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Show TP15 LEHI SUN. T.EIII. UTAn Vio is tKereatest Indian Sm, x-of Today? OUR- ROADSIDE MARKETING By T. J. Delohery Sally Sez CHILDREN By ANCELO TATRI TOURISTS A CASH CROP ' fj J V-W Ruth. Muskrat Bronson " VV, , -" ? &&feir& " fir) e-5C p-l ,. Menominee V" ' .... i -vA-vVl lS KLJ?' JPyiarv Martina an TWefrm.rt " V ? s. D. Weeks, oresident or Bacone Indian -5 J - V V. . s ' - il - III I in Oklahoma : Mrs. narold L. Ickes. wife CaJ iJ? ,A ' T, ... I- ' ,ifl AV iv -; X4v,7,f - yr' vk - ; rmW I By ELMO SCOTT WATSON mfIE celebration of American In dlan Day this year has a special spe-cial significance because on that H ceremony will be held at A Cen tury of Progress In Chicago at which an honor medal will be presented to the Indian of to- dav whose achievement In the field of the fine arts, religion, medicine, law, science, politics, fin education, social service, agrl " culture or service to the federal I eovprument has been most outstandin Larrf of this medal has been sponsored 111 '!' I'OUriCil r lie, n uuuuiiai uisouna Ivoted to the advancement of the Indian I to the Interests of the Indian. For the L months the Council Fire has been re-I re-I nominations for the . award, which will li bj t commitioe composed of Lew Sarett, f of "Many, Many Moons," "The Box of Slow Smoke," and other books of poetry an subjects; Ernest Thompson Seton, and founder-president of the Woodcraft of America; John Collier, commissioner pa affairs, Washington ; Dr. W. Carson director or maian education, wasningion; D. Weeks, president of Bacone Indian i in Oklahoma ; Mrs. Harold L. Ickes, wife wetary of the Interior, and an authority 3 an subjects ; Mrs. George H. Ileafford, t n of the Indian Cemetery Restoration Mrs. William J. Rogers, chairman of ' an Welfare committee, third district, fill deration of Women's Clubs ; and Mrs. .laton, Cherokee Indian historian of Okla- award of such an achievement medal is made an annual affair, according to Scott !tprs, a Chippewa Indian who Is president $ Indian Council Fire, who says : "Few peo- S"W that the Indian has made any progress f of the conditions with which he has haa ft, but there are Indians In every walk who are making good. Their achievements m real ones because they have had to irae such handicaps as the restrictions of pan Bureau system, race prejudice and fwallzing effect of a comnlete transition 'one civilization to another." er, the records of the list of more than as men and women, who have been noml f -. i wmcn is 10 De awarded on f r 22, Is a good cross-section of Indian r-ment today. Among them are the fol- W Asah, James Auchlah, Monroe Hunt- p e wopope and Gilbert Mopope, 9 ,P of boys who make historical fftheir tribe and whose paintings, pub- ; wrm, command a hljrh Driee. ! v Ul U1B 'eaaers in the move-I move-I the establishment of a National In- 'fm7 8 cear' S10UX- lecturer and wa, com- President Roose- dt Eonnli, ct . Worker i , Iormer teacher and i NaHthnnB ian 8e": now presl- forth, klHtil.0tstaDdinS ers In """"kii or the race. D ok. I to, graduate of Y'tMrt iirT ?L0OO Mor- mplished , Uolyke senior who ?myear Vith theIr trainln8 'C!0,,chw':teacher;assiSt. Indian " :v""""su'P8 ana general fl students In Haskell Indian - kvSSapaT' comP8er and mn- C4iba. organs of the iiainj i "JC naian service ! HkilKbfr: 1933. superintend- uu ocnooL IHonti ! leader in In- .ckasaw. iierof ftefl " ,cn001 rd In fritor. i. ue nrst woman. -iu . r Us Corn, ir t0rIcaI "'ety. work among the Silver-Toncjue who has appeared In both Europe and America. Mourning Dove, Okanogan, author of two books "Cogawea" and "Coyote and Others" (Okanogan folk lore). ; Dr. Charles A. Eastman (Ohiyesa), Sioux, former government physician and Indian service Inspector; national councilman of the Boy Scouts; director of the Brooks-Bryce foundation for promoting peace and friendship between the English-speaking races; lecturer and author of 11 books on Indian life. Dp. George R, Frazler, Sioux, physician In the Indian service for. 19 years, the only full-blood American Indian practicing medicine. Ethel Frazler, Sioux, graduate nurse and head of the welfare department