BILL. 80] 



TUZSINT T YIGH 



859 



about Warner lake, s. Oreg. Hotcu, or 

 Ochoho as he was commonly known, 

 was its chief, and by the latter name the 

 tribe Avas usually called. They were 

 moved to the Yainax agency, Oreg., but 

 subsequently left it and ranged to the 

 s., esjiecially about Camp Bidwell, n. e. 

 Cal., where the remnants of the tribe are 

 now supposed to be. (h. w. h. ) 



Ocheo'sband.— Dyar iti Ind. Aft". Rep. 1873, 324, 1874. 

 Tu-zi' yam-mos. — Powell, Paviot.so MS., B. A. E., 

 1881. 



Tuzsint. A village, presumably' Costa- 

 noan, formerly connected with Dolores 

 mission, San Francisco, Cal. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Twana. A Salish division living along 

 both sides of Hoods canal, w. Wash. 

 The name is said to signify 'a portage,' 

 the portage referred to being that between 

 the head of Hoods canal and the head- 

 waters of Puget sd. According to Eells 

 there are three bands — the Colcine, Sko- 

 komish, and Tulalip. From the name of 

 one of these bands all of them are some- 

 times called Skokomish. Pop. about 265 

 in 1853. They are probably the Skoko- 

 mish of the Indian Office reports, num- 

 bering 203 in 1909. 



Deewano. —Simmons in Ind. Aff. Rep., 224, 1858. 

 Duwano. — Simmons, ibid., 192, 1860. Skokomish. — 

 Moonev in 14th Rep. B. A. E., pi. l.xxxviii, 1896. 

 Toanda.— Stevens in Ind. Aff. Rep., 459, 1854. 

 Toando.— Farnham, Travels, 111, 1843. To-an- 

 hooch.-Gibbs in Pac. R. R. Rep., I, 435, 1855. To- 

 anhoock. — Ibid., 431. Toan-huch. — Gibbs in Cout. 

 N. A. Ethnol., i, 177, 1877. To-an-koooh.— Stevens, 

 op.cit.,4.52. Too-an-hooch.— Treaty of 1859in U. S. 

 Ind. Treaties, 800, 1873. Too-au-hoosh.— Ros.s in 

 Ind. Aff. Rep. 1869, 135, 1870. Towanda.— Ring, 

 ibid., 104, 1868. Tu-ad-hu.— Eells in Smithson. Rep. 

 1887, 605, 1889 (own name). Tu-ad-hu.— Eells, Nis- 

 qualli vocab., B. A. E., 1878 (Nisqnalli name). 

 Tu-an'-hu.— Eells in Smitli.son. Rep. 1887, 605, 1889 

 (Clallam name). Tu-a-nooch.— Starling in Ind. 

 AS. Rep., 170, 18.52. Tu-a-noock.— Ibid., 172. Tu- 

 canob. — Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, vi, 689, 1857 

 (misprint). Twana. — Eellsin Smithson. Rep. 1887, 

 605, 1889. Twanoh.— Lane in Sen. Ex. Doc. 52, 

 31st Cong., 1st sess., 173, 18-50. Twanug.— 6th Rep. 

 N. W. Tribes Can., map, 1890. WJlfa Ampafa 

 amim.— Gatschet, Lakmiut MS., B. A. E., 105 

 (Lakmiut-Kalapuya name) . 



Tweeg. A large North American batra- 

 chian {Menopoma aUeghanensis), called 

 also hell-bender, mud-devil, ground- 

 puppy, spring-keeper, inan-eater, etc. 

 The name is from Lenape (Delaware) 

 twe'kv, a radical word. (w. r. g.) 



Tweezers. See Pincers. 



