No. 120 1942

A CATALOGUES OF BOOKS Relating to Offered for Sale by EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS 55 West 42nd Street New York, N. Y.

THE ONLY COPY NOW KNOWN OF ALTAMIRANO'S "INFORME" ON THE JESUIT MISSIONS. [I] ALTAMIRANO (PEDao IGNActo). Informe Historic°, Canonic°, y Real, por las Missiones de la Compania de Jesus de la Nueva-Es- pana: En el Expediente con el Irmo. Senor D. Pedro Sanchez de Tagle, Obispo de Durango, del Consejo de S. M. &c. Sobre si Rich° Ilustrissimo Missiones de Sinoloa, Sonora y Otras, que se Diche Com- prehenderse en el Territorio de su Obispado. 44 pp., 4to, half mor- occo. [Madrid, c. 1755]. 350.00 SO VAR AS IS KNOWN NO OTHER COPY IS NOW IN EXISTENCE. WagJUT, Spam'4h Southwest, records the title [No. 122] which he cites from Medina, Biblioteea Hispauo -Americana. Medina likewise was unable to trace a copy but found the title in an early catalogue. [2] ARizoNA : Its Agricultural, Mineral and Other Resources— Gold, Silver, Lead and Copper Mines of Arizona. 40 pp., 16rno, orig- inal printed front wrapper. N. p.. (1867). 50.00 Not in Munk or Bradford; no copy in the records; nor are we able to trace the work in any of the bibliographies consulted. Describes the soil, climate, future productions, rivers, resources, Indians, prospective railroad; the pioneer mines and the mineral resources of the region with descriptive letters on the mines and a particular account of the Specie Basis Mining Company, whose operations were to center in the Sacramento Mining Dis- trict of Mohave . [3] [ARIzoNA ViEws]. Twenty-two stereoscopic views of early Ari- zona scenes, including: Meshonginuvi; Kanab Canyon; Kieskabi- Wolpi ; Mesa of Moquis Wolpi ; "The Monument ;" Hualpai-Moquis Village; Town of Araibi; , etc. Photographed by Savage, Wittick and Beaman. Arizona, (c. 1872-1875). 30.00 The Arizona collection of F. S. Dellenbaugh, member of the Powell' Colorado Expedition, with his signature and manuscript notes from his own observations. Dellenbaugh was one of the first to view a number of the wonders herein depicted, and the views, in turn, are among the earliest of such portrayals. EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS 3 ARRICIVITA'S HISTORY OF THE FRANCISCANS IN ARIZONA & THE JOURNEYS OF GARCES TO THE COLORADO.

[4] ARRICIVITA ( JUAN DOMINGO). Cronica Serafica y Apostolica del Colegio de Propaganda Fide de la Santa Cruz de Queretaro en la Nueva Espana, xix, 613 pp., 4to, spanish calf. Mexico, 1792. 125.00 ORIGINAL EDITION. Wagner, SpaRiSh. Southwest, No. 174. A founda- tion item of the first importance, being the contemporary history of the Franciscan missions in Arizona, beginning with the entry of the pioneer fathers in 1768. Further, the work contains the earliest appearance of Garces' narrative of his expeditions to the Colorado, with an account of his final murder in the Arizona country.

[5] ASHER & ADAMS. Map of . Folio, 23" x 16. N. p., 1874. 4.00 [6] [ASHLEY-SMITH]. The Ashley-Smith Explorations and the Dis- covery of a Central Route to the Pacific, 1822-29, with the Original Journals edited by Harrison C. Dale. Maps and plates. 8vo, cloth. Cleveland, 1918. 25.00 This is the first publication of the journals and letters of these noted explorers. Ashley plotted the route as far as Salt Lake ; Jedediah Smith continued his work, reaching by way of the and the .

[7] AUDUBON (J. W.). Journal: 1849-1850. Record of a trip to Texas, and a journey through Mexico and Arizona to the gold- fields of California. Map and plates. 249 pp., 8vo, cloth. Cleveland, 1906. 10.00 Wagner-Camp No. 208. The only publication of Audubon's entire journal. APPARENTLY UNIQUE VIEW OF CAMP MOHAVE.

[8] BAKER (GEORGE H.). Camp Mohave, Arizona. Folio lithographic view, 11 2 " x 17", matted. San Francisco, [c. 1868]. 75.00 A manuscript notation signed by the historian Seymour Dunbar states : "I reproduced this view in a full page illustration in Volume IV of the History of Travel iv America. I never saw nor heard of another copy of it." The rare lithograph shows a government mule train coming up with the camp, the dozen or so buildings of the post, an encampment of Mohave tepees, and a steamboat negotiating the Colorado,

[9] BANCROFT (H. H.). and . 8vo, calf. San Francisco, 1889. 3.00 [10] BARTLETT (J. R.). Personal Narrative of Explorations in Tex- as, New Mexico, California and Sonora, connected with the U. S. and Mexican Boundary Commission, 1850-53. Map and plates. 2 vols., 8vo, cloth. New York, 1854. 15.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 234. This is the narrative of the expedition sent out to determine the boundaries of the country "acquired" from Mexico 4 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS following the Mexican War. Wagner calls it "a very interesting book of travels, as Bartlett went everywhere from Mazatlan to San Francisco and spent about three years on a regular junket." '[11] . Report on the Boundary Line between the and Mexico. Five folding maps. 32 pp., 8vo, sewn. Washing- ton, 1853. 15.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 234, note. Two of the maps are variations of Dis- turnell's "Treaty" map [see No. 68], while another shows the conflicting opinions of Bartlett, Gray and General Garcia Condé. [12] BEALE (E. F.) and WHIPPLE (LIEUT. A. W.). Reports and Features of the Route to the Pacific on the 35th Parallel. Atlantic and Pacific Railroad. 3 large folding maps, including the "Detail Map of the Atlantic & Pacific Rail Road from the Mississippi to the Pacific" (1%2 ft. x 372 ft.). 43 pp., 8vo, original printed wrappers. N. Y., 1867. 35.00 The large map shows Arizona in great detail. The reports elucidate the southwestern explorations of Beale and Whipple through New Mexico and Arizona to the Colorado, with a careful outline of the proposed route for a southwestern overland railroad. [13] . Wagon Road from Fort Defiance to the Colorado River. Map. 87 pp., 8vo, sewn. Washington, 1858. 20.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 297. BENAVIDES MEMORIAL, 1630. EDITED BY DR. HODGE. [14] BENAVIDES (FRAY ALONSO DE). The Memorial of Fray Alonso de Benavides, 1630. Translated by Mrs. Edward E. Ayer. Annotated by F. W. Hodge and C. F. Lummis. Plates. 309 pp., 8vo, cloth. Chi- cago: Privately Printed, 1916. 35.00 One of the great documents of Southwestern history. Cited by Ban- croft as "the most important authority extant." BERTON'S "VOYAGE ON THE COLORADO." 1878. [15] BERTON (FRANcis). Un Voyage sur le Colorado. Folding maps and 16 plates. 64 pp., 8vo, cloth. San Francisco, 1878. 30.00 Berton set out from Yuma on April 10, 1875 and ascended the Colo- rado some 350 miles to Eldorado Canon. His descriptions of the incidents of the journey, the Indians, and the country passed through are accurate and interesting. The plates which were lithographed by Britton & Rey are excellent. ANALYTIC DESCRIPTION OF ARIZONA'S ARMY POSTS. [16] BILLINGs (JoHN S.). Descriptions of the Military Posts of the Army. Maps and plates. 4to, cloth. Washington, 1875. 45.00 Officially printed for the officers of the Army only. More than forty pages are given over to detailed reports on the location, climate, men, buildings, barracks, and life and conditions at Camps , Grant, Low- ell, McDowell, Mohave, and Forts Bowie, Whipple and Yuma, as also the Rio Verde and San Carlos Indian Reservations. A table of distances for the various forts, camps, and other important points prefaces the text. 55 WEST 42ND STREET, Ntw YORK 5 [17] BOURKE (CAPT. J. G.). An Apache campaign in the Sierra Madre: Expedition in pursuit of the hostile Chiricahua Apache. Plates. 12mo, cloth. N. Y. 1886. 15.00 See No. 52 for Gen. Crook's' personal narrative of this campaign, in which he captured . [18] . Compilation of notes and memoranda on the use of human ordure and urine in rites of a religious or semi-religious character among various nations. 56 pp., 8vo, calf. Washington : Pri- vately Printed, 1888. 20.00 "Printed for distribution among scholars interested in the subject of ethnology and anthropology and not for general perusal." Compiled from observations extending back to 1869 "while serving as aide-de-camp upon the staff of General Crook, during the campaigns against hostile tribes west of the Missouri." Deals with the manners, customs and usages of the Zunis, Mokis, Navajos, Sioux, Cheyenne, Crows, Arapahoes, Shoshones, [rtes and other tribes; their urine dances, phallic dances, snake dances, sun dances, and other strange and curious rites and practices. [19] . On the Border with Crook; Campaigning against the Indians in Montana, Wyoming, Arizona and New Mexico. Portrait and plates. 8vo, cloth. N. Y., 1891. 12.50 ORIGINAL EDITION. Captain Bourke was an army officer of wide experience among the Indians, a member of the Staff of General Crook, and participated in many Indian campaigns. The book, which is entertain- ingly written, records personal experiences and observations during many years of frontier campaigning. [20] . The Same. Second Edition. N. Y., 1892. 7.50 [21] . The Snake-Dance of the Moquis of Arizona With a Dissertation upon Serpent Worship. 31 colored plates, 8vo, cloth. New York, 1884. 17.50 First authentic description of this celebrated ceremonial. The strange rites here so faithfully described in text and picture are believed by Sa- ville and other archaeologists to have been performed unaltered for thous- ands of years. [22] Box (CAPT. M. J.). Adventures and Explorations, being the record of Ten Years Travel. 34 pp., 8vo, cloth. N. Y., 1869. 20.00 Munk, p. 36. One of the best descriptive narratives of the southwestern country. [23] BOYD (O. B.). Cavalry Life in Tent and Field. Portrait. 12mo, cloth. New York, 1894. 7.50 Adventures and military service in Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico, with valuable particulars of the Indian Campaigns. BRINK'S NAVAJO DICTIONARY. [23a] [BRINK, REV. L. P., et al]. An Ethnologic Dictionary of the Navajo Language. By the Franciscan Fathers. 105 illustrations. 536 pp., printed on Japan Vellum throughout, 8vo, original wrappers. St. Michaels, Arizona, 1910. 37.50 Only 200 copies of this truly remarkable book were printed. It repre- 6 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS seats the life work of Rev. L. P. Brink of Tohatchi, New Mexico, who invented the Navajo alphabet, evolved a dictionary and grammar conform- ing to Navajo usage, and finally succeeded in reducing the language to its present. literary form. Every detail of this tribe—numbering 20,000— language, social customs, religion, houses, implements, mode of life, manners and customs, etc, here find painstaking and accurate record. [24] BRowNE (J. Ross). Adventures in the Apache Country. A Tour through Arizona and Sonora, with Notes on the Silver Regions of . Plates. 12mo, cloth. New York, 1869. 7.50 ORIGINAL EDITION. Wagner-Camp, No. 412. No other work gives so vivid or such an accurate account of the country and of the terrors which then attended border life in Arizona, where one-twentieth of the population had been_ swept away by the attacks of the in three years. [25] BURR (DAVID H.) Map of the United States of Mexico. Drawn and Published by David H. Burr. Colored folio, 12V2" x 10 /1 2 ". New York, 1832. 5.00 Shows the Arizona country on a small scale, as part of Sonora and New California. THE FIRST JOURNEY ACROSS THE CONTINENT. [26] CABEZA DE VACA (ALVAR NUNEZ). Relation et Naufrages. 302 pp., 8vo, half calf. Paris, 1837. 35.00 Narrative of the first white man to cross North America. The journey of Cabeza de Vaca and his companions in 1527 across Texas through New Mexico and Arizona to the Pacific, antedates the expedition of Coronado, and stands first in point of interest and sequential significance. THE RARE FIRST ENGLISH TRANSLATION. [27] [CABEzA DE VAcA]. The Narrative of Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca. Translated by Buckingham Smith. 8 maps. 138 pp., folio, orig- inal cloth. Washington: Privately printed, 1851. 100.00 Copy No. 59 of 100 printed for the friends of George Riggs, and pre- sented by him to Lieut. George Foster Emmons. This translation of the 1555 text is the FIRST ENGLISH EDITION OF AN "OVERLAND", and this won- derful journey may be regarded as the beginning of Arizona annals. [28] . The Same, with the notes augmented by twenty years further research by Buckingham Smith, and with a Life of de Vaca by Thomas Field, and a Memoir by Gilmary Shea. Plates. 300 pp., 4to, cloth. New York, Privately printed, 1871. 60.00 100 copies only were printed for friends of the editor, and none for sale.

