Immigration over the centuries transformed New York City into a cosmopolitan metropolis, with many of those migrants drawn from America’s hinterlands. What they found in the city was not only economic opportunity, but also a place to grow artistically and intellectually.

Such was the case of Willa Cather, who while living in New York City would draw on her Nebraska childhood to write a succession of novels about prairie life and its people (including My Antonia and O Pioneers!) that would culminate in a 1923 Pulitzer Prize.
Louise Bogan, in 1931 a new poetry editor for the New Yorker (and a poet herself), wrote a profile of Cather for the Aug. 8 issue. An excerpt:



Bogan concluded the profile with this note about Lèon Bakst, who was commissioned in 1923 to paint a portrait of Cather while she visiting Paris (image courtesy Omaha Public Library):
My dear late friend Susan Rosowski, who was a preeminent Cather scholar, wrote that Cather was “the first to give immigrants heroic stature in serious American literature.” In these times when immigration is so hotly debated, it is worth revisiting My Antonia and O Pioneers! to recall what once made America truly great.
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One Arm Restaurant
If you wanted to get lunch fast and cheap in 1931 you might have stopped at one of John Thompson’s New York restaurants. According to Tom Miller (daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com), there were no waiters in Thompson’s restaurants. “Customers purchased foods like cold corned beef, cold boiled ham, smoked boiled tongue or hot frankfurters at a counter. They then took their trays to ‘one arm’ chairs lined up along the wall. There were no tables; instead customers ate at what was similar to turn-of-the-century school desks.” E.B. White stopped in for a visit:

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Cinematic Eyeful
The Pre-Code comedy-drama Transatlantic was light on plot but heavy on deep-focus cinematography (by James Wong Howe) that wowed New Yorker critic John Mosher in 1931…and still wows critics today.


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From Our Advertisers
We begin with another socialite endorsing Pond’s Cold Cream — Mrs. Potter d’Orsay Palmer nee Maria Eugenia Martinez de Hoz. She was wife No. 2 of Potter d’Orsay Palmer, son of the wealthy family of Chicago Palmer House fame…they would divorce in 1937, and the playboy Potter would marry two more times before dying of a cerebral hemorrhage in 1939 (the result of a drunken brawl). Maria Eugenia would remarry and return to her homeland of Argentina to raise a family…
…it seems Maria Eugenia didn’t limit herself to endorsing cold cream, as this next ad attests (from the May, 1934 Delineator magazine)…
…Maria Eugenia endorsed Camels because they were marketed to women back then, as were Marlboro cigarettes, the makers of which continued their silly handwriting and jingle-writing contests to promote the brand (note the examples “Miss Eileen Fitzgerald” offered of what defined a modern lifestyle)…
…the makers of Chesterfield cigarettes, on the other hand, originally marketed their product to men, but they made sure women were included in the copy beneath the image — “yes, there’s a big woman vote” …
…you may recall the subtle ways Liggett & Myers began to lure women smokers back in 1928 with this ad campaign…
…you see a lot of tobacco ads because cigarette manufacturers were one of the few industries still turning a profit during the first years of the Depression…men and women were smoking like crazy, maybe to calm their nerves over the performance of their refrigerators…
…one could always calm the nerves by taking a spin in a new Plymouth, bargain-priced at just $535…
…and we have another Arno-esque ad by Herbert Roese, touting the wonders of “New York’s Most Interesting Newspaper”…
…on to our cartoonists, we begin with this wonderful spot drawing by Barbara Shermund…
…and an illustration by Reginald Marsh of a Coney Island crowd that graced facing pages in “The Talk of the Town”…
…here’s one of four drawings Walter Schmidt contributed to the New Yorker between 1931 and 1933…
…Perry Barlow illustrated the joys of dining out with the kiddies…
…back to Barbara Shermund, who eavesdropped on her debs…
…Kemp Starrett gave us a proud moment at the county fair…
…I. Klein offered up a new twist on the term “family planning”…
…John Held Jr assessed the aesthetic value of chunky mission-style furniture…
…and Peter Arno reappeared in the cartoons with this full-page illustration of some desperate climbers…
Next Time: Asphalt Jungle…
Sometimes if your’re good you can catch Cather’s “Pauls Case” on PBS.A short dramatization of the story.
Ive seen other restaurants use school desks for the customers.Didnt know Thompsons started it.I wish Horn and Hardarts woulda done that instead of having to sometimes share a table with a nut-job or wino who stunk out loud.
And any drawing by Reginald Marsh is always in good taste.
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Thanks for reading. I’ll keep an eye out for Paul’s Case.
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