Ready help to the sick or hurt, which must be on hand before ordinary first-aid methods can be offered.
Hatchet cookery. That is, the simplest cookery without tools but a hatchet and such utensils as it can be used to make.
The teepee with its open fire and perfect ventilation.
Symbolic or Indian names as honors of high degree.
Feathers as decoration for exploits, where the Warbonnet is desired for full dress.
Individual honors in some 300 departments of outdoor life, carefully listed later.
Group of honors or degrees in Woodcraft.
The tally book, or Winter Count, a record of the Tribe or Band with full symbolic and pictorial embellishments.
The peace-pipe as a solemn ceremony.
The sacred fire ceremony.
The Navaho loom.
Indian blankets or robes made by those who are to wear them.
Indian basketry because it is the best the world knows, besides being purely woodcraft manufacture peculiar to this country.
Indian art because it is highly distinctive and destined to be the foundation of a great National American School.
Indian pottery.
Indian song because it is the original folk song of the land and sure to grow into a great National music.
Indian dances because they are the most promising folk dances known.
Indian sign language. The only true gesture language. It is being revived because of many new applications.
The Indian ideal of dignity and self-control.
Sympathy with the ideal Redman.
Selected tasks to prove and develop self-control.