Oca- -^»' 





TWO TYPES OF HAVASUPAI HOUSES 



The brush-covered lodges are set among the trees where it is difficult to see them. Every man 

 builds several — and then spends his days and nights, weather permitting, out of doors. Some of 

 the houses are log cabins like the Navaho hogans ; some are shaped like our own walled tents, but 

 so low and sand-covered as to seem mere mounds ; still others are rectangular with dirt-strewn roofs 

 and brush walls, while the greatest number are brush-thatched structures resembling huge beehives, 

 built in a style which these Indians claim as peculiarly their own 



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