920 NORTH AMERICAN LINGUISTICS. 
Cusick (Davkl) — coutinued. 
dation of the | Great Island, | (Now North America,) | The two 
infants born, | and the | Creation of the Universe. | Second — A 
real account of the early settlers | of North America, and their 
dissentions. | Third — Origin of the kingdom of the Five Nations, | 
which was called | A Long House: | The Wars, Fierce Animals, 
&c. I Second edition of 7,000 copies. — Embelished with four en- 
gravings. I 
Tuacarora Village: | (Lewiston, Niagara Co.) [New York] | 
1828. I c.BP. 
3 J). 11., pp. 4-36. 12°. Numerals of tlie Mohawk and Tuscarora, p. 36. 
Dakota ABC Wowapi Kin. See [Eiggs {Rev. S. E.)], No. 3^75. 
Dakota Odowan. See [Riggs (A. L.) and Williamson (J. P.)], 
edUors, Nos. 3265-32C6. 
Dakota Text Book. See [Huggins (Eliza) and Williamson (Nancy 
J.) ], No. 1869. 
980 a Dakota vocabulary, taken down from Manzakute mani. * 
Maimscript. 14 pp. folio. lu the library of Mr. J. G. Shea, Elizabeth, N.J. 
981 a Dally (M. E.) Eapport sur les races indigenes et sur I'archeologie 
du Nouveau-Monde. Par M. E. Dally. * 
In Soci(St(5 d'Authrop. de Paris, Bulletin. Tome Troisifeme. — Anu<5e, 1862. 
pp. 374-411. Paris, 1862. 8°. Sejiarately issued as follows : 
981 b Sur les Eaces Indigenes | et sur | I'Arch^ologie du Mex- 
ique I par M. E. Dally | Membre [etc., three lines]. | (Extrait des 
Bulletins de la Soci6t6 d'anthropologie de Paris, | t. 111,3" fasci- 
cule, 1862.) I 
Paris I Librairie de Victor Masson | Place de TEcole-de-Mede- 
cine. I 1862. | B. 
Pp. 1-36. 8°. Des langues anciennesde I'Am^rique, containing remarks upon, 
and extracts from, Gallatin, Haven, Bancroft, Heckewelder and Maury, pp. 24-28. 
984 c [Dalrymple {Rev. — )] Pamunkey vocabulary (17 words). 
Ill Hist. Mag., first series, vol. 2, p. 182. New York, 1858. 8°. 
987 a Danforth (Samuel). [Vocabulary of the Massachusetts Indian 
Language.] * 
Manuscript, imperfect, in the library of the Massachusetts Historical Society. 
49 unnumbered 11. sm. folio. There is a very small fragment of each of two 
leaves at the beginning and of one leaf at the end. 
Mr. Danforth " prepared an Indian Dictionary, which was once iu jiossession 
of the Massachusetts Historical Society, but which, I am sorry to learn from the 
librarian, has been mislaid or lost. . . . This was a MS. copy, and had 
probably been loaned out with reference to its being jirinted." — Emery's Ministry 
of Taunton, vol. 1, 2>- 183. 
" He left behind him a manuscript Indian Dictionary, which seems to have 
been formed from Eliot's Indian Bible, as there is a reference under every word 
to a passage of Scripture." — Sjn-ague's Annals of the American Pulpit, vol. 1, p. 
141. 
