- Weapons
- On his back I saw a handsome otter-skin quiver, full of arrows
- The day was windy and cold, and the bull skin kept the chill air from me and my babe
- She dropped her pack and came running back, her hands at each side of her head with two fingers crooked, like horns, the sign for buffaloes
- At this hour, fires burned before most of the tepees
- Indian Burial Ground
- Turtle, I think, was the last woman in the tribe to use an old-fashioned, bone-bladed hoe
- Snake Head-Ornament came close to her and fired off his gun
- She laid the grass thickly over the sides of the little tepee
- I would lay the puppy between my shoulders and draw my tiny robe up over his back
- Ahole
- Turtle’s hoe was made of the shoulder bone of a buffalo set in a light-wood handle, the blade firmly bound in place with thong
- Winter clothing
- In daytime lookouts were always on the roofs of some of the lodges
- Common Hopi sun symbol
- I loaded my boats on the travois of two of my dogs
- Buffalo heart skin bucket
- Kwátaka, bird with sun symbolism
- When my sack was filled, I tied it shut and slung it on my back by my packing strap
- My grandmother Turtle made scarecrows to frighten away the birds
- Travel by canoe
- At one side of our field Turtle had made a booth
- Old Turtle made me a dolly of deer skin stuffed with antelope hair
- Corn Husking
- Screen of the Alósaka
- ver all she bound a wildcat skin, drawing the upper edge over the baby’s head, like a hood.
- Then he arose and took my baby tenderly in his arms
- Indian 'Buffalo Jump'—Yellowstone Valley
- She had a little fawn-skin bag, worked with red porcupine quills
- We were fond of squashes and ate many of them
- We were clad warmly, for the weather was chill. All had robes
- Hidatsas Earth lodge
- A Buffalo Hunt
- “Big-head,” a solar god
- My mothers dipped each a big horn spoon full of water
- The hunters came in
- They saw two great fires sweeping toward them over the prairie
- Waheenee and Her Husband, Son-of-a-Star
- American Indian Picture-Writing
- Trade Beads and Hawk Bells
- Ornaments
- The Hunting Camp
- The smaller ears we bore to the village in our baskets
- I put on my copper kettle and made blood pudding
- Typical natives of the Sandwich Islands
- My two mothers, I knew, were planning a big feast
- Our stages were now hung with slices of drying meat
- Strikes-Many Woman parched ripe sweet corn, pounded it in a mortar with roast buffalo fats, and kneaded the meal into little balls
- Sitting Bull
- Native of Ualan
- The Mound builders
- A big fire was built
- Otomi Indian Girls, Mexico
- The Lodge - 3
- Drying meat
- Tools and Pottery
- We made our eleventh camp on the north side of the Missouri
- Tahitian fleet off Oparee
- Indian gravestone showing the totem of the Turtle
- Cooking Dried Meat