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Show INTERVIEW: Mabel Dry and Kay Fowler August 8, 1967 Page 13 go out. Some people was still doing that but these young -folks now a days, they don't do that. F: When you first moved here a few were still doing that? D: Yes. F: How about at that place that your family had at the Paria? Did they do that there? D: They do that. That's the Indians way to be. When they have that monthly sickness they don't have to stay around in the camp. They have to make their camp on the--a little far out away. F: So that still lasted until a few years after you moved here? Some people still did that? D: Yes. F: How about things like making baskets and all of that? How long did that last? Do people still do that or? D: I don't know, there's nobody to do it. I used to do it. F: You did? D: Yes. F: But you don't do it anymore. D: I do it sometimes if somebody ask for me to do something like -" that. If I have the squawbush and things like that. If I don't have it, then I don't.make it. [laughter] By this time I'm scared to go in the bushes. I might put my fingers in something. F: In a rattlesnake or something, huh? |