ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPA1GN PRODUCTION NOTE University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign library Brittle Books Project, 2014.COPYRIGHT NOTIFICATION In Public Domain. Published prior to 1923. This digital copy was made from the printed version held by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It was made in compliance with copyright law. Prepared for the Brittle Books Project, Main Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign by Northern Micrographics Brookhaven Bindery La Crosse, Wisconsin 2014 REPORT Of THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL ON THR PROCEEDINGS O? TH1 FIRST ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF TH8 SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS t?SL& i# THE UNIVERSITY OF OHIO COLUMBUS, OHIO OCTOBER i.M7l 1911 ' 0ZQ ■M-i -y 3 '*mS * lib; Xp* J, " ,'v PRIHTMD BY ORORR OF THE EXEC0T1VI COUNCIL) ■ Washington, o. c. X«2 \THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY 37CUoe SO V.IUNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LitiRAf;, NOV „ 3 1916\ \ THE FIRST CONFERENCE OF THE SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS. SOME OF THE INDIAN MEMBERS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE. (Photo reproduced by courtesy of the Indian Schoo^ Journal, Chilocco, OTcla.) i iREPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL ON THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS WASHINGTON, D. C. 1912D> I i> b ■'S6r S/t t THE SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS. PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE. PREFACE. For a century at least the thinking American Indian has dreamed of organization for the purpose of the protection and the advancement of his race. There have been many successful attempts in the annals of the aboriginal American, race to con- federate certain tribes and nations, and even parts of different linguistic stocks have united for mutual purposes, but the idea of uniting the entire race or a considerable portion of it within a large geographical area heretofore does not seem to have im- pressed any Indian as strongly as Tecumseh, the famous Shawnee. The common ground which every tribe had in Tecumseh's time was the oppression of the red race by the various divisions of the white race that had invaded America. Much of this oppression was due to pure love of conquest and the consequent destruction of a people possessing inadequate means of defense. Much of it also was due to the natural misunderstanding that 0 exists between races of radically different environments' and dif- r ferent stages of ethnic culture. It was also due largely to the ^ conception 011 the part of the white race that it had inherently ^ superior rights and was morally justified in oppressing and exterminating the original occupant of America. Some of these ^ideas unfortunately exist today. 1 With the possession of the continent secure to the govern- ments of the various branches of the European nations who have -^established themselves in America, the original occupants, the C^red race, have been crowded aside. The Indian is no longer a ^considerable factor, numerically, even though he forms one of ^the five great races of mankind. Divided into innumerable bands, J"?each speaking a different dialect and still further divided by scores fjof radically different languages, the Indian hitherto has been unable to act as a unit. 5117974 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Torn from his original environment and stripped of the greater portion of his possessions, the Indian finds himself thrust into new conditions, which, in some instances, he fails to comprehend. He finds his entire surroundings unnatural and thus he is forced into a/n anomalous and abnormal position. A reservation does riot afford a normal condition of human environment, the condi- tion of wardship is not conducive of independence or of develop- ment. The paternal system of the Federal Government which now exercises control over about 300,000 native Americans has bred many gross evils, and the Indian of today as a result of that system finds himself unable to assert himself in a natural way. He is allowed no voice in his destiny, for it is the paternal hand of "the Great White Father" that assumes the right to guide him. There are conditions where such authority may be neces- sary, but rapid steps should be taken to remove such conditions instead of promoting them. Not only has the Indian been ab- ruptly torn from his natural environment but he has been thrust into a false environment inconsistent with the modern conception of enlightened conditions. He is thus doubly wronged and given scant opportunity to secure his rights as a man free born. It is such conditions that have bred the widespread dissatisfaction and restlessness of the many tribes. Thus he is held in the grip of false conditions, neither able nor caring to assume his former condition nor able to adjust himself to the normal conditions of modern society. He is neither a citizen nor a foreigner. As to his exact status and just what his real rights are are things, obscured by conflicting and complex legislation. One great law makes him a citizen and another denies him the privilege of exercising the rights of such. Thrust upon a reservation he is told that he is a nation and that the reservation is his country. Contracts made with his " nation " are dignified with the title of " treaty," yet he is unable to exercise the rights of a nation or to enforce the provisions of the treaty.1 An agent, who is generally a political appointee, becomes his sovereign and acts as his supreme court. Education, missionary efforts, the benevolence 3 The treaty system was abandoned in 1871.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 5 of the churches and industrial missions have done much for the Indian, but as long as his position is what it is, as long as he has an undetermined status and as long as his environment is incom- patible with that of the country in which he lives, so long will good efforts be wasted or be characterized by small results. An immense amount of energy, time and money will be expended, with results small in proportion. The thinking Indian, therefore, asks that he be treated as an American and that a just opportunity be given whereby the race as a whole may develop and demon- strate its capacity for enlightenment and progress. Under cer- tain circumstances history has demonstrated that individual In- dians are capable of rising to positions of the highest honor and responsibility. Already the American Indian has proven his value as a constructive force in the State. The thinking Indian of today, viewing events and conditions in their true perspective, asks, therefore, that the entire race may be given the freedom which will enable it to develop normally as an American people in America. It is with tbese and other similar ideas in mind that the modern Indian who for a long time has been studying the needs of his race sees the necessity for race organization, and holds it as the means by which many of his vexing problems may be solved.ORGANIZATION OF THE SOCIETY. After a correspondence covering a period of more than two years between Professor F. A. McKenzie, of the Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, and a number of representative American Indians, six Indians, Dr. Charles A. Eastman, Dr. Carlos Montezuma, Thomas L. Sloan, Hon. Ctoas. E. Dagenett, Miss Laura M. Cornelius and Henry Standing Bear, met at Ohio State Uni- versity on April 3-4, 1911 and started a movement for the organ- ization of a society whose aim should be the highest interests of the race. The movement was given the temporary name of the American Indian Association. During the April meeting the following platform of purposes and policies was adopted as the objects of the new organization: 1st. To promote the good citizenship of the Indians of this country, and to help in all progressive movements of the North Anlerican Indians. 2nd. To promote all efforts looking to the advancement of the Indian in enlightenment which makes him free, as a man, to develop according to the natural laws of social evolution. 3d. To exercise the right to oppose any movement which ap- pears detrimental to the race. 4th. In all conferences and meeting of this Association, there shall be broad, free discussion of all subjects bearing upon the welfare of the race. 5th. This Association will direct its energies exclusively to general principles and universal interests, and will not allow itself to be used for any personal or private interests. The honor of the race and the good of the country will always be paramount. 78 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE 6th. It is the sense of the Committee that every member of the Association should exert his influence in every legitimate way to bring before each member of the race the necessity of promoting good citizenship. For the purpose of broader and more effective work the Tem- porary Executive Committee was enlarged as follows: Charles E. Dagenett, Peoria, Chairman, Miss Laura M. Cornelius, Oneida, Secretary, Mrs. Rosa B. La Flesche, Chippezva, Corresponding Sec- retary and Treasurer, Dr. Charles A. Eastman, Sioux, William Haz- lett, Blackfoot, Arthur C. Parker, Seneca, Harry Kohpay, Osage, Dr. Carlos Montezuma, Apache, Thomas L. Sloan, Omaha, John M. Oskinson, Cherokee, Hon. Charles D. Carter, Choctaw, Miss Emma Johnson, Pottawatomie, Henry Standing-Bear, Sioux, Howard E. Gansworth, Tus car or a, Henry Roe-Cloud, Winnebago, Mrs. Marie L. Baldwin, Chippezva, Robert De Poe, Klamath, Charles Doxon, Onondaga, Benjamin Caswell, Chippewa. Prof. F. A. McKenzie was appointed local representative at Columbus, Ohio. During the April committee meeting the following communica- tion was received: Columbus, Ohio, April 4, 1911. To the Native Americans of the United States, Greeting: Word has come to our ears that you are planning to meet in national assembly for the first time in history to discuss the prob- lems which devolve upon the Indian race, and we, therefore, hasten to invite you to light the camp-fire first in the city named for the first white man who visited these shores. Let us, if we may, forget any animosities of the past, and jointly work for those conditions and those policies which in the future will justify peace because based upon the principles of equity, intelligence and progress. The high position which your leaders are reaching make us eager to welcome the representatives of all the tribes in .the name of the State Uni-CHARLES E. DAGENETT (Peoria)SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 9 varsity, the city of Columbus, and the civic and religious bodies of our city. (Signed) W. O. THOMPSON, President, Ohio State University, GEORGE S. MARSHALL, Mayor of Columbus, CHAS. J. PRETZMAN, President, Chamber of Commerce, JOSEPH TAYLOR BRITAN, President, Ministerial Association, H. M. BLAIR, Secretary, Y. M. C. A., E. O. RANDALL, Secretary, State Historical & Archaeological Society, J. M. HENDERSON, President, Columbus Federation of Labor. The invitation was accepted and Columbus named as the place for the first annual conference, the date being set as October 12-17. In calling this convention the committee set forth the following reasons why such a conference should be held: Reasons for a National Indian Conference. 1. The highest ethical forces of America have for a generation been endeavoring on a large scale and in a systematic way to bring the native American into the modern life. It is well to see whether these efforts have brought results. 2. The time has come when the Indian should be encouraged to develop self-help. This can be achieved only with the attainment of a race consciousness and a race leadership. We cannot predict the race leader, but a gathering of the educated, progressive mem- bers of all the tribes is a prerequisite to his discovery.10 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE 3. The Indian has certain contribution's of value to offer to our government and our people. These contributions will be made more efficiently if made in an authorized and collective way. They will, at least they may, sa>ve us immense losses from mistaken policies which we otherwise might follow. 4. The white man is somewhat uncomfortable under a convic- tion that a " century of dishonor " has not been redeemed. If in any degree he can convince himself and his red brother that he is willing to do what he can for the race whose lands he has occupied, a new step toward social justice will have been taken. The city of Columbus can well afford to lead the nation in such a noble movement. MINUTES OF THE SECOND COMMITTEE MEETING. Tuesday, June 20, 1911. The temporary Executive Committee of the Society held its second meeting at the home of Miss Laura M. Cornelius, Seymour, Wisconsin, June 20th and 21st. Those present of this Committee are as follows: Charles E. Dagenett, Chairman, Denver, Colorado. Prof. F. A. McKenzie, Local Representative, Columbus, Ohio. Miss Laura M. Cornelius, Secretary, Seymour, Wisconsin. Miss Emma D. Johnson, Shawnee, Oklahoma. Mrs. Rosa B. La Flesche, Columbus, Ohio, Corresponding Secre- tary and Treasurer. The Committee had the advantage of the advice and suggestions of Messrs. Chester P. Cornelius, Esq., of Seymour, and Dennison Wheelock, Esq., of De Pere, Wisconsin. The Chairman opened the meeting Tuesday a. m., June 20, by calling attention to the need of a letter to be sent out to the Indians of the country, giving information about the Conference to be held in Columbus, Ohio, next October, and that this letter should be accompanied by a pamphlet, giving all necessary and detailed infer-SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS ii mation. It was moved, seconded and carried that such a letter and pamphlet be sent out. The members of the Committee present then selected extracts from letters which had been sent in by absent members and formulated what is known as the " Indian letter." Each letter sent in by absent members was read by the Secretary and discussed by all members present. The whole forenoon was devoted to this work. The meeting adjourned for luncheon. After luncheon the meeting continued on the subject of the " Indian letter " a part of the afternoon. The pamphlet, like the " Indian letter," was formulated from ideas obtained in letters submitted by all the members of the Execu- tive Committee. The next question brought before the Committee was, whether or not a " non-Indian " letter should be written, and by whom ? It was moved and seconded that such a letter be written, and by unanimous agreement it was decided that Professor F. A. McKenzie write the letter on the letter-head of the Department of Sociology and Economics, of th$ Ohio State University, and that the letter be sent out from Columbus. It was also agreed that each one of these letters be accompanied by a card, stating that the letter was sent at the suggestion of the person furnishing the name and address. Membership of the Conference. It was unanimously agreed that every tribe be asked to select and send its own delegate, and the Executive Committee shall issue invitations to all of those designated by the tribes as delegates, unless for very special reasons their judgment dictates otherwise. The Executive Committee will also invite any other Indians whom they think it advisable to have as delegates to the Conference. The question of changing the name of the Association to indicate more clearly its membership and its purpose was brought before the Committee, but it was finally decided wise to leave that matter for the decision of the October Conference. The meeting adjourned until the following day.12 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Wednesday, June 21, 1911. This session was called to order by the Chairman, who presented the subject of the programme for the October Conference. Upon the written request of Dr. Chas. A. Eastman, Chairman of the Programme Committee, who was absent, Professor F. A. McKenzie was asked to act as Chairman. Every member of the Executive Committee present was furnished with a skeleton programme sent out by Dr. Eastman, previous to the meeting. Work on this began by the discussion of the topics suggested on the programme and the persons selected to discuss them. The matter of assigning subjects to the different persons whose names had been suggested seemed a most difficult task, so after much thought and talk on the part of every member present, it was deemed advisable to allow the speakers to select their choice of subjects from those named. It was moved, seconded and carried that the Corresponding Secretary send out to all members of the Conference, indicating their intention to attend, the programme, asking them to suggest competent persons as speakers for each topic, and to ask each member of the Committee, " Which topic would you prefer to discuss yourself ? " Upon motion, it was ordered that the writers of papers must submit them to the Chairman of the Programme Committee, care of The American Indian Association, Columbus, O., not later than September first next. A motion was made, seconded and carried that Prof. McKenzie be authorized to ask President W. O. Thompson, of the Ohio State University, Columbus, O., to act as Chairman of the Thursday evening meeting. That he shall invite whomsoever he chooses to assist him in welcoming the Indian delegates. He shall also intro- duce the Indian speakers responding to the addresses of welcome. It was deemed advisable to have an entertainment Friday evening, October 13th, and charge admission. Admission price to be fifty and twenty-five cents. This evening's entertainment has been left an open question, to be filled by correspondence.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 13 It was agreed that the Executive Committee shall control the Saturday evening meeting (October 14th), which is to be addressed by non-Indians of national reputation. It was moved, seconded and carried that the Sunday afternoon meeting be held in Memorial Hall, that there shall be no stated admission price, but that a collection shall be taken at the meeting. This meeting shall be for the purpose of presenting the religious and moral problems of the Indian, and that Rev. Frank Wright be aisked to be the closing and principal speaker of this meeting. Three of four other speakers, among whom shall be Mr. Steven Jones, on " Y. M. C. A. among Indians," may be asked to speak (10 minutes each). It was agreed that there shall go out with the pamphlet to all those indicating their intention to attend the Conference, a request that they come prepared to submit either a platform or such planks of the platform, covering such subjects as they wish to be consid- ered and voted upon by the Conference. Each writer of a paper will be asked to submit plank covering the subject on which he is writing, and at the same time that his paper is submitted. This is to be submitted to the Conference for its action. It was unanimously agreed that the officers of the Executive Committee furnish credentials to any member of the Association, or any other Indian, desiring to attend the Universal Races Con- gress,1 in (London, during July, 1911. Mr. Chas. E. Dagenett, Denver, Colorado, was appointed a committee of one to take charge of this matter. A motion was made, seconded and carried that the Chairman appoint a committee to formulate the Constitution and By-Laws for the Association, and request that same be presented for consider- ation at the opening meeting of the Conference, Thursday after- noon, October 12, 1911. 1 Dr. Charles A. Eastman received such credentials and attended the Races Congress, representing the American Indian in that body. His address was on " The American Indian."14 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE The meeting adjourned, subject to the call of the Chairman at some time in the near future. (Signed) L. M. CORNELIUS, Secretary. June 22, 1911. Objects of the Society. The Committee, after its Seymour meeting, issued the following statement: The American Indian Association is primarily an organization of American Indians. It proposes to bring together all progressive Indians and friends of Indian progress for the purpose of promot- ing the highest interests of the Indian as a race and as an individual. It asserts that any condition of living, habit of thought or racial characteristic that unfits the Indian for modern environment is detrimental and conducive only of individual and racial incompe- tence. While the Association and its founders most sincerely appreciate the splendid elements and achievements of the old-time Indian culture and the methods by which early conditions were met it realizes most keenly the inefficacy of these methods in meeting the conditions of modern times. It asserts that the life hope of the Indian of America depends upon the ability of the Indian to meet enlightened races upon an equal footing in all walks of life. The Association seeks to bring about a) condition whereby the white race and all races may have a better and a broader knowledge of the red race, its claims, its needs and its ability to contribute materially and spiritually to modern civilization. The Association asserts the right of the Indian to an active voice in the rights and destiny of his race and will ever seek to defend all rights and just claims of the race. One of its high aims is to see the development of conditions whereby the Indian as an indi- vidual and as a race may take his place as a man among men, as an active member of the great commonwealth, amd independent of all support not accorded to any body of people who have achieved a position equal to the most enlightened.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 15 In stating this the Association emphatically asserts its belief that the Indian possesses natural ability and aptitude for every life mission and that under proper conditions these capacities will find a useful and successful development. It believes that the development of individual ability and the stimulation of high ideals far better than the impressing of every man into a preconceived type. It therefore believes that Indian progress depends upon awakening the abilities of every individual Indian, the realization of individual responsibility for self and race, and the duty of responding to the call to activity. The Association expects every progressive Indian to become an Active member. To its Associate membership it invites all non- Indians interested in its principles. Their kindest friends, however, will realize and insist that the Indians' first help must come from and through themselves. Let them come out of the silence, voice their common demands, and develop their strength by serious dis- cussion in national council. Not all will agree, but all can learn from each other, and will find many points of agreement which will lead to common action for the good of all. To-day the white man does not believe in Indian capacity — does not believe that he has either the intelligence or the dignity to hold such a Conference as is here proposed. The Conference alone will by its success win great things for the race. Everyone, however, should realize that this is not an association organized for the pur- pose of antagonizing or opposing the efforts of the government or of other agencies in their efforts in behalf of the Indian, but to aid every move tending toward race and national advancement. The following communication was mailed to about 4,000 Indians: THE AMERICAN INDIAN ASSOCIATION. Columbus, Ohio, June 25, 1911. Dear Fellow Indian: What is to be the future of the American Indian? Is he to continue to be the creature of outside forces? Every Indian says, No! We earnestly believe the time has come when the Ameri-16 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE can Indian should take the initiative in the struggle for his race betterment, and to answer in his own way some of the vital ques- tions that confront him. The first step in this direction is, we believe, the revival of the old face-to-face discussion around the " Old Council Fire " composed of Indian men and women not of one tribe only but of all the tribes in the United States. Will you not help to form a council to take up the industrial, educational, religious and legal problems confronting our race? This is a repre- sentative government and it is time we were heard. A great many problems have arisen out of the question of race adaptation to new conditions. Mistaken work will continue unless the Indian expresses himself, for no one knows the heart of the Indian as the Indian himself. An organization that shall voice the best judgment of the Indian people, and that shall command the attention of the United States has become a vital necessity. In no other way can we so effectively mould public opinion and bring about conditions for the good of the Indian race. In order to deal with, this great question and to secure more united action, leading ultimately to effective organization for race progress and race betterment, it became evident that an association of American Indians should be formed. A number of the signers of this letter met in Columbus, Ohio, in April to arrange for the first meeting to be held in October. At that time it was felt neces- sary to draft the statement of "Purpose" which you will find in the inclosed pamphlet. We believe it is a statement which will appeal to every lover of our race. Friends of the Indian are rising up everywhere to endorse this movement. Does it appeal to you? This will be the first association of its kind, and it is hoped that every person of Indian blood will take pride in assisting to make it one of the leading and most beneficial associations in the United States. Its primary object will be to serve in every way possible the best interests of the race. You alone, as an Indian, can realize what an immense advantage will come to you personally by what- ever gain the Association shall secure for our race. Personal free-SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 17 dom and personal advancement are dependent upon racial rights and racial achievement. This is your opportunity to help your people. Becom^ an active member of the Association. If you cannot become active to the extent of attending the Conference, you may be active enough to become a member and send us at least $2.00 to help defray expenses. More than that will help to make the greatest convention of the kind ever held, and do a greater good for our cause. At least you can send in a list of names of progressive Indians whom you know, with their addresses, and interest as many of them as you can. We hope you will do all three. Please let us< know to what extent we may depend upon you. We want you to feel free to express yourself fully with regards to the Association and the Conference. Further information concerning the Conference will be mailed to you upon receipt of your intention to attend. There is enclosed a little pamphlet that will give you additional information in regard to the Association and the Conference. Yours for results, THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. White friends of Indian progress were sent the following letter by Professor F. A. McKenzie, who was elected the Columbus representative for the Society. OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY W. O. Thompson, D. D., LL. D., President. DEPARTMENT OF economics and sociology J. E. HAGEETY M. B. HAMMOND F. A. MCKENZIE ?-c-LO°iS*SL Columbus, Ohio, June 25, 1911. W. F. GEPHART ' ' C. C. HUNTINGTON BEATRICE SHEETS The persistent desire of the white man from the days of Columbus to the present to bring the native people into whatever of civiliza- tion he himself possessed has been largely negatived by an equally persistent cupidity and frequent erroneous judgment. The benevo-i8 proceedings of the first conference lent endeavors of state and church and people have not, however, been entirely lost. There has been developed, or there has sur- vived, a body of Indian men and women who have the vision and spirit and ability when joined in a common movement, to interpret each race to the other and to inspire the despondent of their own race, through the sacrifice inherent in leadership, to a splendid upward struggle. By organization and by conference a race con- sciousness and a race confidence will be developed. Not lack of capacity but isolation and despondency are the destruction of a primitive people. Optimism and union will be their salvation. The importance of this move toward self-help is so great that the friends of the race cannot afford to let the plans fail of success. By public discussion of his own industrial, educational, legal, and religious problems, the Indian will contribute powerfully to their solution. I, therefore, deem it an honor and privilege to be author- ized to invite you to become an Associate member of the American Indian Association. Your name and your membership fee of two dollars (or more, if it be your pleasure to so favor us) will assist in making the October Conference a larger and more potent body. As citizens of the United States we owe it, do we not, not only to the native people but also to ourselves to demonstrate an efficient friendship for the Indian? The greatness of nation and of self is measured in the ability to see beyond race lines. Trusting to receive your approval and cooperation, I am, Very truly yours, f. a. Mckenzie, Columbus Representative The American Indian Association.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 19 PROCEEDINGS OF THE CONFERENCE. The following programme was drawn up by the Programme Committee: Conference Programme. Thursday, October 12. Morning session: 9.00 o'clock. Registration...................Ohio Union, University Campus. Afternoon: 3.00 o'clock. Organization..................Ohio Union, University Campus. Evening: 8.00 o'clock. Addresses of Welcome....................Memorial Hall, City. Presiding Officer, Dr. W. O. Thompson, President Ohio State University. Hon. Judson S. Harmon, Governor of Ohio. George S. Marshall, Mayor of Columbus. Fred B. Herbst, President of the Chamber of Commerce. Responses — Indians................................... Chairman of Association. Hon. Charles D. Carter. Miss Laura M. Cornelius. Mr. Thomas L. Sloan. Address............................................... Hon. R. G. Valentine, Commissioner of Indian Affairs.20 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Friday, October 13. Morning: 9.00 o'clock. Industrial Problems. Chairman — Chas. E. Dagenett. Subject: "Indian in Agriculture"................J. E. Shields. Marvin Jack. " The Indian in Industry "............Miss Laura M. Cornelius. General Discussion. Subject: " The Indian as a Skilled Mechanic"......Cbais. Doxon. General Discussion. Subject: "Modern Home-making and the Indian Woman" Mrs. Anna Dawson Wilde. Mrs. Marie L. Baldwin. General Discussion. Afternoon: 3.00 o'clock. Ohio Union — University Campus. Educational Problems. Chairman — Charles Doxon. Subject: "The Philosophy of Indian Education"........ Arthur C. Parker. Dr. G. J. Frazier. General Discussion. Subject: "Higher Education for Indians "—Howard E. Gansworth, General Discussion. Subject: "The Preservation of Native Indian Art"...... Mrs. Angel Decora Deitz. General Discussion. Subject: "Indian in the Profession"...........John M. Oskison. Dr. O. DeForest Davis. General Discussion. Evening: 8.00 o'clock. Entertainment............................Memorial Hall, City.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 21 Saturday, October 14. Morninig: 9.00 o'clock. Ohio Union — University Campus. Legal and Political Problems. Chairman — Dennison Wheelock. Subject: "Reservation System, Administration".......... Thomas L. Sloan. De Witt D. Hare. General Discussion. Subject: "Land-holding"......................Charles Kealear. General Discussion. Subject: "Trust Funds and their Management".......... J. Hampton Tucker. General Discussion. Afternoon: 2.00 o'clock. Ohio Union — University Campus. Chairman — Thomas L. Sloan. Subject: "The Law and the Indian of the United States" Hiram Chase. Thomas W. Mani. General Discussion. Subject: " Citizenship for the Indian "... .Hon. Charles D. Carter. Chester P. Cornelius. General Discussion. Evening: 8.00 o'clock. University Chapel — University Campus. Address—"The North American Indian"............... Dr. Charles A. Eastman Short Voluntary Addresses by Associate Members. Open Discussion.22 PROCEEDINGS OP THE FIRST CONFERENCE Sunday, October 15. Morning: 9.00 o'clock. Indian speakers to be delegated to the various churches of the city. Afternoon: 3.00 o'clock. Memorial Hall, City. Moral and Religious Problems. Rev. Frank H. Wright. Rev. William Holmes. Henry Roe Cloud. Rev. Sherman Coolidge, P. J. Deloria. Robert H. Hall, Secy. Indian Y. M. C. A. Evening. Indian speakers to be delegated to the various churches of the City. Monday, October 16. Morning: 9.00 o'clock. Election of Officers. Adoption of Platform, Constitution and By-Laws. THE CONFERENCE. The Conference opened Thursday morning, October 12th, at the Ohio Union building, on the campus of the Ohio State University. Registration occupied the greater part of the morning. At two in the ajfternoon the Temporary Chairman, Charles E. Dagenett, called the meeting to order and requested an invocation by one of the clergymen members. By unanimous consent it was asked that the Temporary Chairman and Secretary be retained in their respect- ive positions throughout the Conference. The Chairman appointed the following committees: Committee to prepare the Constitution and By-Laws, J. M. Oskinson, Arthur C. Parker, Thomas L. Sloan, Laura M. Cornelius and Charles E. Dagenett; Committee on Statement of Purposes, Dr. Charles A. Eastman, Rev. William Holmes, Henry Roe-Cloud, and Mrs. Rosa B. La Flesche.