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Show THE SPANISH FORK PRESS. SPANISH FORK. VT ( ? (idl (rfe KITCHEN 5 i i CABlWTiS n?4u . News Notes Jt't m Prmltgo to L too in I ee--a Tbs sirelUnre ef the lene-- t kg family lies mat no ihilf got an undue amount ef attention. The antique Idea that the rhdd must ttork foi hla pgrania until the day ha aa twenty-en- e I deni belter for the youth than In let him gel It into hie hend that h a parents niuei work for him V. Hubbard. eld-Us- SALT LAKE Salt Lata I the cn-t- ar of a great livestock area that la 1927 nnt more than 8000 cart of Uvo-stoto tho Halt Lalto rtockyardo PRATER Poultry raiser In I'taH oro receiving return of approxlntljr t Vi! per hen per yror after all feed WHEN YOU ENTERTAIN have ben deducted. Tho stato hao many individual flocks of from (000 tiU-i- i For g hot tlMi itMjr Ik lo.Oiitl hen. to H l fetched tv nervy the lot for tho ship, PROVO Preparation Well la liked: hitting of Utah county of tho nln crop ping n. Warms. Chichcn mad !y the grower, actook until i eiidt-- r in u are cording to W. J. Thnyne, Utah county kettle lull of water l agent. A number of the biggest shipfive to !x pound chirk ha. a sacked a big porrnr, adding utt otdoti o per ofalready l heir crop, tion the kettle for aouaotiliis Tho GUNNISON Keaaou lint chit kdi in j aide and oul hefote put- I contest nrotei-r- a to bo or.e of the moat Intcreat.rg feature of the Smpeto ting Into iha krill Teat Iha broth lo ace Unit II la iiol j county filr, which If to be held Svp-- ! r 12, 13 and 14. 8. W. Chapman loo htiliy, adding daring Hie tend-ehas the pulling contest In Monti of Remove well cooking. (he foul wlon cooked, lake off Ilia incut fr..nt Iho ! charge. He exp eta a hundred team holies In Deal pieces utul place to a ' to eder the content. dull nc lulu Imi water, udding a LR10HAM CITY In a letter Just little of the fat fioiu the kettle to received by 'he local chamber of comInto ihe kettle now merce from Governor George II. Dern, keep nioUt. place four good nixed Imtn lieu of eel tho chief executive accept an Invitacry, denned and cut lulu ntiuill plena: tion to participate In the Peach day cook uniil linrly lender, hut ind aR ; fedivitie hire on September 14 13, remove tlmi iu a dl li lo keep hot: Oher p- -f n lrcnt men of the itxte have now add four package of noodle, or a!.-- 'iffiified thei, Ideation to attend If Iniincmiiile. ulmut a douh'e tecijM th h'r peach festival, In unmunf, and rook l. minute. j M YTGN Farmer who reside eno Serve a mat of noodle. then a few j tl, jt. i;mmon. Alfinah ami Bluebell, spoonfuls of celery und l.p witu vhete there hx been sufficiert water rldcken and a simonful of gravy. Il ft r irrigation purpose. are having nerved on a platter nerve In the miii i pood re al in the rxMng of grain way noodles first, then Ihe cilery thi season. Some of the field or and top with the chicken. from thirty to forty bu-h- t I Rabbit Chortcak. Clei.n rabbit and of wheat to the acre. A conshletabe cut Into pieces, diedjo with flour and portion of the grain has already been put lufo a frying pan with iu and some ha been threshed. cupful of tint tel or bacon tat und four PROVO According to Jfhn F. Men- . ltih.(sMgitifula of chopped onion, t ook manncrr of the Utah County I.i- - t until broun. tutti ng frequent J.nir aesoriatlnn, every effort Is being move to a large kettle, rover with miK, l0 brin;r to the fjir thi, )car stock or wuter to whh-- live hom'lon a Treater exhibit in all department cubes hnve been ill solved told tw-A Setter program of Inr-- e racing to t blude of mine, a hay leal, iftther with special entertaining at- end cook until tender. Strain, reserve tractions, is well und:r way. The fair the meat und ditu-urthe hone. Mdt otiens September 27 nnd will continue s udd of halter, cupful ter three JonxDimf ziorArfi) of a ci'pful of llotir, and stir WASHINGTON fait Lake lend until brown. Add to the strained western cities in other Inr r!l stock, cook five minutes, udd salt und of grain in post office receipts Photegrapb ef Chief Steadies near, eoartesy pepper and Ihe rnld.it meat and keep in the month of August, as compared Hoaahloe Mlfflia rampaay. Other photograph, hot until serving time. Split Indi- 'wi h August of last year, arcording eeartesy Coaatapulllaa Uook eorpoiatlott. vidual short spread with butter, to flares made public at the offirc the rdddt aud phu-- u rljie of the as primitive as the Sioux from which Standing pour over pjs master general. The gltin In the ernter of eueh