On the Navahoes consult the full list prepared by Professor Frederick Webb Hodge in Washington Matthews' "Navaho Legends," published by Houghton, Mifflin & Co., for the American Folk-Lore Society. Coues, Elliott. On the Trail of a Spanish Pioneer. The Diary and Itinerary of Francisco GarcÈs in his Travels through Sonora, Arizona, and California. 2 vols. Francis P. Harper, New York, 1900. Dorsey, George A., and Voth, H. R. The Oraibi Soyal Ceremony. (Field Columbian Museum, publication 55, Anthropological Series, Vol. III, No. 1. 59 pages and many plates.) Fewkes, Jesse Walter. Preliminary Account of an Expedition to the Pueblo Ruins near Winslow, Arizona, in 1896. (In Smithsonian Report for 1896. Pages 517 to 539.) Preliminary Account of ArchÆological Field Work in Arizona in 1897. (In Smithsonian Report for 1897. Pages 601 to 603.) Two Ruins Recently Discovered in the Red Rock Country, Arizona. (In American Anthropologist, August, 1896. Pages 263 to 283.) Pueblo Ruins near Flagstaff, Arizona. (In American Anthropologist, N. S., Vol. II, 1900. Pages 422 to 450.) A Suggestion as to the Meaning of the Moki Snake Dance. (In Journal of American Folk-Lore, date unknown. Pages 129 to 138.) The Owakulti Altar at Sichomovi Pueblo. (In American Anthropologist, N. S., Vol. III, 1901. Pages 211 to 226.) An Interpretation of Katchina Worship. (In the Journal of American Folk-Lore, April-June, 1901. Pages 81 to 94.) The Pueblo Settlements near El Paso, Texas. (In American Anthropologist, N. S., Vol. IV, No. 1, 1902. Pages 57 to 95.) The New Fire Ceremony at Walpi. (In American Anthropologist, N. S., Vol. II, No. 1, 1900. Pages 80 to 138.) Property Rights in Eagles among the Hopi. (In American Anthropologist, N. S., Vol. II, 1900. Pages 690 to 707.) Tusayan Flute and Snake Ceremonies. (In Nineteenth Annual Report Bureau of American Ethnology, 1901. Pages 957 to 1011.) ArchÆological Expedition to Arizona in 1895. (In Seventeenth Annual Report Bureau of American Ethnology, 1898. Pages 520 to 744.) Snake Ceremonials at Walpi. (Vol. XIV. of Journal of American Ethnology and ArchÆology. Houghton, Mifflin & Co., Boston, 1894. In this volume is a carefully prepared bibliography on the Snake Dance (see pages 124 to 126) which is too lengthy to be reproduced here and to which the student is referred.) GarcÉs, Francisco. Diary and Itinerary, translated by Elliott Coues. (See Coues.) Hough, Walter. Environmental Interrelations in Arizona. (In American Anthropologist for May, 1898. Pages 133 to 155.) James, George Wharton. In and Around the Grand Canyon. Little, Brown, & Co., Boston, Mass., 1900. Indian Basketry. Henry Malkan, New York, 1901. The Havasupai Indians and their Cataract Canyon Home. (In Good Health, Battle Creek, Mich., August, 1899. Pages 446 to 456.) The Industries of the Navahoes and Mokis. (In Good Health, June, 1899. Pages 315 to 322.) The Pueblo Indians and their Prayer Spring. (In Good Health, July, 1899. Pages 379 to 384.) The Snake Dance of the Mokis. (Two articles in Scientific American, New York, June 24, 1899, and September 9, 1899.) Scenes of Spanish Occupancy in our Southwest. (In American Monthly Review of Reviews, July, 1899. Pages 51 to 59.) Discovery of Cliff Dwellings in the Southwest. (In Scientific American, New York, January 20, 1900.) What I Saw at the Snake Dance. (In Wide World Magazine, London, January, 1900. Pages 264 to 274.) Harvest Festivals of Some of our Southwestern Aborigines. (In Good Health, October, 1899. Pages 583 to 589.) Moki Fashions and Customs. (In Good Health, November, 1899. Pages 641 to 647). Types of Female Beauty among the Indians of the Southwest. (In Overland Monthly, San Francisco, Cal., March, 1900. Pages 195 to 209). Some Indian Women. (In New York Tribune Supplement, April 8, 1900.) The Fire Dance of the Navahoes. (In Wide World Magazine, London, September, 1900. Pages 516 to 523.) The Hopi Basket Dance. (In New York Tribune Supplement.) Indian Madonnas. (In New York Tribune Supplement, December 23, 1900.) Indian Pottery. (In House Beautiful, Chicago, April, 1901. Pages 235 to 243.) Down the Topocobya Trail. (In Wide World Magazine, London, April, 1901. Pages 75 to 80.) Indian Basketry. (In Outing, New York, May, 1901. Pages 177 to 186.) The Storming of Awatobi. (In