[29] [CAREzA DE VACA]. Garcia (A. B.). Vida y Hazanas de Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca. 264 pp., 12mo, cloth. Madrid, 1928. 3.00 The life and exploits of the explorer.

[30] CADY (JOHN). Arizona's Yesterday : Narrative of John H. 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 7 Cady, Pioneer. Plates. 12mo, wrappers. (Patagonia, 1915). 3.50 Journal of a trip across the plains with the Argonauts to Arizona, with details of Indian Warfare. HUTTON'S OVERLAND TRIP FROM EL PASO TO . [31] CAMPBELL (ALBERT W.). Pacific Wagon Roads. Report upon the Several Wagon ,Roads Constructed under the Direction of the Interior Department. Two large folding maps of the El Paso-Fort Yuma Wagon Road, and four others. 125 pp., 8vo, cloth. Washington, 1859. 25.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 321. Copies with the maps in good condition are the exception. Pages 77-100 contain the report and personal narrative of N. H. Hutton of the road building expedition across the entire length of the to Fort Yuma in 1857-8. CLARKF,'S JOURNEY THROUGH ARIZONA IN 1849. [32] CLARKE (A. B.) Travels in Mexico and California : Comprising a Journal of a Tour from Brazos Santiago, by way of Monterey, Chi- huahua, the country of the Apaches, and the River Gila, to the Min- ing Districts of California. 138 pp.„ 12mo, original printed wrappers, laid in half morocco slip case. Boston, 1852. 125.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 210; Cowan, p. 48: "Scarce and but little known." Clarke left New York Jan. 29, 1849, as a member of the Hampden Mining Company of 46 persons. Brazos was reached in mid-February, and from thence the company proceeded westward via Monterey, Chihuahua, Janos, Santa Cruz, Tucson and the Gila to Los Angeles where they arrived July 9th. [33] COCHRAN (M. A.). From Reveille to Retreat. An Army Story. Plates. 12mo, cloth. Cincinnati, 1896. 10.00 Narrative of Major Prescott's march into Arizona ; Fort Yuma; two years at Fort Apache; Indian scouting; the Apache outbreak; Whipple Barracks; tramping and camping through the Territory, etc. [34] COLTON (G. W.). Map of Arizona and New Mexico. Colored county Map. 25" x 16", folding into 12mo. New York, 1877. 7.50 Showing the districts, surveyed townships, forts and military camps, towns, settlements, Indian reservations and encampments, and the routes of the Atlantic & Pacific and the ,Southern Pacific railways. [35] . Map of Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico. Colored folio, 17" x 26". New York, 1865. 10.00 Arizona is shown without southern Nevada as heretofore included in her borders. The just located Fort Whipple is laid down as is every other known geographical feature of the Territory. EARLY MAP OF THE GADSDEN PURCHASE. 1854. [36] CovroN (J. H.). Map of the Territory Acquired from Mexico by the Gadsden Treaty of 1854. Inset 11Y2 " x 4Y2 " in large map, 27" x 20" entitled "Kansas & Nebraska," but extending to 112' and 8 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS including Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Utah, Colorado, New Mexico and Part of Arizona. Folding into 12mo, gilt-stamped original cloth covers. New York, 1854. 35.00 Not in Phillips. POSSIBLY THE EARLIEST MAI' Or THE GADSDEN PUR- CHASE, exhibiting Kearney's Route, Cooke's Route, Boundary Commission Wagon Route, proposed Southern Route for Pacific Rail Road, etc. [37] . The Same. N. Y., 1857. 15.00 [38] CONKLIN (E.). Picturesque Arizona. Travels and observa- tions in 1877. Plates. 8vo, cloth. N. Y., 1878. 3.00 THE NARRATIVE OF FATHER CONSAG, 1748. [39] CONSAG (P. FERNANDO). Carta del P. Fernando Consag de la Compania de Jesus, Visitador de las Missiones de , a los Padres Superiores de esta Provincia de Nueva-Espana. 43 pp., small 4to, wrappers. San Ignacio, 1748. 150.00 Wagner, Spanish Southwest, No. 120. Consag spent many years in Lower California and played an active part in the early exploration of the Colorado-Gila Country. Much of this "Carta" is given over to an ac- count of the life of Father Antonio Tempis and his career in the California Missions from 1736-1746. COOKE'S MARCH THROUGH ARIZONA. OPENING THE GILA ROUTE. [40] CooKE (COL. P. ST. G.). The Conquest of California and New Mexico; an Historical and Personal Narrative. Folding Map. 8vo, cloth. New York, 1878. 20.00 ORIGINAL EDITION. First hand narrative by the leader of the Mormon Battalion. Cooke took command at Santa Fe with orders from Gen. Kear- ney to open a wagon route to the Pacific by the Gila Route. This involved a march of 1100 miles through unknown wilderness without road or trail. His guides were Charbon,eau and Leroux, who, finding it impossible to fol- low the Gila urged Cooke to turn southward. Cooke, however, a strict disci- plinarian, continued westward, saying "he would be damned if he would go round the world to reach California." This march—undertaken by infantry with wagons for which a road must be found or built—was much more difficult than that of any that had previously crossed the continent in these latitudes. COOKE'S DAY-BY-DAY JOURNAL OF THE MARCH. [41] . Journal of the March of the Mormon Battalion of In- fantry Volunteers under the Command of Colonel Cooke, from Santa Fe to San Diego, Kept by Himself. 85 pp., 8vo, sewn. Washington, 1849. 40.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 165: "The first publication of this journal." The work comprises the commander's personal day-by-day narrative of the har- rowing winter march through New Mexico and Arizona. [See also Tyler, No. 202] COOPER'S CAPTURE OF APACHE CHIEF MANGUS. [42] COOPER (CAPT. CHARLES L.). Report of an Expedition in the 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 9 Black River Country, Narrating the Pursuit and Capture of Apache Chief Mangus. 12mo, broadside. Whipple Barracks, 1886. 15.00 'The report of the campaign extends to some five hundred words and is dated flora Fort Apache. [43] [CoRoNADo]. Aiton (Arthur S.). The Muster Roll and Equip- ment of the Expedition of Francisco Vasquez de Coronado. Now translated into English for the first time. 28 pp., 12mo, printed wrap- pers. Ann Arbor, 1939. 1.00 A recently discovered Coronado document throwing new light on the expedition. ORIGINAL EDITION OF CORONADO'S EXPEDITION. [44] . Castaneda (P. De). Relation du Voyage de Cibola En- trepis en 1540; ou l'on traite de toutes les Peuplades qui habitent cette Contree, de Leurs Moeurs et Coutumes, par Pedro Castaneda de Nagera. 392 pp., 8vo, half calf. Paris, 1838. 45.00 ORIGINAL EDITION. In 1539 Vasquez de Coronado, fired with the zeal of conquest, marshalled a force of 300 Spaniards and 800 Mexicans at Cu- liacan in Southern California. In order to be certain of his route he sent ahead a Franciscan friar, Marcos de Niza, who went "through Sonora and Arizona, perhaps to Zuni," [Bancroft, p. 7], and returned with celestial vis- ions and golden revelations of the natural marvels he had seen. Having listened to this tale (which is printed in the Appendix) Coronado and his 1100 conquerors set out to follow Niza's route, (roundly cursing the friar's exaggerations on the way), and finally reached Zuni. Expeditions were sent to the Moqui towns, the Colorado canyon, and the Pecos River. The army wintered in the Rio Grande Valley in 1540 and in the following year penetrated possibly as fax north and east as Kansas. Castaneda wrote the narrative of the expedition. It remained in the Spanish archives, unpublished, until translated into French by Ternaux- Compans as above. [45] . The Journey of Francisco Vasquez de Coronado, 1540- 1542, as told by Pedro de Castaneda, Francisco Vasquez de Coronado, and Others. Translated and Edited by G. P. Winship, with Additional Notes and an Introduction by F. W. Hodge. 148 pp., 8vo, buckram. San Francisco : Grabhorn Press, 1933. 25.00 One of 550 copies. COUES' JOURNEY THRU ARIZONA TO THE PACIFIC. [46] CouEs (ELLtoTT). From Arizona to the Pacific. 16 pp., 8vo, wrappers. N. p., 1866. 35.00 Not in Munk. Presentation copy. Details an overland journey in search of ornithological specimens, from Fort Whipple to Fort Mohave, and thence in company with the Commanding General in the Territory down the Colorado to Fort Yuma, whence after a stay, Coues returned to Mohave and proceeded on to California. [47] CozzENs (S. W.). Crossing the Quicksands ; or, the Veritable Adventures of Hal and Ned upon the Pacific Slope. Plates. 317 pp., 8vo, cloth. Boston, 1877. 25.00 Not in Munk. 10 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS [48] . The Marvelous Country ; or Three Years in Arizona. Plates. 8vo, cloth. Boston, [1876]. 2.00 As common as the foregoing and following are scarce. [49] . The Young Silver Seekers ; or, Hal and Ned in the Marvelous Country. Plates. 343 pp., 8vo, cloth. Boston, 1883. 15.00 Munk, p. 57.

[50] CREMONY ( JOHN C.). Life Among the Apaches. 322 pp., 12mo, cloth. San Francisco, 1868. 20.00 ORIGINAL EDITION. Cremony's work to the present day remains one of the best upon the Apache and his aboriginal neighbors. Among other exper- iences Cremony served as interpreter to Bartlett [See No. 10] in the Ari- zona boundary survey. The book is a dependable authority. APPARENTLY THE FIRST GUIDE-BOOK THROUGH ARIZONA. [51] CREUZBAUR (ROBERT). Route from the Gulf of Mexico and the Lower Mississippi Valley to California and the Pacific Ocean, With Directions to Travellers. [Lacking the maps, as usual]. 41 pp., 12mo, original gold stamped cloth. New York, 1849. 100.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 166. THIS IS APPARENTLY THE FIRST BOOK PRINTED TO GUIDE EMIGRANTS THROUGH THE ARIzONA TERRITORY. The work contains a description of the Texas-New Mexico-Arizona country and the routes of the pioneer expeditions from Texas to the Pacific Coast. Of particular importance is the personal narrative of Dr. J. S. Ford detailing his hazardous journey from Austin to El Paso del Norte with ma- jor Neighbors' Expedition, and the table of distances, with descriptive text, of the route from thence via Oro de Vaca San Bernardino, San Pedro River, Fort Tucson, Pimo Villages, Mouth of' the G-Ha River, Cariso Creek, and Warner's Rancheria to San Diego. The "Directions to Travellers" com- prise three closely printed pages in the smallest type and offer the emi- grant in detail every instruction necessary to undertake the journey, from the animals he should purchase, the organization of a company, the clothes, provisions, medicines, and articles for exchange with the Indians, right on down to the "rifle, pair of Colt's Revolvers, one butcher-knife, and a toma- hawk." CROOK'S PERSONAL NARRATIVE OF THE APACHE CAMPAIGN & THE CAPTURE OF GERONIMO.

[52] CROOK (GEN GEORGE) . Annual Report of Brigadier General , U. S. Army, Commanding Department of Arizona, 1883. 43 pp., 12mo, printed wrapper. Prescott, 1883. 75.00 Munk, p 58. For an extended account see Bancroft, pp. 569-573. The treachery and elusiveness of Geronimo is among the more interesting epi- sodes of Arizona history, and this personal narrative of the chase and cap- ture is one of Arizona's rarest books. The present is one of the official cop- ies and is signed in manuscript by Crook's aide-de-camp Capt. S. Roberts. Pages 1-17 are taken up with the official report of the events of this thrill- ing year, and the remainder of the volume consists of Appendices "A" to "I." These latter comprise Crook's account of his first examination of condi- tions in the territory immediately after he had been called in to subdue the Apaches; his orders as to the future management of the reservations ; 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 11 "Memorandum of a Council at San Carlos, between Gen. Crook and the Indians on the White Mountain Reservation"; official orders from the Gen- eral of the Army "To destroy hostile Apaches"; the McComas Massacre and other depredations committed by the Chato and Geronimo raiding parties; the preparations for the chase; the pursuit throughout ; trailing the savages to the Apache stronghold in the Sierra Madre—a place never reached by troops before; the engagement, final capture, and terms of capitulation. Crook's own narrative of the famous campaign extends from page 24 to 35, For a collateral account see Bourke's Apache Catni pwign, No. 17.

