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

|Sp[^u]'klish a
| covered. | (Another)
sweat-lodge
sha |sh[^u]'ta|ku[/e]-utch,|k[/i]tchikan[']sh|stin[/a]ga=sh[/i]tko;|
they| build | of willows,| a little | cabin looking like |
|sk[^u]'tash a|w[/a]ldsha 3
| blankets | they
spread
sp[^u]'klishtat|tatat[/a]k s[)e]|spukli[/a].|T[/a]tataks a h[^u]'nk|
over the |when in it they | sweat. | Whenever |
sweating-lodge
| w[/e]as|l[/u]la,|tat[/a]taks
|children| died, | or when
a h[/i]shuaksh|tch[/i]m[)e]na,|sn[/a]wedsh|w[/e]nuitk,|[k=][^u]'[k=]i|
a husband | became | (or) the | (is) | they weep |
widower, wife | widowed,
|[k=][)e]lek[/a]tko,|sp[^u]'klitcha
|for cause of death | go sweating
t[/u]mi|shash[/a]moks=l[/o]latko;|t[/u]nepni|wa[/i]tash|tch[/i]k| sa |
many | relatives who have lost | five | days | then |they|
|h[^u]'uk|sp[^u]'klia. 6
| | sweat.


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