shorteake; olive Bear sprang. They were the Blackfeet. culled the is 7.82 per cent, from 8'O.J, 911 to with n sprig of pars'ey. j 5117,-127- . On!v four out of fifty lore Tigers of the Plains. who were the ruling tribe garnish a Prune Salad. Cut head let me Into of a wild fl'iiimlu known as the northwest terriin the United Stat" lndud"d in cti's on Individ, tal thi tabulation have a tories In Canud.i imlil l!!t5 when the provinces six slices and place i larger gain, a tahl.'spooiiful .if mayof Alberta aud cunie Into being. plates. But j Melon day. Green RIVER GREEN Iu the onnaise center, sprindressing Go among those llluikft-etoday and they will festival, was fit- -. river's b" tell you of their thought at seeing their first while kle with paprika, surround with a t ngiv celebrated Monday by one ef men so lately did civilization touch tludr lives. hord r of elmpped nut meat, place crowds ever to assemble at the big'-eout lile n ring of finely cut etderv. Long l.ance's first remembrance Is of an InterLast years crowd if River. C.cen of that on tiie d"0 of nnd oul.-ddtribal haitle which took place In northern Mon70D0 person was ecuMed If not ex- of cooked a lettuce border the prunes, tana perhaps on the very epot where today some from nil ceedcd by the aonM''" automobile tourWt is campiig! And Chief Buffalo stoned and cut Into pieces. over eastern end sou hern Utah, which Do You Like Tengu:7 Child Long Lance Is scurcely thirty years of age. j c'tterega'ed Monday to do h mi-iLike Standli.g Bear he received a Spurt a d trainThere is no more del lento m.d nicep to the piin-ip- al product of the ing and learned to ride, to shoot nnd speak the ly flavored meal than a vvcl. cooked valoy the melon. truth, und reading In their hooks of the qualities tongue. It is es j MYTON The public rd which this training developed in the ludiaa hoys pecially good, h srhool of Dimbesre c un'y will makes one wonder If perhaps tiie modern civilsliced ier thin h!' Monday, S'ptember 19. fcveral ized" American might not learn some profitable and served cold, open r , of the buildings are being put in lessons In us a sandwich from these barbarians. condition and new equipment provided. tribes which Although of different trlbes--nntilling or with a A total of twelve truck lines have ben were ancient and hereditary enemies there Is a salad ami a cup eotahlirhed providing transportation of tea. striking similarity between the narratives of this the pupils. The Duchrwve emta'y Sioux and this Bluekfoot. Both bring out very Here Is a fiue for teachers institute will be )Hd Tr'-dn- y to the dish true of serve with the rough ends und forcibly qualities honesty, generosity, and Friday, September 6, nnd 7, at reverence and simple kindliness of tiie primitive broken parts of tiie longue: Duchesne. An interesting program is Indian character before It was Influenced hv the Tongue Itallenne. Use tiie broken being prepared. A typical incident Is given white man's ways. pieces of a boiled smoked tongue cm GOALVILLE Coalville city counIn Long Lnncep hook in telling of n luiffalo hum Into small dice. Mix .together two cil has r.amed a eorrmttee to ir.- It was the Indian mans Job to provide tiie meat tuhlespoonfuls of butter, three the cost of pip. from for tiie family by killing the buffalo and tiie In of bread crumbs, uncdiolf dlan womans Job to follow the hunt and skin teaspoon! ul of parsley, one teaspoou-fu- l the flowing hot l in tho ro-- e tlv nnd dress the dend animals. Long Lance writes: city park, with in .tmeli'-- s of minced union, one egg yolk, u xt to report at tbThn mr.ef'nT Each wife knew which animats had been brought Utile suit und pepper to taste. Spread services of Emil Hrnsen, lniinn down hy her husband hy the arrow which had this on tiie bottom of a glass baking heen left In It For every Indian had his arrow dish. at the Utah urn) ct Arrange the diced tongue and gardener painted a certain way, ao that anything he killed been to have tv secured design with tt could eaailv be Identified If he shot a a few slices of tongue ovei lapping r.pw park grounds, and it in e- - rei -I with a bullet he would circle back and each other on top of tiie inkiure. hurl one of hie arrows In Its body, so his wife Cover with one this work will be under vvaj within a cupful of boiled rice short time. would know It was his which bus been well seasoned with The young son of our late med'clne man, White FILLMORE Opening day of the Dog, was Bitting on his pony among ua boys He butter, peppec, salt nnd paprika and