:\Hi 



edge round the wrists. The 

 regular waterprooC Ixiots. 

 ■nitli M)le>i of \^liitf mmNKiii 

 and .1 hand lound the top 1 

 iu( Ii widi of rlic -.uiic iiiatc- 



ll,d. A sholt |M'U pioicctv 



fiolti tin- t<>i. <>t the l(ii( Ik, id. 



A stimjiof ^tout -mew hi.iid 



about 2 h-et lony is ]i,i^>-( d 



through a hole in tlic Miid.llf 



of the body and a knot tied 



in the end in front. Tliough 



the design is elaborate the 



worlaiianship is very rude. 



and the elothes seem to be 



made of odds aud ends. Tlie 



maker perliaps had in mind 



a fabulous man with teeth 



like a walrus, about whom 



we heard some fragmentary ~?i 



traditions. 



Fig.;is(MNo.s-tS2(i [i;55sj ^- ^'- -^ 



, ' ,' Fiu. :iSo.— ll.-cliani(:il tloll: ilniin i.kiv.r. 



tliough somewhat rouglily 



mad(>, mechanical doll. it represents a man dressed in deerskins 

 .sitting with his legs outstretehed aud holding in his extended left 

 hand a drum and in his right a stick, as if beating the drum. 

 The arms are of \\ halebone, and b\- pressing them he can be made to 

 beat the drum. Tlie <loll is made of a single piece of wood — a knot with 

 two branches, which mak.- the legs. (I learned this from ('ai)t. Heren- 

 deen, who saw this doll at the village before it was tinish.'d., The 

 height of the sitting hgure is 11.^ inches. 



^^ 



A still more ingenious mechanical toy which, however, like the pre- 

 ceding, was made for sale, is shown in Fig. .'.■SI (No. siis.-,,-, 1 1.!")! | from 

 Utkiavwin). This is a man sitting in a kaiak iu the attitude of paddling 



