20 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE 



E. 



Eatnes : This word iollowing a title or within \ 

 I>aren theses iiftei' a note indicates tliat a copy of 

 the work referred to has been seen by the com- 

 piler in the library of Mr. Wilberforce Earaes, 

 Brooklyn, K. Y. 



Eells {Eev. Myrou). The Indian lan- 

 gnaffes of Pnget Sound. [Signed M. 

 Eells.] 



In the Seattle Weekly Post-Intelligencer, 

 vol. ."j, no. 8, p. 4, Seattle, "Wash., November 26, 

 188.5, folio. (Pilling, Wellesley.) 



Remarks upon the peculiarities and grani- 

 matic forms of a number of languages of the 

 northwest coast, among them the Makah. 



Indians of Pnget Sound. (Sixth 



paj)cr.) Measnring and valuing. 



In American Antiquarian, vol. 10, pp. 174-178, 

 Chicago, 1888, 8^. (Bureau of Ethnology.) 



Numerals, and remarks concerning the 

 numeral system, of quite a number of the lan- 

 guages of Washington Territory, among them 

 the Bellahella and Aht, pp. 174-176. 



The ])receding articles of the series, all of 

 which appeared in the American Antiquarian, 

 contain nolinguisticniaterial. It was the inten- 

 tion of the editor of the Anticiuarian, when the 

 aeries should he finished, to issue them in book 

 form. So far ,ts they were printed in the mag- 

 azine they were repaged and perhaps a num- 

 ber of signatures struck off. The sixth paper, 

 for instance, titled above, I have in my posses- 

 si(m, paged 44-48. 



TlieTwana, Clieinaknm, and Klallam 



Indians of Washington territory. By 

 Eev. Myron Eells. 



In Smithsonian Institution, annual report of 

 the Boai-d of Uegeuts for 1887, part 1, pp. 605- 

 681, Washington, 1889, 8°. (Pilling.) 



Numerals 1-10 of a number of languages of 

 the northwest coast, among them tlic Makah, 

 p. 644.— Comments upon the affinities of the 

 num(>rals given, pp. 645-646. 



This article was issued separately, without 

 change; and again as follows: 



The Twana, Chemaknni, and Klallani 



Indians of Washington territory. By 

 Rev. Myron Eells. 



In Smithsonian Institution, Misc. Papers 

 relating to anthropology, from the Smithsonian 

 report for 1886-'87, pp. 605-681, Washington, 

 1889, 8°. (Eames, Pilling.) 



Linguistic contents as under title nextabove. 



Aboriginal geographic names in the 



state of Wivsbington. By Myron Eells. 

 In American Anthropologist, vol. 5, pp. 27- 

 35, Washington, 1892, 8°. (Pniing.) 

 A few Makah names witJi meanings. 



Eells (M.) — Continued. 



Copy of a sermon preached by Rev. 



Dr. Eells to the Indians at Walla-walla. 

 In Bulmer (T. S.), Ckristian prayers in 

 Chinook, 11. 39^6. 



"Of the 97 words used, 46 are of Cliinook ori- 

 gin, 17 Nootkan. 3 Salish. 23 English, 2 Jargon, 

 and iu French." 



The sermon is accompanied by an interlinear 

 English translation. 



See Bulmer (T. S.) 



Rev. Myron Eells was born at Walker's 

 Prairie, Washington Territory, October 7, 1843. 

 He is the son of Rev. Cusliing Eells, D D., and 

 Mrs. M. F. Eells, who went to Oregon iu 1838 as 

 missionaries to the Spokane Indians. He left 

 Walker's Prairie in 1848 on acconntof tlie Whit- 

 man massacre at Walla walla and Cay use war, 

 and went to Salem, Oreg., where he began to 

 go to school. In 1849 he moved to Forest Grove, 

 Oreg.; in 1851 to Hill.sboro, Oreg., and in 1857 

 again to Forest Grove, at which places he con- 

 tinued his school life. In 1862 he removed to 

 Wallawalla, spending the time in farming and 

 the wood business until 1868, except the falls, 

 winters, and springs of 1863-'64, 1864-'65, and 

 1865-'60, when he vvasatForestGrovein college, 

 graduating from Pacific Universitj' in 1866, in 

 the second class which ever graduated from 

 that institution. In 1868 he went to Hartford, 

 Conn., to study for the ministry, entering the 

 Hartford Theological Seminary that year, grad- 

 uating from it in 1871. and being ordained at 

 Hartlord, June 15, 1871, as a Congregational 

 minister. He went to Boisfi City in October, 

 1871, under the American Home Missionary 

 Society, organized the First Congregational 

 church of that place in 1872, and was pastor of 

 it until he left in 1874. Mr. Eells was also 

 superintendent of its Sundaj* school from 1872 

 to 1874 iiud president of the Idaho Bihh^ .Society 

 from 1872 to 1874. He went to Skokomish, 

 Washington, in June, 1874, and h:is worked as 

 missionary of the American Missionary Asso- 

 ciation ever since among the .Skokomish or 

 Twana and Klallam Indians, pastor of Congre- 

 gational church at Skokomish Reservation since 

 1876, and superintendent of Sunday school at 

 Skokomish since 1882. He organized a Congre- 

 gational church among the Khillams in 1882, of 

 which he has since been pastor, and another 

 among the whites at Seabcck in 1880, of whicii 

 he was pastor until 1886. In 1887 he was chosen 

 trustee of the Pacific University, Oregon; in 

 1885 was elected assistant secretary and in 1889 

 secretary of its board of trustees. He delivered 

 the address before the Gamm:i Sigma society 

 of that institution in 1876, before the alumni in 

 1890, and preached the baccalaureate sermon in 

 1886. In 1888 he was chosen trustee of Whit- 

 man Coliegx}, Washington, delivered the com- 



