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Show I 4 Till: SAUNA SI N. SAUNA. ITAII H9999NHmm999944M0 b IRAD10 PROGRAMS N. B. C. BCD NCTwOBK- -fI w im ih III UHX M m r"dr k IMS ui'ua I li t Alaaut t 94444499999999944m99 IM 4 I I i 4 I at It It I at 10 u tiiii. tl4t. ka Jsiiuka. 1 II Ai-tiuaa- 1ihm. twta in . ltar, Av I i at It It rr rrw. Mtlio lil -- Thlr af Ik tiaKaoe A'akaaqa. I". A r burnt tka Bamavar. M. p. m. N. B. C. BCD NCTWORK-Cla It a m. lU4i 1 f m, Vblr l.uholJ III t 1 I t laatituta. opt Uaaaral UnIMt Par If. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK Ward llur. m. 0 II p, M, National Farm and Homs, M. iiaiiinr f ti I F4M Alt. it p. n. Gan. ftamrdtr. rod m, ! . Uhllch-I.- m. Kdlaon III ConrafU I St p m. Ilaal Polka. a Itoial Orchestra, I SI p. m. IIM p m Amo a V ASr COLUMBIA SYSTEM It at a m, Ha imhp Allan. Grant tiprt fonrart. Ml p m. m. IV Courlora. (Mualral) I at K.o-lM- o C4iurs tlagadna. p, m, phpalr-ap. m. I K, Navy ltand 14 na . m. Barn panaialaa. I 14 p. in. N kl Club Humane. Ml I II Ii.-I-- N. B. C. BCD NETWORK Sept 10. It a. m. ItadlO lluuarhnld Ir.allltltn. 4 34 p. m. Saran)lil FUrltht. 1 14 m. prophylsrilc. 44 p. m Kvrady Ituur. 9 00 p. m. Cl.runt Ciub Kaklntoa. Hour. 14.44 p. m Hadio-K- a N. B. C. CLUE NETWORK I II p m. llonlmrry Ward Hour, I 14 p. m. Nali Farm and lloma Hour 7 ( p. m. 1ur oil ltand. n. tin halin Tirvmrn. IIM I 04 p. ro. Colic a pru Flora. It I p. m. 9 00 p. m. 34 p. m. vrz&s: He died in Washington on the 21th day of tocfmber, 1824, of croup, in the (kkb year of bis age." It I to (lie credit of the white man, at least that md all of the monuments which lie has erected have I wen to friendly Indlitna. Some of them perpetuate the warlike deed of Indlun who were in their day the bitterest enemies of the eiicron'EIng wllie. One of these stand In the courthou yard at Point pleasant. W V . and hear wltne to (tie grenlne of Cornstalk, the Shawnee, who led hi warrior In the first buttle" at Point Pleasand greatest ant at the mouth of the great Kanawha in 1774 under Gen when native white frontiersmen Andrew Lewi strove mightily with native rial men under Cornstalk. Although defeated at that battle. Cornstalk prowess and generalship won the highest praise from hi enemies, who laer were the most slnrere mourners of his death at the hand of treacherous and cowurdly whites while he was detained as a hostage. A memorial in a Pittsburgh park recalls another great Shawnee who fought under Cornstalk at Point Pleasant He was Cntahecnssn, but known along the frontier as Black Hoof, a warrior whose fighting days extended from P.raddocks defeat in 1755 through the defeats of Hannar and St Clair, until Mad Anthony Wayne finally broke the power of the Indians and peace was signed in 1795. No part of the United States is richer In Indian memorials thnn the great Mississippi valley which was for so long the beloved homeland of several powerful Indlnn tribes. Near Columbus, Ohio, stands a monument to the memory of Leather-Upa Wyandot chief, who was executed by his own people on the site of the monument In 1809. This memorial was erected by the Wyandot club, an organization dating back to pioneer days, because of the fact that, although the Wyandots claim that the old cldef was executed for practicing witchcraft. It was the opinion of the settlers that it was dune because Leuthcrllps was too friendly with the whites. Chicago, the metropolis of the Mississippi valley empire, is especially rich In Indlnn memorials. In addition to the Mestrovlc and Dallin statues. It has also a monument which perpetuates not only the story of a terrible Indian massacre but also a noble act on the port of a red man. This Is the Fort Dearborn Massacre monument on the lake front, capped by the stirring group which depicts Black Partridge, the Pottawatomie, saving the life of Mrs. Helm, wife of one of the officers In the fort, from the deadly tomahawk of an Infuriated Indian brave. West of Chicago the traveler will see, on a high bluff above the Rock river, a solitary majestic figure outlined sharply against the natural beauty of field and woodland In the background. Although this statue, the work of the noted Chl, cago sculptor, Lorado Taft, Is popularly believed to be that of Blackhnwk, the great leader of the