I wish that I could find an arrow head!"
As the doctor walked on he pointed to a pebble half buried in the sand
beside the path. The boy stooped; there was a beautiful arrow head!
He was very glad. Seeing that he was pleased, the doctor took him to
his office and showed him hundreds of arrow heads. Some of them were
small and finely chipped.
[Illustration: A stone arrow head]
"These are bird arrows," the doctor said.
Then he showed large arrows.
"These are for killing buffalo and other big game."
And there were stone axes and hammers. Lastly, the doctor showed him
something that looked like a little, very old hatchet. The boy turned
it over and over and looked at it. It was all weather stained, and
reddish-brown and green.
[Illustration: A stone ax]
"This is not stone," the boy said at last.
"No," said the doctor, "that is a copper hatchet. I was very glad to
get that because there are not many of them found now. You know that
when Columbus came to our country, red men lived all over the land.
They were in what we call the Stone Age; that is, they made their tools
and weapons of stone. But there are great lumps of copper beside one
of our lakes here. Now copper, you know, is a rather soft metal, and
the red men about here learned to pound it into shape for weapons.
They called both their stone hatchets and copper hatchets 'tomahawks.'
"Red men never learned to melt iron and make tools of it as we do,
though there was plenty of iron in the mountains among which many
tribes lived.
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