6 TllliP tJIiEM AWA'- AMERICAN. Published Weeklj by Pupils of The Chemawa Indian School. Subscription price 25 cents per year. Clubs soffive. 'or over, 20 cents. J ...Eatered at the postofflce at.Chemawa, Ore., 't" " "as second-class mail-matter. "A' pretty 'face' is not near so attrac- tive as a. sweet; loving disposition. -i.j jjjap6ji 'eespn the' "I .can't" or "donf t5 c$re" ? boy s; . ;and girls and you will see therri grow up to be good-f or nbthihgVmen''ahd women,' miserable failures in future life. You don't be long to" that class, do you? The poor Indian, "so often sized up . as': ' 'defieieht in neadwork, has at last er'ri'ed' liis right to be considered . as something more than a tireless, clumsy nieetof . football mechanism. He is now to be regarded as a person of crafty. Jle has added his( quota to: the history! )bf b strategic football. But where cAitside 'Of the columns of the It'aryard'Lairipbori or the Yale Record iyoyil lny oiVe hope to see such a de gltf ul; combination of football with hide and-; seeky ,such a burlesque of strategy-put- forth in all earnestness? Exchanged ' ' ' 'The.! children ; of one Dabney were not permitted ; to attend a white school in .Richmond, Va., because their grandmother was an'Indian. This seems incredible, tor the great Virginian: John Randolph, of Roanoke, boasted of his descent from Powhatan.. United States Senator Matthew ,Quay; has-. jpelaware Indian blood in his veins." JJ Colonel Ely S. Parker, a. fuilblood Seneca'' -Indian, 'an-' educated man, ' was a member pf General Grant's. sta$f m 18G1-65. A great deal of Indian blood is diffused among white families of high distinction in this country and Canada. Some of the most distinguished Scotchmen in the ser vice of the Hudson's Bay Company had Indian wives. Louis Riel, . the leader of the rebellion in Manitoba, was a hand some and highly, intelligent half breed, General Sam Houston, the victor of San Jacinto, married a beautiful woman of the Cherokee tribe, and many Cherokee women within the last fifty years have married white men of ability, intelligence and high character. Marriages between whites and indians have not been uncom mon in the United States, and in Canada the French trappers, voyagers and hunters often had Indian wives. To this day the French Canadian peasantry not seldom marry Indian women. Oregonian. Indians who are. refined,- educated and respectable need not be ashamed of their Indian blood, any more than an Irishman, Dutchman , or English man should be ashamed of his blood. There are many Kings and Queens among all nationSjand in this day and age of advancement and civilization people are taken for what they are and what they do instead of what , their grand fathers were or did. Our English ancestors, a few. hundred years ago, were worse than the native American in many ways. They were wild tribes living on herbs, and in half naked condition, roaming around the woods, righting each other with clubs and spears. But the Romans conquered Great Britain, introduced schools, built roads, bridges, and taught the savage' Englishman to wash his face, wear clothes and work. They have kept it up and to day many live in palaces and ride in automobiles. The Indians coming into contact with civilization and inter-marrying with the whites are making 'much more rapid strides in education and civil- J izationi -They deserve credit for it, and many of ' them are worthy of the confidence, love' and- respect of the good white people of this country.