. The journal of American history. y they made four leagues to San Gregorio, in Coyote Caiion. The waterof the wells was so scanty that the cattle received very little, while the coldwas so intense that each day many of cattle and caballerias, exhausted bythe hardships of the journey, died. So severe was the cold this nightthat the people were frightened, and it required all the exertion of theofficers to get them through the night, while three caballerias and five oxenwere frozen to death. At seven in the morning the commander was notifiedthat many of the cattle, driven by thirst, had escaped


. The journal of American history. y they made four leagues to San Gregorio, in Coyote Caiion. The waterof the wells was so scanty that the cattle received very little, while the coldwas so intense that each day many of cattle and caballerias, exhausted bythe hardships of the journey, died. So severe was the cold this nightthat the people were frightened, and it required all the exertion of theofficers to get them through the night, while three caballerias and five oxenwere frozen to death. At seven in the morning the commander was notifiedthat many of the cattle, driven by thirst, had escaped from their the sergeant with three soldiers and a vacpiero to look for them, hemoved forward to the sink of the Santa Catarina (Coyote Creek), there made way for the date, the fig and the olive. Complete figures on the cantaloupecrop of the Imperial Valley, as it is now called, show that 1,954 carloads of thelittle melons were shipped out of the valley in the year of 1908. This is but one ofthe products. U/ S r js. m nTV JV I. $\x&t (S)tu>rlan& Snurttnj to % (golton (Satr &*ZZ=!*~*s$$X$3r~ ^^ggg^Il—^l^g-EI *g ^£££^ ^^5 to give the horses a rest and wait for the cattle to come up. In this daysmarch, the loss in cattle and caballerias was very heavy- In the afternoonof the second day, the sergeant returned with a few of the cattle, andreported a loss of fifty head, suffocated in the mud of the Cienga de SanSebastian, being too weak to extricate themselves. Anza was greatlydistressed at this mishap which had cost him so dear, in spite of all his few miserable Indians came into camp and were fed by the morning of December 23rd began with a rain-storm, but it ceasedraining at nine oclock and the expedition resumed its march up the canonof the Coyote. Two short jornados brought them on the 24th to therancheria of the Danzantes. They were halted here by the sickness ofone of the women of the expedition. By ten oclock that night she washapp


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