Outing . THE YOUNGEST BRIDE OF THE HUICHOL CHIEF, PHOTOGRAPHED JUST AFTER SHE HAD PUT ON A GILT BANGLE, GIVEN HER BY OJARA 100 OUTING ing but the air, though the result was as-tounding. Not less than five hundredturkeys scuttling through the rank grassfor distances of hundreds of yards onthree sides of us, rose in flight to thenearest trees. There was no under-brush, and as the turkeys flew three littleblack-faced deer, and two black-tails, gi-gantic by comparison, bounded off intothe forest. Small wonder the Huicholes,living as they do by the chase, shouldguard so jealously their vast natural


Outing . THE YOUNGEST BRIDE OF THE HUICHOL CHIEF, PHOTOGRAPHED JUST AFTER SHE HAD PUT ON A GILT BANGLE, GIVEN HER BY OJARA 100 OUTING ing but the air, though the result was as-tounding. Not less than five hundredturkeys scuttling through the rank grassfor distances of hundreds of yards onthree sides of us, rose in flight to thenearest trees. There was no under-brush, and as the turkeys flew three littleblack-faced deer, and two black-tails, gi-gantic by comparison, bounded off intothe forest. Small wonder the Huicholes,living as they do by the chase, shouldguard so jealously their vast naturalgame preserve. We walked perhaps a mile and a halfto where a spur of heavily wooded moun-tain came down to the meadow. ThereCarlos stationed Ojara and myself instands of cut brush, evidently preparedovernight, each at the base of a pine. A HUICHOL HUNTER PHOTOGRAPHED IN NOSTIC. THIS PHOTO SHOWS TYPICAL BOW AND ARROWS, SASH AND POUCHES tree and about fifty feet apart. He paidnot the slightest attention to either of themozos, and thereby gained their perma-nent ill-will, for they had come to con-sider themselves as much the guests ofthe Huicholes as were we the chief took a place behind an-nother tree, and Ojara and myself tookour mozos one into each shooting box, tokeep them from parading up and downthe valley shooting at everything in we heard a noise down thevalley as if the whole tribe had gone onthe warpath; then we noticed that thechiefs two henchmen had vanished, and,just as we concluded that we were goingto enjoy an old-time deer drive, the firstdeer came along. It was a doe, a white-tail as I remember, and I held Chinostoo ambitious arm when hestarted to raise the also passed the deer,but not so the Huichol. Leaping from his blind,running bent double likesome overgrown


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade, booksubjectsports, booksubjecttravel