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Show 448 LEADING FACTS OF NEW MEXICAN HISTORY small trouble. In matters of education they have made considerable advances. Their lands have all been confirmed and patented to them and these are exempt from taxation. Although citizens of the United States they do not care to exercise the functions pertaining thereto. The general government has aided them materially in the construc- tion of irrigation canals and reservoirs. A table relative to these Indians prepared by the bureau of ethnology appears in the note.®* Sth, Os nae Sah. clara * * nil ee. Stl an hee bs ee PRE-SPANISH PorrTERy SHARDS, Gita Basin de ad te eer } Roman A. Mexicans of the Nineteenth Century R. Baca. Horace F. H. Longwill. Stephenson. . ry a a er 8" )-* ee eae er sea ae osee Seah, be Site PS pac ae tee jeshomen Pb 868 Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 30, pt. 2. Prominent New “ Don ae Veet es Pe la |