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Turtle’s hoe was made of the shoulder bone of a buffalo set in a light-wood handle, the blade firmly bound in place with thong

Turtle’s hoe was made of the shoulder bone of a buffalo set in a light-wood handle, the blade firmly bound in place with thong.jpg Turtle, I think, was the last woman in the tribe to use an old-fashioned, bone-bladed hoeThumbnailsInside the lodgeTurtle, I think, was the last woman in the tribe to use an old-fashioned, bone-bladed hoeThumbnailsInside the lodgeTurtle, I think, was the last woman in the tribe to use an old-fashioned, bone-bladed hoeThumbnailsInside the lodgeTurtle, I think, was the last woman in the tribe to use an old-fashioned, bone-bladed hoeThumbnailsInside the lodge
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Turtle’s hoe was made of the shoulder bone of a buffalo set in a light-wood handle, the blade firmly bound in place with thongs. The handle was rather short, and so my grandmother stooped as she worked among her corn hills.

She used to keep the hoe under her bed. As I grew a bit older my playmates and I thought it a curious old tool, and sometimes we tried to take it out and look at it, when Turtle would cry, “Nah, nah! Go away! Let that hoe alone; you will break it!”

Author
Waheenee--An Indian Girl's Story
By Waheenee
as told to Gilbert Livingstone Wilson
Illustrator: Frederick N. Wilson
Published in 1921
Available from gutenberg.org
Dimensions
780*300
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1311
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