Show 'Nt' ' V 4 ' THP OARIAVn TIMES GARLAND UTAH News Notes t'l m Prioileg e to Liam Utah in n “Cafe of the Code It was the idea of the Chaldean and that the "gate Platonic philosophers In Capri-of the gods” was located Nature Magazine cornus says released b souls Through this gate while death returned to heaven conthrough the "gate of men" tn the stellation of Cancer souls descended from heav en In the bodies of men The populous of these two "gates" correspond to the positions of fluff two winter and summer respecsolstices SALT LAKE —Salt Lake is the center of a great livestock area that in 1927 sent more than 8000 cars of livestock to the Salt Lake stockyards DRAPER — Poultry raisers in Utah tively are receiving returns of approximately $2 per hen per year after all feed costs Island Yields have been deducted The state has Catalina flocks of from 5000 many individual Ancient Treasures to 10000 hens Santa Catalina Island Cat Avalon for the shiptrails PRQVO — Preparations —An attempt to follow ancient ping of the onion crop of Utah County Island to temple of (lie are being made by the growers acthe Sun God has Cliinlgohiuich" Utah the W to of J cording Thayne county sulted instead In the discovery agen- t- A number of the biggest shipburial plaeg of - small Indian prinpers already have sacked a big porcess of 3000 years ago and evidence tion of their crop that child sacrifices were Indicating GUNNISON — The made in wholesale fashion hy tribe oil the coast contest promises to be one of the most of the Channel Islands interesting features of the Sanpete of California Within u stone urn weighing 134 county fair which is to be held SepS W tember 12 13 and 14 Chapman pounds nnd fashioned skillfully ns of Manti has the pulling contest in though by modern tools was found He expects a hundred teams the skeleton of un Indian girl charge Her to enter the contest tween live and seven yearsthe hands apparently had clutched CITY— In a letter just BRIGHAM ornamentatrim rieli urn whose of comun the local chamber of received by her ion of wumpum bespeaks royal merce from Governor George H Dehi the chief executive accepts an invitatlineage In a circle with the urn as a cenion to participate iji the Peach day ter were counted hy Prof Ralph (Hidhere on fioptember festivities Other prominent men) of the state have den curator of the Catalina museum the skeleof Channel Island Indians also signified theii intention to attend tons of G1 children buried in tiers the big peach festival four deep with Mirill heads touching who reside close MYTON — Farmer end) other to ML Emmons Altonah and Bluebell them was the skeleton of Beneath where there has beep sufficient "Watef t man A spear blule slill are having a for irrigation purposes wns fixed In the ribs good results in the raising of grain urn The sand within the funeral this season Some of the fields are hud of ground crystal the appearance producing from thirty to forty bushels — A consideiab’e apparently ncCordlng to the discovof wheat to the acre erer ri sacred sand used in the huiial portion of the grain hfs already been of Indian royulty— and was far dif:ut and some has been threshed- ferent from that which' had sifted PROVO — According to John F Menover the graves of the other children denhall managerof the Utah County These finds ns well as a wealth of every effort is being obsidian knives spear mints and made to bring to the fair this year heads and hundreds of other ara greater exhibit in all departments stone and ticles of wampum inlaid A better program of horse racing tobone have provided material over gether 'with special entertaining atwhich GHdden has puzzled since he tractions is well under way The fair discovered them opens September 27 and will continue One thin piece of slate he believes for three days to he a stone map holes having been WASHINGTON— Salt Lake leads drilled to Indicate trulls to the four all other large western cities in pernmln burying grounds on Santa Catacentage of grain in post office receipts lina Island in the month of August as compared "It Is plausible" Glldden said “that with August of last year according the child burial within the to figures made public at the office urn strange it were 'and those surrounding The of the general jrrain postmaster hs primitive as the Sloftx from which Standing the result of a natural death of a 108 tu cent 911 is f 782 iom per Bear sprung little girl of high rank and the slay- Ttiey vveri hie BlucEfeeT Pulled the fifty large attendants Ing of G4 “Tigers of the Plains” whoWere the ruling tribe $117426 and playmates cities in the frrpb'Li of wild domain known northwest territy included in wllh her Or they nil may hnve been this tabulatioiff'havjt ltffger gain ories In Canada until 1905 Jien the provinces killed In some religious ceremonial GREEN Vnme Green of Alberta RIVERLfelon day Saskatchewan Into being and rile (io among those Black feet todu nnd they will River’s big annual festival was fit"It is even possible the princess may tell you of their thoughts at seeing meir first white tingly celebrated Monday by1 one rf have been given some potion nnd hurmen— so The way the small hands lately did “civilization” totfkh