The Indian Village At The Fair ‘~ By[M. Watner Turrift : part of United States. They have b t with them their entire atock of n handicraft and cosâ€" tumes.‘ They are the ‘Winnebago and Sioux of the Dakota region. The Winne are led by a powerful chief who was given the name of Thunder to show his strength. The Stoux have as theeir leader Chief Jast of the elaborate Maya Temple surrounded by the Uniâ€" ted Stateg Army, World‘s Fair visiâ€" tors havg the opportunity of witâ€" nessing ofie of the neatest shows on the of A Century of Proâ€" gtess. This show takes place in the blockaded |arena of the Indianâ€" Vilâ€" PAGE FOUR hmmmimmnmmm- dian Vi are from the northern 3 cans ..}} Choice POT ROAST, Manor 2 Ibe. . LARD ,}|, + it.: :. h 9C ï¬:s:ll complete assortment of FRESH BROILERS KITCHEN ‘CLEANSER, QUALITY MARKET * srestbens., "~ s , DELICATESSEN ‘UZ : crRoOCERY Ee MEATS _b. Panerali, Prop. 1060 North Green Bay Road l;lone H. P. 1024 FREE DELIVERY a WE DELIVER Phone Ordéers Promptly Attended. . _ VISIT OUR STORE Centrally located between Highâ€" wood E Highland Park, or PHONE | YOUR ORDERâ€" 1024 pt Delivery Sliced Round Fresh Dreksed Frying Chickens Armour‘s Chuck Roast Milk Fed V eal Steak Fresh Little Pig Hams Sausage Meat h cndctca Lard STOPâ€" SHOP â€" SAVE Free [Delivery Phone 1241 307 Wa an Ave. flixm BL FRLâ€"SAT. SPECIALS ‘‘\CQLD MEAT B;rbec'ï¬n Pork â€" Baked Ham Boiled Ham:â€" Veal Loaf Bol and 4 p.m. to 6: k Rosst : 124@ « Liver Sausage talian Salami A Potato Salad Steak Phone 1241 Star Cured COFFEE, 29c ) to 11 :30 p.m. TÂ¥%C 22¢ 19¢ 15¢ 10c 65¢ 23¢ 8C 16c 15¢ was ~ one of color, bnl#ï¬ , and drama. These red men g@ve their customers all they paid to see and more. They;started out with a numâ€" ber of native dances i as the War â€" dance, Shield 8,) Feast dance, Bow and Arrow dance, Corn dance and numerous others. > One of their members did a reâ€" markable job of imitating Ma and animals. He didâ€" a: great job imâ€" itating the coyote, and he even put on a dog fight. | iN Then to top off this grand proâ€" gram, Chief Silvertone, noted Indian tenor ,sang, "By the Waterp? of Minâ€" netonka," first in English and then in his native tongue. It was a great job done by a tplendï¬ singer. Here is a little l\istom ‘this band of red men. The entire hisâ€" tory to follow was .eompil*d from an actual history of these Indians and from a conversation with one of the chiefs. . ( l A little more than 400 years ago, before the white man heard of this country, all America was a& wilderâ€" ness. _ Wild animals| and J savage tribes of Indians made it their home. As our maps show us, there »wwere many different kindsT of | land | in North America,) just as there are now. East of the Mississippi valley were dense forests dotted with lakes and rivers. West of it ‘stretched high tPeeless plains over| which herds of shappg . buffalo ; roameld. Still, farther west rose the snowâ€" capped Rocky Mountains, the range of bigâ€"horn sheep and grizgly bears. To the west of ‘tzefl{e mountains were dry plateaus and desert wastes where only mpâ€"br::k %ca'etun flourish; â€"And }bey t rose other mountains, Sierra Nevadas and coastal ranges,.which clung close to the edge of that bh# westâ€" ern sea we call the Pacific Ocean. W ‘symboli¢ : of the forests where they have made r homes. The icine man of this outft is one of the oldest Indians living toâ€" day. Old Tom Crow is 98 years of age and is still prmieinc.;‘!mdiqina the way he has always knownâ€" the Indian way. ePe _‘ i goes and Sioux put on for their Inâ€" dian â€" enthusiasts who ï¬ad the stands on either side of arena, :Many notables ‘have been made members of this noted e. Genâ€" eral Italo Balbo is #ne of the outâ€" standing new members. Your corâ€" respondent happened to present at the crowning (presentation of an Indian headâ€"dress) of ong of the military héeads of , Culver| Military Academy. ‘Two others from the same institute received a and were made fjunior members of this great national order of di-a)l guished men. // J a Around these. villages |stretched fields of