Product Type
Condition
Binding
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Seller Rating
Published by History Today Limited, Bracken House, London, 1972
Seller: Ray Dertz, Naperville, IL, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical
Soft Cover, Staple-bound. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. 7¼"x9½"; pages 385-458; Soft Pictorial Cover, staple-bound; The binding and pages are clean, tight and square. There is no underlining, highlighting or margin notes. A used copy with normal reading wear. If you order multiple titles, I will combine them in order to reduce postage costs. If you have any questions, contact me before ordering for details. Contains the following: Foreword: To the New Word (emigration to the United States based on the book Passage To America by Terry Coleman); The Private War of George Washington by William T. Brigham; The Decline of Lord John Russell by John Prest; Temple Bar, London by Leonard W. Cowie; Walpole and His Critics by H. T. Dickinson; Newfoundland and Canada in the 1860s by Frederick Jones; Tithes in Country Life by Alan Wharam; Women Militants in the English Civil War by David Weigall; Hannibal in Edinburgh, 1775 (General Robert Melville?s theory of Hannibals route through the Alps) by Dennis Proctor; Book Reviews; Letters to the Editors; Notes on Further Reading.
Published by Texas State Historical Association, 1985
ISBN 10: 0876110677ISBN 13: 9780876110676
Seller: ThriftBooks-Atlanta, AUSTELL, GA, U.S.A.
Book
Paperback. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less 1.01.
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Published by University of Albuquerque / Calvin Horn
Seller: ThriftBooks-Atlanta, AUSTELL, GA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less 1.01.
Published by Ward Ritchie Press, Los Angeles, 1937
First Edition
Softcover. Condition: Very Good+. Dust Jacket Condition: No Dust Jacket. First Edition; First Printing. 8vo; 155 pages; Light rubbing and wear to covers.
Published by Independently published, 2022
Seller: Sharehousegoods, Colgate, WI, U.S.A.
Book
Condition: New. Fast Shipping - Safe and Secure Mailer - Our goal is to deliver a better item than what you are hoping for! If not we will make it right!.
Published by Barnes & Noble, 1959
Seller: High Enterprises, Olympia, WA, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. No Jacket. Barnes & Nobel . 1959 edition stated in Fine condition. Blue boards, corners and gilt titles are perfect. Interior is white, crisp and unmarked. Hinges and binding are strong. An exceptionally well cared for example. Lacks original DJ. Ships promptly in a custom box. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall.
Published by Barnes & Noble, Inc, New York, 1953
Seller: Frey Fine Books, Rougemont, NC, U.S.A.
Cloth. Condition: Very Good. Facsimile edition. 1953 printing, Facsimile edition. A very Good copy. 8vo., xv, 411 pp., illustrated with maps9 some folding) and a facsimile reproduction. Bound in green cloth. Light shelf wear. Part of the publisher's series, "Original Narratives of Early American History".
Published by Barnes & Noble, Inc., New York, 1953
Seller: JBK Books, North Manchester, IN, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. 411pp; Index; fold-out maps. Dark green cloth with gold lettering on spine. Former library volume with customary labels and markings; interior clean, tight, textually unmarked. Original copyright 1907; reprinted 1953.
Published by Ridgway/Popular Pub., USA, 1925
Seller: Comic World, Steinbach, MB, Canada
First Edition
Soft cover. Condition: FAIR+, Reading Copy. H. C. Murphy Jr. Painted Covers. (illustrator). ADVENTURE (Pulp Magazine). February 28th 1925; -- Volume 51 #3 The Secret of the Timor Laut by Frederick Moore; Writers- Frederick Moore; Barry Scobee; Michael J. Phillips; Arthur Woodward; Hugh Pendexter; E. S. Pladwell; F. W. Hodge; Sidney Herschel Small; Arthur O. Friel; John Webb; James Sharp Eldredge ILLUSTRATOR - Painted Cover by H. C. Murphy Jr. PUBLISHER - Ridgway Company; PLACE- USA; DATE - February 1925; EDITION First by Publisher BOOK TYPE - PULP Magazine DESCRIPTION; ** CONTENTS; The Secret of the Timor Laut by Frederick Moore; Empty Cartridges by Barry Scobee; A Freudian Feudist by Michael J. Phillips; Salt as Currency in 1780 by Arthur Woodward; The Bush Lopers by Hugh Pendexter; Keegan's Law and Order by E. S. Pladwell; The River of the Lost Souls by F. W. Hodge; The Scarecrow by Sidney Herschel Small; Mountains of Mystery by Arthur O. Friel; On the Cards by John Webb; In Ghost Canon by James Sharp Eldredge; >> Chipped & creasing to covers; water damage to magazine; Piece missing from right edge of backcover (size = 3.5" x 1") Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall TRUE FIRST Edition MAGAZINE Format Thus. Book.
