10 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE 



Bushotter (G.) — Continued. 



91. Cert.iiu boyish customs, 7 pp. 



92. Ghost story, 7 pp. 



93. Origin of white people, 9 pp. 



94. Games and their seasons, 10 pp. 



95. Education of a boy, 9 pp. 



90. Youth killed in battle and his faithful 

 horse, 11 pp. 



97. People who used to live in the north, 7 pp. 



98. Ghost woman and robin (belief .about the 



latter), 9 pp. 



99. Flying serpent, whose touch was fatal, 4 



PP- 



100. Origin of twins, 4 pp. 



101. Mr. Bushotter's autobiography, 117 pp. 

 '02. Belief about the loved one who has been 



called by the ghost, 6 pp. 



103. Fight between two gamblers near Cham- 



berlain, Dak. 7 pp. 



104. The singing elk, 8 pp. 



105. The belief as to Iktomi, 9 pp. 



106. War of Tetous against the Omaha, 7 pp. 



107. Narrow escape of Upi-canha, 5 pp. 



108. Hankasitku's war adventure, 10 pp. 



109. How certain men (doctors, priests, &c.) 



have become "mysterious," 16 pp. 



110. Fight between the Lakota and the Chey- 



ennes and Sapa wiciasa (probably the 

 Comanche), 22 pp. 



111. Eules of etiquette for brothers. Sisters, 



and cousins, 20 pp. 



112. Ghost story, with two pictures, 5 pp. 



113. Beavers' customs, 8 pp. 



114. Iktomi and the old woman who fed all the 



animals, 24 pp. 

 il5. Handsome man saved from a pit by a 

 wolf, 32 pp. 



116. Trick of a myth-teller, 9 pp. 



117. Thistles, 4 pp. 



118. How the Indians regard the past and their 



ancestors, 21 pp. 



119. Whatconstitutesarespectableman, 11pp. 



120. Big Belly Society, 5 pp. 



121. Mandau Society, 10 pp. 



122. Following one another, 7 pp. 



123. Painyankapi, 45 pp. 



124. Horse race, 4 pp. 



125. Hitting the moccasin, 9 pp. 



126. Shooting at the cactus, 5 pp. 



127. Hitting the bow, C pp. 



128. Shooting at bunches of grass, 6 pp. 



129. Shooting at the lungs of an animal, 6 pp. 



130. Taking slaves from one another, 9 pp. 



131. Trampling on the beaver, 6 pp. 



132. Ho-wi! Ho-wi! (Boys or youths in a ring 



(fee.) 11 pp. 



133. They touch not one another, 5 pp. 



134. Game with the micapeca (a grass with a 



long, sharp beard), 5 pp. 



135. Old woman accuses them, 4 pp. 



136. Game with slings, 4 pp. 



137. Goose and her children, 9 pp. 



138. Pteheste unpi (buffalo horn game), 7 pp. 



139. Hutanacute (a peculiar stick that is 



hurled), 4 pp. 



140. Making the wood dance by hitting it, 7 pp. 



Bushotter (G.) — Continued. 



141 . Making the wood jump by hitting it, 7 pp. 



142. Making the bow glide by throwing, 5 pp. 



143. Coasting, 7 pp. 



144. Game of ball, 11 pp. 



145. Shooting at an arrow set up, 6 pp. 



146. Grizzly bear game, 10 pp. 



147. Deer game, 10 pp. 



148. Running toward one another, 9 pp. 



149. "WakiukiCiciyapi, 9 pp. 



150. Hitting one another with frozen earth, 



10 pp. 



151. Hitting the ball, 11 pp. 



152. Tahuka cangleska unpi, 43 pp. 



153. Game of earthen horses, 7 pp. 



154. Paslohanpi; they slide by pushing, 13 pp. 



155. They kick at one another, 13 pp. 



156. The hoop is made to roll by the wind, 8 pp. 



157. Pop-gun game, 9 pp. 



158. "Wrestling, 8 pp. 



159. Courting the females, 8 pp. 



160. Game with bows and small, wood-pointed 



arrows, 10 pp. 



161. Swinging, 10 pp. 



162. Taking places (of sitting, standing, &c.) 



from one another, 9 pp. 



163. Playing with small tilings, 17 pp. 



164. Hosisipa, or pinching the backs of hands, 



11pp. 



165. Wonape h'ah'a, 8 pp. 



166. Who will get there first ? 9 pp. 



167. Hopping, 9 pp. 



168. Throwing arrows with the hand at an 



object set up, 6 pp. 



169. Ghost game. 



170. Hide and seek. 



171. Jumping down from a tree, bank, &c. 



172. Tanpa unpi, game with plumstones. 



173. Odd or even ? A stick game. 



174. Throwing chewed leaves into the eyes. 



175. Game with the ankle-bones of the deer. 



176. Native wooden harmonicon, played by 



boys. 



177. Mysterious game. 



178. Playing doctor. 



179. Pretending to be dead. 



180. Hunting young birds in summer. 



181. Hunting eggs in spring. 



182. Going to make a grass lodge. 



183. Scrambling for presents. 



184. Sitting on wooden horses. 



185. Making a bone turn and hum by twisting 



and pulling a cord. 



186. String twisted in and out among the 



fingers. 



187. Tumbling and somersaults. 



188. Game with large things. 



189. Courtship, picture and 47 pp. 



190. The Uuguagic'ala, a bird that foretells 



cold weather, 14 pp. 



191. Cause of scrofulous sore on neck, 10 pp. 



192. Meaning of ringing sound in the ears, 10 pp. 



193. Ilioka and Tokala Societies, 17 pp. 



194. Dog Society. 



195. Katela (killing by hitting), or Taniga i<Su 



(taking the buffalo paunch;. 