[53] • Instructions for the preparation of reports and esti- mates of Quartermasters in Arizona, covering fuel, forage, straw, repairs to barracks and hospitals, clothing, tools, transportation, etc. 9 pp., 12mo, sewn. Prescott, 1886. 5.00 [54] . Memorial upon the Death of Capt. Emmet Crawford of Wounds received in Battle with the Chiricahua Apaches. 8vo, broadsheet, in mourning borders. Fort Bowie, 1886. 15.00 McMurtrie, No. 116, locates only the copy in the Huntington Library. Narrates the events of Crawford's campaign against the Apaches, "one of the most important expeditions organized for this purpose." CURTIS' HISTORY OF THE SOUTHWESTERN INDIANS. [55] CURTIS (EDWARD S.). The North American Indians : The Apache, the Jicarillas, the Navajo, the Pima, the Mojave, the Yuma, the Maricopa, the Hualapai, and the Yavapai. Written, Illustrated and Published by E. S. Curtis; Edited by F. W. Hodge; Foreword by Theodore Roosevelt ; Under the Patronage of J. P. Morgan. 154 f ull- page photographs, each an illustration of an Indian Type or of some vital phase in his life-cycle. 2 vols., 161, 142 pp., 4to, original half morocco. Cambridge, 1907-1908. 85.00 Signed by Curtis and Roosevelt. The opportunity to secure these es- sential separate volumes on the Southwest is seldom vouchsafed. The work details every important phase of these tribes: history, homeland, life, myth- ology, medicine and medicine men, customs, arts, ceremonies, vocabularies; cte. Beyond question the finest production on the American aborigines.

[56] CUTLER (GEN. BEN C.). Charge, Finding and Sentence of Lieut. Porter Haden at Franklin, Texas, for Insubordination to Gen. West, Commander of the . 5 pp., on lined note- paper, 12mo. Santa Fe, 1863. 5.00 Signed in manuscript by Gen. Cutler.

[57] DAPRAY (L'Eur. J. A.). Order Discontinuing the Temporary Campaign Headquarters at Willcox, Arizona Territory. 12mo, broad- side. Whipple Barracks, Prescott, 1886. 3.00 [58] DAVIS (A. P.). The Irrigation Investigation for the Benefit of the Pima and other Indians on the Reservation, Arizona. 6 plates and four folding maps. 58 pp., 8vo, stapled. Washington, 1897. 5.00 12 EDWARD EBERSTADT 8z SONS DAVIS' SPANISH CONQUEST OF THE SOUTHWEST. [59] DAVIS (W. W. H.). The Spanish Conquest of New Mexico : 1527-1703. Map and plate. 8vo, half calf. Doylestown, 1869. 25.00 Privately issued in a small edition after many years' study of original sources and other official Spanish and Mexican records never before con- sulted or translated. [60] DAWSON (T. F.). The Grand Canyon. An article giving the credit of first traversing the Grand Canyon of the Colorado to James White, a Colorado gold prospector, who it is claimed made the voyage two years previous to the Powell expedition in 1869. 67 pp., 8vo, sewn. Washington, 1917. 7.50 Dr. Dawson was White's staunchest champion. He here sets forth with enviable partiality his arguments and conclusions in support of the pros- pector's claim to priority.

[61] DE FoRREsT (LIEUT. CYRUS H.). Proceedings of a Court of Inquiry to Examine into the Facts and Circumstances Connected with the Shooting for Mutiny of Corporal , by Order of Gen. Joseph R. West, at Mesilla, Arizona. 3 pp., 8vo, laid in cello- phane envelope. Santa Fe, 1863. 12.50 One of the few records of death by the firing squad in Arizona. The court found the deceased guilty of mutinous conduct and absolved Gen. West from any blame in connection with his execution. [62] . Proceedings of General Court Martial at La Mesilla, Arizona, with Charles, Findings and Sentences for Derilection of Duty at Mesilla. 4 pp., 12mo, laid in transparent envelope. Santa Fe, 1863. 10.00 The trials of various California Volunteers for desertion, stealing, gambling, subversive conduct, etc. at Mesilla. [63] DELLENBAUGH (F. S.). The Romance of the Colorado River. The Story of its Discovery in 1540, with an Account of the Later Explorations. Plates. 399 pp., 8vo, cloth. N. Y., 1904. 7.50 [64] DE LONG ( SIDNEY R.). The History of Arizona from the Ear- liest Times. 199 pp., 12mo, cloth. San Francisco, 1905. 8.50 The Oat/Ilan tragedy ; Crabb Expedition and Massacre; Gadsden Pur- chase ; Indians; County history, pioneers, etc. DERBY'S REPORT & MAP OF HIS EXPLORATIONS. [65] DERBY (LIEUT. GEO. H.). Reconnaissance of the Gulf of Cali- fornia and the Colorado River. Large folding map. 28 pp., sewn, uncut. Washington, 1852. 35.00 The day-by-day journal of the first exploration, charting and sounding of the Colorado by an American. Derby later achieved prominence as a humorist under the pen-name "Phoenix." DESCRIPTION OF ARIVACA & ITS WEALTH. [66] DESCRIPTION of the Arivaca Estate in the Territory of Arizona. 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 13 Large folding "Military Map of Arizona." 18 pp., 8vo, original printed wrappers. [London, c. 1879]. 30.00 The Arivaca District—some sixty miles south of Tucson—was first explored by Posten and Ehrenburg for the Sonora Exploring and Mining Company. Here the "Heintzelman" mine was developed and operated until 1861 when insufficient military support gave the Apaches a free hand. The present work in detail of the region gives accounts of the country and its resources with reports by Ward, Browne, Heintzelman, Ehrenberg, Cozzens and Pumpelly. The "Military Map"—a particularly fine one—locates the many camps, the hills, streams, trails, etc. APPARENTLY THE ONLY EXISTING COPY IN WRAPPERS OF DISTURNELL'S RARE GUIDE. [67] DisTuRNELL (J.). The Emigrant's Guide to New Mexico, Cali- fornia and Oregon ; Giving the Different Overland and Sea Routes. Large folding colored map by J. Disturnell, entitled "Map of Califor- nia, New Mexico and Adjacent Countries, Showing the Gold Reg- ions, &c. 1849." 80 pp., 16mo, in the original printed wrappers, laid in protective half morocco slip case. New York, 1849. 450.00 ORIGINAL EDITION. Not in Wagner-Camp. This is the Braislin copy which seems to be the only known copy in the original printed wrappers. The wrapper is facsimiled in the Braislin Sale Catalogue, No. 602, wherein the work is described as: "ONE OF TITE GREAT RARITIES OF CALIFORNIA, AND ONE OF THE LEAST KNOWN OVERLAND GUIDES. It contains the finest map of the gold region of all the early California Guide Books." Inset on the map is a summary of "Overland Routes" giving the itinerary and distances of the various routes. The work is one of the first guides to the then little known regions. The preface is dated March, 1849, and states: "The compiler of this work being acquainted with the great want of correct information in relation to the various ROUTES to New Mexico California and Oregon, has been in- duced to publish the following GUIDE for the benefit of the Emigrant and Adventurer, to visit or settle in the newly acquired territories of the union which are now attracting the notice of the civilized world." The first 46 pages of the guide are given over to narrative descriptions of the various routes, tables of distances, etc. These include the interesting narrative of Col. Hays under the title: "Route from Texas to San Diego via El Paso"; as also a detailed itinerary, with distances of G-en. Kear- ny's official report, dated San Diego, U. C., Dec. 12, 1846; Major Cooke's Report of the opening of the Gila Wagon Road ; and Table of Distances of Col. Hay's Route. The second part of the work [pp. 49-80] contains a "Description of New Mexico and California," in detail of the history, re- sources, Indians, and gold regions of our newly acquired Southwest. DISTURNELL'S "TREATY MAP" OF THE SOUTHWEST. [68] . Mapa de los Estados Unidos de Mexico, Segun lo Or- ganizado y Definido por las varias actas del Congreso de dicha Re- publica, y Construido por las mejores autoridades. Lo Publican, J. Disturnell, Revised Edition. Elephant folio engraved colored map, with leaf of text, folding into 12mo, gilt stamped covers. Nueva York, 1847. 40.00 See Bancroft, pp. 469-73. This is the "Treaty Map"; so called because it is specifically designated in Article 5 of the Treaty of Guadelupe Hidalgo 14 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS [See No. 199] as the map by which the southwestern boundary was to be determined.

[69] . The Same. Nueva York, 1846. 35.00 ORIGINAL EDITION. APACHE OUTRAGES IN ARIZONA. [70] [Doss' S , M. D.]. Memorial and Affidavits showing Outrages perpetrated by the Apache Indians in the Territory of Arizona, 1869 and 1870. 32 pp., 8vo, original wrappers. San Francisco, 1871. 35.00 The testimony of survivors and eye-witnesses to the fiendish barbari- ties of the Apaches. It constitutes a bloody catalogue of outrages, massa- cres, robberies and depredations. "We have endured hardships and braved dangers with fortitude and though hundreds have fallen beneath the scalp- ing knife and tomahawk, or suffered torture at the burning stake, the survivors fill the broken ranks, and continue the contest."

THE SUPPRESSED PORTION OF DODGE'S "OUR WILD INDIANS." PRIVATELY ISSUED BY THE GENERAL. [71] DODGE (GEN. R. I.). A Living Issue. By the Author of "Our Wild Indians." [Being the Suppressed Chapters of that Work.] 37 pp. 8vo, original printed wrappers. Washington: Privately printed, 18,82. 37.50 Shea No. 154: "VERY RARE." In his preface to the expose Dodge says: "The first twelve chapters of the original manuscript of my book 'Our Wild Indians' were devoted to an elaborate discussion of the Indian question. These chapters were discarded by the publishers as too argumentative . . . The facts and arguments set forth in that MSS. are (in my opinion) of too much importance te the honor of the Country to be lost ; and I am too much in earnest to remain silent under all the wrongs and outrages heaped upon the Indians . . . This pamphlet GIVES THE pAcTs!" [72] . Our Wild Indians : Thirty-Three Years' Personal Ex- perience among the Red Men of the Great West. With Adventures on the Great Plains and Mountains. Portrait and plates. 653 pp., 8vo, cloth. Hartford, 1882. 3.50 [73] DOOLITTLE (J. R.). Speech on the bill to organize the Territory of ARIZUMA. 16 pp., 8vo, uncut. Washington, 1860. 10.00 [74] DUNN (J. P.). Massacres of the Mountains. A History of the Indian Wars of the Far West. Folding map and plates. 8vo, cloth. N. Y., 1886. 15.00, Bancroft, p. 554: "The best, and indeed almost the only connected view of the extant. Both in matter and manner it merits high praise." [75] DUTTON (CLARENCE E.). Tertiary History of the Grand Can- yon District. Plates. 4to, cloth. Washington, 1882. 3.00 THE ECKHOFF & RIECKER "OFFICIAL" MAP. [76] ECKHOET (E. A.) & RIECKER (P.). Official Map [Colored] 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 15 of the Territory of Arizona. Compiled from Surveys, Reconnais- sances and other Sources. Attest : Governor J. C. Fremont. 37" x 28", folding into 12mo, original cloth covers, with broadside text : "Table of Distances from and to the Different Stations in Arizona Terri- tory." New York, 1879. 40.00 Cited in Bancroft's "List of Authorities." An important map, in great- est detail, bounding the Indian Reservations, Mining Districts, County Bor- ders, and defining the Military Telegraph and Railway lines, towns, set- tlements, ranchos, etc. ONE OF THE CRUDEST AND RAREST ITEMS OF ARIZONIANA. GILA BEND, 1868. [77] ELLts ( JosEPH). Old Timers Hearken!!! [Follows fifty-seven lines of the crudest, most mixed-up type ever set in Arizona, being the advertising spiel of an itinerant overland trader]. 8vo, broadside, 12" x 9", laid in protective cellophane wrapper. Gila Bend, Arizona, 1868. 100.00 THE ONLY KNOWN COPY. Undoubtedly printed aboard the trader's wag- on as it set up for business at Gila Bend, July 4, 1886. "We are camping on the trail and there's but few of us left . . . Joe Ellis has got backk from the States . . . Pintes, Apaches, Navajos, greasers and the smallpox tried to stop roe but I give them all the shake . . . and along with Joseph is the damndest biggest stock of bibles, rifles, playing cards, praying beads, cigars, a new preparation of corn, wagon grease, overalls, paints, some kid- gloves; and a few coffins [some satin lined], to suit blondes or brunettes . . . Along with the dry goods, Joseph has gathered 12 barrels of wet goods . . . After fraternizing with this liquor a man does not go to his cabin, cuss his wife or squaw, slam his children, and kick the stuffings outen his dog, but becomes pleasant, soft and lovable . . . It costs you two bits a jag and the barkeeper turns his back while you catch on to the jag." [78] EMORY (MAJOR W. H.). Notes of •a Military Reconnaissance from Fort Leavenworth to San Diego, Including the Arkansas, Del Norte and Gila Rivers. Large folding map and 43 plates. 8vo, cloth. Washington, 1848. 6.00 Wagner-Camp No. 148. One of the important documents on the South- west.

