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Sunday Times Signal from Zanesville, Ohio • 9

Location:
Zanesville, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Section Page Three fun in of 226 riend Bring a ilh a Thrill MSTMAS PM of will GIT Bed Spreads chief said of Crown Tested rayon TAETA in a Grand SALE! group Values to $650 their parents and ave Add a 205 JHaiordcOern 308 Use the Classified Ads for Best Results MONTH END SPECIALS PUPPY TOWELS UN TO MAKE The Modern np Woman Knows That marriage R5R5 to $750 Value the Now hygiene 395 295 Complete Men's lannel eminine Hygiene 395 Deportment s685 Values to $1050 (Broken Izt) PATTERN 1557 HURRY! IT BY EX RAY Intelligent Shoe Store Opposite irst Bank 427 Main Street i "ST LAITO! III in four two of under study Christmas party Legion auxiliary Mrs are ave her be presented singers This each and each Semlnoles planted in black and of the Monday the the a until little Sprague the pro the club teachers at a of In ed If Ko Exchanges No No All sales final from divided As the family sisters cups powdered sugar cup butter dash of nutmeg CHRISTMAS CAROL SING 10 LAME CLUB RECITAL TO BE DISPLAYED AT DINNER PARTY Warmly Made! Smartly Styled! 0 Nelson of the be best nephew IRST LOOR TWO DAYS ONLY MONDAY AND TUESDAY CLEOPATRA VXPORIZOR ACIAL SCALP TREATMENTS Highly recommended for blackheads pimples and acne aswel! a regular facial and scalp treatment Miss Belle Crozier of Gallgher street will be hostess at the Christmas par ty of the Areme club The date has not been set Miss Marie Lewis will be assistant hostess There's oHd comfort in these flannel robes! All wool for warmth Notched collar con trast trim fringed sash Popular colors! each deed these made right board this business executive probably still was thinking about office bow ed his head gravely said At the meeting of the Shakespeare society next Tuesday evening in the home of Paul Bainter Maple ave nue the fourth act of King Lear will be the subject There will be quotations and Dr Margaret O'Neal will discuss the character Mr Bainter will be director of been made reservati unable Again Broken Lots of ine Shoes are Priced so you may one Vlce was Mix Jones Speaking! A certain business man who re ceives innumerable telephone calls at his office we will call him Mr Jones surprised his family Thanks giving Day when he started to say grace To the amazement of the hun gry family gathered around the fes tive who the and Ceremony Will Take Place Home of Par ents in Cumberland Mrs red ristoe wjtl entertain the Home Garden club in her home next riday afternoon Mrs isk Morris will present a Christinas story and plans will be made for Christmas baskets The roll call will be answer ed with Christmas for The He Group No 4 Samples (4B $750 to $1050 gays 'That might have bean bad news to me Smiles Laffit Off "but notice how My HEALTH INSURANCE helps me and will present Means her life heann happlne At the American Dec 13 members will bring gifts to be given to needy children The aux iliary will aid tn plans for the Christ mas party of the American Legion the date for which has not been set Earl Brannon is chairman for the Legion affair The women will dress dolls for the Legion party Mrs Scroggs president of the auxiliary Mrs red Bealmear and Mrs Dan Mc Intire are in charge of the commit tee for obtaining the dolls They will be glad to deliver dolls to be dressed to anyone caring to help and will later call for the dolls A card party will be held by the auxiliary Dec 27 to take the place of the usual business meeting This will be for members of the club their husbands and guests and all friends of the auxiliary he added of Indian eagle feathers days brave of was the Zanesville Branch is Planning Affair to be Held in Art Institute a his wife Indian ROSA SHRINE TO HOLD INSPECTION RIDAY Rosa Shrine will hold its annual inspection next riday evening at 7:30 in Grotto hall with Mrs Elma Hullinger supreme worthy high priestess of Springfield a In specting officer The inspection will be preceded by a banquet at 6 o'clock In the hall Reservations may be made with rank Offenbacher Homewood nue Group No 3 Dickerson Metatarsal Arch Relief and Archlock Shoes and is entitled "If They Could Come Back These women dressed In the costumes of their dav will mee? and discuss tne changes that have taken place since they lived and express ineir they they Junior Music Club Will Give Program Thursday in Art Institute The Junior ederated Music club of which Mis Edna Hedge is counse lor will present its second recital of the season next Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock in the Art Institute As this