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	 <filedesc> 
		<titlestmt> 
		  <titleproper>Albert B. Reagan (1981-1936) Papers, 
			 <date>1905-1935</date></titleproper> 
		  <author>Under the direction of the University Archivist</author> 
		</titlestmt> 
	 </filedesc> 
  </eadheader> 
  <frontmatter> 
	 <titlepage> 
		<titleproper>Register of the Albert B. Reagan (1981-1936) Papers, 
		  <date>1905-1935</date></titleproper> 
		<num>MSS 250</num> 
		<publisher>L. Tom Perry Special Collections<lb/><extptr show="embed" entityref="byuseal1"/><lb/>Brigham Young University</publisher> 
		<date>1979</date> 
		<list type="simple"> 
		  <head>Contact Information</head> 
		  <item>L. Tom Perry Special Collections</item> 
		  <item>Harold B. Lee Library</item> 
		  <item>Brigham Young University</item> 
		  <item>Provo, UT 84602</item> 
		  <item>USA</item> 
		  <item>Phone: 801/422-3175</item> 
		  <item>Fax: 801/422-0461</item> 
		  <item>Email: Specialcollections@byu.edu</item> 
		</list> 
		<list type="deflist"> 
		  <defitem> 
			 <label>Processed:</label> 
			 <item>Under the direction of the University Archivist</item> 
		  </defitem> 
		  <defitem> 
			 <label>Date completed:</label> 
			 <item>1979</item> 
		  </defitem> 
		  <defitem> 
			 <label>Encoded by:</label> 
			 <item>Kenneth Bullard</item> 
		  </defitem> 
		</list> 
		<p>©2003 Brigham Young University. All rights reserved.</p> 
	 </titlepage> 
  </frontmatter> 
  <archdesc level="collection"> 
	 <did> 
		<head>Descriptive Summary</head> 
		<unitid label="Call Number">MSS 250</unitid> 
		<unittitle label="Title">Albert B. Reagan (1981-1936) Papers, 
		  <unitdate type="inclusive" normal="1905/1935">1905-1935</unitdate></unittitle> 
		<origination label="Creator"> 
		  <persname>Reagan, Albert B., 1871-1936</persname></origination> 
		<repository label="Repository"> 
		  <corpname>L. Tom Perry Special Collections</corpname></repository> 
		<physdesc label="Extent">9 boxes (45 linear inches).</physdesc> 
		<abstract label="Biographical History Abstract">American author and
		  historian who did research on Native Americans in the American West. Reagan was
		  a professor of anthropology at Brigham Young University.</abstract> 
		<abstract label="Scope Abstract">Correspondence, research notes, and
		  reports. The materials document Reagan's research among the Native Americans of
		  New Mexico, Arizona, Minnesota, Colorado, Washington, and Utah on many
		  reservations. He studied various tribes of Native Americans including the Jemez
		  Indians, Navajo Indians, Ojibwa Indians (Chippewa Indians), Quileute Indians,
		  and Ute Indians. He did research on Indian ethnology, history, and mythology.
		  Also included are various materials relating to the topography and geology of
		  Utah and the American West.</abstract> 
	 </did> 
	 <accessrestrict> 
		<head>Access</head> 
		<p>Open for public use.</p> 
	 </accessrestrict> 
	 <userestrict> 
		<head>Conditions of Use</head> 
		<p>It is the responsibility of the researcher to obtain any necessary
		  copyright clearances.</p> 
		<p>Permission to publish material from Albert B. Reagan (1981-1936)
		  Papers must be obtained from the Supervisor of Reference Services and/or the L.
		  Tom Perry Special Collections Board of Curators.</p> 
	 </userestrict> 
	 <prefercite> 
		<head>Preferred Citation</head> 
		<p><emph render="italic">Initial Citation:</emph> MSS 250; Albert B.
		  Reagan (1981-1936) Papers; University Archives; L. Tom Perry Special
		  Collections, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University.</p> 
		<p><emph render="italic">Following Citations:</emph> MSS 250, LTPSC.</p> 
	 </prefercite> 
	 <bioghist id="bio"> 
		<head>Biographical History</head> 
		<p>American author and historian who did research on Native Americans in
		  the American West. Reagan was a professor of anthropology at Brigham Young
		  University.</p> 
	 </bioghist> 
	 <scopecontent> 
		<head>Scope and Content Note</head> 
		<p>Correspondence, research notes, and reports. The materials document
		  Reagan's research among the Native Americans of New Mexico, Arizona, Minnesota,
		  Colorado, Washington, and Utah on many reservations. He studied various tribes
		  of Native Americans including the Jemez Indians, Navajo Indians, Ojibwa Indians
		  (Chippewa Indians), Quileute Indians, and Ute Indians. He did research on
		  Indian ethnology, history, and mythology. Also included are various materials
		  relating to the topography and geology of Utah and the American West.</p> 
	 </scopecontent> 
	 <controlaccess> 
		<head>Subject Tracings</head> 
		<controlaccess> 
		  <head>Institutions</head> 
		  <corpname>Brigham Young University--Faculty</corpname> 
		</controlaccess> 
		<controlaccess> 
		  <head>People</head> 
		  <persname>Reagan, Albert B., 1871-1936</persname> 
		</controlaccess> 
		<controlaccess> 
		  <head>Places</head> 
		  <geogname>West (U.S.)--Antiquities</geogname> 
		</controlaccess> 
		<controlaccess> 
		  <head>Genre/Form</head> 
		  <genreform>Letters</genreform> 
		  <genreform>Reports</genreform> 
		  <genreform>Notes</genreform> 
		</controlaccess> 
		<controlaccess> 
		  <head>Subject</head> 
		  <subject>Jemez Indians--History--Sources</subject> 
		  <subject>Navajo Indians--History--Sources</subject> 
		  <subject>Ojibwa Indians--History--Sources</subject> 
		  <subject>Quileute Indians--History--Sources</subject> 
		  <subject>Ute Indians--History--Sources</subject> 
		  <subject>Indians of North America--History--Sources</subject> 
		  <subject>Indians of North America--Folklore--History--Sources</subject>
		  
		  <subject>Geology--West (U.S.)--History--Sources</subject> 
		</controlaccess> 
	 </controlaccess> 
	 <dsc type="in-depth"> 
		<head>Container List</head> 
		<c01 tpattern="container:container:description" level="series"> 
		  <head>Inventory</head> 
		  <did> 
			 <unittitle>Inventory</unittitle> 
		  </did> 
		  <thead> 
			 <row> 
				<entry>Box</entry> 
				<entry>Folder</entry> 
				<entry>Contents</entry> 
			 </row> 
		  </thead> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<unittitle>A.B. Reagan Correspondence. 
				  <unitdate type="inclusive">1905-1935</unitdate></unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<unittitle>Miscellaneous Indian School Papers</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Course of study, Nett Lake Day School</p> 
				  <p>Department of the Interior - United States Indian Service -
					 Cornfields Day School 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">1925-1926</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>Department of the Interior - United States Indian Service -
					 Cornfields Day School 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">1926-1927</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>Devices Used to Arouse Interest in School Work, by Otilla A.