of the Evanston (111.) hospital Ralph Fredenburg, Menominee, tribal advocate and chairman of the Menominee delegations to Washington and leader In the educational and business advancement of his tribe. Charles J.; Frechette, Menominee, tribal dele gate and president of the advisory board of the Menominees. John Frost (Plenty Crows), Crow, Interpreter, educational and religions leader among the Crows. Frank S. Gauthier, Menominee, tribal Inter preter, delegate to Washington and chairman of the tribal advisory board for the Menominees. Rev. Philip Gordon, Chippewa, one of the only two Catholic priests who are Indians; builder of the unique Indian church on the Chippewa reservation near Hayward. Wis., and of the chapel of SL Therese at Centurla, Wis. Dr. Joseph IL Jacobs, Mohawk, graduate of McGill university medical school and a prac ticing physician on the Caughnawaga reservation. William J. Kershaw, Menominee, lawyer, ora tor; assistant attorney-general for the state of Wisconsin with special Jurisdiction over Indian claims. Mrs. Theresa La Motte, Menominee, wife of sub-chief of the Menominee and a leader In perpetuating the arts and crafts of the women of her tribe. . Mrs. Eugene B. LawBon, Delaware, first rice president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs; former president of the Oklahoma Federation Fed-eration of Women'i Clubs;, composer of note and an authority on Indian music. Angus F. Lookaround. Menominee, athlete, All American quarterback on the Navy team In 1917. organizer of the Eeshena (Wis.) Indian school band, at present a member of the Minneapolis symphony orchestra. Maria Martinez, San Ddefonso Pueblo, one of the finest Indian pottery makers of today who doing much to develop and preserve this ancient handicraft George C. Miller, Seneca, expert diamond cut ter and one of the best In New York. William B. Newell (Rolling Thunder), Mohawk and Kiowa, World war veteran ; graduate of Syracuse university, missionary among the Sen-ecas, Sen-ecas, founder of the Society for the Propagation of Indian Welfare, Joe Noonan, (Wanno-Gano), Cherokee, artist, illustrator and author, vice president of the Associated As-sociated Arts club of Los Angeles. Roy Oshkosh, Menominee, member of the Menominee Me-nominee tribal advisory board. W. David Owl, Cherokee, former director of religious education and physical education at Haskell; now missionary to the Six Nations in New York. Dr. Arthur C. Parker, Seneca, director of the Rochester (N. Y.) Museum of Arts and Sciences; Sci-ences; New York state archeologlst for 18 years; leading American authority on the New York Indians; former president of the Congress of American Indians and an officer In many other organizations devoted to their interests; George C. Peake (Little Moose), Chippewa, World war veteran, dramatic reader of Indian verse and stories. Rock (Imnija) Sioux, old-time Sioux warrior, one of the few survivors of the original Indian police force, organized In 1879 by Dr. V. T. McGlllycuddy, agent for the Ogallalas, which directed di-rected those people in the "white man'g road." Ann Ross, Cherokee, the only Indian girl who has made an outstanding success in motion pictures, pic-tures, now working on her first feature picture. William Shelton, Snoqualmle, lecturer, authority author-ity on Indian totem poles, organizer of the first Northwest Indian fair. Houston B. Tee Hee, Cherokee, lawyer and financier; from 1904 to 1931, he has held the following positions: Mayor of Tahlequah, Okla.; Oklahoma state legislator, United States probate attorney, registrar of the United States treasury, treas-ury, assistant attorney-general of Oklahoma and member of the Supreme court commission of Oklahoma. Mary Thompson (Te Ata) Chickasaw-Choctaw, actress and singer, who has scored successes In England and America. James F. Thorpe, Sac and Foxe, one of the greatest football players ana m His tory twice winner of the all around American championship; winner of all the events in the Pentathlon and the Decathlon In the Olympic games in Sweden. Silver Tongue, Hoopa, known as we -Amer- lean Caruso"; he one oi u.c "-"""j m-dlan m-dlan singers of the country. c