...It   is  the women   who cling   most    tenaciously to  heathen rites   and
superstitions,   and     perpetuate  them    by  their   instructions    to  the
children.”
Many     Osage   students    at  Mollie’s    school  tried   to  flee,   but
lawmen  chased  after   them    on  horseback   and bound   them    with
ropes,  hauling them    back.   Mollie  attended    class   eight   months  each
year,   and when    she did return  to  Gray    Horse,  she noticed that
more     and     more    girls   had     stopped     wearing     their   blankets    and
moccasins    and    that     the     young   men     had     exchanged   their
breechcloths    for trousers    and their   scalp   locks   for broad-brimmed
hats.   Many    students    began   to  feel    embarrassed by  their   parents,
who didn’t  understand  English and still   lived   by  the old ways.   An
Osage   mother  said    of  her son,    “His    ears    are closed  to  our talk.”
Mollie  was forced  to  attend  the St. Louis   School. Credit  15Mollie’s    family  was straddling  not only    two centuries   but two
civilizations.  Her family’s    distress    increased   in  the late    1890s   as
the U.S.    government  intensified its push    for the culmination of  its
assimilation     campaign:   allotment.  Under   the     policy,     the     Osage
reservation  would   be  divvied     up  into    160-acre    parcels,    into   real