					 Reagan</p> 
				  <p>Boarding School Menus - How to Improve Them. Magazine article
					 by Marion E. Wolf</p> 
				  <p>Magazine articles entitled: &quot;Pima Women Display
					 Needlewood&quot;; Things that Every Indian Girl and Boy Should Know&quot;;
					 &quot;Domestic Art Department&quot;</p> 
				  <p>Correspondence, 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">August 22, 1921 - June 29,
						1922</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>Report of Attendance, Quarter Ending 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">June 30, 1921</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>Industrial Detail, 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">September 6, 1920</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>Allowances (maximum allowance of certain articles for each
					 pupil)</p> 
				  <p>Correspondence, 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">December 29, 1920</unitdate></p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<unittitle>Reagan - Note books</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<unittitle>Portions of Manscripts</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Various papers with no title</p> 
				  <p>Names for English Speaking people</p> 
				  <p>Various papers iwth no title</p> 
				  <p>Ne-gon-nan-quod - A Chippewa Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Origin of Moss - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>Chasing the Rainbow</p> 
				  <p>Why the Raven Lives on the Rocks or in the Far-Away Woods - An
					 Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Whale Tooth Myth</p> 
				  <p>How the People of Earth Obtained Fire - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>Legend About How a Boiling Flood was Stopped</p> 
				  <p>An Aztec Tradition</p> 
				  <p>The Stone-Skinned Man</p> 
				  <p>Eagle &quot;Gets Even&quot; with Raven</p> 
				  <p>Myth About the Powerful Men of the Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>Myth About Bear and Raven</p> 
				  <p>Bear's Meddling - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Story of the Bones</p> 
				  <p>Carnegie Party Makes a Valuable Find of Vertebrate Fossils</p>
				  
				  <p>A Story about Manibush</p> 
				  <p>Kit Carson's Fort Found</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte's Honeymoon</p> 
				  <p>Some Closing Remarks on Shaker Medicine Doctoring and Shamanic
					 Performance</p> 
				  <p>The Airship &quot;Tomanawos&quot; Canoe and Medicine</p> 
				  <p>The Shishi Gig</p> 
				  <p>Dr. Lester or He-tuc-thal-took of the Qualayetes</p> 
				  <p>Speech Entitled &quot;Influence Indians Have Had Upon Our
					 Civilization&quot;</p> 
				  <p>Myth About Manabush's Being the Great Spirit</p> 
				  <p>The Flood Myth - A Traditional Recital of Manabush's
					 Overcoming the Sea Lion-Snake Gods</p> 
				  <p>Papers without titles</p> 
				  <p>The Historical Chart of the Migrations of the Bois Fort
					 Inidans</p> 
				  <p>A Ritual Parchment and Certain Historical Charts of the Bois
					 Fort, Ojibwa of Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>Some of the Exhortations to the Candidate by the Medicine
					 Man</p> 
				  <p>Have You Seen Us</p> 
				  <p>Papers without titles</p> 
				  <p>Contract</p> 
				  <p>Pictographs</p> 
				  <p>Papers without titles</p> 
				  <p>Sand-storm Electricity</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<unittitle>Portions of Manuscripts</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Some New Mexican Fossil Plants</p> 
				  <p>Papers without titles</p> 
				  <p>The Santa Anna Indians</p> 
				  <p>Various Uses of Plants by the White Mountain Apaches of
					 Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Making a Pigeon House out of Scraps</p> 
				  <p>Drawing</p> 
				  <p>Papers withou title</p> 
				  <p>A Bit of Creative Reporting</p> 
				  <p>The Story of a Bashful Man</p> 
				  <p>Papers without title</p> 
				  <p>Drawing</p> 
				  <p>Drawing</p> 
				  <p>From Albert b. Reagan, Ouray, Utah. Obituary of Richard
					 Brennan</p> 
				  <p>Drawing</p> 
				  <p>Beobachtungen Aus Der Echinodermata, Molluscoidea, Und
					 Mollusca Der Quileute-Bucht Dei Lapush in Washington, U.S.A., Mit
					 Illustrationen, (Als Sie Angezogen Werden)</p> 
				  <p>Tertiary Fossils of California, Except the Pliocene</p> 
				  <p>Papers without title</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<unittitle>Portion of a Manuscript (Undentified)</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<unittitle>Indian Stories for Children</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>El Capitan, The Monuments, and Snake House</p> 
				  <p>Organ Rock</p> 
				  <p>The Painted Desert</p> 
				  <p>The Spanish Bayonet or Soap Weed</p> 
				  <p>The Cactus Tree</p> 
				  <p>The Great Canon</p> 
				  <p>The San Francisco Peaks</p> 
				  <p>The Great Bridge</p> 
				  <p>The Beautiful Skies of Arizona</p> 
				  <p>The Cowboy</p> 
				  <p>Child's Wonderland of Arizona</p> 
				  <p>An Indian Village in a Jug</p> 
				  <p>The Apache Boy</p> 
				  <p>Camping in the Forest</p> 
				  <p>Writings of the Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>The Hopi Girl and Her Home</p> 
				  <p>Z 20 and Her Home</p> 
				  <p>Tumacacori</p> 
				  <p>The Roosevelt Dam</p> 
				  <p>Sunset Peak</p> 
				  <p>The White House</p> 
				  <p>A Navajo Girl and Her Home</p> 
				  <p>Petrified (Stone-Tree) Forest</p> 
				  <p>Montezuma's Castle</p> 
				  <p>The Beautiful Skies of the Southwest</p> 
				  <p>Writings of Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>The Story of the Long Ago (Dixon)</p> 
				  <p>The Kayklahkwal Dance of the Long Ago (Billey Haballekomp)</p>
				  
				  <p>The Tomaneous Elk Hunter (Billey Haballecomp)</p> 
				  <p>Another Version of Kwatte's Killing Subbus (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte and the Fire Stick Girls (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>The Rabbit, Gooseander Duck, and the East Wind (Elon
					 Mason)</p> 
				  <p>The Raven and the Deer (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>The Raven and the Goose (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>The Eagle and the Raven (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>A Myth of the Long Ago (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>How the Secondary Rainbow Came to Be (Klekabuck)</p> 
				  <p>My &quot;Tomanawis&quot; (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>The Crow and the Raven (Mark Williams)</p> 
				  <p>Tustus (Klkubuthlup)</p> 
				  <p>Kweetstit; Or, Not Enough to Eat</p> 
				  <p>The Wolf Deer (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>How a Quileute Chief Got a Clallam Indian Wife</p> 
				  <p>Battle of Pekillum on the West Coast of Vancouver Island
					 (Dickson)</p> 
				  <p>Killing Elk with Tomenewis (Dickson, Payne)</p> 
				  <p>A Marriage Myth of the Long Ago (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>How the Upper Trap People Got Even with teh Lower Trap
					 People</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<unittitle>Miscellaneous Indian Stories - Reagan</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>The Jemez and Sia Indians</p> 
				  <p>The Sia Indians</p> 
				  <p>The Jemez Indians</p> 
				  <p>Indian Tales</p> 
				  <p>Dances and Shamanic Preformances of the Quileute Indians</p> 
				  <p>More Notes on the Ancient Picture Writing North of the Rio
					 Grande</p> 
				  <p>Notes on the Shaker Church of the Indians</p> 
				  <p>Some Notes on the Picture Writing North of Mexico</p> 
				  <p>Pete Martin's Parchment, A Song</p> 
				  <p>Farmer John's Medicinal Bark Parchment</p> 
				  <p>The Oldest Historic Written Records North of Mexico, If Not in
					 the Two Americas</p> 
				  <p>Evidence of Migration in Ancient Pueblo Times</p> 
				  <p>Miscellaneous Papers on Indian Ruins</p> 
				  <p>Some Ancient Indian Granaries</p> 
				  <p>Truth, Etiquette, and Respect Among Indians</p> 
				  <p>The Creation Myth of the Zuni Indians (partly after
					 Cushing)</p> 
				  <p>A Zuni Myth</p> 
				  <p>Beliefs of the Kutenai Indians</p> 
				  <p>Kanakuk's Keeping Booze Away from His People</p> 
				  <p>The Indian's Belief in a World Earlier than the Present</p> 
				  <p>The Coming of Horses Among the Indians</p> 
				  <p>The Indian Medicine Man</p> 
				  <p>Sketches of Indian Life and Character</p> 
				  <p>Various Indian Occult and Hypnotic Ceremonies</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<unittitle>Miscellaneous Indian Stories - Reagan</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Some Drawings and Altars of Jemez, Pueblo, N.M.</p> 
				  <p>The Big Buffalo - A Deleware Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Last Stand of the Yaquis</p> 
				  <p>Why the Yaquis Are at War</p> 
				  <p>Religious Dances of the Yaqui Indians</p> 
				  <p>Indian Funeral</p> 
				  <p>The McMurry Indian Contracts and the Gore Investigation</p> 
				  <p>The San Felipe Indians</p> 
				  <p>The Ysleta Indians</p> 
				  <p>The Sandia Indians</p> 
				  <p>A Masked Dance of the Pueblo</p> 
				  <p>Miscellaneous Short Articles</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<unittitle>Miscellaneous Short Stories - Reagan</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Papers with no title</p> 
				  <p>Tradition of the Battle of Chinook (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>Tradition of the Battle of Forks Prairie (Stick-le-pe)</p> 
				  <p>Tradition of the Battle of Chemaum, New Port Townsend
					 (Klekabuck)</p> 