Is the Christmas program there is a gift exchange among the club mem bers Christmas carols will be sung under the direction of Miss Blanche McCracken Miss Beatrice will serve as chairman of gram The affair will be for members they are Indian schools boys and to public Mrs Colville of Lexington nue entertained recently in home in honor of Mrs Wilbur Bow man of Chicago Miss Myrta Howell was joint hoatess Mrs Bowman was formerly Miss Ethel Strait of thia city She is visiting relatives here A linen shower was a feature of the evening party for Mrs Bowman In the games played during the evening Miss Verna Strait was prize winner A late luncheon was served and the home was decorated with autumn flowers THE SUNDAY TLMES SIGNAL ZANESVILLE SUNDAY NOVEMBER 28 1937 Group No 1 Rythm Step Paradise Queen Quality the Russian sound picture that has been described by New York critics as one of the ten best films of the year will be an entertainment feature at the dinner to be given by the University club Monday evening at 6:30 o'clock for members and their guests This pic ture is not released through the or dinary moving picture channels in this country and is among the un usual and artistic films of foreign make The dialogue is in Russian and the titles are in English The picture will be shown follow ing the dinner which Is to bo a lobster dinner and in addition steak and frogs will be served for ihoee who prefer them A large numbei reservations have already and there will be extra for members who were make their reservations During the evening there will bridge and other social diversions The party will be the final one ol the present administration The new officers will take charge after this affair Douglas Duncan is the retiring president of the club and Judge Lincoln Knapp is the incoming pres ident The present social committee Dr SuUberger chairman and Kenneth Gale co chairnum will con tinue to serve throughout December Bowling will be resumed by the club Wednesday evening The fourth and final session of the men's bridge tournament will lye held next riday evening 'Crown rayon tafefta texted for fabric con struction dry cleanability and strength Beautiful quilted spreads lovsly appllqued spreads shim mering plain spreads In excellent taste foe Colonial modern or period rooms Buy them for ds llghtful gifts in single or double bed sizes In the enchanting colors: light blue royal blue soft green dark green gold rust rose dust University Club Arranges to Show As Entertainment noted publisher is by a business man of this who lived near Mr Pulti summer heme at Seal Har inhabl allowed in be Caravan To Hit Trail Mrs Eleanor Bailey Johnson has received word from her son Graham Johnson who is a member of the caravan which will travel cross coun try during the Northwest Territorial celebration that the caravan will soon leave ort Devens Mass The first stop will be Hamilton Mass where the first pageant will be pre sented It will be a two day affair and will be reviewed by the gover nors of six states The pageant will be broadcast on a Coast to Coast hook up December 30 and there will be a grand ball that night when the guests will cerne In costume of early settler days or two days tents of Hamilton will not be on the streets unless they pioneer costume Movietones taken of the pageant Mr Johnson will take part episodes of the pageant tn which he will have speaking parts He will represent Colonel Knox of Kentucky and Richard Henry Lee of Virginia in battle and she died of grief locks of her hair were found on oaks With the passing of the hair turned grey and that Indian hair you now see grow An inteioting story of the late prominent tn the hsltory of AmericaTrvsorVh PhIi fvar ui i i told citv zer bor Me Mr Pultizer abhorred noise and had a sound proof room built In his Seal Harbor home Whenever he engaged a suite in a hotel he always engaged the rooms around it so that there would be no noise to disturb him He was very fond of yachting and was seen often aboard his yacht which he bad christened Group No 2 Rythm Step Paradise Queen Quality Red Cross Vp to $750 Value Thelma Axllne will discuss The meeting will be open to the public and will be the direction of the drama art group Members of the dance study and the recreation group will held their weekly meetings as long as school is in session The remainder of the study groups are closing their ses sion soon until January The dance study groups meets Thursday at the Art Institute the recreation group meet riday at the YWCA women to attend YOUR imad our personal tor of churdh Miss Mrs be her Mr and Mrs Harry Crow Cumberland have announced the en gagement and