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Injun Joe then kills Robinson to settle an old grudge and frames Potter for the crime, unaware that Tom and Huck have witnessed it. When the case comes to trial, Tom testifies on Potter's behalf and identifies Injun Joe as the actual killer, prompting the latter to flee the courtroom.
At the graveyard, they witness three body snatchers, Dr. Robinson, Muff Potter and Injun Joe, robbing a grave. A fight breaks out, during which Robinson knocks Potter unconscious and is then murdered by Injun Joe. When Potter wakes up, Injun Joe puts the weapon in his hand and tells him that he killed Robinson while drunk.
Tom and Becky eventually stumble upon Injun Joe in McDougal's Cave. He traps them, but Tom and Becky manage to escape. Tom and Becky later discover the spot where Joe hid his treasure. Tom then finds an opening in the cave and asks Becky to get her father. Joe ultimately finds Tom and attempts to kill him before Huck suddenly shows up.
Indian Joe, (Captain Joe, Old Joe, Jo Indian, Joe Injun, Abenaki translation of Joseph: Susapp [1]) was a Native American scout. ... Joe died on February 19, 1819 ...
The men quarrel, Robinson knocks Potter unconscious and Injun Joe stabs Robinson to death, then puts his knife in Potter's hand. When Potter awakens, Injun Joe accuses Potter of the slaying. Huck and Tom flee the scene and swear never to tell anyone what they've seen, lest Injun Joe find out and kill them both.
The power car, number 9903, was named Injun Joe. The three trailer cars received other names of Mark Twain characters: Becky Thatcher, Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn. The train was christened on October 25, 1935, in Hannibal by Nina Clemens Gabilowitsch (1910-1966), the granddaughter and ultimately last descendant of its namesake.
The cartoon is a color remake of the Looney Tunes black-and-white short Injun Trouble (1938). All voices except narration and Sloppy Moe are performed by Mel Blanc, whose screen credit is his first in a non-Bugs Bunny cartoon.
Twain would weave that suspicion into the plot of Tom Sawyer in a grave robbing scene involving Injun Joe. Alleged Jesse James hideout. According to folklore, McDowell used the cave as a secret Confederate weapons storage cache during the American Civil War. McDowell was an ardent Southern supporter, and indeed had a stash of cannons and ...