Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 151, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 November 1933 — Page 24

PAGE 24

SISTERS SEEK WILL R. WOOD ESTATE SHARES Suit Is Filed to Set Aside Bequests Left by Congressman. By r Pro, LAFAYETTE Ind Nov. 3.— Two M.= f ers of the lat* Will R Wood Jtoprcsentative in compress eiehteen ypstr. sought to break his will to.day on grounds that he was of unsound mind when it was executed JMay 27, 1931. •' The sisters are Mrs. Hallie M. Morse, Oxford, and Mrs. Belle W Chancellor, Stockland. 111. They are |.IS nearest relatives. Mr. Wood left an estate valued #> approximately $450,000. Purdue university was the chief boneficiary. The suit charg°s that Mr. Wood was unduly influenced and that fraud was practiced in making out his will. Seventy-five defendants are named, including Purdue university. Mr. Wood died suddenly in New York last spring, just as he was preparing to go abroad for his health. He represented the old Tenth Indiana district and the new Second district. In congress he w'as chairman of the house appropriations committee and was one of the Republican leaders of the lower house. WARREN CENTRALTc HOLD COMMUNITY FETE Students to Stage Party Tonight in School Building. Students of the Warren Central , high school will hold a community party tonight in the school building. The Warrenette girls will give an exhibition of modern dancing, square dancing and tap dancing. The party, which is being sponsored by Mrs. Myrtle Rodden, assistant principal, will feature Frank Ainsley’s orchestra. APPROVE BOND ISSUE Petersburg to Construct Pumping Station With U. S. Aid. Approval of a $50,000 bond issue by the city of Petersburg for construction of a water pumping station and filtration beds w r ith federal funds, w'as given yesterday by the public service commission.

The Largest A C PC D C Poultry House \9 JC f Ei H 3 BOILING ft CHICKENS OC H.avv Breed, Milk Fed Rock* gfl ■■ and Reds. B FRYS lb IQc LEGHORN 4 n FRYS I O c CITY POULTRY MARKET 111-113 N. New Jersey St. Corner Wabash—the Red Front Fhone Llnealn 4079 The Largest Poultry House in City Free Dressing Parking Space

S UVite cr call at o ur T| ■ Premium store for catalog M and retire book M I Wilson ’ s Premium Store I I 250 CENTURY I ■ building I ■ Indiana polls j Indiana H * BHHH H wNm

THE GOOD OLD DAYS-WHICH ONES?

Old-Time Imbibers Ponder Drinking Styles After Repeal

(Continued From Page 21) back because they don’t seem to have been much fun. B B B THE next cylcle of good old days brought a technique of pleasure based upon excessive eating. The Case Martin, a New York restaurant respected even by Frenchmen, moved uptown from the present Hotel Lafayette and occupied Delmonicos old stand. Charles Rector, who had made a success in Chicago, was building up a great name in a long, low building on Longacre Square, between Forty-third and Fortyfourth streets, the present site of the Claridge hotel. Louis Bustanoby, ex-manager of Martin's, opened the Case des Beaux-Arts at Sixth avenue and Fortieth street, in a studio building owned by the artist, A. A. Anderson. Anew and for those days vast hotel, the Astor, rose on Broadway, where because of its location, it became a part of all White Way life like the Knickerbocker. on the southeast corner of Broadway and Forty-second street. The streets were the scene of competition between unreliable taxi cabs and spavined hack horses. The white light district was moving uptown, to approximately its present location. And the sole manner in which a young lady in those good old days was to feed her. take her to the theater and feed her again. There was no dancing in restaurants. There were no dances that could be performed on small floor space. There were in some of the gayer places salon orchestras.

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THEATER tickets were not expeasive. Young ladies did not accept gifts. Young ladies did not get squiffed; i. e., they would not down drink for drink with their escorts. So the men stuffed them with food, and, like Eskimo squaws, the women of the period judged their suitors by the amount and quality of provender supplied. The ability to order up a nice little dinner for two. with savoir faire, aplomb hors d'oeuvres and crepes suzettes, was the mark of the man of the world. So was a lot of bum French tossed into conversation and letters by the ears. This picture of the man of the

Death Watch Wife Sees Mate Gored by Bull.

By Times Special Evansville, Nov. 3.—Simon Beechler, 65, Vanderburg county farmer, w r as gored and trampled to death by a bull at his farm home near here yesterday, as his wife vainly sought to save him. Finally, with the aid of a neighbor, who heard her screams, the | bull was driven away. Pa jamas Are Distress Signal : By United Pros SADWICH. Mass., Nov. 3. —A pair of checkered pajamas was used | as a distress signal by the crew of | the thirty-five-foot schooner Cimba !to attract the attention of coast I guards here recently.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

world was assiduously developed on the film of public consciousness by the restaurateurs, maitres and hotel, sommeliers (wine waiters to you), and, in all likelihood, by a number of newspaper men who got free meals for putting the idea across A “nice little dinner.’’ in the opinion of the day, was cantaloupe <sl the canta), strained gumbo, sea bass, duchess potatoes, sweetbreads, broiled squab guinea chicken, stuffed peppers, baked tomatoes, green corn off the cob. roast plover, salad, fruit ice. cakes, bonbons and black coffee. The cost was about the same at the Astor, the new Del's, or Martin's. The restaurants must have had a working agreement, like ship lines. a a a YITITH the above nice little ’ dinner for tw r o'. one ordered up a pint of amontillado sherry, a quart of Rhine wine, a quart of champaign, and cordials, and it set one back about $25. One then conducted one’s cheese and crackers to the theater, after which, in order to shoot the breeze with her a little longer, one took her to another restaurant for a trifling supper consisting of caviar, gumbo, lobster, quail, salad, ice cream and cake. “There are practically five meals in the routine of the well-to-do New Yorker,” a journalist of 1906 announced.

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John Paul Bocock, a habitue of the Beaux-Arts. bien champagnise one evening, wrote on the reverse of his menu a poem epitomizing the time, in its subject matter, its coyness and its liberal interlarding of French. Emil, the thrice-worthy manager of the restaurant, treasures the original manuscript like a revelation of the Divine Words. Here it is: Toujours the dinner should begin. With two Martinis, ’tis a sin To dine alone—then one will be on Edge for the saucisson de Lyon. And while the fair white cloth Is spread With olives, radish and French bread. A deft garcon. demure and neat, Shall bring the blue points, toute de suite. Potage. oui. oul, petite marmite. Or consomme, and—ici, vite, Garcon, from Louis cellar bring. Some sunshine bottled for a king. Hail, bottled sunshine, glorious wine, Hail, haunting magic of the vine— A bumper to thine amber spell. Truth rises from thy bubbling well. The wine that winks! The wine that glows Akin to diamond and to rose. The wine that bids the sun arise In weary hearts and tired eyes. A lobster, now, or else a fish Done ala russe in a small dish And—once more sunshine “not too old “Nor yet too young, and not too cold.’’ That measures women, too. as well As wine—just hear that music swell! Ici, garcon. an artichoke, Some poulet, or a ruddy duck. Music and champagne, eyes that shine

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And lips that smile—who would not dine! Beaux-Arts, and bizarre, tout le monde Enjoys a roast, or brune or blonde! Which was she that girl, when she stole Mr heart? I wonder! Escarole And some cold chicken—sentiment And salad aye together went. A biscuit, now. a demi-tasse A cigarette a parting glass “L Addition. ' so. from life and light Once more we pass into the night.

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TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS.

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