approaching marriage of their daughter Miss Lucille Crow and Paul Zimpfer son of Zimpfer of Columbus The wed ding will take place on Christmas Day at 4 o'clock in the home of the parents Rev Lodwick pas the Buffalo Presbyterian Cumberland will officiate Crow has named her sister Newman of Lorain to only attendant and Sutherland brother in law bride cf Kingston will man Allan Newman small of Miss Crow will be ring bearer The wedding will be followed by a reception after which the young couple will leave immediately for a brief wedding trip They will be at home later in Bexley The bride elect is a graduate of both Muskingum college and Ohio State university arid has been a teacher for several years in the Bex ley schools She makes her home in 2215 Bryden road Bexley Mr Zimpfer is a graduate of Cap ital university where he received his bachelor's degree and received his A at Ohio State university He will receive his PhD at Ohio State in December He Is a professor botany at Capital university The announcement was made an evening partv given by Mrs Newman and Mrs Nelson Sutherland sisters of the bride riday evening in the home of the bride elect our tables of bridge were in play A late luncheon was served the appoint ments being in pink and white The announcement was concealed In tiny bells used as favors Announcement to the immediate family and relatives was made at a family dinner on Thanksgiving when the wedding plans were announced in miniature newspaper ting rid the being where they can go home at night and live among their own people Concerning the old Indian legends about the origin of their people Chief Own Red eather said that the old Indians still look upon them selves as the aborigines They believe that the South American Indians mi grated from the North The old In dians he said point with pride to their having been here three thou sand years ago the name Indian be ing given to them during visit to America where he thought he had discovered India To the older Indians they will always be The Indian chief mentioned similarity of languages between South American Indians the Eskimos and brown skin natives of other countries Some of the old Cherokees he said still retain their tribal lan guage although the younger genera tion is getting away from it Chief Own Red eather spoke erf vviii Rogers whom he said was eighth Cherokee and former President Curtis whom he said one quarter Caw Indian Tom he also said Is part Cherokee "Will Rogers was heart and soul to the the chief said al ways had their best interests at heart Chief Own Red eather formerly worked in the Indian offices of the Department of the Interior and it was there that he met his wife a German girl The chief said that his grandmoth I er Tonquah was a teacher at the early tribe of the Cherokees who were I moved from South Carolina where they originated when a law was pass Daughter of Chief Own Red eather Born in This City views not only of affairs as knew them but also tell what think of present conditions Appearing the pageant will be Priscilla the Puritan maid two In dian women Pocahontas and Saka kawea Anne Hutchinson who stirred things up a bit in the Common wealth of Massachusetts The Pio neer Mother Lucretia Mott the Quaker zealous in trying to right the wrongs of the world: Mary Lyon founder of Mt Holyoke College: Catherine Beecher the first teacher of science in America her sister Harriet Beecher Stowe Julia Ward Howe Carrie Nation rances Willard Rev Anna Howard Shaw and Jane Addams Complet SHAMPOO OR INGER WAVE 25c ea BERTHE BEAUTY SHOP KNOWN OR SERVICE Masonic Temple North ourth Street appointment Phone 4743 3 inn I YOUNG Jot ed In 1696 to transplant them in Oklahoma They originally lived In the Smoky Mountain region and re cently a small residence was granted them there by the government In telling of the early bead work he said that years ago the beads called wampum were very hard to obtain and were very valu able It is thought that years ago Alaska was joined to Asia and the beads came from Mongolia and were purchased by the Indians from the Alaskan tribes Many of these beads were made from shells and bone Many symbols are used in the bead work of the American Indians and In the Southwest all the weaving of the Indians who weave blankets is symbolic he said In the early days there was no thread or needles The sinews were stripped from the back of a deer and beaded work was crafted on these There were no patterns as the work wa entirely symbolic The Swastika which many people regard as a Hitler emblem he said has been a favorite of the Indians tor many years and la found in exhibits three thousand years old which