Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Address by Col. Garrick Mallery, U. S. A. (Chairman of Subsection of Anthropology) Before the American Association for the Advancement of Science at Cincinnati, Ohio: August 1881
An argument for the uniformity of the signs of Indians is derived from the fact that those used by any of them are generally understood by othe1s. But signs may be understood without being identical with any before seen. It IS a common experience that when Indians find a signzwhich has become conventional among their tribe not to be understood by an interlocutor, a self expressive Sign is substituted for it, from which a visitor may form the impression that there are no conventional signs. It may likewise occur that the self-expressive sign substituted will be met with by a visitor in several localities, different Indians, in their ingenuity, taking the best and the same means of reaching the exotic intelligence.
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