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 23 Thursday (Oct. 12) Evening Session. The Thursday evening session was the first public session and was held in Memorial Hall, the largest place of assembly in the city of Columbus. Dr. W. O. Thompson, President of Ohio State University, presided. Addresses of welcome were made by the Secretary of the Governor of Ohio; Hon. George S. Marshall, Mayor of Columbus, and Hon, F. H. Hysell, representing the Chamber of Commerce. Responses were made by Arthur C. Par- ker, Charles E. Dagenett, Laura M. Cornelius, and Thomas L. Sloan. The principal address of the evening was by Hon. Robert G. Valentine, and was as follows: Address of Hon. Robert G. Valentine, Commissioner of Indian Affairs. " It has long been the custom of the Indian Office in writing letters to Indians to address them as ' My friends,' and sign ' Your friend/ It is a good old custom. It is the great need of the tangled conditions which exi&t in the present economic and socio- logical structure of our society, that everything which brings to the front, and emphasizes, and enlightens, the idea of friendship, be observed among us in every possible way. Peace on earth, good will toward men, the golden rule, those wonderful three chapters in the book of Matthew beginning with the beatitudes in the fifth chapter and ending with the seventh, are becoming every day, not only standards in an ethical world more or less apart from the daily struggle on our farms and in our offices and in our shops, but are becoming an integral part of the very structure and muscle and nerve of business and commerce themselves. " The more destructive processes of competition are giving way gradually to a proper harmonizing of interests. The only question is, not of the superiority of combination to competition but of the method of combination, so as to retain in the sovereign of this country, which is all the people, benefits which are their right and privilege. On friendship in its personal and individual sense much24 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE has been written; but on it in its sociological sense, much remains to be said; and when such chapter of our progress in America is truly written, Indian affairs will be dealt with there, for Indian affairs is one of the great tasks of this age of friendship. Many people will not believe this statement; even all those of us here, who are alive to the work, may well feel that the work is so undermined by mistakes and overlaid by corruption, that it is mere idle dream- ing to think of friendship as of its essence. But friendship is of its essence. At leaist, this is the one statement I shall make here to-night on which I feel justified in being dogmatic to the extent of saying that it is the only point in all Indian affairs on which I dare to be dogmatic, in that I feel that I am true to myself in addressing you here,— all of you, as my friends. " At this point my dogmatism ends. I had hoped not even to be asked to speak, further, at least, than the few words I shall want to say to you a little later on in closing as to how deep my personal belief in this Conference is, and the great good which I believe is coming to Indian Affairs from it; but I have been asked to say a little something before I come to that, and I will gladly lay before you two subjects. " The first is very closely related to the thoughts which we were thinking together a few moments ago. The substance of friendship is Truth; its breadth and finer spirit is candor, frankness, openness, or, in the technical political language of the day, publicity; and probably the one policy which I have the most undeviatingly pur- sued since my first day as Commissioner is to welcome without reserve in the Indian Office and throughout the Field, publicity of every sort. " In pursuing this policy of throwing the Indian Service and all its affairs wide open to the light and air, and allowing everyone access to our records and the freest possible opportunity to study conditions on the Indian reservations, I*have frequently been- urged to draw the line between so-called responsible and irresponsible per- sons. I have refused to draw that line,— first, because it is useless. It is true, of course, that an irresponsible person, frequently carry- ing a large amount of ignorance into his researches, and comingSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 25 out not only no wiser but more confused, can cause a certain amount of temporary trouble; but, look at the alternative: always forced publicity with wrong motives impugned instead of a candid disclosure of facts as they are. " The experience of the past has shown that even the most irresponsible criticism will find support in some quarter and fre- quently the criticisms passed are just; for the Indian Office, like all other human organizations, has its faults, makes even serious mis- takes, and sometimes does things wrong. Furthermore, positive injury has come to the Indian Service from not enough free and general concrete discussion of Indian policies. " Indian affairs are, even under the best possible administration, peculiarly ai field for the grafter, and all other wrongdoers. The lands and the moneys of the Indians offer a bait which the most satiated fish will not refuse, and frequently a whole local com- munity will get on the wrong track toward the Indians. I have heard genuinely respectable members of a community say that the best thing that could happen to the Indian was to lose all his lands and all his money, and have to go to work. They say this not- withstanding the fact that by such a time the Indian would have no physique, physical or moral, left, for drink and disease are allies of those who seek to prey upon him. " To offset all this, not only the utmost publicity as to all Indian affairs, but the freest discussion of all divergent views with regard to them is essential. I have felt it a distinct loss to my adminis- tration that many persons who are accustomed to think and write on Indian subjects have never paid the Indian Office a visit, and sought to learn first hand here what we are trying to do, and how. It is my hope that I may meet personally every such person. " If things of any sort are going wrong, every officer in the service, on behalf of his own reputation, is the most concerned in righting them, and no man who is doing his duty can have any- thing to fear from any kind of an investigation. While some of the reservations are what might still be technically called closed reservations, I prefer to handle them all as open propositions. The26 PROCEEDINGS OP THE FIRST CONFERENCE day has gone by, even if it were still desirable, which I do not admit, to run them from a more or less closed administrative point of view on the theory that " too many cooks spoil the broth." They must be run to-day, and I am glad that it is so, in the light of ful- lest publicity, and the Indians, however incompetent, must like the rest of us to some extent run their risks from interested or disin- terested or dishonest advisors and learn themselves to choose sound counsel. The number of people now settling around the reserva- tions, and even on most of them, makes this course inevitable. " The fact that this is so, makes the work of every superintendent a vastly difficult one. While he must listen to all and suppress nothing, it is still his duty to act as he thinks right, only, of course, being careful to see that his reasons are clearly stated for the public to consider. If any superintendent feels that this is too difficult a task he should be somewhat comforted by the fact that the Com- missioner has even more of such difficulties to encounter. " Under my second subject I want to lay before you a few par- ticular problems on which we are now working. Each and every one is a problem on which I need particularly the help of those of you who are outside the Government service. Under the tremen- dous pressure of daily routine, those of us in the Government service too frequently are in danger of losing the thread of our work, of wandering from the right path. It requires a much stronger mind and clearer vision than I dare to hope that I possess to feel assured that one is not blinded by the detail to the main issue. I frequently have to get away from my desk, and go into the woods or on a hill top,— actually, physically, in order to bring my mind to bear right on an important problem. I feel among you here as if I were again on a hill top. "As to many of the problems now before me, I have already come to some more or less tentative conclusions. As to others, I am frank to say I have no conclusions at all worth calling such; but as to either or both of these classes, I need your help. Where I have some kind of a conclusion, I may be wrong; and where I have none, I need your help doubly."SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 27 The Commissioner then spoke on the following topies : 1. I have been going slower and slower on the issuance of patents in fee. Do you think that I am going slow enough, or too sIqw? I realize that this is a question which lies at the very root of all that the Indian Office is trying to do. 2. Out of 300,000, about 166,000 are potential citizens of the United States. Industries and economic developments, trust funds, State school system. 3. Making reservations semi-communistic, self-supporting com- munities. 4. Whether that part of the Act of May 8, 1906, deferring citi- zenship was a mistake or not. 5. Social grouping of allottees. 6. 9,000 Indian children not in any school. 7. Dr. Gulictas meeting of physicians. 8. General Jurisdictional Act. 9. Co-education in Indian service. 10. Segregation of tribal funds. 11. State liquor co-operation. 12. Promotion from field to office, new examinations. Indians pushing up — 6,000, 30 per cent, are Indians. 13. Ask for personal letters criticising outcoming annual report, and suggestions at all times. " It is because of the existence of these problems and the mighty questions they raise that when I first heard of this proposed meet- ing I felt that a new day had come in Indian Affairs. The public opinion of the country as a whole has its attention so largely taken up with other particular big problems that its reaction on Indian affairs is too spasmodic, too local, or too superficial to be funda- mental help in our work. " I hope this organization will continue to broaden its member- ship till it includes every critic of the Government, every class and shade of opinion. The minute that any man thinks that this meet- ing and its successors is not sympathetic with his ideas, and so plans to stay away, that minute he becomes the one person most28 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE urgently needed here. And the one thing that I venture to say to you about your internal affairs is that the greatest mistake you can make is to think that you yourselves do not stand most in need of that man. "We need an All-Indian public opinion. This meeting is epochal in that it and its successors can bring to us that help." FRIDAY MORNING SESSION. October 13, 1911. The Conference was called to order at 9.30 o'clock. The Chairman introduced Mr. J. E. Shields, who presented a paper on "The Indian in Agriculture." In explanation, Mr. Shields said : " Just a word before I start my paper. You will notice in my paper here that I have just mentioned the tribes of the Arapahoes and Cheyennes. We have, of course, many more tribes represented among us, but since I only know about the Arapahoes and Chey- ennes, I make mention of just those two tribes in my paper." THE INDIAN IN AGRICULTURE. By J. E. Shields. One of the greatest problems that has confronted the govern- ment of the United States has been the question of how to deal with the Indian, and lead him from former environments, sever him from the previously formed nomadic habits of hunter and plains- man, and transform him into a citizen and agriculturist. There have been volumes written upon this subject, and I do not presume to, within the short time allotted to the reading of this paper, advance any new theories or enter into a discussion of the many complicated questions that naturally present themselves in relation to the Indian affairs and the governmental policy in dealing with him as a ward or as a citizen. My purpose is to state as briefly. + 'f. J. E. SHIELDSSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 29 as possible what the Indian ha® accomplished in Oklahoma, and to point out some things in connection with his development which are within themselves a splendid prophecy of future success. It must not be forgotten that but little more than a quarter of a century ago the Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians were restless, wandering plainsmen, for whom the reservation had no attraction and whose untamed spirits tenaciously held out against the restraints which the rapidly advancing westward marching civilization was slowly but surely throwng around them. The buffalo had disappeared from the western plains. The settlements were gradually pushing westward, and the time had come for the passing of the old and the coming of the new. As far back as the early seventies in the last century, the Chey- ennes and Arapahoes had commenced1 to take hold of the new prob- lems of citizenship upon which hung their future destiny. To describe their first steps in the new way, I herewith submit an extract from Agent Darlington, in the third annual report, dated August 26, 1871, which illustrates the early steps taken: " It gives me great pleasure to report considerable advancement in the objects connected with this Agency since my last report. u We know of but one instance of any depredations being com- mitted since our last annual report. The last winter's hunt realized a bountiful harvest of excellent robes. A number of the Arapahoes were ready to raise corn and other produce. " Big Mouth " was the leading chief in farming. He had; twenty-five acres of corn, of which he is justly proud. The Cheyennes said that they would not take the corn road until they saw how the Arapahoes succeeded. Some little farming was being done by the Indians from 1871 to 1877, but for the lack of plows and other farming tools the farm work was limited. " In 1877 our Agency received a large shipment of plows and wagons, which were shipped to Wichita, Kansas, which was then our nearest railroad point. " The Cheyenne and Arapahoe Transportation Company was composed wholly of Indians, and as they set out from the Agency with 160 of their best horses and mules, bound for the city of30 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Wichita in charge of two Government employees who acted as wagon masters, it was a> unique company. Their arrival was a novel sight to the citizens of Wichita. Crowds of them were soon at the depot. Some of them offered to assist in " setting up " the wagons, but the trainmasters would accept of no help except from the Indians. ' 'Awkward as they were at first, they soon learned how to put a wagon together. In three days they were ready to hitch up and pull out the train of forty, four-horse wagons, hauling sixty-five thousand pounds of supplies, which the Indians delivered to the Darlington Agency in good order and condition. Then the Indians were the happy owners of wagons, harness and plows, paid for by their own honest labor. Thus the Indians were able to farm on a larger scale, and were making good headway, as there were a good many small fields being opened up along the river bottoms." In 1889 and 1890 the allotting of this reservation begun, and each man, woman and child was allotted his or her 160 acres of land, and it was intended that each family of Indians would move on their own allotment to live. This, of course, was something new for the Indians, as they had been in the habit of living in little villages wherever they choose, but after some little time, and with the untir- ing efforts of the Agents, the Indians were finally induced to move on their allotments, and those that were able began building and opening up little farms. In all the farming that they had been doing they had to use their small ponies for work stock, and this was becoming somewhat discouraging, and some of them were about to give up farming, but some of the more industrious fellows, who were drawing big annuity, managed to get money enough to buy farm horses. About this time the Indians began leasing their lands, and while this wais considered by some a drawback to their farming, for it enabled them to have their lands worked by the white people, yet some of the Indians made good use of their lease money by buying a better class of horses. In the last few years the Indians have been selling their inherited lands, and this, together with their lease money, has enabled them to buy up-to-date farming implements.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 31 I have often heard the remark made that the Indian could never be induced to farm his own land, but I must say that this is a big mistake, for in looking the country over you will find that the Indians have many nice little homes and model farms in connec- tion with these homes being operated by full-blooded Indians. The Indians are rapidly advancing in agriculture, as has twice been proven in the last two annual fairs that we have had for our Indians, and with one exception, that of live stock, we have proven to our white brother that we are his equal as agriculturist. At our annual Indian Fair, which was held art Weather ford, Oklahoma, and by the way, which was our first real Indian Fair, we had about thirty entries in the live stock and poultry department, and this year, with our fair at Watonga), Oklahoma, we had ninety entries in the live stock and poultry department. Showing a great advance over last year, and as we are yet young in the fair business, having had just the two Indian fairs, we expect great results in the near future, for I believe that our Indian fairs are doing as much as any other one factor toward advancing the Indian in agriculture. The fair which we held at Weatherford last year, as before stated, was our first endeavor along that line. The results were very gratifying. The fair at Watonga this year was a revelation to many people who did not know the capability of the Indian along agricultural lines. The fair at Watonga was well attended by people from genuine surprise and we shall fail after long inquiry, if the fundamental ideas of the female pantheon in primitive life be not the four duties or functions that have been and must remain the peculiar province of woman's activity, to wit: " 1. The bearing and nurture of children; the maiden, the wife, the mother (the tutor of her children in all arts, crafts and wis- dom). " 2. The nourisher of the human family, the one who gives food. " 3. The maker of the fireside, the house, the home. "4. The clothier of men, the spinner, the weaver, and, indeed, general guardian of peaceful industry and practical wisdom." One of the most erroneous and misleading beliefs relating to the American Indian woman is that she was both before and after mar- riage the abject slave and drudge of the men of her tribe. This false view, due largely to inaccurate observation and mis- conception of American Indian institutions, was perhaps correct, at times, ais to a very small portion of the tribes, and only where the environment afforded only the barest necessities and needs of life, and, sometimes, withheld even this scanty meed. The American Indian woman being domestic, industrious, unsel- fish, provident, adaptive to existing conditions, and artistic in her tastes, is well equipped for the making of a modern home,— one's own dwelling-place of a time not ancient or remote,— the making64 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE of an abiding-place of the present time of domestic affections, of love, of tenderness, of peace that is not ruffled nor broken by the turmoils and tempests of life. A home is not an outright gift of God, but with His merciful help it is acquired in time by a slow process of building upon fixed laws of life and nature. The first and most important things about a modern home is a house, and a house to be a true home must be adapted to the re- quirements of its occupants, to their position in society and to their means and income. The modern home need not necessarily be large, but it must be of such size as to afford the largest measure of convenience and of the ordinary comforts of life. Of course, the woman alone cannot make such a home. The man who is to share it with her must cooperate with her in working out the details of home-making; each has a part to perform, and happiness in the home cannot be attained unless the duty of each is faithfully fulfilled. Among my people, the Chippewa of the great Algonquin stock of languages, each sex has its own peculiar sphere of duty. To the man belongs the duty and obligation of protecting his family,— his wife or wives and their offspring and near kindred, and to support them with the products of the chase and of the fishery; to manufacture weapons and wooden utensils, and com- monly to provide suitable timbers and bark for the building of the lodge. These activities required health, strength and skill. The warrior was usually absent from his fireside on the chase, on the warpath, or on the fishing-trip, weeks, months, and sometimes years; and he was subjected to the hardships and the perils of hunting and fighting, and to the inclemency of the weather, often without food and shelter. To the woman belongs the duties required in the home, in the lodge. Taking care of the children and attending to the cooking, the sewing, the making of mats, baskets, and pottery, and utensils of bark; she also gathered and stored edible roots, seeds, berries, and plants, for future use and present consumption; the smokingMRS. MARIE L. BALDWIN (Chippewa)SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 65 of meats and fish and eels, brought by the hunters ; when on the march it was the duty of the woman to care for the camp and its equipage and the family belongings, in which labor she was of course assisted by the children and such men as were incapacitated for more active service. Sowing and cultivating the crops was chiefly the duty of the woman, although she was at times assisted by the men. The woman was industrious, frugal, loving and affectionate, and performed her duties willingly and cheerfully. She was not a drudge and slave of her husband and the men of her tribe. She was treated with the respect, the esteem, gentleness and loving con- sideration she so richly merited and appreciated. Her native artistic ability enables her to beautify her home in many ways with the materials which the modern merchant has to sell. It was my good fortune to visit the home of a woman of Indian blood, in which paintings both in water color and oils richly adorned the walls and a large number of embroidered sofa pillows of exquisite beauty graced the sofa, and in which I saw a profusion of embroidered center and individual pieces, as well as fine drawn work which adorned the dinner table, and pieces of hand-painted china bonbon dishes, fruit dishes and vases tastefully placed here and there; and there I also saw curtains of net filled in with darning cotton with designs of artistic beauty, two of which had been origi- nated by my hostess, and the draperies which hung in the space of the folding doors between the front and back parlors were of fish net, edged with tassels of her own handiwork. All these things were the product of this noble woman's own hands and industry. This woman took pride in saying that everything in her home ex- cept the furniture, carpets, the piano, and the housekeeping utensils, had been made with her own hands or those of her sister. This woman in addition to this did all her own cooking of meats, vegetables, pastries and breads; she too preserved all the fruit, and prepared all the pickles, jellies and jams used in her household. She had two children and did all the sewing for them and her- self. In this manner she was doing her full share in the home- making ; she was a good wife and a good housekeeper.66 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE This is, I am proud to say, only one example of many happy homes among people of Indian blood wherein the woman by her naitural industry and thrifty domestic management has done her part in the making of home. In the home I visited the husband was a printer. He toiled hard to support his little family, often denying himself of personal com- forts ins order that he might bring some pleasing gifts to his wife or children ; he counseled with and confided in her concerning his business and plans; he realized that woman's quick intuition often sees at a glance what a man is slow in discovering. And so even though she did not give him great aid in his business, she was thereby made happy by being taken into his confidence, and on the other hand, he was inspired by her trust and encouragement. With the training derived from her mother's experience in cutting up the meat products of the chase, the Indian woman possesses a knowledge which enables her to purchase the exact piece of meat she may want for a certain dish. I remember many a beef roast I was sent to market to purchase was turned into a potroast or a stew by my mother while I was learning to market, because she recognized that that particular piece or cut of meat that I had car- ried back to her was not suitable for the oven roast which she had desired. But the environments of the primitive life of the American In- dian woman have in large measure changed. Conditions have be- come transformed and so new environments have been created; new institutions, customs, laws and beliefs have gradually displaced the old, the ancient; here lies the difficulty with the modern American Indian woman,—her people are no longer independent and self- governing; she must change her motives and ideals in life and so adjust herself as well as she may to these novel surroundings which have, unsolicited, been brought to her door by peoples of the eastern hemisphere; her outlook upon life must now be in large measure from new viewpoints. New values must be given to the facts of life. To secure welfare and happiness she must adapt and wisely adjust her inherent and acquired talents to these modern surround- ings. Many of the things that were useful and necessary, yea,SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 67 sacred, to her own mother, must now be laid aside. Methods of producing, securing and preserving shelter and the necessaries of life must be adopted or changed or discarded1 altogether to meet the new conditions of life on this continent. And the American Indian woman who fails to realize this duty and obligation to her race in her home-making fails completely to read aright the signs of the time. In short, the peculiar customs, laws, beliefs and institutions of her ancestors which do not comport with these changed conditions and which have come into collision with those which are better adapted to secure welfare and happiness under modern conditions of life, must be laid aside; let them rest with the glorious deeds and attainments, the heroism and the patriotism of her ancestors, in the hall of fond memory. (Applause.) The CHAIRMAN: We have just five minutes in which to adjourn for luncheon, as guests of the Faculty of the Ohio State University. Upon motion, the Conference adjourned until 2.00 o'clock the same day. Friday Afternoon Session, October 13, 1911. The CHAIRMAN: The meeting will please come to order. Before proceeding with business I wish to read a telegram from Mr. Friedman, Superintendent of the Carlisle Indian School. Mr. Dagenett then read the telegram, in which Mr. Friedman expressed his regreat at not being able to attend, and extended his best wishes for the success of the Conference and the perfection of a permanent organization. The CHAIRMAN: Another matter that is up before we pro- ceed with the programme is the question of a meeting of the com- mittee to draw up a constitution. There is so little time between our sessions that it almost impossible for this Committee to meet except during the regular sessions. The Committee to draw up a constitution is ais follows: John M. Oskison, Thomas L. Sloan,68 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Miss Laura M. Cornelius, Arthur C. Parker and myself. Those members of this Committee who are not on the programme this afternoon are requested to meet in the Constitutional Committee room immediately, to at least start on this work. Mr. Henry Roe Cloud will act as the Chairman of this session. Mr. CLOUD: In opening this meeting this afternoon I want to do something a little out of the usual order. To a great many of us, this gathering here in Columbus means a very great thing, not only to those of us who are here, but to those Indians whom we represent, and it seems fitting that we shiould relate all our doings here to the Great Spirit, in whom every one of us believe. I have never met an Indian yet who did not believe in the Great Spirit, and so I take the liberty, as Chairman this afternoon, to call upon Rev. Sherman Coolidge to lead us in a word of prayer before we begin this discussion on education. Mr. Coolidge then led the Conference in prayer. Mr. CLOUD: I am asked, by Mr. Dagenett, to announce that those who belong to the Committee to draw up the constitution and by-laws should retire immediately, as I understand it, to their task. Our subject this afternoon is the question of the educational prob- lem of the Indian, and it is divided into two parts, " The Philos- ophy of Indian Education " and " Higher Education for Indians," and as branches of higher education, the subjects of " The Preserva- tion of Native Indian Art" and " The Indian in the Professions." Now we will have the pleasure of listening to Mr. Arthur C. Parker, a Seneca by descent, on the subject of " The Philosophy of Indian Education." THE PHILOSOPHY OF INDIAN EDUCATION. By Arthur C. Parker. At the time of the white invasion of America, beginning in 1492, a >new type of ethnic culture was introduced to the continent. Whatever may have been the merits of the institutions of the purely American cultures before this time or since, we must recognize theSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 69 fact that, viewed ethnologically, the so-called civilization of the whites was a distinct advance. Few American Indian tribes at the beginning of the Columbian epoch, especially those north of Mexico, were above the first stages of barbarism, and some were pure savages. The new culture brought them new ideas and new materials. It showed them how, by the application of labor and through change of character, many hitherto useless objects could be made to contribute to human enjoy- ment, and how through a systematized knowledge of natural laws that which was better and greater could be devised. The simple American, accustomed only to the simple things about him, and familiar only with utilizing things nearest at hand, saw a demon- stration of the supreme power of knowledge when he saw ships and horses, guns and implements of steel. These things gave men power, power not only over beasts and other men, but power over space and elements. The Indian was subtle enough to see his own weakness, and thus in his own way he sought the power that the higher culture gave, but at the same time protested against it. This education, which a higher culture gives by contact with another culture, is termed acculturation. Ordinarily we call it civilization. When the white race sought to teach its culture to the Indiam, and when the Indian endeavored to acquire it, both races discovered that there was some fundamental difference that prevented imme- diate success. The fault lay in the chasm that separates one stage of ethnic culture from another, it lay in a difference of mental texture, in serious as we were in the past. Mr. Doxon, you know, got up hungry this morning, had no breakfast, and spoke about bread and butter. He is a serious bread and butter man. (Laughter.)92 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE I am struck with the idea that we ought to preserve all that is best in Indian art, and that there is too much of a tendency to condemn all Indian things ; that there are beautiful things among the Indians, as well as useful things. My wife is a white woman. She was born in Boston, educated in New York City, and belongs to the white race, but she sees the usefulness and beauty in some of the Indian things. I don't think she has had a baby that she has not had in an Indian baby case because it was warm, it was handy and it was beautiful, and made by our people, the Arapahoes, on the Indian River Reservation, and she is wearing a pair of mocca- sins that were made by the Arapahoes or the Cheyennes. She says they are eaisy, and they are warm, and she likes to wear them, and there is enough room so they don't hurt her feet. (Laughter.) And the Arapahoes' sacred tepee — I have a picture of it,—I wish I had it here. I have used this tepee myself, but not in the cause of the old religion of our people, which was not so very bad after all. Why, when I was in New York, taking a special course in college, the rector asked me to take his place one Sunday in a very aristocratic church, and I addressed those people about something that was tender among them, and that was the pew-rent system. Those people paid so much for their pews, those in front, of course, paying a little more than those behind. There were only one or two pews, way back in a corner, for the poor people and for strang- ers, and I want to tell you that I did not feel as though I was in a religious house and in a religious atmosphere. When I went in there I felt that I could not sit down and worship God, and I told those people in that sermon that I would rather have the religion of the Arapahoes, of my fathers, and sit in their sacred tent, than a religion auctioned off in that way. There is art in their religion, not commerce. (Applause.) Mr. SLOAN: The thought occurs to me thi3 time that in art we have much to be proud of. We have here with us Dr. Eastman, who paints in word pictures the sentiments of the Indian, and has handed them down to us so that they will be preserved for time immemorial, and we have as an organization, the honor of