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Word: girls (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...performance in Boston, New York, Baltimore and Washington, it is no fault of the Pratts. Anyhow, one thing leads to another, one act leads to another, the hero, R. P. Bullard '24, who does the entire singing of the piece, gets into endless amatory difficulties with the girl who planted on him and the girl whom he loves with every ounce of red blood in his manly frame, and after a very pleasant second act at the Bahamas, during which there is a whacking-good number called "Will you marry me?", the company returns to a third...

Author: By Paul MERRICK Hollister, | Title: PUDDING "TAKES A BRACE" EFFECTIVELY | 4/12/1923 | See Source »

...Author. Louise Bryant is a beautiful girl still in her twenties, with large brown eyes, chestnut hair, and an impudent air of self-assurance that disarms diplomats, statesmen, detectives and editors. As the wife of the late John Reed, " Playboy of the Revolution," she has had more adventures in five years than ten ordinary women have in a lifetime. She first met the Communist leaders sketched in her book in 1917 during the Bolshevik coup d'etat which her husband described in what is still the most graphic and authentic picture of the revolution, as "Ten Days That Shook...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Mirrors of Moscow | 4/7/1923 | See Source »

KIKI?Lenore Ulric entering the last lap of her inordinately long career as the Parisienne who wasn't a bad girl after all. She wears an attractive checked skirt in the first...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: The Best Plays: Apr. 7, 1923 | 4/7/1923 | See Source »

POLLY PREFERRED?Genevieve Tobin appears in a comedy with a perfect first act. A go-getter, finding a pretty girl stranded in the Automat, makes a movie star and eventually a wife out of her. A burlesque director furnishes many a laugh...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: The Best Plays: Apr. 7, 1923 | 4/7/1923 | See Source »

...birth of her daughter, the present Mrs. Reiner. The mother did not tell her daughter of this, but with a strange anxiety turned the child's bent toward singing, determined to realize in her the graces of song of which the child had deprived her. One day, when the girl was half grown, an angry maid taunted her bitterly with having caused the ruin of her mother's voice. Still mother and daughter could not bring themselves to speak of the theme that had been hidden, and the woman died with the silence unbroken. The daughter became a singer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cincinnati | 4/7/1923 | See Source »

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