				  <p>Myths about Kwatte and about Kwatte and Duakia</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Putting the Sun in the Heavens (Sailto)</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte and the Sumbus Whale</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte and the Creation of Human Beings</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Kills the Man-Eating Shark</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Trying to Sell His Adopted Daughters</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Has a Battle with the Fernis Wolf</p> 
				  <p>Duskia Attempts to Roast the Children so She Can Eat Them and
					 is Herself Cremated</p> 
				  <p>Duskia is Killed by the Slaves of the Rainbow</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte and Duskia</p> 
				  <p>Myths About the Thunder Bird</p> 
				  <p>The Mink Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Medicine-Myth or the Gods Punish Medicine Men Who Use
					 Their Tomaneous to Kill People</p> 
				  <p>The Kad-da-dol-ka Myth</p> 
				  <p>Myth About the Bear and the Raven</p> 
				  <p>The Duck Myth, the Origin of the Bright Colored Feathers of
					 Birds, Etc. (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>The Civiliziing Myth (Kaliar)</p> 
				  <p>The Eagle Myth (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>Scolds So Much (Bucket Mason)</p> 
				  <p>Myth About Mr. Bear and the Fish Trip (Sheshecoop)</p> 
				  <p>The Deer and the Wolf (Sheshecoop)</p> 
				  <p>Myth About the Winter Wren and the Elk (Dickson Payne)</p> 
				  <p>Myth About the Raven</p> 
				  <p>Another Myth About the Raven (Sheshecoop)</p> 
				  <p>Whale-Bear Myth (Police Hobucket)</p> 
				  <p>A West Coast Indian Myth (Carl Black)</p> 
				  <p>The Rape of the Daughter of the Mother Earth (Klekabusk)</p> 
				  <p>The Carpenter-Hunter Myth (Pcht Jack)</p> 
				  <p>Another Myth About the Raven</p> 
				  <p>Thunderbird is Beaten in a Spear-Ball Contest</p> 
				  <p>A Myth About Raven and Eagle</p> 
				  <p>A Hoh version of the Myth About Raven and Eagle</p> 
				  <p>The Rabbit, Goosander Duck, and the East Wind</p> 
				  <p>That Arrow Ladder</p> 
				  <p>A Myth About Two Young Ladies, War in Heaven, and How the
					 Great Bear and the Lesser Bear Came to be Stars</p> 
				  <p>Why the Mole is Blind</p> 
				  <p>A Marriage Myth of the Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>The Deer and the Wolf</p> 
				  <p>A Story of the Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>Story of a 'Tomanawis' Elk Hunter</p> 
				  <p>Myth About the Tomanawuis&quot; Belt</p> 
				  <p>The Raven and the Goose</p> 
				  <p>Another Wolf-Deer Myth</p> 
				  <p>Wabush is Saved by the Slaves of Rainbow - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>Why the Fish, Birds and Animals are now Scattered Over the
					 Whole Earth</p> 
				  <p>West Coast Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>How the Raven's Nasal Openings Came to be</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Goes to the Happy Land</p> 
				  <p>Why the Raven is Now a Bird</p> 
				  <p>The Fox and the Lizard</p> 
				  <p>The Whale-Bear Myth</p> 
				  <p>How the Raven Got His Crooked Nose</p> 
				  <p>Why we Now Have Tides</p> 
				  <p>Eagle Gets Even with Raven</p> 
				  <p>How the Raven's Nasal Openings Came to be</p> 
				  <p>Why the Whale and Porpoise Live in the Sea and the Wren is so
					 Small</p> 
				  <p>Puberty Customs</p> 
				  <p>Marriage Ceremonies</p> 
				  <p>Native Medicines</p> 
				  <p>To-mana-wis of Cheif Cha-me-tsot</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<unittitle>Indian Myths - Reagan</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>A Caddo Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>A Cora Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>An Arikara Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>Indian Tales</p> 
				  <p>The Pottery Myth of the Nett Lake Indians, Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>That Double Headed Monster</p> 
				  <p>An Indian Myth About an Extinct Monster</p> 
				  <p>The Kahl-dah-dol-kwa Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Falling Star Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Marriage Ceremony of the Navajos - Not a Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Fox and the Lobster</p> 
				  <p>A weasel Myth</p> 
				  <p>Why the Crow is Now a Bird - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Creation of Man</p> 
				  <p>The Elephant Feet - A Hope Legend</p> 
				  <p>Picture Island</p> 
				  <p>Why the Chipmunks have Strips on their Backs</p> 
				  <p>The Crawfish and the Raccoon</p> 
				  <p>Hatzo</p> 
				  <p>Indian Tales</p> 
				  <p>Toncha</p> 
				  <p>Forget-Me-Not</p> 
				  <p>The Wanton Hunter</p> 
				  <p>The Beautiful Sun - Beloved Maiden</p> 
				  <p>An Old Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Magic Pot</p> 
				  <p>The Seven Stars of the Great Dipper</p> 
				  <p>The Sacred Zuni Lakes and Springs</p> 
				  <p>The Beautiful Apples</p> 
				  <p>A Zuni Myth</p> 
				  <p>Religious Beliefs of the Kickapoo</p> 
				  <p>An Indian Myth About an Extinct Mammal of Monstrous Size</p> 
				  <p>How Cassipoa's Chair Came to Be</p> 
				  <p>The Story of the Bones</p> 
				  <p>How the Secondary Rainbow Came to be</p> 
				  <p>Why the Mole is Blind</p> 
				  <p>Why the Deer Flees When Anyone Approaches It</p> 
				  <p>Why the Blue Jay Scolds So Much</p> 
				  <p>Bear's Meddling</p> 
				  <p>Rabbit and North Wind</p> 
				  <p>The Winter Wren and the Elk</p> 
				  <p>Sleep and Raven</p> 
				  <p>Another Raven Myth</p> 
				  <p>Another West Coast Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>Daughter of Mother Earth</p> 
				  <p>The Carpenter - Hunter Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Raven - Another Myth</p> 
				  <p>Mount Baker and Thunderbird - A Lummi Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>Tradition of the First Coming of the White People to
					 Quillayute</p> 
				  <p>Tradition of the First Coming of the White People to
					 Bellingham Bay</p> 
				  <p>Tradition About Chief Cha-ma-tsot's &quot;Potlatch&quot; Hall
					 and Its Totem Drawings</p> 
				  <p>How the Squirrel Became Such a Climber</p> 
				  <p>How the Ant Came to Be</p> 
				  <p>Tradition of the Wreck of the &quot;Southern&quot;</p> 
				  <p>Why the Medicinal Springs and Salt Lakes Near the New Mexico -
					 Arizona Boundary Line are Salty</p> 
				  <p>Mother Nature - A Paiute Legend</p> 
				  <p>Why the Mole is Blind</p> 
				  <p>Calling Back the Sun, A Winter Solstice Ceremony of the Hopi
					 Indians0</p> 
				  <p>Calling Back the Sun</p> 
				  <p>The Indian and the Diamond - A Chippewa Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Muskrat and the Beaver (Changing Tails) - A Chippewa
					 Myth</p> 
				  <p>How the Raven Got His Crooked Nose</p> 
				  <p>The Petrified Wood Myth (And the Petrified Wood Itself)</p> 
				  <p>The Meteor Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Fox and the Bear</p> 
				  <p>How the Country From Duluth to the Rainy Lake Region Was
					 Formed</p> 
				  <p>How the Mesabe and Giant Ranges Were Formed</p> 
				  <p>An Aztec Tradition</p> 
				  <p>The Elk-Cougar Myth</p> 
				  <p>How the People of Earth Obtained Fire</p> 
				  <p>Prince Badger</p> 
				  <p>The Indian Preacher - A Chippewa Tradition</p> 
				  <p>The Marriage Ceremonies of the Navajos - Not a Myth</p> 
				  <p>Be Kind to Animals - An Alaskan Legend</p> 
				  <p>Why the Beasts, Fish and Birds are Now so Scattered</p> 
				  <p>The Origin of Moss</p> 
				  <p>Ne-gon-nan-quod</p> 
				  <p>The Moon and Her Dark Enemy</p> 
				  <p>A Bois Fort Chippewa Myth</p> 
				  <p>Chasing the Rainbow</p> 
				  <p>The Monster Fish of Lake Simcoe</p> 
				  <p>Two Fish</p> 
				  <p>The Cause of the Tides</p> 
				  <p>Bear's Meddling</p> 
				  <p>The Ute Legion of Creation</p> 
				  <p>The Great Man of Tongue Point (Near the Present Tower,
					 Minnesota)</p> 
				  <p>Selfish Dodokwal</p> 
				  <p>The Rainbow House</p> 
				  <p>The Petrified Wood Myth (And the Petrified Wood Itself)</p> 
				  <p>An Indian Myth About and Exticnt Monster</p> 
				  <p>The Muskrat and the Beaver (Changing Tails)</p> 
				  <p>The Indian and the Diamond</p> 
				  <p>The Rabbit and the Lynx</p> 
				  <p>Myth About the Jars: Or, the Gift fo the Jars</p> 
				  <p>How the Country From Duluth to the Rainy Lake Region,
					 Minnesota, was Formed</p> 
				  <p>Those Two Rabbits - Not a Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Elephant Feet</p> 
				  <p>Calling Back the Sun, a Winter Solstice Ceremony of the Hopi
					 Indians - Not a Myth</p> 
				  <p>Why the Medicinal Springs and Salt Lakes Near the New Mexico -
					 Arizona Boundary Lines are Salty</p> 
				  <p>The Pottery Myth of the Nett Lake Indians</p> 
				  <p>Finding a True Friend - Not a Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Whale - Bear Myth</p> 
				  <p>Myth About the Moon Mother and the Bear</p> 
				  <p>The Pied Piper of the Indians</p> 
				  <p>Squirrel and Crow</p> 
				  <p>The Origin Story of the Pueblos</p> 
				  <p>Mother Nature</p> 
				  <p>An Indian Villiage in a Jug - Not a Myth</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<unittitle>Portions of an Indian Dictionary</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<container type="box">7</container> 
				<unittitle>Indian Drawings</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<container type="box">8</container> 
				<unittitle>Use of Plants by Indians Known to the Writer</unittitle>
				
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<unittitle>Indian Dances and Games, Descriptions and
				  Charts</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Some Notes on the O-ge-che-dah, or Head-Man Dance of the Bois
					 Fort Indians</p> 
				  <p>Descriptions of Drawing, Giving Positions of the Actors</p> 
				  <p>Diagram of Movements Made in Establishing an Alter</p> 
