A Stoney Indian

We’ve seen this painting by Nina Crumrine before on a 1947 dinner menu that identified the subject as a “Canadian Indian.” Today’s menus more narrowly define the subject as a “Stoney Indian.” The Nakoda tribe is closely related to the Assiniboine and more distantly related to the Sioux tribes; white people called the Nakoda’s “stoney Indians” because of their cooking technique of heating rocks in a fire and dropping them into bowls of broth.

Click image to download a 1.3-MB PDF of this menu.

Both of today’s menus are from 1944 and have straight lines bordering the portraits. But, unlike the other menus we’ve recently seen with straight lines, the portrait title is given in a script typeface rather than Bodoni type. So far I haven’t found any menus with Bodoni type but an Art Nouveauish border.
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Click image to download a 900-KB PDF of this menu.

The first menu is for breakfast and has table d’hôte meals printed on the left side of the menu rather than on a separate sheet. The second has the a la carte menu printed on the right and beverages on the left; obviously, the table d’hôte lunch or dinner menu would have been glued over the beverage side of the menu.


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