6 CHEMAWA AMERICAN. tiim will he worth anything that does not Include this. A m io had bitter it t k i how to read he had better never learn a letter In the alphabet, and be trueand gen uine in Intention and action, rather than,, being learned in all sciences and in all language!, to be at the same time false at t heart , and also counterfeit in life' Above till things teach the boys that truth is more than rtcuns, more than culture, in re than earthly power or posit lou. 3. To bepurelu thought language and life pure iu mind and in body. Ah im- . pure man, young or old, poisoning the so- . ciety where he moves, is u?oral ulcer, a ..j plamie-epot, a lepers, who ought to be treat . ed as were the lepers of old, who were ban ished from society and compelled to cry "unclean" as a warning to save others from pestilence. 3. To be unselfish. To care for the feel ., ings and comfort ot others, To be polite. To be just in all dealings wilh others. To be generous, uoble and manly. Tills will ., Include genuine revereuce for the aged, , and things sacred. - - 4. To he self reliant and selMielpful even from early childhood. To be Indus trirus always, and self-supporting at the earliest proper age. Teach them that all honest work Is honorable, and that an idle, useless life of dependence ou others is dis graceful. The Purity Advocate. CUBA LIBRE AT CHEMAWA. The Freedom of the Island Was Cel ebrated La.t Night. BY THE PUPILS OP THE SALEM INDIAN TRAINING SCHOOL-AN EXCELLENT AD DRESS DELIVERED FOLLOWED BY A GOOD MISCELLANEOUS PROGRAM- The Chemawa Iudiari Training eSchool, near this city, baa always taken a deep in terest iu the fortunes of Cuba, When Cap tain Mahoney, of the Cuban army, visited in Salem be spent several days at the school and lectured there, and visit resulted in In creasud iuterest iu the welfare of the then unhappy island. Now, th it Cuba is at least free, a sovereign nation among the peoples of the earth, the friends of inland people every where rejoice, and the pupils at Chemawaaie amonir those ho rejoicing, and last night they celebrated the happy event in Cuba's stirring history by an elab orate entertainment iu honor of the Cuban Republic. An excellent musical and literary pro gram was rendered, the Chemawa Bund playing for the first time the "Cuban In dependence March," l be music for which was received on last nleht's train, and which the members of the baud had never seen before. The grand march was per A nmed by from 600 to 600 people teachers and pupils and ashort time spent in social amusement. During the evening an evcel lent address on "Cuba Libre" was deliv ered to the great delight of I lie puidls. -States-man. CLEANING HAVANA. Uncle Sam has been to hlaJCuban wards, if nothing more, at leait a cleanly old fel low with soap and mop. Two pictures o( Colon Park, Havana, in the National Geo graphy Magazine, one squalid, the other beautiful,, are unlike enough to suggest the. famous saying of Hamlet to his mother. The Cubans did not like their new uncle's house-cleaning process. What was good enough for them once was good enough al ways. But they bad to stand bis scrub bing like rebellious children having their faces washed, while he cleaned their city inside and out with thirty-three thousand galUms of disinfectant dully, out the weeds out of their parks, built a wall along the Bea, making a flue promenade, swept from their streets the accumulated filth of years, and built new pavements. Now that the worn is nearly done the Cuba ire. are beginning to take pride in their city, and, growing in civic Bptrlt, the vital text-words of our President are likely to keep up the work that others have started for them, and make theit city one of the most attractive wiuter resorts iu the world.