Picture and Text / 1893
nding o
ture has been more persistent and pleasing than when I imagined him reaching out after more heathen souls to be garnered for God and Mother Church. I have pictured him inquiring of his faithful Indians as to the whereabouts and number of other and heathen Indians, in outlying districts. He soon learned of Pala, but his great organizing and building w
ted Indians. Then I felt the urge of this devoted man's soul as he spoke, through his interpreter, to the dusky crowd of men, women, and children as he bade them sit upon the ground, while he unfolded his plan to them. He had come from the God of the white men, the God who loved all men and wish
d become superior to their hereditary enemies, the Cahuillas, and the Indians of the desert and of the far-away river that flowed from the heart o
nce that, on such a day work would begin in which they were expected, and would absolutely be required, to take a part? Diplomac
onally I believe the former was the chief and prevailing spir
beams, which patient oxen slowly dragged down the mountain sides, through the canyons and valleys to the spot, and maidens and women, doubtless, were sent to pick up boulders out of the rocky stream bed for the covering of the base of the Campanile. In the meanti
ce, and finally, one bright morning, possibly with a thousand or more gathered from San Luis Rey to add to the thousand of Palas a
every morning. Then, after breakfast, dispersion, each to his allotted toil. Year after year this continued until the Mexican diputa
has no foundation in fact. Pala is Indian of this region for water. These were the water Indians, to differentiate them from the Indians who lived on the other side of the mountains in the desert. The Indians of Warner's Ranch, speaking prac