of tomorrow. Many of them are com— ing around the last turn on this trail. They are shopping in our stores, buy— ing the same food as the whiteman, the same type of wearing apparel, modern furniture, radios, T. V. sets and stereos and the merchants like to do business with them. Does the Indian hold a place in the history of Louise Municipality? We will let the reader answer that question. And now let us take one more look at the “Old Mound” that to the prehistoric Indian was a shrine, a dancehi‘ll and an observation post, and which to the early settlers was a pilot on the almost bare prairie. With the passing of years it has lost much of its value as a land mark, due to the erection of many farm buildings, surrounded by windbreaks. The buildings in the towns also tend to obstruct the travellers’ view of the Mound. But now, in 1967, another landmark has come into View. This time there is no doubt about it being built by humans. It is none other than a micro- wave tower many feet high, which with the three red lights thereon, becomes a pilot to the traveller, by land or by air and can be seen for many, many miles in all directions. Within a mile east of the “Old Mound” the new landmark stands ready to direct the weary traveller, as did the Mound in the early days of the pioneers. 37