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About Weekly Chemawa American. (Chemawa, Or.) 189?-198? | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1906)
lUeelily gbemawa American VOL. IX. . JULY 13; 190(3 ' No. 17 Art in Industry What is art? ' We do not need to look in the book for a definition. Art nowadays is visible all aboiit us, in almost everything we use. It is to be seen not alone in the pic tures on the wall,' in the form and orna mentation of public buildings and pri vate houses, 'andin the humblest things we use in the form and ornaments of the lamp, at which we sit to read, in the legs and cover of the table, in the - pitcher from which we pour a drink of water, and the tumbler from which we drink it, in the handle of a boy's jacknife, in the pattern of a girl's calico'gown. It is impossible to escape the applica tion of art lo industry: the -farmer sees it in the design painted on his lumber wagon, and his wife sees it in the castings upon her kitchen stove and. in the backs and legs of her kitchen chairs. The making of a lumber wagon or a kitchen stove, even supposing there was no attempt, to make one of these useful aiticlesa thing. pleasant to: look at, would ) an ''art," according to the dictionary 'definition ; but nowadays when we speak of the employment of art in industry we mean something else; -we mean the at tempt not only to render beautiful to the . eye objects which are made wholly to be beautiful or pleasing, like a. painted pic ture wa bit of sculpture, but also to ren der .those, beautiful in some degree which are made to be useful first of all. Ex. Salem July Fourth - ..One of the divisions of yesterday's pro cession which called forth much, favor able comment-was the battalion. of cadets from the Chemawa Indian -Training school, which formed the escort of the states and Miss Columbia float. The. .boys, over two ..hundred strong, were formed-in companies graded according to size, and their movements, were mark ed rby. the regularity and precision of drilled veterans. . Their uniforms were neat, clean -and well fitting and they made a -fine showing.-;: The officers of the school, and the boys themselves, are entitled to the thanks of Salem for their generous contribution to the day's pleas ure. .Salem Statesman. It is a mistake to stop at . teaching a lesson once. After 'instructions, test; after test, drill; after drill, review; after review, review again and continue to drill until the subject is worked into the bone.