no 



SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS \0L. 66 



danced. Someone washed his wounds and all the warriors sang. 

 The same songs were used if a man had been killed and his body 

 placed in the center of the circle." Several of these songs were 



Fig. 115. — Woman with baskets for gathering berries. 

 Photograph by Miss 13ensmore. 



recorded, together with scout songs and those connected with an 

 attack upon tlie enemy, 



A burial ground in recent use was visited. On the Inirial places 

 were scattered the bones of horses and dogs slain at the death of 

 their owners (fig. 1 13). Household utensils had been placed on many 



