AUTHORITIES CITED 



1105 



Catlin, G. — Continued, 

 ing eight years' travel (1832-1839) 

 among the wildest tribes of Indians in 

 North America, etc. Two volumes. 

 4 tli edition. London, 1844. 8°. 

 1— II, 117; 2— II, 118; 3— II, 98; 4— II, 99. 



Century Magazine. .See Roosevelt. 



Clark, Benjamin. The Cheyenne Indians. 

 I A manuscript history and ethnography 

 of the Cheyenne Indians, written at 

 the request of General Philip Sheridan 

 by Benjamin Clark, interpreter at Fort 

 Reno, Oklahoma.) 



Now in possession of Dr George Bird Grin- 

 nell of New York city. 



Clark, W. P. The Indian sign language, 

 with brief explanatory notes, etc, and 

 a description of some of the peculiar 

 laws, customs, myths, superstitions, 

 ways of living, code of peace and war 

 signals of our aborigines. Philadel- 

 phia, 1885. 8°. 



Colby, Gen. L. W. The Sioux Indian 

 war of 1890-91. By Brigadier-General 

 L. W. Colby, commanding the Ne- 

 braska National Guard. (Transactions 

 andreports of the Nebraska State His- 

 torical Society, III, 144-190; Fremont, 

 Nebraska, 1892. 8.) 



1—153: 2—150: 3—155; 4—157; 5—159-170; 

 6— 159; 7— 164; 8—165-170; 9— (McGillycuddy) 

 180; 10—165. 



Commissioner [Comr.~\. Annual report of 

 the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to 

 the Secretary of the Interior. (Sixty- 

 first annual report, Washington, 1892. 

 8°.) 



1— Report of Agent ~W. P. Richardson, 1852, 

 71, and report of Agent W. P. Badger, 1859, 

 144; 2— Agent Danilson, 1S75, 25S; 3— Agent 

 Tiffany, 1881, 10; 4 -Commissioner Price, 1881, 

 viii-il; Agent Tiffany, 1881, 10-11; 5— Agent 

 Linn, 1884, 102; 6— Agent Patrick, 1SS5, 111; 

 7— Agent Scott, 1891, vul. I, 258; 8— Agent 

 Smith, 1873, 319; 9— Agent Boyle, 1870, 58; 

 10— Superintendent Meacham, 1870, 50; 11 — 

 Agent Cornoyer, 1873, 317-18; 12— Commis- 

 sioner Brnnot, 1871, 98; 13— Umatilla council, 

 1891, 95-7; 14 — Superintendent Colonel Ross, 

 1870, 30; 15 — Superintendent Meacham, 1870, 

 50-54; 16— Report, 1871,95; 17— Superintendent 

 Odeneal, 1872, 362; 18— Subagent "White, 1843, 

 451 ; 19 — ibid. 453 ; 20 — Commissioner Hayt, 

 1877,10; 21— ibid, 10; 22— ibid, 12; 23— ibid. 11; 

 24— ibid, 12; 25— ibid, 12-13; 26— Commissioner 

 Hayt, 1878, xsxiv; 27a— ibid, xxxv: 27b— 

 Agent Rust, 1891. I, 223; 28— Commissioner 

 Morgan, 1891, I, 132-3; 29— Agent Wright, 



Commissioner — Continued. 



ibid, 411-2; 30— Dorchester report, ibid, 529; 

 31— Commissioner Morgan, ibid, 124; 32 — 

 Agent Wright, ibid, 411-12; 33— ibid, 128, 130; 

 34— ibid, 130; 35— ibid, 130; 36— ibid, 130; 37— 

 ibid, 130; 38— ibid, 131; 39— ibid, 132; 40— ibid, 

 132; 41— Commissioner Morgan, 1892, 128; 42— 

 Dorchester. 1891, vol. I, 532; 43— Agent Wood, 

 1892, 390, 399; 44-Mrs Z. A. Parker, in report 

 of Superintendent Dorchester, vol. I, 1891, 529- 

 531; also published in theNewXork Evening 

 Post of April 18, 1891, and in Journal of A 

 can Folk-lore, April-Juue, 1891; 45— Reporton 

 the Utes, Pai-Utes, etc, by J. W. Powell and 

 G. W. Ingalls, 1873, 45; 46— Superintendent 

 Parker, 1866, 115; 47— ibid, 115. 



Dorsey, Be v. J. O. See Journal of Ameri- 

 can Folk-lore. 



Drake, B. Life of Tecumseh and of his 

 brother the Prophet; with a historical 

 sketch of the Shawanoe Indians. Cin- 

 cinnati, 1852. 12 . 



1—87, passim; 2—88; 3—93; 4—130; 5—142; 

 6—151; 7—153; 8—158; 9—193. 



Drake, S. G. The aboriginal races of 

 North America,comprising biographical 

 sketches of eminent individuals and 

 an historical account of the different 

 tribes, from the first discovery of the 

 continent to the present period, etc, 

 15th editiou, revised with valuable ad- 

 ditions, by Professor H. L. Williams. 

 New York, 1880 (?). 8 . 



1—625. 



Dutton, Maior C. E. The submerged 

 trees of the Columbia river. (Science, 

 New York, February 18, 1887, page 

 156.) 



Eells, Rev. Myron. (Letter in regard to 

 tho Shakers of Puget sound, quoted at 

 length in the chapter on that subject. 

 Works by the same author, referred to 

 in tho same chapter and in the tribal 

 synopsis accompanying the chapter on 

 the Nez Perce war, are "History of 

 Indian Missions on the Pacific Coast,'' 

 and "Ten Years of Missionary Work 

 among the Indians at Skokomish, 

 Washington Territory, 1874-1884."— 

 Congregational House, Boston, 1886. 

 12°.) 



Mr Eells was born in the state of "Washing- 

 ton, has been for many years engaged in mis- 

 eion work in that section, and is the author of 

 valuable works relating to the tribes and lan- 

 guages of the state. 