				  <p>Diagram of the Apache Wheel Dance</p> 
				  <p>The Bowl Game</p> 
				  <p>The Beaver Teeth Game</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<unittitle>The Jemez Indians</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<unittitle>Unidentified Indian Vocabulary</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<unittitle>Historic Review of Indians in the U.S., Alaska
				  excepted</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<unittitle>Fiction, Autobiographical and Non-Indian -
				  Reagan</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>The Two Shoplifters</p> 
				  <p>Lumbering in Northern Minnesota and Adjancent British
					 Territory</p> 
				  <p>Capital Punishment</p> 
				  <p>The Person Who Looks Like Me</p> 
				  <p>The Greatest Tighwad I Ever Knew</p> 
				  <p>The Queerest Man I Ever Worked For</p> 
				  <p>Personal Touch in Teaching</p> 
				  <p>Unidentified Manuscript</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<unittitle>Fiction, Autobiographical and Non-Indian -
				  Reagan</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Whistling Wind</p> 
				  <p>Cured by Indian &quot;Science&quot;</p> 
				  <p>Scenario</p> 
				  <p>The Military Status of Japan and Her Present Aims</p> 
				  <p>My Vacation</p> 
				  <p>Summary of Glacial Literature Relating to Glacial Deposits</p>
				  
				  <p>Hunting Deer in Northern Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>Prosperity Forcast for 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">1932</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>At Home in St. Louis is Better Than a Kingdom on the Planet
					 Pluto</p> 
				  <p>Plenty of Dough</p> 
				  <p>The Negro and Making Ice</p> 
				  <p>The Best Joke I Ever Heard</p> 
				  <p>Couldn't Change It</p> 
				  <p>It Just Vanished</p> 
				  <p>My First Kiss</p> 
				  <p>The Stingiest Person I Ever Knew</p> 
				  <p>A Score for the School Master</p> 
				  <p>A Race for Love</p> 
				  <p>Far Better than Riches</p> 
				  <p>That Rattle-Snake Rattle</p> 
				  <p>Who Made teh Kayenta-National Monument Ruins</p> 
				  <p>The Most Interesting Place I Ever Visited</p> 
				  <p>God May But I Can't</p> 
				  <p>Who Or What Am I</p> 
				  <p>Guess Who I Am</p> 
				  <p>Who Am I</p> 
				  <p>Another Use of the Tongue</p> 
				  <p>Armored</p> 
				  <p>What Am I?</p> 
				  <p>What Is It?</p> 
				  <p>Have You Seen Us?</p> 
				  <p>Guess Who I Am?</p> 
				  <p>The Guessing Game</p> 
				  <p>The Impression Stunt</p> 
				  <p>Seeing Things</p> 
				  <p>Looking Through Your Hand</p> 
				  <p>The Floating Needle</p> 
				  <p>Looking Through Your Hand</p> 
				  <p>The Floating Needle</p> 
				  <p>The Spinning Forks</p> 
				  <p>The Inverted Glass Stunt</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<container type="box">7</container> 
				<unittitle>Fiction, Autobiographical and Non-Indian Writing -
				  Reagan</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>The Mystery of Moro Grove</p> 
				  <p>My Narrowest Escape from Death</p> 
				  <p>The Lady of Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>Indian Fiction (?)</p> 
				  <p>The Profound Abyss</p> 
				  <p>Sunset Peak</p> 
				  <p>The White House, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Tumacacori</p> 
				  <p>The Bad Lands</p> 
				  <p>The White House, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>The Trip is Real Wonderland</p> 
				  <p>The Famous Montezuma's Castle and the Equally Wonderful
					 Montezuma's Well</p> 
				  <p>Some of the World's Greatest Monuments</p> 
				  <p>Sunset Peak</p> 
				  <p>The Roosevelt Dam, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Petrified Forests of Arizona</p> 
				  <p>My Home</p> 
				  <p>C-30 and Her Home</p> 
				  <p>The Great Captain, A Recorder fo the Time Immense</p> 
				  <p>The Second Largest Canyon in the World</p> 
				  <p>Hunting in the Northern Lake Country of Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>My Hobby</p> 
				  <p>How I Made Extra Money</p> 
				  <p>Unidentified Manuscript</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<container type="box">8</container> 
				<unittitle>History of Germany</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<container type="box">9</container> 
				<unittitle>In the Wake of the Dark Star</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<unittitle>Washington Indians - Miscellaneous</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<unittitle>Indian Myths - Northwest</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Miscellaneous Papers</p> 
				  <p>Mythology - Mt. Baner</p> 
				  <p>Birth Ceremonies</p> 
				  <p>Puberty Customs</p> 
				  <p>A Battel with the Makahs (Klekabuck)</p> 
				  <p>A Journey to the Adobe of the Dead (Klekabuck)</p> 
				  <p>Bury the Dead</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte and Duskia (Sailto)</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Puts the Sun Up in the Sky to Shine on All the
					 World</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<unittitle>Trial Exhibits 
				  <unitdate type="inclusive">1893</unitdate>(Unknown origin,
				  probably Washington State)</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<unittitle>Quiluete Day School, LaPush, Washington, &quot;Old
				  Story&quot; by students</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<unittitle>Indian Stories and Games Collected by Reagan at LaPush,
				  Washington</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<unittitle>Washington - Reagan. Some Myths of the Hoh and Quileute
				  Indians</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>How the Headlines and Promotions of the Olympic Peninsula Were
					 Formed</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Kills Duskia</p> 
				  <p>The Story of Duskia and Her Daughters</p> 
				  <p>A Son is Born to Kwattee</p> 
				  <p>Kwattee Gives Birth to a Son (Another version of the last
					 myth)</p> 
				  <p>Kwattee, The Bees, and the Girls</p> 
				  <p>Kwattee and the Fire-Stick Girls</p> 
				  <p>Story About the Rocky-Islets at the Mouth of the Quillayute
					 River, Washington</p> 
				  <p>Kwattee's Honeymoon</p> 
				  <p>Myth About Twin Rocks, and the Death of Kwattee</p> 
				  <p>The Deer and the Wolf</p> 
				  <p>The Story of the Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>Story of a &quot;Tomanawis&quot; Elk Hunter</p> 
				  <p>Myth About the &quot;Tomanawis&quot; Belt</p> 
				  <p>The Raven and the Goose</p> 
				  <p>A Myth of the Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>How the Raven's Nostril Openings Came to be</p> 
				  <p>Why the Skate-Fish is Not Good to Eat</p> 
				  <p>Tustus</p> 
				  <p>Kweetsit; or, Not Enough to Eat</p> 
				  <p>Another Wolf-Deer Myth (or, One Should Not Laugh at
					 Others)</p> 
				  <p>A Myth About Killing Elk with &quot;Tomanawis&quot;</p> 
				  <p>How the Upper Trap People &quot;Got Even&quot; with the Lower
					 People</p> 
				  <p>The Story of Crescent Lake</p> 
				  <p>Why the Raven is Now a Bird</p> 
				  <p>How Cassiopa's Chair Came to Be</p> 
				  <p>The Fire Woman and the Stone-Skinned Child</p> 
				  <p>A Myth About Why the Blue Jay Scolds So Much</p> 
				  <p>Rabbit and East-Cold-Wind</p> 
				  <p>A Myth About the Winter Wren and the Elk</p> 
				  <p>Myth About the Raven</p> 
				  <p>Another Myth About the Raven</p> 
				  <p>The Civilizing Myth</p> 
				  <p>Another Raven-Eagle Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Meteor Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Mink Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Medicine Myth or The Gods Punish Medicine Men Who Use
					 Their &quot;Tomanawis&quot; To Kill People</p> 
				  <p>The<emph render="underline">Kahd-dah-dol-kwa</emph>Myth</p> 
				  <p>Myth About the Bear and the Raven</p> 
				  <p>The Story of How People Courted in the Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>How the Squirrel Became Such a Climber</p> 
				  <p>Why the Raven is Now a Bird</p> 
				  <p>How the Ant Came to Be</p> 
				  <p>The Raven and the Deer</p> 
				  <p>The Whale Tooth Myth</p> 
				  <p>A Hoh Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Thunderbird Myth</p> 
				  <p>Duskia is Killed by the Slaves of Rainbow</p> 
				  <p>Animals, Reptiles, and Amphibians of the Rosebud Indian
					 Reservation, South Dakota</p> 
				  <p>Thunderbird is beaten in a Spear-Ball Contest</p> 
				  <p>The Whale-Bear Myth</p> 
				  <p>A Myth About Raven and Eagle</p> 
				  <p>A Hoh Version of the Myth About Raven and Eagle</p> 
				  <p>That Arrow Ladder</p> 
				  <p>A Myth About Two Young Ladies, War in Heaven, and How the
					 Great Bear and the Lesser Bear Came to Be Stars</p> 
				  <p>Why the Mole is Blind</p> 
				  <p>A Marriage Myth of Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>The Deer and the Wolf</p> 
				  <p>Battle of Chinook</p> 
				  <p>Battle of Nittinat</p> 
				  <p>Battle of Neah Bay, Warm House, and Ozette</p> 
				  <p>Battel of Ahkalot (James Island) At Quiluete, now Known as
					 LaPush</p> 
				  <p>The Battle of Queets</p> 
				  <p>How a Quileute Chief Got a Clallam Wife</p> 
				  <p>Another Conflict with teh Makahs</p> 
				  <p>Second Battle of Chinook</p> 
				  <p>The Battle of Forks Praire</p> 
				  <p>The Battle of Pekillum on the West Coast of Vancouver
					 Island</p> 
				  <p>Another Battle with the Makahs (Related by Klekabuck)</p> 
				  <p>The First Coming of the White People to Quileute</p> 
				  <p>A Story of the Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>Story of a &quot;Tomanawis&quot; Elk Hunter</p> 
				  <p>Myth About a &quot;Tomanawis&quot; Belt</p> 
				  <p>The Raven and the Goose</p> 
				  <p>A Myth of the Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>How the Secondary Rainbow Came to be</p> 
