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"From the First Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution"

(And the Rabbit arrived at home.) "Itcitci+!!
O grandmother, the heat has left nothing of me," said he. She said,
"Oh! my grandchild! I think that the heat has left nothing of him for
me." (From that time the rabbit has had a singed spot on his back,
between the shoulders.)
* * * * *


DETAILS OF A CONJURER'S PRACTICE.
IN THE KLAMATH LAKE DIALECT. OBTAINED FROM MINNIE FROBEN, BY A.S.
GATSCHET.
M[/a][k=]laks|shu[/a]kiuk|k[/i]uksash|[k=][/a]-i|g[^u]'l[']hi|
Indians |in calling | the | not | enter |
conjurer
|h[/u]nk[)e]lam|l[/a]dshashtat,|nd[/e]na
| his | into lodge, | they
halloo
sha'hm[/o]knok;|k[/i]ush toks|w[/a]n|kiuk[/a]yank|m[^u]'luash|m[']na|
to call (him) | the conjurer| red | hanging out| as sign | his |
out; fox on a pole
|kan[/i]ta|p[^i]'sh.
| outside |"of him."
Kuk[/i]aks|tch[^u]'tanish|g[/a]tp[']nank|wig[/a]ta|tch[/e]l[x]a|
Conjurers| when treating| approaching | close by| sit down |
|m[=a]'shipksh.


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