carry this name more honorable ones he had a right to have taken from differ- cnt battles and exploits of his extraordinary life." He was the fleotest man in the tribe; "could run down a buffalo, which he had often done on his own through life in preference to many others and legs, and drive his arrow to the heart."
This chief came to lis death, several years later, in a tragic He had been in some way the accidental cause of the way death of his only son-a very fine youth-and so great was the anguish of his mind at times that he became insane. In one of these moods he mounted his favorite war-horse, with his bow and arrows in his hand, and dashed off at full speed upon the prairies, repeating the most solemn oath that he would slay the first living thing that fell in his way, be it man or beast, friend or foe. No one dared follow him, and after he had been absent an hour or two his horsc came back to the village with two arrows in its body covered with blood. Fears of the most serious kind were now entertained for the fate of the chief, and a party of warriors immediately mounted their lorses and retraced the animal's tracks to the place of the tragedy, where they found the body of their chief horribly mangled and gored by a buffalo-bull, whose carcass was stretched by the side of him.
A close examination of the ground was then made by the Indians, who ascertained by the tracks that their unfortunate chief, under his unlucky resolve, had met a buffalo-bull in the are very stubborn, and unwilling to run from any one, and had incensed tho animal by shooting a number arrows into him, which had brought him into furions combat. The chief had then dismountcd and turned his horse loose, hav- ing given it a couple of arrows from his bow, which sent it hoe at fnll speed, and then had thrown away his bow and season when they quiver, encountering the infuriated animal with his knife alone, and the desperate battle had resulted in the death of both.