				  <p>How the Raven's Nostril-Opening Came to be</p> 
				  <p>Why the Skate-Fish is Not Good to Eat</p> 
				  <p>Tricky Raven and Tricky Crow</p> 
				  <p>Tustus</p> 
				  <p>Kweetsit; or, Not-Enough-To-Eat</p> 
				  <p>Another Wolf-Deer Myth (or, One Should Not Laugh at
					 Others)</p> 
				  <p>A Myth About Killing Elk with &quot;Tomanawis&quot;</p> 
				  <p>How the Uppper Trap People Got Even With the Lower Trap
					 People</p> 
				  <p>How Cassiopa's Chair Came to Be</p> 
				  <p>The Fire Woman and the Stone-Skinned Child</p> 
				  <p>Duskia is Killed by the Slaves of the Rainbow</p> 
				  <p>Another Whale-Bear Myth</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Makes the Three Faces of Men</p> 
				  <p>Another Myth About the Animals Fighting with the Star</p> 
				  <p>A Lummi Myth About Mt. Baker and the Thunderbird</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte and the Fire-Stick Girls</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte, The Bees, and the Girls</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Gives Birth to a Son</p> 
				  <p>A Son is Born to Kwatte</p> 
				  <p>The Story of Duskia and her Daughters</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Kills Duskia</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<container type="box">7</container> 
				<unittitle>Washington - Reagan</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>List of Indian Doctors at LaPush</p> 
				  <p>Shakerism</p> 
				  <p>The Potlatch</p> 
				  <p>Sketches of Indian Life and Character</p> 
				  <p>The First Coming of the White People to Quileute</p> 
				  <p>The Quileute Children's Pastime</p> 
				  <p>Birth Ceremonies</p> 
				  <p>Miscellaneous Notes</p> 
				  <p>Ow-Ow's Story About Canning</p> 
				  <p>The Lummd Indians of Washington</p> 
				  <p>Hoh-Quillayute Indians. Effects of Shakerism on the Quillayute
					 Day School, as observed in 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">1907</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>Docas' Story about Twin Rocks</p> 
				  <p>Trip Among the Bird Island of the Pacific Coast of
					 Washington</p> 
				  <p>My Vacation in the Olympic Peninsula, Washington</p> 
				  <p>Left Handed Indians of the Neah Bay Agency, Washington 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">1906</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>Hoh - Quillayute Indians. Physical Diognosis: Miscellaneous
					 Notes (Taken in 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">1906</unitdate>)</p> 
				  <p>Quillayute - Hoh Indians Measurements and Physical
					 Diagnosis</p> 
				  <p>Some Myths of the Hoh and Quileute Indians (abstract)</p> 
				  <p>Some Quileute Indian Myths and Traditions, etc.</p> 
				  <p>The Arrow Myth (Police Hobucket)</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte and the Whale (Police Luke Hobucket)</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Makes Man (Talcus Eastman)</p> 
				  <p>Burying the Dead</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Kills Duskia (Sailto)</p> 
				  <p>The Doctoring of an Old Woman</p> 
				  <p>The Medicine Doctors' Deceiving People (Luke Hobucket)</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Puts the Sun Up in the Sky to Shine on All the World
					 (Klekabuck)</p> 
				  <p>A Battle with the Makahs (Klekabuck)</p> 
				  <p>A Journey to the Abode of the Dead (Klekabuck)</p> 
				  <p>Burying the Dead (Klekabuck)</p> 
				  <p>The Elk Dance</p> 
				  <p>The Whale Dance</p> 
				  <p>Myth About the Origin of Cassiopea's Chair in the Heavens</p> 
				  <p>The Devil Fish Drowns Duskia (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>Why the Raven is Now a Bird (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>The Fire Woman and the Ston-Skinned Child (Elon Mason)</p> 
				  <p>Some Quillayute Myths:</p> 
				  <p>How the Ant Came to Be</p> 
				  <p>One of the Many Quillayute Thunder Bird Myths</p> 
				  <p>How the Indians Lived at Quillayute in the Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>How the Young People Courted in Old Times (Hal George)</p> 
				  <p>How the Squirrel Became Such A Climber (Related by Johnson
					 Black)</p> 
				  <p>An Old Story (Related by Hal George)</p> 
				  <p>How the Indians Useed to Kill the Elk (Rex Raymond Ward)</p> 
				  <p>An Old Story (Eli Ward)</p> 
				  <p>Some Archeological Notes on Western Washington and Adjacent
					 British Territory</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<container type="box">8</container> 
				<unittitle>Some Notes on the Olympic Peninsula,
				  Washington</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<container type="box">9</container> 
				<unittitle>Kwatte Cycle - Washington</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Table of Contents</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Kills the Subbus Whale</p> 
				  <p>How the Headlines and Promotions of the Olympic Peninsula were
					 Formed</p> 
				  <p>An Ozette Version of How the Headlines and Promotories of the
					 Olympic Peninsula were Formed</p> 
				  <p>The Myth About the Returned Spirits, Concluding With Another
					 Story About the Killing of Subbus</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Kills the Elder Thunder Bird, Rescues His Brother, and
					 Puts the Sun Up in the Sky</p> 
				  <p>Another Version About Kwatte's Putting the Sun Up in the
					 Sky</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Makes Man</p> 
				  <p>Another Version of Kwatte's Creation of Human Beings</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Tries to Sell His Adopted Daughters</p> 
				  <p>Another Story of Kwatte and Duskia</p> 
				  <p>Why the Indian Canaoe is Shaped Like It Is</p> 
				  <p>Kwatee Transforms the Things of Earth to Fit Their Proper
					 Use</p> 
				  <p>A Hoh Version of the Thunderbird Myth</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Changes Man to His Present Form</p> 
				  <p>A West Coast Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Rape of the Daughter of the Mother Earth</p> 
				  <p>The Carpenter-Hunter Myth</p> 
				  <p>Another Myth About the Raven</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<container type="box">10</container> 
				<unittitle>Quileute - Hoh Indians, Measurements and Physical
				  Diagnosis</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<unittitle>Bois Fort - Miscellaneous</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Big Parchment</p> 
				  <p>H.R. 20881 - A Bill Authoritizing the Establishment of an
					 Indian Boarding School in Minnesota out of Funds Belonging to the Chippewa
					 Indians of Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>The Sun-Shirt</p> 
				  <p>Farmer John, The Medicine Lodge Parchment</p> 
				  <p>Anakomigenung's Medicine Lodge Parchment (Andy Fields)</p> 
				  <p>Farmer John's Sky Manido Wigwam Medicine Lodge</p> 
				  <p>Dance of the Dreamers</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<unittitle>Minnesota Twenty-five Ojibwa Songs Sung by
				  Ne-ba-day-ke-shi-go-kay (George Farmer)</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<unittitle>Minnesota Bois Fort and Rainy Lake Indian
				  Names</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<unittitle>Minnesota Indian Stories</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Manabush Takes a Ride on a Beautiful Bird</p> 
				  <p>Picture Island and Its Pictographs, and Mythical History</p> 
				  <p>The Society of Dreamers and the O-ge-che-dah, or Headsmen
					 Dance of the Bois Fort (Ojibwa) Indians of Nett Lake, Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>Ogeshedah Song, Stanza No. 1</p> 
				  <p>The Society of Dreamers</p> 
				  <p>Explanation of the Drawing giving Position of the Actors</p> 
				  <p>Somewhat Similar Games of Other Indians Seen by the Writer</p>
				  
				  <p>The Pay-Gay-Say or Bowl Game</p> 
				  <p>A Ritual Parchment and Certain Historical Charts of the Bois
					 Fort Ojibwa of Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>Indian Tales:</p> 
				  <p>Chief Moses Day Daybwaywaindug's Medicine Bark (History Chart)
					 Parchment, With His Interpretation of the Glyphs on Same</p> 
				  <p>Pete Martin's and Farmer John's Medicine Bark Parchment</p> 
				  <p>Red Medicine Dance Wigwam Parchment</p> 
				  <p>Description of Dance, etc.</p> 
				  <p>Chief Moses Day Daybwaywaindug's Medicine Bark (History Chart)
					 Parchment, With His Interpretation of the Glyphs on Same</p> 
				  <p>A Ritual Parchment and Certain Historical Charts of the Bois
					 Fort Ojibwa of Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>The Grand Medicine Society of the Bois Fort Indians and Andy
					 Fields An-Ako-Mige-Nung's Birch Bark Medicine Lodge Parchment</p> 
				  <p>The Moccasin Game of the Bois Fort Chippewas</p> 
				  <p>The Snow Snake Game</p> 
				  <p>Tshe-she-mon, or the Children's Snow Snake Game</p> 
				  <p>The Snow Stick, or Quash-quay-she mung</p> 
				  <p>Shinny</p> 
				  <p>&quot;Ball Game&quot;</p> 
				  <p>Double Ball, or Push-kah-wan</p> 
				  <p>LaCrosse</p> 
				  <p>Rules for counting the points</p> 
				  <p>Sha-mah-ke-way-be-ne-koh-nung, or the Children's Game</p> 
				  <p>The Bowl Game, or Ojibwa Dice Game</p> 
				  <p>The Ken-not-tah-hah Game of the Apaches</p> 
				  <p>The Bois Fort Indian Reservation in Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>Quelquis Plantes Du Bois Fort; Reserve Indienne; Dans l'etat
					 Minnesota Aux Estats-Unix</p> 
				  <p>Index to Census 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">1908</unitdate>, Bois Fort Band of
					 Chippewas in Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>Census of Bois Fort Band of Chippewas of Minnesota, 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">1909</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>The Grand Medicine Society of the Bois Fort Indians</p> 