their lives the biggest crowds ever to assemble at led alive Last year’s crowd of iluUhed the outer rim of the bowl Green River an Intertrefiiembrunce Iong Lance's 7000 persons was equaled if not exribal battle which took place In northern makes this a possibility" nil inlaid In four broken perhaps on the very spot where tduy some ceeded by the assemblage from Wampum over eastern and southern Utah which circles on the rim of the urn with aulomobile tourist is camping! And ChU Buffalo here Monday to dq homt'lilhl Long Iance Is scarcely congregated thirty yenrraif age “gates'’ leading to the four minis of the df to Like he Bear a the product principal received age the Spartan' Standing compass lend (Hidden to believe lug and learned “to ride to shoot nnd speak the valley — the melon the burial place may be near the site truth ” and reading In their hooks of the and MYTON — The public schools of the temple of Chinigchinieh qualities wliirii this training developed In the Indian bXvs high school of Duchesne county will makes one wonder If perhaps the modern “civ! open Monday S“ptember 10 Several ButterSlored T7cd" American of the bunHngiTarneIrig put In belief might not learn some prolltahl The Department of Agriculture says In child training from these “barbarians condition and new equipment provided that for butter to he stored for wintotal of twelve truck lines have been Although of different tribes — and tribes which ter use sweet cream were ancient and heredttury pasteurized enemies— there Is a tablished providing transportation should be used churned at a low temstriking The Duchesne county the pupils similarity between the narratives of this and the butter washed so Sioux and peralure this Blackfoot Both bring out very hers’ institute will be held Thurs-nfirm nnd waxy that Holla forcibly the qualities of honesty generosity true Friday September 6( and 7 at or it will be butter should be wrapped of reverence and simple kindliness of the primitive Ducflesne An interesting program is prints In Indian character before It was Influenced parchment butter pa peg placed In n by the being'prepared stone crock nnd covered with sirong while man’s ways typical Incident U given COALVILLE —Coalville city counbrine Butter should be stored In as Iong Lance’s hook in telling of a buffalo hunt cil has panted a committee to investcool a It win the Indian man’s job to place as Is available and In a provide the meat igate the cost of installing pipe from fur the family by killing the buffalo and the In- the flowing hot well in the recently place free from odors likely to be dian woman’s by the butter Joh to follow the hunt and skin acquired city park with instructions nml dress the dead unlmnls Long Lance writes: to report at the next meeting The Enh wife knew which animals had been brought Popular trio — three meals a day services of Emil Hansen landscape dwn by her husband by the arrow which had colgardener at the Utah Agricultural beta left In It For 'every Indian had his arrow lege have been secured lo design the minted a ecrtaln nay so that anything he killed with It could If he shot a new park grounds and it is expected easily be Identified buffalo with a bullet he would circle back and this work will be under way within a burl one of hia arrows In Its body so bis wife short time would know it was his The younir sop of our lata medlclns man Whits FILLMOREOpening day of the aaa kitting 'on his ponyr amongua boys He Millard county fair being held at Fill- tit wav carrying back a quiver full of tils dead on father’ arrows which hla mother had given him more) Was 'attended by1 one "of the to plsv wrth Ona of the women came over to thla largest crowds ever assembled at a lad ard took out one of White Dog's arrow and Millard county fair The exhibits in walked out on the field and pulled one of her own the department of agriculture domeshusband a arrows out of a buffalo bull and stuck tic science and art and education were arrow In th hole She skid nothing While Dog's to anyone but later we eawXwhlte Dog's widow effectively displayed in the recently remodeled old state capitol the work squatting over the buffalo akiijnlng It and sobbing quietly oygr the bloody pelt of remodeling having just been comJust an Standing Bear lias Written In his book for the establpleted in preparation some real “Indian history” froin the point of ishment of a state museum in the old so has Long Lance written the view of the Sioux historic structure between the vhlte and red story of the relations RICHMOND — The state road comraces fiom the point of view of hi? people the mission and the commissioners of and IllaekfeeL And there Is no more thrilling Cache county have reached an agreeperson admires pure 'Vgrlt” In a ment Inspiring Of the road commission whereby mini whether he be white or red) story anywhere will put the highway from the Richof the Indian out tlim Ids account of the mond crossroads through Lewiston to Lots of folks who think they have hm Almighty Voice Almighty Voice waS the son Idaho sJateJineJiuri and level up the detour that runs tlon which could be corrected In five foster parents wherefore he knows Long Lance's Both of