BIBLIOGRAPHY. xiii 



Fields, Captain, U. S. Army: 



The Modoc War. The causes which led to it and the results. Correspoudeuce 

 of the Constitution, Atlanta, Ga., Sundays, October 13 aud 20, 1S89. 



Fkemont, Col. J. C. : 



The Exploring Expedition to the Eocky Mountains, Oregon and California, etc. 

 New York and Auburn, 18uC. Small 8°. 450 pp. aud map. (May, 184:2, to 

 August, 1844.) Klamath Country of Oregon, pp. 283-204. Snake Indians, 

 p. 297. Summer Lake, p. 290. Abert Lake, p. 292. (Passed only through 

 the eastern part of the countrj- and from Klamath Marsh northward.) 



Gabb, Dr. William M. : 



Vocabulary of the Klamath of Southern Oregon. MS. 10 leaves. 4°. 150 words. 

 Collected by 7neaus of the Chinook Jargon in 18C4. In the Library of the 

 Bureau of Ethnology. 



Gatschet, Albert S.: 



(1) Adjectives of color in Indian Languages. In American Naturalist, XIII, pp. 

 475-485. Philadelphia, 1879. 



(2) The same was, with few changes only, published in German under the head- 



ing: "Farbenbenennungen in nordamerikanischen Spracheu." In Zeitschrift 

 fiir Ethnologic, Vol. XI, Berlin, 1879. The first of che seven languages spoken 

 of is the Klamath of Oregou. 



(3) Sketch of the Klamath language of Southern Oregon. In Amer. Antiquarian, 



I, pp. 81-84. (1878-1879.) 



(4j Mythologic text in the Klamath language of Southern Oregon, with transla- 

 tion and comments. Ibid., I, pp. 161-166. 



(5) The numeial adjective in the Klamath language of Southern Oregon. Ibid., 



II, pp. 210-217. (1879-1880.) 



(6) Volk und Spracheder Maklaks im siidwestlichen Oregou. In Globus, illustr. 



Zeitschrift f. Lauder- und Viilkerkuude, Vol. 35, No. 11, pp. 167-171 und 

 187-189. 4°. Braunschweig, 1879. 



(7) Three short texts were published in the First Annual lieport of the Bureau of 



Ethnology, Washington, 18:il. Imp. 8°. pp. 583-587, with commentaries: 

 Details of a conjurer's practice; TheEelapse; Sweat Lodges. (They are also 

 embodied in the author's Eeport, under "Texts." 



Hadley, Lewis F.: 



Vocabulary of the Modoc. Manuscript in three blank books, ou 34 unpaged 

 leaves. 4°. In the Library of the Bureau of Ethnology. 



Hale, Horatio: 



Ethnography and Philology of the United States Exploring Expedition during 

 the years 1838-1842, under the command of Charles Wilkes, U. S. Navy. 

 This work forms Vol. VI of the report of that expedition, and was published 

 Philadelphia, 1840. 4°. It contains about 190 words of the "Lutuami"or 

 Klamath language, pp. 570-029. The words which Mr. Hale obtained for 

 father, nine, yes, dead show that his informant was a Klamath Lake and not 

 a Modoc Indian. 