				  <p>Andy Fields An-a-ka-me-ge-nung's Birch Bark, Medicine Lodge
					 Parchment</p> 
				  <p>Requirements of the Lodge</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<unittitle>Lady of Minnesota (Complete Carbon Copy)</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<unittitle>Bois Fort Indians, Manuscript</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<container type="box">7</container> 
				<unittitle>Bois Fort Indians, Manuscript No. 2</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<container type="box">8</container> 
				<unittitle>Myths About the Pictographs on Minnesota's
				  Picutre:</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Island in Nett Lake, Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>Myth About Manabush's Being the Great Spirit</p> 
				  <p>The Flood Myth - A Traditional Recital of Manabush's
					 Overcoming the Sea Lion-Snake Gods</p> 
				  <p>Manabush is Feasted</p> 
				  <p>Honesty Pays; It Also Pays to Follow Instructions</p> 
				  <p>Manabush Takes a Journey</p> 
				  <p>Manabush Goes Visiting</p> 
				  <p>The Drowning of Manabush</p> 
				  <p>Manabush Takes a Ride on a Beautiful Bird</p> 
				  <p>Manabush &quot;Gets Even&quot;</p> 
				  <p>Exploits of Paush-ke-ne-au-ne-ke-shig</p> 
				  <p>Lodges and Dance Ceremonies</p> 
				  <p>The Bois Fort Chippewas</p> 
				  <p>Some Myths and Traditions of the Bois Fort Chippewas</p> 
				  <p>The Flood Myth - A Traditional Recital of Manabush's
					 Overcoming the Sea-Lion_Snake Gods</p> 
				  <p>Manabush is Feasted</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<container type="box">9</container> 
				<unittitle>Minnesota - Some Myths of the Bois Fort
				  Chippewas</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Honesty Pays; It Also Pays to Follow Instructions</p> 
				  <p>Manabush Takes a Journey</p> 
				  <p>The Drowning of Manabush</p> 
				  <p>Manabush Takes a Ride on a Beautiful Bird</p> 
				  <p>Manabush &quot;Gets Even&quot;</p> 
				  <p>Exploits of Paush-ke-ne-au-ne-ke-shig</p> 
				  <p>A Fish Story of the Long Ago</p> 
				  <p>The Pottery Myth</p> 
				  <p>Manabush Goes Visiting</p> 
				  <p>The &quot;Big Moose&quot;</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<unittitle>Census of the Uncompahgre Ute Indians of Ourah Agency,
				  Utah. 
				  <unitdate type="inclusive">July 1, 1901</unitdate></unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<unittitle>The Pictographs of Ashley and Dry Fork Valleys in
				  Northeastern Utah</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<unittitle>The Anciently Inhabited Caves of Ashley and Dry Fork
				  Valleys, in Northeastern Utah</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<unittitle>Uncompahgre Ute Annuity Roll, n.d.</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<unittitle>Pictographs and Maps (Uinta? Apache region?)</unittitle>
				
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<unittitle>Utah Material - B.Y.U. Period</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Fort Carson - Robidoux and Other Places of Interest at Ouray,
					 Utah</p> 
				  <p>The Utah Lake Mounds</p> 
				  <p>Pictographs and Petroglyphs Examined by teh Archaeology Class
					 in the Fall of 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">1934</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>Pictographs in the Vicinity of Goshen</p> 
				  <p>Pictographs from Lincoln Beach, Southwest of Utah Lake, Near
					 Provo, Utah County, Utah</p> 
				  <p>Field Work - Mounds</p> 
				  <p>Farmer John's Sky Manido Wigwam Medicine Lodge</p> 
				  <p>The Utah Lake Mounds</p> 
				  <p>An Added Note to the Description of Fort Kit Carson</p> 
				  <p>Further Notes on &quot;Indian Writings&quot;</p> 
				  <p>Some Notes on an Ancient Culture of the Provo-Salt Lake
					 Region</p> 
				  <p>Indian Myths Indicates that the Mammoth was a Contemporary of
					 Ancient Man in America</p> 
				  <p>Valuable Archaeological Collection Obtained from Nephi</p> 
				  <p>Pictographs in Nine Miles Canyon</p> 
				  <p>Pictographs and Petroglyphs Examined by the Archaeological
					 Class in the Fall of 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">1934</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>Archaeological Report of Field Work for 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">1934</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>Nine-Mile Canyon - Green River Trip</p> 
				  <p>Pictographs in Nine Mile Canyon</p> 
				  <p>Pictographs and Petroglyphs Examined by the Archaeological
					 Class in Utah Valley in the Fall of 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">1934</unitdate></p> 
				  <p>Pictographs in the Vicinity of Goshen</p> 
				  <p>Petroglyphs in the Environs of Santiquin</p> 
				  <p>The Cedar Fort Pictographs</p> 
				  <p>The Red Cut Pictographs Field Work - Mounds</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<container type="box">7</container> 
				<unittitle>Uncompahgre Ute Indians Census, 
				  <unitdate type="inclusive">June 20, 1912</unitdate></unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<container type="box">8</container> 
				<unittitle>Brush Creek Valley, Utah</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Some Archeological Notes on the Brush Creek Region, in
					 Northeastern Utah</p> 
				  <p>The Square House Ruins of Brush Creek Valley, Utah</p> 
				  <p>The Long-Forgotten People of Brush Creek Valley, Utah</p> 
				  <p>The Ancient Agriculture of Brush Creek Valley, in Northeastern
					 Utah</p> 
				  <p>Some Archeological Notes on the Brush Creek Region, in
					 Northeastern Utah</p> 
				  <p>Map of the Brush Creek Region East of Vernal, in Northeastern
					 Utah</p> 
				  <p>The Ancient House People of Brush Creek Region in Northeastern
					 Utah</p> 
				  <p>Some Notes on the Ancient Earth-Lodge Peoples of the Uintah
					 Basin, Utah</p> 
				  <p>The Square House Ruins of Brush Creek Valley, Utah</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<container type="box">9</container> 
				<unittitle>Ouray - Correspondence, 
				  <unitdate type="inclusive">1930-1933</unitdate></unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<container type="box">10</container> 
				<unittitle>Preliminary Notes on the Archeology of Ashley Valley and
				  Environs, Utah. (Some Notes on the Archeology of Ashley and Dry Fork Valleys,
				  in Northeastern Utah)</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Two Rock Pictures and their Probable Connection with the
					 &quot;Pied Piper&quot; Myth of the Indians</p> 
				  <p>Some Notes on the Caves and Ruins in Ashley and Dry Fork
					 Valleys and Adjoining Territory in Northeastern Utah</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">7</container> 
				<container type="box">1</container> 
				<unittitle>Utah - Reagan</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Some Archeolgical Notes on Hill Canyon in Northeastern
					 Utah</p> 
				  <p>Ruins in Nine Mile Canyon, Utah</p> 
				  <p>A Recent Find in Nine Mile Canyon</p> 
				  <p>Eleven Little Indian Villages, Dating Back to the Dawn of the
					 Pueblo Age, in Ashley Valley and Adjacent Territory, in the Uintah Basin, in
					 Northeastern Utah</p> 
				  <p>Summary of Utah Archeological Work</p> 
				  <p>Utah's Great Natural Bridge</p> 
				  <p>Ancient Head Hunters in the Uintah Basin in Northeastern
					 Utah</p> 
				  <p>Anciently Inhabited Caves Near Vernal, Utah</p> 
				  <p>Archeological Finds in Northeastern Utah</p> 
				  <p>Summary of Archeological Finds in the Uintah Basin in
					 Northeastern Utah</p> 
				  <p>The Ancient &quot;Rock Writings&quot; of Ashley and Dry Fork
					 Valleys in Northeastern Utah</p> 
				  <p>Uintah Basin History</p> 
				  <p>Bear Dance of the Ute Indians</p> 
				  <p>Some Games of the Northeastern Utes: &quot;Up Jinks&quot;
					 Game; Hand Game; Ute Stick Game</p> 
				  <p>The Gosiute (Goshute), or Shoshoni-Goship Indians of the Deep
					 Creek Region in Western Utah</p> 
				  <p>Some Notes on an Ancient Culture of the Provo-Salt Lake
					 Region</p> 
				  <p>Preliminary Notes on the Archeology of Ashley Valley and
					 Environs, Utah</p> 
				  <p>Additional Archeological Notes on the Uintah Basin in Utah</p>
				  
				  <p>Hunting in the Uintah Basin, Utah, Now and Thirty-Five Hundred
					 Years Ago</p> 
				  <p>Archeological Work in the Uintah Basin in Utah for the year
					 1933</p> 
				  <p>Bear Dance of the Ute Indians</p> 
				  <p>Correlation of the Archaeolical Finds in the Uintah Basin in
					 Utah</p> 
				  <p>The Uintah-Ouray Bear Dance</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">7</container> 
				<container type="box">2</container> 
				<unittitle>Utah - Reagan</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>The Deep Creek Region in Western Utah</p> 
				  <p>Geology of the Deep Creek Reservation, Utah</p> 
				  <p>The Deep Creek Reservation and Its Indians</p> 
				  <p>The Shoshoni - Goship Indians</p> 
				  <p>In the Third Judicial District Court in and for the County of
					 Tooele, State of Utah</p> 
				  <p>The Great Wealth of the Deep Creek region, Utah</p> 
				  <p>The Shoshoni-Goship Indians</p> 
				  <p>In the Third Judicial District Court in and for the County of
					 Tooele, State of Utah</p> 
				  <p>The Shoshoni-Goship Indians</p> 
				  <p>Ancient Petroglyphs from Ashley and Dry Fork Canyons,
					 Northwest of Vernal, Utah</p> 
				  <p>Preliminary Notes on the Archeology of Ashley Valley and
					 Environs, Utah</p> 
				  <p>Indian Rock Writings in Ashley and Dry Fork Valleys in
					 Northeastern Utah</p> 
				  <p>Archaeological Finds in Uintah Basin in Utah</p> 
