732 POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY. 



time I had visits from dilapidated gentlemen from Albany and 

 Jersey City and Philadelphia and the like, who supposed that I 

 was a credulous fool whose money and himself would be soon 

 parted, and who gave me what they considered many excellent 

 reasons for presenting them with five dollars apiece. But, during 

 that whole period, not one of the many thousands who lived in the 

 crowded tenements all around me, and to hundreds of whom I 

 preached three times a week, asked me for a penny. Not one! 

 They came to me by day and by night, men and women, boys and 

 girls, for counsel, courage, sympathy, admonition, reproof, guid- 

 ance, and such light as I could give them — but never, one of them, 

 for money. They are my friends to-day, and they know that I 

 am theirs; and, little as that last may mean to the weakest and the 

 worst of them, I believe that, in the ease of any man or woman 

 who tries to understand and hearten his fellow, it counts for a 

 thousandfold more than doles, or bread, or institutional relief. 



THE HOPI INDIANS OF ARIZONA. 



By GEORGE A. DORSEY. 



AS one approaches the center of Arizona, along the line of the 

 -^— ^ Santa Fe Railroad, whether he come from the east or from 

 the west, his attention is sure to be arrested by several tall, spire- 

 like hills which are silhouetted against the sky to the far north. 

 These peaks are the Mold Buttes, and to the north of them lies the 

 province of Tuscayan, the land of the Mokis, or the Hopis, as they 

 prefer to be called. That country to-day contains more of interest 

 to the student of the history of mankind than any other similar- 

 sized area on the American continent. But very few of the great 

 throng that roll by on the Santa Fe trains every year in quest of 

 pleasure, of recreation, of new scenes and strange, stop off at Hol- 

 brook or Winslow to take the journey to the Hopis, and very few 

 even know of the existence of these curiously quaint pueblos of 

 this community, which to-day lives pretty much as it did before 

 Columbus set out on his long voyage to the unknown West. 



The term pueblo, a Spanish word meaning town, is by long 

 and continued use now almost confined to the clusters of stone and 

 adobe houses which to-day shelter the sedentary Indians of New 

 Mexico and Arizona. Not only are these Indian towns called " pue- 

 blos," but we speak of the Indians themselves as the Pueblo Indians, 

 and of the culture of the people — for they all have much in common 

 — as the pueblo culture. This similarity of culture is not due to 