Published by Charles Scribners, 1907
Seller: Arader Galleries of Philadelphia, PA, Philadelphia, PA, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. good to vg solid and tight blue boards with gold prints with maps.
Published by Government Printing Office, Washington D. C., 1921
Seller: Charles Lewis Best Booksellers, San Diego, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Dust Jacket Condition: No dust jacket. First Impression. Demy folio, [27.75cm/11inches], full gilt-embossed olive-coloured cloth sans dust jacket, pp. viii + 795-1481 indexed. No Illustrationsketches, &tc. incorporated within the text. Please feel free to inquire as to particulars and/or additional photographs. . Features: Franz Boas, The Ethnology of the Kwakiutl (based on data collected by George Hunt). [Continued from Pt. 1 ./ Sections VII -XII] . George Hunt (1854 - 1933) (Tlingit) was a Canadian and a consultant to the American anthropologist Franz Boas; through his contributions, he is considered a linguist and ethnologist in his own right. He was Tlingit-English by birth and learned both those languages. Growing up with his parents at Fort Rupert, British Columbia in Kwakwaka'wakw territory, he learned their language and culture as well. Through marriage and adoption he became an expert on the traditions of the Kwakwaka'wakw (then known as "Kwakiutl") of coastal British Columbia. Working with Boas, Hunt collected hundreds of items for an exhibit of the Kwakiutl culture for the World Columbian Exposition of 1893 in Chicago, and accompanied 17 people of the tribe there. Boas taught Hunt to write in Kwakiutl, and the native ethnologist wrote thousands of pages of description of Kwakiutl culture over the next decades. In exceptionally good condition.
Published by Government Printing Office, Washington D. C., 1919
Seller: Charles Lewis Best Booksellers, San Diego, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Dust Jacket Condition: No dust jacket. First Impression. Demy folio, [27.75cm/11inches], full gilt-embossed olive-coloured cloth sans dust jacket, pp. 677, indexed. Illustrated with 13 b-w halftone plates and xxx sketches, &tc. incorporated within the text. Please feel free to inquire as to particulars and/or additional photographs. . Accompanying papers include: Uses of Plants by Indians of the Missouri River Heights" byMelvin Randolf Gilmore, "Preliminary Report of the Antiquities of the Region between the Mancos and La Plata Rivers in Southwestern Colorado" by Earl H. Morris, "Designs on Prehistoric Hopi Pottery" by Jesse Walter Fewkes and "The Hawaiian Romance of Laiekawai" by Martha Warren Beckwith. . Beckwith graduated from Mount Holyoke College in 1893 and taught English at Elmira College, Mount Holyoke, Vassar College, and Smith College. In 1906, she obtained a Master of Arts degree in anthropology after studying under Franz Boas at Columbia University, and she received her Doctor of Philosophy in 1918.[2] In 1920, Beckwith was appointed to the chair in Folklore at Vassar College, making her the first person to hold a chair in Folklore at any college or university in the United States. In exceptionally good condition.
HODGE, Frederick W., ed. Spanish Explorers in the Southern United States 1528-1543. N.Y.: 1925. Facs. maps (one folding). xv, 411pp. Includes contemporary narratives of the expeditions of Cabeza de Vaca, De Soto and Coronado. Very good.