are shown at the ield Museum in Chi cago It is used by the Chinese Jap anese and was used tn early Egypt The Indians consider the Swastika a good luck symbol and the cac tus plant symbol means long life the Thunderbird happiness: and the rain drop means good crops rain clouds and plenty to eat The home of the American Indian the chief said is a tepee not a wig wam A tepee is a traveling home but a wigwam was a square hut made of logs and bark with mud between with a hole for the smoke to go out and a hole in the center to enter The Indians of the Southwest live in hogans which are made in round shape or in adobe huts or Chief Own Red eather spoke of the famine among the Sioux Indians in 1934 1935 and said that food was so hard to get that many of the In dians were living on flour mixed with water In 1934 a big dust storm dried up all the wheat and the In dians did not make a nickel from their crops ather Stuyvesant of an Indian school in South Dakota persuaded Chief Own Red eather to take charge of the exhibits erf these Indians at the air In closing Chief Red eather dem onstrated an Indian fire eating trick and then told a striking legend of the Seminole tribe and the origin tne Spanish moss found on trees the Everglades This moss is call indlan by the taken from a tree and the ground it will turn look like Indian hair Once upon a time the there was a beautiful Indian girl of the Seminoles who fell in love with a young chieftain The chieftain was killed Later living years is the ing on oaks In the land of the Sem inolesH IMP PUPPY TOWELS 1 CX 4 vpn frukv puppies full ol miscmei are uuura inch cross stitch 'tis? Quick oontains a transfer averaging about Illustrations of Mrs Duncan Harrison is chairman of the Christmas party for all mem bers of the Zanesville branch Amer ican Association of University Wo men which will be held December 13 at 8 o'clock in the Art Institute Each member has been asked to bring a gift for one of the girls of the recre ation group The social committee is in charge of the meeting Mrs Robert Warne is chairman of the literary and music study group which will meet Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock in the Art Institute American will be the general subject for discussion Miss Shirley Hartmeyer will present a pa ncr on Superstitions Mrs Charles Roarh by Negro spirituals will by a group of colored meeting which was postponed from November 24 Is an open meeting Miss Mildred Wilson will give Christmas readings at a meeting In the Art Institute Monday December 6 Miss "Sacred (By Request) There have been so many requests concerning a sauce for the holiday pudding recipe contributed to this column by' Mrs Louisa Douglas that she has very graciously given us a recipe for those of you who wish to have it for your Christmas or New Year's dinner The recipe is as fol 2 in Print A smart new idea for a frock with literary inclination is used in one worn by an attractive young woman of this city It has all of the current magazines blended into an attractive print tn a most intriguing fashion Theee prints are in the mode of Schiaparelli the famous designer who loves to use striking and orig inal motifs such as acenes of Paris and fruits and vegetables in profu sion Scarfs are emblazoned with pic tures of young people dancing the Big Apple diaries of sub debs pat terns with many kinds of cigarettes brightening up their backgrounds Chief Own Red eather blooded Cherokee Indian and Catherine known by her name Laughing Eyes with their lit tle papoose Virginia otherwise known by her Indian cognomen Little awn are temporary residents here Chief Own Red eather is giving lectures on Indian lore and legends to school children Chief Own Red eather was berly a boxer and was known as Cherokee Kid in fighting circles is a graduate of Cleamiore Military academy and comes from Oklahoma He used to box with Jack Vlachls of this city The little papoose Virginia was born in Zanesville two months ago and now is a chubby healthy little baby The little father spoke here last ebruary where he gave lec tures at many of the city schools In cluding Lash high school and Grover Cleveland high and others He was in charge of the exhibit of South Da kota Indians at the Chicago air Chief Own Red eather given dem onstrations of early Indian life and the Indian sign language explains the use of the bow and arrow and ex hibits many articles showing the cus toms of the early American Indian In short he gives a prologue of the American Indian He explains the medicine man's dance buck dance and shows many costumes and also wearing apparel of the Indian He also explains the Indian calen dar and