maize, tended by women. The whole task of planting, harvesting, the preparing ‘of the corn ifor storâ€" ing, fell on their shoulders, while to the men was allotted the tremendâ€" ous exertion of war and the chase, the surrounding forest:; abounded with With m feet the hufters stole noiselessly over forest paths, or ‘in their light birch canoes | glided | easily . the ‘strea:i,. pitting their wits against the cunning of their quarry. . | Ablest of the eastern forést peoâ€" ple were the Iroquois of north. When the white men began to settle in what is now the: State of New York, they found (flourishing Iroâ€" quois villages, set in_little;jqenim in the midst of trees about ; the shores of the finger lakes, |â€" _ _ The Iroquois were bold, fierce warâ€" riors. | [Five tribes of the Troquois, the Mohawks, Oneidas, Onandagas, Cayugas and Senecas formed the great tonfederacy known as; the 2502 Lake Fotgb}. L 30¢ Thursdayâ€"Friday Saturday "Rasputin and â€"â€" the Empress" Sundayâ€"Monday . Sept. 10â€"11 CHAS. RUGGLE PHIL IS Private Detective @©College Humor"‘ "Melody Cruise" DEERPATH John, Ethel and Lionel BARRYMORE turday d 14 Bept. 9 WILLILAM POWELL JACK OAKIE Children always 10¢ ®4 Sept. 12â€"13 25¢ . 1â€"8 a more compactly populated ?fl- However, most everyone will admit that the advantages of living in beautifully | planned North s§m communities with spacious lawns and landscaped gurroundings more than makes up 4 r the actual investn?ent' which has | required. $ \ Consider the typical street in my; North Shorte community. R 1 of the North Shore Gas Company show that one mile of gas main is required for everyâ€"fifty meters inâ€" stalled, whereas, in Chicago, Lul than oneâ€"quarter mile of main is required for egch fifty meters. When you considér that the same ratio pa‘ved street, sidewalks, ‘street ligzts.} applies with regard to length of sewer main, water â€"main, telephone cable, and electric light lines, tfhon? you will a picture of the 900-1 nomic significance of population, _ Economyâ€"minded citizens will ask if there is anything that can be d about this situation. < For example, how can th. rii'denta of any district help th h to reduce living costs? Ong debatable solution for this problem is through an incréase of the population. 3 In the first case, the support of fifty households per mile is all that can be counted upon to justify Lt;a investments covering the above serâ€" vices; while, in more populous argas, several times as many home owners share in su pq‘y:ting the various serâ€" vices. â€" ./| | | | If there is any one thing that y c»%i anything else lit is the cost of livâ€" ing. â€" City le zemur:gy fin itq a complex problem beca in n, a much larger portion of the i = vidual income is spent for various commoditieg ahd services necessary for living. (Further, it will be f nd] that much df the expense is fixed so that it remging about the same from year to year. _ f _| It is obvious that the cost to the individual will tend to be lower in League of the Iroquois (later they: admitted a (sixth tribe, the Tuscarâ€"] oras, who lived in North Caroli;‘m).? These uni tribes ~became : the scourge of their neighbors. 'iher? drove out the| Hurons who opposed them : and ir power was felt throughout |Pannsylvania and v+est-,?. ward over |the Ohio Valley. | So powerful did they become that at one time they threatened to control the eastern| half of North Ametica. Dcnsity;:{ fEPopulation | Cotï¬t}ols Living Cos | To defend their villages against hostile raids, |the Indians encl [ them by stockades. . An ohï¬ village of "long houses." The interâ€" ior of a "long house" was ;;:rti-i tioned off into little rooms, each o¢â€" cupied by a family. A large house of this kind might hold as many, as twenty families. In the village the houses lare arranged in strgets, in larger villages they were ï¬me-ï¬ times placed in a ring around 11’ central court, where games and cerâ€" emonial dances took place. sc3 On the great treeless plains which sweep like a green and brown, sea from the | Saskatchewan, south?a:fl} to the Rio