24 ([Return])
Shau-go-dai-a, i. e., a Coward.

25 ([Return])
The war-cry.

26 ([Return])
A burrow.

27 ([Return])
Diminutive form, plural number, of the noun Möz.

28 ([Return])
The dress of the females in the Odjibwa nation, consists of sleeves, open on the inner side of the arm from the elbow up, and terminating in large square folds, falling from the shoulders, which are tied at the back of the neck with ribbon or binding. The sleeves are separately made, and not attached to the breast garment, which consists of square folds of cloth, ornamented and sustained by shoulder straps. To untie the sleeves or armlets, as is here described, is therefore to expose the shoulders, but not the back--a simple device, quickly accomplished, by which the magician could readily exercise his art almost imperceptibly to the object.