Clementine Paddleford — American Journalist born on September 27, 1898, died on November 13, 1967

Clementine Paddleford was an American food writer active from the 1920s through the 1960s, writing for several publications, including the New York Herald Tribune, the New York Sun, The New York Telegram, Farm and Fireside, and This Week magazine. A Kansas native, she lived most of her life in New York City, where she introduced her readers to the global range of food to be found in that city. She was also a pilot, and flew a Piper Cub around the country to report on America's many regional cuisines. Paddleford coined the term "hero" relating to a submarine sandwich in the 1930s, writing that one needed to be a hero to finish the gigantic Italian sandwich... (wikipedia)

Never grow a wishbone, daughter, where you backbone ought to be.
Beer is the Danish national drink, and the Danish national weakness is another beer.
A tiny radish of passionate scarlet, tipped modestly in white.