[79] ENGELHARDT (Z.). The Franciscans in Arizona. Map and plates. 8vo, cloth. Harbor Springs : Indian School Print, 1899. 15.00 Munk, p. 73. Except for Arricivita, [See No. 4] this is the main au- thority. ESCUDERO'S HISTORY OF SONORA. [80] ESCUDERO (J OSE A. DE). Noticias Estadisticas de Sonora y Sinaloa. Folding table. 148 pp., 8vo, morocco. Mexico, 1849. 60.00 Sabin, No. 22844. An important book with much on the geography, resources and Indian tribes just prior to the Gadsden Purchase. [81] [EsPEjo]. The Voiage of Anthony of Espeio, who in the yeare 1583, with his Company, discouered a Lande of 15 prouinces, replen- ished with Townes and Villages, with Houses of 4 or 5 Stories 16 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS Height. 8vo, boards, vellum back. Lancaster, 1928. 15.00 One of two hundred copies presented, and signed by F. W. Hodge. [82] [EsPEjo]. Luxan (D. B. de) Expedition into New Mexico Made by Antonio de Espejo 1582-1583 as Revealed in the Journal of Diego Perez de Luxan, a Member of the Party. Translated and Edited by G. P. Hammond and A. Rey. Facsimiles, maps and plates. 8vo, half vellum. Los Angeles, 1929. 25.00 This is the first English translation of Luxan's day-by-day journal. It is considered the best of the contemporary sources and more reliable than Espejo's own. [83] EVANS ( J. W.). The Salt River Valley, Arizona. Questions Answered. 4to, broadsheet, 3 columns text in fine print to the page. [Phoenix, 1892]. 7.50 A mine of information on Phoenix and the Salt River Valley, being the answers to 109 questions about the region. [84] FARISH (T. E.). Central and Southwestern Arizona. The Gar- den of America. Plate. 48 pp., 8vo, wrappers. [Phoenix], 1889. 12.50 Malurtrie, No. 138. History of the region from Coronado's entrada to the then present. Individual county histories and statistics for Pinal, Mari- copa and Yuma, with descriptions of the towns, settlements, resources, pro- ductions, etc. [85] . Southeastern Arizona: its Varied Climate and Won- derful Resources. Inducements to Emigrants. 47 pp., 8vo, original wrappers. Phoenix : Arizona Gazette Print, 1889. 15.00 ,McMurtrie No. 142. History of old Apacheria and Papageria ; moun- tains, views and plains; climate and soil; stock-raising; agricultural devel- opments; sketches of the history of Pima, , and Graham Counties, etc. COMPLETE WITH THE THREE MAPS. [86] FERGUSON (MAJOR D.). Report on the Country, Its Re- sources, and the Route between Tucson and Lobos Bay. 3 Large folding maps, including one of the country and routes from El Paso to Los Angeles. 22 pp., 8vo, new boards. Washington, 1863. 25.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 387. Copies with all three maps are seldom met with. It is one of the few works listed by Wagner which he had failed to obtain for his own collection. Braislin, No. 718, cites only two maps. This report is of great importance as showing the practicability of a railroad from the Rio Grande to the Gulf of California. In addition, it shows why the South- ern Confederacy was attempting to hold the Territory of Arizona; exhibits the value of the region and the necessity of its conquest and occupation by the North; the purchase from Mexico—ere it becomes a possession of France—of a strip of territory giving access to the Gulf of California is also advocated. The itineraries of the various routes explored by Major Ferguson are set forth in elaborate detail. [87] . The Same. Another copy issued with two maps, includ- ing the folding one of the overland. 8vo. new boards. Washington, 1863. 10.00 A facsimile of the third map is inserted. 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 17 THE ONLY LOCATED PERFECT COPY. [88] FERGUSON (R. D.). For Sale ! A Group of Gold Bearing Mines in Southern Arizona. Important Mining Statistics. Recent Great Gold Strikes. Review of Mining Interests. Map. 40 pp., 8vo, original printed wrappers. Tucson : Star Publishing Print, 1888. 35.00 The only located perfect copy. A copy is referred to by McMurtrie, No. 128, in the Arizona Pioneers Historical Society, but its last leaves are mutilated. The mines here described are situated in the Quijotoa Range, about eighty miles westerly from Tucson.

[89] FINLEY (ANTHONY). Map of Mexico. [Colored] quarto, 1172 " x 8W. Philadelphia, [1828]. 10.00 San Xavier del Bac is shown as the northernmost point in Sonora, with practically all of Arizona included in New California. The Indian tribes are located, including the "Yabapaias Indians, with Long Beards." PHOTOGRAPHIC RECORD OF GERONIMO'S CAPTURE. [90] FLY (M. E.). Scenes in Geronimo's Camp. The Apache Outlaw and Murderer. Taken Before the Surrender to Gen. Crook in the Si- erra Madre Mountains. 25 full-page photographic views and por- traits, with 3 pp. of accompanying descriptive text, 4to, original wrap- pers. Tombstone, 1886. 25.00 Not in Munk. A most interesting series of photographs of the Apache Campaigns, with a colored view of the "Council between Gen. Crook and Geronimo."

[91] FORBES (R. H.) Canaigre. Plates. 35 pp., 8vo, sewn. Tucson, 1896. 2.50 Analysis and study of this southwestern plant.

[92] FRAZER (ROBERT). The Apaches of White Mountain Reserva- tion. 22 pp., 8vo, wrappers. Philadelphia, 1885. 5.00 Narrative of a tour with Gen. Crook through the Apache Country. A history of the Apaches is given, as also a description of their Reservation and life thereon. FREJES' HISTORIA DE LA CONQUISTA.

[93] FREJES (FRANCISCO). Historia Breve de la Conquista de los Estados Independientes del Imperio Mejicano. 302, 2 pp., 12mo, calf. Mejico, 1839. 60.00 One of Bancroft's sources. Contains much upon the history, geography, Indians, and the conquest of Coahuila & Tejas and Sonora & Sinaloa, with data on their colonization. [94] FRoEstt, (JuLius). Aus America, Erfahrungen, Reisen und Studien. 2 vols., 12mo, half morocco. Leipzig, 1857-58. 25.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 292. ORIGINAL EurrioN. "This is one of the most interesting books of travel through the Southwest. Froebel went out first in 852 by the Santa Fe Trail. In June of 1854 he went to California by way of Tucson and the Gila." [94a] . The Same. In English as : Seven Years' Travel in 18 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS Northern Mexico and the Far West of the United States. Plates. 8vo, cloth. London, 1859. 10.00 [95] GARCES (FRANCISCO). On the Trail of a Spanish Pioneer. The Diary and Itinerary of Francisco Garces in his Travels Through So- nora, Arizona and California, 1775-1776. Translated and Edited by Eliott Coues. Map and plates. 2 vols., 8vo, cloth. New York, 1900. 15.00 For the first appearance of much of these diaries see Arricivita. [96] GIBSON (O.) Brief on Behalf of Petitioners [Bi-a-Iii-le and six other Navajoes] on their Application for a Writ of Habeas Corpus. [with another pamphlet :] Alexander ( J. L. B.). Argument and Brief of the Appellee, in the Supreme Court of the Territory of Arizona. 19, 26 pp., 8vo, printed wrappers. Phoenix, 1909. The two items 12.50 The Navajoes were captured on their reservation by Capt. H. O. Wil- lard and charged with inciting hostility toward the government, rape, dep- redations on property, and threats to kill Indian Superintendent Shelton. [97] GOLD & Silver Mining in Sonora. Proposed Purchase of the San Juan del Rio Mines & Lands Belonging to the Cincinnati and Sonora Mining Association. 16 pp., 8vo, wrappers. Cincinnati, 1867. 20.00 Munk, p. 383. Contains correspondence regarding the company's lands and surrounding regions, including a long description written to in 1858, by John Denton Hall, eight years a resident in the country. Other letters by C. Chipman, Major Emory and DeBow, relate to the pro- posed Southern Pacific Railway through the Territory, the barbarity of and need to annihilate "the hordes of Apaches that lay waste its borders," etc. [98] [GOVERNOR'S REPORTS]. Murphy (N. O.). Report of the Gov- ernor of Arizona Territory to the Secretary of the Interior. 34 pp., 8vo, wrappers. Washington, 1890. 3.00 [99] . The Same for 1891, 1892, 1893, 1894, 1895. each 3.00 [100] . The Same for 1900, 1901, 1904, 1905, 1907-11. each 1.50 [101] GRAHAM (COL. J.). Report on the Boundary Line between the United States and Mexico. 2 folding maps and profile. 250 pp., 8vo, cloth, Washington, 1852. 15.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 212. Contains much valuable material including the journals of Graham's several explorations; his troubles with Bartlett, as al- so the report of Whipple's tour of the Gila. [102] GRAND Central Mining Company. Numerous maps and photo- graphic plates. 31 pp., 8vo, wrappers. [New York, 1905]. 3.50 An important mining project near Tucson, with a panoramic view of the town forty years ago. [103] GRANT (U. S.) Records and Documents of Mexico relating to the land now embraced within the Territory of Arizona. 6 pp., 8vo, folded. Washington, 1874. 2.00 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 19 NARRATIVE OF WM. GRANT, OVERLAND CONTRACTOR & BUILDER OF FORT BRECKENRIDGE. [104] GRANT (WILLIAM S.). Statement of William S. Grant, Army Contractor in Arizona [Narrating his Journey to Arizona to supply all Troops in the Territory from March, 1860; his arrival at Fort Buchanon ; business in Tucson ; freighting to Arizona from Texas; seizures by "Texas Rebels"; constructing Fort Breckenridge; build- ing roads in the Territory ; establishing a cattle ranch; losses from Indian depredations; destruction and abandonment of the Forts ; burning of his mills, store-house, lumber wagons and grain; supply- ing the Federal troops evacuating Arizona, &c.]. 13 pp., 8vo, original printed wrappers. [Washington : Privately Printed, 1862]. 75.00 THE ONLY COPY LOCATED. GRAY'S REPORTS ON HIS PIONEER EXPLORATIONS. [105] GRAY (COL. A. B.). Charter of the Texas Western Railroad Company, and Extracts from Reports of Col. A. B. Gray and the Secretary of War on the Survey of the Route from the Eastern Bor- ders of Texas to California. Nature of Country and Climate, Mineral and Agricultural Resources, &c., &c. Folding map. 40 pp., 8vo, origi- nal printed wrappers. Cincinnati, 1855. 65.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 255, note. Braislin, No. 851: "EXCESSIVELY RARE." [106] HAM BUN (JAcos). Narrative of personal experiences as a frontiersman, missionary to the Indians, and explorer. Disclosing severe privations, perilous situations and remarkable escapes. By J. A. Little. 12mo, cloth. Salt Lake, 1881. 15.00 ORIGINAL EDITION. Hamblin was one of the pioneer Mormons. His nar- rative embraces the trip across the plains to Salt Lake; the Mountain Meadows Massacre ; journey from Utah to California ; expedition to Las Ve- gas; life among the Moquis ; their manners and customs; adventures among the Navajos; explorations and accounts of the early Arizona settlements. [107] HAMILTON (P.). The Resources of Arizona : its Mineral, Farming and Grazing Lands, Towns, Mining Camps, Indians, Early History, etc. 120 pp., 8vo, wrappers. Prescott, 1881. 12.50 McMurtrie, No. 60. [108] . The Same. Second Edition, enlarged, and with litho- graphic views of Prescott, Tucson, Tombstone, Globe, Silver King, Clifton and Phoenix. San Francisco, 1883. 7.50 [109] HARDY (LIEUT. R. W. H.). Travels in the Interior of Mexico, in 1825-1828. Folding map of Sonora and Gulf of California, Plan of the Rio Colorado, etc. 8vo, cloth. London, 1829. 7.50 First survey and chart of the mouth of the Colorado and Gila Rivers. [110] HARPENDING (ASBURY). The Great Diamond Hoax and other Stirring Episodes. Portraits. 12mo, cloth. San Francisco, 1913. 3.50 Inside story on Arizona's great diamond mine swindle. 20 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS [111] HAsKELL (LIEuT.). Announcement of Col. O. B. Willcox's Assumption of the Command of the Department of Arizona, Reliev- ing Col. A. V. Kautz. 12mo, broadside. Prescott, 1878. 3.50 [112] . Camp Grant, Arizona Territory. General Courts Mar- tial, being the Trials of twelve Arizona Soldiers. 7 pp., 12mo, sewn. Prescott, 1878. 7.50 [113] HINToN (R. J.). The handbook to Arizona: its resources, his- tory, towns, mines, etc. Maps and plates. 8vo, cloth. San Francisco, 1878. 6.00 Includes twenty lithographs of early scenes, among which are depicted the beginnings of Prescott, Tucson, Fort Yuma, etc. The work itself is a mine of historical material. TRAVELS IN ARIZONA & FIGHTS WITH THE APACHES.

