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About Weekly Chemawa American. (Chemawa, Or.) 189?-198? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1902)
2 w CHEMAWA AMERICAN. 7;? licimiwa mericHti. H. L. LoVKLACK, Manager, Published Weekly by the Pupil ef Hie Chemawa Indian School. Subscription J'rici, 26 Cant Pr Yuar. Ciiiht or foe rnnd mr 20 Centi pr yea. Entered at the Postoffice at Chemawa, Or., as second -class mail -ma Her. atidnti. all ButliieM Cmmunlfatluua 1 Thh Chemawa American, Chemawa, Oregon, Note. If this ppace in "marked with a red cross ; : It means that your subscription lias expired. please renew- " ; Only 25 cents per year. Work baid while you work; when you play, play with vim; and be cheerful and happy about both your work and play. While New York, Philadelphia nnri the East are enjoying a blizzard, ouly equaled by the famous one of 1H88, we In I he Wil lamette Valley are hanking In thesunshine, the violet are peeping through the ground, the grass has starttd lo (trow and the in uiciaiotiB all point to Sprinirtitiib being at In a school the great thing Is not to quarrvl ; to pull all to-gi'ner, to refrain from hasty unwtse words and actions, to tiuselflshly and wiaely peek the lst fiood of all ; and to get rid of workers whose temperaments are uuforiunaip, whose beads are not level, no matter bow much knowledge culture they may have, rantan-kerousiwss is worse, tliao heter odoxy.' What has become of Ompulary Educa tion for the Indian? He needs it, just as much as the whites do in many of our most progressive states. Give us compul- sary education and good, Arm treatment of the Indian after he leaves school and we will soon have no "Indians." Without eompulsary education we will, at several points In the United States, beslmply leav ening the loaf, but the load will still be to carry. It may surprise a verv, very few of our pupils to learu that socials are not given for the purposeofteachingus totw spooney. The boy or girt that cannot exert him self or herself to be agreeable to a partner not of his own selection and not the one he or she is "gone on" needitoexert them selves to overcome a very serious fault. Let us see if we can think of any home where the husband and wife do nothing tn entertain their company but tusqnrezeeacb the other's band. We go to the sociako enjoy ourselves, yet there is a lesson of great value to be learned there. It is to learn how to help make it agreeable fur everybody. Commissioner Jones is Right. Commissioner Jones is Tight. A man wrapped iu a blanket, with long hair streaming about his face, cannot be ex pected to work, It is a pleasant govern mental fiction that Indians can be taujrut to work. Before this can even approach reality the blanket must give away tu clothing that will permit the free ns of the limbs, and the long balr must be shorn. In tha maze of theories that have been woven about the Indian problem it Is grati fying to find at Inst something practical. Oregoman. The Commissioner has ordered that In dian pupils after leaving school shall not be allowed to wear long hair or a blanket, and no sooner is the order issued than all the cranks and fanatics in the country set up a howl and talk about personal right, etc., etc The Cranks, for cranks they aro, probably never Baw an Indian, and if they did, looked at them as if tbey were Ofacar Wildes, or some other monstrosity