M:IInrd county fair, being held at F was carrying on his back a quiver full of his dead cover the rice with a of top grated father's arrows, which his mother had given him was attended by one of the to play with. One of the women came over to this cheese. Set in the oven long enough largest crowds ever arserr.bl" I at a lad and took out one of White Dog's arrows ard to get thoroughly hot. Millard county fair. The exhibits 'n walked out on the field and pulled one of her own Braised Tongue. Boll a tongue in the husband's arrows out of a buffalo bull and stuck department of agrieulttr-''- . White Dogs arrow lif the hole. She said nothing salted water for two hours or until science and art and educaMon wre to anyone; but later we saw White Dogs widow tender. But into cold water for a few effectively displayed in the roce squatting over the buffalo, skinning it and sobbing minutes to loosen tiie skin, then reremodeled old gtate canitol, the wirc quietly over the bloody pelL s of remodeling having just b'en comJust as Standing Bear has written In Tils book move It and slice Into slices on Inch of thick. Slice bulled pleted in some real Indian history from the point of preparation for the esta1. view of the Sioux, so has Long Latiee written the ham the same thickness and trim It lishment of a state museum in the old to match the tongue. But a little historic structure. Story of the relations between the white and red races from the point of view of bis people, the butter In the pan nnd brown the RICHMOND The stae rord cm-- , mirsien and the commission 'rs of Blackfeet And there is no more thrilling and tongue and ham on both sides. Blue (If a person admires pure grit in a these braised slices around a round Cache county have reached a i a baking dish. In alternate slices nnd man, whether he he white or red) story anywhere whereby the road commi-.-ie- n In the center put fresh cooked nnd will put the of outthe Indian than his account of the epic highway f"oni th RichCover witli mond crossroads spinach. law, Almighty Voice. Almighty Voice was the son through Lewiston of Sounding Sky and Spotted Calf, who were buttered bread crumbs and chopped the Idaho state line in good cordit n Brown a and level up the detour that runa egg yolks. Long Lances foster parents, wherefore he knows whereof he writes in telling that warriors story. short time in a hot oven and serve. through Cove precinct. Both of th 'se Stuffed Tongue. Boll a tongue unhirtwavs have been used as a deto.ir Almighty Voice became an outlaw through an unfortunate chain of circumstances. By mistake til tender. Skin and slit through the while the concrete highway in the lie had killed a steer belonging to the government larger end; remove part of the meat, north part of the county was bei' g of tiie Northwest Territories and he was arrested enough to make a well to hold the constructed. The two roads are to be stuffing. Chop the meat that was reby the mounted police and lodged In' Jail. One of put in first class shape. It is said, moved and mix with bread crumbs, tiie police jokingly told him they were going to OGDEN W. R. Chaplain,- head .f hang hi in for killing that steer, little realizing butter, salt and pepper nnd four the terrible effect which this Joke would have on chopped olives. Fill and place the the United States forest service graztiie untutored Indian. But Almighty Voice escaped tongue In a casserole, lay small strips ing research at Washington D. C., conof fat salt pork on top nnd brown ferred with officials of the intermoun-tai- n from jail and then began what was perhaps tiie t most famous in tiie history of that fanibus It well In a hot oven. Serve with: forest service here for a sin-- t Olive Sauce. Mix two tablespoontime recently. Mr. Chapline was en organization, rioted for tiie fact that It always fuls of flour, two tahlespoonfuis of route to California ffrm the eat. gets iis man. It Is true that the Counted police finally did get Almighty Voice but at a terrible cost. butter, one teaspoonful of beef ex- Ernest Winkler, chief of grazing ,'n Tiie hunt for him lasted two years. Finally they tract, one cupful of boiling water and the intermountain forest service, recornered him, but it was not until artillery was salt and pepper to taste. Add the turned to Ogden from southern Ueh brought into action and the place In which Alboiling water last Just before tak at the time of Mr. Chapl:ne'3 mighty Voice and two companions were entrenched The ranges in southern Utah are ven Ing from the heat add two tablespoon that he was finally conquered. fu!s .of grated olives. thorough dry, but both cattle and sheep p.