Monday, Jul. 16, 1923

Born. To Mr. and Mrs. Edsel S. Ford, at Detroit, a daughter. She is Henry Ford's third grandchild, first granddaughter.

Engaged. William H. Vanderbilt, 21, of Manhattan, eldest son of the late Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt and Mrs. Paul FitzSimons, to Miss Emily O'Neill Davies, of Manhattan.

Marriage postponed: Captain Charles Nungesser, eminent French ace, failed to marry Miss Consuelo Hatmaker, of Manhattan, in Paris as scheduled. James Hatmaker opposed the wedding because of his daughter's extreme youth. It is understood that the engagement must endure " for at least a year."

Sued for divorce. Robert Elias Treman, of Ithaca, N. Y., by Irene Castle Treman, dancer, in Paris. After the suit had been filed, Mrs. Treman denied all knowledge of it and left Deauville with her husband for a two or three days' visit.

Divorced. Ethel Barrymore, actress, from Russell G. Colt, of Manhattan. She charged cruelty and nonsupport.

Divorced. Countess Eleanor Curran Moroni, former vaudeville actress and manicurist, from Count Girolamo Moroni, of Italy. She charged nonsupport.

Divorced. Park Benjamin, brother of Mrs. Enrico Caruso, by Mrs. Katherine Doremus Benjamin. She charged misconduct.

Died. William R. Day ("Silent Man"), Secretary of State under President McKinley, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the U. S., 1903-1922; at Mackinac Island, Mich., of bronchitis.

Died. Mrs. Nettie Fowler Mc-Cormick, 88, widow of Cyrus H. McCormick, inventor of the grain reaper, at Lake Forest, 111., of acute bronchitis.

Died. Mrs. Samuel M. Vauclain, wife of the President of the Baldwin Locomotive Works, at Rosemont, Pa., from a hemorrhage following a long illness.

Died. George L. Buff, 84, manufacturer of instruments which have been used in surveying practically every great engineering feat for 50 years.

Died. William H. Hall, 89, Civil War veteran who helped to carry President Lincoln from the Ford Theatre after his assassination by Booth; at South Shields, England.

Died. Le Vice-Admiral Ferdinand Jean Jacques de Bon, 62, Chief of the French Naval General Staff since 1916, who visited the United States in 1921 as chief naval adviser to Premier Briand at the Washington Arms Conference, at Paris, after a long illness.