having that man with us. He is recognized around the world as one ofSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 93 the most beautiful Indian word painters that the world has known, and he has brought to the knowledge of the world sentiments, char- acter and religion that has not been known before. On the other hand, we have the other artist, known to me origi- nally as a schoolmate, Miss Angel De Cora, now Mrs. Deitz, the instructor of art at Carlisle, who paints in pictures those same sen- timents, so that they may be preserved, and we in this organization, I believe; should be proud to be able to preserve these sentiments in word pictures and in painted pictures — these sentiments and sym- bolisms of our past that are preserved, and be able to hand them down to posterity, We should be proud of that. (Applause.) Chairman CLOUD: It is a wonderful thing to have such men and women in our movement. It certainly ought to give a great momentum to thi-s movement to be able to gather here such men and women. A suggestion was made that some action be taken in regard to the preservation of that which is truly Indian. I do not know whether a committee has been appointed on resolutions, or not, or whether the Committee on Organization would include that, but it seems to me that whoever is on that committee, whoever is appointed to that committee ought to certainly get the sense of this meeting, and I think it is the sense of this Conference that whatever is purely true native Indian art ought by all means to be preserved. We shall have to pass over the paper, " Higher Education for Indians," that was to have been presented by Mr. Howard E. Gans- worth, as he is not present, nor has he sent his paper. I am very sorry, indeed, that Mr. Gansworth is not with us to-day to present this paper, as he is a Tuscarora ami graduate of Princeton Univer- sity, and a living embodiment of that subject. The subject of the next paper is " The Indian in the Professions," by J. M. Oskison, a Cherokee.94 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE " THE INDIAN IN THE PROFESSIONS." By J. M. Oskison. My business, or profession, is writing and editing. In my small way, I've tried to make myself an interpreter, to the world, of the modern, progressive Indian. The greatest handicap I have is my enthusiasm. I know a lot of Indians who are making good; I know how sturdily they have set their face toward the top of the hill, and how they've tramped on when the temptation to step aside and rest was strongest. When I try to write about them I lose my critical sense. Then the editors sympathize : " Too bad he's got that Indian bug"—and ask me about the cowboys. Now, I'll write fiction about cowboys, make 'em yip-yip and shoot their forty-fours till everybody's deaf, but I'll be hanged if I'll repeat the old lies about the Indian for any editor that ever paid on acceptance! " Most of the Indians that go through Carlisle really do go back to the blanket, don't they! " It was an assertion rather than a ques- tion, and a modern magazine editor made it to me not a year ago. " You're wrong," I said. " I can send you accurate statistics compiled by Mr. Friedman, Superintendent of the School, which show exactly what has become of the Carlisle graduates. They go back to useful, serviceable lives. They plow and trade, become sol- diers and mechanics, enter the professions — teaching, nursing, the law, the diplomatic service, the ministry, medicine, politics, den- tistry, veterinary surgery, writing, painting, acting. If you want me to do it, I'll assemble a gallery of individual Indians who are getting to the top of their professions in friendly, honorable compe- tition with ninety million white Americans that will fill half of your magazine." Did he want me to do it? Not he! Better for him one Indian who had slumped than a hundred who had pushed ahead. If only Congressman Carter or Senator Curtis would go back to the tepee and the blanket! That would be a story worth telling! The other day there came to me in the office of Collier's Weekly, of which I am associate editor, a package of papers from theSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 95 Council of Santa Clara Indians at Espanola, New Mexico. The letter from the Council, signed by Santiago Naranjo, opened in this way: "Lately we observed your comment upon the Pima Indians. Encouraged at the display of fairness, we are submitting to you a few carbon copies of some correspondence which will in a slight measure indicate the maladministration of the affairs of the Pueblo Indians, which is even yet in no measure relieved after eight or more investigations." To a copy of a memorial addressed to the Secretary of the In- terior were signed the names of the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, the War Captain and the Principal. Signing as Principal for San Felipe, I noted the name of Harvey Townsend. I recalled a long drive up the Rio Grande with Dagenett two and a half years ago when we stopped on the edge of the village of San Felipe and asked for Harvey Townsend. Harvey and Dagenett were at Carlisle to- gether— in the same military company. As we drove on from San Felipe to Santo Domingo, the Supervisor made some scattered observations to the effect that the white man wouldl certainly say that Harvey Townsend has gone back. But he hasn't. He has been Governor of the Pueblo, he is now Principal, and he is one of that Rio Grande Indian Tea Party that is out to get a square deal from their agent and to break up an illegal traffic in liquor that is ruining many of their young men. Professional reformers they are — I pity the short-sighted official who thinks he is dealing with a lot of ignorant and pliable children when he goes against the 52 Pueblos who signed that letter to Secretary Fisher. Everywhere the Indians are getting back their voice and speaking out for their rights like men and women who mean to get them. We know the meaning of worry these days at Yuma, at Sacaton, at Santa Fe. And Government officials know it, too. Our Commissioner of Indian Affairs is honest and efficient. Neither his tongue nor his mind is crooked. And he is having the devil's own time to keep pace with the Indian recruits to this pro- fession of reforming. I don't think he'll ever catch up; I hope not! Let us develop this profession of reformer, let us develop self-96 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE confidence — make ourselves effective, sane and scientific! Cut out mere complaining, and develop the lawyer's habit of investigation and clear arrangement of facts. Last Spring at Carlisle I heard a Siceni Nori, a graduate of the school of 1894, make a talk to the graduating class of 1911. Mr. Nori is, I believe, a Pueblo Indian, and is the chief accountant at Carlisle. I should like to quote all of that good speech to you, changing it here and there to make it fit you. The gist of one para- graph I cannot resist using. It is one in which Mr. Nori ran over a list of Carlisle graduates who are making good in business and the professions: " If it shall be the pleasure of any one here to take a trip to Cuba and it becomes necessary to have the assistance of a dentist, just look up Dr. James E. Johnson, who is enjoying an annual income of $4,000; and his wife, also a graduate, employed by the govern- ment at a salary of $1,200 per annum; or, if you do not desire to take the water trip, take the Pennsylvania Limited and go to Tiffin, Ohio, where you will find Dr. Caleb Sickles, another graduate and a prominent dentist, who is equally successful; then, if you have time, go to Oneida, Wisconsin, where you will find Dr. Powlas, a prominent physician, who has the largest practice at his home at De Pere, Wisconsin, and is a real leader and missionary among his people. Then proceed to Minnesota and find Carlisle graduates practicing law and other professions in the persons of Thomas Mani, Edward Rogers and Dr. Oscar Davis. Or, if you took the southern way, you would find along the Santa Fe route, Carlisle graduates and ex-students working in the various railroad shops and taking care of sections of that great railroad system, preferred above all other kinds of skilled labor, for they have shown their worth as good workmen. Or, you might meet Chas. A. Dagenett, a graduate, who is National Supervisor of Indian Employment, who has by experience gained here at this school under the Outing System, been able by untiring effort to systematize and to build up what is really the Carlisle Outing System for the entire Indian Service, and for 300,000 Indians, It is not often possible to find a man who can be equally successful in everything that he attempts,SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 97 but we have in a Carlise graduate, Charles A. Bender, the world- famous pitcher of the Philadelphia Athletics, a crack marksman ancf a jeweler by trade, and a past master in all." Every month I get the " Southern Workman/' the school maga- zine published at Hampton. Over in the back is a department of " Indian Notes/' which is inspiring reading. Here are printed bits of news of Indian graduates who are busy in the world. In one paragraph you will read that Elizabeth Bender is taking a nurse's training at the Hohnemann Hospital in Philadelphia; in another, that Eli Beardsley has gone to take a job as engineer at the Grand River School in South Dakota; in a third, that Jacob Morgan, a Navajo, is working as a missionary among his people in New Mex- ico. Month after month the list of those who graduate into the professions lengthens. And not only at Carlisle and Hampton are the professions recruiting Indian members, but Haskell and Sher- man Institute, the high schools of Oklahoma and scattered colleges from Dartmouth to the University of Washington are turning them out. With me at Stanford University was an Indian named Jeffe, from Washington. Not only was he a good football player, but one of the best students we had in our law department. Another law student who came to Stanford in my time was a Cherokee named Hughes. He had previously spent two years in Dartmouth. Last fall at Muskogee I had a good talk with a young Cherokee named Bushyhead, son of a former chief of my tribe. He had just come back from six months in Mexico, where he went to learn Spanish. He was fitting himself for an appointment in the Diplomatic Ser- vice. How many here know Little Bison, that thin-faced, keen- eyed Sioux, who wants to colonize Nicaragua with American In- dians? There's the type of professional man who stirs the imagina- tion. Professionally, Little Bison is a veterinary surgeon — very modestly, he told me once that there isn't a better horse doctor in the country — but he has also been a showman, an artist's model, a companion for an invalid man who wanted to see the ends of the earth before he died. Now he is a colonizer, a practical diplomat, having business with the Estradas and the Zelayas of Central Amer- ica. He comes to my mind, a figure of adventure, out of a tropical98 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE upland where the bright-plumed parrots screech. He brings the bright feathers and stories about curing a mule for a native of Nicaragua, about the fine land waiting for development, and about the power 5,000 Indian men would be down there when a revolution broke out. To my mind, Little Bison is a type of promise. He lives by his wits. And that is my definition of a professional man. Not to follow worn trails, but to be ready to break out new ones — let this be the aim of those of us who enter the professions — whatever they be. The professions are wide open to us. We have the strength and the steadiness of will to make good in them. Prejudice agtainst the Indian simply does not exist among the people who can make or mar a career. Always the climb for the top will be going on. The Indian who fits himself for the company of those at the top will go up. He will go as swiftly and as surely as his white brother. There is no easy, short road up — either for the Indian or for the white man. Conscientious, thorough training, character, haid work — the formula for success in the professions is simple. I believe the average Indian would rather work his brain than his hands. That has been accounted our misfortune. I think it will be our salvation. There is room for us in the professions, there is a wide market for brains. (Applause.) Chairman CLOUD : The second paper oni this subject is by Dr. O. DeForest Davis, a graduate of a dental college in Minne- apolis, where he is successfully practicing his profession. Mr. Davi9 could not be with us to-day, so he has sent bis paper. THE INDIAN IN THE PROFESSIONS* By O. DeF. Davis. The question of how best to care for and educate the Indian has perplexed our government ever since it began, and even now no satisfactory solution has been accomplished. Hundreds of thou- sands of dollars have been spent annually for schools, teachers and the maintaining of numerous reservations throughout the country,SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 99 and still the problem remains unsolved, which proves that the sys- tem followed has not been an unqualified success. This, however, does not indicate that the Indian has not the qualities which when properly trained and governed make for well-balanced, successful men. The problem which confronts us is one which must be met and solved by the Indian himself. It is a fundamental law of life that in order to gain the fullest possible development each man must ultimately work out his own salvation. The Indian can do this ajnd will as soon as the way has been indicated and he has been relieved of the retarding influences of the present system. There are perhaps numerous avenues through which we can ac- complish this much desired end. But as a professional man I am partial to the idea that professionalism affords the best field for the Indian. I believe he has natural qualities which especially fit him for professional work. His usually perfect physique and quiet, firm manner give him a personality which is invaluable to pro- fessional men. He is mechanical and has wonderful ability to work with his hands. This would add greatly to his success as a surgeon or dentist. There is one quality, however, which will handicap him and must be overcome. He demands a perfectly free life, dislikes close application to minute details and has an inherent disregard for the systematic use of time and energy. One of the principal reasons why I advocate professional work for the Indian is because the education itself will take him away from the old retarding relations and influences. It will create in his mind new standards and higher ideals,— and we know that a man with no standards, no ideals to attain to is like a ship without a rudder — he never arrives. When we have accomplished this I consider that half the battle is won because I believe that if the Indian is given a definite work with high standards of perfection to attain to and a normal, healthy atmosphere in which to work, he will show results as good if not better than his white brother. There are a large number of Indians throughout the country who are making good as professional men and I believe their success may be directly attributed to the fact that they have severed their100 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE more intimate tribal relations and gone out where ability is recog- nized and paid for,— gone out into an atmosphere where every man is doing some definite work and making good at it. An atmosphere of this kind is a great incentive as compared with the reservation where almost nobody does anything definite and few make good. This is an age of specialization and I know it would simplify our problem if we were to advocate a professional education for as many enterprising young Indians as possible. This would take them away from everything that is not progressive and put them where success is the rule rather than the exception. It would relieve them of that dead, stagnant thought which pervades every Indian reser- vation and makes progress of any kind extremely difficult if not impossible. Undoubtedly the organization of this Association is the greatest progressive step that has ever been taken in the history of the Indian problem. The beautiful part of it is the fact that we are not being called to conference by our white brothers. We are taking this step ourselves. We are better fitted than anyone else to do the work before us. It is our problem and we understand it best. Our salvation lies with the young Indian, and I know that as soon as he is relieved of the dead, retrogressive thought which has been instilled in him through generations of subjection to a pauperizing system, and his mind filled with thoughts of ambition, activity, power and success, then will the Indian go to work and dem- onstrate forever and beyond all possible question the utter falsity of the old saying,—" The only good Indian is a dead one." (Applause.) The CHAIRMAN: The next on the programme is "General Discussion." In any great race, the home stretch is always the time of the greatest exertion, and when a man wants to win the race that is when he exerts himself to the utmost. Now this is the last twenty minutes of discussion, and this is the last opportunity you will have to express yourselves on the subject of " The Indian in the Professions." Dr. EASTMAN: The professional life of the North American Indian is somewhat of a question for me. The recent Indian Com-MRS. EMMA D. GOULETTE (nee JOHNSON) (Pottawatomi)SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS IOI missioner was a man who seemed to have no use for an Indian, and did not care to see him succeed1, but he is only one man, and when you can point to an Indian who has achieved some distinction, it makes an impression among the public. It gains for us the sym- pathy and assistance of those who are willing to work for the Indian. I was much gratified when, in Mr. Oskison's paper, the speaker pointed out some of the successes of our tribesmen, both men and women, and it is a source of pride to me and a pleasure, and the knowledge of those successes will be an inspiration to us in the future. We hiave a great many Indians to-day in every walk of life and the fact that they are succeeding is an inspiration to us all in our efforts to better the conditions of the Indian race. Miss EMMA D. JOHNSON: I cannot resist saying a few words upon this subject. I am no public speaker, except when I feel that I have to speak. I have been through the country quite a little in my work as teacher. I have seen our Indians in the pro- fessions and I have seen them with their higher education, and I have seen them in the camp, and I regret very much that the majority of the people of the Caucasian race of the United States do not recognize the ability of the Indian to compete with the white race. So often we have found that the Indian who has received a training in the higher education, who has gone back and worked very energetically, has received very little recognition, and very little encouragement. I wish very much, and I do not speak for myself only, but also for the boys and girls whom I have had the pleasure of teaching, that the members, especially the Active members of this Conference, would do their utmost in trying to acquaint the world — I don't mean the United States, I mean the world — with the abilities of the Indian. As has been stated several times to-day, the Indian is capable. All he needs is favorable circumstances and favorable opportunities to go ahead and become one with the people of the United States, in every walk of life. So many people seem to think that the Indian is like an animal; that he is incapable of thinking — that is the common impression among the majority of the people; of course, not in the more highly educated class, the broad-minded class, but it is that class which we must work against, and if we can102 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE only encourage our boys and girls not to be afraid of taking up the professions it will help to break down this prejudice. We are not all agriculturists,— we have our lands allotted to us, it is true, but we are not all agriculturists. I hope that the members of this Con- ference will herald it far and wide, not Qnly by words but by exam- ple, and encourage our younger generation not to be afraid to step out and say: " I am not an agriculturist; I am a carpenter; I am a blacksmith; I am a physician," and go ahead and not be afraid after we get out to assert ourselves, not so much in speaking, as in acting and proving to the world that we are capable. (Applause.) Mr. SLOAN: I feel impelled to say something because of the confession by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs that more than nine thousand Indian children are without school facilities. Wherever the white man has settled the wild country in any num- ber, where they are always scattered over a great territory, immedi- ately the schoolhouse is in evidence, and if the white people in their organization in the states and territories can provide schools for their children under such circumstances, it seems to me that the mighty government of the United States could provide all the schools that are necessary for the education of the Indian children. (Applause.) I am impressed with the Indian school system, because whatever I have attained, and whatever success I may attain, has for its foundation the education that I got at Hampton, and I owe every- thing to that institution because I have been to no other academic school since. (Applause.) It strikes me that every race in its development has mile-stones marking its history, and those mile-stones are its great men who have established some history-making epoch in their career, and it strikes me that the Indiam school system, as we have enjoyed it, is one of those great epoch making periods that has enabled us to come together with the knowledge and information so that we might with proper organization at this time do some great good, and as I think back, how wonderfully and fortunately it came about. General Pratt was placed in charge of the captured Apaches at St. Augustine, Florida. Among those captives there were a num-SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 103 ber of Apache children. He wrote to the government officials that those children were guilty of no crime, and that under the American system of education, all children within its borders were entitled to some opportunity of education, and after this appeal to the govern- ment or its officials, he appealed to the country at large, and the appeal was answered by another great man, Samuel Chapman Arm- strong, of Hampton, the man who opened the school and the oppor- tunity for the Indians to gain an education. The Apaches, in charge r,f General Pratt, commenced their studies at Hampton, and then this great man joined hands and made an appeal to the country at large, and out of that appeal grew Carlisle, and out of Carlisle has grown the school system extending to the reservation, and most of us here have enjoyed some benefits from it. I have in mind this one state- ment, as it came to me most forcibly at the time of the death of General Armstrong. The Review of Reviews published his pic- ture, and the only thing that I could find that was thought necessary to say about him was these words: " Samuel Chapman Armstrong died " such a date. There are very few men of this character in the United States and among the greatest was General Armstrong. (Applause.) The other gentleman is still living and his work is still going on, and I would like for every Indian who has enjoyed the benefits and advantages of that great work that was started by those great men to appreciate their labors and the value of their work. These men have made it possible for you to enjoy the bene- fits of it, so I feel that it is necessary for us in this Association to see that these nine thousand Indian children who have no school facilities, shall obtain them within a reasonable time. (Applause.) If the Department of Indian Affairs through an executive officer cannot make a sufficient appeal to Congress to furnish those facil- ities, we should appeal to the people at large of this country, and see that they in the magnitude of their might and the heartiness of their spirit, and earnestness of their purpose see that those chil- dren get what they are entitled to. In passing over that portion of the great Sioux reservation, which is a vast territory, for miles and miles without house or trail, you will come upon little schoolhouses about which are Indian camps,104 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE and those Indians have camped there that their children might have the advantages of an education. It is an improper system, and some way should be devised of meeting these conditions. Chairman CLOUD : We want this Conference to contribute something very definite to the general public, and I think it is well worth while to think very seriously on what the last speaker has said in this regard, and before the Conference is over, something ought to be done definitely and presented to the public along those lines. Our time of discussion is over, and if you will allow me a few seconds, I would like to say a word or two in regard to the Indian in the professions. I like Mr. Oskison's definition of the Indian in the professions, " The man who lives by his wits," and that would include not only the Indians who have gone into the professions such as teaching, the law, medicine and1 all that, but all Indian men and women who have gone out upon their own initiative and worked out their own salvation, perhaps in some line of business. Another speaker has spoken of the fact that the best way to overcome the prejudice that the white man has against us, is to go out in the professions and compete with them, and I want to speak upon this fact. I have noticed among the Indian people a certain prejudice against the Indian who is trying to strike out for himself. Here is an Indian who has started a store, and the Indian passing in the street says, "This man is trying to set himself above me, and I will, go and trade with the white man next door," and the white man next door may be the greatest grafter in town, and that Indian who is starting out in business may have had a vision. He may have undestood the meaning of the times, and he may have said to himself, " As for me, I will strike out and do this thing," and his fellow Indian passes by on the street to the white man the next door. You may be the very ones when you go home, to start in some such thing as that, and they may pass you by in that way, and I would suggest that we do everthing in our power to overcome this prejudice among our own people, in order to further these new ideas that we have been discussing this afternoon, and in regard to the discussion we have had this afternoon, I wish that we would have had freer dis-SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 105 cussion. I think we have had a great afternoon in the limited discussion that we have had. Miss CORNELIUS: I am not a product of any of the Indian schools, for the reason that my father got the idea that the greatest advantage in the shortest possible time was not derived from an Indian school, but from the public school, which is the white man's greatest institution in this country. I appreciate, however, the splen- did work that has been done in the Indian schools. They are all right as far as they go, but they do not go far enough. We have had demonstrations enough, I am sure, to establish the fact that there is nothing the matter with the Indian's ability, and that it is only a matter of being given an opportunity. There are certain things that I have thought of for some time. There is no fund for getting into the higher professions. The appropriation for Indian education does not set aside any fund for college education. I came up against this as long ais six years ago when I suggested the appropriation of a fund for college education for some very able Indians that I knew, and the Indian Office re- plied that the appropriation was confined to the Indian schools. Now, instead of going and putting about two millions in brick and mortar to establish Indian schools, it seems to me that two millions to any tribe ought to educate all the men who can enter the pro- fessions, and this country is already fortified in splendid and mag- nificent institutions, and it seems to me a waste of money to go on building Indian schools at a very great expense, when with that sum of money we might install some such system as the Porto Rican system. I am not very well fortified with statistics with regard to that, but I believe something like five hundred dollars is set aside for the Porto Rican for his public school education, and that this money is sent to him in installments to pay for his board and living and tuition, and then he goes and looks for the best information, according to the line or the prof ession that he choses. I do believe that this government owes it to us, and1 I think that the American people want to give it to us, want to administer the justice to us that is due us,— when they see the need, and that we are capable of doing these things — and I think it is due us. We must insist on106 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE that, I think, but I do not see why some such system as this Porto Rican system could not be installed by the Indian Office, and' let each man, each boy or girl, who is fitted for it, begin with the academy or the school that fits for the university, get this money like any other boy or girl in the country who comes from home and whose parents are well able to take care of him. This would be the suggestion that I would leave, that we arrive at some definite conclusion with regard to that future system of the Indian school. The present system, as it is, is not going to last. Just as soon as citizenship comes in it will leave, and we are going to be forced into something that is not definite in the minds of anyone, and I do think we have got to take a definite attitude with regard to the future greater evils that will arisen The present reservation schools will be taken away, and then we do not know just where we are going to be received. With regard to the boarding school as an institu- tion, I have heard educators say that they did not believe in board- ing schools in its moral effect upon the child — that it hurts them too much, and there is not enough individualism developed in it. Mr. DAGENETT: The speaker is mistaken in designating it as the " Porto Rican system." It is Philippine, and it is under the Insular Bureau of the War Department. An allowance of five hun- dred dollars per year was made for each of about 200 students that were sent over here. The money was not given to the student, but his expenses were paid by the man in charge of what is known as the " Philippine American Student Movement," through the Insular Bureau. We miust regard the Indian school as an evil, but at a certain staige of the game it is a necessary evil. Nobody, I believe, seeks to defend the government Indian school as the ideal educational proposition for the Indian. But there is another thing. Nearly all the agricultural colleges of the United States are in a way aided by the general government, and nearly every one of the institutions are open to any young Indian, man or woman, of the United States free of tuition, if they want to accept it. The only thing is their expenses. That move- ment is being worked up. I have had correspondence with prac-SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 107 tically every institution in the United States in which it would be desirable to place the advanced Indian young mam and woman, or rather the finished product from Indian schools as they stand to-day. Only from a few have I received adverse comments on the proposi- tion. One was from an institution in the midst of Indian schools, Albuquerque, New Mexico, and another was from the Superintend- ent of Public Instruction of the State of Idaho. My plan is along the lines suggested by Miss Cornelius, namely: that we take those whom it would be desirable to give advanced education and let them be provided for in the public institutions of the country, the educa- tional institutions of the country in which the children of the people of the country are educated. Let the Indians be educated in these, rather than in special Indian institutions. The cost would be a little bit more,— perhaps fifty or sixty per cent, more, but I believe the good would be five hundred per cent. more. It is feasible to have practically the same plan for our advanced Indians, young men and women, as is now in operation in behalf of the Philippine students in the United States. Correspondence with the Insular Bureau of the War Department at Washington will give you all the informa- tion about this Philippine student movement you may desire. Mr. CHASE: I for one belong to that class of Indians that wants to stand upon their own feet, upon their own exertions. I don't wish this country to know that they are maintaining me by any gifts or donations. (Applause.) The government is educating our youth in the fundamental principles upon which this govern- ment stands. They owe it to us as a moral obligation, not as a legal obligation. It is the good sense of the Christian people of this country that has elevated — as myi friend' Sloan mentioned awhile ago — men like General Armstrong and men like General Pratt, to influence congressional legislation to bring about appropriations for such institutions as Hampton and Carlisle. (Applause.) It was not because we had a right to demand it. The education that our youngsters are getting, as I understand it, is fully upon the standard of any of the public schools, and as thorough, as I understand it. There is one failing in these institutions. The Indian should be taught the history of this country more, and of his own race, and108 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE of his rights as a citizen — civil government is what he needs in