[114] HOBBS (CAPTAIN JAMES). Wild Life in the Far West ; Perso- nal adventures of a Border Mountain Man. Comprising Hunting and Trapping Adventures with and Others; Captivity and Life among the Comanches; Services under Doniphan in the War with Mexico; Desperate Combats with the Apaches, &c. Plates. 8vo, cloth. Hartford, 1873. 25.00 An authentic narrative full of excitement and adventure in the far southwest from the middle '30's onward. Hobbs was with Birker during his pursuit of the Apaches in 1840; was at Fort Yuma in '49, and describes the "outrageous Ferry Company"; describes the Holliday Massacre near Tucson; the arrival of the Apache captive, Emma Brown, at Fort Buchan- n; prospecting the Cerro Gordo mines; visit to the White Mountain mines; prospecting up the Colorado; massacre by the Apaches; battle at Opoto Village; beaver trapping on the Clin; scouting expeditions to Sonora; trip from Fort Yuma to Tucson, etc.

[115] HODGE (H.). Arizona as it Is; from Notes of Travel During 1874-6. Plates. 8vo, cloth. N. Y., 1877. 2.00

[116] HOWARD (GEN. O. O.). Order for the Transfer of Headquar- ters of the Department of Arizona from Prescott to Los Angeles, and Provision for Transportation Thereto. 12mo, broadside. Prescott, 1887. 5.00

[117] HUGHES (J. T.). Doniphan's Expedition : The Conquest of New Mexico ; General Kearney's Overland Expedition ; The Cam- paign against the Navajos. 144 pp., 8vo, half morocco. Cincinnati, 1848. 12.50 Wagner-Camp, No. 134. The author was an actor in many of the scenes which he describes. HUTAWA'S MAP OF THE WEST.

[118] HUTAWA ( JUL'S). Map of Mexico and California. Compiled from the latest authorities. Second Edition. Large folio, folding into 55 WEST 42ND STREET, Ntw YORK 21 12mo, original printed board covers. St. Louis, 1863 [184?]. 25.00 A curious production. Evidently the map-plate was made years before the date here given, probably between 1847 and 1849. Superimposed upon it is the present delineation of the country extending from the Missouri to the Pacific Coast. The various State and Territorial boundaries have been painted in. The territory embracing New Mexico and. Arizona is named, but apparently with the aid of a rubber stamp. Despite its crudities the map is surprisingly elaborate as regards in- ternal details; particularly in the case of New Mexico and Arizona. The towns, settlements, mines, etc., are located and named; their profusion lit- erally peppers this section of the chart. Interesting too are the many routes traced, among which are those of Smith, Gregg, Kearny, Cooke, Fre- mont, Lewis & Clark and others. The trails, including the Oregon, Old Spanish, and Santa Fe are shown, as are the forts, trading posts, and locations of the Indian tribes.

THE TUCSON METEORITE CONTROVERSY. [119] IRWIN (DR. J. D.). History of the Great "Tucson Meteorite" Donated to the Smithsonian Institution. 8 pp., 12mo, printed wrappers. Memphis, 1865. 15.00 Munk, p. 114. History of the discovery and wrangle over ownership of the "Tucson" or "Irwin-Ainsa" Meteorite—the second largest then known. [120] IvEs (LiEur. J. C.). Report Upon the Colorado River of the West. Maps, portraits and plates, 4to, half morocco. Washington, 1861. 5.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 375.

[121] JACOBS (H. S.). El Dorado. The Mining Fields of Arizona, with an Account of the Ancient People, their Monuments, and a De- scription, drawn from Personal Observations, of Remarkable Ruins. 24 pp., 8vo, original printed wrappers. N. Y., 1882. 30.00 Not in Munk. Journal of a trip from Fort Yuma up the Gila to Flor- ence, southeastward across the desert to Painted Rock, the Pima dwellings, and southern Arizona. [122] JANIN (Louis). Report on the Marsliaw Mining Property in the Patagonia Mountains. 16 pp., 8vo, original wrappers. New York, 1879. 4.50

[123] JOHNSON (W. H.). Pioneer Spaniards in North America. Plates. 8vo, cloth. Boston, 1903. 3.00

[124] JOHNSON & WARD. Map [Colored] of the Territories of Utah, Nevada, Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona. Double folio, 17" x 24". New York, 1864. 6.50 The outline boundaries of the territories are substantially correct, al- though southern Nevada is included in Arizona. The interior districts, however, are most peculiar. The various explored overland routes are traced as also the proposed routes for the Pacific Railroad. [125] . New Military Map of the United States, Showing

-?? EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS the Forts, Military Posts, etc. Colored folio, 17" x 24". New York, 1861. 6.50 Shows Arizona as extending eastward to the Pecos River from the Col- orado and south of 34° to the Mexican border. Also interesting as delineat- ing the various forts in the new Territory just at the time they were being abandoned to the Confederacy.

[126] KAHN (JuLius). Admission of Arizona and New Mexico. 24 pp., 8vo, stapled. Washington, 1911. 4.50 Not in Munk. Against the admission of Arizona under the constitution as submitted by the territory. BOUNDARY SURVEY OF CAMP BOWIE. [127] KAuTz (CoL. A. V.). Boundaries of the Military Reservation at Camp Bowie, A. T. 12mo, broadside. Prescott, 1878. 6.50 Signed in manuscript by the Colonel's Aide-de-Camp. [128] . List of Appropriations for Supplies, Civilian Employ- ees, Extra Duty Men, and Army Transportation at Camps Apache, Bowie, Grant, Lowell, McDowell, Mohave, Thomas and Verde, and Yuma Depot and Fort. 12mo, broadsheet. Prescott, 1878. 6.50 [129] KIBBE (W. C.). Memorial of the Prescott and Arizona Cen- tral Railway. 6 pp., 8vo, sewn. Washington, 1890. 3.50 Not in Munk. Proposal for the construction of a railroad to Phoenix from Prescott.

[130] KING (CAMERON H.). Southern Arizona. 26 pp., 8vo, original wrappers. Phoenix, 1887. 17.50 Embraces Mazicopa, Yuma, Pinal, Pima, Gila, Cochise and Graham Counties, with much on Phoenix and its transportation facilities. [131] KINO (E. F.). Historical Memoir of Pimeria Alta: A Con- temporary Account of the Beginnings of California, Sonora and Ari- zona, 1683-1711. Translated and edited by H. E. Bolton. Maps and plates. 2 vols., 8vo, cloth. Cleveland, 1919. 25.00 THE FIRST LEGISLATIVE ACTS. PRESCOTT, 1865. [132] LAWS. Acts, Resolutions and Memorials, Adopted by the First Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Arizona. 8vo, boards. Prescott: Arizona Miner Office, 1865. 60.00 .1‘felklurtrie No. 8. ONE OF THEi EARLIEST IMPRINTS to issue within the tolitory. The contents include the providing for temporary govern- ment, and various other Acts having to do with the setting up of govern- ment. Other sections of the work have to do with the history of the region, local annals of settlement and Indian combat. Among the more sanguinary records are accounts of the war with the Apaches; Lieut. Woolsey's Cam- paign, etc. Political affairs include the clash between Gen. Carleton and Sylvester Mowry. On the peaceful side, are such matters as the land grants; the routes, road-building, mineral development, navigation of the Colorado, railroad projects and the territorial boundary survey. 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 23 JOURNALS OF THE FIRST LEGISLATURE. [133] LAWS. Journals of the First Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Arizona. 250, 18 pp., 8vo, boards. Prescott: Office of the Arizona Miner, 1865. 60.00 McMurtrie, No. 11. Bancroft, p. 523, declares the volume to be: "THE BEST AUTHORITY ON THE ORGANIZATION OF THE TERRITORIAL GOVERNMENT." In addition to its importance for its basic legal documents, which in- clude various gubernatorial proclamations, and the proceedings of the Legis- lative body, the volume contains the OVERLAND JOURNEY of Governor Good- win and his staff from Fort Leavenworth to Fort Whipple, October-Decem- ber, 1863. [133a]. LAWS. Journals of the Second Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Arizona. 8vo, half calf. Prescott : Arizona Miner Office, 1866. 35.00 McMurtrie, No. 17. Similar in scope to the preceding as also the fol- lowing. [134] LAWS. Journals of the Third Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Arizona. 8vo, calf. Prescott: Arizona Miner Office, 1867. 25.00 McMurtrie, No. 24. THE FIRST COMPILED LIVE STOCK LAWS. [135] LAWS. Live Stock Laws of Arizona. issued by the Live Stock Sanitary Board of the Territory of Arizona, , 1897. 93 pp., and advertisements, 8vo, original printed wrappers. Phoenix: South- western Stockman Print, 1897. 40.00 THE FIRST COMPILED LIVE STOCK LAWS OF ARIZONA, issued for "the guidance and direction of the live stock inspectors and detectives." Contains the laws regulating live stock, including the last proclamation of the Secre- tary of Agriculture establishing quarantine, the instructions issued to In- spectors by the Bureau of Animal Industry, etc. MINING LAWS OF THE TERRITORY OF ARIZONA. 1865. [136] LAWS. Mining Laws of the Territory of Arizona. 12 pp., 8vo, sewn, separate uncut issue. Washington, 1865. 17.50 Characterized by Gov. McCormick as the "best laws ever devised upon the subject." The laws are divided into five "titles" which cover the regu- lations regarding registry of mines; mining rights ; conveyance, ektent, mode of acquisition and retention of titles; abandonment and relocation of mines; proceedings in litigated mining eases; alluvial and diluvial deposits; Territorial claims, etc.

[137] LOCKMAN (J.). Travels of the Jesuits into various parts of the world: Compiled from their letters, with accounts of the man- ners, government, religion, etc., of the various nations visited; and extracts from other travellers. Folding maps, including Kino's "Pas- sage by Land to California," and plates. 2 vols., 8vo, calf. London, 1762. 30.00 Cowan, p. 143. An important collection on the early explorations and 24 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS

work of the Jesuits including: "State of the missions newly settled by the Jesuits in California, by F. Francis M. Picolo"; "A Descent made by the Spaniards, into California in 1683," etc. [138] McCLINTocK (J. H.). Mormon Settlement of Arizona. The Mormon Battalion ; overland expedition in 1847; early pioneering ; Indian campaigns, etc. Maps. 8vo, cloth. Phoenix, 1921. 5.00 Nearly the whole edition was lost in the Pueblo flood. [139] McCooK (GEN. A. McD). Roster of the Department of Ari- zona. 22 pp., 8vo, original printed wrappers. Los Angeles, 1890. 12.50 Alphabetical list of all the officers in the Department and the personnel at each of the individual forts. [140] McCoRmicK (RICHARD). Arizona : Its Resources and Pros- pects. Map. 22 pp., 8vo, wrappers. New York, 1865. 15.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 419. Interesting sketches of the country; gold dis- coveries on the G-Ha and elsewhere ; settlements; Indian tribes, emigration; routes, etc.