Published by The Texas Historical Association, Austin, TX., 1990
ISBN 10: 0876110669ISBN 13: 9780876110669
Seller: Quinn & Davis Booksellers, Austin, TX, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: As New. Dust Jacket Condition: As New. Second printing First by this publisher. A facsimile of the classic 1907 edition. Includes a facsimile of , THE NARRATIVE OF ALVAR NUNEZ CABECA DE VACA, edited by Frederick W. Hodge; THE NARRATIVE OF THE EXPEDITION OF HERNANDO DE SOTO BY THE GENTLEMAN OF ELVAS, edited by Theodore H. Lewis; and THE NARRATIVE OF THE EXPEDITION OF CORONADO, BY PEDRO DE CASTANEDA, edited by Frederick W. Hodge. 411 pages. The two fold out maps are present in this volume. Dust jacket and book are in Fine, as new, condition. ; Standard Book Size.
Published by The Texas State Historical Assoc. , Austin., 1984
ISBN 10: 0876110715ISBN 13: 9780876110713
Seller: Quinn & Davis Booksellers, Austin, TX, U.S.A.
Book
1/4 Leather. Condition: Fine. Limited Facsimile Edition. This special limited edition includes a facsimile of , THE NARRATIVE OF ALVAR NUNEZ CABECA DE VACA, edited by Frederick W. Hodge; THE NARRATIVE OF THE EXPEDITION OF HERNANDO DE SOTO BY THE GENTLEMAN OF ELVAS, edited by Theodore H. Lewis; and THE NARRATIVE OF THE EXPEDITION OF CORONADO, BY PEDRO DE CASTANEDA, edited by Frederick W. Hodge. 411 pages. This is a limited edition of 100 copies. This copy is not numbered. Fold out maps are not present in this volume and it is priced accordingly. No dust jacket as issued. Quarter bound in genuine leather with slip case. Book and slip case are in Fine condition. ; Standard Book Size.
Published by LA 1937, 1937
Seller: T A Swinford, Bookseller, Sun city west, AZ, U.S.A.
Book First Edition
Stiff pr. wraps. Condition: Good. 1st Edition. 1st Ed 155pp, frontis,signed, index, stiff pr. wraps vg+ By the Ward Ritchie Press, very scarce. Early legends, Guzman, DeVaca, Estevan, The Coronado Expedition, DeSosa, Onate, colonization, missionary labors, the Hanikay Tragedy.
Published by Charles Scribner?s Sons, 1907
Seller: Yesterday's Muse, ABAA, ILAB, IOBA, Webster, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hard Cover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. First Edition. First edition. U.S. Secretary of State Robert Lansing's copy, with his bookplate on front endpaper (these were purchased from a family library in Henderson Harbor, NY, near his birthplace in Watertown, which included many other works owned by him). Page ridges lightly foxed. 1907 Hard Cover. xv, 411, 4 pp. Volume 2 in series. With maps and a facsimile reproduction. The Narrative of Alvar Nunez Cabeca De Vaca; The Narrative of the Expedition of Hernando De Soto by the Gentleman of Elvas; The Narrative of the Expedition of Coronado, by Pedro De Castaneda. Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca (c. 1488/90/92 ? after 19 May 1559) was a Spanish explorer of the New World, and one of four survivors of the 1527 Narváez expedition. During eight years of traveling across what is now the US Southwest, he became a trader and faith healer to various Native American tribes before reconnecting with Spanish civilization in Mexico in 1536. After returning to Spain in 1537, he wrote an account, first published in 1542 as La relación y comentarios ("The Account and Commentaries"), which in later editions was retitled Naufragios y comentarios ("Shipwrecks and Commentaries"). Cabeza de Vaca is sometimes considered a proto-anthropologist for his detailed accounts of the many tribes of Native Americans that he encountered. In 1540, Cabeza de Vaca was appointed adelantado of what is now Paraguay, where he was governor and captain general of New Andalusia. He worked to build up the population of Buenos Aires but, charged with poor administration, he was arrested in 1544 and then transported to Spain for trial in 1545. Although his sentence was eventually commuted, he never returned to the Americas. He introduced the story of the India Juliana in his accounts. Hernando de Soto (c. 1497 ? 21 May 1542) was a Spanish explorer and conquistador who was involved in expeditions in Nicaragua and the Yucatan Peninsula. He played an important role in Francisco Pizarro's conquest of the Inca Empire in Peru, but is best known for leading the first European expedition deep into the territory of the modern-day United States (through Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and most likely Arkansas). He is the first European documented as having crossed the Mississippi River. De Soto's North American expedition was a vast undertaking. It ranged throughout what is now the southeastern United States, searching both for gold, which had been reported by various Native American tribes and earlier coastal explorers, and for a passage to China or the Pacific coast. De Soto died in 1542 on the banks of the Mississippi River; sources disagree on the exact location, whether it was what is now Lake Village, Arkansas, or Ferriday, Louisiana. Pedro de Castañeda Nájera was a Spanish conquistador who wrote a chronicle of the expedition of Francisco Vásquez de Coronado in New-Mexico; Arizona and Texas.