Indian history Chief Own Red eather said that the Indian cal endar has twelve moons each of which have different symbols He has an original history of the Sioux In dians written in 1776 In this history which Is the only way the Indians had of keeping reports is told a story of a great famine In explaining the Indian feather headdress he said that it was ori ginally made of and in the early feather represented a When an Indian had 32 feathers in his headdress he a chieftain and was given to vote in the powwow The chief demonstrates the differ ent kinds of arrows tomahawks and war clubs used in the early days Re cently he visited lint Ridge and tells the story of that famous hls toncal spot where the warriors of many of the Indian nations gathered their flint to make arrows Chief Own Red eather said that the Indians gathered their flint in silence and they never quarreled while at that spot which was known as neutral ground although many times they met their deadliest enemies while there Because of the very fine grade of flint Indians would come for miles and miles to obtain flint for their arrows believe the Indians today are getting a lot of money given to them by the said Chief Own Red eather is not true i The Indian of today has been given the right to vote like any other American citizen" he added is only one reservation for the In dians In Oklahoma he added "In Oklahoma the richest tribe is the the chief continued reason for this is that years ago they formed a in other words they divided up the money equally among the members of the tribe Whatever money was made oil on the lands was equally among the Osages royalities went on if a had for instance five or six and they all died the royalities would stay in the family The Osage had a council that formed a treaty among themselves that whatever royalties obtained would be so divided To this day the royalty Is still going on under that form of the he said There are fewer regular schools today the chief continued He explained that a few years ago the Indian young boys and girls were taken away from their family life and put in schools where living condi tions were entirely different In the end they became accustomed to the new mode of living and could not adapt themselves to living among their own people Many of them per ished under this arrangement get and girls are schools (Thristmas giit floss what simple 8 to the hw nerfect for or lair! Pattern 1557 pattern of seven motifs lone for each day of the week)x8 irches: material requirements color suggestionstt neorl U41 auili licc send 10 cents In stamps or coin (coin preferred for this patem to Sunday Time Spinal Needlecraft Dr pt Zanesville Ohio White plainly pattern number your name and addreea Dolls On Parade An exhibit of between 30 and 40 character dolls belonging to Mary Efim Moore of Cumberland will be a feature of the entertainment to be given by the Girl Reserves of the Cumberland high school In the school auditorium on the evening of December 9 The entertainment ruin Ttrnspn somft twenty womeu A Softer More Natural Permanent WA ET Here ii the wave that yoa've Ea been looking fort Soft feminine warea with faseinatinr rfnrlet ends Jost flick the comb and your hair looks richt Other Waves S250 and Mrs George Smvthe of orest cst avenue will be hostess at a meet ing of the Conventional Arts club In her home next Thursday after noon at 2:30 o'clock The meeting will be held Thursday Instead of the usual meeting day on Wednesday The roll call will be answered with Superstitions Mrs James Knapp will present a paper on Care of the Insane" There is a private little room especially devoted to feminine marriage hvglcne nt HudletU mt sore PERMANENT WAVE SPECIAL Limited Time Only 2 wfaovres 310 IDEN Beauty Parlor Cor 41 A Market Phone 222 223 a Cream ingredients together very light and fluffy vvrino rr frillt hlice This recipe Is for hard sauce but in case you wish a liquid sauce place the pan of sauce In a vessel of hot water and beat until it Is cream Do not leave in the hot water too long as it will become too thin LUCII CROW INDIANS MAKE HOME Tn urn nni i iJn io HERE TEMPORARILY Jj fl i I I fl I A 1 I AN rant wsmwmwflwis 1 ville I Isabel rattersonM I I i 5 1 I if fc 4 I I I I Ml 4 voVv I xA I I iW 1 1 ifc hr I laWmllaal cl ft Qt teWW A 1 I I i Ms 1 95 IL is 1 pH 53 iEa 11 gj 1 ROBES ffl 590 III a na a a a UJT a a a a IT I a a i lr tj Bo? MT a o' 4 a vnn make i quarters for ormerly Howell Utur Store HBBBHaan rXu LAITO! I i I 'fe I I I 1 1 I4 1 I 0.

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About Sunday Times Signal Archive

Pages Available:
66,045
Years Available:
1922-1959