Torquemada, Juan de-Continued.
the natives of New Spain. The comments by the author are, of course, of less significance.
Ulloa, Francisco de.
Hakluyt, iii, 397-424 (ed. 1600). Translated from Ranusió, iii, fol. 339-354 (ed. 1556).
Vetancurt, Augustin de.
This work forms a part of the second voltime of the Teatro Mexicano.
Villagra, Gaspar de.
Villalobos, Ruy Lopez de. See Santisteban, Fray Gerónimo de.
Ware, Eugene F.
Agora, Lawrence, Kansas, Nov., 1895 [not cempleted.] A translation of Castañeda's narrative from the French of Ternaux.
Whipple, A. W., et al.
Pacific Railroad Reports, vol. iii, pt. 3, Washington, 1856.
Winship, George Parker.
Bulletin of the Boston Public Library, October, 1894. Reprinted, 60 copies.
Fourteenth Annual Report Bureau of Ethnology. Washington, 1896. Contains the Spanish text of Castañeda, and translations of the original narratives.
Winship, George Parker — Continued.
Papers of American Historical Association, 1894, Washington, 1895, pp. 83-92.
Boston Transcript, Oct. 14, 1893. A translation of the Relacion de lo que. . . Alvarado y Padilla descubrieron.
American History Leaflet, No. 13, New York, 1894. Contains a translation of the Relacion del Suceso, and of Coronado's Letter to Mendoza, 20 October, 1541.
Winsor, Justin
Besides Professor Haynes' chapter in volume ii, pp. 473-503 (see entry under Haynes), the same volume contains chapters by Dr Winsor on Discoveries on the Pacific Coast of North America, pp. 431-472; by Clements R. Markham on Pizarro and the Conquest and Settlement of Peru and Chile, pp. 505-573, and by John G. Shea on Ancient Florida, pp. 231-298. The fact that special investigators in minute fields of historical study have found omissions and errors in this encyclopedic work only serves to emphasize the value of the labors of Dr Winsor. There is hardly a eubject of atudy in American history in which the student will not, of necessity, hegin his work by consulting the critical and bibliograpbical portions of Winsor's America.
Wytfliet, Cornelius.
For Coronado, see p. 170, or p. 91 of the French translation of 1611. Qvivira et Anian. See plates li-liii ante
Zamacois, Niceto de.
Nineteen volumes. For the chronicle of events in New Spain during the years 1 35– 1546, 880 vol. iv, 592-715.
Zaragoza, Justo.
In this volume Señior Zaragoza has added much to the inherent value of the Tratado of Suarez de Peralta (see entry above) by his annple and scholarly notes, and by a very useful "Indice geográfico, biográfico, y de palabras Americanas." These indices, within their inevitable limitations, contain a great deal of information for which the student would hardly know where else to look. This is equally true of the indices to the Cartas de Indias, for the excellence of which Señor Zaragoza was largely responsible.