Twenty-nine Palms. A reservation of 

 160.21 acres of patented desert land, near 

 the 1 16th meridian, in the Mohave desert, 

 Cal., nearly half way between Indio on 

 the Southern Pac. K. R. and Bagdad on 

 the Santa Fe Pac. R. R. The settlement 

 formerly belonged to the Serranos, but 

 in 1867 the Chemehuevi, after fighting 

 the Mohave, by whom they were defeated, 

 fled to this place; meanwhile the Serranos 

 have died out or moved away. In 1908 

 the entire population, with the exception 

 of a single Serrano, was Chemehuevi. 

 Within the last few years several Cheme- 



huevi removed from Twenty-nine Palms, 

 on account of lack of subsistence, to the 

 Cabezon res. of the Cahuillas (Kawia), 

 near Coachella, 3 m. s. e. of Indio. [See 

 Kroeber in Univ. Cal. Pub., Am. Arch, 

 and Eth., viii, 33, 37, 1908.) 

 Mara.- Kroeber in Univ. Cal. Pub., Am. Arch, 

 and Eth., viii, 33, 1908 (native name). Twenty- 

 mile Palms.— Ind. Aff. Rep. 1902, 175, 1903. 



Two Runs. A former Cherokee village 

 on Etowah r., at the crossing of the old 

 Indian trail between Coosa and Tugaloo 

 rs., in the present Bartow co., n. w. Ga. — 

 Royce in 5th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1887. 



Twostars, Solomon. An hereditary chief 

 of the Sisseton Sioux; born at Lacqui- 

 parle, Minn., in 1827. He early became 

 a convert to Christianity under the min- 

 istry of Riggs and Williamson, and was a 

 federal scout in the Sioux outbreak of 

 1862. He was still living at Sisseton 

 agency, S. Dak., in 1907. (d. r.) 



Tyacappan. A village formerly in the 

 vicinity of Trinity r., Texas, visited by La 

 Salle in 1687 while on the way from Ft 

 St Louis on Matagorda bay to the Missis- 

 sippi. Douay says that the village was 

 large and that its people possessed horses. 

 La Salle relates that the houses were of 

 interlaced canes, covered with tine white 

 plaster. Here was found a boy who could 

 speak Spanish. The village was in the 

 Caddoan country, and the people may 

 have belonged to that family, (a. c. f. ) 



Ticapanas. — Cavelier (1687) quoted by Shea, Early 

 Voy., 37, 1861. Tyakappa. — Coxe. Carolana, map, 

 1741. Tyakappan. — Douay (1687) in Shea, Discov. 

 Miss. Val.. 212, 1852. Tycappans.— Coxe (1741) in 

 French, Hist. Coll. La., ii, 241, 1850. 



Tyaia. The extinct Pinon clan of Sia 

 pueblo, N. Mex. 



Tyaia-hano.— Hodge in Am. Anthr., ix, 351, 1896 

 (/(('(?(o=' people'). 



Tyajuindena ( Tya-juin-den-a) . A former 

 pueblo of the Jemez (q. v. ) in New Mexico, 

 the exact site of which is not known. — 

 Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 207, 

 1892. 



Tyasoliwa. A former pueblo of the Je- 

 mez of New Mexico; definite location un- 

 determined, (f. w. h. ) 



Tyee. 1. A man of importance; a chief; 

 somebody. 2. Important; superior; 

 great. The word is used in parts of the 

 Pacific coast: from tyee 'chief,' in the 

 Chinook jargon, a term ultimately de- 

 rived from the Nootka dialect of the 

 Wakashan family. (a. f. c. ) 



Tyendinaga (probably named in honor 

 of Thayendavegea, q. v. ). A IMohawk res- 

 ervation of about 17,000 acres of tillable 

 land, occupied in 1910 by 1,323 Indians, on 

 Quinte bay near the e. end of L. Ontario, 

 in Hastings co. , Ontario. The Indians are 

 known officially as "Mohawks of the Bay 

 of Quinte." — Can. Ind. Aff. Reps. 



Tyigh. A Shahaptian tribe speaking the 

 Tenino language an<l formerly occupying 

 the country about Tygh and White rs. in 