these or ten minutes An effective through Cove precinct whereof he writes lo telling that warrior' story highway $ have been used as a detour like Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon Almighty Voice became an outlaw through an while the concrete highway in the restores to normal digestion By unfortunate chain of circumstances mistake north part of the county was does awnw wj t fillips "const'rueicd The' two" roads" affi to'be sourness and gas right after meals of the Northwest Territories and he was arrested put in first class shape it is said In Jail One o prevents the distress so apt td occ by the mounted police and lodged OGDEN — W R Chaplain head of two hours after eating What a the police Jokingly told him they were “going to little realizing preparation to take! And how huig him for killing that steer" the United States forest sendee grazgood It is for the system! the terrible effect which this Joke would have on Unlike t ing research at Washington D C the untutored Indian ButAlmighty Voice escaped burning dose of soda— which Is but with officials of the intermoun-tai- h temporary relief at best— from Jail and then began what was perhaps the forest service here for a 6hort Milk of Magnesia neutralizes Phillips In the history of thnt famous niiiii famous many Mr Chnpline was en times Its volume In acid time recently noted for the fact that It “always org'inlzaflon route? to Califomiafrom the easL Ntxt time a hpnrty meal or too rich gels Its man” It Is true that the mounted police Ernest Winkler chief of grazing m Elilet bas brought Dnlbe tlfd get Almlghty Voiee bat at a terrible cost rethe intermountatn forest service comfort try— The hunt for hint lasted two years Finally they turned to Ogden from southern Utah corn red him hut It wns not until artillery was at the time of Mr Chapl’ne’s visit brought Into action and the place la which Al The ranges in southern Utah are very iwliiy Voice nnd two companions were entrenched dry but both cattle and sheep are in tWotigh'y shelled that he wns Amdiyyonquered good condition showing good weights An when he was Ctuiquered he was no longer UrJ Winkler said fih'e to harm Ids attackers For Alui’ihty Vole Li died fighting A Many iT&jxmzArrmAvozs ELMO 8C0TT WATSON MICHIGAN Indian day comes on Separe tember 28 and Indications that It'WlIl be more widely oIh served this year than at any time since it was originated hi Illinois in 1919 The purpose of Aimtflcun Indian day is to foster more cordial relations mi l a better understanding - between the red and white races but more IH'rhilly to bring to the ntton-tlon of the whites the tunny ac of the Indian complishments In vlevy of that fact the recent appearance of two books written by Indians Is especially noteworthy for In both “My People the Sioux" ly( Chief Standing Ilenr published hy Houghton Mifflin company and “Imng Lance" by Chief lltilTulo Child Iong Lance published by the Cosinhpolltun Hook corporation the while man can Had an “accurate” ctinTiKTor as Hirlriiyal oflhe “Indian In the life stories of these repreexemplified sentatives of two of the finest types of North American Indians— the Sioux and the BluckfeoL For wlmt Chief Standing Hear says In the preface to Ids hook applies to lmth lie writes: By The preparation of this book has not bean with Idea of It Is just a mesaase to th white race to prime my people before their ees In a true and authentic- manner The American Indian has been wrllten about by hundreds of authors of white blond or possibly by an Indlnn of mixed blood who has spent the greater part nf his life away from reservation These ere not In a position io write accurately about the struggle! and of the Indlnn disappointment White men who have tried to write atorlcs about the Indian have either foisted on the public some or If they Impossible "lhrljlr“ have been In sympnthy with the Indian have written from knowledge whlth wna not accurate and No one la able to understand the Indian reliable race like an Indian Bear A brief review of ttie career of Standing lilted he la to Interwilt 'show how eminently pret hlg people of the red race to the white race He wiis bom In ISOS when the Sioux were still nonmds whose proud spirit had not yet been tamed by military conquest nnd by being penned upon on reservations where they came enough Into contact with ii certain class of white man to hnve their primitive vlrlues corrupted by that conturt As a boy tie lived In the buffalo akin tipi of the old time I’lains Indiana nnd received from Ills elders the spiritual and physical train-- ' that of the Spartans of Ing which resembled as ancient time's young man he kuew the thrill of the buffalo chase and the Intertribal a rnee of first class fighwars which developed ting men of whom Generul F V Benteen once said "They (the Sioux) are the greatest wurrlors that the sun ever shone on” Although too young to have a part In the last stand of the Sioux In the War against the Untied States government the fact that he wns the son o7un of hereditary chief of the Sioux and oue who was prominent fa both the war nud pence councils of hts tribe gave Standing Bear an unusual opportunity to know the fads about some