-- in And when he was conquered, he was no longer good condition, showing good w. ignis, able to harm tils attackers. For Almighty Voice Mr. Winkler said. ck gut horse-pullin- g i i oiie-lml- f l. . one-hol- spotted cazf this country and abroad and as movie actor In southern California where be now lives. The MEItlCAN Indian day comet on Sep distance which Standing Bear of the Sioux hut teniber 2S and Indication ore covered la following the white man's road U olsthat It will he more widely a, nothing less than amazing. In the short space of served this year than at any sixty years there bus been written In the history 3t Ht'e alnee It wua originated In of this Individual at least a thousand years of Illinois in 1919. The purpose of racial history, a giants stride from barbarism to American Indian day J to foster what we call civilization" I more cordlul relutlont anl a betSoon af;er Standing Bear was horn hi people ter understanding between the saw for the first time a raHroad train on the red and white racea, but more I'uloii Pacific railroad, which was then being attento to the bring eechilty pushed west. Willi mixed emotions of unmzcmcnt tion of the whiten the many acand fear they watched this great "snake" go puffcomplishments of the Indian. ing across the prairie, little realizing that It was In view of tlmt facte the recent appearance of he one of lie vital forces In bringing about to notetwo books, written by Indians, Is especially downfall of their race at the hands of a the worthy, for In both My People, the .Sioux, more powerful nnd ruthless type of civilization. MifStanding Hear, published by Houghton The naive attitude of the Sioux toward the railflin company, nnd "Long l.nnce," by Chief I.iilTalo road, as well ns toward many other of the tilings Child Long Lunce, publMu d by the Cosmopolitan used by the white men. as relleeted In the pages Jlook corporation, the while man can Had an of this red man's book. Is the best possible comaccurate portrnyul of the Indiun character, as upon the great difference between the mentary exemplified In the life atorlea of these repreStanding Bear of IMIS and the Standing Bear sentatives of two of the finest types of North of 1928. And reading tills. Hie white mnn may American Indians the Sioux and the Blackfeet learn how unjust lie has been to the red man For what Chief Standing Pear says In the preface not unjiisf in the sense that he robbed the Indian to his honk applies to botli. He writes: of his hinds nnd his freedom nnd Imposed upon him restrictions hateful to a free spirited and The preparation of this book has not been with It la juet a message to the any Idea of roving people, hut un.lu: In his attitude toward whit race; to bring my pople before their eyes the Indian, tiie attitude which made him expert In a true and authentic manner. The American the red nmn to adopt almost overnight a social Indian has been written about by hundred of authors of white olood or possibly by an Indian of nnd economic order which the white man hud mixed blood who hat spent the greater part of hla evolved only after centuries of painful effort. life away from a reservation. These are not In a It Is this fact which makes the reading of such position Co write accurately about the struggles and books ns those written by Standing Bear und disappointment of the Indian. While men who have tried to write atorlea about Buffalo Child Long Lance especially appropriate the Indian have either foisted on the public some to the aims of American Indian day. For by doing If or. Impossible thriller; they so, the American of the present day, no matter have been In sympathy with the Indian, have writhow Indifferent he m.u h to the wrongs perten from knowledge which was not accurate and reliable. No one Is able to understand the Indian upon tiie Indian h.v Americans of pst petrated race like an Indian. generations, can come more nearly having an A brief review of the career of Standing Itcur adequate understanding of the Indian point of will show how eminently fitted he Is to interview, both post nnd present, and thus hp aide to pret his people of the red race to tiie white race. do his share In avoiding further Injustice to a He was horn In 1SG8 when the Sioux were still brine people who still form a not inconsiderable nomads, whose proud spirit had not yet been of the population of this country. part tamed by military