Grande in Texas, liv many roving bands of Indians. They belonged to tribes speaking différent languages, but their way of lis‘vint, was muth the same. . l .E nB Unlike thgir forest brothers, these people: had need of canoes, for the plains broken by few) rivâ€" ers and lakes, Theirs was an mlz country of| yast grasslands, over which herds of buffalo wandered it search of |p k ped The life f/the plains Indianiwa.g tentered wupon the buffalo. Thi§ great shaggy animal :umiahed;m% with practi¢ally ‘all of the necessi ties of life, |From its hide, horns, hoofs and bones the redman 1 f his bows, shjelds, lodges, clothing, and toolsâ€"â€"ngne of the animal) was wasted. . " meat was ge tooked ‘m réasting or broiling, 4 {::go part |of it was dried fo f long cold months of winter, then the snow made hunting i “me sta ce, I Competition for life was kéen among the ians of the muEn . than among the tribes of the east ‘The typical plains tribes practice no agriculture (except for the Crow$§ who raised tiny patches of to acco), Dependent on the buffalo for food, the plains {l lians lived in dread 0: the buffalo ‘s migrating off theil hunting range. When this happened, they were forced to invade neig ï¬ ing: territo And conflict between neighboring .} tribes fas Early: in J history the weaket ones were driven from the opef plains to shelter of rough mountaif valleys, : only those skil it warfare w left to Imagine :‘encampment of Siou®,) _ > Trinit consisting |of five hundred lods & | The Reve bxl-e.kingu {:mo:g:out over the| . â€" plains. . . | Before started the! chief woul d his criers throug ; j Servicf::l the ::r Tmmmdntߠdeégision| |~Sunday :;em , dl:h:beï¬mï¬ announced, 7:30 a.m. lodge chief was seen : » flappin‘ e wind. Thil was th 11.-m00 ’:::_ signal for the striking of ï¬l‘ ie other ‘And in one niinute 3 five hnnW?of them, which } had been strained tight, were ing in the wind, and in ar minute all would be flat upo ground. r horses and do; which had a great nu were then rapidly loaded wit 4 in a ring around .a , where games and cerâ€" es took place. | f t treeless plains which i for life was kéene Eims of the grass he tribes of the plains tribes practice THE PRESS ||| Time was when e ing about ‘the man of i ‘This inâ€" _::Ls» mmh"fl iged N"ï¬. fromen are doing a big part of the ‘Rriving and cold! facts compiled by 'ï¬atieiu\d_-ind te that they are |going a mighty fine job at handling ¢ars. In fact,‘ the accident record puts. women in a very favorable Tight as drivers. | ; t \| ‘And now theyi_gs taking over the ¢are of the car. l. o longer does the ‘busband have to disturb a mind inâ€" fent on the problems of business, or ; ossibly golf scores, with details \dbout the care of the car. When t‘ ication is needed, or when tires ‘gequire attention the wife is the member of the family who sees that g‘f e work il-dom!,lh [|. Not only does this relieve the exâ€" geutive head of the family from deâ€" ils such as he likes to avoid at ,‘h > office, but it & whispered in some quarters that it also results in the ‘dar being kept in much better conâ€" ition. Women .gre good judges of: alue and they Jike to have their ;i rroundings kept p:;;s:ut. A woâ€" i}‘ may not b:’i‘po kpert at selectâ€" ing a car, but r she has one she kEnows whether she gets good servâ€" “é e in its care, just as accurately as ‘ghe measures service in her home or. in stores. When it comes to service or the family car the average housewife is more particular than her husband, ahq she has more apâ€" preciation of the little attentions Yhat not only make a car look betâ€" Merbut keep in better condition. | But don‘t worty about any great Toad that has been added to the isks of suburban housewives by %he responsibility for seeing that the #ar is kept up to the mark. Just &As women have karned to take adâ€" fantage of all modern facilities in bther fields they| have learned that All that is needeéd ~to keep the car Fight is a littloflLgood judgment in Relecting service stations. The Stanâ€" flard Oil Compgny is telling this tory and describing the: service hich it