of the in any of the futqre might In passing that historians well lake Into consideration Standing Bear's narbefore writing again of such matters as the like Big Horn where Custer Battle of the of Crazy Horse tn the gunrd perished the death Neb house at Camp Kohtnson and the now famous affair at Wounded Knee which some white historians have called a “battle” but which the Sioux to thla JojLcall Ji “massacre" Standing Bear’s education (In the sense tn which the white man gee tlmt term) began one of the' first- group of Shux children to enter the nfwly established school for Indians at DiTII It continued there for sev'Vnrllsle eral i‘rs was supplemented as art employee of John Wunnrtiflker at tils store In Philadelphia and continued ss an employee of the government qn and Pine Itldge reservation as a the member of Buffalo I’JlJ’r wild wrat show both In rative j - X this country and abroad and as a movie actor la southern California where he now lives The Standing Ilenr of the Sioux bus dlslHiphlch ro'tf t Ahe white man's road" Is ffiotV In the short space of iniuife lisdng here bus been written In the klxty‘y tills hgltvhlunl at least a thousand years of rAlnl history a glant’e stride from barbarism to wffit we call “civilisation"! Soon after Standing wwtMwfB-dd saw for the first time a railroad train on the Union Pacific railroad wbich was then being pushed west Willi mixed emotions of umuzeinont and fear they watched this great "sunke'’ go puffing across the prairie little realizing that It wns to be one of the vital forces in bringing about the downfall of their race at the hands of a more powerful ami ruthless type of civilization The naive attitude of the Sioux toward the ns well ns toward many other of the tldugs used by the white men ns reflected In the pages of tills fed mini's book Is the hest possihlp eoni- between tfu mentury Umn the great difference Standing Bear of ISOS nnd the Standing Iteur nf 1928 And rending this the while man tuny lenro how unjust he has been to the red innr-not unjust in the sense that tie robbed the Iiuliun of Ids lands nnd Ids freedom and Imposed uivon him restrictions hateful to a free spirited nnd roving people but unjust In tils attitude toward the Indian the attitude which made him expect the red man to adopt almost overnight a social nnd economic order which the white man had evolved only after ceniurles of painful effort It Is this fact which makes the rending of ruch hooks as those wrllten by Standing Beat iwid Buffalo Child Long Lance especially appropriate to the alms of American Indian day For hy doing so the American of the present day no matter how Indifferent be nun be Jo the “wrongs" perpetrated upon the Indian by American of generations- - can come more poorly hnvlng an of the Indian adequate understanding of view both past nnd present and thus be able to do his share In avoiding further Injustice to a brave peoplejvlm still form a not Inconsiderable part nf the population of this country ' What Is true of Chief Standing Bear ns an authentic Interpreter of the real Indian Is no less true of Chief Buffalo Child Long nnd the history of hts life Is ns romnntle a record of transformation as Is that of the Sioux ciders - What that Is intimated S Irvin by Cobh who wrote tn the foreword to “Long Lance" this : It wss an altngethpr another and a different book that my friend Buffalo Child Long Lanee might have written He mlrht hnve written tn tell how he won scholastic and athletic honors at Carlisle and at Manlius of how whir mustering fh whits man's tongue he learned hnlf a dnsen tribal languages other than his own: of how having received a presidential award of appointment to West Point h threw away that most rherlshert dream ofh!a— the dream of being —Indian— Officer th gu a r a row Trm - a"rrre line In 1U and at the Aral call for recruits for overseas service to enlist tn the Canadian forces of how jrolntt In as atirlvate he came out at the end of tha World war as a captain of hla body covered with wounds and his bresst glittering with medals bestowed for high conduit and ashe Isf pst raider as a leader of forlorn hope tn ths trenrl'eo and across No Man’s Ijind of how hla own people conferred upon him the chieftainship of one of the fogr principal bawds of ths Northern Blarkfeet of Jiow beginning as a reporter on lestern Canadian paper he ha earned for himself distinction as a writer of mas a sines Ita might have told these things but being an Indian he didn't And for one am gliid that he hae written this on For here sinking tills own engng- his own individual achiaielnen tn Ing personality In the background he depicts graphic phases of Ilf which has altogether vanlehed of a race which --of- nti noin t rapidly fitted than Chiet Long ls nee tp writ a true hook about the true Amencxn Indian and know of no book on the subject which better revral (he spirit of the Indian In tbs years that are gone ant ths spfftt of time the like of waklch will never be ' seen again Although Chief Buffalo Child Long liace ts "younger intn than Chief Stnndng Bear his rechl lections of his chihllwiod are f those of a people brttr" c A w WhenEjod Sours f H w 1 Philups Milk of Magnesia J |