294 



PICURfs CHILDREN'S STORIES 



lETH. ANN. 43 



At the end of the volume a number of nonmythological textlets 

 dealing with folkways and an Our Father version, all from the same 

 informant, have been added. The texts were originally prepared 

 with interlinear translation, but this has been omitted because of the 

 cost of printmg, although I believe that the including of interlinear 



(.0- 



a. 



J3 



translation best subserves the purpose for which such texts are 

 published. 



Grateful acknowledgment is due especially to Dr. J. Walter Fewkes, 

 Chief of the Bureau of American Ethnology, for his sympathetic 

 support of these studies. The warmest thanks are also given to 

 Rosendo Vargas, the narrator, and Miss Helen H. Roberts, who 

 transcribed the songs with painstaking accuracy. 