HODGE, Frederick W., and LEWIS, Theodore H., eds. Spanish Explorers in the Southern United States, 1528-1543. N.Y., 1907. 1st ed. 411pp. Illus., folding maps. Orig. cloth. A very good copy.
Published by GPO, Washington DC, 1907
Seller: Sabino Books, Oro Valley, AZ, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Good. First edition. Worn, corners bumped. Folding map is present. Bulletin (Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology), 30.; House document (United States. Congress. House), 59th Congress, 1st session, no. 926 B000RMVAO6.
Published by Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1907
Seller: K & B Books, Tucson, AZ, AZ, U.S.A.
Book First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. No Jacket. 1st Edition. 411 pp., facsimile frontis, two fold-out maps, index. A fine, tight, unmarked copy with a discreet previous owner signature on the ffep. This comprehensive, academic volume is comprised of the narrative of Alvar Nunez Cabeca De Vaca, the narrative of the expedition of Hernando De Soto by gentleman of Elvas, and the narrative of the expedition of Coronado, by Pedro De Castneda.
Published by Barnes & Noble, Inc, New York, 1959
Seller: Ground Zero Books, Ltd., Silver Spring, MD, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Fair. xiii, [3], 413, [3] pages. Footnotes. Index. Some endpaper and edge soiling. DJ is worn, torn, soiled and chipped. This is par of the Original Narratives of Early American History produced under the auspices of the American Historical Association under the General Editorship of J. Franklin Jameson. The three narratives printed in this book are but a small selection from among many scores; for the narratives of Spanish explorers in the southern United States constitute an extensive literature. But if interest and historical importance are both taken into account, it is believed that these three hold an undisputed preeminence among such 'relations.' Frederick Webb Hodge (October 28, 1864 - September 28, 1956) was an American editor, anthropologist, archaeologist, and historian. He graduated from Cambridge College (now George Washington University). He became very interested in Native American history and cultures, and worked for the Bureau of American Ethnology from 1905 to 1918. He collaborated with George Gustav Heye, who had been collecting Native American artifacts, and established the Heye Foundation to support archeological work. Heye founded the Museum of the American Indian in 1916 in New York, where Hodge later served as editor and assistant director. During his time at the Smithsonian, Hodge also conducted archeological expeditions and excavations at Nacoochee Mound in Georgia, and at Hawikuh, near Zuni Pueblo. He also served as executive officer at the Smithsonian Institution. Theodore Hayes Lewis was the first archaeologist to systematically survey and record archaeological sites in Minnesota. He was born in 1856 and disappeared in Colorado in 1909. He was educated in Ohio and moved to St. Paul, Minnesota in 1878 where he worked as a surveyor investigating antiquities from 1878-1880. He began work on the Northwestern Archaeological Survey during the years 1880-1883 and became associated with Alfred J. Hill in 1881, who paid most of his research expenses and contracted with Lewis to complete a survey of Native American burial mounds in Minnesota and other nearby states. Between 1883 and 1895 Lewis surveyed more than 12,000 mounds in Minnesota, Canada and surrounding states. From 1884 to 1907, he published over 50 scholarly articles about his research in Minnesota, which have formed the basis of knowledge about petroglyphs, incised boulders, burial mounds and cave art in the state. Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca (c. 1488/90/92 - after 19 May 1559) was a Spanish explorer of the New World, and one of four survivors of the 1527 Narváez expedition. During eight years of traveling across what is now the US Southwest, he became a trader and faith healer to various Native American tribes before reconnecting with Spanish civilization in Mexico in 1536. After returning to Spain in 1537, he wrote an account, first published in 1542 as La relación y comentarios ("The Account and Commentaries"). Cabeza de Vaca is sometimes considered a proto-anthropologist for his detailed accounts of the many tribes of Native Americans that he encountered. Hernando de Soto (c. 1500 - 21 May 1542) was a Spanish explorer and conquistador who was involved in expeditions in Nicaragua and the Yucatan Peninsula. He played an important role in Francisco Pizarro's conquest of the Inca Empire in Peru, but is best known for leading the first European expedition deep into the territory of the modern-day United States (through Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and most likely Arkansas). He is the first European documented as having crossed the Mississippi River. De Soto's North American expedition was a vast undertaking. It ranged throughout what is now the southeastern United States, both searching for gold, which had been reported by various Native American tribes and earlier coastal explorers, and for a passage to China or the Pacific coast. De Soto died in 1542 on the banks of the Mississippi River; different sources disagree on the exact location, whether it was what is now Lake Village, Arkansas, or Ferriday, Louisiana. The first account of the expedition to be published was by the Gentleman of Elvas, an otherwise unidentified Portuguese knight who was a member of the expedition. His chronicle was first published in 1557. An English translation by Richard Hakluyt was published in 1609. Pedro De Castaneda was a chronicler of the Coronado Expedition to Quivira in 1540-42. Castaneda was a native of the Biscayan town of Najera in Spain. He came to the Americas before the middle of the 16th century and became prominently identified with Mexico's government and affairs. He lived in the Mexican town of Culiacan from which the expedition set out, at which time he was listed on the muster roll as departing with two horses, one coat of mail, and "native weapons." His Coronado Expedition account was first written in Mexico soon after the event, but the original manuscript has disappeared. After returning to Spain, Castaneda made a copy, which was finished on October 26, 1596. His narrative was not published but remained in the archives until translated first to French and then to English. The Spanish manuscript, now in the Lenox Library in New York, was translated into English by George P. Winship, assistant in American History at Harvard University. His translation was published in the 14th annual report of the United States Bureau of Ethnology. Castaneda's account ranks with the log of Christopher Columbus and De Soto's expedition as one of the most important documents on the early European exploration of North America. Reprint edition. Presumed first printing thus.
Published by Smithsonian Institution/Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, DC, 1910
Seller: Clausen Books, RMABA, Colorado Springs, CO, U.S.A.
First Edition
Olive Green Cloth. Condition: Good++. B&W Photographs/Pictures/Diagrams/Engravings (illustrator). First Edition. Part 2, N-Z only; Lacks Part One; Retired library copy, usual stamps, labels, and markings, loose rear withdrawn pocket with glue remnant on rear end paper; A bit of handling looseness to the hinge, all pages safely intact. Else clean and tight. All page edges are a bit shelf toned. Rubbed, olive green cloth, crease fold down the spine, chipping with light fraying to the chips at head and foot of spine, scuffed covers, bumped and fraying corners. 1221pp., including bibliography. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Ex-Library, Hardcover.
