of the posts near the fire
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Indian boys, when out herding horses, often carried two or three ears of corn for lunch. An ear was parched by thrusting a stick into the cob, and holding it over the coals

Author
Waheenee--An Indian Girl's Story
By Waheenee
as told to Gilbert Livingstone Wilson
Illustrator: Frederick N. Wilson
Published in 1921
Available from gutenberg.org
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622*525
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