his education more than anything else.. This idea that the government is going to give my children money to elevate him into a profession is not the thing that we want. If a man becomes capable of it, instinct will tell him what he is good for and he will strive for it. When I left my home in Nebraska to attend the Liaw School down here in Cincinnati, I went there with a purpose. Before I went there I made a resolution that I was going there for hard work, and I did. In two years' time, although not coming out with flying colors, I maintained my own with my class. It has been flouted throughout the country that our people are being maintained by the government, have been fed and clothed by the government all these hundreds of years. I say it is a falsehood and a libel upon our people. What we hctve is from our own efforts and from the lands which the government has solemnly pledged to our people. I do not know of any time in the history of the Omaha tribe, or any of our northern tribes, where the government has spent one cent. All the money that we have had with reference to our living came from our efforts and from money justly belonging to us under contractile obligations with the government, and I say it is a false notion with the white people that we are being fed and clothed by the government of the United States, that we live by the sufferance of the government. I saiy if I can't live in this country with a consciousness that I am living here because God placed me here, and that I am living under a government that is obliged to protect my life, my liberty and prosperity, the* same as any other citizen, I want to leave that country. (Applause.) Here are things to be considered in the education of the Indian. You may teach him everything, but you must also understand his duties as a citizen, and of his rights as a citizen, and be able to maintain them. Dr. EASTMAN: In connection with the words of the last speaker, that there has been a great deal of injustice done to our tribes, I wish to say that really no prejudice has existed as far as the American Indian is concerned. I have found that it lies within us to show the paleface what we can do. There: is a reward, andSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 109 a fair one, too, when you reach it, but it lies within you, wherever you live, to make a success in your profession. You must be hon- orable and moral, and in this way move up and be of service to your neighbor, for it is only the ignorant, the worldly of the worst kind that turn up their noses at our people. There is no prejudice against our people in the professions. Where I live, in Massachu- setts, I always like to have the white people in my home. There are always a lot of college girls and college boys there all the time/ My house is full of college boys. I happen to have five daughters growing up. (Laughter.) Much that we have thought is prejudice against the Indian is not prejudice, but is simply misunderstanding. Now you know they used to talk about the Indian war-whoop. We have no war-whoop, it is simply the Indian cheer. What I want to impress upon your mind is that there is no real prejudice against any honest Indian on the part of the white people. We can easily take our place in society. I have visited from tepee to White House, and I have met many people, some of whom I get so sick that I wish that I did1 not know them. Miss CORNELIUS: I wish to be understood definitely with regard to a certain position I took awhile ago, when I suggested that the Indian have some funds on which he shall base his higher education. I appreciate the depth and the fineness of public spirit behind Mr. Chase's remarks, that we don't want to be taken care of. That is not the idea. We do not want to install that as a sys- tem, but there are certain other factors we have to take into con- sideration. For one thing,- Mr. CHASE: I rise to a point of order. If we are going to discuss these things longer, let us have some time set. Chairman CLOUD: Our time for discussing the paper of Mr. Oskison has expired. Mr. SLOAN: I move you that if it is the sense of this Associa- tion that where there are Indian children without common school facilities under the direction and control of the Interior Department, that we request the Indian Office and the Congress of the Unitediio PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE States that provision be made to furnish those children with proper school facilities. Motion seconded and unanimously carried. Upon motion duly made and seconded, the Conference adjourned to meet the next morning, October 14, 1911, at the same place. The Public Entertainment. At 8.15 p. m. of the same day a musical programme was carried out at Memorial Hall, where a large and appreciative audience had gathered to greet those taking part. Except for the services rendered by Miss Nora McFarland and quartette of boys from the United States Indian School, Carlisle, Pa., all who took part in the programme were members of the Society, and contributed freely and gratuitously of their talent. PROGRAMME. Part I. Pantomime Song —" My Wandering Boy "............. Miss Nora McFarland, Nez Perce. Words by Quartette: James Mumblehead, Cherokee. John Goslin, Chippewa. Clement Hill, Tuscarora. Abe Clonahaski,Cherokee. Song —Chippewa Melodies...................Carlisle Quartette. (a) " Manitou Listens to Me." (b) " Why Should I Be Jealous." Cornet Solo —"The Palms"..........M. D. Arcbiquette, Oneida. Miss Emma D. Johnson, Pottawatomie, Accompanist. Song —Steal Away ....................Carlisle Quartette. Essay — " Chippewa Customs "......Michael V. Wolfe, Chippewa. Solo_" Once ".................Miss Sadie Wall, Pottawatomie. Miss Johnson, Pottawatomie, Accompanist.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS in Part II. Song — Omaha Melody.......................Carlisle Quartette. (a) " Song of the Leaders."—Ojibwa. (b) " Canoeist's Love Song." Cornet Solo — "Bridal Chorus"......M. D. Archiquette, Oneida. Baritone Solo — Bedowin Love Song................... Rev. Frank H. Wright, Choctaw. Solo — Indian Lover's Song.......Miss Sadie Wall, Pottawatomie. Pantomime Song — " Nearer My God To Thee "........ Miss Nora McFarland, Nez Perce, Carlisle Quartette. The most unique feature of this programme was the demonstration in the Indian sign language of familiar hymns by Miss McFarland. As the quartette sang the words of each hymn Miss McFarland, in the sign language, kept up with the singers. The evening's entertainment was a very interesting and pleasing one, considering the fact that the performers — members of the Society attending the Conference — were in no wise professional musicians. For further description, see page 171. Session of Saturday a. m., October 14, 1911. The Conference was called to order by the Chairman, Mr. Dage- nett, who read a communication from the President of the Columbus Chamber of Commerce, inviting the Association to hold its meeting at Columbus during the celebration of the centennial of the found- ing of the permanent capital at Columbus, commencing August 27 and continuing until September 12, 1912. Mr. SLOAN: I move that we do not accept the invitation at this time, but leave it for further consideration at some future time. Motion was seconded and carried.112 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Chairman DAGENETT: In view of the facts that the regular Chairman* of this session, Mr. Dennison Wheelock, is not present, I will appoint Dr. Caleb Sickles to preside over this meeting this fore- noon. Dr. Sickles takes the chair. Chairman Sickles invited Rev. William Holmes to open the meet- ing with prayer. Chairman SICKLES: The first speaker on the programme is Mr. Thomas IL. Sloan, who will address us on the " Reservation System — Administ ration." ADDRESS OF THOMAS L. SLOAN ON"RESERVATION SYSTEM — ADMINISTRATION." Mr. Chairman and Members of the Conference: This Confer- ence of the American Indiajn is called to provide for his general welfare, and to establish a better and broader understanding of his condition, necessities, and his rights as an American citizen and as a man. Anything that may enlighten this body on all the questions that involve the rights of the Indian, his betterment, his property interests, his condition, or education, and above all that which will develop his manliness and independence should be openly, freely and honestly discussed. Wrongs or improprieties that affect the Indian or his property should be discussed here, and the only limit set for that discussion should be the truth. Since the advent of civilized government on this continent, the Indian has been recognized as the subject of the dominant power claiming and holding the territory. While treaties were made with all the solemnity of international law, still the Indian tribes were within the power and jurisdiction of the dominant government. They were not separate nations within the judgment of civilized governments who among themselves made treaties which they re- spected. The civilized nations made treaties with the Indians as a matter of expediency. Early in the administration of Indian affairs it became evident that the Indian could not rely upon the statements of the Indian Service officials, the laws made by Congress for their protection, norSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 113 the treaties made between them and the United States of America. The rights to hunt, to fish, to make homes and to occupy the lands of their fathers were never held sacred to the Indian, although declared to be by law or treaty. Public policy and political policy joined in the administration to deprive him of his rights. In Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado an official first named to protect his water interests, without which the lands were of no value, recommended that he hold his rights: under the State and territorial laws. This was in States where the Indian's rights are least considered, and where it is the practice to steal water and take advantage by the use of it. This protecting Indian official wanted those rights turned over to the State. He even1 admits under oath that where the courts have decreed that a certain quantity of water on specifically described lands, he, as an official of the Indian Office, ignored the decrees of the court, the previously acquired water rights and the established rule of law as announced by the court for the protection of Indian lands and water. When asked what he had done to recover the stolen water rights for the Indians, he said he did not think it right to take it away from the whites who had used it so long. He was paid to protect and look after the interests of the Indian, but he had no desire to recover that which belonged to him. The long years of use by the Indian had! no effect upon him as to their established water rights. But when it had been stolen from them by the whites and used for a shorter time it was wrong to take it from them and give it back to the Indian to whom it belonged. That is an example of administration protection, and a disgrace to the service and to the nation, against which complaint should be made. In the administration of the lands of deceased allottees by the Indian Office, the decision of the Secretary of the Interior is at- tempted to be made final and conclusive. In one case, after the heirs had establish their rights in a bearing after due notice, and the Secretary of the Interior had approved and promulgated the order and given notice to the heirs of their respective rights, the Secretary of the Interior, upon the request of a senator, without notice, hearing, evidence, or any legal papers being filed, has takenii4 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE up the case and reversed his previous decision. The heirs were afterwards informed that they had no rights in these lands. This is a confiscation of property rights. It is the most extreme disregard of property rights and interests that can be found in modern times. A " star-chamber " proceeding, without notice of hearing, depriving the individual Indian of property rights and interests without due process of law. That is some of the recent administration protec- tion. The most solemn safeguards of vested property rights are overriden by the very power that was designed to protect the Indian's rights. It has gone on to such an extent that in one case the Supreme Court of the United States has said that the action of the Interior Department was so arbitrary that it had no place in American juris- diction; and in that particular case they restored the rights of which the Indian had been deprived by decree of court and made the state- ment that there was no place even in the Executive Dpartment of the Government for such arbitrary action and disregard of law. Still the very thing which the Supreme Court of the United States found to be arbitrary and unreasonable is the very thing that has been done and will continue to be done until it is limited by whole- some and just laws. Think of a politician who had never had any court experience acting as a judge in controversies involving land titles by descent worth millions of dollars, and who, without experience, attempted to adjudicate thirty or forty cases in a single day. He not only acted as judge, but also as attorney for both sides. The record shows that this acting judge in some cases heard all of the evidence upon one side and then gave notice to the other side. One of the funda- mental rights in the courts of law concerning controversies over property is to be faced with witnesses, and to examine and cross- examine them upon the testimony which they offer. But in these cases the acting judge saw fit to hear all the testimony upon one side before giving notice of hearing to the other side. Appeals from this acting judge go to the superior who appointed him. The idea of the Indian Office seems to be that they are better fitted to handle all the affairs of the Indian than the Indian him-SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 115 self, or the other departments of a republican form of government. The Indian Office says, " The Indian does not know what is best for him in the administration of these inheritances." So a politician is selected to act as judge for them, and this politician acting as judge violates every rule of law for the protection of property, and the Indian is subjected to rules and regulations aod arbitrary action that violates constitutional limitations. The evil seems to be that the Indian Bureau administers as if the Indian was selected for their benefit, to exploit them, and not they that were created for the benefit of the Indian. This spirit prevails generally in the Indian service. It seems that there is no step forward in the Indian service. With less lands now to administer, with fewer ignorant Indians, they still have more employees, greater expenditures', and a greater per capita cost to maintain their work than before. More rules and regulations, and when an Indian learns to comply with one set of rules and regulations they are changed so that he is compelled to begin again. Although the President of the United States appointed a so-called competency commission to determine the competency of the Omaha Indians, and they made their report, which was approved, and the Indians declared competent, still the superintendent in charge may, without hearing or notice of any kind, declare a citizen Indian of the tribe to be incompetent. Should the superintendent in charge report favorably upon any such man, a> clerk or some one else in the Indian Office may overrule it, and the communications which are submitted to the Indian Office are treated as confidential and there- fore not open to an investigation by the party affected. It is in effect a star chamber proceeding that determines that a citizen of the United States is an incompetent person. Their status as men and women determined in such a manner is not by law, but by autocratic and arbitrary power. The practice of subjecting a man or woman to investigation without notice, heading or trial, and declaring him or her incompetent upon a secret order, is one that cannot be defended under any circumstances. Such men and women, being citizens of the United States and of the States wherein they live,n6 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE are entitled to all the rights, privileges and immunities of citizens of the several States, but they are treated as arbitrarily as the sub- jects of the Czar of Russia. Men, through political accident, and most likely through business failure preceding it, are placed in posi- tions of arbitrary power. They evolve new theories, discover latent powers, old and new wrongs, and remedies for all. They are fol- lowed by a horde of their appointees who know nothing more than themselves about the people and their conditions. About the time they have discovered their success or failure some new politician is found or some " land duck " requires a berth. Then begins some new idea. The local communities about the reservation always desire some- thing to be done with it. The representatives of the business people of the town adjoining a reservation desire that the land be obtained in fee, sold or otherwise disposed of, not for the welfare of the Indian, but to enable them to develop business or trade. Business men, politicians, farmers, railroad men, grafters and sharks in the vicinity of a reservation wish it open, not for the benefit of the Indian, but for a larger opportunity for each in his own line. Such influences reach the executive branches of the government as well as Congress more readily than the Indian, and when something is to be done with the Indian land or property under the general guise of some good for him, he is the last person to know about it, through some action taken that affects his property or his income. Among the Omaha Indians, admittedly among the most advanced, there was a new scheme about leasing their allotments. It was discussed at Washington by the commissioner and the delegates from the towns around the reservation, and with the superintendent in charge and the leading citizens about the reservation, but not with the Indian. The last to know anything about it were the Indians. Yet it was their property; they were affected most by any change as to their income or manner in which they should get it, but they were the last to learn anything about it and were not consulted as to what might be best in reference to their land. Those people who were consulted were those who had interests adverse to the Indian. They, because of their position or political influence or the two combined*THOMAS L. SLOAN (Omaha)SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 117 were the first who were given consideration, and those who were most affected, whose rights were being considered, were the last to be notified, not consulted, simply notified. Sales of Indian land have been made under the directions of agency officials. Usually the Indians, before the sale, obtained more money in a year from rentals than they can get from the proceeds of the sale of the land in the same length of time while held in the agency office. In some cases after the sale of such lands and its dissipation in a few years, the Indian is without any income at all, and he would have had an income through rents during that same period an amount equal to the sum which was paid to him from the principal. The money is held at the agency for the sale of land, which furnishes some means of living, and the only means of living for many Indians. On the Rosebud Reservation it costs1 the Indian as much in time and money and effort to collect the small sums of money at the agency as it would to have gone out and earned it. Others with sums of money at the agency have suffered in want. One old man past seventy years of age, living near Bonesteel, on what was for- merly a part of the Rosebud Sioux Reservation, was told in a letter from the office at Washington, in answer to his, application to be paid some money, that if he would go to the agency he would receive from his four thousand dollars there on deposit such amount of money as would be necessary to provide for his needs. It was one hundred aind fifty miles across the country to the agency. To go around by railroad was more than three hundred miles, and the stage route twenty-five miles more. He had neither the means nor the physical ability to make the trip, and this particular old man died in absolute want, except such means as were provided him by the neighbors. An inspector of the Indian service says there are many such cases. An old Indian woman past eighty years of age, in order to get from the agency a check of ten dollars, money due her derived from the stale of her land, had to travel seven or eight miles each month to get the check. During the severest kind of cold weather, about the 1st of January, it was necessary for her grandson to carry herii8 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE to the wagon and cover her carefully and drive a distance of seven or eight miles and return, and the hardship upon that old lady was more thlan it was worth to get it. Had she paid her grandson a reasonable compensation for taking care of her there, he should have had five or six dollars left out of the ten dollars that was paid her. The ration system is no worse than the present money system, which holds the Indian a bondsman and makes him eke out the same kind of living or existence that he had when he received the rations. It takes from him every incentive for development, and holds him in such subjection that his independence and manliness are destroyed. He gets no experience, and he is subservient at all times through the control of this money to the agency official and to the reservation system. It is only a continuation of the old system, which was admitted by the Indian Office, by the Indians, and those who have any general knowledge of those affairs as a thing greatly detrimental to the Indian. He gets no experience; he has no incentive to develop. In some instances where Indians have lived from the reservation, and because of the law which provided that when an Indian separ- ates himself from his tribe and adopts habits of civilized life he is a citizen of the community in which he lives. Stich an Indian may hold an allotment upon the reservation. The Indian Office seems desirous of bringing such Indian into bondage through the control and supervision of his lands. Such men have made application for fee patents and they have been refused. Some of them, where they have a section of land, have been offered a fee patent for one hun- dred and sixty; and a hundred and sixty acres of land, as sold upon the Pine Ridge Reservation at this time, would just about yield the expenses of going up there and selling it and coming back. I think that about five dollars an acre is all that could be demanded for the ordinary lands upon the Pine Ridge Reservation at this time. One young man who was doing business in the city of Chicago made several trips to Washington to obtain a fee patent for his land. Although he had been in the general grocery business in that city and had deposited in the bank the sum of a thousand dollars and a little more, still he is not considered competent by the Indian Office,SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 119 through their star-chamber proceedings, so that he might handle the proceeds of three hundred and twenty acres of land that might bring at most ten dollars an acre in the Sioux country. It seems that in order for such a man to be free it would be absolutely neces- sary for him to abandon his rights upon the reservation and live separate and apart and independent of the Indian nations and every- thing that he might have. To those who only know reservation life among their own people and nothing of what can be done away from it, a breaking away cannot well be expected. The long years of reservation life and the dominant official control has been exercised to such length that the reservation Indian does not know the limit when it is reached. An allotment has no property value to the Indian citizen living in Chicago or other places away from the Indian country unless he can turn it to some advantage, and that is denied him absolutely by the present policy of the Indian Office. He may have been unfitted for life in the open, no means of making use of the land because of want of teams and agricultural implements and a house in which to live, and the necessities of life to live upon until he could break up his land and raise a crop. The country in the immediate vicinity of Pine Ridge was a num- ber of years ago broken up by hordes of homesteaders, who, when the dry season came on, abandoned the country, left their land, their houses, their barns, their fences, and were glad to be able to get back to some of the more prosperous parts of the country with their teams and families, and the country was absolutely abandoned, and still it is expected of an Indian that he shall make a living and thrive under the same conditions and upon the same kind of land where the educated and prepared white man failed. No man in Washington, neither the head nor the subordinate, can know the conditions of the man -or his opportunities or his capabilities. The Indians are individuals and are not bound di- rectly or controlled by any set of rules and regulations which may be promulgated by the Secretary of the Interior or the Commis- sioner of Indian Affairs. The man on the ground, the agency offi- cial, is overwhelmed by official duties and does not know, perhaps,120 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE does not care, about the individual; be has more than he can do, and he is expected to do that which only the individual can do for himself. He is not given a chance to get away from supervision long enough to assert his individuality, and it may be that he will only develop manliness after he has been defrauded out of his lands or has frittered it away. At any rate the present system is not making men and women. There is a lack of development of the man in dealing with the Indians. A missionary on the Rosebud Reservation said that the Sioux Indian was simply eking out an existence upon the inherited lands which had come to him and which he had sold, and that he was not as manly, as independent, or as strong as he was some fifteen years ago when he made efforts on his own behalf. How many inspectors of the Indian service have sustained the Indian in an investigation against an Indian Office official? Most of them have sought to sustain the official against any Indian who complained. Complaint was made about a certain Indian official and an inspector was sent to the agency. Witnesses were examined and the acts complained were practically admitted. It appeared that he had held an open honest meeting, and here for once was an opportunity where the truth could be reached and something decisively done where a wrong had been committed. The officials were transferred. It was thought that everything had been done honestly and fairly. The report disclosed " that the thing com- plained of had been done, but the inspector said the officials employed at that agency were faithful to the government, and it was wrong to condemn or to punish them. That to do*so would be detrimental to the service and would encourage complaints. These are some of the things of which the Indian should com- plain, and in which the administration should be improved. When you think of inspectors, y6u expect them to investigate for the benefit of the Indian, but it has happened in many instances their inspection has been to the detriment of the Indian. This covers sufficiently the matters of administration, and the law applying to it, so that the subject is open for discussion, tn the administration of Indian affairs there should be such reformsSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 121 as will give the Indian in hearings and investigations those rights which belong to him under the Constitution of the United States. That his property may be protected by regular court proceedings, and that when the court decrees certain rights, no Indian official be permitted to disregard the decree of the court and the law pro- tecting the Indian, and not to violate his own oath of office to the detriment of the Indian. We should ask for reforms, and the repeal of this Act of Congress, which provides that the investiga- tions of the Secretary of the Interior as to the heirs of deceased allottees shall be final and binding as in violation of the express limitations of the Constitution of the United States, which provides that the government of the United States shall be vested in the three departments, legislative, executive and judicial. The Supreme Court of the United States has said that the action of an executive officer can never be a judicial power. Even the layman can see that when a controversy arises between two parties in reference to the vesting of property rights by descent, that controversy is one for judicial determination as to the claims of the parties under the law. We are having these lands administered in a manner that is a shame and a disgrace to any civilized nation, let alone these United States, and we ought to ask for such reform as will guar- antee to us the protection of the laws and the privileges with refer- ence to our property rights, which are given to every citizen, and for that matter, to non-citizens who hold property within the United States. DISCUSSION ON RESERVATION ADMINISTRATION. Chairman SICKLES : We have heard this very excellent paper by Mr. Sloan, and we are now ready for the discussion of the same. Mr. CHASE: It is my opinion that the evils which we are now feeling are the result of the violation of common principles of justice, our treaties, and even the Constitution of the United States. The duty of investigating property rights belongs to the judicial department and not the executive, and the law which gives the Secretary of the Interior the right to decide questions with refer-122 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE enee to ownership of land is unconstitutional and void, and we are not bound by the decisions of the Secretary of the Interior if he violates our rights and decides adversely to our vested rights. We have had innumerable cases of that kind on our reservation, and I do not lay the injustice that we have suffered to any wanton de- sire to injure us, but to the fact that the executive department is the weakest power in construing or interpreting laws. I believe that the whole system of procedure should be changed and that the rights that are guaranteed to every man under the Constitution* should be given the Indian. Miss CORNELIUS : If anybody goes away from this meeting passive in regard to his attitude toward our position in this country on this point, I miss my guess on it. I - declare, when we hear things from the experiences at first hand, of men like we have heard this morning, and have felt in our own lives the conditions that they have portrayed, and then to stand by and not know where we stand in regard to this organization, I declare we won't do it. If there is going to be any indefinite attitude with regard to what we are going to do when we have the problem in our hands, we never in the wide world expect to win as Indians, as individuals or as a mass, and it seems to me that the great thing this morning that we should take away is that definition of our position in the future. Miss JOHNSON: I have not heard all of this discussion this morning, I am sorry to say, but I am interested in this question of helping the Indian at home. I think I know that our schools do not teach the amount of civil government they should to cover the practical needs, or the common laws, and the practical laws that would apply to them in their business transactions right on their reservations. I have come from a reservation recently, where I have been investigating, as much as time would permit, perhaps two months, and I find not only those who have been in 'our schools and sent out as graduates,-—not only those older Indians, but even those who hiave been in my class and sent out as graduates—know nothing whatever about the manner in which they should go about it toREV. SHERMAN COOLIDGE (Arapahoe)SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 123 transact their business and hold out for their own rights. What sort of citizens does the government of the United States expect us to be when our education in the most vital lines is neglected? In fact, I must say right here, my experience of twelve, years has been that it is not the Indian pupil that has been first, but it is the beautiful grounds andi the beautiful buildings and the feather in the cap for the officials, the money has gone for that. The child has come secondary. I know it. I have had to take money out of my own pocket, and I have done it ever since I have been teaching, to buy material for my work in order to give my pupils the necssary object lessons, and I have worked hard to get my money, too. I have been three years in getting Caesars to work wit1", and a few things like that in the class room. The desired ends now seem to be the posing, the beautiful grounds and training the chil- dren to go before the public and show off, and behave like monkeys, I suppose. (Laughter.) I don't know what else. I have thought of that question ever since I have been teaching, and I recommend strongly against calling certain ones graduates of schools when I knew they were not fitted to go out and be called graduates and have the people look upon them and feel that they were incompetent, any more than infants would be, because they had just gotten away from their Indian ideas and had not learned enough English to grasp the meaning of the words in the class room to know what they really had been trying to — what they teachers had been trying to teach them. They were left in a worse condition than they were before, and I cannot emphasize too strongly the necessity of us taking action, among the first things that we do, and submit to those who