ed, or to buy horses and mules.
Of these traders there were seven or eight, of whom the following are remembered: Murray, an Irishman known to the Indians as Pau-ē-sīh′,Cleveland Browns Tröjor, Flat Nose; Fisher, an American,Philipp Lahm Tröja, Nō-mā-nī′, Fish; Hatcher, a Kentuckian,Winnipeg Jets Barn, Hē-hīm′nī-hō-nāh′, Freckled Hand; Thomas Boggs,Cristiano Ronaldo Tröja, a Missourian,Kevin De Bruyne Drakt, W?hk′ po-h?m′,Belgia Drakt Barn, White Horse; John Smith, a Missourian,Canada Goose Mountaineer Jackor, P?-ō-om′mats,Lång Ärmar Polo, Gray Blanket; Kit Carson, a Kentuckian, Vī-hiu-n?s′, Little Chief, and Charles Davis, a Missourian, Ho-nīh′, Wolf.
L. Maxwell, Wō-w?hph′ pai-ī-sīh′, Big Nostrils, was180 the superintendent or foreman at the fort, but had nothing to do with the trading. He looked after the herds and laborers and fort matters in general.
Murray, who was a good hunter and trapper, and a brave man, was one of the two more important men among the traders. He usually remained at the fort, and was almost always left in charge when the train went to the States. Hatcher, however, was probGoogle Links:
http://luyuexincheng.com/shownews.asp?id=82
http://www.luyuexincheng.com/Shownews.asp?id=10 |