+Lit. D. 34: 470. Mr. 23, ’07. 330w.

“This trader is evidently plagued, like many others, by the presence of a secondary personality under imperfect control. His narrative is perpetually disturbed by the emergence of an invader, an unclean spirit in the shape of a literary person, a lover of the heroic, the romantic, the Arcadian, quite a gifted literary person too.”

+Lond. Times. 6: 222. Jl. 12, ’07. 970w.

“Through the straightforward and unaffected manner in which he pictures his life, the reader learns more about the nature of the Indians among whom Mr. Schultz has lived than in the most elaborate scientific treatises.”

+Nation. 84: 339. Ap. 11, ’07. 220w.

“Should be widely circulated, if only to correct mistaken impressions of what the Indians were before the buffalo disappeared; and what they still may be under the guidance of honest and generous Indian agents.”

+N. Y. Times. 12: 125. Mr. 2, ’07. 490w.

“There are all sorts of humorous and other anecdotes, told in a literary manner.”

+N. Y. Times. 12: 385. Je. 15, ’07. 140w.
+R. of Rs. 36: 426. Jl. ’07. 130w.
+Sat. R. 104: 304. S. 7, ’07. 730w.

“Furnish the truest and most sympathetic records of the inner and domestic life of the Indian of the plains.”