Word: eleanors
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Chairman, H. J. Williams, Hazel Reid; W. H. Robertson, Elavine Williams; L. V. Baker, Dorothy Freedland; R. M. Grogan, Anna Grogan; Robert Beecher, Gladys Stapley; G. A. Sweet; Eleanor Davis...
...Chairman, J. T. Baldwin, Eleanor Sutton; F. K. Kernan, Grace Sargent; S. C. Graves Jr., Mary Hall; L. Nichols; R. Field, J. S. Clark...
...Chairman A. R. Balsam, Margaret Nas; J. F. Lincoln, Madeline Bastian; P. R. Lincoln, Dorothy Gray; H. B. Tyson, Eleanor Gilligan; A. W. Jones, Priscilla Sargent; J. M. Cooper, Virginia Cross...
...Prohibition not officially dealt with. Miss Eleanor Rathbone of England stated that " prohibition is not practical politics in England now." Inquiries failed to reveal a single prohibitionist among the French or Italian delegates. All the Dutch delegates were strongly against prohibition. Miss Bertha Lutz of Brazil asserted that the working women of Brazil were " in favor of prohibition on moral grounds, because their husbands spent money on wine...
...attempts toward "Every Home Its Own Hollywood" Robert J. Flaherty, producer of Nanook of the North, sailed for the South Seas to film Samoan life and customs before the natives start charging a couvert-charge for their own variety of hula-hula. "Cinderella of Hollywood" is the nickname of Eleanor Boardman, who plays the leading role in Rupert Hughes' new cinema play, Souls for Sale. A year ago, according to all accounts, she was not even a "super." Her course led her from her home in Germantown, Pa., to Broadway, to a chorus part, to three small movie parts...