Sacs and Foxes, its maker has declared that it is neither a representation of that leader nor of any single tribe. It symbolizes the Indian, a spirit while still a conquered race It is one of the first large monuments to be made of concrete. Still further west is another statue by the same sculptor which tells the story of another great Sac and Fox leader. This is the bronze figure of Chief Keokuk which stands In the Iowa cijy which bears his name. Oshkosh Is an honored name, the nnme of a chieftain of the Menominee Indians and several years ago, In a beautiful setting In Menominee park, the citizens of Oshkosh, Wis., erected a statue In honor of his memory. Out in Colorado Is another city which hears the name of a great Indian chief. He s Chief Ouray of the Utes, nn Indian who repeatedly proved Ills right to the title of "Friend of the White Man." A few years ago a part of their debt of gratitude to him was paid by the unveiling of a monument to Ouray and hls wife, Chl-peton a tract of land near Montrose which was a part of the original Chief Ouray ranch. And these are hut a few of the many memorials to the vanished race. As westward the "star of empire took its way It took with it the Indian and the sorrowful fate which has been his, and is symbolized in one of the most famous of ail Indian statues the bowed figure of an Indian warrior, mounted upon a horse whose drooping head Is pointing toward the setting sun James E-Fraser Tha End of the Trail." friend. rtzsr DJCAB30RTT '&ZCAZO TOTrznTfX By ELMO )1IIS SACKS SCOTT WATSON year marks (lie tenth aunt Ternary of (lie establishment nf a for honoring the memory of the original Inhabitants of this continent the American Indian. . It whs III ll19 that the Illinois , a legislature authorized the olwerv- f A anee of Indian day on the fourth Friday In September of each year. Since that time the Idea has spread to other states und all over the country the day Is marked with various ceremonies. In connection with this event, it Is Interesting to note how many permanent memorials have been arreted within recent years to perpetuate the fame of some Individual red tunn or of the Indian as a race. The past year has seen the addition of several to an already long list of such memorials. Outstanding among these hnve been the two Indlun equestrian statues of heroic size which were made a part of the main project of the monumental Grant park decorative scheme, the twin bridges across the railroad tracks at the foot of Congress street, on the lake front of Chicago. Characterized as two of the ugliest but most Impressive Indians ever cast In bronze," these statues, modeled by Ivan Mestrovlc, the rreat Yugo-Sla- v sculptor. Idealize the lighting spirit of the American Indian as not done before. Other memorials to a vanished race (and tliut terra is used purposely, because the primitive Indian Is not merely the "vanishing race," hut very definitely 4 vanished race) include the life-lik- e bust of Chief Oratem, of the Achkinke-shack- y tribe, which was recently presented to the Bergen County Historical society in New Jersey ; the monument to Chief Straw of the Delawares, unveiled at Strawtown, near NoblesvIUe, Ind. ; and a massive granite boulder erected at Surrey Courthouse, Virginia, which recalls to the people of that state their indebtedness to an Indian named Chanco. A bronze tablet on that boulder tells his story. It reads: In memory of Chanco, the Indian who lived with Richard Pace at Paces Paines in this county and who. on the night before the massacre of March 22, 1622, Informed Pace of Opechancanough's plot and thus saved the Jamestown colony." And these are only a few of the many memorials to the American Indian which have been erected in every state in the Union. An entire book could be written about these memorials and the heroic deeds to whloh they testify. This article, therefore, cannot hope to contain a complete In New England alone, for instance, a plan was set on foot several years ago to erect one hundred monuments to all the tribes and to a number of Individual Indians who lived in that section of the country. Just the other day it was announced that a memorial of a different sort from the usual was to be established on Mount Hope in Rhode Island as a shrine to perpetuate