may be of assistance to us, that the study of civil government be introduced in our schools, substituting and adding in that study, any practical thing that might come up. It is the same way in our commercial departments. Our pupils need most dreadfully the information necessary to deposit money, to write out a check and to draw their own money, and know what a mortgage is when a person comes -to them. There are hundreds of people on the reservation to-day or around the reservations where lands had been opened to the public, who124 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE are continually coming and saying, " I want to sell you a piano; don't you want this, and don't you want that?" "Just give me a mortgage on your land." There is not one in fifty, I am most sure, who knows what a mortgage means, and knows under what obligations he is placing himself when he gives a mortgage, for the simple reason that he is not up on the tactics and the sly move- ments of the other race, who will take the greater part or even ,the whole of their lands. These are extremely vital questions for our Indians to be in- formed upon, and not only those who have not been in school recently, but those who are turned out as graduates to-day. They need modern business training. They need more strict infor- mation about the laws, and in order to get that they need interested employes in our schools who will teach them. There are a great many people who are interested, but not to that extent, who are employed in our schools. There are a great many who deserve a great deal of credit, but there are more who are there for the money, and the government is paying their salaries, and the work for the Indian is secondary. I tam speaking for the reservations I have had the pleasure of living upon, Mr. SLOAN: Was that a great pleasure? Miss JOHNSON: It was a pleasure because I was a teacher and I could investigate and see their needs and such things. Mr. SLOAN: I wanted to know. Miss JOHNSON: I live upon a reservation now. At my own home it is not a pleasure, but where I can investigate when I am not under the thumb of the government it is. Take my own self. I know nothing whatever about my rights as a citizen. I have been given a letter which reads as follows: " You may control your own land, providing you do thus and so," and what brought that letter to me, I am free to state, was this: The renting of my farm was in the hands of our Agent. I went to him, as is the custom with our Indians, and I saw to the making out of the papers. An agreement was made between myself andSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 125 this renter, calling for the clearing of a certain number of acres of land. I allowed him his pay for this work out of the cash rent, consequently taking a very small sum of cash rent, and I received a very small sum. He had been paid in advance for doing this work. When the time came for him to do it, he did not do the work, I wrote to the Agent about it, and he said he would see about it. I have the letters downstairs. I wrote him again, and nothing was done. The man had not fulfilled his contract. The United States government was behind; this Agent. I wrote three or four letters. Finally I said that the work must be done in some way, and I hoped it would not be necessary for me to refer it to the Department of the Interior. A reply came back that when it would be done and how it would be done was for this man to say* I had nothing to say about it, and consequently that agreement was never lived up to. There was no push back* of it, even after all my letters to him. Then a letter came granting me the right to rent, and the time is just about up for this renter, and he, from all indications, is trying to get out of getting this piece of ground under cultivation. My people do not know when they are citizens or when they are not. They send word to the Department, u We wish this and so " The Department sends word back, " You are citizens of the United States. We can't do that for you " They send in for something else. The word comes back, " Why you are wards of the govern- ment, we cannot grant you that" Where are we now? That is the condition of the Pottawatomies to-day. I have just come from them and I have known of their recent transactions, and I know that they cannot get a hearing, either as citizens or as wards of the government, and it is time that this Association should be adopting some resolutions on questions upon which we are to act, and not only to adopt them but act. There are a great many other things I could relate upon this very same subject, but I think I have said enough. Mr. SLOAN: May I have a few minutes to relate a personal experience ?126 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Under the rules and regulations of the Secretary of the Interior, leases for Indian allotments were required to be made upon certain forms furnished by the Indian Office. These leases were signed in the first instance by the Indian, and then by the white lessee, gen- erally, or the lessee at any rate, then approved! and irecommended by the Indian Agent, and then forwarded to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, who recommended it, or recommended against it, iand then approved by the Secretary of the Interior, and when approved by the Secretary of the Interior it constitutes a valid contract. You can enforce it. On our reservation we are required to make leases in that way. Through influence, however, the office is partial to different persons who are lessees, and in one instance, an old Indian, now past seventy years of! age, only two or three years ago went to the office and he desired to make a lease to a certain person that he thought was a friend of his. The Indian Agent refused to permit it. He had another man he wanted to have this land leased to. As it would result in delay to object, the Indian acquiesced to the demands of the Agent. Now it happened that this particular man was financially embar- rassed, and a poor farmer, so that he had neither money to pay his rent in the first instance, nor the ability as a farmer to get it out of the land. The usual custom was to pay all rents on Wednes- day of each week, so after the first day of March, when the lease had been made by this Indian to this man, he came to the office for his rent, and he was there every Wednesday, and sometimes went to the office between times to inquire about it. During the meantime, however, he had sold a piece of land which had been allotted to a child, and the child had died, making him the sole heir. He made the sale and went home, and he had considerable money on deposit, and out of that deposit he was authorized to purchase a team. He continued to drive to the Agency, a distance of eight miles, every Wednesday, and once or twice between, to learn when he was going to get his rent, and that went on about a year and a half. And then he asked the Agent one day if he could have authority to buy another team out of his money that was on deposit from the sale of the child^s land. The Agent said,SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 127 " What have you done with that team you bought about a year ago?" He said, "That team I bought out of the heir-ship land, I killed that running her to get my rent, and I have not got it yet." (Laughter.) Rev. COOLIDGE: I hope you will pardon me for perhaps repeating what has already been said, but it seems to me that this is something of an experience meeting, and these things are related to show how generally all these evils exist in different localities and among different tribes. Of course, one of the first things we have had to complain about is treaty making. You all know what treaty making is; that the treaties we have made are easily broken. Now, one of the speakers spoke, who was evidently experienced as a teacher, about things she had to buy out of her own pocket to use in her class room. I am a missionary, and I have been everything — that means every- thing—to be a missionary. It means judge, farmer, butcher, preacher, teacher, policeman, doctor, and everything else. Now I first went on my reservation as a missionary. They had a very poor excuse of a man for Agency physician. How he man- aged to be practicing medicine, I do not know, but he was the doctor at the Agency, and employed by the government and paid by the government. The Indians did not want to go to him for medicine. I tried to coax them to go, and I tried to induce them to go and get their medicine from this doctor, but they would not. Some of them were suffering. About that time one of our friends sent me some money, and among the uses that I made of that money was to buy patent medicine, and I went over the directions on the bottles carefully, and had them interpreted, and I told my patient emphatically that he must take that medicine just so, and it would cure him, and he would never have that disease any more. (Laughter.) I have never lost a case. (Laughter.) Now, I was teaching in a school room at that time, and I taught the young how to shoot, and they shot. Another teacher took my place when I resigned, and she said, " Why they seem to know everything." (Laughter.) Now I go on lecture128 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE tours to Iowa and to Missouri, and I was once asked to speak before the Teachers' Institute in one of the Missouri towns, and they said to the audience, " The Rev. Sherman Coolidge is with us to-day and he will tell us about his people. He is a Cherokee." (Laughter.) They had been talking about Freebel, and his system, and so on. I told them I had never heard of the man before. I said, " The text books that we are using in the boarding schools of Wyoming are those that were used when I was a child myself, about twenty-five or thirty years ago, and one of my text books was Ray's Primer." No wonder the teacher had to put her hands in her pocket and get something that she could use to advantage. I have had to do that, and my salary has ranged anywhere from $100 a year to $800 a year. It was $200 for a long time, and $250 for a long time, and that where prices were high and1 where things were scarce and hard to buy even with money, if you had it. Now, the other subject I wish to speak of is in regard to the changing of regulations. I applied for a patent to my land, to my in- herited lands, and to my own allotment. " Oh, yes," they said; " yes, why you ought to be able to get it in three months, a man of your education and ability and character, and of everything that is good.'' (Laughter.) I wrote out my application, and I waited with the patience of an Indian, and I am waiting yet. (Laughter.) I may have to go to the other lands, and wait there. (Laughter.) About ten months afterwards, there comes a letter which said that " Since you have spoken about that application, the regulations have been changed. Enclosed you will find the new forms to fill in and make out." (Laughter.) The regulations had changed by that time, and so had my mind. (Laughter.) Now I said to myself, " If I get a patent to my land, they will tax that land, and I will have to pay it," and I said, " Keep your patent as long as you want to. I am not going to create taxes that I have to pay. Let my land lie up there. It cannot decrease in value. It must increase. Keep your patent, and I will not have to pay taxes that I would have to pay if I became a citizen of the United States. I do not know whether I am a citizen of the United States or not. I am forty-eight years old,— nearly half a century. I have been an educated, civilizedSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 129 man since I was twenty-one, and before. Put that in your pipe of peace and smoke it." (Applause.) And the wills that you and I ought to be allowed to make, to give our property to our families, our wives and our children, and rela- tives, or to our friends, or charitable institutions, we cannot make them without obtaining the approval of the Department. I have tried that for another Indian. I wrote out a will, just as good as any that Mr. Sloan or some other legal light can make (laughter), and the Judge said, " That is all right; you ought to have no trouble about that," but I never heard anything about it. We submitted it to the Agent, and I do not know whether the Agent has pigeonholed it, or whether it was lost between the Agency and the Dead Letter Office. I do not know what has become of it. We have not heard from it. I think that is one. thing we ought to take up, that we ought to be able to make wills, the same as any other people in the United States. I have taken up more than my share of time, but I have a whole lot of things that I still want to tell you, but I won't tell them now. Miss JOHNSON: I wish to make one statement here while we are speaking of wills. Since my father's death I have tried to get a patent to his lands. Now he was a white man, and a brother of the Chief of Police of Washington City, who recently died, James Johnson. We have been citizens and civilized always. My brother- in-law, who had charge of the administration, has been a citizen. He has been an architect and builder. He has supervised the con- struction of various Indian schools, and he is now Superintendent of the Water-Works in the city of Shawnee, Wyoming. He is recog- nized as a competent mechanic. He was appointed administrator, and we have not been able to get a satisfactory reply from Wash- ington, only that under certain rules and regulations, the patents could be granted. Mr. HORTON ELM: I am certainly glad that we as a people are reaching a point where we can discuss the different phases of the question with a great deal of patience and generosity. We are reaching a point where we can differ on 'these questions and yet at the same time shake each other's hands with genuine friendship.130 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Civilization is certainly reaching a higher stage among us when we can do that. It is certainly very interesting to me to hear some of our great speakers. There has been a great deal said that I did not know anything about, and I have been deeply impressed by it. I have learned a great deal, and when I go home I will surely talk about it; I will surely tell my friends out there the progress that the Indian is really making; I am proud of them. I am proud of every Indian who makes a step in advance, because I can talk about it; I can talk to the white people and say to them, "Here is an Indian who is doing something; who is showing that he can become civilized, that he can become master of the different lines of work that he undertakes; he is just like other people." When I was coming away I was talking to one of my friends and I told him that I was coming to Columbus. He asked me, " What are you going there for?" I said, "We are going down there to talk about the Indian problem."' He said, " What do you want to go out there for; the problem is right here on the reservation." But I think the farther we get from the reservation the better impression we will make with the public. We want the sympathy, we want the active encouragement of the strong forces in American life; we want the friendship of the white people ; we want them to help us ; we want to cooperate with them ; we do not want to set up a par- tition; we want to break down this partition which stands between the civilized and the uncivilized, and I believe that this is the enterr ing wedge in the solution of our problem. The individual relation between the white man and the red man will settle righteously, I believe, our Indian race problem. Now, there has been a great deal said about what the Indian used to be. To a certain extent I believe we put too much emphasis on our former condition. (Applause.) We should think less of our former growth and more of our present, and of the things that hinder and retard that growth. I want to see the Twentieth Century Indian. I do not believe in setting up a Chinese Wall of tribalism. I want the interests of both races won. I believe the success of our race depends upon our making our interests one with those of the white man. (Applause.)SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 131 Mr. PARKER: Among the Six Nations of New York, of which by Wood I am a representative, the State and Federal Governments permit the operation of the ancient tribal laws bearing on the in- heritance and transmission of property. These provisions in some cases are at direct variance with the interests of any people, Indian or white, of modern times. Under the ancient tribal law the wife has no claim to her husband's property, nor have the children any claim to their father's property. Under the present system this cus- tom has generally lost its force where both husband and wife are tribally the same. Where the wife, however, is non-tribal she and her children, if they live on the husband and father's reservation, are denied a claim on his real estate. It sometimes requires a severe contest for such widows and orphans 'to establish a right to occupy their home property. This is a result of the ancient matriarchal system in which the woman was the head of the household and the landowner. In civilized society such a system cannot be permitted to exist without creating abuses. The family in civilized society is the social unit, and where the family as constituted is not regarded as a unit there is at once social degradation. In modern society the clan family cannot supplant the actual family without causing in- justice and misery. In ancient times when the man was the hunter, the warrior, the defender of the home territory, the clan law was a wise provision. The woman was the head of the household and conserved the home. In modern society the man is the head, the provider of food and shelter, and just because he lives on a reserva- tion his wife and children should not be denied the right to the home they have established together. This, as I have said, is fre- quently done where the wife is non-tribal,— and the State of New York sanctions such a custom. In Canada, among the Six Nations, the case is different. The husband is required to care for his wife and family. The wife, /whether she be white or red, tribal or non-tribal, becomes auto- matically adopted into the husband's nation and has all his rights. In special cases where the old clan law must operate for the trans- mission of a hereditary Chieftainship or official title, of course, the case is different. Property rights, however, pass from the father132 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE to the wife and her children, eliminating the abuses we find in New York. I should like to recommend to New York Indian authorities a consideration of the Canadian system, which guarantees justice. And thereupon it wais moved that the chair appoint a Committee of New York Indians to take up the matters pertaining specifically to the New York Indians and to report their conclusions to the general body; motion seconded and unanimously carried. At this point Chairman Dagenett, of the Temporary Executive Committee, announced that the Columbus Chamber of Commerce had volunteered to raise the funds necessary to defray the ex- penses incurred in securing Memorial Hall for certain of the meet- ings of the Association. (Applause.) Mr. PARKER: I move that we as a token of our appreciation extend a rising vote of thanks to the Chamber of Commerce, the University Faculty and all others who have rendered such great assistance in arranging for this conference. Motion seconded and carried. Thereupon, upon motion duly made, seconded and carried, the conference was adjourned until two o'clock P. M., Saturday, Oc- tober 14th, 1911. PUBLIC SESSION OF SATURDAY AFTERNOON. Chairman DAGENETT: We are fortunate in having with us this afternoon Mr. Thomas L. Sloan, who will act as chairman of this afternoon meeting. Invocation by Rev. Griffis. Chairman SLOAN: Friends, it is our pleasure this afternoon to have with us here a gentleman who has acted as attorney in be- half of the Indians and white people. Men of ability in business, lawyers of the town and community, have called upon him for legal advice, and he has discharged his duty in a manner becomingSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 133 to a professional man in the practice of the law. He has been County Judge of the County of Thurston, State of Nebraska, and has occupied the position of County Attorney, and in all his ex- perience he has been directly in contact with the legal matters per- taining to Indian affairs. He is to present to you a paper upon the law and the Indian of the United States. I take pleasure in presenting the Honorable Hiram Chase, of the Omaha tribe of Indians, who is a resident, office holder and citizen of Thurston County, Nebraska. THE LAW AND THE AMERICAN INDIAN IN THE UNITED STATES. Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen: Before we proceed it is appropriate that something be said con- cerning this conference, and of its objects and purposes. Compli- ments are due to the managers of this meeting, who have made it possible for the Indians of this country to meet hereafter in repre- sentative conventions, so that we may associate together for the communication of thoughts, the formation of opinions, and have in view the honor of the country, and plans to promote a better civilization and good citizenship among our people. And I wish to express a sentiment which I presume is felt by all who have at heart the honor of this country, and the welfare of our race, and it is this: that had conventions of this kind been organized in the past, and conducted with intelligence, and with the purposes which this meeting has in view, I venture to say that the reproaches upon the government for the abuses resulting from its dealings with our people would be few, and the condition of our race better than it now is; as it is I think the condition of our people is verging on a crisis — a crisis in which the worth of an or- ganization of this sort will be measured by its ability to disseminate the truth concerning the condition of our people, and teach them their rights and duties, and above all to stand by them and insist that our rights are as sacred under the Constitution and the laws as those of any other class of citizens.134 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE The honor and glory of any country and the happiness of its people of every shade of color or condition — white, black, red or yellow,—rests on the faithful administration of the laws, by wise, able and honest officers. The law is " Ye shall have one ordinance, both for the stranger and for him that was born in the land," or to put this into constitutional language: " No person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law." What I wish to impress upon this meeting is, that a plan to or- ganize an association composed of our own race for the purpose of laying plans to promote the welfare and good citizenship of 300,000 people, the major part of whom are inexperienced and are ignorant of the ways and laws of the white man, is a laudable move on our part, but I wish to apprize you that according to my poor ideas the task before us is an arduous.' one. Good citizenship of any of us of Indian blood, whether he be a polished gentleman, garbed in the latest fashions, gracing a seat in the halls of Congress, or one of our common Indians who has not as yet outgrown his swaddling clothes, taking care of his wife and babies on his allotment, rests on the consciousness, that his life, his liberty and his property is under the protection of the laws of an honest government. There is no middle ground to take in the measures you have in contemplation. It is conceded on all sides that the Indian of this country has not received justice — that he is the dupe of ill-advised plans and policies — and what is to be regretted is that he is as conscious of this as the best educated among us, and how do you expect to make good citizens of such a people. Upon the Indian Question, I belong to that class which believes that the reproaches upon the government for the abuses in Indian Affairs, the retarded progress in civilization and the unhappy pros- pects of our people is due to Indian policies, founded on false doc- trines, and in the disregard of our treaties, and upon laws the con- stitutionality of which are questionable. The principles of law which have been unheeded and which should govern the United States in its dealings with our people are few and simple—and these principles are as immutable as thoseSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS which govern the motions of the heavenly bodies—the planets—the sun—the moon and the stars—and these principles are reflected by the opinions and writings of eminent jurists among whom are the names of John Marshall and James Kent. These jurists lay down the following axioms of the law applicable to the Indians of this country: (1) That an Indian tribe occupying its own territory secured to it by treaties with the government is a STATE—a> distinct political society capable of managing its own affairs, and governing itself. (3 Kent, 384.) (2) That although an Indian tribe resides on its reservation within the boundaries of one of the states of the Union, the right of sovereignty over such reservations is vested in such tribe and not in the state mentioned (3 Kent, 384), and this; upon the prin- ciple of international law that, " nation® great and small are equal in respect to each other, and entitled to claim equal considera- tion for their rights, whatever may be their relative dimensions or strength, or however greatly they may differ in government, re- ligion or manners; that each nation has a right to govern itself as it may think proper, and no one nation is entitled to dictate a form of government or religion or a course of internal policy to another, and no nation is entitled to take cognizance or notice of the domestic administration of another state, or of what passes within it as between the government and its own subjects. The Spaniards violated all rules of right, when they set up a tribunal of their own to judge the Inca of Peru according to their laws. If he had broken the laiw of nations in respect to them, they would have had a right to punish him; but when they undertook to judge of his own interior administration, and to try and punish him for acts committed in the course of it, they were guilty of the grossest injustice. (1 Kent 21.) (3) It is clear that on these principles already stated, state laws can have no force upon Indians residing upon their reservations, and it is upon the same grounds that the validity of any law of Congress may be questioned, which attempts to curtail or destroy the rights of Indians secured to them by their treaties. (Supra Id & Pollard v. Hagan 3 How. 212.) Up to forty years ago the government recognized these principles of law and acted on them in its relations and dealings with the136 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Indian tribes and their reservations, and it never entered into the thoughts of any man that Congress had the authority to pass laws over the Indians or their reservations, but such a monstrous doctrine has its advocates to the extent that Congress may ignore the solemn obligations of Indian treaties, and by mere acts of legislation, even dispose of lands belonging to the Indians, at its will and pleasure, without consulting the wishes of the Indian owners. As against an Indian policy which rests on the false doctrine that Congress has uncontrollable power to legislate over Indians and their reservations created for them by the treaties, to the ex- tent of dissolving their tribunal government, and segregating tribal lands into private and alienable titles, and dubbing our people citi- zens when they are not ready for citizenship, and sending them forth without experience and knowledge of the white man's ways and laws only to be robbed and plundered and be reduced to a homeless people, in addition to what has already been said, I shall submit in opposition another set of principles: The inquiry now is, not what Congress has or will assume to do in the way of legislating over Indians and their reservations, the question is simply this: Whether or not Congress has the consti- tutional power to do these things. Suppose therefore, that I have stated the question accurately, I venture to affirm: (1) That the powers of Congress to legislate are restricted to only such subjects as are enumerated in the Constitution. (2) That there is no clause in the Constitution which gives to Congress expressly or by necessary implication the power to legis- late specially over the Indians or Indian reservations.. If there is such a clause let it be produced. The argument will then be at an end. (3) Treaties under the Constitution are declared to be supreme laws, and can only be made, and the rights under them can only be modified, changed or destroyed by new treaties, with the consent of the President and two-thirds of the Senate, and no by mere acts of legislation. (Art. 2; sec. 2 cl. U. S. Const. & Federalist.) (4) The validity or constitutionality of any law of Congress which attempts to impair or destroy the rights of Indians under their treaties may be question on the grounds stated in the pre-SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 137 ceding paragraph and also on the constitutional provision that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law. In an article by Mr. Clinton R. Flynn, of Indianapolis, Ind., en- titled "The Legal Status of the Indian of the United States," ap- pearing in the Central Law Journal of May 25, 1906, is contained the whole strength of the arguments of those who maintain that Congress has uncontrollable power to pass laws over Indians and their reservations. According to Mr. Flynn, the inherent and ancient rights of Indian tribes to continue their self-government on their reservations does not rest on the guarantees of the govern- ment pledge to them in solemn treaties; but that it rests on the sufferance of the government, and through "pity" and for the sake of "humanity." Then Mr. Flynn, like others, proceeds to argue that Congress has the same authority to legislate over Indians and their reservations as it has over the " territories belonging to the United States." But the mere reading of the constitutional provisions to which he alludes refutes his notions, which is as fol- lows : " That Congress shall make needful rules! and regulations respecting the territories belonging to the United States, the rule of law for the construction of constitutions and laws being, that nothing shall be read or injected into, not expressed1 by the law giver; and that persons and things not mentioned in them shall be excluded according to the maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius. And in opposition to the barren notions of Mr. Flynn and others have concerning the obligation of Indian treaties, I wish to quote what a western judge said of them. This judge said that Indian treaties were "as much of the supreme law as those made with foreign nations. If our government solemnly pledges its faith, by treaty with American tribes, it must ever be held as sacred and binding as if it were pledged to civilized nations. To maintain treaties—especially with the weak—is the glory of a nation, because it redounds to its honor and prosperity; to break them is to violate all law, and all faith and all honor, Carthage has come down to us138 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE through the long line of centuries as a people characterized by ' Punic faith.'" (Uhlig v. Garrison 2 N. W. 19.) Mr. Chairman, a better Indian policy of the government which would redound to its honor and glory and at the same time secure the contentment and happiness of our people cannot be devised than that reflected in the opinions and writings of John Marshall and James Kent, and I can do no more than to submit what these eminent jurists say concerning the relations existing between the United States and the Indian tribes. These men say that " the English, the French, and the Spaniards were equal competitiors for the friendship and the aid of the Indian nations. The crown of England never attempted to interfere with the national affairs of the Indians, further than to keep out the agents of foreign powers, who might seduce them into foreign alliances. The English gov- ernment purchased the alliance and dependence of the Indian nations by subsidies, and purchased their lands when they were willing to sell, at a price they were willing to take, but they never coerced a surrender of them. The English crown considered them as nations competent to maintain the relations of peace and war, and of governing themselves under her protection. The United States, who succeeded to the rights of the British crown in respect to the Indians, did the same and no more; and the protection stipu- lated to be afforded to the Indians, and claimed by them, was under- stood by all parties as only binding the Indians to the United States as dependent allies." (3 Kent 384.) And in speaking particularly of the relations of the United States to the Cherokee tribe of Indians, and as decided by Chief Justice Marshall in the case of the Cherokee nation vs The State of Georgia, Kent says: "A weak nation does not surrender its inde- pendence and its right of self-government, by associating with a stronger, and receiving its protection. This is the settled1 doctrine of the law of nations ; and the court concluded and adjudged that the Cherokee nation was a distinct community, occupying its own territory, with boundaries accurately described, in which the laws of Georgia could not rightfully have any force, and into which the citizens of Georgia had no right to enter but with the assent of theSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 139 Cherokees themselves, or in conformity with the treaties, and with the acts of Congress. The court accordingly considered the acts of Georgia which had been mentioned, to be repugnant to the Constitution, treaties and laws of the United States and conse- quently that they