Duncan Hines (44 page)

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Authors: Louis Hatchett

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236
Contract with Duncan Hines and R. R. Donnelley and Sons Company, March 1938.

237
Hotel receipt, St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans, 18 March 1938.

238
Hines,
Adventures in Good Eating
, 175.

239
Documents, R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company with Duncan Hines and Adventures in Good Eating, Inc., 14 February 1938-2 May 1938.

240
Hotel receipt, Walnut Park Plaza, Philadelphia, 21 May 1938.

241
Hines,
Food Odyssey
, 32. The hotel is located at 2 East 55th Street.

242
Hines,
Adventures in Good Eating
, 209.

243
Hines,
Food Odyssey
, 32-34.

244
Receipt from R. R. Donnelley to Duncan Hines, 1 July 1938.

245
MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?,” 17.

246
“From Hobby to Publishing,”
Publisher's Weekly
134 (6 August 1938): 354-55.

247
Hotel receipts, Deshler-Wallick Hotel, Columbus OH, 11 August 1938.

248
Hines,
Food Odyssey
, 150.

249
Hotel receipts, Commodore Perry Hotel, Toledo OH, 22-23 August 1938.

250
This restaurant was located at 436 Huron Street.

251
This restaurant was located at the intersection of Madison and Erie Street.

252
Park City Daily News, 1
September 1938.

253
Chicago Daily Tribune
, 7 September 1938. The funeral was held in the chapel at 4227 Cottage Grove Avenue. The author has not yet located the grave site.

254
I. A. Bench (secretary to Duncan Hines) to Franklin M. Watts, 9 September 1938.

255
Ernie Pyle, Scripps-Howard news service, 10 September 1938.

256
Trade-Mark certificate, United States Patent Office, 28 February 1939. On 19 September 1938, Hines filed an application with the United States Patent Office to have Adventures in Good Eating, Inc. registered as an official trademark under the protection of the laws of the United States. On 28 February 1939, Hines was awarded Trade-Mark No. 365,202, and it remained in force for twenty years.

257
Horace Sutton, “Wayfarer's Guardian Angel,”
Saturday Review of Literature
31 (27 November 1948): 38.

258
Duncan Hines to I. A. Bench, 27 November 1938.

259
Interview with Cora Jane Spiller, 16 August 1993.

260
M. Lincoln Schuster to Duncan Hines, 30 November 1938.

261
Duncan Hines to Frank M. Watts, 9 June 1939.

262
Adventures in Good Eating, Inc. v. Best Places To Eat, Inc. and Carl A. Barrett, civil action no. 1844 (1940), 31.

263
Milton MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?,”
The Saturday Evening Post
211 (3 December 1938): 17.

264
Phyllis Larsh, “Duncan Hines,”
Life
21/2 (8 July 1946): 16.

265
MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?,” 80.

266
Anna Rothe, ed.,
Current Biography
(New York: H. W. Wilson, 1946) 261.

267
Interview with Mary Herndon Cohron, 29 August 1994.

268
Clementine Paddleford, “60,000 Miles of Eating,”
This Week Magazine
(12 January 1947): 12.

269
David M. Schwartz, “Duncan Hines: He Made Gastronomes Out of Motorists,”
Smithsonian
15 (November 1984): 92.

270
MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?,” 80.

271
Ibid.

272
Schwartz, “Duncan Hines,” 92.

273
Milton MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?,”
The Saturday Evening Post
211 (3 December 1938): 82.

