MALLERY.] EVENTS NOTED. 581 
Fig. 842.—The-Swaw’s Winter Count, 1835-36. A Minneconjou chief 
named Lame-Deer shot an Assiniboin 
three times with the same arrow. Ile 
kept so close to his enemy that he never eZ. 
: : Za 
let the arrow slip away from the bow : 
but pulled it out and shot it in again. 
Fig. 543 consists of two stories pic- eet i 
tured by Lean-Wolf, a Hidatsa chief, 
showing the attack made by Sioux Indians in search 
of horses and the result of the raid. In the upper fig- 
aw ure, at the left end, is shown the Sioux camp from 
which the trail of the horse thieves extends to near 
the camp of the Hidatsa, at Fort Berthold, North Dakota. This 
1 Ae) = 5 
Ua CNS 1) 
K CaNG 5 
Wy LrGS Ne) =) 
‘ad [= Eee YS 
= 2 SSS Cease iY 
Zz aa CS NS), 
py SS ae 
In x= te oe N 62°6 
i ee = 
IG. 843.—Lean-Wolt’s exploits. 
village is indicated by the circular dirt lodges within a square 
inclosure. The Sioux captured some Indian horses and rode away, as 
indicated by the prints of horse hoofs. A series of short lines from the 
we 
a b c d € Ne q h i 
i k 1 mn 0 Pp q r 8 t u 
Fic. 844.—Record of hunt. Alaska. 
Hidatsa village indicates that Lean-Wolf and his companions followed 
on foot, subsequently overtaking the Sioux, killing one and taking his 
