BULL. 30] 



TALIPSEHOGY TALTUSHTUNTUDE 



679 



Kinisquit and Bellacoola (or Palamey), 

 under the Northwest Coast agency, the 

 town of Talio apparently having become 

 extinct. 



Taleomx.— Boas in Petermanns Mitteil., pt. 5, 130, 

 1887. Talicomish.— Tolmie and Dawson, Vocabs. 

 Brit. Col., 12'2b, 1884. Ta'lio.— Boas in Mem. Am. 

 Mns. Nat. Hist., II, 49, 1900. Talio'mH.— Boasin7th 

 Rep.N.W. Tribes Can. ,3, 1891. Tallion.— Can.lnd. 

 Aff., pt. II, 162, 1901. Tallium.— Ibid., 1889, 272, 

 1890. Talomey.— Ibid., pt. ll, 70, 1904. Taluits.— 

 Brit. Col. map, Ind. AfT., Victoria, 1872. 



Talipsehogy. A former Upper Creek 

 town in Alabama, with 19 heads of fami- 

 lies in 1832.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 

 578, 1854. 



Talirpingmiut ( ' inhabitants of the 

 right side'). A subdivision of the Oko- 

 miut Eskimo, residing on the w. shore of 

 Cumberland sd. Pop. 86 in 1883. Their 

 villages are Umanaktuak, Idjorituaktuin, 

 Nuvajen, and Karusuit. Koukdjuaq was 

 a former village. 



Talirpingmiut.— Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., 426, 1888. 

 Tellirpingmiut. — Boas in Trans. Anthr. Soc. Wash., 

 111,96,1885. 



Talisman. See Fetish, Oyaron, Palladium. 



Talitui. A former Kaiyuhkhotana 

 village on Tlegon r., Alaska. 

 Tallily.— Zagoskin. Desc. Russ. Poss. Am., map, 

 1842. Ttalitui.— Zagoskin quoted by Petroff, 

 Rep. on Ala.ska, 37, 1884. 



Talking Kock (trans, of Cherokee N-Cin- 

 yu^-gufni'unVsld, 'rock that talks' ). A for- 

 mer Cherokee settlement or settlements 

 on Talking Rock cr., an affluent of Coosa- 

 watee r., n. Ga. The town-house was 

 situated about a mile above the present 

 Talking Rock station on the w. side of the 

 railroad. The name refers, according to 

 one informant, to an echo rock some- 

 where on the stream below the present 

 railroad station. — Mooney in 19th Rep. 

 B.A.E., 417, 1900. 



"Talks and Thoughts." See Hampton 

 Normal and Agricultural Institute. 



Tallapoolina. A Chumashan village for- 

 merly at Rancho Viejo, V^entura co. , Cal. — 

 Taylor in Cal. Farmer, May 4, 1860. 



Tall Bull {HoU'>a-qa-ihoins). A name 

 hereditary among the Cheyenne and 

 borne at different periods by several dis- 

 tinguished men, of whom the most noted 

 was a ]irominent leader of the hostile Dog 

 Soldier band, the principals in the out- 

 break of 1868-69. After nearly a year of 

 savage raiding along the Kansas border, 

 thej' were completely routed by Gen. E. 

 A. Carr, with part of the Fifth cavalry 

 and a detachment of Pawnee scouts, on 

 July 11, 1869, at Summit Springs cr., n. e. 

 Colorado, Tall Bull being among the slain. 

 See Cheyenne. (.j. .m. ) 



Tallulah (strictly TaZa^iV). The name 

 of two former Cherokee settlements, one, 

 ancient, situated on the upper part of 

 Tallulah r., in Rabun co., Ga. ; the other 

 on Tallulah cr. of Cheowa r., in Graham 

 CO., N. C. The word is of uncertain 

 etymology. In documents from the Lower 

 dialect it is spelled with an r. (j. m. ) 



Taruraw.— Moonev in 19tb Rep. B. A. E., pt. i, 633, 

 1900 (early form"). Toruro.— Ibid. TuUoolah.— 

 Doc. of 1799 quoted by Royce in .'>th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 144, 1887. Turoree.— Mooney, op. cit. 

 Turrurar. — Royce, op. cit., map. Turruraw. — Mou- 

 zon's map of 1771 quoted by Royce, op. cit. 



Talmamiche {TaV -ma-mi' -tee) . A Ta- 

 keJma band or village on the s. side of 

 Rogue r., Oreg. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, iii, 235, 1890. 



Taloffa Ockhase (talofa 'town', lix'hasi 

 'lake': 'Lake town,' from its situation). 

 A former Seminole town about 30 m. w. 

 s. w. from the upper part of L. George, 

 probably in Marion co., Fla. 

 TaloflfaOckhase.— Romans, Fla., 280, 1775. Tolofa.— 

 Jesnp (1837) in H.R. Doc.78, 25th Cong., 2d sess., 

 108, 1838. 



Talohlafia. The Parrot (Macaw?) clan 

 of Taos pueblo, N. Mex. 

 Talo'lafia tai'na. — M. C. Stevenson, notes, B. A. E., 

 1910 (tai'na= 'people'). 



Talomeco (Creek: tnlua 'town', miko 

 'chief'). A former town in the vicinity 

 of Savannah r., S. C, visited by De Soto 

 early in 1540, and described by Garcilasso 

 de la Vega (Florida, 130, 1723) as con- 

 taining 500 well-built but abandoned 

 houses and also a very large "temple," 

 in which were deposited the remains of 

 the caciques, etc. It probably belonged 

 to the Chiaha. 



Talon. A division of the Ottawa on 

 Manitoulin id., in L. Huron, that after- 

 ward moved to Michilimackinac, Mich., 

 on account of Iroquois hostility. — Lahon- 

 tan (1703) quoted in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist, 

 IX, 176, note, 1855. 



Talonapin ('fresh meat necklace'). A 

 band of the Hunkpapa Sioux. 

 Fresh meat necklace people. — Culbertson in Smith- 

 son. Rep. 1850, 141, 1851. Ta-lo'-na-pi.— Hayden, 

 Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. Val., 376, 1862. Talo-na 

 p'i".— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 221, 1897. 



Talotunne {Ta-lo' tdnne). A Takelma 

 band or village on the s. side of. Rogue r., 

 Oreg.— Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lOre, iii, 

 235, 1890. 



Talpahoka. A former Choctaw town on 

 a western affluent of Chickasawhay r., 

 probablv in Jasper co., Miss.^ — Romans, 

 Florida," 329, 1775. 



Talpatqui. An Apalachee town named 

 in a letter from the chief of the tribe to 

 the King of Spain in 1688. — Gatschet, 

 Creek Migr. Leg., i, 76, 1884. 



Talsunme ('large acorn'). A former 

 village of the Chastacosta on the n. side 

 of Rogue r., Oreg. 



Tal-siin'-me.— Dorsey, MS. Chasta Costa voeab., B. 

 A. E., 1884. Ta'-sun-ma' ^iinne.— Dorsey in Jour. 

 Am. Folk-lore, in, 234, 1890. 



Taltushtuntude. An Athapascan tribe 

 or band that formerly lived on Galice cr., 

 Oreg. They were scattered in the same 

 country as the Takelma, whom they had 

 probably overrun. In 1856 they were re- 

 moved to Siletz res., where 18 survived in 

 1877. 



Galeese Creek Indians. — Treaty of 1854 in U. S. 

 Ind. Treaties, 978, 1873. Galice Creek.— Ind. Afif. 



