ABOKIGINAL AMERICAN BASKETRY. 545 



AVniTMORE, Mr8. W. L., Salem, Oregon. 



WiLCOMB, C. P., Memorial INIuseum, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, California. 



Large and choice collection of California basketry, well identified and lal)eled. 

 Williams, H. E., Cassel. California. Fine i-ollection of Ilat Creek baskets. 



IX. BIBLIOGRAPHY 



And let her works priiise lier in the gates.— Krxc; Lemuel. 



The following- list of publications will help to follow up this study 

 in special lines. A great awakening of interest in the processes of 

 savao-e industries as the foundation of all modern machine work has 

 stimulated the production of excellent books and papers on basketiy. 

 At the moment of going to press the author of this general treatise 

 learns of several. Dr. P. E. Goddard, of the l^niversity of California, 

 w^as so o-ood as to lend his proof on the Hiipas; Frank Russell on the 

 Pimas had not appeared; Enmions on the Tlinkit, and Dixon and 

 Kroeber's further studies on California basketry were not in print. 



AxDER.sox, Ada Woodriff. Last Indnstry of a Passing Eace. Harper's Bazaar, 

 November 11, 1899. 



B., T. F. Lessons in Basket Weaving. Tlie Papoose. New York, February and 

 May, 1908. 



Bancroft, H. H. Native Races of the Pacific States. New York, D. Ap})leton & Co., 

 5 vols., S vo. Index references to basketry, weaving, and kindred topics. 



Barrows, David Prescott. The Ethno-b(jtany of the Coahuilla Indians of southern 

 California. Chicago, 1900. The University Press, 82 pp. 8 vo. 



Basket, The. A quarterly journal. Vol. 1, 1903. Pasadena, California. Edited 

 by George Wharton James. Organ of The Basket Fraternity. 



Blanchan, Nelt.te. What the Basket means to the Indian. Everybody's ^Magazine, 

 Y, 1901, pp. 561-570, illustrated. 



Boas, Franz. The Decorative Art of the Indians of the North Pacific Coast. Bulletin 

 American Museum of Natural History, New York, IX, 1897, 54 pp. See also the 

 author's papers in Reports of British Association, 1889-1891. 



Bureau of American Ethnolo(;y. Reports, bulletins, and miscellaneous publica- 

 tions abound in jiapers discussing l)asketry and related matters, 1879-1903. 



Carpenter, H. INI. How Indian Baskets are made. The Cosmopolitan, October, 1900. 



Carr, Jeannie C. Among the Basket Makers, California. Illnstrated Magazine, 

 October, 1892. 



Channing, Grace Ellery. The Baskets of Anita. Scribner's Magazine, August, 

 1890. 



Chesnut, V. K. Plants used l)y the Indians of Mendocino County, California. Wash- 

 ington, 1902. Contributions to the National Herbarium, VII, pp. 295-408. 



Chittenden, Newton H. Among the Cocopahs. Land of Sunshine, Los Angeles, 

 California, 1901, pp. 196-210, illustrated. 



Coles, Claudia Stuart. Aboriginal Basketry in the United States. The House 

 Beautiful, February, 1900. 



Coville, Frederick V. The Panamint Indians of California. American Anthro- 

 pologist, V, 1892, pp. 351-361. Washington. 



. Directions for collecting Specimens and Information illustrating the aborigi- 

 nal Uses of Plants, Bulletin No. 39, Part J, U. S. National ^Museum. 



. Wokas — Primitive Food of the Klamath Indians. Report of the U. S. 



National Museum for 1902 (in preparation). 

 NAT MUS 1902 35 