TWO COPIES LOCATED: McCORMICK'S MESSAGE, 1865. [141] . Message of Hon. R. C. M'Cormick, Acting Governor of the Territory of Arizona, to the Second Legislative Assembly. At Prescott, December 11, 1865. 13 pp., 8vo, sewn, uncut, as issued. Prescott : Office of the Arizona Miner, Official Paper of the Terri- tory, 1865. 85.00 McMurtrie [No. 7] locates only the copies in the Bancroft and Con- gressional Libraries. A MOST IMPORTANT PIONEER DOCUMENT, describing con- ditions and events throughout the Territory in its second year of civil government. Discusses the newly discovered mines and lainerai resources; the mineral law ; the Howell Code ; Federal interference; farming and ranching; the condition of the friendly Vavapais, Mojaves, Hualapais and Pimas, and the progress of the reservations; the problem of the hostile Apache "by whose bloody hands so many of our patient pioneers have fallen" [their complete extermination, the governor states, "is the primary and all important work to which our attention must be given"] ; the Apache campaigns of the Arizona Volunteers; progress in surveying the Territory; navigating the Colorado to the Callville settlement ; establishment of a new county about the towns of St. Thomas and St. Joseph; exploration and building of wagon roads; overland mail and stage coach communica- tion, and the various routes; the Pacific Railroad, etc. THE ONLY LOCATED COPY. PRESENTATION FROM GOV. R. C. McCORMICK. [142] . Message of Governor McCormick to the Fourth Leg- islature of Arizona, Delivered September 9, 1867. [Caption title]. 7 pp., double column, 8vo, sewn, uncut. [Prescott, 1867]. 50.00 No OTIiER COPY LOCATED. McMurtrie, No. 22 records a different issue in a single copy. Delivered at a time when the "Wallapais", Pah-Utes„ Yava- pais and other hitherto friendly tribes had taken the war-path with the Apaches, McCormick's message is chiefly a recital of Indian treachery, outrage and depredation. The governor berates the Federal government for leaving the territory to the mercy of the savages; calls for the raising of 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 25 local volunteer troops; describes the pitched battles; need for a separate military department; reservations: progress of surveying, mining, and ag- riculture; the overland mail routes and schedules; stage-coaches, etc. [143] MACOMB (CAPT. J. N.). Report of the Exploring Expedition from Santa Fe to the junction of the Grand and Green Rivers of the Great Colorado of the West in 1859. Maps and plates. 152 pp., 4to, original printed wrappers. Washington, 1876. 15.00 Munk, p. 144. Seldom met with in wrappers.

[144] MALTE-, BRUN (M. A.). La Sonora et ses Mines. Esquisse Geographique. 31 pp., 8vo, original wrappers. Paris, 1864. 25.00 Munk, p. 145. Sketches of the route with a table of distances; accounts of the gold and silver mines; the towns; Indians; manners and customs; productions; climate; animals; boundaries, etc. [145] MARcv (CAPT. R. B.). The Prairie Traveler. A Hand-Book for Overland Expeditions. Maps, plates and itineraries of the routes between the Mississippi and the Pacific. 12mo, cloth. New York, 1859. 6.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 335. The itineraries—showing the distances between camping places, the character of the roads, wood, water and grass—include Stone's route to Tubac, Wagon Road from El Paso through Fort Yuma to San Diego, Beale's Route from Albuquerque to the Colorado River, etc. APACHE DEPREDATIONS NEAR PRESCOTT. [146] MEMORIAL of the Walnut Grove Gold-Mining Company. 24 pp., 8vo, sewn. Washington, 1873. 10.00 Catalogue of the Apache raids and depredations from 1864-1869 near Bully Bueno mine, a dozen miles from Prescott. More than twenty lengthy depositions of eye-witnesses to the outrages and murders are appended. [147] MENA (F. Z.). Las Guerras con las Tribus Yaqui y Mayo del Estado de Sonora, 1529-1902. Folding map. 342 pp., and Index, 4to, original wrappers. Mexico, 1905. 10.00 [148] MILES (GEN. NELSON A.). Roster of the Department of Ari- zona. 19 pp., 8vo, original wrappers. [Los Angeles : Dep't. of Arizo- na], 1888. 8.50 Lists all the officers in the department from the Second Lieutenants up and details of the garrisons at each fort including the "abandoned" post at Fort Thomas. [149] . Schedule and results of target practice at Forts Low- ell, McDowell, Mohave and Thomas, with a list of the qualified marksmen. 4 pp., 12mo, sewn. Prescott, 1886. 2.50 [150] MITCHELL (S. A.). Map of the United States and Territories. Colored folio, 13" x 21". Philadelphia, 1860. 5.00 Shows Arizona not as a Territory but as a district of New Mexico. The Overland Mail Route from El Paso, through Mesilla and Fort Buchanan to Yuma is laid down. 26 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS [151] MOHAVE Mining and Milling Company, Mineral Park, Mo- have County. Two folding maps and two folding lithographic views. 14 pp., 8vo, original front wrapper. New York, 1879. 12.50 Detailed description of Mohave County and its mines. The maps are of Northwestern Arizona, and the mines of Mohave District, while the views depict in large panorama the mines of the district and show the toll road from Hardyville to Prescott. [152] MouRAusEN (B.). Diary of a Journey from the Mississippi to the Pacific with a U. S. Government [Whipple] Expedition. Map and colored plates. 2 vols., 8vo, half morocco. London, 1858. 20.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 305. [153] . The Same. German Edition. Leipzig, 1860. 10.00 "THE MOST IMPORTANT WORK DEALING WITH ARIZONA." WITH THE RARE MAP AND WRAPPERS. [154] MOWRY (SvLvEsTER). Memoir of the Proposed Territory of Arizona. By Sylvester Mowry, U. S. A., Delegate Elect. Folding Map of Routes, etc. entitled: "Map of Proposed Arizona Territory from Explorations by A. B. Gray and Others to Accompany Memoir by Lieut. Mowry, U. S. Army, Delegate Elect." 30 pp., 8vo, original printed wrappers. Washington: Privately Printed, 1857. 150.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 293: "THIS IS THE MOST IMPORTANT WORK DEALING WITH THE CONDITIONS IN ARIZONA after the Gadsden Treaty and before the Civil War." This copy is in rarest state, complete with the correct map and the printed wrappers. It is the first work on the Territory, which it bounds between the Colorado and the Rio Grande and between the 34th parallel and the Gadsden boundary. Besides his own account Mowry includes the latest communications and despatches of the leading pioneers "on the ground"—Poston, Ehrenberg, Brady, Major Fitzgerald, Warner, Oury, J. A. Douglas and A. B. Gray. These afford a contemporary and connected eye-witness narrative of the pioneer affairs and events in the Territory: the boundary dispute; the Crabb expedition; border troubles and lawlessness, mining affairs, etc. Says Poston: "We are in a state of anarchy, and there is no government, no protection of life, property or business; no law and no self-respect or morality among the people; every man goes armed to the teeth, and a difficulty is always fatal on one side or the other—we have no remedy but to form a VIGILANCE COMMITTEE." The final pages comprise a memorial setting forth conditions in elaborate detail and praying the erection of a territorial government. The map—whose existence Wagner doubted—delineates the boundaries of the proposed territory in color and lays down the various overland and local routes, explored and suggested for exploration. [155] . The Same. Complete with map but in half morocco binding. Washington, 1857. 85.00 [156] . The Same. Map in facsimile. 8vo, cloth. 35.00 PRESENTATION COPY IN ORIGINAL WRAPPERS. [157] The Geography and Resources of Arizona and So- 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 27 nora. 48 pp., 8vo, in the original printed wrappers. Washington: Pri- vately Printed, 1859. 60.00 ORIGINAL EDITION. Wagner, No. 276 had not seen this edition. Wagner- Camp, No. 336, fails to note the appearance of the pamphlet in printed wrappers. The work is one of the first to give accurate and extensive in- formation on Arizona and her resources, geography and mines. The appendix lists various overland routes and endeavors to prove the superiority of the 32nd parallel through Arizona, for a Pacific Railroad. [158] . The Same, without wrappers. 8vo, cloth. 1859. 35.00 [159] . The Geography and Resources of Arizona and So- nora. Folding map. 124 pp. and errata slip, 8vo, original printed wrappers. San Francisco, 1863. 35.00 Second edition, augmented by observations on ses eral journeys through- out the region and a year's residence in the territory. "The accompanying map," says Mowry, "is as accurate as any yet published." [160] . The Same. With map and errata, but bound in cloth. 25.00 [161] . The Same. Third Edition. 251 pp., 12mo, cloth. New York, 1864. 3.00 [162] O'NEILL (W. O.). Central Arizona for homes, for health, for wealth. Folding panorama of Prescott, and plates. 130 pp., 8vo, printed wrappers. Prescott : Hoof and Horn Print, 1887. 10.00 Munk, p. 169; McMurtrie, No. 124.

[163] PARKE (Li mn'. JOHN). Report of Explorations between the Rio Grande and the Gila. 53 pp., 8vo, sewn. Wash., 1855. 12.50 Wagner-Camp, No. 267. Original issue. FIRST PRINTED NARRATIVE OF AN ANGLO-AMERICAN TO PENETRATE THE ARIZONA COUNTRY.

[164] PATTIE ( JAMES OHIO). The Personal Narrative of James O. Pattie, During an Expedition from St. Louis, through the Vast Re- gions Between that Place and the Pacific Ocean, in which he Suffered unheard of Hardships and Dangers, and had Various Conflicts. 5 plates. 8vo, half morocco. Cincinnati, 1833. 75.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 45. [165] PETERS (D. C.). The Life and Adventures of Kit Carson, the Nestor of the Rocky Mountains. Plates. 8vo, cloth. New York, 1858. 15.00 ORIGINAL EDITION. Wagner-Camp, No. 396. Authentic account of the many Apache forays in which the famed scout figured. [166] . The Same. New York, 1859. 6.00 [167] . The Same. Hartford, 1893. 3.00 28 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS THE ONLY LOCATED COPY IN ORIGINAL WRAPPERS. [168] POSTON (CHARLES D.). Speech of Charles D. Poston, of Ari- zona, on Indian Affairs. 20 pp., 8vo, in the original printed colored wrappers. New York, 1865. 60.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 422, fails to note the issuance of this work in wrappers. The pamphlet is an authority much used and cited by Ban- croft. It contains a long letter from Kit Carson detailing a trip "For the purpose of exploring the country west of the Oribi villages, and if possible to chastise the Navajos inhabiting that region." Also the Memorial of the territorial legislature on the Indian question; Waldemar's Report of his exploration of the Valley of the Colorado; and Poston's own experiences and observations in the territory and among the Indian tribes. [169] . The Same. 20 pp., 8vo, sewn, as issued. New York, 1865. 30.00

ONE OF THE FIRST EMIGRANT'S NARRATIVES VIA THE GIL,A ROUTE. [170] Powtm, (H. M.) The Santa Fe Trail to California, 1849- 1852. The Journal and Drawings of H. M. T. Powell. Edited by Douglas S. Watson. Maps and sixteen plates. 272 pp., 4to, original half morocco. San Francisco : Grabhorn Press, [1931]. 75.00 Printed in an edition of 300 copies from the original Journals. For a considerable account of this extraordinary volume see Calif. Hist. Quar., Vol. X, No. 4. Therein Dr. Wheat characterizes it as "one of the two or three most important contemporary accounts of the , particularly in view of its detail of experience along the Santa Fe route." The narrative is fraught with interest describing the set-out from Greenville, Ill., on April 3, 1849; the questions of route; arrival at Inde- pendence; the Indians; the toll of cholera; Company organization; buffalo; strife and final break-up of the company; arrival at Santa Fe, July 23; Departure for San Diego; the Continental Divide; Pima thievery; the nightmare of the Gila Route; the Sierra Nevada; reach San Diego December 3; thence northward to an Francisco, by way of Los Angeles, San Fer- nando, San Buenaventura, Santa Barbara, and San Jose; off to the mines; experiences at the diggings 1849-52. Among the beautiful original sketches reproduced are those of San Xavier del Bac and Pueblo de Tumacacori, drawn early in October, 1849. MAJOR POWELL'S PERSONAL NARRATIVE.

