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Updated: May 8, 2025
Hammond the moment she landed on the island where the moving picture company was established. But, as she saw that the Gem was not at the dock, she scarcely expected to find the president of the company at hand and in that expectation she was not mistaken. Mr. Hooley, the director, however, told her what he knew about the occurrence that had started Totantora so madly from the island in the canoe.
"Yet I would very much like to earn money to spend in searching for the great Chief Totantora," she confessed to the three white girls. "The Great Father at Washington can do nothing now to find my father and I do not blame the White Father. The whole world is at war and those peoples in Europe are sick with the fever of war. It is sad, but it cannot be helped."
The Osage Nation is not at all poverty stricken and it holds its property ill community fashion." "What makes her travel around in such a foolish way, then?" Aunt Alvirah asked. "She wants ready cash. She wants it for a good purpose, too," explained Ruth thoughtfully. "You see, this girl's father is Chief Totantora, a leading figure in the Osage Nation.
Hammond that yonder the man with the little green eyes the fat man cannot have us taken." "For goodness' sake!" gasped Helen, "she's talking of that Bilby, isn't she?" "What does it mean? Has Bilby come again?" cried Ruth, speaking directly to Totantora. "We go," said the chief. "Hammond, he say so. Now. They come for me and for Wonota with talking papers from the white man's court." "Then Mr.
"He has gone to confer with the lawyers and see if they can get the court to vacate the injunction issued against our use of Wonota. Bilby and the sheriff came again. They had a warrant this time. It called for the production of Wonota. Luckily you had her off the island at the time. They searched every nook and cranny, and meanwhile Totantora got away. They wanted him too."
Doing that will bring you, quicker than anything else, to the point where you can wear diamonds and ride in your own motor-car and go to the opera. What does your father, Chief Totantora, say to your new ideas, Wonota?" "The chief, my father, says nothing when I talk like that to him. He is too much of an old-fashioned Indian, I fear.
"I think he will bring his daughter ashore," Ruth said composedly. "If I were you I would not cross him further." "I ain't going to, Miss," said the fellow, now on his feet. "I see Jim is keeping as far away from him as he can. Jim can't swim." "Go aside somewhere. When they reach the bank I will try to take Totantora and the girl away with me.
Hammond's representative went in search of Totantora and Wonota and the two Osage Indians were brought back to the moving picture camp before night. The work of making the last scenes of "The Long Lane's Turning" was taken up at once, and until the last scene was taken Ruth and her associates were very busy indeed.
Is he coming ashore?" He turned to look at the boat, and then leaped to his feet in some fear. Totantora, by leaning well over the stern of the boat, had dragged the torn coat out of the propeller, and now he was coolly examining the mechanism with the evident idea of starting the boat. The Indian seemed familiar with the driving power of such a craft.
With Wonota, however, it was different. In the first place, she came of a tribe of people in whom it was bred to smother all expression of emotion even the most poignant. Wonota almost worshiped her father; but did she ever look upon Chief Totantora with a smile of pride or with affection beaming in her eyes? "Not so you'd notice it," said Helen, on one occasion.
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