NO TOWN HOUSE FOR DUCHESS
Visions of the young Duchess of Norfolk as one of Mayfair's leading hostesses are beginning to fade, and all the rumours that the Duke of Norfolk was looking for a somewhat smaller mansion which would make a suitable setting for her parties havo been proved false, for the Duke and Duchess are actually looking for the smallest of service flats, having decided, like many other young couples in their set, to do without a London house at all—at any rate for some years, states a London writer. They are both interested in :;port and want to live in the country, so they have made arrangements to divide their time between Arundcl Castle, the Duke's beautiful Sussex place, and Everingham Park, near York, which is the centre dT the "country" in which they hunt. When they come to town it will only be for a night or two, and a flat will serve their purpose admirably.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXV, Issue 36, 12 February 1938, Page 19
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160NO TOWN HOUSE FOR DUCHESS Evening Post, Volume CXXV, Issue 36, 12 February 1938, Page 19
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