[ [2] H. Hale, Indian Migrations as Evidenced by Language, p. 24. (Chicago, 1883.)

[ [3] See the R. P. A. Lacombe Dictionnaire de la Langue des Cris. Introd., p. xi. (Montreal, 1874.)

[ [4] See Joseph Howse, A grammar of the Cree Language, p. 13, et al. (London, 1842)

[ [5] In a note to Mr. Gowan's edition of George Alsop's Province of Maryland, pp. 117-121 (New York, 1869); also, in 1858, in an article "On the Identity of the Adastas, Minquas, Susquehannocks, and Conestogas," in the Amer. Hist. Mag., Vol. II, p. 294

[ [6] Early Indian History on the Susquehanna, p. 31. (Harrisburg, 1883)

[ [7] Megnwe is the Onondaga yenkwe, males, or men, viri, and was borrowed from that dialect by the Delawares, as a general term. Bishop Ettwein states that the Iroquois called the Delawares, Mohegans, and all the New England Indians Agozhagduta.

[ [8] Bozman, History of Maryland, Vol. I, p. 167.

[ [9] Heckewelder, History of the Indian Nations, p. 80.

[ [10] Peter Jones, History of the Ojibway Nation, p. 32.

[ [11] Relation da Jesuites, 1637, p. 154. The Hurons, at that time, are stated to have had reliable traditions running back more than two hundred years. Relation de 1639, p. 50.