"I see some berries!" cried Katie, and began to pick them.

"We'll go in farther," said Martin. "The bushes near the road have been

almost stripped. Come on, keep on the path and watch out for snakes."

There was a well-defined, narrow trail through the timbered land.

Though the weeds had been trodden down along each side of it there were

dense portions where snakes might have found an ideal home. After a

long walk the little party was in the heart of the woods and blackberry

bushes, dark with clusters, waited for their hands. Berries soon

rattled in the tin pails, though at first many a handful was eaten and

lips were stained red by the sweet juice. They wandered from bush to

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bush, picking busily, with many exclamations--"Oh, look what a big

bunch!" "My pail's almost full!" Little Katie and Charlie soon grew

tired of the picking and wandered around the path in search of

treasures. They found them--three pretty blue feathers, dropped, no

doubt, by some screaming blue jay, a handful of green acorns in their

little cups, a few pebbles that appealed to them, one lone, belated

anemone, blooming months after its season.

The pails were almost filled and the party was moving up the woods to

another patch of berries when little Mary turned to Amanda and said,

"Ach, Amanda, tell us that story about the Bear Charm Song."

"Yes, do!" seconded Charlie. "The one you told us once in school last

winter."

Amanda smiled, and as the little party walked along close together

through the woods, she began: "Once the Indians lived where we are living now---"

"Oh, did they?" interrupted Charlie. "Real Indians, with bows and

arrows and all?"

"Yes, real Indians, bows and arrows and all! They owned all the land

before the white man came and drove them off. But now the Indians are

far away from here and they are different from the ones we read about

in the history books. The Indians now are more like the poor birds

people put in cages---" Her eyes gleamed and her face grew eloquent

with expression as she thought of the gross injustice meted out to some

of the red men in this land of the free.

"Go on, Manda, go on with the story," cried the children. Only Martin

had seen the look in her eyes, that mother-look of compassion.

"Very well, I'll go on."

"And, Charlie," said Mary, "you keep quiet now and don't break in when

Manda talks."

"Well," the story-teller resumed, "the Indians who lived out in the

woods, far from towns or cities, had to find all their own food. They

caught fish, shot animals and birds, planted corn and gathered berries.

Some of them they ate at once, but many of them they dried and stored

away for winter use. While the older Indians did harder work, the

little Indian children ran off to the woods and gathered the berries.

But one thing they had to look out for--bears! Great big bears lived in

the woods and they are very fond of sweet things. The bears would amble

along, peel great handfuls of ripe berries from the bushes with their

big clawed paws and eat them. So all good Indian mothers taught their

children a Bear Charm Song to sing as they gathered berries. Whenever

the bears heard the Bear Charm Song they went to some other part of the

woods and left the children to pick their berries unharmed. But once

there was a little Indian boy who wouldn't mind his mother. He went to

the woods one day to gather berries, but he wouldn't sing the Bear

Charm Song, not he! So he picked berries and picked berries, and all of

a sudden a great big bear stood by him. Then the little Indian boy, who

wouldn't mind his mother, began to sing the Bear Charm Song. But it was

too late. The great big bear put his big paws around the little boy and

squeezed him, squeezed him, tighter and tighter and tighter--till the

little boy who wouldn't mind his mother was changed into a tiny black

bat. Then he flew back to his mother, but she didn't know him, and so

she chased him and said, 'Go away! Little black bird of the night, go

away!' And that is where the bats first came from."