offers in a series of unusual Advertisements ’mw appearing in this paper. Thig advertising points but how completz is Standard Servâ€" lce and how easily it makes the job bf looking after the car. | _A look in at any Standard Station will show how generally women are taking over the responsibility for {kervicing the ï¬&nily automobile. l Mrs, Larry Ajpna of Ft. Sheridan entertained the members of her Five Hundred Club on Tuesday evening. Miss Helen Leyer of St. Louis, Mo. is visiting her mother Mrs. Joseph Leuer of Homewood Avenue. ‘ Miss Myra Litzenberg and Miss lCarolyn Saath spent the Labor Day: holidays in ‘Saugatuck, Mich. Dr. and Mrs, Earl Fritsch and hildren have returned from their summer. home at White Lake, Mich., and are residing in the Tone buildâ€" ing untilt theninttor part of this month. t < Miss Louise| Silber has been spending the pagt ten days with her sister,â€" Mrs.:: Elizabeth Worth . of Vine Avenue. She will leave about the 12th of tember to resume teaching music mt the University. of Wyoming, at Lgramie, for the comâ€" ing year. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Silber, ve returned :from their western trip, and ‘ are .now staying at the Moraine. ; A meeting of Appeals has b« $3, 22nd at 8:00 p. tion to change dence district district a trac adjoining Dee of. Waukegan is not subdivil is certain lots H. O. Stone‘s Section 28 and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Moore Jefâ€" ries will entertain at tea on Sunâ€" ay in honor of their two daughters, /irginia and Helen. The tea is not ; debut party, it is simply a garden arty for friends of Mr. and Mrs. effries and their daughters. The rirls will leave f[or school in a week r so. ol * Highland Park Locals and Personals Town Auditors Meet The board town auditors of Deerfield Towpship met at 2:380 Tuesday aftermoon at the offices of the township in Highland Park, and passed routine bills of the township. Trinity Episcopal (jimh , The Reve Christoph Keller, bors Locals ar?f Personals Deerfield * Housewives And Autos Services: P Sunday, Sept. 10: t 7:30 a.m. Holy Communion. 11:00 a.m. Morni prayer and East Laurel Avenue Card of Thanks of the Zoning.: Board of en called for Sept. p.im. to consider a petiâ€" re from Class A Resiâ€" d and part of which what is known as add to Deerfield in p Class B Residence ‘lying south of and %ld Avenue and east oad part of which and family. Ori Carpets Repairing and Cleaning Rugs i JOHN B. NASH, Prop 327 North Greesa Bay Road H HI({iJ LAND PARK | . FRUIT & GROCERY | . WE DELIVE | _ PHONE H. P. 4 SPECIALS FOR THUR. FRIL & SAT. FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES 1 UALITY GROCERIES Blue Valley BUTTER Special 4 quarter for Jmmtse? o?y,lb.24c ’ e dozen E CHASE & SANBORN E DEL MONTE || [ MAXWELL HQUSE w l lh- 1 | ' 5â€"lb. box for "..!:« for . BEETS or CARROTS I'E.-}. biï¬bu Atlas Specia Cream City Gettleman Plus "The Store with a Reputation" for Lighthrilse Tleanser ans.. 10. /1/‘ 15c Ex;;)ejégvel' beautiful jas they are, they deserve the : most ski{_llful and careful handling when they are cleaned. You can safely Send| your Oriental Rugs to usâ€"our proces$ revives the rictness of color, the thick, l xurious "pile"" With dirt, dust soil and grime removed, your rugs will have a most appealing freshness. ©~ h 18 . |[â€".. _ a1C sOAP FLAKES Regular 31¢ peller. P P § Indudant % PoTATOE is ECC } ?ll I | _ Per Case $9,25 24 Bottles 8 H\tal FFEE ty 513 CENTRAL AVENUE WE DO OUR PART one H. P. 3900 White BEER 29¢ 15¢ 35¢ A Call Will Convince You. 10c ME MB ER THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1983 3 dozen APPLES For cooking and eating, & MNG +2¢+..72. : dn tnisnds cce for Large basket O > ..02, ie innthanss E GINGER ALE E ROOT BEER E LIME RICKY Case of 12 quart for ITALIAN PLUMS PHONE H. P. 4390 No Free Delivery on Beer BEVERAGES Armour‘s Pare Star Highland Park 3900 plus bottle deposit ORANGES Large Juicy LEMONS Sweet, Juicy Freeâ€"Stone Fancy LARD Estimating Cuttin‘ Laying Sewing Stair Pads and Linings Savoy Rheingold ‘25¢ 49¢ 39¢ 19¢ T19¢ T¢ 4 We