Word: cartier
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...McLeans had the finest honeymoon money could buy. To top it off, Evalyn dropped in at Cartier's in Paris, bought herself a jeweled ornament called the Star of the East ($120,000) and smuggled it through the U. S. Customs. Father paid up, of course. Another time when Evalyn and Ned went abroad, to get over having had their first baby, Evalyn won about $70,000 at Monte Carlo and they set off to drive to Paris. When they got there, having beaten the train time by ten minutes, they found that their chauffeur, forgotten in the back...
Married, Pierre Claudel, 24, elder son of France's Ambassador Paul Claudel who this week left Washington for his new post at Brussels; and Marion Rumsey Cartier, 21, only child of Jeweler Pierre C. Cartier; in Manhattan...
...light your cigar on a star up here," cried Alfred Emanuel Smith, proud because he was showing off his building to Jean Cardinal Verdier, Archbishop of Paris. Then, during luncheon with John Jacob Raskob, Editor Michael Williams of The Commonweal, Jeweler Pierre C. Cartier, President John S. Burke of B. Altman & Co., Banker Robert Louis Hoguet and others, Cardinal Verdier admired the view...
...English call "pearls," but never with real pearls or gems of any sort. Thus a real duke in his mere gold coronet is usually able to slip past tourists unobserved at the opening of Parliament, bold barons bearing the brunt. A new ducal coronet may be bought from Cartier in London for about $1,000, but a headgear of some sort set with precious stones might be sold to the right tourist as a "ducal coronet...
...renascence in bathroom fixtures and furniture has smitten the automobile. Some of the artists responsible for the renascence are now working on auto bodies: Norman Bel Geddes, jack-of-all-design; Joseph Urban, Ziegfeld and Metropolitan Opera scenic artist; Helen Dryden, painter and fashion artist; the house of Cartier, jewelers...