FiirohPth Tourtillot. Menominee, teacher irhon, rwia.1 Indian school for 28 years IU IUC uouvuh x - 11 and noted for her service to Indian girla. ph Whirling Thunder. WinneDago. lecturer. teacher and Boy Scout leader. Kin math, lecturer ana proaucer of moving pictures showing authentic Indian life. . Lone Wolf, Elackfoot. a forme -w-y ,n Montana who has Decome Indian painters of today. ((bflWOTl"!""'' REVIEW LESSONS I? VERY so oiteu it is necessarv - for a pupil to go over the points he has learned. He reoeata hia rules, brushes up his tables, does the problems once more. This Is an essential step In his learning. It makes for thoroughness, for one thing. Our minds often trick us, We think we know a fact very well. It has a pleasant familiar feeling as we remember It In passing. "Oh, I know that," says the child, and goes on. The wise teacher doesn't stop with that She says, "Good. I ell me all about it" Oftenerthan not the pupil Is dismayed to find that this thing he knew so well slips from his grasp when he tries to lay hold of It He hesitates, stammers stam-mers and fidgets and finally says. "I Knew that just as well as my own name and I couldn't say it" ue didn't know It as well as he knew his own name. Ills name has been used so often that it has be come a part of himself. The fact that slipped into the haze when he tried to hold It had not been used often enough, had not been knitted into the fabric of hia thought Repetition alone will not help a child to knowledge. It is not enough to repeat words, accurate though they may be. That Is only one form of an Idea, its thinnest most elu sive and deceptive form. To grasp its values and make them useful to our thinking we have to know the idea In many forms In action, In association with other things. A child learns that a river is a stream of water running down hill toward the sea. Suppose he never saw the boats carrying their loads up and down its course, never saw the farms turn green and bear their harvests because of Its beneficent watering, never noted the difference Its drainage meant to the nearby up lands how much does be know about a river? We begin with the word but the word must be clothed and made manifest before a child knows much about It When you are trying to help a child review a subject, Instead of hammering on the set word, try to get a new view of It by helping the child to find new associates for It IT'S RAINING nfT'S raining. Mother, it's rain- ing. Does that nipan we can't go?" "You certainly don't expect to go out in the rain? If It Is raining, you have to stay in the house. That's all." A groan runs through the anxious group about the window. "Stay in all day? What will we do?" There are some rainy Saturdays In every year and that means a lot of disappointed children, for Saturday Satur-day Is their Important day. They save up their treats for that day, they look forward to It all week, for weeks ahead. A disappointment like a rainy day is no light blow to eager children. Sometimes the rain need not In terrere. u tne children were go ing to the circus, let them go. The circus In the rain Is great fun, Usually, It Is under cover, anyway, Concerts, plays, museum trips, need not be affected by the weath er. The outdoor trip, the picnic and the like and the week-end camping may be Impossible, but sometimes there Is a chance even for them. If there Is, let them take It Getting a wetting is not going to hurt a healthy child. They are as waterproof as young ducks, provided provid-ed tbey are in good health and their clothes are fit There is beauty In a rainy day. The soft gray that veils the world enchants It The everyday things take on an air of mystery. The smells and the feels of a rainy day are a welcome variety vari-ety In the children's experiences. It would be a pity to deprive them of the delights that the rains bring. The drip of the rain from the trees, the echoing voices, the soft thud of footsteps on fallen leaves, the smell of earth that lies open to the meat and drink that the season Is offering, the colors and the atmosphere at-mosphere of all our days offer something some-thing precious and lasting to the children who can