Published by New York : Franklin Square, 1913, 1913
Seller: Joseph Valles - Books, Stockbridge, GA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Fair. No Jacket. LC: AP2 .N867 ; marbled papers with 1/2 leather binding ; hinges weak ; ex-lib ; heavy, thick volume ; Experiments in government an the essentials of the constitution / Elihu Root -- The hope of the American wage-earner / W. Jett Lauck -- An English view of Mr. Bryan / Sydney Brooks -- Gold and Prices / Albert S. Bolles -- Vested rights : a Refutation of Vice-President Marshall's Views / Cyril F. Dos Passos -- Why is a Revolution? / Paxton Hibben -- The Younger Novelists / Mrs. W. L. Courtney -- The Author of "Robinson Crusoe" / Edith Wyatt -- A Pioneer of Aviation / NOrman Douglas -- The Relation of Drama to Literature / Donald Clive Stuart -- The Man in the Moon -- Letters to the Editor: The Inspirers of Shakespeare's Sonnets / Clara Longworth de Chambrun -- A Fallacious Theory / David Ochs -- [August 1913] -- THe Direct Rule of the People / George Kennan -- Why I Bought the Equitable / Thomas F. Ryan -- A National Aeronautical Laboratory / A. F. Zahm -- Bananas and Diplomacy / Chester Lloyd Jones -- The Chreubim [poem] / Florence Earle Coates -- Correspondence Between Nietzsche and Strindberg / Herman Scheffauer -- Women and Logic / Edward E. Hale -- England's New Dramatists / P. P. Howe -- Engnlish Literature's Debt to the Bible / William Gilmer Perry -- The Place of the Sussex Man / Frederick Arthur Hodge -- The Political Side of State Ownership in France / Theodore Stanton -- Experiments in Government and the Essentials of the constitution / Elihu Root -- Letters to the Editor: Another Word on The Ethics of Miracles" / J. Wallace MacGowan -- Aylmer Maude -- [September 1913] -- The Reorganization of the Republican Party / James A. Fowler -- American Ambassadors Abroad -- National Aid to Good Roads / Jonathan Bourne -- Nagging the Japanese / Francis G. Peabody -- The Public's Financial Interest in Public Utilities / Hammond Vinton Hayes -- E. A. P. [poem] / George E. Woodberry -- Emile Verhaeren / G. F. Theis -- Living English Poets / R. A. Scott-James -- The Better Part in Conversation / G. W. Firkins -- The Mad Englishman / Norman Douglas -- Social Hygiene : The Real Conservation Problem / Lewis M.Terman -- Letters to the EDitor: The Authoritative criticism of poetry in America / Russell Hart -- Vested Rights, in Rebuttal / Samuel B.Pettengill -- Again, The Ethics of Miracles / J M Corum -- [October 1913] -- Asquith : The Master Statesman -- A British View of the Mexican Problem -- The West Virginia Coal Insurrection / Charles Frederick Carter -- High Prices and the Theorists / Fabian Franklin -- An Introduction to Croce's Philosophhy of the Practical / Douglas Ainsle -- Francis Thompson / Darrell Figgis -- Why the Currency Bill Should Not Pass / Samuel Untermeyer -- The Owen-Glass Bill as Submitted to the Democratic Caucus / Paul M. Warburg -- The Origin, PLan, and Purpose of the Currency Bill / Robert L. Owen -- [November 1913] -- Six Months of Wilson -- The Cockpit of Europe -- The Currency Bill -- THe Sacrifice of Sulzer -- Humiliating the Vice-President -- The Progressing Colonel -- The Tragedy of the Contentnea -- The Intellectual Golf Championship -- Fifty Years of Anthropology / Ernest Haeckel -- The Problem of Ulster / Sydney Brooks -- Bulgaria and the Treaty of Bucharest / Svetozar Tonjoroff -- Professor Royce and the Problem of Christianity / John T. Driscoll -- The Vision of Gettysburg [poem] / Robert Underwood Johnson -- A High-Minded Public Man / W D Howells -- The English Girl in Fiction / Mrs. W. L. Courtney -- John Eglinton / Ernest A. Boyd -- Why Goldwin Smith Came to America / Arnold Haultain -- How to Amend the Currency Bill / Frank A. Vanderlip -- Our Supervised Morals / Louise Collier Willcox -- Music and the Drama / Lawrence Gilman -- The Book of the Month / F. M. Colby -- Letters to the Editor: Appreciation / Melton Reed -- The English and Mr. Bryan -- [December 1913] -- The President and Mexico etc; FAIR. Book.
HODGE, Frederick W. Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico. Washington, 1911. Two vols. Illus. maps. 972; 1,221pp. Orig. cloth. BAE Bulletin 30.