Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution . sed, and finally he said: You may stop herebecause j-ou are not of so great value as myself; this is too near homefor me. So he journeyed on to the southwest and made his home ina high mountain protected bj many angry white and black made her home in the lake, and the Gods of War selected amountain rising from the lake for their home. «These sacred objects will soon be scattered, as the secret of burying the vases benenth the waterhas become knoivn to the men now employed in construct


Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution . sed, and finally he said: You may stop herebecause j-ou are not of so great value as myself; this is too near homefor me. So he journeyed on to the southwest and made his home ina high mountain protected bj many angry white and black made her home in the lake, and the Gods of War selected amountain rising from the lake for their home. «These sacred objects will soon be scattered, as the secret of burying the vases benenth the waterhas become knoivn to the men now employed in constructing the Government dam for these spring will be in tlie be<l of the great reservoir. &The writer was bound to secrecy regarding the home of ^Hliakwa. The Zufiis make pilgrimagesthither for the purpose of collecting turq\ On these expeditions they are always provided withtelikinawe and sacred meal. The plumes are otfered to the angry bears who guard Hliakwa. andthe meal is sprinkled upon the beasts, when, the Zuiiis say, they become friendly and allow them BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY TWENTY-THIRD ANNUAL REPORT PL. XII


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectindians, bookyear1895