Word: cathleen
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According to the latest statement from Boston Police headquarters the thousand-odd Harvard students who passed through the Yard yesterday morning were in the approximate vicinity of a $15,000 diamond studded "slave" bracelet, which was lost there Wednesday afternoon by Miss Cathleen B. Rice, of Hartford, Connecticut. All day yesterday a special detachment of the police force searched in the Yard shrubbery for the missing ornament, while two inspectors went the rounds of the city pawn-shops. The bracelet has not yet been found, however...
Died. Mrs. Cathleen Neilson Vanderbilt Colford, 40, onetime (1903-20) wife of the late Reginald Claypoole Vanderbilt; suddenly, from heart disease; in Paris...
...Perhaps Cathleen, Marchioness of Queensberry, had not heard the warning of Emile Fuchs (see above) that she ought to have at least a baronet* in her family tree to succeed as an artist in the U. S. She is only the daughter of a Scotch commoner, famed Anglo-U. S. Portraitist Harrington Mann...
...first wife, nee Cathleen Neilson, divorced him in 1919. In 1923 he married Miss Gloria Morgan, daughter of Consul-General Harry Hayes Morgan; last year she bore him a daughter. Though still relatively a young man, the world in which he spent his money with such debonair magnificence and through which he raced in his roaring automobiles has largely vanished; even the scenes of his gayeties are being removed. Delmonico's, where he gave numerous dinners, recently closed its doors; Madison Square Garden, at whose ringside his plump beetling face often brooded, has been pulled down...
...also represented by his portrait of Mr. Goadby Loew, a lean, commanding gentleman folding wiry arms over a double-breasted blue waistcoat. There too was Anna Pavlowa by Malvina Hoffman; almost too slinky, too shiny-eyed a lady for that decorous dusk; Schattenstein's picture of Miss Cathleen Vanderbilt (Mrs. Harry C. Cushing III), oval face, narrow eyes, pursed sleepy mouth; Halmi's portrait of Miss Constance Mc-Cann, a slim girl with red hair; Alfred Munnings' restrained, academical paintings of Mrs. George F. Baker Jr., Mr. Sidney Fish. There was an early Sargent; an early Augustus...