60 



PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF 



[Feb., 



Said to have been used on 

 burns, but this statement 

 not confirmed. 



Erodium cicutarium L'Her. 



Stork's Bill; Alfilaria. 

 y am'pa-gwa-nup . 

 Apparently from yam'pa (q. 



vid.). Cf. gwa'nwp, odor, 



etc. 



Erythronium grandiflorum Pursh. 

 Dog-tooth Violet, 

 toi'ya-wi-tum-ba-ga. 

 Euphorbia montana Engelm., 

 dentata Michx., etc. 

 mo'a-ba-bu-ip. 

 ?toi'ya-ba-bu-ip. 



Eurotia lanaia Moq. White Sage, 

 tci'cop. 



Used as a remedy in inter- 

 mittent fevers. 



Ferula multifida Gray, 

 to'dziip. 



The young shoots of this 

 plant are said sometimes 

 to have been eaten, but 

 never the grown plant or 

 old parts, which were far 

 too strong in taste. The 

 roots furnished a remedy 



. highly esteemed as an 

 application on wounds and 

 bruises. For this purpose 

 the roots are first sliced or 

 minced and then thor- 

 oughly mashed to a pulp 

 on a stone. It was then 

 ready to be spread upon 

 the affected part. The 

 author saw it thus applied 

 to an Indian's foot that 



had been crushed under 

 the wheel of a wagon. 



Regarded also as an excellent 

 remedy for distemper in 

 horses among the Utes and 

 Gosiutes. The procedure 

 is to burn the roots in a pan 

 held beneath the nose of 

 the sick horse so that the 

 latter shall inhale the 

 smoke. 

 The seeds are said occasion- 

 ally to have been eaten. 

 Festuca tenella Willd. Fescue 

 Grass, 

 si'wump. 



yo'ni-so-nip (Goship. Cf. Gly- 

 ceria). 

 Seeds served as food. 

 Festuca ovina L. var. brevifolia 

 Watson. Fescue grass, 

 toi'ya-si-wump. 



[toi'ya-bi, mountain, + si'- 

 wump.] 

 tl'sa-hump. 



yo'ni-so-nip (Goship. Cf. pre- 

 ceding form and Glyceria). 

 Occasionally this and preced- 

 ing form are mentioned as 

 to'bai-bi (see Poa). 

 Seeds eaten. 



Flower (general term), 

 hi'bin-giip. 



Fragaria vesca L. Strawberry, 

 an'ka-pa-ri-ump. 



[an'ka-bit, red, + pa, pa'ri, 

 water, watery, + -ump; 

 "red water berry."] 



Franseria hookeriana Gray, 

 pi'a-tso-hwa. 



