Farnham's Travels in the Great Western Prairies, etc., part 1, May 21-October 16, 1839
volume xxii, p. 36, note 13.--ED.
[161] A brief note on the Arapaho is in our volume v, p. 225, note 120. The significance of the tribal name is uncertain, but is supposed to mean "he who buys or trades." The Caddo and Comanche had epithets for this tribe, that signified "dog-eaters."--ED.
[162] This is incorrect, the Shoshonean differing widely from the Algonquian language stock. On the Arapaho language, consult James Mooney, "Ghost Dance Religion," in U. S. Bureau of Ethnology _Report_, 1892-93, p. 1012.--ED.
[163] With this fanciful tradition, compare that of Lewis in _Original Journals_, ii, pp. 329-351.--ED.