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procurable, a strip of dressed buffalo hide crossed out - ? in beads of various color, Some and notably the Agalalla, Hucapapa, Cheyenne, & Dakotas. use a ground? of white bead and tcrossed out - the designs are marked in color. The blanket is our illustration is one owned by Mr. Stolie, and is a specimen from Standing Rock S. Dakota. The blanket its self is a dark indigo blue with marginal lines of white inserted - and red these marginal lines are about one inch wide and at the top and bottom edges are red. Near the middle is the strip of bead sewed to the blanket with deer sinew. The ground is white and at intervals more or less regular on ? ? in the colored beads. The first is a rectangular device comprised of five bars, green interspersed with four bars of red, which merge in a perpendicular bar of red. adjoining this is one of yellow, then one of deep blue, and a row of red triangles completes this figure. of these there are five on the strip; no skin two, and half of this central one between the rectangular figure, are ? of ? four and a half inches in diameter, with a central cross of two red (the ?) and two blue arms. on a field of white. This blanket is made by sewing together two smaller ? and as will be seen the the greatest dimension is the width. In cold weather, and when courting, the indian envelopes himself in his blanket head and all leaving only a small aperture through which to look. This fiction, alleged to be held by the ostrich, "that when his head is covered his whole body is out of sight, applies to the indian