enjoy them. I don't like to teach children that a rainy day checks them completely. complete-ly. It may not be wet enough to change their plans. If a rain day outfit will settle the difficulty let them put It on and go ahead. If it is too heavy a rain use one of the alternatives yon have had In mind. Instead of an outdoor excursion make It an Indoor one to some Interesting In-teresting place. Help them to use the rainy day and enjoy it The weather does not hurt healthy children. Dress them to meet It Instead of dressing them by the calendar, nse the thermometer. thermome-ter. A sweater can be worn with comfort on a cool day and laid aside with perfect safety on the following follow-ing warmer day. We master the weather. We like It We enjoy the changes In color and atmosphere and temperature that It brings. Who wants to be afraid of a rainy day? C Bell Sjadlt. WNU Serrtc "pHAT the tourist Is a profitable customer for farm produce, prepared pre-pared food and spare rooms In farm homes has been discovered by thousands thou-sands of farm women. In West Virginia, twenty-eight farmers' wives have formed an organization or-ganization called the Mountain State Tourists' Home. This association, asso-ciation, fostered by the West Virginia Vir-ginia extension service, adopted rules and regulations governing the service and uses a uniform sign which is posted In front of each member home. Advertising folders, bearing the name and location of each member as well as the Interesting sights nearby, are widely distributed In advance of each tourist season with the result that members of the association asso-ciation have experienced an increase in-crease In business during the six years of this co-operative effort More than 6,000 people stopped from one to several days at these 28 farms last year. They came from 40 states, England, Norway, Finland, Fin-land, Germany, India, Korea, Philippine Phil-ippine Islands, Canul Zone and Canada. Rates are uniform the state over, lodging being charged at $1.50 per night for two persons, with breakfast break-fast at 25 cents per person and 50 cents each for dinner and lunch. "Our experience is that tourists are a profitable market not only for spare rooms but for fruits, vegetables, vege-tables, eggs, milk, honey, meats and other things we produce right here on the farm," said Mrs. Paul Priest of Franklin, W. Va. "I buy some fruit especially grapefruit and oranges; or-anges; also cereal, tea, coffee, sugar, su-gar, crackers, cocoa and spices. "We raise our own potatoes, tomato to-mato Juice, corn, beets, apples, peaches, pears, cherries, blackber ries, grape Juice, chicken, eggs, mutton, mut-ton, veal and pork. I find tourists like our cured meats and canned goods. They have a speclnl liking for country cured ham." These Mountnln State Tourists Homes, scattered over the state of West Virginia, are making Rn effort to have city people spend their va- '2 &iteiU twif- 1 tr"--i I r "- 4 . r A West Virginia Farm Horns. cations In one place. They are also pointing out the advantages of hunt ing and fishing, because of the large number of sportsmen who get away from the cities In the summer and fall to follow their favorite sports and who are always eager to find good accommodations. While West Virginia scenery helps the tourist-catering business for these farm women, visitors are making a practice of stopping in the country for both lodging and meals. They find It handler and more economical. " Mrs. Fern Berry of Marlon, Mich., sells a large amount of fresh garden gar-den truck at a nearby tourist camp. Twice a week Mrs. Berry fills the car with red beets, carrots, green onions, radishes, corn, cabbage and cucumbers. Potatoes In two-pound bags, enough for one meal, sell well as do her canned goods and horseradish. horse-radish. Prices are gauged according accord-ing to city retail levels. Seven acres on a side road doesn't sound attractive from a profit-making standpoint but Mrs. Grace B. Baertscb of Baraboo, Wis had made It with the aid of her kitchen, give them a living and cash In the bank. Mrs. Baertscb sells eggs, poultry and cooked food to a tourist camp some distance away during the