Some Indian Ways 



451 



By these tricks you can make the vent draw the smoke. 

 But after all the main thing is to use only the best and 

 driest of wood. This makes a clear fire. There will 

 always be more or less smoke 7 or 8 feet up, but it worries 

 no one there and keeps the mosquitoes away. 



RED — All parts marked so: UUUllu •_ Smoke-flaps and all tops of teepees, stem 

 of pipe, lower half-circle »mder pipe, middle part of bowl, wound on side 

 of Elk, blood falling and on trail; Horse, middle Buffalo, two inner bars 

 of pathway upback; also short, dark, cross-bars, spot on middle of two 

 door-hangers, and fringe of totem at top of pathway, and two black lines 

 on doorway. 



YELLOW— All parts marked so: '£ " 



1 Upper half-circle under pipe stem, 



upper half of each feather on pipe; horseman with bridle, saddle and one 

 hindfoot of Horse; the largest Bufialo, the outside upright of the pathway; 

 the ground colors of the totem; the spotted cross-bars of pathway; the 

 four patches next the ground, the two patches over door, and the rings 

 of door-hanger. _____ 



GREEN — All parts marked so. ft^^^>^ Bowl of pipe, spot over it; feather 

 tips of same; Elk, first Buflfalo, middle line on each side pathway, and 

 around teepee top; two dashed cross-bars on totem and dashed cross-bars 

 on pathway; bar on which Horse walks; lower edge and line of spots on 

 upper part of door. 



HAIRY-WOLF S TEEPEJ 



Marked with a peace pipe in Cut p. 444 is Hairy-Wolf's 

 teepee. I came across this on the Upper Missouri in 1897. 