				  <p>Archaeological Notes on Florence and Chandler Canyons and Some
					 Additional Notes on Hill Canyon</p> 
				  <p>Notes on a Reconnoitering Archeological Expedition into the
					 Uitah Basin</p> 
				  <p>The Uintah Basin</p> 
				  <p>The Robidoux-Inscription</p> 
				  <p>The Kit Carson Story</p> 
				  <p>The Sage-Williams Accounts</p> 
				  <p>Fremont's Trip to the Basin</p> 
				  <p>Uintah Fort Massacre</p> 
				  <p>Additional Archeological Notes on Ashely and Dry Fork Canyons
					 in Northeastern Utah</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">7</container> 
				<container type="box">3</container> 
				<unittitle>Arizona - Reagan</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Snake House - the Home of a Forgotten People</p> 
				  <p>Various Uses of Plants by the White Mountain Apaches of
					 Arizona, the West Coast Indians and the Bois Fort Chippewas (Ojibwas) of
					 Minnesota</p> 
				  <p>The Small House and Semi-Pueblo Ruins of the Painted (and
					 Shiny Painted) Ware Series in the Cornfields-Hopi Volcanic Buttes' Field, in
					 the Navajo Country, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Chinda's Honeymoon</p> 
				  <p>The Medicine Ceremonies Performed Over the Daughter of C 2</p>
				  
				  <p>Archeology of the Cornfields District, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Notes on the Navajo Country, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Contributions to the Archeology of the Navajo Country</p> 
				  <p>The Small House Ruins of the Slab-House and Black-On-White
					 Pottery Series in the Cornfields-Hopi Volcanic Buttes' field in the Navajo
					 Country, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Concluding Report on the Archaeology of the Tuba-Kayenta
					 Region</p> 
				  <p>Archaeology of the Cornfields-Hopi Volcanic Buttes field
					 Region, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Human Habitation</p> 
				  <p>Other Ruins in Pueblo Colorado Wash Valley</p> 
				  <p>Concluding Remarks on the Ruins of the Region in Addition to
					 Those Previously Drawn from the Pottery Analysis (The &quot;conclusion&quot;
					 concerning the ruins of the Tuba-Kayenta region, Previously given, as applies,
					 in part, to the ruins of this region)</p> 
				  <p>Ruin 230</p> 
				  <p>Archeology</p> 
				  <p>Technology, Slab-House Type</p> 
				  <p>Concluding Remarks on the Archeology of the Region
					 (Confields-Hopi Volcanic Buttes)</p> 
				  <p>Utilization of the Navajo Country</p> 
				  <p>Physical History</p> 
				  <p>Some Notes on Mineral Resources and History of Mining in the
					 Navajo Country</p> 
				  <p>Ruins of the Navajo National Monument, Arizona</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">7</container> 
				<container type="box">4</container> 
				<unittitle>Arizona - Reagan</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Contributions to the Archeology of the Navajo Country,
					 Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Final Report of the Archeology of the Navajo Country</p> 
				  <p>Concluding Remarks on the Archeology of the Cornfield-Hopi
					 Volcanic Buttes' Region, as Brought out by the Pottery Analysis</p> 
				  <p>Petrified Forests in the Navajo Country in Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Oil in the Navajo Country</p> 
				  <p>Coal in the Navajo Reservation</p> 
				  <p>Notes on the Archeology of the Cornfields Region, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Duck Hunting in the Navajo Country, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Indian Tribes I have Known</p> 
				  <p>The Apache Medicine Game</p> 
				  <p>The Setdilth (or Stick Game) of the Apache</p> 
				  <p>Some Additional Notes on the Indians of the Fort Apache
					 Region, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>A Flood Myth of the Navajos</p> 
				  <p>The Origin of Moss</p> 
				  <p>Bear's Meddling</p> 
				  <p>The Wanton Hunter</p> 
				  <p>Be Satisfied with Yourself as Your Are</p> 
				  <p>How Our Songs Were Obtained - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Two Bears</p> 
				  <p>The Lost Children</p> 
				  <p>The Two Brothers</p> 
				  <p>The Weasel Myth</p> 
				  <p>It Pays - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Children's Journey - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>Great Natural Bridges of Utah</p> 
				  <p>Utah's Great Bridges</p> 
				  <p>The Star Husbands - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>A West Coast Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Star Mother Myth</p> 
				  <p>All Things Should be Free - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>Kwatte Kills the Subbus-Shark - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Turtle and the Ground Hogs - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>The Star Husbands</p> 
				  <p>Nonnegeshing - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>All-Kinds-Of-Trees - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>A Stone Giant - An Indian Myth</p> 
				  <p>Tumacacori</p> 
				  <p>A Race With a Mountain Storm</p> 
				  <p>Z 20 and Her Home</p> 
				  <p>Keetseel and Nearby Ruins on Northeastern Arizona</p> 
				  <p>The Cowboy</p> 
				  <p>Petrified (Stone Tree) Forests</p> 
				  <p>White House and Other Ruins in De Chelly and Del Muerto
					 Canyons</p> 
				  <p>The San Francisco Peaks and Other Interesting Things Near
					 Flagstaff, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>El Capitan, The Monuments, and Snake House</p> 
				  <p>The Spanish Bayonet Soap Weed</p> 
				  <p>The Beautiful Skies of the Southwest</p> 
				  <p>The Painted Desert</p> 
				  <p>The Roosevelt Dam</p> 
				  <p>Great Natural Bridges</p> 
				  <p>The Great Canyon</p> 
				  <p>Records of the Past in America</p> 
				  <p>Contributions to the Geology of the Navajo Country, Arizona,
					 with Notes on the Archeology</p> 
				  <p>The Influenza Among the Navajos was Terrible Scourge</p> 
				  <p>The Fourth of July Summer Solsitce Ceremony of the Navajos</p>
				  
				  <p>Mother Earth and Accompanying Man-Beings</p> 
				  <p>Customs of the Mikwok Indians of California</p> 
				  <p>Sandstorm Protection fo the Southwestern Indians</p> 
				  <p>The Sun and His Dark Enemy</p> 
				  <p>Ancient Cities of Northeastern Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Ghost Cities of the Long Distant Past in the
					 &quot;Upstairs&quot; Part of Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Fossils From the Dakota Formation in the Vicinity of
					 Steamboat, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Some Geological Notes on the Upper Cretaceous of Black Mesa,
					 Arizona</p> 
				  <p>The Tertiary-Pleistocene of the Navajo Country in Arizona,
					 with a Description of Some of Its Included Fossils</p> 
				  <p>Geological Notes on the Fort Apache Region, Arizona</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">7</container> 
				<container type="box">5</container> 
				<unittitle>Arizona - Reagan. Utilization of the Navajo
				  Country</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Photographs (Transferred to Photoarchives 
					 <unitdate type="inclusive">6/18/86</unitdate>) 
					 <list type="simple"> 
						<item>A Navajo Cornhusking scene</item> 
						<item>A Navajo cornfield</item> 
						<item>A Navajo woman weaving a basket</item> 
						<item>Navajo sheep at Ganado, Arizona</item> 
						<item>A scene in the Black Mesa region of the Navajo
						  Country</item> 
						<item>A Hopi Indian weaving</item> 
						<item>Handling logs</item> 
						<item>Blooded Hereford Indian bulls0</item> 
						<item>A Small one man coal mine, Gallup, New Mexico</item> 
						<item>Navajo hogan</item> 
						<item>Ganado Mission (Frances Kirkwood Memorial
						  Mission)</item> 
						<item>A distant view of Moencopi Indian Village</item> 
						<item>A Navajo and wife</item> 
						<item>Indian boys at work in vineyard, with orchard in
						  background</item> 
					 </list></p> 
				  <p>Geological map of the Upper Black Mesa Country, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>A Navajo garden (picture)</p> 
				  <p>Utilization of the Navajo Country</p> 
				  <p>Some Notes on the Navajo Country</p> 
				  <p>Ruins in the Tuba-Kayenta Region, Arizona (map)</p> 
				  <p>Geological map, Cornfields District - Apache County,
					 Arizona</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">7</container> 
				<container type="box">6</container> 
				<unittitle>Arizona Geology</unittitle> 
				<note> 
				  <p>Upper Cretaceous of Black Mesa Above the Mesaverde Formation -
					 The Zilhlejini Series of Montana Age</p> 
				  <p>Fossils From the Dakota Formation in the Vicinity of
					 Steamboat, Arizona</p> 
				  <p>Drainage of the Region - Past and Present</p> 
				</note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <thead> 
			 <row> 
				<entry>Box</entry> 
				<entry/> 
				  <entry>Papers</entry> 
			 </row> 
		  </thead> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">8</container> 
				<container type="box"/> 
				  <unittitle>Descriptions of materials and colors of the Indian
					 Pottery</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <thead> 
			 <row> 
				<entry>Box</entry> 
				<entry/> 
				  <entry>Book</entry> 
			 </row> 
		  </thead> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">8</container> 
				<container type="box"/> 
				  <unittitle>Business Accounts of Agency, 1919-1920</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box"/> 
				  <container type="box"/> 
					 <unittitle>Miscellaneous Clippings and writings on Indians,
						Archeology, and Science Academics</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box"/> 
				  <container type="box"/> 
					 <unittitle>Notes and Clippings on Uintah Basin</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box"/> 