[171] PowELL (MAJOR J. W.). Canyons of the Colorado. Portrait and plates. 400 pp., 4to, cloth. Meadville, 1895. 35.00 Printed in a small edition and but seldom met with. This is the ex- plorer's own personal narrative of his expedition through the Canyon in 1869. It is of great value as the final and complete record - of the first conquest of the mighty chasm. [172] . Exploration of the Colorado River of the West and its Tributaries, Explored in 1869-1872. Plates. 4to, cloth. Washing- ton, 1875. 5.00 Official report of the great explorations. 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 29 [173] PumPELLy (R.). Across America with notes of a residence in Arizona. Plates. 454 pp., 12mo, cloth. N. Y., 1871. 2.00

[174] RAND, MCNALLY & CO. Indexed County and Township Map of Arizona, with a new and original compilation and index, desig- nating all post office towns and railroad stations, railroads, express companies, counties, lakes, rivers, etc. Large folding colored map. 16 pp., text, 12mo, original printed boards. Chicago, [1881]. 12.50 One of the most elaborate maps of the period. REID'S OVERLAND JOURNAL: SELMA, 1858. [175] REID (JO HN C.). Reid's Tramp ; or, A Journal of the Inci- dents of Ten Months' Travel through Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California. Including Topography, Climate, Minerals and Inhabi- tants. 237 pp., 8vo, cloth. Selma, 1858. 275.00 ORIGINAL EMTION. Wagner-Camp, No. 307. Very good copy of a work usually in poor condition. Huntington, No. 740: "EXCESSIVELY RARE. Probably no subsequent overland narrative, and only one or two of earlier date, can in any way compare with it in point of actual rarity." The work was entirely destroyed during the holocaust in and about Selma during the Civil War. The author was First Lieutenant of Col. Crabb's Auxiliary Expedition, a filibustering enterprise which resulted in the massa- cre of all but one of the original participants; many facts of this and other little known events of Arizona history are here brought to light. The party left Marion, Alabama, Sept. 1, 1857, for the purpose of exploring the Gadsden purchase ; arrived at Ft. Bliss„ Nov. '5; on Feb. 8, 1858 at Rancho de las Calabasa, Reid joined Crabb in his sanguinary Expe- dition. After the defeat and massacre Reid and a few surviving compan- ions made their way to the Tucson Valley, from whence, after a brief recruiting stay, they vroceeded to the Pima and Maricopa Villages, thence down the Gila to Fort Yuma and San Diego and northward to San Pedro, Santa Barbara, Monterey and San Francisco. [176] ROESER (C.). Map of the Territory of Arizona. Colored doub- le folio, 24" x 32", folding into 8vo, cloth covers. New York: Litho- graphed by Julius Bien, 1876. 25.00 Phillips, p. 123. An important large-scale and detailed map. Munk, p. 192, lists a later issue. SAFFORD'S MESSAGE ON THE INDIAN CAMPAIGNS. [177] SAFTORD (Gov. A. P.). Message of the Governor of Arizona, Delivered January 14, 1871, before the Sixth Legislative Assembly. 13 pp., 8vo, sewn, as issued. Tucson : Citizen Office Print, 1871. 45.00 McMurtrie, No. 32, locates but two copies. The message treats of the wagon roads and telegraph, railways, immigration, mining, town sites, sur- veys, outlawry and murders, the boundary controversy with California, etc. Much important information is given concerning the Indian outbreaks, depredations, and campaigns—including the six hundred mile scouting etxpe- dition led by Safford himself. SAFFORD'S "ARIZONA." TUCSON, 1874. [178] . The Territory of Arizona ; a history of the Territory's 30 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS acquisition, organization, and mineral, agricultural and grazing re- sources; a Review of its Indian tribes—their depredations and subju- gation; and showing the present condition and prospects of the Terri- tory. 38 pp., 8vo, original printed wrappers. Tucson : Citizen Office Print, 1874. 35.00 MeMurtrie No. 38. THE FIRST PRINTED REPORT ON THE BOUNDARY WAGNER-CAMP : "A VERY RARE BOOK." [178a] SALAZAR-YDARREGUI ( JOSE). Datos de los Trabajos Astrono- micos y Topograficos„ dispuestos en Forma de Diario. Practicados durante el ano de 1849 y principios de 1850 por la Comision de Lim- ites 1VIexicana en la Linea que Divide esta Rupublica de la de los Estados-Unidos. Two folding maps, one of which is entitled : "Plano de la Confluencia de los Rios Gila y Colorado." 123 pp., 8-vo, half calf. Mexico, 1850. 225.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 190, locates only the Huntington and Streeter cop- ies and states "A VERY RARE BOOK, EVEN IN mExio)." Salazar represent- ed the Mexican government in the settlement of the boundary according to the Treaty of Guadeloupe-Hidalgo. Much of his exploration was made in conjunction with Bartlett and Gray, and in company with Whipple, Salazar surveyed and mapped the Gila. His report, in day-by-day form, is the first printed detailed account of the regions traversed. [179] SAL,POINTE (ARCHBISHOP J. B.). Soldiers of the Cross : Notes on the Ecclesiastical , Arizona and Colorado, 1528-1898. Portrait and 45 plates. 299 pp., 8vo, cloth. Banning, Cali- fornia: Printed by the Indians at St. Boniface's Industrial School, 1898. 20.00 Printed on the local mission press by resident Indian boys. Due to the circumstances of its issuance but few copies were printed. The work, an important contribution to the history of the West, is the result of years of research in the ancient archives and personal association with the natives. it treats exhaustively of the early Spanish explorations, the expeditions of Cortez, 1528; Nuno de Gusman, 1530; Marcos de Niza, 1539; Coronado, 1540; and of Fernando Alcaron's Expedition to California in 1541; the early Missions among the Indians; the martyrdom of Fray Juan Padilla and other of the early Jesuits; Espejo's Expedition of 1582; Onate's ex- pedition 1596; the various Indian tribes; the Pueblo revolt; reconquest of New Mexico; Annals 1700-1800; the fail of Spanish Rule; the period of Mexican Rule; S. Conquest; and, finally, the period of American Rule. [180] SITGREAVES (LORENZO). .Report of an Expedition down the Zuni and Colorado Rivers. Folding map and plates. 8vo, calf. Wash- ington, 1853. 5.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 230. [181] SKETCH of the Mission of San Xavier del Bac [Tucson]. Written by a Missionary of Arizona. 20 pp., 8vo, original printed wrappers. San Francisco, 1880. 20.00 Great Collection, No. 18: "An important tract regarding the Jesuit Missions to the Popo , o Indians from 1590 to 1770, and of San Xavier, which was founded aboutb 1692." 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 31 [182] SMITH (BucKINGHAm). Grammar of the Pima, or Nevome, a Language of Sonora. From a Manuscript of the XVIIIth Century, 97, 32 pp., 8vo, cloth. New York, 1862. 37.50 One of 160 copies issued. The Pima language was spoken by the tribes front the River Yaqui in Sonora, northward to the Gila and even beyond the Colorado. Besides the grammar this work contains a vocabulary in Pima and Spanish, as well as the Doctrine and the Confesionario in the Pima tongue. [183] SMITH (JEDEDIAH). The Travels of Jedediah Smith. A Docu- mentary outline, including the Journal of the great American path- finder. Edited by Maurice Sullivan. 195 pp., 8vo, boards. Santa Ana. 1934. 15.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 3, note. Smith's 0 Will graphic account of his en- trance into the fur trade in 1822, his first journey up the Missouri and into the Rockies ; his hazardous trip across the desert eastward to Salt Lake across the Mojave Desert ; and his journey up the Sacramento Valley in 1827-1828.

[184] [SMITH, MR.]. A Bill to Provide for the Admission of the State of Arizona into the Union, and for Other Purposes. 12 pp., 8vo, sewn. Washington, 1892. 3.50 [185] . Report on the Supreme Court of Arizona Territory. 2 pp., 8vo. Washington, 1906. 1.610 1858 MAP OF "ARIZONIA" SHOWING THE OVERLAND ROUTES. [186] SPRAGUE (MAJOR J. T.). A Memoir upon Stephenson's Silver Mine, Near in the Organ Range of Mountains, with an Appendix. Large folding map, 15" x 23", entitled : "Sketch of the Location of Stephenson's Silver Mine in the Organ Range of Moun- tains, Compiled by Major J. T. Sprague." 40 pp., 8vo, original print- ed wrappers. Albany, 1858. 75.00 This map, and the second issue below, are, so far as we trace, UNIQUE. A. most interesting and early map locating the territory of "Arizonia." and laying down Fort Yuma., Fort Buchanan, Tucson, etc. and with the "Pacific Railroad" and Great Overland Mail Road running through these points. [187] . Report and By-Laws of the Fort Fillmore Silver Mining Co. Near Fort Fillmore, in the Organ Range of Mountains in the Territory of New Mexico. Large folding map with title as below. 14 pp., 8vo. original printed wrappers. New York, 1858. 65.00 The map is lithographed from the same plate, but with "Arizonia" spelled "Arizona" and with certain other changes, including pictorial vig- nettes added ; the legend reads: "The Great Overland Mail Road and Pacific Railroad. Sketch of the Location of the Ft. Filmore Silver Mine Known as Stephenson's Silver Mine in the Organ Mountains. Also Showing the Great Overland Mail Road and Pacific Rail Road. Lith. of Harry E. Pease, Albany." 32 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS ORIGINAL EDITION OF THE OATMAN CAPTIVITY. [188] STRATTON (R. B.). Life among the Indians : being an Inter- esting Narrative of the captivity of the Oatrnan girls, among the Apache and Mohave Indians ; with an account of the Massacre of the Oatman family ; the capture of Olive and Mary Oatman ; the death by starvation of the latter ; the five years suffering and capitiv- ity of Olive Oatman; also her singular recapture in 1856. Portrait and plates. 183 pp., [2 leaves, pp. 155-58 in facsimile]. 12mo, original cloth. San Francisco, 1857. 200.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 294: "This is the genuine original edition, ONLY A FEW OF WHICH ARE. IN EXISTENCE." The Oatman family formed part of a company organized in 1849 in Illinois to make a settlement near the junc- tion of the Gila and Colorado Rivers. The expedition left Independence early in August, 1850, and traveled by the Santa Fe trail and thence by the Cooke and Kearny route to Tucson and the Pima Village, where they arrived, February 16, 1851. Oatman and his family pushed on ahead, and while encamped on the Gila at a, place since known by his name, they were attacked by the Apaches who killed the father, mother and four chil- dren, and carried off as captives two daughters, Olive, aged 16, and Mary, a girl of 10. The captive girls were carried into the mountains and after a time sold to the Mojaves. The younger girl died, but Olive was kept as a slave until 1857, when she was finally ransomed, brought to Yuma and thence sent east to live in New York. Conklin, Picturesque Arizona, p. 1.95- 6, says that Olive died in a N. Y. insane asylum before 1877. [189] . The Same. Second Edition. Map and portrait. 231 pp., 12mo, original cloth. San Francisco, 1857. 100.00 [190] . The Same. Third Edition. Chicago, 1857. 50.00 [191] . The Same. New York, 1859. 3.00 [192] SUMMERHAYES (M.). Vanished Arizona : Recollections of My Army Life. Plates. 8vo, cloth. Philadelphia, 1908. 15.00 ORIGINAL EDITION. An excellent portrayal of early day army life in the West; stationed at Cheyenne until the termination of the Sioux troub- les • on to San Francisco ; thence to Port Isabel at the mouth of the Colo- rado; Fort Yuma Camp Mojave across the Mojave Desert to Ft. Whip- plc; on to Camp 'Apache; life among the Apaches; the Colorado Desert; stationed at Ehrenberg; Old Camp McDowell, etc. [193] . The Same. Second Edition. Salem, n. d. 2.00 UNRECORDED ROUTE AND GUIDE BOOK FORT LEAVENWORTH : DEPOT PRINT, 1868. [194] TABLE OR DISTANCES in the Department of the Missouri, Embracing the Districts of Kansas, Upper Kansas, New Mexico and . 32 pp., 8vo, original printed wrappers. Fort Leavenworth: Depot Printing Office, 1868. 150.00 Not in McMurtrie. Contains some forty-odd tables of routes and dis- tances throughout Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado as personally trav- elled and measured by such well-known western explorers as Capt. G. S. Hollister, Lieut. J. B. Shinn, Majors Henry D. Wallen, Edward Willis and 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 33 David Ferguson, Col. J. R. West, Gen. R. B. Marcy, etc. The tables of routes, some of which are accompanied with descriptive travel notes, in- clude those from Ft. Leavenworth to Denver City; Altar and Ft. Barrett to Tucson; Tucson to Mesilla and Port La Libertad; Ft. Garland to Fort Union and Albuquerque; Ft. Harker to Denver and Fort Uriion; Ft. Whip- ple to Mojave; Santa Fe to Denver, Albuquerque, and Fts. Whipple, Sum- ner and Garland; Kansas City to Santa Fe; Ft. Wingate to Albuquerque; and from San Diego to Ft. Yuma.

