. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. them-selves as sorry for having anything to do with the war againstus, and promised to quit their country aud all intercourse withthe Comanches aud join the Cheyeunes on the Arkansas, whoare the friends of the whites. This course I ai)proved, andsince my departure from that country last spring learned thatnearly all the Kiaways have moved to the country of theCheyennes aud Arapahoes and are living in perfect amity withthe surrounding tribes. He also states that there seem to have been feweratta
. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. them-selves as sorry for having anything to do with the war againstus, and promised to quit their country aud all intercourse withthe Comanches aud join the Cheyeunes on the Arkansas, whoare the friends of the whites. This course I ai)proved, andsince my departure from that country last spring learned thatnearly all the Kiaways have moved to the country of theCheyennes aud Arapahoes and are living in perfect amity withthe surrounding tribes. He also states that there seem to have been fewerattacks made upon travelers along the Santa Fe roadrecently, which he can account for only on the sup-position that the Indians having, in 1846 and 1847,secured so much booty by their daring outrages upontravelers, are now and have been the past summerluxuriating in and enjoying the spoils {Report, 77). WINTER 1S47-4S They camped all winter on T^ain PV(, Whiteriver, an extreme upper branch of the South Canadian (perhaps Fm. 99—Winter iS!7-43—AVinter camp. identical with Major Longs creek). camp. The figure represents the winterwith the (^ ^ brush windbreakaround it. SUMMER 1S4S Op (in K (Iflo, KaitstFiko initi-ation sun dance. This dance was held on Arkansas river near Bents fort, in Colorado, and was distin-guished by the initiation of several KiVits(fiko(see summer 1846). The tigure represents an initiate with his (red) bodypaint and opiimyaipo. WIXTER lS48-4!» The Kiowa were camped on Arkansas river near Bents fort andmade antelope medicine {((ful-agiia) for a great antelope the figures from the Dakota calendars of Mallery (figure 102). Fig. 100—Summer 1848—laitiatiozi stmdance.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectindians, bookyear1895