				  <container type="box"/> 
					 <unittitle>Notes on animals, birds, plants, and
						Indians</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box"/> 
				  <container type="box"/> 
					 <unittitle>A Ute custom</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box"/> 
				  <container type="box"/> 
					 <unittitle>English notes</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box"/> 
				  <container type="box"/> 
					 <unittitle>Teaching Notes from Indian School</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box"/> 
				  <container type="box"/> 
					 <unittitle>Geological Notes</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box"/> 
				  <container type="box"/> 
					 <unittitle>Material on Warren Hastings</unittitle> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		  <thead> 
			 <row> 
				<entry>Box</entry> 
				<entry/> 
				  <entry>Contents</entry> 
			 </row> 
		  </thead> 
		  <c02> 
			 <did> 
				<container type="box">9</container> 
				<container type="box"/> 
				  <unittitle>Articles by Reagan</unittitle> 
				  <note> 
					 <p>&quot;The Wreck of the 'Southern'&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;What is the Age of the Aubrey Limestone of the Rocky
						Mountains?&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Some Paintings from One of the Estufas in the Indian
						Village of Jemez, N.M.&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;A Probable Origin of the Rings of Saturn&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Summary of Archaeological Finds in the Uintah Basin,
						in Utah, to Date&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Some Fossils from the Lower Aubrey and Upper Red Wall
						Limestones in the Vicinity of Fort Apache, Arizona&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Sun or Gunelpiya Medicine Disk&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;A Probable Origin of the Numerous Depressions in the
						Mesa South of the Arroya Formed by the Outlet of Tijeras Canyon in the Sandias
						Near Albuquerque, New Mexico&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Jemez-Albuquerque Region, N.M.&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Archeological Notes on the Fort Apache Region,
						Arizona&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Effect of Ice in Lake Upon the Shore Line&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Shake Dance of the Quilent Indians, With Drawings by
						an Indian Pupil of the Quilente Day School&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Birds of the Olympic Peninsula&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Glacial Epoch&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Birds of the Rosebud Indian Reservation, South
						Dakota&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Some Myths of the Hoh and Quillayute Indians&quot;</p>
					 
					 <p>&quot;Some Additional Myths of the Hoh and Quillayute
						Indians&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Apache Stick Game&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Geology of Monroe County, Indiana, North of the
						Latitude of Bloomington&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Gosiute (Goshute), or Shoshoni-Goship Indians Of
						the Deep Crek Region, in Western Utah&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Some Ancient Indian Granaries&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Some Notes on the Olympic Peninsula,
						Washington&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Description of Some Fossil Plants from the Stanford
						Paleontological Collection&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Fossils of the Red Wall Compared with Those of the
						Kansas Coal Measures&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Some Geological Notes of the Upper Cretaceous of Black
						Mesa, Arizona&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;A Trip in the Little Fork, Nett River Country,
						Minnesota&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;A Trip Among the Rainy Lakes&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Probable Eocene Glacial Deposits in the Fort Apache
						Region, Arizona&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Identification of Two Fossil Leaves from Iowa, One
						from Arizona and a 'Tree Trunk' from Kansas&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Geology of the Jemez-Albuquerque Region, N.M.&quot;
						(map)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Geology of the Jemez-Albuquerque Region,
						N.M.&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Fossils from the Mancos-Dakota-Tununk Formation in the
						Vicinity of Steamboat, Arizona&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Geology of the Deep Creek Reservation, Utah, and Its
						Environs&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;A Geological Map of the Deep Creek Region,
						Utah&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Extension of Cretacic Laramie Formation into
						Arizona&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Utilization of the Navajo Country&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Glacial Epoch&quot; (in<emph render="underline">Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science</emph>, 
						<unitdate type="inclusive">December 23 and 24,
						  1913</unitdate>)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Stream Aggradation Through Irrigation&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The National Monument of Canyon De Chelly&quot; and
						&quot;Great Natural Bridges of the Southwest&quot; (in<emph render="underline">Roger Williams Naturalist</emph>, 
						<unitdate type="inclusive">July 1932</unitdate>)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Indians of the Fort Apache Region&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Shishi Gig&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Medicine Songs of George Farmer&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Our Distant Sky Relative,&quot; &quot;The Continent at
						the Bottom of the World, &quot; &quot;From Out of the Ocean&quot; (in<emph render="underline">Forest Leaves</emph>, Summer 
						<unitdate type="inclusive">1931</unitdate>)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;A Bit of Lincoln Highway&quot; and a review of his
						book<emph render="underline">Don Diego - A Tale of the Pueblo Uprising of
						1680</emph>(in<emph render="underline">Forest Leaves</emph>, Summer 
						<unitdate type="inclusive">1928</unitdate>)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Report that Stirred the Natives&quot; (<emph render="underline">Forest Leaves</emph>, 
						<unitdate type="inclusive">Winter 1932</unitdate>)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Sandia Indians&quot; (<emph render="underline">Forest Leaves</emph>, 
						<unitdate type="inclusive">Spring 1930</unitdate>)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;A Story from Old Spain&quot; and &quot;The Big Buffalo
						- A Cippewa Indian Myth&quot; (<emph render="underline">Forest Leaves</emph>, 
						<unitdate type="inclusive">Spring 1931</unitdate>)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Fire Dance of the Navajos&quot; (<emph render="underline">Forest Leaves</emph>, 
						<unitdate type="inclusive">Winter 1931</unitdate>)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Die Fossilien der Clallamformation mit denjenigen der
						Tertiarformationen in Vancouver-Insel und mit denjenigen der
						Astoria-Miocanformation in Oregon verglichen&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Die Fossilien der Hohern Red-Wall-Kalksteins mit
						denjenigen der Kansas-Kohlenformation verglechen&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Grande Medicine Society of the Bois Fort Indians, and
						Andy Fields An-ako-mi-ge-nug's Birch Bark, Medicine Lodge Parchment</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Caves of the Vernal District of Northeastern
						Utah&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Whaling of the Olympic Peninsula Indians of
						Washington&quot;</p> 
					 <p>&quot;A Progressive Bois Fort Indian - Ben D.
						Beargrease&quot; (<emph render="underline">The Red Man</emph>, 
						<unitdate type="inclusive">February 1914</unitdate>)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Some Notes on the Olympic Peninsula, Washington. A
						Reply to Criticisms by Arnold and Hannibal&quot; (<emph render="underline">Science</emph>, 
						<unitdate type="inclusive">August 4, 1916</unitdate>)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;Early Indian Culture in our State&quot; (<emph render="underline">Utah</emph>, 
						<unitdate type="inclusive">November-December,
						  1935</unitdate>)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;A Ritual Parchment and Certain Historical Charts of
						the Bois Fort Ojibwa of Minnesota (<emph render="underline">Americana</emph>, 
						<unitdate type="inclusive">1935</unitdate>)</p> 
					 <p>&quot;The Sun God Moccasin Tales,&quot; Vol. 1 and 2</p> 
				  </note> 
			 </did> 
		  </c02> 
		</c01> 
		<c01 tpattern="container:container:description">
		  <head>Additional Inventory</head>
		  <did>
			 <unittitle>Additional Inventory</unittitle>
		  </did>
		  <thead>
			 <row>
				<entry>Box</entry>
				<entry>Folder</entry>
				<entry>Contents</entry>
			 </row>
		  </thead>
		  <c02>
			 <did>
				<container>9</container>
				<container>1</container>
				<unittitle>Brief summary of additional Albert Reagan materials
				  located at the Museum of Peoples and cultures Brigham Young University,
				  compiled by Shane A. Baker, October 23, 2001, 16 pages.</unittitle>
			 </did>
		  </c02>
		</c01>
	 </dsc> 
  </archdesc>
</ead>
