unearths some literary gems.
Frrom Vanity Fair, October 1916:
A contrived but cute bon mot from Benchley; a prescient bit from Dorothy Parker (debuting in this issue as "Dorothy Rothschild"--little did she know that, a century later, people would be turning the tables on her beau by incorrectly attributing other people's witticisms to *her*); and a list of silly names (with "Archibald Witherspoon Troutt" as a bonus, culled from a separate list that was mostly sub-par).