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Show 361 maps show it north of the wells. Secret Spring may possibly be Coal or Hamilton Spring on the maps of today. 16. tortineau, "Seeking a Refuge in the Desert," p. 250. 17. Ibid. 18. Ibid., p. 251. Here tortineau infers that this Indian was the same who showed Johnson how to dig for water, tortineau's "History of Mission," pp. 18-19 says that the Indian was only suspected of murdering his wife of. whom he admitted cannibalizing. Simpson detailed another case of suspected incidence of cannibalism among these people in l859« (Report of Explorations, p. 58.) 19. tortineau, "Seeking a Refuge in the Desert," p. 251; also see Dame, "Journal of Company," p. 13; and tortineau, "History of Mission," p. 18. 20. Jedediah S. Smith to General Willam Clark, 12 July 1827- (photo-copy of transcript), Utah State Historical Society. 21. Fremont, Report, p. 276. 22. Simpson, Report of Explorations, p. %. 23. A good study of these Indians is Catherine S. Fowler and Don D. Fowler, "Notes on the History of the Southern Paiutes and Western Shoshonis," Utah Historical Quarterly 39 (Spring 1971), pp. 96-113. 24. Bean's report, Manuscript History, 7 June 1858, p. 6l6. "Piede" is another term for "Southern Paiute." 25. Martineau, "Seeking a Refuge in the Desert," p. 251. 26. Ibid. p. 298. |