An Indian picture which so faithfully reproduces the actual life of the plains that one wonders at the accomplishment. It is, perhaps, not too much to say that Selig has succeeded in transferring to the films the real life of the West, that mystical thing which is so baffling to the reproducer and yet so apparent to all who have seen it. Reproduction is likely to contain something of the personality of the reproducer, regardless of his endeavors to keep himself out of his work. Selig has accomplished this and this picture is presented as a transcript of an actual occurrence which typifies much of the life of the past and preserves in permanent form scenes which have gone never to return. - The Moving Picture World, September 17, 1910
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