the memory of King Philip, the great Wampanoag warrior. On that historic ridge will be built a fireproof museum for housing objects of historic 'Indian value and it will be a shrine, an archeological sanctuary for new England history. Massachusetts long ago honored the memory of King Philips father, Massasoit, with a huge bronze Statue of "the great Sachem of the Wampanongs, protector and preserver of the Pilgrims." which was erected at Plymonth daring the Pilgrim tercentenary in 1921. The tfeltor at New Harbor, Maine, will And tiny " lit there a reminder of uuother friend of the PilIt Is a granite monument with a bruuze tablet bearing this inscription: Snnmset. an Indian Sagamore of Pcnmquld who welcomed the English at Plymouth, gave a dcd of the land where this stone was quarried, and of that where it stands, to John Drown of New llarhor irtti July, 1625, and acknowledged It before Abraham Shurte, it being the first proHrly executed in New England." One other New Englund statue which should be mentioned before lenvlng that part of the country is the famous bronze by grims. ch-e- Cyrus E. Dullin. "The Apcu1 to the Great Spirit, wldeh stands before the museum of fine arts in Poston. Tlds was the lust of a series of four statues made by the famous sculptor more than twenty years ago which represented the raclnl tragedy In which our national life began. The first The Signal of Peace stands In Lincoln park, Chicago, and represents the friendly meeting of white and red man. The Medicine Man In Fulrmount park, Philadelphia, depicts the red mans suspicion of the Invader while Protest shows the warfare of the tribesmen against The Appeal to the Great Spirit illustrates the surrender of the Indian, not to human enemies but to a higher friend. One other of Dallln's symbolical sculptors should he added to the list of his masterpieces. It Is The Scout" which stands In Penn Valley purk In Kansas City Mo., an appropriate locale, for this was the eastern terminus of the Oregon and Santa Fe trails and the mounted Indian Is looking over the vast empire where he made his Inst stand before the onrush of the white settlement of the West. The recent unveiling of the Chanco monument In .Virginia Is a reminder that Pocahontas, one of the two great Indian heroines In American history, was not the only one whom Virginians hnve reason to hold In grateful remembrance. The statue of Pocahontas, which stands on Jamestown Island, Is perhaps the best known of all Indian statues. To see the memorial to another Indian heroine you must go clear across the continent to City park in Portland, Ore. There stands Snkakawea, her hand outstretched to the west, pointing the way as she did more than a hundred years ago when she guided Lewis and Clark on their famous expedition into the wilderness. North Dakota also has iionored the memory of this Indian girl with a statue which stands on the grounds of the state cnpltnl at Bismarck. Virginia, however, is not the only state which had a Pocahontas. Near the town of Benton, Tenn stands a cnlrn of stones hearing a marker with In Memory of Nancy the following Inscription: Ward, Princess and Prophetess of the Cherokee Nation. The Pocahontas of Tennessee, The Constant Friend of the Pioneer. Born 1738 Died set-tier- s. 1822." In the Congressional cemetery In Washington, stands a monument which is not only unique In that burying ground of notatdes of our nation. It is also a memorial to an Indian warrior and statesman said by many to be the greatest of all his race known to the white man and honored at the time of his death with a military funeral accorded only those ranking as general officers of the United States army the only red man in history to have been paid such a tribute. Engraved on the plain shaft that marks his burying place are these words: "Pushmataha, a Choctaw Chief lies here. This monument to his memory was erectqd by Ms broth r cl lefs. who were associated with him In a delegation from their nation in the year 124 to the government of the United States. Pushmataha was a warrior of great distinction. He was wise In coum-il-. eloquent to an extraordinary degree, and on all occasions under all circumstances, the white mans D. C s, a, 14 04 a. It. oo 1 I t t It no a COLUMBIA SYSTEM f Thrift m. Grant m. Ha Hmlry Allen. m. Tltcronold Talk. m. Knilaraky and ilardin. m. Flyin Ktoric. ll-li- so p. Wh'lamaa p. m. Old Gold. p. m. Fad Salon Hour. m. In p. Story p. m. Jess Crawford. oo 10 no 10 30 It 00 I a. p. p. I'uirh tlaau-r- timairrla. Wlillama Karl orrhertrad ana. Fn. N. B. C. RED NETWORK Sept 11. 