Honors^ Degrees, and Indian Names 95 



Class I. Red Honors — Heroism 



Honors are allowed for saving a human life at risk of 

 one's own; it is a coup or a grand coup, at the discretion 

 of the Council. 



A soldier's war medals count for a grand coup each. 



Courage. (The measure of courage has not yet been 

 discovered.) 



RIDING 



To ride a horse i mile in 3 minutes, clearing a 4-foot 

 hurdle and an 8-foot water jump, counts honor; to do it 

 in 2 minutes, clearing a 5-foot hurdle and a 12-foot water 

 jump, high honor. ^ 



Trick-riding. To pick up one's hat from the ground 

 while at full gallop on a horse of not less than 13 hands, 

 counts honor. 



To do it 3 times without failure, from each side, with 

 horse of at least 15 hands, counts high honor. 



GENERAL ATHLETICS 



(Advisers — J. E. Sullivan, secretary of Amateur Athletic Union; Dr. Luther 

 H. Gulick of Russell Sage Foundation, New York.) 



Those under 10 are children; those over 10 and under 

 16 are boys; those over 16 and under 18 are lads; those 

 over 18 are men. 



Girls take the standards according to their ages up to 

 18, but for athletics are never over that. No matter what 

 their age, thenceforth they continue in the "lad class," 

 and in filing the claim need only mention their class. 



Men over 70 return to the lad class. 



The records are given according to Spalding's Almanac, 

 where will be found the names of those who made them, 

 with date and place. 



A dash ( — ) means "not open." 



