MOONET] 



AUTHORITIES CITED 



1107 



Heckewelder, J. — Continued. 

 published in the Transactions of the 

 American Philosophical Society, Vol. I. 

 1 -291 293. 



Howard, Gni.O. O. Nez Perce" Joseph; 

 an account of his ancestors, his lauds, 

 his confederates, his enemies, his mur- 

 ders, his war, his pursuit, and capture. 

 By 0. O. Howard, brigadier-general, 

 U. S. A. New York, 1881. 12 . 



1-52; 2—04-72; 3—83. 



Huggins, E. L. Smohalla, the prophet 

 of Priest rapids. (Overland Monthly, 

 February, 1891; vol. xvii,No. 98; sec- 

 ond series, pages 2118-21.").) 



t ';i]ir;iin Huggins, now of the start' of I reneral 

 Miles, visited Smohalla in an official capacity 

 about the same time as Major MacMurray. 

 Some additional details were furnished by him 



in personal i versatiou with the author. 



1—209; 2—209-215. 



Humboldt, A. Political essay on the 

 kingdom of New Spain, etc. Trans- 

 lated from the original French by John 

 Black. London, 1811; i volumes, 8°. 

 1_ I, 200-203; IV, 262. 



Indian Informants. (Among the Paiute 

 in Nevada information and songs were 

 obtained directly from Wovoka, the 

 messiah, from his uncle, Charley Sheep, 

 and others; among the Shoshoni and 

 northern Arapaho in Wyoming, from 

 Norcok, Shoshoni interpreter, Henry 

 Reid. half-blood Cheyenne interpreter, 

 Nakasli. Sharp Nose, aud others; at 

 Pine Ridge, among the Sioux, from 

 Fire-thunder. American Horse. Edgar 

 Fire-thunder of Carlisle, Louis Menard 

 and Philip Wells, mixed-blood inter- 

 preters, and others: among the Arapa- 

 ho and Cheyenne in Oklahoma, from 

 Black Coyote, Left-hand, Sitting Bull, 

 Black Short Nose, and numerous others, 

 and from the Carlisle students, Paul 

 Boynton, Robert Burns, Clever Wur- 

 den, Grant Left-hand, Jesse Bent, and 

 others; among the Comanche, from 

 Quanah, William Tivis (Carlisle) and 

 his brother, Mo'tumi; among the Kio- 

 wa, from Biauk'i, Gunaoi, Tama (a 

 womau), Igiagyakona (a woman). Mary 

 Zo nt am, and others, with the Carlisle or 

 Hampton students, Paul Setk'opti, Belo 

 Cozad, and Virginia Stumbling Bear, 



Indian Informants — Coutiuued. 

 and from Andres Martinez, a Mexican 

 captive ami interpreter; among the 

 Caddo, from George Parton ami his 

 daughter Eliza, John Wilson, and 

 Robert Dunlap, half-blood interpreter; 

 among the Wichita, from the chief 

 Towakoni Jim. Detailed information 

 in regard to the Smohalla and Shaker 

 beliefs and rituals among the Columbia 

 river tribes was obtained in Washing- 

 ton from Charles Ike, half-blood Yaki- 

 ma interpreter, and chief Wolf Neck- 

 lace of the Palus.) 



Indian Office [Intl. Off."], (Documents on 

 file in the Indian office, exclusive of 

 those relating directly to the Ghost 

 dance and Sioux outbreak of 1890, those 

 being filed in separate eases labeled 

 ,; Ghost Dance." Sec Commissioner 

 and Ghost Dance.) 



1 — Letterof Agent Graham to General Clark. 

 dated February 22, ls27; 2— Document indorsed 

 '"The Kiokapoo Prophet's Speech," dated St 

 Louis, February 10, 1827. 



Jackson, Helen (" H. H."). A century of 

 dishonor. A sketch of the United 



States govern nt's dealings with 



some of the Indian tribes, etc. New 

 edition, etc. Boston, 1885. 12 . 



Janney, S. M. The life of George Fox; 

 with dissertations on his views con- 

 cerning the doctrine, testimonies, and 

 discipline of the Christian church, etc. 

 Philadelphia, 1853. 8 . 



Journal of American Folk-lore [./". F. L.]. 

 (An octavo quarterly magazine pub- 

 lished at Boston.) 



1 — "The Ghost Dance in Arizona," an article 

 originally published in tin- Mohave Miner, and 

 reprinted from t he Chicago Inter-Ocean of June 

 25, 1891, in V, No. 16, January-March, 1892, 

 pages 65-07; 2— ibid; 3— ibid; 4— Mrs Z. A. 

 Parker, "The Ghost Dance at Pine Ridge," 

 from an article in the New York Evening Post 

 of April is. 1891, quoted in IV, No. 13, April- 

 June, 1891, pages 160-162. The same number 

 of the journal contains other notices of the 



ssiah ami (he Ghost dance; 5— G. B. Grin- 



nell, "Account of the Northern Cheyennes 

 Concerning the Messiah Superstition," in IV, 

 No. 12, January-March, 1891, pages 61-00; 6_ 

 '•Messianic Excitements among the White 

 Americans," from an article in the New York 

 Times of November 30, 1890, in IV, Xo. 13, 

 April-June, 1891; lev. J. ( >. Dorsey, The 

 Social Organization of the Siouau Tribes, in 

 IV, No. 14, July-September, 1891. 