0.00 n. m. National Homo Hour. 10 IS a. m. Radio Household tnatitut. 30 p. m. LnTouralr.e Concert. 7 00 p. m. Mobllu!) Hour. 7 30 p in. Happy Wonder Raker. I 00 p. m. Initram Shaver, t 30 p. m. ralmollvo Hour. 10. 00 p. m. Gilbert and Sullivan Opera N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p. m. Montrniery Ward Hour 130 p. m. Nnt'l Form and Hoina Hour. 7:00 p. m. Yeast Foamera. 7.30 p. m. Fvlvan'a Foreatera. 00 p. m. Flit ftoldlera. t 30 p. m. Forty Fathom Fish, t 00 p. m. ABA Voyagera. Carlson. 9.30 p. m. Stromber 10:00 p. m. Amos 'n' Andy. COLUMBIA SYSTEM Ida Bailey Allen. Talk on Interior Hecoratln. Hnnk Simmons Show Boat. United Symphony Orchestra. La Falina Smoker. Kolster Radio Hour. Dixie Echoes. 11:00 a. m. 11:30 a. m. S 00 p. m. 9:00 p. m. 9:30 p. m. 10:00 p m. 10:30 p. m. N. B. C. RED NETWORK Sept 12. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 7:30 p. m. Victor Hour. 8:00 p. m. Seiberlln Singers. 9:00 p. m. Halsey Stuart Hour. N B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:30 p. m. Nat'l Farm and Home Hour, 1:00 p. m. University Presidents. 6:30 p. m. United Reproducers. 7:00 p. m. Lehn and Fink. 8:00 p. m. Veedol Hour. 8:30 p. m. Maxwell House. 9:00 p. m. Atwater Kent. 9 '30 p. m. Around World with Libby. 10 00 p. m. Amos 'n Andy. COLUMBIA SYSTEM a. ra. Morning Merrymakers. a.- - m. With Theresa Martin. a. m. Ida Bailey Allen. a. m. Du Barry Beauty Talk. p. m. Theroneld Health Talk. p. m. Daguerreotypes. 8:30 p. m. U. S. Marine Band. 9:00 p. m. True Detective Mysteries. 9:30 p. m. Gold Seal Program. 10:00 p. m. Buffalo Civic Symphony Or. 10:30 p. m. Voice of Columbia. (Musical.) 10:00 10.30 11:00 11:30 2:45 8:00 N. B. C. RED NETWORK Sept 13. 9:00 a. m. National Home Hour. 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 5:30 p. m. Raybestoa Twins, 7.00 p. m. Cities Service. 8:00 p. m. An Evening Jn Paris. 8:30 p. m. Schradertown Brass Band. 8.00 p. m. Whispering Tables. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. m. Mary Hale Martin. 1:00 p. m. Montgomery Ward Hour. 1:30 p. m. Natl Farm and Home Hour. 4:00 p. m. LaForge Berumen Musicals. 7:00 p m. Triadors. 7.30 p. m. Gillette Raxor. 8:00 p m. Interwoven Pair. . 8.30 p. m. Philco Hour. 9:00 p. m. Armstrong Quakers. 9:30 p. m. Armour Hour. 10:00 p. m. Amos 'n' Andy. COLUMBIA SYSTEM 10:00 a. m. Grant League of Thrift 11:00 a. ,i. Ida Bailey Allen. 11'45 a. m. Radio Beauty School. 7:30 p m. Howard Fashion Plates. 8:00 p. m. Hawaiian Shadows. 8:30 p. m. The Rollickers. 9 00 p. m. True Story Hour. 10:00 p. m Light Opera Gems. 10:30 p. m. In a Russian Village. N. B. C. RED NETWORK Sept 1A 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Institute. 4.30 p. m. Skellodians. 7:00 p. m. Mohawk. 7:30 p. m. Laundry Owners. 8.00 p. m. General Electric Hour. 9:00 p. m. Lucky Strike Dance Orch. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 1'30 p. m. Nat'l Farm and Home Hour 5:30 p m. Gold Spot Orchestra. 4.45 p. m. Dr. Klein. 7 30 p. m. Marvin Radio Tube Co. 10.00 p. m. Amos n Andy. SYSTEM Sorrento Serenade. 8.30 p. m. The Romancera. , 9 00 p. m. Grajbar Electric Program 110 p.m. Temple Hour. (Musical ) 19.39 p.m. Jesse Crawfords Melody Hr. COLUMBIA 8 00 p. m. Iai COCA CITY pr4oo p!ea ta 1tib amount! l valuation if tu belt, with lit Il0(w t-- f lit . rr 17 44 COLUMBIA IVITCM M. Aatioiie Hoar, t. I at p, m. IU4at lm tuiry. I M n tik4ral Hour. ilt1:tea) Trnra-M- l I at m. K w I a Palma t t M t, Ilit. Wtub i : U 19?4 io tim(o4 kt 1 til.kR Lt4, 4 la spit of tho kbfvurUo taier 9prinf. la 1971 tbs crop amoukM 14 1.713.M4 be4 a4 ia Mfi.boo, Hoar ai m, m. Twill p, m, W lui I, m, Al ( m. m. m PiM p. m , ItAlio HCfiKR CITY fiitnaa Huar w. UTAH Fatly : to Liv to ('i a Privilege C. N. B, C. BLUE NCTWOAK m. Tka I I News Notes -i i- m. M. III.. J Rail Uba valley it tba beat teat producer. BRIGHAM CITY tluraa rarer, bucking bronra, nulrt and 4t - , and mualral enter! ja. roping. eta bill' round wut a program ab af Wrnocia of ibn IVacb dag relebraiMi