conquest and by being penned WhRt Is true of Chief Standing Bear ns an came on where reservations, enough they upon authentic Interpreter of the real Indian Is m Into contact with a certain class of white man less true of Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance, nnd to have their primitive virtues corrupted by that the history of his life is as romantic n record of contact. As a boy he lived In the bnlTalo-skltransformation as Is that of the Sioux chiefs. old Plains Indians and received time tipi of the What that life was Is Intimated hy Irvin S. Cobb, from his elders the spiritual and physical trainwho wrote In the foreword to Long, Lance this: resembled which of that of the Spartans ing Tt was an altogether aonrher and a different ancient times; as a young man he knew the book that my friend Buffalo Child Long l.anre thrill of the buffuio chase and the Intertribal might have wrtiten. He might have written to tell wars which developed a race of first class fighthow he won arholastie and athletic honors at Carlisle and at Manlius: of how, while mastering the whom F. W. men once General Benteen of ing white man'a tontrue, he learned half a dozen tribal said They (the Sioux) are the greatest warriors languages other than hla own: of how, having rethat the sun ever shone on. Although too young ceived a presidential award of appointment to to have a part In the last stand of the Sioux West Point, hs threw away that most rherished dream of his the dream of being a against the Inited States government In the War Indian officer in the regular srmv to cross the the fact that he was the son of an of 1S7G-7Ifne In 1916, and at the first call for reeruits for Sioux one of the chief who and was hereditary overseas service, to enlist In the Canadian forces: of how, going In as a private, he came out at the prominent In both the war and peace councils of end of the World war as a captain of Infnntrv. ills tribe gave Standing Bear an unusual opporhis body covered with wounds and his breast glitinsome know fuets about the to of the tunity tering with medals bestowed for hitch conduct and And stand. It Inst cidents of Pint may be noted gallantry; of how he fought as a sniper, a a In passing that historians of the future might raider, as a leader of forlorn hopes In the trenches and across No Mans Land; of how his own people veil take Into consideration Standing Bear's narconferred upon him the chieftainship of one of the rative before writing again of such matters as the four principal hands of the Northern Blackfeet: of Battle of the Little Big Horn where Custer how, beginning as a reporter on a western Canadian paper, he has earned for himself distinction perished, the death of Crazy Horse In the guard as a writer of magazines. house at Camp Robinson, Neb., and the now He might have told these things, but. being an famous alfair at Wounded Knee which some white Indian, he didn't. And 1 fur one am glad that he has historians have called a battle" but which the written thlr one For here, sinking his own engaging personality, his own individual achievements Sioux to this day call a massacre. in the background, he depicts graphic phases if a Standing Bears education (in the sense in which life which has altogether vanished, of a race wnich 1 tiie white man uses that term) began when he Is rapidly vanishing know of no man better was one of the first group of Sioux children to fitted than Ohiet Long Lance to write a true book about the true American Indian and I know of no school for Indians at enter the book on the subject which better reveals the Carlisle. Pa., In 1879. It continued there for sevspirit of the Indian In the years that are gene and as an of was eral years, employee supplemented the spirit of times the like of which will never be seen again. jnnn Wananiaker at his store in Philadelphia and continued as an employee of the government on Although Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance Is a the Rosebud and Pine Ridge reservations, as a younger man than Chief Standing Bear, Ids recollections of his childhood are of those of a people member of Buffalo Bills wild weet show both In By ELMO SCOTT WATSON A f 1 self-trlor- i blood-curdlin- g, n newly-establishe- d i one-hal- f two-third- d-.- por-eerda-re ttJXmLVrSMVQTJ ! Utah lit lilt, tt talus htateaew , , ; : - , f rt j he s: i i (.hlld-trnlnln- g table-spoonful- s w-l- - n-- A'-re- vl three-quarter- g rre-me- nt well-season- i hord-cooke- d man-hun- vi-'i- t. Lad died fighting. |