were, in judgment of law null and void." (3 Kent 384.) And in reference to the relations of the States of the Union to the Indian tribes, Mr. Kent referring to the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States further says: " The decision of the Supreme Court of the United States was not the promulgation of any new doctrine; for the several local (state) governments, before and since our Revolution, never regarded the Indian nations within their territorial domains, as subject, or members of the body politic, and amenable individually to their jurisdiction. They treated the Indians within their respective territories (or reservations) as free and independent tribes, governed by their own laws and usages, and under their own chiefs, and competent to act in a national character, and exercise self-government, and while residing within their own territories, owing no allegiance to the municipal laws of the whites. (3 Kent 384, 385.) Mr. Chairman, in exposing to public view these principles of law upon which a wise Indian policy should have rested, I do not expect that officers of the government and others interested in the prose- cution of a bad system, fraught with so much of the evils in Indian affairs of our times, will retire from what they deem to be their onerous duties; but I am resolved that those who have the honor of this country, and the welfare of our people at heart shall know that our people do not live by sufferance and at the bounties of the government, as is generally supposed, but that all we own is de- rived from efforts of our own, and from our lands secured to us by solemn treaties with the government; I am also resolved that per- sons anxious and interested in the welfare of our people shall know that the honor of this country and the prosperity and happiness of our people must rest upon an Indian policy founded on common principles of justice, and in harmony with our treaties and the Constitution, and not on the breach of them. (Applause.)140 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE DISCUSSION ON LEGAL CONDITIONS. Chairman SLOAN: I am sure you have all been interested in the able paper and able presentation of it by Mr. Chase* He is a student of constitutional questions, and the statements that he has made to you here are biased upon the judicial opinions of the greatest constitutional authorities and writers of American times. In connection with his article there occurred to my mind a cir- cumstance which I wish to relate: After the Omaha Indians had been citizens for a period of twenty-two years the superintendent or agent in charge of the agency requested authority from the Office of Indian affairs to establish what was termed a Court of Indian Offenses. The authority was granted, and this agent selected as members of that court persons who were entirely subservient to his will. The result wais that this court was the form through which he exercised the power of prosecutor, judge and executioner. Indians were placed under arrest; their money was* taken from them by so-called fines; they were required to work upon the streets and roadways around the agency; and a jail was built in which some of them were confined. I do not know how long that prac- tice was in existence, as I had been away for some time, but I heard of it and was called to the agency. On going there I found one of the Omaha Indians in jail under a sentence of that kind* I looked up the record — so-called record which they had, and it was full of blank pages without a record: of any form. This man who was in jail asked me to get him out. I proceeded to the city of Omaha, made application for a writ of habeas corpus to the United States Circuit Court for the District of Nebraska, and a temporary writ was allowed. It came on for hearing, and at that hearing the court said this: " The utmost research on the part of the United States District Attorney and his ^assistant, supplemented by an effort on the part of the court, has failed to find any authority of law for the establish- ment of such courts or the exercise of such a power."SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 141 A peremptory writ of habeas corpus was granted to the defend- ant, and he was released. This, under that statement of the court, was one of the most flagrant violations of constitutional protection. It was as arbitrary as anything could be; and if justice had been meted out to the man who exercised that authority he would have been in jail himself a while, and would have had to pay damages for false arrest and imprisonment. The question is now open for discussion. Mr. GRIFFIS: I wish to express my admiration for this most able paper. It contains that for which the Indian has always contended; that is>, the right to take care of his own affairs. It is what the Cherokees have contended for; the Creeks; the Seminoles; and it is what that Little band of Seminoles in Florida, down in the Everglades, are contending for to-day. Legally a»nd officially there are no Seminoles in Florida. You will remember that in 1855 they were all run down and sent to a reservation in the west; but 112 of them escaped, and the descend- ants of those 112 are now living in the Everglades, a place to which no white man can go; and they have been living there in their primitive condition since that time. They are hunters, farmers, fishermen, making a good living. They say, " We have nothing to do with the United States government. This home belongs to us according to the treaties made with our ancestors. No white man south of the Chattahoochee river has any business here. This is our home and our land, and we will never leave it. We have a right to govern ourselves." And as an illustration of what the Indian might have been if the white man had kept his hand off of him, look at this very people, I spent a month with them. They gave me the best they had. I happen to speak their language. I found how those people govern themselves, and apparently there is no force in their government; yet there is no stealing; they leave their belongings laying around without any idea of protection. They are living just about as they did when the white man first came there. One day I went out with one of the men and he left his things laying around not locked up, and I said to him, " Why do you leave these things here in the142 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE wigwam ? " " Why shouldn't I ? " he said. " Well/' I said, " they are valuable to you, and someone might steal them." He said, " Oh, no, there is no danger down here. A white man couldn't get into these Everglades." But it is a fact that there is no thievery among those Seminoles, because no white man can touch them. (Applause.) Miss JOHNSON: That is my opinion of Oklahoma) before it was settled. ! Mr. GRIFFIS : There is no fighting among them; no thievery; no dishonesty. The only man who ever sees them or has anything to do with them is an old trader who has been trading for twenty- four years ; and he says those men do exactly what they say they will. " If a man comes to me and says ' I will pay you on a cer- tain day,' he always comes on that day; er if he doesn't make any promise I know that I will get the money/' At one time Bishop Gray went down there and made a big barbecue for those Seminoles, expecting by that means to get them to come in where they could preach to them aind have them accept the Christian religion ; and by the way they hiave been there some twenty years and have not secured a single convert. The Indians said to them, " Why don't you go over and preach to those white men who have stolen our homes away from us? Go and change them; and if you can change them we will consider your religion." I wish to say in closing here that the Indian has in him what is necessary for him to govern himself, and he has always had. I have seen many chickens hatched, but I never knew the process of hatching to be facilitated by some person taking a stick to break the shell. If the chicken inside was not a dead one it always got out. Now, we Indians are not dead ones; we will get out and work out our own salvation. There is an inherent power in the Indian when he has the chance to adjust himself to modern progress, aind he will do it if he is not interfered with. Now, speaking of those Seminoles down there in Florida, down in those Everglades: I have asked them what they would do when the water in those Everglades was gone. I have said to them,SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 143 "You will have no water; you will have no hunting, no fishing; everything1 will be gone. You have no home; you have no reserva- tion. What will you do?" And the old chief has pointed and said, "See our guns; see our ammunition. That is what we will do." That simply means that the Indian knows how to die, and they will never remove them from those Everglades. (Applause.) Dr. EASTMAN: This is an unusual opportunity, for most of us are not lawyers, and we must extract from Mr. Chase by ques- tioning some points that we may have in mind that he may eluci- date to us in order that we may gain a fair understanding of our status, not as citizens (though most of us here now perhaps are), but upon that higher international law which affects all our prop- erty. I was in Providence last Saturday, and a stranger came and talked to me. " Do you know so and so? " I said, " No." " Well, there is an Indian here who lives at Pawtucket; she just went by the street here; she claims half or nearly half of Rhode Island; her claim extended along the shore nearly fifty miles." And the people somehow conceded to give her so much a month. Now, this treaty, or whatever it was, was made a hundred or a hundred and fifty years ago. And there are so many things all over this country which stand out like that. But what I want .to get at is, I think we can learn a great deal by asking Judge Chase points on that paper that we would like to understand. I think that the United States acknowledged, or at least the statutes admitted that thiey could not, in case of homicide, try an Indian who has killed another Indian on a reservation, and I think that was the rule up to somewhere about March, 1880. Chairman SLOAN: March 30, 1885. Dr. EASTMAN: I think that is the case of Spotted Tail. I would like to know whether those laws passed affecting those Indians were legal or not. Mr. CHASE: The principle of international law that I have just stated in the paper there will solve# many of the questions that have been propounded. Because the government of the United States is composed of certain of the higher intelligent people of the144 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE human race, philosophers, scientists, lawyers of great ability, and those skilled in all the arts and sciences — that fact does not war- rant them in violating the treaty rights of our people. Our treaty rights with the government of the United States, in the language of that western judge, are just as sacred a/s the treaty made with England or any of the foreign powers ; and the fact that we have been placed here by the All-Wise Creator gives us the right to enjoy this life after our own methods, our own ideas, our own religion; and that is what the officers of this government guaran- teed to our people in the early treaties, the terms of which they violated in later times. The question which has been propounded by the gentlemen is one to be reflected upon. There is a case in recent time coming from Oregon, In re Soleski (I forget the citation), which has de- cided that a crime committed on territory secured to an Indian tribe under a treaty is so far out of the jurisdiction of the State court that they cannot in any manner take cognizance of it; but they went farther in that decision than I wanted them to. I wanted them to stop there and to concede to the Indian tribe owning that land the right to punish those two Indians that had been fighting on that reservation. If the policy of the government had been to listen to the principles laid down by our eminent jurists whom I have quoted, what would have been done? They would have gone up to your Sioux people, Dr. Eastman, and they would have treated you properly; they would not have had; soldiers there to force you into signing treaties; they would have htad their Christian men and women there; they would have entered into your religion; they would have got down and reasoned with you; they would have told you that your salvation, your temporal salvation on this sphere, a part of which God ha® given to our race, lay in adapting yourself to new conditions; they would have told you that the time of the hunt and the chase and the fight for the Sioux nation was at an end ; they would have told you that you had too much land ; that this country was large enough to hold all the Indians and the white people that may come to live with us and be our friends; they would have put you on an inalienable reservation sufficient forSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 145 your needs; and you could have worked out your salvation without interference. Dr. EASTMAN: They did that twice, and broke it. Mr. CHASE: They would have drawn out your ablest men. Let me tell you, the ablest men among our people are not always the educated Indians. Some of our ablest men are those who can- not speak a word of English, but who have high intellectual powers. I know, too, many defame the name of Sitting Bull and men of his type, but if they had been understood their names would be venerated. Those *nen were fighting for just the same thing that George Washington fought for. (Applause.) They were fight- ing for their country, for their homes. The white man does not seem to realize what our people used to be. They were warriors; they were hunters; and; their mode of living, their nomadic lives, necessitated a large territory over which to roam, and they had to go to war to defend that country. Mr. Eastman, your people and ours had many, many fights, and we both fought for the same reason; we wanted to keep as much of those plains over which the buffalo roamed as we could. And when the white man came we had to defend ourselves against them; it was that that prompted those terrible massacres. A fight between white men is a battle, but when the Indian, fighting for his rights, gets the better of the paleface, it is a massacre. But I do not wish to say one word here that would alienate those of the white race whose sympathies are with us, because our interests are their interests, our religion should be their religion, and our aspirations should be the same as theirs. But I do not believe that the salvation of the Indian rests upon the division of tribal lands into separate ownership and alien- able titles, and the thrusting on him, while he is unprepared to receive them, of the rights and duties of citizenship. When our Indians become civilized and wish to quit the reservation and its mode of living, let them receive citizenship just as the Russian or the Frenchman or the Spaniard who comes over here to make this country his home. (Applause.) Such a policy of letting the Indian alone to his own efforts I think would redound to the honor and glory of the country.146 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Citizenship for the red man should be based upon his own exertions, his own ideas, and such a policy would be an incentive to him to strive for a higher standard of civilization. The Indian intellect is just as keen, just as strong, and his character just as high as many of our white brethren, and that, too, in face of the fact that they have had civilization at their back for thousands of years, and that the precepts of the lowly Nazarene have been with them for twenty centuries. (Applause.) The Constitution of the United States was framed by men of the highest ability, and its principles were laid down to protect not only the rights of its citizens, but of every person that may come to this country, whether he be poor or rich, freeman or slave, the Indian im the forest or the product of a high civilization. And the Indian's rights do not depend upon his citizenship, but upon the fact that he is a man, endowed by God with the same instincts, the same love of life, the same hopes and aspirations as any other man. If he had had his land owned by his own community, not in common, but in such a way that it could not be transferred, he would have worked out a standard of civilization equal to any white community in this country. We do not need to be citizens. In glancing through one of my scrap books at home I ran across a little article telling how, at Fort Ticonderoga, during the Ameri- can Revolution, under Colonel Ethan Allen, there were fourteen Iowa and Missouri Indians fighting against the English. Think of it! Those Indians were not from the colonies, but from the far western plains. In every war the red man has furnished his quota to fight for the republic. In the Rebellion there were many of our people enlisted on both the Union and the Confederate side; in the late Spanish War many of our young men went out to shoulder the musket for the government of the United States. We do not have to be citizens to do that. (Applause.) It is too often true that our Indians have sold their lands ; in advance of the title they have contracted debts of half or two-thirds the value of their land; when they get their title their creditors sur- round them, take them to some town, fill them full of whiskey, andSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS H7 they lose their land, without any real compensation. Those are the condition® against which I am fighting. Even in Ohio here, perhaps in the northern part of the State, up around Toledo, there were at one time communities like the Wyan- dottes and the Miamis, who were tribes of high intellectual powers, who had made treaties with the government, who had their own organizations and were self-governing, and who were prospering until some Indian " policy" came along which drove them from their homes, the homes of their fathers. Mr. GRIFFIS: They did worse than that; they killed ninety- six of them down here. Mr. CHASE: That very thing occurred, and I do not attribute it so much to the sovereign power of the United States ais I do to the officers and the ministers of the government. Dr. EASTMAN: When they push, them out of their homes and destroy their means of living, and indiscriminately murder them, don't you think that is the cause of the Indian's turning against the whites and becoming so unreasonable, seemingly unrea- sonable, and perpetrating some of the most atrocious methods of warfare? Mr. CHASE: The policy that has grown up in opposition to the one I suggested in my paper has been inaugurated by grafters and bad politicians, and men who want to make their millions off of the Indian. The government is helpless if the political ward- heelers are at its head and are to repay political obligations. Dr. EASTMAN: Mr. Chase has said some very interesting things. I do not want to look back to and live the old life and deny myself some of the things we have now, but it is true that we must know our status as far as we can. Some of us want to be citizens, but we have one hundred and sixty acres there that is hanging around our neck — wherever we go we are pulled that way — and whatever little money is coming to us from our allot- ment, and if we go to any part of the United States that Indian agent holds that up before us ; and it is simply terrible. I have; fought that same battle, and I have pushed it to the President; no148 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE less than five Presidents I have dealt with direct. In one reserva- tion, when the land was sought to be leased the Indian agent claimed it wajs with the authority of the commissioner. The Indians pro- tested, but he went through the usual performance. The Indians made him give them credentials to come to Washington to protest; that they wanted to stand by their treaty rights. But they were helpless. They went over to see the Indian agent in the usual way. He says, " Come over such a time." And they went over and he said come to-morrow. And they came back, and he says, ■" I have so much to do; I can't see you now; come to-morrow." And he kept putting them off. They were helpless. The Indian agent told some of his friends that they were the kickers; that there was no truth in their position; tha/t they were the natural kickers, the low class of Indians. The Indians kept their silence. They came before the Senate committee and I examined all the evidence. They had even a telegram, copy of the telegram, that the commis- sioner sent to Bismarck, ordering the Indian agent to make those Indians lease that laod; and tell them that if they didn't do it he would hold up their rations, or they would lease it from Washing- ton by Hitchcock, who was then Secretary of the Interior. Senator Stewart was then chairman. Those poor Indians presented their case, Jones calling them kickers and liars, although in somewhat pleaisanter words. They had the contract with them and finally handed it to the old senator. The old fellow stroked his beard, and he say5, " Commissioner, this looks bad; this looks bad." But when the question was put up to the President, the politicians hung around and nothing was accomplished. Then I said to myself, " We must try the highest obligation of all civilized nations; treaties; the highest obligation; the interna- tional law." I went up and saw Judge Springer and said, " Haven't we power to get an injunction against the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and the Secretary of the Interior to prevent their leasing our lands without our consent ? " He said, " You can." We served that from the District Court at Washington, and they were thunder- struck. They immediately asked for thirty days to run over the law, I suppose. I had in mind to push the case to the SupremeSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 149 Court as a test case. And he finally asked thirty more days, and sent Commissioner Jones back to North Dakota and did the whole thing and came back. There is nothing there. The trouble is that politics is running the whole matter, and the officials keep their mouths shut and pass it off some way, so that there is not a decision; they do not dare to allow a decision to be made on some of their acts. As I have stated in my last book, I have discovered after thirty- five years of experience in civilization that there is no Christian civilization; that Christianity and modern civilization are direct opposites; direct opposites; irreconcilable. There are people who individually are Christians; there are families who are Christians. I have no fault to find with Christianity. One of the most beauti- ful things the white man has is Christianity, when he lives up to it. But modern civilization is so materialistic and has gone on so far — why, even the ministers in this State sell their votes if the papers are to be believed! I have stated in one of my public addresses, I think it was in Harvard, before an audience of the white race, that " there will come a day when an Indian will be the Abraham Lincoln to reform your politics! You are absolutely gone. Every public man is a slave to your system. (Applause.) You have been developing a superb civilization; along those lines you have de- veloped a magnificent civilization,— material, brilliant,— but in it you have lost all spiritually." (Applause.) Here and there in the United States our people have owned lands belonging to this tribe and that tribe. The whites recognize that, as in the Rhode Island case. She had a son-in-law who was a good lawyer and happened to be on the State Supreme Court. It is recognised that we have rights, for if we did not these lawyers who hang around Washington after these Indian claims zvoidd have no business. It is not due to a lack of intelligence or education on the part of the white man, but it is the politics. Municipal and State governments are absolutely rotten with it. And I hope that this body will add their little mite to the general reform movement that is sweeping over the country along political and social lines, however small our contribution may be in that direction. (Applause.)150 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Mr. HENSLEY: There is a question that has confronted the Sioux tribe that comes under this subject. (I am sorry that I haven't the English language as perfect as some of my brothers). Among our tribe when we corner the government on any subject, the excuse they give us is, " You are ai ward of the government; therefore you are just like a minor or child, and we have got the right to dictate to you and you have to listen/' The Sioux com- mences to realize what that means. The Sioux in self-defense, in defending his country, under the leadership of Crazy Horse, Sit- ting Bull and others, had wars with the United States government. And when we did try to defend ourselves and were defeated, then they take the position- that we are minor children with no right to speak for ourselves. And the Sioux, understanding this situation, is highly insulted, because he is not used to that kind of life. He is proud and thinks that he is a man, and he never knew that he had to place himself in that position,— that of a child. The Sioux defended their country in the old times, and they are willing to defend it again to the very last. At that time the gov- ernment was in a position to wipe out every Sioux in the country, but it said, " Let us stop fighting. We think we owe you some- thing and we are going to give it to you." The Sioux said, "All right; let us see what you have got." And then the proposition is brought forth. They said, "If it suits the Sioux it is all right; we will stop here; we will stop and we will take what you have to give us." They have waited all these years for what was promised them, and they have not received it. When they asked for these various things which had! been promised them the government has said they must wait, they must take so much, they must live on a reservation until some indefinite time. The Sioux does not want that. They want to know why the negroes have no bureau at Washington, while the Indians have. Is it because the Indian has land and the negro has none, and they do not care what becomes of him ? Now, the Sioux say they never had any agreement, nor did they understand that they were to be wards of anyone, nor have they ever been conquered. But to-day they have found that that is theSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 151 way the government regards them. So they have said to me, " You go to this Congress; you will meet people of different tribes, who are far advanced in education and who are familiar with such situa- tions; try to find from our brethren if it is proper under the Con- stitution that the government assume a guardianship over us, and see if, under the law, there is any way we can remedy this and be men. I said, " I will try my best to point out just what you wish, and if the Conference understands me, find a remedy." (Applause.) Mr. DOXON: Some of the speakers have referred to the fact that whiskey is helping to deprive the Indian of his property in the west. There is a law against selling whiskey to the Indian. That does not seem to have much effect on the traffic. It seems to me that the law should be changed. The whiskey traffic is a business, and the man that sells or gives it away does it as a business. I think that there should be a law which would permit the prosecu- tion, not only of the dealer who sells it, but of the Indian who buys it as well. (Applause.) The man who does it is not only guilty of an evil in drinking the whiskey, but there is a certain wicked- ness in wasting money; he simply wastes the money by buying liquor; for it does no good, but rather harms the body and soul.1 (Applause.) Chairman SLOAN: I wish to take just time enough to points out a specific instance. One Indian Commissioner issued patents to an Indian drunkard who had a large family in the State of Kansas. This man immediately sold his land and drank up the proceeds. He is now a charge upon his friends and relatives, and his wife and children must be cared for by charity. Miss JOHNSON: We have contended with that very same thing on our reservation, and the decision has just about been made that it will be necessary to grant patents only to those who are competent, and retain control of the entire business of the drunkard so as to protect the Indian children. 1 Mr. Doxon is President of the Iroquois Temperance Society in New York State.152 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Chairman SLOAN : Mr. De Witt B. Hare will now speak to us on the subject, " Trust Funds and Their Management." Mr. Hare, in addressing the Conference, said in part : TRUST FUNDS AND THEIR MANAGEMENT. Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen of the Association: Of the many questions which have come before this body for discus- sion, one of the biggest and most important is the administration of the trust fund. The trust fund is a thing that we as Indians of the Sioux tribe are most concerned about. I wish that I had been informed earlier, so that I might have prepared myself on the sub- ject more fully and have given you more fully an understanding of it as it is understood by us in our administration of the Sioux affairs. The mere fact that it is a trust fund signifies that it belongs to us, to our race, and that the United States government has assumed the position of trustee, and therefore is morally and legally bound to use that fund to our best interests and advantages. In perform- ing that duty to our best interests and advantages the trustee must know thoroughly the natures, needs and conditions of our people in general. The government's knowledge of the needs and condi- tions of our people is necessarily derived largely from the reports of individual agents or superintendents, who are assumed to know and speak for our people. The difficulty in this respect lies in the fact that a large percentage of these agents or superintendents are men of limited knowledge of the real needs of our people and the existing conditions in their field of labor, the reservation, and there- fore cannot Very adequately convey to the government, or the de- partment, rather, the information most desired. Conditions on the Indian reservations to-day in the United States are at a standstill, or are retrograding, because the man sent by the government to be the example, guide, inspiration and teacher for the people does not understand more fully the lay-out, the general needs, the view of his work, and the real nature of the people whom he undertakes to lead, inspire and teach. Such men fail in the per-SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 153 formance of their offices and duties because of this misapprehension. If it had not been for that very fact, these mistakes that have been committed and the consequent miseries suffered by our race would have been avoided. The government, acting as a trustee for our people, really believes and is thoroughly convinced that the matter of paying out ten dol- lars per month from this trust or inherited money, belonging to our people, is a very good thing; that this ten dollars per month is.the only thing that could possibly be done to bring about the comforts, blessings, and so forth, to our people advantageously; and that this ten dollars per month payment is abundantly enough for an Indian and his family to live on. Those of us who have lived on reserva- tions among our people, and who have looked into the conditions surrounding this money question more extensively, are fully aware of the fact that the government's understanding of this matter is very limited. That is not a good thing for our people by any means. It is not a proper position, nor one that will bring about the intended comforts and blessings. It is haird enough for the Indian or any man with his family to live on that. This pittance of ten dollars a month is just sufficient to keep an Indian hungry and in need. And one thing which I wish to bring before you and before this Conference, as individuals or collectively, is to think over this mat- ter and to act as a Conference by some concerted action whereby we may influence the Congress of the United States to change this system or perhaps to be more liberal in its policy. I have had Indians come to my place, twenty-two miles from: the agency, who wanted me to go down to the agency and interpret for them, saying that they wanted certain moneys for their living; that there must be something the matter with the interpreter or the man that had stood them off, or they would not have suffered these consequences. They wanted me to go down. They took me away from my business. I had to go down there sometimes myself, drive twenty-two miles a day and then back, only to be turned away with the statement that the Indians are not good ; the Indians are bad; and therefore they cannot get the money. I have seen Indians who154 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE are good who could not get their money because they are not in with the United States government; I have seen Indians that are bad, who are really bad, who are claimed to be good by the agent or the superintendent, and therefore they get their money, for the reason that these conditions exist on our reservation, I wish to suggest to you, Mr. Chairman and ladies and gentle- men of the Conference, that we submit some proposal to the Con- gress of the United States recommending that a law be passed pro- viding that the Indian, regardless of his circumstances, shall get twenty-five dollars a month, or even fifty dollars a month, out of his or her trust fund to be used for his or her advantage. (Applause.) Miss JOHNSON: We have that trouble on our reservation at home. There were two old women who, after the failure of the crops, had no chance of getting any money from their funds; they were widows, and they had no relatives; they were allowed ten dol- lars per month for their sustenance. It was not sufficient, and they were compelled to go hungry. The younger people can hustle for themselves, but our old men and women need protection. Chairman SLOAN: Rents, proceeds from sales, money and trust funds may be paid to all Indians except the two classes; minors and incompetents. Thomas W. Mani was to have read a paper this afternoon on " The (Law and the Indian of the United States." He is not able to be present to-day. He has prepared this article with great care, and the Chairman of the Conference has asked Mr. Wolf, a Chippewa Indian, who is at present a student at Hamp- ton Institute, to read that paper. Mr, Wolf then read the paper. Chairman SLOAN: The Committee on Purpose of Organiza- tion is ready to submit its report at this time. Mr. Henry Roe Cloud then read the Platform Committee's report on the purpose of organization. Chairman SLOAN: I believe the Committee on Constitution is also ready to report.