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Dear Prof. Koines; 
My work among the Apaches is at an end, and I shall 
leave tomorrow for the Pins as/? My address for the next 
three weeks (until March 10) will be Sacaton, Pinal County, 
Arizona. 
I have been wholly successful in what I wanted, ex- 
cept that, on account of almost constant rains, I could not 
reach White Mountain. . if conditions permit I may return to 
that region at the end of my journey. 
The camera which Mr Gill promised to send five days 
after ray departure has not yet reached rne, which I much re- 
gret, for I had numerous opportunities of getting good 
views and portraits. 
I have secured a number of archeological specimens, 
which I sent to the Museum. They are all from the valley of 
the San Carlos River, in which are numerous remnants of an- 
cient occupation. These remnants consist of square, mod- 
erate size dwellings, the walls of which were made of natural 
boulders, placed, mostly in two layers, virtually in a thick 
mass of adobes. Prom two to two-and-a-half feet of such 
walls are underground, and the rooms are wholly filled with 
what appear to be crumbling^ from the walls, drift and allu- 
\ ium . An through the valley the peojjle cremated their 
dead and buried the remaining bones in jars. I send you one 
such jar and contents entire; it was found in a hole digging 