the Chautauquan, Cleveland, O., August, 1901. Pages 497 to 501.) The Art of Indian Basketry. (In the Southern Workman, Hampton, Va., August, 1901. Pages 439 to 448.) Indian Basketry in House Decoration. (In the Chautauquan, Cleveland, O., September, 1901. Pages 619 to 624.) Moki and Navaho Indian Sports. (In Outing, New York, October, 1901. Pages 10 to 15.) Indian Pottery. (In Outing, New York, November, 1901. Pages 154 to 161.) The Hopi Indians of Arizona. (In Southern Workman, Hampton, Va., December, 1901. Pages 677 to 683.) The Collecting of Indian Baskets. (In the Literary Collector, New York, January, 1902. Pages 103 to 109.) Some Indian Dishes. (In American Kitchen Magazine, Boston, Mass., January, 1902. Pages 129 to 133 and frontispiece.) The Indians and their Baskets. (In Four Track News, New York, February, 1902. Pages 77 to 79.) Indian Blanketry. (In Outing, New York, March, 1902. Pages 684 to 693.) Lummis, Charles F. Across the Continent. (Scribner's.) A New Mexico David, and Other Stories. (Scribner's.) The Land of Poco Tiempo. The Man that Married the Moon. All the volumes of "Land of Sunshine," now "Out West," of which he is Editor, published in Los Angeles, Cal. Matthews, Washington. Navaho Legends. (The American Folk-Lore Society. In this volume Professor F. W. Hodge has a full bibliography on the Navahoes.) Mindeleff, Cosmos. Navaho Houses. (In Seventeenth Annual Report Bureau of American Ethnology, 1898. Pages 475 to 517.) Pepper, George H. The Navaho Indians. An Ethnological Study. (In Southern Workman, Hampton, Va., November, 1900. 7 pages.) The Making of a Navaho Blanket. (In Everybody's Magazine, New York, January, 1902. Pages 33 to 43.) Powell, J. W. The Lessons of Folk-Lore. (In American Anthropologist, N. S., Vol. II, No. 1, 1900. Pages 1 to 36.) Voth, H. R., and Dorsey, George A. The Oraibi Soyal Ceremony. (See Dorsey.) AN IMPORTANT NEW BOOK DESCRIBING THE MOST STUPENDOUS SCENE ON THE AMERICAN CONTINENT In and Around the Grand Canyon By GEORGE WHARTON JAMES Illustrated with twenty-three full-page plates and seventy-seven pictures CROSSING THE COLORADO TO THE SHINUMO. CROSSING THE COLORADO TO THE SHINUMO. The volume, crowded with pictures of the marvels and beauties of the Canyon, is of absorbing interest. Dramatic narratives of hairbreadth escapes and thrilling adventures, stories of Indians, their legends and customs, and Mr. James's own perilous experiences, give a wonderful personal interest in these pages of graphic description of the most stupendous natural wonder on the American Continent.—Philadelphia Public Ledger. A veritable storehouse of wonders.—Boston Advertiser. There is a ring of actuality about this book.—Outing, New York. The Grand Canyon has never before received such an exposition either with pen or camera.—Literary World. He has told his story in so fascinating a manner that one feels almost within sight and sound of the great canyon.—San Francisco Bulletin. The most thorough description of the Grand Canyon of the Colorado and its surroundings to be found anywhere.—Chicago Tribune. He has not been content to describe the wonders in his own words, but from historical records, from the notes of explorers and discoverers, and from the accounts of Indian natives, white hunters, miners, and guides, he has quoted freely wherever he could find matter of interest and value.—Argonaut, San Francisco. An illustrated work of which too much can scarcely be said in praise. The Grand Canyon is one of the world's wonders, and this volume is the most thorough and satisfying presentation of its many rugged attractions thus far offered.—San Francisco Chronicle. There is probably no man in the country who is better qualified for the writing of such a book than Professor James.... Too much cannot be said in praise of his work.—Arizona Daily Journal-Miner, Prescott, Arizona. Will be the standard with reference to the main features—historic, scenic, and scientific—of the Great Canyon of the Colorado.... Legend and tradition are drawn upon for the dramatic effect and local color, so that in many respects the book possesses a charm peculiarly its own.... One of the typical books of the great West.—Brooklyn Standard Union.
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