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The Lord Mayor of London, Sir George Broadbridge, on October 7 reopened the rebuilt Cecil House, a public lodging-house for women in Devonshire Street, London. The Lord Mayor and the Lady Mayoress are interested in a tiny visitor who fell asleep during the ceremony. On the left is the Mayor of Holborn. "Cecil House" can accommodate fifty women and two babies, and replaces the old yueen Anne dwelling which first opened its doors. ten years ago.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19371106.2.172.1.1

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXIV, Issue 111, 6 November 1937, Page 18

Word Count
76

The Lord Mayor of London, Sir George Broadbridge, on October 7 reopened the rebuilt Cecil House, a public lodging-house for women in Devonshire Street, London. The Lord Mayor and the Lady Mayoress are interested in a tiny visitor who fell asleep during the ceremony. On the left is the Mayor of Holborn. "Cecil House" can accommodate fifty women and two babies, and replaces the old yueen Anne dwelling which first opened its doors. ten years ago. Evening Post, Volume CXXIV, Issue 111, 6 November 1937, Page 18

The Lord Mayor of London, Sir George Broadbridge, on October 7 reopened the rebuilt Cecil House, a public lodging-house for women in Devonshire Street, London. The Lord Mayor and the Lady Mayoress are interested in a tiny visitor who fell asleep during the ceremony. On the left is the Mayor of Holborn. "Cecil House" can accommodate fifty women and two babies, and replaces the old yueen Anne dwelling which first opened its doors. ten years ago. Evening Post, Volume CXXIV, Issue 111, 6 November 1937, Page 18

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