Pokračování textu ze strany 30
The Woodcraft Indians. Holliday Mag., for Children. New York. Oct., pp. 76–79 with 3 large photos. An account of a tribe of Boy Indians written by W. W. Storms from material supplied by Seton.
Monarch, the Big Bear of Tallac, with 100 drawings, by the author. New York, C. Scribner’s Sons, 1904. 214 pp. incl. illus. Book form of the magazine articles in Ladies’ Home Journal, Feb., – Apr., 1904. (See above.) The story of a California Grizzly. An Italian translation was published in Milan, by L. F. Cogliati, 1910.
The Woodcrafter and the Stars. Country Life, Vol. VII, Nov.; p. 61. About 2000 words.
How to Study a Bird. Bird Lore, Nov., Dec., Vol. VI, No. 6, p. 181–4. A study schedule, a rewriting of the one published in Forest & Stream, 1888. About 2000 words.
1905
A Wild Animal Bedquilt. Ladies’ Home Journal, Vol. XXII, Jan., p. 9, with 1 large drawing by the author with descriptive text.
The Revival of the Bow and Arrow. Country Life, Vol. VII, Jan., pp. 273–275, with 1 drawing of details by the author and 4 photos.
A New Deer-hunt with the Bow. Country Life, Vol. VII, Feb., pp. 370–1, about 1100 words, 1½ pages of cuts.
Woodmyth and Fable. The Century Co. New York. 8 vo., pp. 181. 88 drawings by the author. Book form of magazine articles, Century, Nov., Dec., 1903, Jan., 1904. (See above.)
Blazes. and Indian Signs. The interpretation of all marks, stone-talk, smoke codes, twisted grass, and the language of twigs — calling for help with a gun — the sign of the skull. Country Life, April, pp. 632–634. 19 photos.
Arnaux, the Homing Pigeon. Ladies’ Home Journal, Vol. XXII, April, pp. 13, 14, with 2 illus. by the author. Republished in “Animal Heroes.”
Laws of the Seton Indians. Pub. in Camp Conference Secretary’s Report, Boston, April 26, 1905, pp. 69–77. This is a new edition of the Red Book, and is now called the Fourth Birch Bark Roll. The ten laws enjoin obedience, no wild fire, protect wild life, keep game laws, fair play, no firearms, no pollution of ..text pokračuje