274
Ibid., 80.

275
Duncan Hines,
Adventures in Good Eating
, (Bowling Green KY: Adventures in Good Eating, Inc., 1941) 26.

276
MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?,” 80.

277
Their guest told the Wakefields, as she made her exit, that she would send them a check.

278
Duncan Hines,
Duncan Hines' Food Odyssey
(New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1955) 72.

279
MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?,” 81-82.

280
Hines,
Food Odyssey
, 72-73.

281
Clementine Paddleford, “60,000 Miles of Eating,”
This Week Magazine
(12 January 1947): 12.

282
Hines,
Adventures in Good Eating
, 148.

283
Hines,
Food Odyssey
, 73. After 37 years of feeding the public, the Wakefields retired from the Toll House in 1967. It folded as an institution about 1970. Frank Saccone purchased the building in September of 1972 and reopened it in June 1973. Ruth Wakefield died at age 73 in 1977. At 11:30
P.M.
on 31 December 1984, fire swept through the historic structure, demolishing it completely. Kenneth Wakefield, then 87 years old, said he would miss it.
Brockton
[Mass.]
Enterprise
, 2 January 1985.

284
Paddleford, “60,000 Miles of Eating,” 12.

285
Hines,
Adventures in Good Eating
, 117.

286
Hines,
Food Odyssey
, 169-71.

287
MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?,” 81.

288
Hines,
Food Odyssey
, 115-17.

289
Ibid., 123.

290
Hines,
Adventures in Good Eating
, 81.

291
Hines,
Food Odyssey
, 123-24.

292
Ibid., 124.

293
MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?,” 82.

294
Fort Lauderdale
[Florida]
News and Sun-Sentinel
, n.d.

295
MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?,” 82.

296
Hines,
Food Odyssey
, 125.

297
MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?,” 82.

298
Hines,
Adventures in Good Eating
, 225.

299
Phyllis Larsh, “Duncan Hines,”
Life
21/2 (8 July 1946): 17.

300
Hines,
Adventures in Good Eating
, 135.

301
MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?,” 82.

302
Hines,
Adventures in Good Eating
, 215.

303
Duncan Hines to I. A. Bench, 11 December 1938.

304
Interview with Cora Jane Spiller, 16 August 1993.

305
Proposal for Directories, R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company to Adventures in Good Eating, Inc., 1 February 1939.

306
Milton MacKaye, “Where Shall We Stop for Dinner?”
The Saturday Evening Post
211 (3 December 1938): 82.

307
Proposal for Directories.

308
Adventures in Good Eating, Inc. v. Best Places To Eat, Inc. and Carl A. Barrett, civil action no. 1844 (1940) 36.

309
Boston Herald
, 23 June 1939.

310
Spiller, 16 August 1993.

311
The Morrison Hotel was located in Chicago at the corner of Madison and Clark Streets and was popular with businessmen because of its central location.

312
Interview with Elizabeth Duncan Hines, 30 August 1993. She should have been scared, as this was one of the few known instances where Duncan Hines drove at night.

313
Duncan Hines,
Adventures in Good Cooking
(Bowling Green KY: Adventures in Good Eating, Inc., 1939) ii.

314
Interview with Caroline Hines Tyson, 27 July 1994.

315
Elizabeth Duncan Hines, 30 August 1993.

316
Spiller, 16 August 1993.

317
Interview with Sara Jane Meeks, 7 June 1994.

318
Spiller, 16 August 1993.

319
The Bowling Green bank that held his office was on State Street between Main and 10th Streets.

320
Spiller, 16 August 1993 and 10 May 1994.

321
Ibid.

322
Ibid., 10 May 1994.

323
Meeks, 7 June 1994.

324
Spiller, 10 May 1994.

325
Meeks, 7 June 1994. In the 1950s, long after Hines had moved his office and home outside of town, when a secretary took dictation from him, it was usually done in his living quarters. The office was one large room and giving dictation was not only distracting to the other employees, it was also annoying to Hines; listening to his secretaries bang away on their typewriters without losing his train of thought was no environment in which to give dictation. Therefore,
Hines had a small office in his living quarters for this purpose, which he called “the library.” When Meeks first saw it, she wondered if Hines belonged to a book club. The sight of so much reading material led her to believe him to be a voracious reader. She said that “when he would come back from a trip not only would there be a pile of letters on his desk waiting for him to answer, but there would also be on the floor an enormous pile of magazines, newspapers and especially books that had accumulated in his absence…. He had a lot of books.” The library was “right by the window, and I would sit there and take dictation, and then, when I would finish, I would go back to the office to type the letter, and then he would come out there and sign it.” Hines needed the library so he could concentrate as he composed material for both magazine articles and the material in his books, activities he could not accomplish if he had the constant clatter of the office about him. But in mid-1939 the “library” was just a thought and months away from realization. In the meantime Hines had to contend with the cramped office space and its physical limitations.

