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ugh first. If you can get your head through, others may pass." The deer returned saying, "Father, it is all right. I passed without trouble." Utset called Elk. She said, "You pass through. If you can get your head and horns through the door, all may pass." Elk returned saying, "Father, it is good. I passed without trouble." Then Utset told the buffalo to try, and he returned saying, "Father-mother, the door is good. I passed without trouble." Utset called the scarab beetle and gave him the sack of stars, telling him to pass out first with them. Scarab did not know what the sack contained, but he was very small and grew tired carrying it. He wondered what could be in the sack. After entering the new world he was so tired he laid down the sack and peeped into it. He cut only a tiny hole, but at once the Star People flew out and filled the heavens everywhere. Then Utset and all the people came, and after Turkey passed, the door was closed with a great rock so that the waters from below could not follow them. Then Utset looked for the sack with the Star People. She found it nearly empty and could not tell where the stars had gone. The little beetle sat by, very much frightened and very sad. But Utset was angry and said, "You are bad and disobedient. From this time forth, you shall be blind." That is the reason the scarabaeus has no eyes, so the old ones say. But the little fellow had saved a few of the stars by grasping the sack and holding it fast. Utset placed these in the heavens. In one group she placed seven--the great bear. In another, three. In another group she placed the Pleiades, and threw the others far off into the sky. The Flood and the Theft of Fire Tolowa (Del Norte Co., Cal.) Along time ago there came a great rain. It lasted a long time and the water kept rising till all the valleys were submerged, and the Indian tribes fled to the high lands. But the water rose, and though the Indians fled to the highest point, all were swept away and drowned-all but one man and one woman. They reached the very highest peak and were saved. These two Indians ate the fish from the waters around them. Then the waters subsided. All the game was gone, and all the animals. But the children of these two Indians, when they died, became the spirits of deer and bear and insects, and so the animals and insects came back to the earth again. The Indians had no fire. The flood had put out all the fires in
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