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About The Chemawa American (Chemawa, Or.) 19??-current | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1913)
THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN H. L WADSWORTH, Superintendent VOLUME 15 MARCH, 1P13 NUMBER 6 A N N IV ER SA R Y OF TREATY B Y T H R E E H U N D R E D M E M B E R S O F V A R IO U S T R IB E S T H E follow ing historical and in terestin g account of the 58th an n iversary of the sig n in g of the peace treaty by J iiL In d ian s of th e N orthw est was w ritten by C harles E u gene B anks and was observed at the T u lalip school, of which Dr. Chas. M. B uchanan is su p erin ten d en t: W ith ancient custom s, tribal trad itio n s and ch ild like sim plicity the In d ian s of D uw am ish, S u q u am ish, Snoqualm ie, Snohom ish, Lum m i and S kagit tribes celebrated treaty day at T u lalip yesterday, it being the fifty-eighth anniversary of the signing of the treaty of peace by C hief Seattle, Chief P it-ka-nim , Chief C how -its-hoit and Chief G ollah, of the Puget sound confederation, and seventy-nine subchiefs of correlated tribes of the P uget sound co u n try . T h e celebration was on the g ro u n d s and in the buildings of the Indian school at T u lalip . More than 300 In d ian s assembled on the w ell-kept lawn before the school buildings fancing on the Sound, and from early m orning until sundow n listened to addresses, played gam es, danced, ate and potlatched w ith an abandon th at filled the air w ith stran g e m usic, color and m otion. In a long building on the edge of the ground lay the g ian t totem pole, a m ighty tree of cedar, partially carved into fantastic shapes of giant lizards, killer w hales, bears, sun-m en, m oon-m en, star-m en, and sp ir its th a t control the destinies of individuals, fam ilies and tribes. W il liam S helton, the native artist who is doing this w ork, is a w onderful canoe m aker, totem carver and m aster m echanic of prim itive modern building. H e was educated for a m edicine m an, but has renounced the ancient su p erstitio n s. H e yet finds his g reatest joy in digging from wood these m arvelous and lifelike grotesque figures. Like a true artist he will not be hurried in his w ork, and so the totem pole, some sixty feet h ig h , was not com pleted in tim e to be raised yesterday, w hich created d isap p o in tm en t both to th e In d ian s and to those who had come to w itness the cerem ony. B ut th ere was no lack of dram a to keep alive the interest, as all the z