ron. bare Brptembcr 13 and If, arrordiug to an announcement of the eterutiv committee following meeting at tbn chamber of rommerre, More Ib&n "l.fiod rbkka the Utah I'ouitrg producers' aasorlaiioa la (be Provo cLatrirt alone during (be pact oea-n- , mrding to Manager Juha T. IU(N-of tb Inral plant In the entire d trie t cf tbt (oral plant, eomprlalng tha let. tory from Yineyaid to patron, more than JiS.Otk) chirk bare been rold. OCDCN Farm crop and livertotk In the southern part of tbs state are in exreiicnt condition, J. Cecil Alter, the lues! brasher bur.aa. rethief ported recently after eo extended trip to that stcMon. The recent rains greatly fccncfittd tbs faI and winter end the Indication ar that rang he a.d. there will be plenty of During hi trip Mr. Alter visited eeu-tec- n PROVO bare been m44 by -- f-- weather hurraa station. RICHFIELD A banner year for u yar beet grower seem certain In tb! section, according to S. It. Poa-wil- l, county agricultural agent. Tha !:! Icng sjeil of cloudy bcoiber, frequent shower, ha been Id -- a I the grovth of beet. The hay crop have been above norms! and the grain ta matured with kri lns than expcCrd a n result of the heavy tr stern that occurred July 27. CEDAR CITY The total number of visitors Into southern Utah park up 3 to August 21. wa 2S.078 nsaln-- t 21.-C2- during the corresponding rerlod of iaat year. E. T. Rcoycn. superintendent of Zion park and Uryce c said recently, lie I altcndmq conference. the governor Approxiten mately superintend! of national parka will virit here en route to or from Yellowstone park to attend a superintendents conference in the park September 18 to 24. ROOSEVELT Hans are well under way for holding in Roosevelt tMt fail the first dairy show ever held la the Uintah basin, according to Walter E. Atwood, chairman of the agricultural and livestock committee of the n. Roosevelt Commercial club. Mr. Atwood says that owners of dairy cattle in all parts of the basin are taking a keen iaterest in the show and that he is now assured that more than 100 head of the finest dairy cows in the basin will be exhibited. The second AMERICAN FORK carload of mill concentrates from the mill of the Pacific Gold Mining and Millirg com; any in American Fork canyon left here last week for the smelter. Reports from the propert are that grade of ore that was milled in Uis drift is still heading into the same last car of 65 tons, about 360 streak of high to the ton. An grade ore continues in the face of the drift and the workings give promise of a high grade bunch, which may open up In the next few days. SALT LAKE Crops In Utah have suffered less from the dry weather than in some of the other mountain states, and the indicated yield of sugar beets is greater than in 1928, according to the Standard Statistics company of New York. General conditions in this group of states are more h satisfactory than last year, the company reports. Records of the company show that Salt Lake transacted the largest volume of business, measured by debits against individual checking accounts, reported for any July in the last 11 years. VERNAL Since the inception late last spring of the drive on mountain . lions in the Diamond mountain region northeast of Vernal, five of the killers have been slain. As the lion infested territory extends into Colorado, as well as the big game and fishing region, efforts are being made by the sportsmen of Uintah county to secure the cooperation of the Colorado state fish and game department to have the state line posted. In past years the fact that hunters, trappers and fishermen of the two states at times found that they had unknowingly operated beyond the borders of their own state has led to some unpleasantness. VERNAL The first two days of the roundup of wild and abandoned horses on the east end of Diamond mountain has netted 120 head, among them a few stunted wild horses not much larger than a sheep. The Initial catch is corralled near the old Slaugh ranch on the slope of the mountain, and it is planned to drive these animals and additional catches into Ashley valley by the end of the month so that branded horses may be redeemed and the unbranded stuff sold to the highest bidders. The drive is being conducted under the supervision of Ernest Eaton of VbrnaL |