. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. KIOWA APACHE RANGE 249 From tliese refereuces it is plaiu that tlie Kiowa Apadie—and pre-sumably also the Kiowa—ranjied even at this early i)eri()d in the samegeneral region where they were known more than a hundred years. Fui jy—Tsjiyrulitl-ti or Wliitf-maii. presi-iit hfad-cliief ol the Kiowa Ajiache later, namely, between the Platte and the frontiers of New Mexico, andthat they ahea<ly had herds of horses taken from the Spanish si^-ttle-ments. It appears also that they were then in friend


. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. KIOWA APACHE RANGE 249 From tliese refereuces it is plaiu that tlie Kiowa Apadie—and pre-sumably also the Kiowa—ranjied even at this early i)eri()d in the samegeneral region where they were known more than a hundred years. Fui jy—Tsjiyrulitl-ti or Wliitf-maii. presi-iit hfad-cliief ol the Kiowa Ajiache later, namely, between the Platte and the frontiers of New Mexico, andthat they ahea<ly had herds of horses taken from the Spanish si^-ttle-ments. It appears also that they were then in friendshii) with the17 ETH 30 250 CALENDAR HISTORY OF THE KIOWA [ETH. ANN. 17 Pawnee. From the fact that tbey traded horses to the other tribes,and that La Salle proposed to supply himself from them or their neigh-bors, it is not impossible that they sometimes visited the French fort


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectindians, bookyear1895