chapter xxviii of the original London edition (1843).--ED.
[2] For Fort Clark and its custodian, James Kipp, see our volume xxii, p. 344, note 317, and p. 345, note 319.--ED.
[3] Simon Bellehumeur, probably this interpreter's father, was in 1804 a North West Company's voyageur on upper Red River. One of the same name also acted as express and scout in the time of General Alfred Sully's campaign (1864) through the Little Missouri Bad Lands. See Montana Historical Society _Contributions_, ii, pp. 314-330; and _Larpenteur's Journal_, ii, p. 362.--ED.
[4] For Kenneth Mc Kenzie, see Wyeth's _Oregon_, in our volume xxi, p. 45, note 25. Fort Union is noticed in our volume xxii, p. 373, note 349.--ED.
[5] See our volume xxii, p. 305, note 263, for account of the Sioux bands, of which the Yanktonai was one of the largest. They were inclined toward peace with the United States although tradition relates that one of these bands participated in the sieges of Forts Meigs and Stephenson in the War of 1812-15. Their habitat was the Upper James River, above the Yankton. They are divided into two bands, Upper and Lower Yanktonai, the former being now located on Standing Rock reservation, North Dakota, the latter near Crow Creek agency, South Dakota.--ED.
[6] For Major Dougherty, see our volume xiv, p. 126, note 92; for Bellevue, xxii, p. 267, note 221.--ED.
[7] Pilcher is noted in our volume xiv, p. 269, note 193; Cabanné, in