SIOUAN LANGUAGES. 



9 



Bushotter (G.) — Continued. 



11. Treatment of the sick ; burial customs. 



12. Tlie man who came to life again. 



13. Hokewiula, or the man and woman in the 



moon. 



14. Man, two in the lodge, ghost female, and 



the friendly wolf, 8 pp. 



15. Man who spaied the wolf cubs, 11 pp. 



16. Thunder and the Uukcegila (mastodon ?), 



12 pp. 



17. Wazija, the northern giant, who brings 



8U0W, 7 pp. 



18. Buffalo people attacked the Indian people, 



6 pp. 



19. Iktumi and the land turtle, 13 pp. 



20. Man and two sons, 15 pp. 



21. Turtle who wished to fly, 10 pp. 



22. Man, who could become a grizzly bear, 6 



pp. 



23. How the Indians made the sun well, 3 pp. 



24. Iktomi and the horned water monster, 7 pp 



25. The strange lake with large submarine 



animals, 6 pp. 



26. "Warrior surrounded by a serpent, 3 pp. 



27. One-eyed serpent, short legs and iarge 



body, 3 pp. 



28. "Why they pray to stones, the sun, &c. 



9 pp. 



29. The mountain in which was a large ser- 



pent, pp. 



30. Adventures of a man and his wife, 7 pp. 



31. Iktomi and the siyo (prairie chicken?), 5 



pp. 



32. Adventure of Mastiuljiin (rabbit carrier), 



5 pp. 



33. Woman who turned to a fish from the 



waist down, 18 pp. 



34. Iktomi and the rabbit ; how the latter 



made snow, 4 pp. 



35. Male gho.st and his wife, 8 pp. 



36. Man with the magic sword, and the one 



with powerful breath, 6 pp. 



37. Swift runner (he who ties stones to his 



legs), 10 pp. 



38. Man rescued by the eaglets, 7 pp. 



39. The double woman, 4 pp. 



40. Iktomi and the mice, 14 pp, 



41. Iktomi and the ducks i:c. 13 pp. 



42. Iktomi and the rabbit; how the rabbit's 



tail became short, 15 pp. 



43. Man who resembled the man in the moon, 



11pp. 



44. Touug lover rescued by the girl, 12 pp. 



45. "Warriors met Heyoka (Sunflower), who 



was singing and dancing, 2 pp. 



46. The flying Santee, 7 pp. 



47. Sanlees' first sight of the bufi"alo, 7 pp. 



48. Lakotas went against the Palani (Rees), 



5 pp. 



49. The short man's adventures, 8 pp. 



50. Smokemaker's fate (war story), 7 pp. 



51. Fight between the Lakota and Sihasapa 



(SIk-sik-a),4pp. 



52. Two unarmed men fight a grizzly bear, 8 



pp. 



Bushotter (G.) — Continued. 



53. The Lakota caught an Omaha spy and tor- 



tured him, 7 pp. 



54. The wild man (a nude cannibal), 4 pp. 



55. Maka nogej'a: he who uses the earth as 



an ear, 7 pp. 



56. "Why horses are called sunka wakan (mys- 



terious dogs), 6 pp. 



57. Man who understood ravens, 5 pp. 



58. Two small stones that were servants of 



the people, 6 pp. 



59. "Wahanksica, a strange animal, 3 pp. 



60. Animal in the Missouri River that breaks 



up the ice in the spring, 4 pp. 



61. How the wind brought sickness to Medi- 



cine Butte Creek, 6 pp. 



62. Beliefs about day and night, and the 



prayers to them, 5 pp. 



63. Man in the forest and his contest with 



ghosts, 8 pp. 



64. Hey6ka woz6pi (feast &c. in honor of the 



anti-natural god), 18 p|). 



65. Heyoka ; he dreamed of Lis death by light- 



ning ; drawing and 13 pp. 



66. Fight between Hohboju witiasa and Black- 



feet (Sik-sik-a), 6 pp. 



67. Of a mysterious man who kuew about a 



distant Omaha war party, 5 pp. 



68. Wise man ; how he caught his eloping 



wife, 7 pp. 



69. Palani (Rees), or Sihasapa (Blackfeet) 



came against the Lakota, 5 pp. 



70. Origin of the buffalo, 5 pp. 



71. Sundance, pictures, &c. 176 pp. 



72. He who could lengthen his arm at will, 7 pp. 



73. What a young man must do before he may 



marry, 11 pp. 



74. How the Crow.s surrounded some Lakota, 



12 pp. 



75. Hau dwiCsas'dpi ("Some yelled at them ") ; 



raid on Dakota cam]), 4 pp. 



76. Waktoglakapi (story of warrior who was 



not wounded), 9 pp. 



77. Fight between the Lakota and white sol- 



diers, 20 pp. 



78. The Santies and their fondness for certain 



kinds of food, 4 pp. 



79. What the Lakota thought about the first 



white people whom they saw, 13 pp. 



80. Belief respecting lakes, 3 pp. 



81. Belief about this world, 7 pp. 



82. Calumet dance, 39 p|). 



83. How they honor the dead, 17 pp. 



84. Wohloke sni kagapi (men who are arrow 



and bulletproof), 8 pp. 



85. Love potions Sec. 5 pp. 



86. Tekagapi (actsof a wounded warrior), 7pp. 



87. Tdku kAgapi (actors clothed in robes 



with buffalo hair outside detect wrong- 

 doers), 11 pp. 



88. Those who imitate the elk, 13 pp. 



89. Why a man may not speak to his mother 



in law &c. 11 pp. 



90. Rules for smoking, feasting, and visiting, 



11 pp. 



