| lazy | angry | observe | stool |
| passes | owner | answered | short |
An Indian boy sees many things which a white boy passes by without seeing. Can you tell why?
The Indian boy is taught to look at things closely, and to think about everything he sees. He learns to observe. Here is a good story of an Indian who was trained to use his eyes when he was young.
An old Indian once lived in a village among white people. His little hut was near the woods. A white man lived alone in a cabin near by.
One night the white man came home late from his work in the fields. He had left a bag of corn hanging in his cabin. Some one had taken it.
He was very angry. "That lazy Indian who lives in the hut has stolen my corn," he told his neighbors.
"Send for the Indian and let him speak for himself," said one of the neighbors.
When the Indian came he said, "I did not take your corn."
"If you did not take my corn, who did?" asked the angry man.
"I can not tell you his name," the Indian answered. "I have never seen him, but I can tell you something about him.