[6] Referring to his storehouses; see “[Wars with the Niska and Tsimshian and conflicts between Haida families],” note [6]. ↑ [a] [b]

[7] See the [preceding story], note [26]. The house that South-east built at that time was so large that he named each half of it separately. The house pole was covered with abalone shells. [↑]

[8] See “[War between the people of Kloo and the people of Ninstints],” note [14]. [↑]

[9] See the preceding story. [↑]

[10] See note [1] and the [preceding story], note [33]. [↑]

[11] A house was sometimes so named because it had a very deep house hole, making it dark inside. [↑]

[12] See “[Fight at the town of Da′x̣ua],” note [2]. [↑]

[13] It is curious that this was the very family to which the town chief of Kloo himself belonged. The section living at Skedans comes to make war upon the chief of the one living at Kloo. [↑]

[14] See the story of “[Sacred-one-standing-and-moving, Stone-ribs, and Upward],” note [35]. [↑]

[15] See the story of [Moldy-forehead], note [2]. [↑]