Word: glorias
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Divorced. Harry Hays Morgan; by Mrs. Laura Kilpatrick Trezvant Morgan; in Paris. They are the parents of the famed "Morgan twins," Mrs. Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt (widow of Reginald C. Vanderbilt) and Lady Thelma Morgan Converse Furness of London. Mrs. Morgan is the daughter of the late General Judson Kilpatrick, thrice Ambassador to Chile. Mr. Morgan, after 40 years in the U. S. diplomatic service, retired as U. S. Consul General at Buenos Aires, Argentina. His father, the late Philip Hickey Morgan, was onetime U. S. Ambassador to Mexico; his son, Harry Hays Morgan...
Died. Charles W. Svensson, painter, uncle of Cinemactress Gloria Swanson; in Manhattan, in a fire in his studio from which, frantic, he was trying to rescue his portraits of his famed niece...
...American Institute of Graphic Arts each year has a jury choose 50 books from those that are submitted. These volumes then are exhibited, first in New York and then on a tour of the states, going as far west as California and returning to the Gloria Club, in New York where the best volume is selected...
...with Owen D. Young, Chairman of General Electric's directors. We, with Charles G. Dawes (Chicago banker, U. S. Vice President), organized the Dawes Plan of German Reparations payments (TIME, Dec. 20); and we were both members of the Second Industrial Conference called by President Wilson in 1919." Gloria Swanson, cinema actress, who married a marquis: "Some people accused me of giving blatant gold-digging advice when I told a New York World reporter the following: 'There are times when clothes are about the best investment that a woman can make. If, instead of bleakly saving...
After hours of preliminary tableaux, solo singing, orchestral music, ballet, the cathedral gave over to Gloria Swanson-on-screen who endured through an interminable legend in which a girl, knowing not whether to devote herself to a career as opera singer, to her lover or to a wealthy villain, discovers (in a crystal) the horrible effect of conducting herself for the sake of the career or the loveless wifehood, and thereupon marries the lover. The effect of the lover is not picturized because (according to the faith expounded ardently and ex cathedra by the subtitles) happiness is inevitable when...