1108 



THE GHOST-DANCE RELIGION 



[ETII. ANN. 1 i 



Keam, Thomas V. Letters and oral in- 

 formation. 



Mr Keam, of Keams Cation, Arizona, lias 

 1m»-ti for a number of years a trader among the 

 Navahoand Hopi (Moki), speaks the Navaho 

 language fluently, and takes an intelligent 

 interest in everything relating to these tribes. 

 He has furnished valuable information orally 

 and by letter, together with much kind assist" 

 ant-e while the author was in that country. 



Kendall, E. A. Travels through the 

 northern parts of the United States in 

 the years 1S07 and 1808. In three vol- 

 umes. New York, 1809. 8 . 



1-11,290: 2— II, 292 and 296; 3— II, 287; 4— 

 I I 292. 



Lee, Captain J. M. See Adjutant-Gen- 

 eral's Office. 



Additional information has been furnished 

 by Captain Lee in personal letters and in con- 

 versation. 



LetterBook [Z. /.'.]. (The letter book of 

 the Indian Office containing, among 

 other things, letters bearing on the 

 Ghost dance, supplementary to the 

 documents in the "Ghost dance 



' files.") 



1— Belt, October 3 and October 20, 205-287; 

 200-211: 2— Belt, November 15, 207-237; 3— 

 Noble, 208-245. 



Lewis and Clark. Explorations. Wash- 

 ington, 1806. 12 . 



The edition used is the earliest printed ac- 

 count, in the form of a message to Congress 

 from the President, Thomas Jefferson, commu- 

 nicated February 19. 1806. 



McCullough, J. See Pritts, J. 



McKenney, T. L., and Hall, J. History 

 of the Indian tribes of North America, 

 with biographical sketches and anec- 

 dotes of the principal chiefs. Embel- 

 ished with one hundred and twenty 

 portraits from the Indian gallery in the 

 Department of War at Washington. 

 In three volumes. Philadelphia, 1858. 

 8 . 



1— vol. I, C4, 65. 



MacMurray, Major J. W. [MacMurray 

 MS.~\. The Dreamers of the Columbia 

 River valley in Washington Territory. 

 A revised manuscript copy, with notes 

 and other additions of an article origi- 

 nally read before the Albany Institute 

 .January 19, ISSti, and published in the 



MacMurray, Major J. W. — Continued. 

 Transactions of the Albany Institute, 

 XI, Albany, 1887, pages 240-248. 



Under instructions from General Milt 

 manding the Department <0' the Columbia, 

 Major MacMurray, in 1884, made an official 

 investigation of the Smohalla religion, with 

 special reference to the Indian land 

 in that section, and his report on the subji ct 

 contains a large body of valuable informa- 

 tion. 



Mallery, Colonel Garrick. Picture writ- 

 ing of the American Indians. (Tenth 

 Annual Report of the Bureau of Eth- 

 nology i 1888-89), 1-822. Washington, 

 1893. 8 .) 



1— 200. 



Matthews, Jir Washington. Ethnogra- 

 phy and philology of the Hidatsa In- 

 dians. Washington, 1877. 8 . (Pub- 

 lished as No. 7 of Miscellaneous pub- 

 lications of the United States Geolog- 

 ical Survej . 



(Personal letters and oral informa- 

 tion. ) 



Dr Matthews, surgeon in the United Stales 



Army, lately retired, formerly stationed on the 



upper Missouri and afterward for several 



us at Fort AViiiiiate, New Mexico, is the 



authority on the Xavabo and Hidatsa Indians. 



1— Letter of October 23, 1891; 2— ibid. 



Merrick, J. L. Life and religion of Mo- 

 hammed, as contained in the Sheeah 



tradition of the Hyat-ul-Kiiloob; trans- 

 lated from the Persian. Boston. 1850. 

 8°. 



Minnesota Historical Collections. See 

 Warren. 



Mormons. The Mormons have stepped 

 down and out of celestial government; 

 i lie American Indians have stepped up 

 and into celestial government. 8 . 

 l pages, (n. d.) 



in anonymous leaflet, publish 

 at Salt Lake City, Utah, about Ju 

 vertising a series of lectures on the fulfillment 

 of Mormon prophecies through the Indian 

 messiab movement and the Sioux outbreak. 



Nebraska Historical Society. See Allis; 

 Colby; Hamilton. 



Overland Monthly. Si c Huggins. 



Parker, Z. A. See Commissioner and 

 Journal of American Folk-lore. 



