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Show trails called by the Blackfeet Indians In-dians the Land of Shining Mountains, Moun-tains, now Glacier Park. The Indians named her River Woman. Her father helped build the Great Northern Railway and she moved with her family from one pioneer post to another. In Montana she learned to speak and read the signs of the Indian language. lan-guage. Lea Halpern, called the Van Gogh among potters, brought over some of her delicate and beautiful pottery pieces to display in Holland Hol-land House, Rockefeller Center, New York, and the collection will now remain in the United States indefinitely. One of her most important im-portant pieces is a companion to a horse selecteTbT Federation ot Holl ' wedding gift t0 p,, Miss Halpern has C T modeling practically all ;; world. She has vlslted!;'-twice vlslted!;'-twice and gone from G leh. She has visited, at th " tion of the DuPontj iw'h' torles in Wilmta'1. Mrs. Mary SteWart sistant director o! thPv ,; City Information Cent', Ing Square, New York Grand Central Terminal !f wer questions about trad ; lations. She also knows rect people to Shinbone ah " of New York's llttleW.;. MODERN Florence Rogers Cassill is the only woman fully licensed as a guide in Glacier National Park and she is so enthusiastic about her work and the Blackfeet Indian crafts that she makes occasional trips east to talk about both at girls' schools. Miss Cassill grew up in the west and from the time she could hold a bridle rode the |