OCR Text |
Show Career of noted sculptor in magazine issue The career of Cyrus E. Dal-lin, Dal-lin, noted Plains Indian sculptor sculp-tor born in Springville, is traced trac-ed in the Winter issue of "Montana" "Mon-tana" the magazine of western history, published by the Montana Mon-tana Historical Society in Helena Hel-ena and due for mailing next week, according to Mrs. Vivian Paladin, editor. The study of Sculptor Dal-lin, Dal-lin, once called the "dean of Utah artists," is contributed by John C. Ewers, ethnologist and anthorpologist for the Smithsonian Smith-sonian Institution. Dallin created creat-ed some of America's best known heroic Indian statuary, including "Appeal to the Great Spirit," "Medicine Man," "The Scout," and "Signal of Peace." The new issue features two-color two-color lithographic printing on the inside and C. M. Russell's painting, "Free Trappers," appears ap-pears in full color on the front cover. The contents will also carry such varied subject matter mat-ter as the strange period of Communist influence in Sheridan Sheri-dan County, Montana, for nearly near-ly two decades between World War I and the 1930's, the critical crit-ical 1868 inspections of General Gen-eral William B. Hazen of forts along the Bozeman Trail, the short but interesting career of John J. Pershing at Fort As-siniboine As-siniboine near Havre, the era of imposing building blocks in Montana's capital city, and the study of Canada's Red River Colony. Fourteen new books on Western Wes-tern history are reviewed in the issue, Mrs. Paladin added. |