[195] THOMAS (LIEUT. E. D.). Proceedings of 6 Courts Martial Tried at Camp Apache and 2 Tried at Prescott, Arizona Territory. 7 pp., 12mo, sewn. Prescott, 1878. 6.50 [196] [THomsoN]. Map [Colored] of Spanish North America. Folio, 2472 " x 20", folding into 8vo. [London, 1814]. 20.00 The mouth of the Gila is shown in the Gulf of California, south of the mouth of the Colorado. Numerous other geographical aberrations nat- urally occur. [197] TouEY (LIEUT. T. A.). Order of Col. Willcox for in- creased vigilance and preparation for "any emergency" with officers of posts responsible for knowing "what is going on in the Indian country." 12mo, broadside. Prescott Barracks, 1878. 7.50 Signed in manuscript by Lieut. Toney. [198] . General Orders Naming the Headquarters at Prescott, Prescott Barracks. 12mo, broadside. Prescott Barracks, 1878. 3.50 FOUNDATION ITEM OF SOUTHWESTERN AMERICANA THE TREATY OF ACQUISITION. 1199] TRATADO de Paz, Amistad y Limites Entre La Republica Mex- icana y Los Estados-Unidos de Norte America, y Esposicion de los Comisionados Mexicanos que lo Firmaron, dirigida al Supremo Go- bierno. [In English and Spanish]. 28, 27 pp., 8vo, original printed wrappers. Queretaro, 1848. 100.00 THE ORIGINAL EDITION OF THE FAMOUS "TREATY 011 GUADELOUPE HI- DALGO," the only copy of which to appear in the records fetched $160.00 some twenty years ago. Bancroft, California, V, 590: "This is the paper which put an end to the war, and gave California [Arizona, and New Mexico] permanently and formally to the -United States." In April, 1847 Nicolas P. Trist was sent as a confidential peace agent to Scott's army, coincident with the latter's operations against Vera Cruz. An armistice was arranged and Trist commenced diplomatic negotiations for peace on August 27, a conference which closed September 7 by Men- can rejection of Trist's terms. Despite the failure of his mission Trist re- mained with Scott's army which shortly thereafter captured Mexico City. With the fall of the capital the war was at an end but there being no offi- cial agents of either government to declare peace and negotiate a treaty Trist assumed the responsibility and again called together the Mexican Commissioners. Jointly they drew up—in part at Mexico City and in other part at Guadelupe Hidalgo the treaty which provided for the cessation of hostilities and the acquisition by the Ti. S. of the regions in question. The resulting treaty was sent on to Washington, was promptly accepted by President Polk, and ratified, with amendments (specifically the deletion of 34 EDWARD EBERSTADT & SONS Article X which related exclusively to Texas and her lands), by the Senate, March 10, 1848. FORT DEFIANCE NAVAJO RESERVATION. [200] TREATY Between the United States and the Navajo Indians. Concluded June 1, 1868. 9 pp., folio. Washington, 1868. 20.00 THE ORIGINAL ISSUE, as concluded at Fort Sumner by Gen. W. T. Sherman. It provides that "from this day forward all war between the parties shall forever cease." In addition to the peace clauses the treaty designates the limits of the new Navajo Reservation at old Fort Defiance in Bonito Canon. [201] TUCSON and Tombstone General and Business Directory for 1883 and 1884. With Useful Information Concerning Both Cities. 226 pp., 8vo, boards. Tucson: Citizen Steam Print, 1883. 20.00 McMurtrie, No. 84, locates but one copy. TYLER'S MARCH OF THE MORMON BATTALION. [202] TYLER (SERGEANT DANIEL). A Concise History of the Mor- mon Battalion in the Mexican War. 1846-1847. 8vo, calf. [Salt Lake], 1881. 25.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 165. Embraces a phase of pioneer overland history nowhere else so fully revealed. Tyler's Narrative is of the highest impor- tance for its account of the earliest wagon road over the Great American Desert; the journey across the plains; the Santa Fe Expedition; the march to San Diego; the battles with the Californians; the FremontiStoekton- Kearny controversy; and for its account of the gold discovery. [203] VELAsco (FRANcisco). Sonora : Its Extent, Population, Nat- ural Productions, Indian Tribes, Mines, Mineral Lands, etc. Trans- lated from the Spanish by Wm. F. Nye. 190 pp., 12mo, cloth. San Francisco, 1861. 15.00 An important source book frequently referred to by Bancroft. Velasco was a native of Sonora and held various official positions of responsibility —among others that of Secretary of State. His work is universally recog- nized as the best on the subject.

[204] V ENEGAS ( MIGUEL) Noticia de la California, y de su Con- quista temporal, hasta el tiempo presente. Complete with the four folding maps. 3 vols., 4to, vellum. Madrid, 1757. 125.00 ORIGINAL EDITION. Cowan, p. 659: "THIS WORK IS CONSIDERED THE FOUNDATION OF A LIBRARY OF ALIFORNIANA." The work was written in 1739 but was supplemented by fresh information from the missions. It was edit- ed by the learned Jesuit father Andrew Marcos Buriel, who was the first writer to define correctly in print the peninsula and the regions of the Colorado and Gila. Hubbard states that the work "is one of the most faith- ful narrations regarding the original condition of the Indians of any part of North America." [205] The Same. in English : A Natural and Civil History of California. With accounts of several voyages and attempts made for settling. Map and plates. 2 vols. 8vo, cloth. London, 1759. 75.00 [206] . The Same. In French : Histoire Naturele et Civile de la Californie. 3 vols. Folding map. 12mo, calf. Paris, 1767. 30.00 55 WEST 42ND STREET, NEW YORK 35 [207] . The Same. In German: Naturliche mid Bergerfiche GeschiChte von Kalifornien. 3 Vols, in one. Folding map. 4to, boards. Lemgo, 1769-1770. 30.00 [298] VILLAGRA (GASPAR PERU DE). History of New Mexico. Translated by Gilberto Espinosa. Introduction and Notes by F. W. Hodge. Plates. 308 pp., 8vo, half vellum. Los Angeles, 1933. 15.00 Translated from the original edition of 1610, this is practically the only contemporary source for Onat6's conquest of New Mexico and Arizona. THE WAGNER-CAMP "PLAINS & ROCKIES." [209] WAGNER (H. R.). The Plains and the Rockies. A Bibliogra- phy of Original Narratives of Travel and Adventure, 1800-1865. Edited by Charles L. Camp. Plates. 299 pp., 8vo, cloth. San Fran- cisco: Grabhorn Press, 1937. 12.50 600 COPIES PRINTED. This is the definitive bibliography on the subject. It describes every known original narrative of exploration and overland travel in the West printed between the years 1800 and 1865. WAGNER'S "SPANISH SOUTHWEST." 1924. [210] . The Spanish Southwest, 1542-1794. An Annotated Bibliography. Facsimiles. 302 pp., 4to, cloth. Berkeley, 1924. 50.00 One hundred copies printed. [211] WARD (L. F.). Report on the Petrified Forests of Arizona. 23 pp., 8vo, wrappers. Washington, 1900. 3.00 The investigations which led to the establishment of the Petrified Forests as a national park. [212] WEBBER (C. W.). The Gold Mines of the Gila. 2 vols. in 1, 12mo, cloth. N. Y., 1849. 15.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 176: "This lurid tale of life on the border was written with the object of getting up what the author calls the Centralia Exploring Expedition to California via the valleys of the Pecos, the Gila, and the Colorado." [213] WEBER (Rtv. ArisELm). The Franciscan Misspns of the Southwest. [Annual volumes of Arizona History]. Volumes I, H, III, V, X, and in German I, II, VI, VIII, and IX. Plates. Ten vol- umes, 8vo, wrappers. St. Michael's: Mission Press, 1913-22. 20.00 Arizona annals and history not elsewhere available. [214] WHEAT (M.). Travels on the western slope of the Mexican Cordillera; its cities, towns, and features of the Region; productions, commerce, mineral wealth, manners and customs of the people, etc. 12mo, cloth. San Francisco, 1857. 20.00 Contains Washburn's trip from Fort Yuma up the Gila to Tucson, and back by way of Alter and Sonoita in 1856, and gaves the details of travels in the Gadsden Purchase; the Tepic Conspiracy; the copper mines; Practicability of a railroad; the American Filibustering Expedition, etc. WHIPPLE'S EXPEDITION ALONG THE GILA. 1849. [215] WHIPPLE (LIEUTENANT A. W.). Journal of an Expedition 36 EDWARD ERERSTADT & SONS from San Diego to the Rio Colorado. 28 pp., 8vo, sewn, separate uncut issue. Washington, 1851. 25.00 Munk, p. 228. The day-by-day journal of Lieutenant Whipple describ- ing his Arizona expedition from the setout September 11, 1849; Santa Monica; Santa Maria; Santa Isabel; Warner's Ranch; Yuma attacks on emigrant parties; Llegeenos, with a brief vocabulary; San Felipe; El Puerto; Vallecito ; Carayal Valley; Signal mountain; "Three Wells;" the Comoyahs; trip into the Yuma country; life amongst the Indians; surveys, etc. Appended is Dr. Parry's detailed "Climatology chart" and Whipple's "Vocabulary of the Yruna Indians." [216] . Report of Explorations near the thirty-fifth parallel, from the Mississippi to the Pacific ocean. 154 pp., 8vo, sewn. Wash- ington, 1855. 15.00 Wagner-Camp, No. 265. Original issue. [217] WHITNEY (LIEUT. F. A.). Record of Seven General Courts Martial Tried at Camp Grant Arizona Territory. 5 pp., 12mo, stapled. Prescott, 1878. 7.50 [218] WIGGLESWORTH (A. M.). Hospital of the Good Shepherd. A Hospital and Christian Mission for the Navajo Indians, Fort Defi- ance. Plates. 8 pp., 12mo, stapled, as issued. Chilocco : Indian Print Shop Press, [1905]. 20.00 Written by the Indian Service physician. The photographs show Bishop Kendrick baptizing a group of Nava.joes, the Indians shearing sheep, the hospital at Fort Defiance, &e. [219] WILLcox (COL. O. B.). Annual Report : Department of Ari- zona, for 1877-78. 6 pp., 12mo, original printed wrappers. Prescott Barracks : Army Hand Press, 1878. 25.00 Not in MeMurtrie or Munk. Record of the operations in the depart- ment, and of the scouting expeditions against the Apaches. [220] WILSON ( Jos. S.). Map of the United States and Territories, Showing the Extent of Public Surveys and other Details. Constructed from the Plats and Official Sources of the General Land Office. Col- ored double elephant folio, 29" x 56", mounted on linen. Washington: D. McCleland, Eng., 1866. 30.00 An enormous map in splendid detail and of particular interest as showing the mineral deposits by means a various colored dots. Arizona is, of course, literally peppered with the dots representing gold, silver and copper. THE PRECURSOR OF THE OVERLAND TRAIL ZEVALLOS' LIFE OF CONSAG WITH HIS JOURNALS. TWO COPIES LOCATED IN THIS COUNTRY. 1764. [221] ZEvALLos (P. FRANctsco). Carta del Padre Provincial Fran- cisco Zevallos sobre la Apostolica Vida, y Vertudes del P. Fernando Konsag insigne Missionero de la California. [vi], 31, [1] pp., [slight repair in title], small 4to, half morocco. Mexico, 1764. 300.00 Wagner, Spanish Soldhevest, No. 145, pp. 442-445. Two corms ONLY ARE LOCATED IN AMEEICA, with a third in the British Museum.