326
Spiller, 16 August 1993.

327
Interview with Thomas C. Dedman, 19 May 1994.

328
Duncan Hines,
Lodging for a Night
, (Bowling Green KY: Adventures in Good Eating, Inc. 1939) vi-vii.

329
Ibid., viii-ix.

330
Ibid., 250.

331
Jack Bruce to Duncan Hines, 25 April 1939.

332
Duncan Hines Cave City Rotary Club speech, 18 August 1943.

333
Duncan Hines to F. H. Marquis, 1 June 1939.

334
R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company to Duncan Hines, 1 September 1939.

335
Interview with Cora Jane Spiller, 10 May 1994.

336
Interview with Cora Jane Spiller, 16 August 1993.

337
Interview with Duncan Welch, 7 March 1995.

338
Emelie E. Hines death certificate.

339
Marriage certificate for Duncan Hines and Emelie E. Tolman, Aransas County, Rockport TX, issued 9 December 1939; returned and filed by W. R. Ellis, Justice of the Peace, 11 December 1939, no. 224.

340
Spiller, 16 August 1993.

341
In 1994 the author visited this still standing structure at 1032 College Street, between 10th and 11th Streets. Most of its interior was exactly as Hines and Emelie left it. All the bathroom arrangements were still intact—the floor tiles, the sink, the toilet, even the old-fashioned bathtub; none had been replaced.

342
Spiller, 10 May 1994.

343
Ibid., 16 August 1993 and 10 May 1994.

344
Warren County Deed Book, # 186, 11 October 1939.

345
Oklahoma City Times
, 4 December 1939.

346
E. Eastman Irvine, ed.
The World Almanac and Book of Facts for 1939
(New York NY: World-Telegram, 1939). Some of that year's top ten non-fiction best sellers included
Mein Kampf
by Adolph Hitler;
Listen to the Wind
by Anne Morrow Lindbergh, which had sold 200,000 copies by 1 March;
A Peculiar Treasure
by Edna Ferber;
Alone
by Richard E. Byrd; and
Benjamin Franklin
by Carl Van Doren, which had sold 187,000 copies by 1 June.

347
Duncan Hines to Frank M. Watts, 28 December 1939. One should note that
Adventures in Good Cooking
had sold reasonably well in three months, considering that it was given almost no publicity.

348
Interview with Larry Williams, 31 March 1995.

349
Interview with Paul W. Moore, 31 August 1994; interview with Larry Williams, 31 March 1995. The original name of the Williams Printing Company was the Folk-Keeling Company, which was purchased by brothers Roy and Fletcher Williams on 8 August 1911 and thus acquired its new name. The business did relatively well for a number of years; when the Depression began, the Williams brothers saved their company from bankruptcy by making their relatives and a friend co-owners. The owners of the firm were Roy and Fletcher Williams, their brother, Tom Williams, their brother-in-law E. A. Burgstrom, and James Overall; each invested $1,000. When they needed more cash, the Williams brothers' two sisters, Clara and Ruth, collectively put up another $1,000. The $6,000 they pooled together enabled the firm to keep the bank from closing its doors. During the Depression, when most Nashville printers were permanently closing their doors for lack of business, the Williams firm was kept alive mostly by their largest customer, the Life and Casualty Insurance Company. The Williams Printing Company's first address in Nashville was 161 4th Avenue North; the company moved in 1933 to 417 Commerce Street, next door to the Ryman Auditorium. In 1983 the firm moved to another Nashville address. The Commerce Street location was the only one of which Duncan Hines was familiar; it is now a parking lot.

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