Image provided by: The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde; Grand Ronde, OR
About Weekly Chemawa American. (Chemawa, Or.) 189?-198? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1902)
THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN. The Chemawa American. Hknhy L, Lovelacb, Manaqeb. Published Weekly by the Pupils or the Chemawa Indian School. tfubacriptton Price, 25 Cents Per Year. Clubs ot Ave and over 20 Cents pr year. Address all Business Communications to The Chemawa Amebian, Chemawa, Obegion. Entered at the Postoffice at Chemawa, Or., as second-class mail-matter. Note. If this space... marked with a red cross it means: :that your sub scription has expired. "Please renew. ' Remember. "Cleanliness is next to Godliness." One of the greatest lesions in life is to learn to take people at their best, not their worBt; to look for the divine, not the hu man in them; the beautiful, not the ugly; the bright, not the dark; the straight not the crooked side. Every Friday night the pupils and em ployee enjoy their regular weekly sociable and Band Concert in the Gymnasium. It would do you good and make you feel 10 years younger to be present at one of these pleasant gatherings, where the cares and worries of work are buried in a flood of in nocent and healthful amusements. The shops are now all running in full blast, where boys are learning the beat paying trades of the day. The instructors in charge of the Chemawa Shops are all experts at their trades, and have fewequals anywhere. The results prove this, as the young men who fiuish their trades here, can successfully compete and bold their own with the average white mechanics of th country, receiving the same wages. Dairying, poultry raising, fruit growing, gardening and farming are the best paying industries on the Pacific Coast. It will pay the Indians to learn one or all of these important lines of Work thoroughly. The Chemawa School will make a specialty of teaching these industries in a scientific and practical war. so that its students will thoroughly understand them, and be able to go to their homes and make independent fortunes in the same manner that hundreds of while men are doing. The boy who does not like to study and will not try to make something of himself, is the one who goes home and tells his parents, that he does not get enough to eat, and any other complaints which his fertile brain can manufacture for an excuse to keep out of school, He does not care what he says or how much he misrepresents. All he wants ia an excuse. Such boys are found in every school, white or Indian. But sensible fathers Hod mothers will not listen to such tales of woe, and will maroh their children back to school in double quick time, knowing it is best for them to be in school and get au education while they are young. An apprentice, who goes into any de partment with a sou I determination to learn and master the trade that he or she de sires to learn and goes to work at anything that bis or her employer thinks best to be done, without saying a word or having a better way to do this, that and the other, will never have any trouble in learning the trade or getting a position either. It does not make any di (Terence what your employer tells you to do, even if yon do think it is not right, or will be of no benefit to you, go ahead and do It with a cheerful heart and band. They will never give you anything to do that you cannot do. Think about it, and brace up and dn everything that you are directed lo do and say nothing back that would annoy auy-one.