Word: elliott
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...colonial. Its clapboard sides have been stuccoed and a stone wing added. French windows look down over a mile of virgin timber through which tumbles a cascade to the river. The estate covers 1,000 acres. Here live or visit his five children, of whom Son Elliott was married last month. Here Mrs. Roosevelt, able, active and animated, runs the Val-Kill shops, where workmen make reproductions of early American furniture by hand. Here lives Governor Roosevelt's elderly mother. Both women take very good care of the Governor when he comes down from Albany for weekends to live...
...Married. Elliott Roosevelt, 21, second son of Governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt, partner in Kelly, Nason & Roosevelt, Manhattan advertising firm (he entered business in 1929, instead of entering Princeton University); and Elizabeth Browning Donner, 20, daughter of Wil. Ham Henry Donner, board chairman of Pennsylvania Steel Co., founder of the towns of Monessen and Donora, Pa. and of Donner Steel Co.; in Bryn Mawr, Pa. Present were Governor & Mrs. Roosevelt, many a socialite, and the groom's three brothers...
Appointed, Dr. Elliott Carr Cutler, director of surgery at Lakeside Hospital, Cleveland, Harvard 1909; to succeed his onetime teacher and friend, Dr. Harvey Williams Gushing, as Moseley Professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical School and surgeon-in-chief at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. Both were famed as surgeons on the Western Front...
Unless many newsmen all made the same mistake, Newsstand-Buyer Mary Williams' memory errs again. On her third marriage last month, to George Anthony Reginald Williams. 33, the aviatrix was widely quoted: "My first husband. Elliott-Lynn, was 76 when we were married, and my second. Sir James Heath, was 56." Sir James, whom she married in 1927 will not be 80 until...
Scribner's increased its page size and altered its format to something generally resembling Forum. Feature titles blazoned on the orange cover seemed more provocative than usual: "Hoover Can Not Be Elected," by Elliott Thurston; "Mill Girls," by Sherwood Anderson; "A Bride...