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 155 Mr. A. C. Parker then read the report of Committee on Con- stitution. And thereupon, on motion! duly made, seconded and carried, the Conference adjourned, to met Monday morning, October 16, 1911, at nine o'clock. PUBLIC SESSION AND JOINT MEETING. Saturday evening, in the University Chapel, Ohio State University. 8 o'clock p. m. The meeting was called to order by the Chairman, who intro- duced Dr. Charles A. Eastman, the Sioux writer and lecturer. Address — The North American Indian, by Dr. Chas. A. Eastman. Short addresses by associate members as follows : Matthew K. Sniffin, Miss Crawford, Mr. John W. Converse, Prof. F. A. McKenzie. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15TH. Morning. 9.00 o'clock. Indian speakers delegated to the various churches of the city. Afternoon. 3.00 o'clock. Memorial Hall, City. moral and religious problems. Addresses by the following : Rev. Frank H. Wright. Rev. William Holmes. Heniry Roe Cloud. Rev. Sherman Coolidge. Rev. P. J* Deloria. Robert H. Hall (Associate Member).156 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Evening. Indian speakers delegated to the various churches of the city. Most of the active members of the Conference spoke in the churches of the city which had been assigned to them. It is esti- mated that more than 10,000 church-going citizens of Columbus heard the Indian speakers during -Sunday morning and evening. The Christian! members of the Conference were thus given an excep- tional opportunity to present the religious side and needs of the race. ACTIVE MEMBERS BUSINESS SESSION. Monday, October 16, 1911. The members of the Conference met in the hall of the Ohio Union, October 16th; only active members being admitted. The meeting was called to order at 9.45 by the Chairman, Mr. Chas. E. Dagenett. A prayer was offered at the invitation of the Chairman by Rev. Wright, after which the following business was transacted: 1. Moved and seconded that the adoption of the statement of purpose and the By-laws be deferred until some future time. ( W right-Coolidge.) Carried. 2. Moved and seconded that the active members present of legal age ajnd standing in this Conference constitute the temporary Com- mittee of the Whole. (Eastman-Cloud.) Carried. 3. Moved and seconded that the former chairman of this com- mittee shall be chairman of the new Executive Committee. (East- man-Coolidge. Vote: ayes, 21; noes, 5.) Carried. 4. Moved and seconded that we reconsider the election of the committee. (Cloud-Eastman.) Carried. Mr. Chais. E. Dagenett was renominated and re-elected' chairman. (Vote: ayes, 19; noes, 8.) The chairman resigned, giving the following statement : " I thank you for this expression of your confidence, but I tender youSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 157 my resignation as chairman of the Executive Committee, effective at the close of this Conference." 5. Moved and seconded that the resignation of the chairman be accepted, and that we proceed to the nomination of a chairman, and that the vote be by ballot. (Cornelius-Griffis. Wright-Johnson.) Carried. 6. Moved and seconded that Thos. iL. Sloan be nominated chair- man of the Executive Committee. (Cornelius-Griffis.) 7. Moved and seconded that Rev. Sherman Coolidge be nomi- nated chairman of the Executive Committee. (Cloud-Parker.) 8. Moved and seconded that Dr. Charles A. Eastman be nomi- nated chairman of the Executive Committee. (Johnson-LaFlesche.) 9. Moved and seconded that nominations close, and that the bal- loting proceed. (Parker-Shields.) Carried. The Chaiirman appointed as tellers Miss Emma Johnson and Wal- lace Denny. Ballots were counted and tellers reported. Ballots cast: Thomas L. Sloan, 20; Rev. Sherman Coolidge, 9; Dr. Charles A. Eastman, 3. Rev. Sherman Coolidge and Dr. Eastman had previously pro- tested against their nominations and requested that their names be withdrawn, which request was denied by the chairman. Thomas L. Sloan declared chairman. Request that Dr. Eastman escort the new chairman to the plat- form at the close of the Conference. (Wright.) Granted. 10. Moved and seconded that Chas. E. Dagenett be secretary- treasurer of the committee as now constituted, and that he be au- thorized to employ an assistant secretary. (Eastman-Shields.) Carried. 11. Moved and seconded that a vote of thanks be extended to our retiring chairman. (Wright-Denny.) Carried.158 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE 12. Moved and seconded that we extend a vote of thanks to our retiring corresponding secretary. (Parker-Wright.) Carried. 13. Moved and seconded that a sub-committee of five, together with the chairman and the secretary-treasurer, be constituted1 the Executive Committee, and that each member be nominated and elected by acclamation. Carried. Rev. Sherman Coolidge, Hiram Chase, A. C. Parker, Hoary Standing Bear and Miss Laura M. Cornelius were nominated, voted upon separately and unanimously elected. 14. Moved and seconded' thait the Executive Committee be invested with the right to provide a provisional constitution for a representative convention of all Indians in the country, and that it recommend that each tribe send at least two representatives to the said convention, designating the time for such tribal elections on or before the 15th day of June. (Chase-Coolidge.) Carried. The chairman ordered a recess in order that we might accept the invitation of the Improved Order of Red Mai and the Daughters of Pocahontas to dine with them. The meeting was called to order at five o'clock by the chairman, Mr. Dagenett, who in the absence of Dr. Eastman requested Rev. Wright to escort the newly elected chairman, Mr, Sloan, to the plat- form, after which business was resumed. 15. Moved and seconded that we adopt for the name of the organization that of " The Society of American Indians." ( Parker- Chase. ) Vote unanimous. Carried. 16. Moved, seconded and carried that Washington be the head- quarters of the organization. (Cornelius-Griffis.) 17. Moved and seconded that the name of our society, be regis- tered. (Griffis-Coolidge.) Carried. 18. Moved, seconded and carried that the chairman and secre- tary of the Executive Committee, as a part of their duties, shall observe closely any proposed legislation of Congress affectingSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS m Indian affairs, and that they shall notify the Indian that may be affected thereby, to co-operate with the Indian Office of the Interior Department for the welfare of the Indians to the best of their ability. (Wright-Sloan.) (Dagenett in chair.) Discussion as to what the principles of the Association should be, by various members. The chairman requested to appoint a committee to draft a num- ber of objects and purposes as a provisional statement of purposes. The chairman appointed Miss Cornelius and Mr. Parker. Commit- tee adjourned to carry out instructions. In the meantime the following motion was made, seconded and carried : 19. That no member of this society be authorized to collect money for it, but that money offered be sent by the donors direct to the secretary-treasurer. (Griffis-Johnson.) Carried. 20. The committee reported the following: The objects of this organization shall be: 1. To promote citizenship and to obtain its rights. 2. To estab- lish a legal department to investigate Indian problems and to sug- gest remedies for abuses. 3. To exercise the right to oppose any move which may be detrimental to the race in matters educational, social and political. 4. To provide a bureau of information, includ- ing publicity and statistics and to record Indian complaints. 5. To provide through our open Conference the means for a free discus- sion by Indians on all subjects bearing on the welfare of the race* 6. To conserve and emphasize those special race characteristics of virtue which distinguish us as the American Indians. Each article was discussed and voted upon separately. Each article was adopted by the Committee of the Whole, and the report of the Platform Committee accepted by the Committee of the Whole as a provisional statement of purpose.160 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE 21. Moved and seconded that a committee of three take charge of the selection of the designs for the badge and button and colors for the society, and that the design be submitted to each of the mem- bers of the society, and that this Committee on Emblem shall be composed of Mrs. Deitz, Mr. Parker and Mr. Oskison. (Standing Bear-W right.) Carried. 22. Moved, seconded and carried that (a) the lecturers, mem- bers of this Conference, be organized to constitute a bureau of revenue, whose censorship shall be determined by the chairman (b) and whose expense shall not be a burden to the other members of the organization, ([a] Cornelius-[b]Johnson.) Professor McKenzie was invited to enter the Conference. 23. Moved and seconded that we extend a vote of thanks to Prof. McKenzie for his services in aiding the success of the organ- ization. (Chase-Johnson.) Rising vote; unanimous. Carried. 24. Moved, seconded and carried that we extend a vote of thanks to each person or organization that extended us their cour- tesies, and that the following persons and organizations be notified by letter of such action by the secretary-treasurer: President Thompson and the Ohio State University. Improved Order of Red Men and the Daughters of Pocahontas. Chamber of Commerce. Mayor of Columbus in behalf of the city. Ministerial Association. Dr. W. H. Kellog. Federation of Labor. Young Men's Christian Association. State Historical and Archeological. The Society of the Federation of Women's Club. The Press. The Ohio Union. Hotel Hartman. (Chase-Griffis.) Carried.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 161 25. Moved, seconded and carried that a committee of three be appointed to draft a vote of thanks to the various bodies who have helped to make this Conference a success. (Parker-Coolidge.) Rev. Coolidge, Mr. Griffis and Miss Cornelius were appointed by the chairman to act on this committee. 26. Resolved, That we ask Congress to provide for the appoint- ment of a commission by the President of the United States to codify Indian law and to determine the precise status of every Indian tribe, its rights, duties and obligations and the rights of individuals of Indian blood whose rights are affected by Indian law. (Parker- Standing Bear.) Adopted. 27. Moved and seconded that the next conference shall be determined by the executive committee. Carried. Moved and seconded that: The membership of this society shall consist of three classes: Active, Indian Associate and Associate. Active members and Indian Associates shall be persons of Indian blood only, and they only may vote and hold office, but Indian Asso- ciate members may vote only upon questions relating to their own tribal interests. Indian associate members shall be Indians from other parts of the Americas than the United States. Associate members of the Society shall be persons of non-Indian blood interested in Indian welfare. Dues in this Society shall be payable in advance and be two dollars per year for all classes of membership. (Motion by Miss Johnson, seconded by Rev. Coolidge.) Carried. Amended motion No. 19: That no member of this Society be authorized to collect money for it, but that money offered be sent direct by the donors to the Secretary-Treasurer, and that said Secre- tary-Treasurer be authorized to receipt for funds and to disburse same in expenses and obligations of the Society and to account to the accredited Auditing Committee of the Society for such expen- ditures. ( Dagenett-Sloan.)162 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE The following bill was drafted for presentation to Congress: A BILL.1 To create an Indian Code Commission to codify the laws relating to Indians taxed and not taxed, and to define more exactly the privileges and disabilities of the several classes of Indians in the United States. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the Presi- dent of the United States be, and he is hereby, authorized and directed to appoint a commission of three men, qualified by legal and sociological training, as well as by acquaintance with Indian affairs and needs, to study the laws governing and the circumstances affecting the various tribes, groups, and classes of Indians in the United States, and to report on or before the tenth day of Decem- ber, nineteen hundred and twelve, a codified law determining the status of the Indians of the United States in accordance with existing legislation and the future best interests of these natives. Sec. 2. That this commission shall be authorized to employ a competent secretary, at a salary of two thousand five hundred dollars a year, and such clerical help as may be necessary, and that the commissioners be reimbursed for actual expenses and be paid ten dollars for every day of actual service rendered. The whole expense shall not exceed twenty thousand dollars, which amount is hereby appropriated for such purpose out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated; and such disbursements as are made under this enactment shall be made by the Secretary of the Interior. Upon motion the Society of American Indians adjourned until such time as it might be called by the Executive Committee for the second annual convention. Onily carried motions are reported in the above report. 1 This bill was introduced by Hon. Chas. D. Carter on January 19, 1912 as House Bill 18334.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 163 After the close of the Conference the Secretary received the following comments on the work of the Society: INDIAN RIGHTS ASSOCIATION, The following minute was unanimously adopted at the meeting of the Executive Committee of the Indian Rights Association, held on November 1, 1911: "We extend a hearty greeting to the Society of American Indians, which recently met as a body for the first time, at Colum- bus, Ohio. The formation of such an organization, managed as it will be exclusively by Indians, is< an indication of the progress of the Red Man to a full recognition of his needs, and an appreciation of the fact that the time has arrived for him to have an active voice in plans for working out his own salvation. The movement is a credit to the race, and is full of promise for the future, if it be wisely directed, as we have every reason to believe from1 this meet- ing will be the case. The high personnel and good spirit manifested throughout this successful Conference also answers the question, frequently asked, 'Why does not the Indian dto something for himself ?' " M. K. SNIFFEN, Recording Secretary. THE NATIONAL INDIAN ASSOCIATION.i New York City, November 1, 1911. Ever since I read in the May number of the Indian's Friend of the very successful outcome of your long labor and unfailing hope on behalf of the creation of an organization of Indians for Indians, I have greatly wished to write you, and I hereby send you my heart- felt congratulations on the above most happy and important result of your " faith and works." 1From a letter to Prof. McKenzie.164 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE The organization effected is in the best hands and has delightfully strong moral support and the promise, I hope, of as strong financial support. Certainly all friends of Indians will wish to lend their aid to the project in hand and I hope many if not all will like to register themselves as at least Associate members. I have pleasure in accepting the invitation to become a patron and most earnestly wish for the Association the largest success. For years you and I have realized that the greatest and best help for Indians must come from themselves, in their own sense of manhood, race responsibility and race philanthropy, and nothing for the race welfare holds more promise, it seems to me, than the fact of this new organization. One Indian Association has done able and noble work for righting wrongs to the race; another and older began the popular plea for its admission into the privileges and duties of United States citizenship and began the planting of Christian missions in the then unevangelized tribes, and with in- dustrial training, and now the way is well opened for a crowning work from the Indians thmeselves. May it have immediate and best prosperity on all the broad interests outlined in your " Pro- visional Platform/' In this new day for Red Men believe me in sympathy and hope. Yours sincerely, (Signed) AMELIA S. QUINTON, Honorary President, The National Indian Association. PUBLIC NOTICE OF THE CONFERENCE. During the Conference many newspaper men were in attendance, and reports of the proceedings were published in newspapers all over the country. Later mention was made in various magazines, such as Leslie's Weekly, The Review of Reviews, the Red Man, The Southern Workman, etc. School journals and missionary magazines gave much space to the work of the Conference. Vari- ous journals of anthropology and sociology also mentioned the subject.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 165 The Red Man gave the following editorial comment: AN EPOCH-MAKING INDIAN CONVENTION. The Red Man is giving a very complete account of the recent meeting of the Society of American Indians, at Columbus, Ohio. That the meeting was epoch-making and a pronounced success is evidenced by the unanimity with which the work has been viewed by both Indians and white men. The meeting itself has absolutely dispelled any doubts which may have been present in the minds of those who were pessimistic before the Conference took place. There was a splendid spirit of good- will and harmony manifested throughout, the addresses and dis- cussions were of a high order, ami the whole American people have been impressed, as a consequence, with the fact that the Indian has reached that stage of development when he is beginning to solve his own problems. The writer does not remember a convention on Indian affairs which has won such a cordial reception, or has done as much good in forming public opinion as to the actual status of the Indian, as the little convention of progressive Indians in Columbus. Hun- dreds of editorials have appeared in the newspapers amd magazines, and not one has been noticed which is unfavorable in its comment. The American people are with the Indian in this last forward step which has been taken for the salvation of the race. The next con- vention will be larger than this one, and will have a wider and deeper influence on every Indian tribe. It would be hard to estimate the good that the Society can accomplish in the years to come by a closely knit organization which harmoniously works for the race. PRESS NOTICES. A few extracts from editorials are herewith printed, which indi- cate how the work of the Association was viewed by the American press: RALLY OF RED MEN. At Columbus, Ohio, the first annual conference of the Society of American Indians will open to-day. Possibly the concurrence of the meeting place and the daste may not be accidental. Columbus was the man who gave the name Indians to the aborigines of the Western Hemisphere, and October 12 was the day when he got his first glimpse of it. These details may have suggested the meet-t66 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE ing place and the time of the meeting to the gentlemen who arranged for this first annual gathering of the representatives of many of the tribes who were here when the great admiral started out from Spain to find India, and who thought he had encountered some of India's outlying possessions. Indians to-day are found in all the country's activities. Among them are farmers, stock raisers, fruit growers, cotton planters, bankers, miners, lawyers, physicians, journalists, artists, educators, clergymen, artisans of all sorts, and men in other occupations. Men of Indian blood are in public station throughout the country. Among them are Senators Owen of Oklahoma and Curtis of Kansas, and Representative Carter of Oklahoma. On the whole, the first Ameri- can is giving a good account of himself. Some very creditable citi- zens of the United States will be in that gathering in Columbus to-day anid for the remainder of the week.— St. Louis, Mo., Globe- Democrat, Oct. 15, 1911. A MEETING OF NOTE. The adva/noement of the American red man is attested by the holding of a conference at Columbus, O., made up entirely of edu- cated Indian delegates. These men read papers and discussed sub- jects of direct interest to their race, including educational as well as industrial topics. A public concert, made up of Indian musicians, was a feature of the meeting. A few years ago the impression pre- vailed that the Indian could not be civilized, and as for educa- tion, it was not considered worthy of attention. But a little patient effort has shown that the American Indian is not only capable of both, but possesses the essentials of good citizenship. This confer- ence of educated Indians may be looked upon as a novelty, but it shows the possibilities. If the Indians had been treated properly in the first place there would be more of them now to enjoy the benefits of civilization.— Pittsburg, Pa., Post, Oct. 14, 1911. GIVES LO HIS OPPORTUNITY. The government schools are not the only expressions of the effort to elevate the standard of the Indian. These do the prelimi- nary work, take the boys and girls from their semi-civilized surround- ings, show them the advantages of civilization, teach them useful arts, and turn them loose to act ais missionaries to their people. TheSOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS ambition thus inspired takes some of the young men through college and ultimately develops them into professional or business men. Meanwhile the Indian workers, who are both Indians and whites, are endeavoring to bring the diminishing remnant of the half-wild, half-spoiled Indians safely through the transition stage. The gath- ering at Columbus will give an opportunity for the most eminent of these workers to discuss methods and future plans.— Cleveland (Ohio) Plain Dealer, Oct, 10, 1911. A NEW TYPE OF RED MAN. A new type of the Red1 Man has developed; a type that works and reads and ponders and looks wistfully into the future for freer pathways of opporunity that his people may follow. These are the Indians that have promoted the congress to be held at Columbus, October 12-15. It is considered inevitable by some students that as a race the American Indian will eventually vanish from the stage of the world's action and will live chiefly, if not entirely, as a picturesque tradition, This, perhaps, is true, but for that very reason it is especially inter- esting that the remnant of tribes once so teeming and puissant should gather in the evening of their history and, with forward- looking thoughts, plan together for the betterment of their kind.— Journal, Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 10, 1911. A CHANGE OF POWWOWS. That the congress now in session is not a copying after the pale- face is clearly shown by the fact that powwows and councils have always been distinctive features of Indian tribal customs, while the capacity of the Indian for political organization and consideration was demonstrated many years ago in the once powerful coalition of the Five Nations, The present convention, then, will be but a repetition of past meetings, barring the decorations of feathers and war paint and including the substitution of addresses by earnest students of contemporary social problems for the whoops of the war dancers and the oracular utterances of the picturesque but otherwise worthless medicine man.— Washington (D. C.) Post, Oct. 14, 1911.PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE ASSIMILATION OF THE INDIAN. The public, which has been accustomed to think of the American Indian as a vanishing race, and to regard the diminishing' numbers on the reservations as the evidence of the necessary evil of the progress of benevolent civilization, is afforded a more pleasing view in the first convention of the Society of American Indians, which opens in Columbus, Ohio, to-day. The new Indian Association should be an effective prod of official action, and should make a new appeal for public interest in sup- port of honesty and efficiency in the Indian service. There is an opportunity for self-help.— Phila., Pa., Bulletin, Oct. 12, 1911. THE INDIANS' CHIEF CONCERN. The thing which chiefly concerns the Indians to-day and which they have protested against for years is encroachment upon the lands reserved for them by the Government, reservations extending over vast territory, enough to allow 250 acres for every man, woman and child of the Indian population. By degrees industrial ideas are instilled into the Indian mind ; farming, the cultivation of the sugar beet, digging trenches for irrigations, making sanitary pro- vision to check the scourge of tuberculosis, and there is much yet to be done. The schoolhouse is a potent factor in molding new Indian thought.— Pittsburg (Pa.) Sun, Oct. 16, I911. CAPABLE OF THINKING. The United States might as well take notice first as last that the American Indians have become capable of thinking for themselves. Full blooded red men began a conference in Columbus this week to consider matters of importance to their own race, and it is very appropriate that they began their sessions on the anniversary of the discovery of America by Christopher Columbus. The work of the federal and the sectarian schools and of such institutions as Carlisle is bearing good fruit, and so is the great foundation work of heroic Christian missionaries.— Findlay (Ohio) Republican, Oct. 16, 1911.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 169 IMPROVING THE INDIAN. The educated Indians with their education are throwing off the apathy of their race, and this is shown by the fact that this week, on the anniversary of the day that Christopher Columbus discov- ered America, a convention of Indians is to be held at Columbus, Ohio, a convention at which there will be delegates from more than one hundred Indian tribes, and which is held for the purpose Of improving the Indian race and for affording the white race a better knowledge of the red race, its claims and its needs.— Columbia, S. G, State, Oct. 8, 1911. RACE OF PROGRESSIVES. However, these progressives are on the right road. Even those who are not yet quite ready for a total renunciation of their guard- ian are headed that way, and will presently come to recognize the contradiction between a demand for freedom and a willingness to continue any of the gratuities. Confident that they can hew their own way, and recognizing in the present system only a humane form of bondage tempered1 by gradual manumission, they will in- sist upon getting rid of the whole pernicious business.— Kansas City, Mo., Star, Oct. 2, 1911. UPLIFTING THEIR RACE. The Society of American Indians was organized at Columbus, Ohio, Thursday night by pure blood representatives of all the sur- viving tribes. The purpose of the association is the uplifting and betterment of the race. Educators, clergymen, authors, playwrights, professional men of various callings, mechanics, farmers and students, all Indians, gathered there Thursday to register. There are no blanket Indians among the founders of the organization.— Bangor, Me., Commercial, Oct. 13, 1911.170 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE INDIAN HAS A CAUSE. He protests against being an outcast in his own land He feels keenly the dishonor of being discriminated against when the republic distributes its civic blessings. He simply contends for his identity, not as a political favor, but as a national right. The red man of the forest, born and bred1 to freedom, is tethered to a stake and given a crust to keep him quiet. Of course he has a cause. We palefaces would have one, too, were we in his place.— Journal, Columbus, O., Oct. 15, 1910. OF VAST IMPORTANCE. If many of the race divisions are unrepresented, a beginning has at least been made that will result in fuller congresses in years to come. Such gatherings will be of vast interest and importance in fixing the truths of history, of American history, in which the part of the aborigines of North America has not been by any means insignificant,— Brooklyn Eagle, Oct. 13, 1911. ELEVATING THEIR RACE. These representatives of the various tribes are educated men, devoted, in the most part, to the elevation of their race; and the subject that will engage their attention is the progress of the Indian and his attitude toward social and political conditions in the United States. There is a greait program of addresses, essays, music, etc., and in these the purpose of the convention will be easily defined.— Columbus (O.) State Journal, Oct. 10, 1911. PROMOTING CIVILIZATION. The advance of degeneracy of the Indian, as one wishes to view it, is seen in this gathering of men of a warlike race, in which members of tribes once hostile unite with the sole object of pro- moting civilization among their people.— Rochester Union and Advertiser, Oct. 14, 1911.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 171 The following brief description was given by Dr. McKenzie, in The Red Man: . < THE FIRST NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF INDIANS By F. A. McKenzie. The vision of the day when from the four quarters of the land there should come the representatives of the native peoples to labor for the welfare of all the tribes, a vision which has long occupied the minds and hearts of many men and women, has at last been realized. The first national conference by Indians to plan for per- manent organization and persistent and undying activity in the interests of the Indians of the United States held its sessions, as announced, from the 12th to the 16th of October, in Columbus, Ohio. When the historic six, representing five Indian tribes, met in April, no one could prophesy what the results in October might be. Far easier would failure than success be forecast. But the plans were built not on surface enthusiasm, and were not relin- quished because of known and large difficulties. The faith which removes mountains assumed charge, and it has been justified of its fruits. Out of that little gathering there has come an organization, permanent in spirit though free of constitutional forms, which num- bers an Active and Associate Membership of over 300. From all over the United States the messages of good-will and assistance have come in large numbers. The first gathering brought together more than fifty Indians, beside their friends, to consult over the needs of their own race. When it is considered what a sacrifice this represents in time and money, this showing is very significant. Many more would have come had circumstances permitted. The Associate Members from a distance shared in the same spirit of interest and altruism, otherwise such people as Mr. Foote and Miss Annie Fuller, of Boston; Mr. John W. Converse, Grand Sachem of the Improved Order of Red Men, of Massachusetts; Miss Crawford, of Oklahoma; Mr. Sniffen, of Philadelphia, and Miss Andrus, of Hampton Institute, would not have been there. The coming of the Rev. Fisher, from the Seneca Reservation, of Dr. Robert D. Hall, of the Y. M. C. A., and the Superintendent172 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE of Presbyterian Missions, Dr. Moffett, also contributed to the strength of the occasion. Bishop Brooke, of Oklahoma), greatly complimented the Conference by coming, even though he could stay only for Thursday morning. It was altogether a time made auspi- cious by the spirit of those present and by the outlook and invitation into the greater work of the future. It was not a spectacular convention. The delegates were there to wrestle with serious and difficult problems. Nevertheless there were features of attraction for those interested in the curious, unique, or artistic, and there were meetings exciting wide atten- tion and publicity. The rare exhibition of blankets and pottery, as well as the literary and industrial exhibit sent by a number of Indian schools, including Carlisle, Hampton, Haskell, and Phoenix, drew sightseers and purchasers from the opening day to the close of the Conference. The delegates began to arrive on Wednesday. Thursday morn- ing was spent in registration and in strengthening acquaintance. Thursday afternoon was given over to business. The temporary organization was extended to the close of the Conference, and committees to draft a constitution, by-laws, and platform were appointed. Mention should be made at this point that the meetings for business and for the reading of formal papers were all held in the Ohio Union, a splendid building on the Campus of the Ohio State University. The Union is the gathering place and social headquarters for the more than 3,500 students of the University. Ample quarters were provided for all the needs of the Conference. The University went further and provided luncheon for all the delegates in the " Commons " on both Friday and Saturday, Presi- dent Thompson taking occasion to dine there himself on both occasions. From five to six Thursday afternoon, representatives of the vari- ous organizations in Columbus, hosts to the Conference, tendered an informal reception to the delegates at the Hotel Hartman, the hotel headquarters. Manager Hadley, of the Hartman, is entitled to the greatest of praise for the every favor and courtesy shown to the individual delegates and to the Conference as a body.