Word: galt
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Divorced. George Galt Bourne, 47, son of the late Singer Sewing Machine President Gilbert Bourne, father of Cinemactress Whitney Bourne (Crime Without Passion); by Nancy Atterbury Potter Bourne, 30, Manhattan socialite, his second wife; in Reno...
...Richard Bennett '28, J. K. Barre '30, Henry Fox '28, Thomas Galt '30, Charles Tatham '28, R. C. Carpenter '29, Abbot Peterson '30, Paul Sherbert '30. Baptista, Charles Leatherbee '29 Vincentio, D. W. Moreland '28 Lucentio, H. W. B. Donegan E.T.S. Petruchio, K. A. Perry '28 Hortensio, A. S. Gerstein '30 Tranio, Adele Wood Biondelo, Charles Hicks ocC. Grumio, G. B. Bingham '28 A Pedant, G. W. Harrington '27 Katharina Frances Small Bianca, Mary Caperton Widow, Corlies Wilber Curtis, Margaret Effinger Specialty Dancers, Sara Sherburne Ogden Goelet '29 Servants, Margaret Child Judy Brown Lydia Edwards Tailor, Abbott Peterson '30 Haberdasher...
...Adler is a distinguished member of a modern group of psychologists," said H. S. Galt, Chairman of the Education Club, "and speaks with authority on the application of psychological analysis to problems of education and conduct...
...Some of its more potent members: Thomas E. Donnelley, Chicago printer; George P. Douglas, Minneapolis lawyer; Joseph R. Ensign, Simsbury, Conn., manufacturer; Samuel H. Fisher, Manhattan lawyer; John R. Galt, Hawaiian banker; Edward J. Gavegan, New York Supreme Court Judge; Robert L. Luce, Manhattan lawyer; Edward L. Parsons, San Francisco bishop; Charles C. Paulding, Manhattan railroad lawyer and nephew of Mr. Depew; Gifford Pinchot, Pennsylvania Governor; Robert Treat Platt, Portland (Ore.) lawyer; James Gamble Rogers, Manhattan architect; Charles H. Sherrill, Manhattan lawyer; George W. Woodruff, Pennsylvania Attorney General...
...Edith Galt Wilson. " 'She's handsome in a heavy way but her face sags.' . . . Democrats, no doubt, see her comeliness and Republicans note the sag. ... If Mrs. Wilson doesn't exactly speak the Woodrow Wilson language, she at least seems to understand it. ... Have you ever noticed how Mrs. Wilson always managed to draw into the background a little and so give the impression that the President is perceptibly taller, which, of course, is not the case. . . . She was proud to be Mrs. Woodrow Wilson but she didn't want to wear the dome...