summer months, and by good salesmanship sales-manship has made many of the same people buy her eggs, which are sent by mall to their city homes, during the winter months. Her egg money runs as high as $100 a month, even though she does not charge as much as the traffic will bear that Is, BIrs. ISaertsch attempts at-tempts to take a premium through the season Instead of following the heavy jumps and recessions of the market No end of farm women, knowing their town sisters don't care to bother with big dinners on Sunday and that city people have a hank ering for a good farm-cooked din ner, have made a specialty of this service. Customers are made large ly by local advertising; also by using us-ing boys to pass out cards announcing an-nouncing the business. Following the same thought some farmers with gardens and other sources of food such as flocks of poultry, canned meats, a small or chard or a lake on the premises, have built tourist cottages so that they not only ran .attract the food and outing trade, :t offer sleep ing accommodations for tourists and city folks who tare to spenj the night e. IV1- WtrB tlpapcr CMo Folk mmr BMd htip in rtrj towa, Whmiir w iniy roam. Let's help them It we can. Bat. flrrt. let's help the folks at PATRONIZK BOMB INDUSTRY Music a Great Help ."Music," said III Ho, the saga of Chinatown, "does not convey a thought with accuracy. It can only suggest emotions as the distilled perfume suggests the flowers." THIS WEEK'S PRIZE STORY I ntennountaln Products N rada's pride. T eemlns toodneas o B ery side. R nes of tattle, M eadowe of aheep, 0 a vmf prairie, cow boys aleep. IT tah, oh! Utah I garden rare, N one In the world with yon compara T rees laden with fruit, and beantjr too, A II combine in 'Products for you. 1 daho'a 'spada' and 'larker Red' N eed anr mors of her be saldT P Iner Wjromlnr. her wool so warm R iliht in our ntidat, ws have every thinr. O ur country ealla, n oty to neighbor and selves. U nited we'll etand. C ome Join ear band, T e nid in the treat cases of man. 8 aeUin and support our president work, buy horns mads foods and yon can, MRS. WM. ALDOUB, Downey, Idahsw Not So Many Thinkera "Silence should not be necessary to thought," said Hi Ho, the sags of Chinatown. It is he who can think while many talk that most eventually be relied on." ASK TOUR DRUGGIST FOR Witch Hazel Cream (BKIN LOTION) AN INTEKMOUNTAIN PRODUCT . Largest Marine Reptile A five-ton fossil tecentlv fonnd in Queensland, Australia, is known as Kronosourus and is believed to be the largest marine reptile fossil ever found. EVERYTHING FOR THE BUILDER LUMBER HOULDINGS BASH DOORS PAINT OIL CLASS PLUMBING FIXTURES PIPE VALVES Ketchum Builders' Supply Bait Lais City 781 W. tth Be. English Setter Is Wise There is no dog possessed of peater cajolery, or one that can better wheedle its owner into do ing things that he knows shouldn't be done, than the English setter. mmMMMm Australia Gives Up Jails No mora jails are to be built in Australia. There are prison honor camps instead where convicts grrad-ed grrad-ed by intelligence are sent to forests for-ests and given hard work and ample food. The aristocracies of Tibet and Burma had an honorific language, sacred to themselves, and woe betide be-tide an inferior who addressed the heaven-born in other than the hon orific speech. T0 ff eh will be paid 1J.UU " bt '-word article m -Wk article a Wbv eaa aheald ass Intermaantain made Goods" 8imiiar to above. Send year story in press er eons to Intermaantain In-termaantain Products Column, P. O. sos lie. Bait Lets City. If yoar story appears In this soma reive - - -v. 117. ti roar ry appears In this (ft r r "r i.7" $3.00 Week No. 1121 WJMLSaH Lake City India Great Gol Hoarder The most wide-scale hoarding existing in the modern world it that which prevails in India. This state posesses approximately one-fifth one-fifth of the gold of the world am nearly all of this Is hoarded, together to-gether with vast quantities of jewels and precious stonej. Damascus a Crowded City Damascus, probably containing a quarter-million inhabitants, hat them so packed together that one can walk around the whole city in quiU a short stroll. |