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 173 Thursday evening a large audience gathered in Memorial Hall to listen to the addresses of formal welcome by representatives of the city and to the responses by representatives of the Conference. President Thompson presided and was joined in his greetings by a representative of the Governor of Ohio, by the Mayor of the city, and by the Secretary of the Chamber of Commerce. The responses were made by Chairman Dagenett, Mr. Sloan, Mr. Parker and Miss Cornelius. The principal address of the evening was by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Hon. Robert G. Valentine. Mr. Valentine was on his way West, but stopped long enough to express his deep interest in the Conference, and his hope that it would stand for publicity and free speech. He ventured the opinion that the membership of the organization should be continuously widened until it included every critic of the government. The Association could not exert its greatest strength if it were not known to be free and untrammeled. The musical entertainment of Friday evening afforded an un- usual treat to an audience of about 600. The singing of the Car- lisle Quartette, the interpretation of two hymns in the sign language by Miss McFarland, the soprano solos by Misst Sadie Wall, the cornet solos by Mr. Archiquette, and the powerful baritone solos by Dr. Frank Wright, as well as the recital of Chippewa customs by Michael Wolf from Hampton, all combined to send a most favor- able report throughout the city, and so to attract larger numbers at the next meeting in Memorial Hall. Saturday evening the weather was not propitious. Nevertheless in spite of the rain, a good audience gathered in the University Chapel. Professor George W. Knight, of the Department of American History, presided' over this meeting. The principal ad- dress was given by Dr. Eastman, who held the close attention of his audience in his interpretation of the Indian and his philosophy. Ten-minute talks by non-Indians occupied the remainder of the evening. The speakers were Mr. Sniff en, Mr. Converse and Miss Crawford. Each brought good wishes for the new Association. Sunday was designated as Indian Sunday, and the ministers and some others were kept busy in the churches throughout the city.174 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE Never before was Columbus so thoroughly enlightened and so thoroughly interested in Indian affairs and in Indians. The Quartette and Michael Wolf turned missionaries to the unfortunate during the day and sang for the inmates of the city workhouse, and for the boys andi girls in the school for the blind. Miss Wall sang for the farmers' convention at the Chamber of Commerce, while Miss McFarland and the Quartette delighted the large congregation at the Broad Street Presbyterian Church in the evening. The real test of the interest and enthusiasm roused by the Con- ference came on Sunday afternoon. Memorial Hall seats about 3,600. Hundreds were in the hall half an hour in advance of the meeting; and when it came time for Dr. S<. S. Palmer, of the Broad Street Presbyterian Church, to open that session devoted to Moral and Religious Questions, the great hall looked practically full. There were certainly more than 2,500 people there. Counting in the meetings in the churches, more than 10,000 people in Columbus listened to Indian speakers on Indian Sunday. Dr. Robert D. Hall brought the greetings of the International Y. M. C. A. The Rev. Philip Deloria talked on the subject of divorce. The Revs. Sherman Coolidge and Henry Roe Cloud emphasized the necessity of the recognition of religion. Dr. Frank Wright preached a ser- mon which gave pointers, as Dr. Palmer remarked later, to the orthodox of other races. By the raising of thousands of hands (and also a good collection) the great audience expressed its desire to have the Conference return to Columbus next year. Columbus had met the test of hospitality. But the essential work of the Conference was not found in these large public meetings. Rather was it in the day-time discussions at the Ohio Union. As time will show, the contribution which, the Association and its members is to make to Indian welfare, will consist in things which reach down and touch the every-day life of the people. What are the things worth while? That is the question which must be answered if the Association is to lead the race from the desert into the promised land. That is why the discussion of prob-SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 175 lems stirred the delegates so much more than any public event. That is why such a topic as " The Indian in Agriculture " could start an intensity of discussion that only increased as the sessions wore on. The papers by Mr. Shields and Mr. Jack brought out even more clearly than was before known to interested people the two facts : First, that the Indian can succeed under normal con- ditions in agriculture, and, second, that the non-citizen Indian is so handicapped that he cannot finance his industry to compete with his citizen neighbor. Miss Cornelius presented her plans for an industrial community operated for and by Indians. The philosophy which lies back of this plan is one which must ultimately be applied in many communities. Mr. Doxon proved in words as he has proved in life, the possibility of the great success of the Indian as a skilled mechanic, while Mrs. Baldwin pointed out not only the historic position of woman in the home, but also conspicuous exam- ples of artistic home-making by the modern Indian woman. The high order of discussion was not lowered in the afternoon. Arthur C. Parker's " Philosophy of Indian Education " was thor- oughly modern in its matter and tone. Its advocacy of "social betterment stations " was thoroughly in harmony with Miss Cor- nelius' paper in the morning. Mrs. Deitz demonstrated anew both} the existence and value of Indian Art in our modern life. Mr. Oskison and1 Mr. Davis in spirited papers showed that the Indian is succeeding in large numbers in the professions. Far from de- crying the tendency toward the professions, Mr. Davis held that it was better to live by brain than by brawn. All of Saturday was devoted to legal and political problems. Mr. Sloan presented the principal paper in the morning on the "Administration of the Reservation," and in the afternoon the dis- cussion centered round the papers of Mr. Chase and Mr. Mani on " The {Law and the Indian of the United States/' When all these papers and the stenographic report of the warm discussions which accompanied them are published, as they will be shortly, they will do three things: First, they will demonstrate the capacity of the race to deal with serious problems; second, they will offer substantial suggestions for the solution of the problems involved; third, they will prove that speech in the Conference was free and176 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE unconstrained Criticism of the Government was frequent and sharp. Like the platform drawn up in April, these papers are likely to become historic. They will be in great demand from the day they are put on the market, and unquestionably they will have an effect on the legislation and policy of the nation. As was not unnatural, a great deal of the interest of the dele- gates was concentrated upon the subjects of the constitution and organization of the Association. Late Saturday it was suggested that a special session be called on Sunday to consider these matters while all of the delegates were present. But the suggestion was strongly and in the end practically unanimously voted down. So it remained for the secret executive sessions Monday morning and afternoon to thrash out these problems. According to the reports that were made public, a draft of a constitution was presented, but it was tabled. It was decided not to effect the final organization at this time, but to leave the whole matter open until a Constitutional Convention could be held in the summer of 1912. This decision was indicative of a high order of statesmanship in the Conference. Indian affairs have always been enveloped in an atmosphere of sus- picion. By the action taken, renewed assurance is given to every Indian in the United States that there is no secret force outside or inside that is controlling the Association. Every one who wishes may still have in 1912 an equal share in determining the organiza- tion and administration of this organization of all Indians for all Indians. The Conference resolved itself into a Committee of the Whole to carry on the business of the Association until the permanent organi- zation should be effected. They then proceeded to elect officers for this Committee, and chose Thomas L. Sloan, Chairman, and Charles E. Dagenett, Executive Secretary. Mr. Sloan in law and Mr. Dagenett in administration are men of exceptional ability and efficiency. It was further decided to open headquarters in Wash- ington, which has since been done. Mrs. LaFlesche is already in charge of the office on the fifth floor of the Metropolitan Bank Building, opposite the United States Treasury. The place for the 1912 Conference has not yet been decided.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 177 With the splendid start "thus made it rests with each individual Indian to say what the final result shall be. For the first time the door is open, and it is open wide. The impress which the Associ- ation has already made upon the country is something remarkable. If every one will pull steadily with his neighbors now, many good things will come true. Every man and every woman, every boy and every girl old enough to understand, can help. It will be neces- sary to sacrifice time and money or (sometimes) ambition, but that is the cost of everything worth while. The more valuable the greater the cost, seems to be the usual rule of the universe. There are some things that can be done right away. Before the next Conference there ought to be at least 1,000 Active Members of the American Indian Association, and at least 1,000 Associate Members. Which thousand will be made up first ? Every person interested: can help to find members. Probably letters will be the easiest means of reaching friends. Everywhere everybody is urged to notify head- quarters of his willingness to join and to help. Those who join now will be charter members and can share in the making of the first constitution. It would be a matter of serious omission to fail to say something about the luncheon tendered the Conference Monday noon, by the Improved Order of Red Men. The Conference was aided in many ways by this Order. With Congressman E. L. Taylor, Jr., as their spokesman and toastmaster, this occasion proved' most delightful. At the close of the luncheon the ladies' auxiliary of the Order pre- sented a purse containing twenty-five dollars to the Association. Before the delegates returned to their business meeting, the Red Men also gave them an automobile ride through and around the city. At the Monday luncheon and in another smaller gathering, Con- gressman Taylor pledged himself to do what he might for the good of the Indian. This is but one sign of the gains that may be made if only all the Indians will unite in harmony to consider what is needed and justly belonging to the race. Every reasonable request backed by a united race will secure prompt and serious consider- ation by Congress and the country, and generally will meet with a favorable response.178 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE ACTIVE MEMBERS PRESENT AT FIRST CONFERENCE OF THE SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS. Mrs. Kate H. Calvert.... 1412 Laidlaw avenue, Bond Hill Sta., Cincinnati, O. Chas. E. Dagenett....... Denver, Colo. DeWitt Hare ........... Dante, S. Dak. Rev. Sherman Coolidge.. 303 West Oak street, Enid, Oklahoma. William F. Springer..... Walthill, Neb. Joseph K. Griffis........ 8604 Wade Park avenue, Cleveland, O. A. C. Parker............ State Museum, Albany, N. Y. Horton G. Elm.......... Syracuse, N. Y. R. F. D. 5. Chas. Doxon ........... Syracuse, N. Y. R. F. D. 5. Oliver LaMere ......... Winnebago, Neb. Albert Hensley ......... Winnebago, Neb. Michael V. Wolf........ Hampton Institute, Hampton, Va. Miss Sadie Wall......... 229 North Park street, Shawnee, Okla. Miss Mary E. Finn...... Indian Employment Office, Denver, Colo. J. E. Shields............ Watonga, Oklahoma. Dr. Chas. A, Eastman.... Amherst, Mass. M. D. Archiquette....... Rocky Ford, Colo. Jos. R. Sequechie........ Chelsea, Oklahoma. P. J. Deloria............ Wakpala, S, Dak. Rev. William Holmes____ Santee Agency, Neb. Miss Nora McFarland... U. S. Indian School, Carlisle, Pa. Miss Jane M. Butler..... U. S. Indian School, Carlisle, Pa. Thomas L. Sloan........ Pender, Neb. Mrs. Marie L. B. Baldwin Indian Office, Washington, D. C. Miss Emma Johnson..... 507 North Market street, Shawnee, Oklahoma. James W. Mumfblehead... U. S. Indian School, Carlisle, Pa. Roland B. Nichols....... Hiram, O. Miss Elsie L. Elm.------- Avon, N. Y. Mrs. Rosa B. La Flesche. 515 Metropolitan Bank Building, Washington, D. C. Mrs. Esther M. Dagenett. Albuquerque, N. Mex. Henry Roe Cloud........ Winnebago, Neb. Mrs. Nannie B. Dell.....' 1115 Mt. Pleasant avenue, Coltunbus, O. Hiram Chase........... Pender, Neb.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 179 Mrs. Nellie R. Denny__________U. S. Indian School, Carlisle, Pa. Wallace Denny ..................U. S. Indian School, Carlisle, Pa. S. J. Nori...............U. S. Indian School, Carlisle, Pa. J. M. Oskison......................Care of Collier's Weekly, New York. Mrs. Angel DeCora Deitz. U. S. Indian School, Carlisle, Pa. Dr. Caleb Sickles................Tiffin, O. Rev. Frank Hall Wright. 244 San Jacinto street, Dallas, Texas. Henry Standing Bear________Pine Ridge Agency, S. Dak. A. A. Exendine.................U. S. Indian School, Carlisle, Pa. Mack Setima......................Rocky Ford, Colo. Care of M. D. Archiquette. Miss Laura M. Cornelius. Seymour, Wis.180 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE MEMBERS OF THE SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANa ACTIVE. Thomas L. Sloan. Chas. E. Dagenett. J. M. Oskison. Dr. Carlos Montezuma. Henry Roe Cloud. Mrs. Rosa B. LaFlesche. Miiss Emma D. Johnson. Mrs. Marie L. B. Baldwin. Miss Laura M. Cornelius. Arthur C. Parker. Howard E. Gansworth. Gus H. Beaulieu. Chas. D. Carter. Charles Doxon. Frank O. Jones. Dr. Chas. A. Eastman. H. C. Gadoury. Wm. Franklin Bourland. Frederick E. Parker. Miss Lottie George. Spotted Rabbit. M. R. Farwell. Lester Chapman. Henry Standing Bear. Antoine Denomie. Richard E. Barrington. Mrs. Cipriana G. Norton. Mrs. Lucy Old Horn. James Hampton Willis. Charles De Corah. Richard Shunatona. J. E. Shields. Rev. L. Bruce. George Shawnee. Miss Sadie Wall. Mrs. Katherine Craig. R. M. Hood. Lewis D. Nelson. Jim Hammond. Sam B. Lincoln. Clarence Three Stars. Miss Dorsie E. Ross. Miss Angeline F. Johnson. Dr. Caleb M. Sickles. Dr. Henry B. Favill. Frank Conroy. Mrs. Angel De Cora Deitz. William H. Deitz. Mrs. Anna Goyituey Canfield. Rev. Sherman Coolidge. Mrs. Bernhard Bollman. Miss Mary E. Finn. Joel Tyndall. DeWitt Hare. William F. Springer. Rev. Joseph K. Griffis. Horton G. Elm. Oliver La Mere Michael V. Wolf. Albert Hensley. Martin D. Archiquette. Rev. William Holmes. Rev. P. J. Deloria. Albert Exendine. Miss Nora McFarland, Miss Jane M. Butler. Jos. R. Sequiechie. Roland A. Nichols. Mrs. Nannie B. Dell. Hiram Chase. John S. Martinez. S. J. Nori. A. A. Taylor (Caesar). Mrs. Charles H. Conley. Meek Q. Setima. Prof. J. N. B. Hewett.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 181 Mrs. Esther M. Dagenett. Henry Horse Looking. Miss Eliabeth M. Davis. Joseph De Porte. Frank Meachem. Victor M. Locke, Jr. Miss Ozetta B. Jenks. Mrs. Kate H. Calvert. Miss Alice H. Denomie. Miss Mary W. Nelson. Miss Jessie C. Morago. Gabriel Hammond. Mrs. Lillian Whiting. James W. Mumblehead. Mrs. Anna D. Wilde. Holmes Colbert. Frederick Big Horse. Miss Elvira Pike. Gov. Douglas H. Johnston. Rev. Frank H. Wright. John F. Grant. Joseph Mack. Mrs. Nellie R. Denny. Wallace Denny. Nobert J. Sero. ASSOCIATE. Mrs. Amelia S1. Quinton. Opecancanough Tribe, No. 163, I. O. R. M. Prof. George A. Coe. Prof. Frank Thilly. Miss Annie Fuller. C. B. Lohmiller. A. S. Nicholson.' Mrs. Molly Kinzie Gordon. A. L. Lawshe. John W. Converse. J. D. Oliver. James Y. Hamilton. Wrn. B. Freer. Jesse F. House. James B. Royce. Miss Cora M. Folsom. Thos. J. King, Jr. Prof. M. R. Harrington. Charles O. Shaw. Dr. Lyman Abbott. C. W. Crouse. Moses Friedman. Miss Natalie Curtis. John R. Eddy. Knott C. Egbert. McClellan Brown Sorosis Club. Miss Edith M. Dabb. Dr. W. J. McGee. Miss Mary D. Colvocresses. Altruian Club. Mrs. Dorcas J. Spencer. George O. Grist. Prof. Charles S. Barrett. Miss Florence Covert. Miss Mary Burr. Miss Eleonora Zeller. Mrs. Katharine A. Seibert. Fred Cline. Miss Caroline W. Andrus, Dana H. Kelsey. Miss Harriet M. Bedell. Frank Wood. C. F. Hauke. Miss Frances G. Paull. Mary Floyd Tallmadge Chapter, D. A. R. John S. Lockwood. E. M. Poston. Foster Copeland. Rev. Samuel S. Palmer. J. A. Jeffrey. William H. Sharp. Charles W. Bryson.182 PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE W. E. B. Du Bois. Miss J. E. Hamand. John E. MeElroy. Dr. Charles F. Meserve. E. M. Wistar. William S. Washburn. Karl Kelsey. J. W. Reynolds. J. W. Alder. Mrs. Adelaide Belle Reichel, Morton C. Elm. Prof. John M. Clarke. R. F. Pettigrew. Mrs. Grace Clark. Rev. William H. Ketcham. Deer Foot Tribe, No. 113, I. R. M. Karl Moon. Thos. C Smith. Rev. J. Emory Fisher. Mrs. Emily P. Lincoln. Miss Maud Russell. Rev. Brewster Humphrey. Joseph Keppler. Hon. William A. Jones. Miss Anna L. Dawes. John Y. Bessell. Mrs. Mary W. Roe. Rev. Walter C. Roe. J. C. Levengood. Dr. Al. Leedts. Mrs. Ida K. Galbreath. Mrs. George U. Marvin. O. T. Corson. Wilbur Dunham. Miss Mattie L. Setterfield. C. W. Goodman. Andrew G. Pollock. Robert D. Hall. M. G. Baily. F. M. Clark. O.William Henry Miner. Mrs. E. D. Van Denburgh. Mrs. Mary Hubbard Temple. Rev. Floyd W. Tompkins, D. D. Mrs. Mazzini Slusser. Judge Mazzinii Slusser. Edward Lindsey. Mrs. Edward Lindsey. J. W. Wheeler. Prof. F. A. McKenzie.SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS 183 STATEMENT OF RECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURES OF THE SOCIETY OF AMERICAN INDIANS —OCTOBER, 1911 Oct, 3 14 17 18 Nov. 18 30 Oct. 18 Nov. 8 Dec. 6 8 Brought forward (Balance)....................... Dues and donations of Active members................ Dues and donations of Associate members............. For the sale of tickets and contributions during Conference, October 12 to 16, 1911............................ Moneys Expended To Capitol News Bureau for clipping services from Sept. 16 to Oct. 16....................................... To Ohio State Journal for advertising................. To Columbus Citizen for advertising.................. To Columbus Dispatch for advertising................. To Rosa B. La Flesche for services as clerk at $60.00 a month, from June 15, 1911, to Oct. 15, 1911.......: • To O. S. U. Chemical Supply Co., for expressage on exhibits from Lawrence, Carlisle and Chilocco............... To expenses of Miss Nora McFarland and quartette of boys from Carlisle, Pa., 5 days........................... To Miss Mary Finn for services as clerk................ To expenses and services of Mack Setima, in charge of ex- hibits...........................................• To Franklin Park Floral Co., for use of palms in Memorial Hall, a days....................................- To Heer Printing Co., printing addresses.............. To incidental expenses during Conference, car tickets, tele- phoning, telegraphing, drayage, etc................. To F. G. & A. Howald, rent of 12 tables............... To H. S. Warwick, for rent of and hauling chairs for assem- bly room.......................................... To the Stoneman Press Co., for printing cards and badges. To the Wilkin-Redman Co., for rent of piano and drayage of same........................................... To Messrs. Armstrong & Okey for reporting, 2 days at $10.90 To Fifth Avenue Savings Bank, one-half cost of printing voucher check books................................ To Michael V. Wolf, Hampton, Va., for expenses at Colum- bus during Conference......................... To Roscoe R. Walcutt, typewritten copy of proceedings of Conference, 75 pages at 30 cents...................... To Spahr & Glenn, printing 10,000 tickets and 75 streetcar signs for concert..........•........................ Balance....................................... No funds received during November. Moneys Expended To E. A. Allen for expressage on exhibits sent to Columbus from Chilocco...................................... To rent of office at $15.00 per month, for Nov and for Dec. (rent payable in advance)................... Balance...................................... For the payment of bills of the society, funds advanced from my own personal account, it is indebted to me as follows: To packing box, 50c; packing goods, $1.50........... To hauling to station.............................. To 6 large desk blotters............................ To 1 pen rack..................................... To freight on goods from Columbus, Ohio............ To storage in Washington, D. C., of goods............ To drayage of goods from storage to office.......... To Monarch Typewriter Co., first payment on typewriter.. To rubber stamps.......................;............ To newspapers to send to members in the interest of the Society, 1 package rice paper, wrapping paper, manila envelopes.......................................... To 1 ball twine, pin ball, registered mail sent to Denver, Colo.............................................. To expressage on package of paper from Denver, Colo.... To second payment of typewriter..................... To postage stamps (2c)............................. Total to date. Deficit Dec* 8, 1911. $100 00 86 00 169 00 47o si $s 00 3 OO 3 OO 3 OO 240 OO 6 93 175 7o 53 15 43 75 12 00 45 OO 23 40 6 OO 5 22 32 So 8 00 20 OO 3 87 46 35 22 50 14 25 1 4<5 30 00 %2 OO 2 OO 25 as 3 22 1 78 75 10 00 75 1 59 85 i 50 10 00 5 00 $39 94 $825 Si $770 6a $54 89 $3* 40 $23 49 $16 45 You will notice that I have not included in the above bill the summary for the month of November. (Signed) Rosa B. La Flesche, Assistant Secretary.INDEX. PAGE. Administration of reservations.....................................112, 121 Adjustment of race.........................................76, 81, 130, 144 Agriculture among Indians: Paper by J. E. Shields.....................................................................28 Paper by Marvin Jack................................................................................36 Discussion on......................................................34 Education in . . . . ................................................41-42 Allotments.......................................................118, 147 American Indian Association........................................................................7 Arapahoes.........................................c..................................28 Archiquette, M. D...........................................................no Armstrong, Gen. C. A..............................................103, 107 Art, The Indian in, a paper by Mrs. Deitz..........................................82 Discussion on......................................................................................................87 BALDWIN, Mrs. Marie L............................................ 58 Bender, C. A.......................................................... 97 Books, Old, in Indian schools......................................123, 128 Business session..................................................... 156 CAPACITY, Indian has............................................... 5 Carlisle quartette.................................................... no Carter, Hon. Chas. D...............................................34, 163 Cheyennes........................................................... 28 Children, Indian, not in school......................................... 102 Chase, Esq., Hiram, Paper on Law..................................... 133 Discussions on................................................27, 106 Cherokees . . . ......................................................... 138 Citizenship, uncertain rights of Indian................................... 125 Civilization.........................................................68, 70 Code Bill, Indian...................................................... 162 Columbus, O......................................................... 8 Conference.......................................................... 22 Conditions.................................................4, 73, 135, 152 Cloud, Henry .... .................................................... 67 Congress, Powers of.................................................. 136 Converse, John ... . .................................................. 153 Commissioner of Indian Affairs........................................ 23 Committees.......................................................67, 156 Coolidge, Rev. Sherman.........................................2®, 91, 127 Cornelius, Miss Laura M....................................14, 35, 43, 121 Criticism against government........................................25, 153 Crawford, Miss..................................................... 153i86 INDEX. PAGE. DAGENETT, Hon. Charles E.......................7, 22, 96, 106, 132, 156 Davis, Dr. O. DeF..................................................96, 98 Deitz, Angel Decora................................................... 82 Deloria, Rev. P. J..................................................... 153 Doxon, Charles M..................................................56, #9 EASTMAN, Dr. Charles A......................................7, 77, 100 Lecture by...................................................... 143 Education, Philosophy of Indian....................................... 68 Election of officers....,............................................... 157 Elm, Horton G......................................................9^, I29 Entertainment............................................*.......... no Environment..............................................28, 30, 33, 69 Executive committee......................................... 8, 10 FAIRS, Indian................................................31* 34 35 Farming........................................................... 37 Friendship of government............................................. 23 GANSWORTH, Howard E........................................... 34 Grafting........................................................... 25 Griffis, Rev. J. E...................................................... 78 HALL, Robert H...........................................................................iSS Hare, De Witt................................................................152 Henesley, Albert, discussion on wardship by...................................15° Holmes, Rev. Wm..........................................................153 Home making...............................................................................58 INDIAN has no rights................................................ 124 Should have rights................................................. 122 Indian opinion, need of.............................................26, 28 Indian students . . . . ................................................. 123 Indian woman...................................................... 58 Indian in professions........................................... .93, 98, 100 Indian Rights Association............................................. 163 Industrial organization.............................................. 42 Inheritance......................................................... J3i Intellect of Indian........................................................ 145 Interior department . . .............................. .............H'4» JOHNSON, Miss Emma (now Mrs. Goulette)............101, no, 122, 124 Johnson, Dr. J. E..................................................... 96 LABOR, capitalized..............................................-52> 53 La Flesche, Mrs. Rosa B.....................................8, 10, 157, 183 Law................................................................ x33 Conditions of................................................... J40INDEX. 187 PAGE. Lawyers, grafting of.................................................. 25 Legal conditions..................................................... 140 Locke, Hon. Victor M................................................. 34 McKENZIE, Prof. F. A..........................................7, 17, 155 Article in Red Man....................................................................171 McFarland, Miss Nora.............................................................110 Members, list....................................................178, 180 Mechanic, Indian as..........................„................................................56 NEW YORK Indians................................................. 131 Naori, S............................................................. 96 National Indian Association........................................... 163 OBJECTS of Society.............................................7, 14, 159 Ohio State University..................................................................................................7 Omahas..........................................................................................................................115 Organization of race.................................................13, 134 Organization of the Society......................................................................................7 Opinion, need of Indian...........................................................................26 Oskinson, J. M....................................................34, 7© PATERNAL system............................................... 4 Parker, A. C......................................................... 68 Pine Ridge.........*............................................118, 119 Program . .......................................................... 19 Pratt, Gen.......................................................103, 107 Professions, Indians in.............................................94, 98 Press notices of conference........................................ 164-170 RACE Congress.................................................... 13 Rations............................................................ 118 Reason for conference................................................ 9 Red Men, Order of................................................158, 160 Rents..........................................................126, 154 Reservation, system................................................. 112 Religious problems..............................................155, 156 Rights..........................................................140, 147 Rose Bud Agency.................................................117, 120 SCHOOL system, Indian..................................72, 103, 105, 109 School, Indian children out of......................................27, 102 Scholarships....................................................................................106 Seminoles . . ........................................................................................141 Shields, J. E............................................................28 Sickles, Dr. Caleb.............................................96, 112, 121 Six Nations . . ...........................................................................................................131 Sloan, Thomas L..........................................17, 92, 109, 112 Sniffin, M. K......................................................155. 163i88 INDEX. PAGE. Social betterment .................................................• • 73 Status, conflicting . . .-. ....................................4> IJ5» I25> *37 Standing Bear, Henry.........»...........................>.......... 7 TARDY action of Government................................127, 128, 148 Thompson, President W. O.........................................-9> l7 Tribal rights...........................................4» I27» I35» *36, 137 Treaty rights. (See Tribal rights.)......................................................................*35 Trust funds.................................................117, 126, 152 Tuberculosis..........................................................49 Tuscaroras................................................................37 UNCERTAIN status of Indian..............................4, 39, "5# *37 VALENTINE, Hon. R. G., Address by................................ 23 Village life......................................................... 51 WARDSHIP...................................................... 147 Right questioned *............................................... I51 Wall, Miss Sadie..................................................... no Wolf, Michael...................................................... 110 Whiskey traffic..................................................... I5I Wealth lies in soil and men........................................... S2 Woman, Indian..................................................... 5$ Wright, Rev. Frank.;.............................................m» *55This book is a preservation facsimile produced for the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. It is made in compliance with copyright law and produced on acid-free archival 60# book weight paper which meets the requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (permanence of paper). Preservation facsimile printing and binding by Northern Micrographics Brookhaven Bindery La Crosse, Wisconsin 2014