Monday, Jun. 22, 1942
Marriage Revealed. Betty Green Cordon, 19, Manhattan's "Deb No. 1" of 1941; and Private Robert Sutton Sallfield Jr., of Akron, Ohio last March.
Married. Actress Mimi Lilygren ("Jo Ann Sayers"), 23, who played the title role in My Sister Eileen; and Ensign Anthony A. Bliss, 29, ex-husband of Publisher Marshall Field Ill's eldest daughter, Barbara; in Manhattan.
Married. The Right Rev. Archibald Lang Fleming, 58, the Anglican Church's "Flying Bishop" of the Arctic; and Elizabeth Nelson Lukens, associate headmistress of The Agnes Irwin School near Philadelphia; in Ardmore, Pa.; he for the second time.
Divorced. Cinemactress Frances Farmer, 28; by Cinemactor William Y. Wycliffe Anderson (cinemonicker: Leif Erikson), 27; in Reno. A few hours later he married Cinemactress Florette R. Ottenheimer (cinemonicker: Margaret Hayes), 25.
Divorced. Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, 29, ex-sportsman, multimillionaire boatswain U.S.N.R.; by Manuela Hudson Vanderbilt, 28; quickly (in ten minutes), quietly (the records were sealed); in Reno. She first sued for divorce in New York last August on grounds of adultery, dropped the suit in the face of publicity.
Missing in Action. Major General Clarence L. Tinker, 54, commander of the Army Air Force in Hawaii; somewhere beyond Midway.
Died. Stanley Lupino, 47, British music-hall comedian, actor, playwright, musicomedy song writer; in London. Born into a famed theatrical family whose name had been associated with the English stage for over 300 years, he was the father of Cinemactress Ida Lupino. (Actor-Manager Lupino Lane is his cousin.)
Died. The Most Rev. Joseph Moran Corrigan, 63, rector of the Catholic University of America; of pneumonia; in Washington. An affable, circular six-footer, he was a popular orator and preacher, an energetic Catholic administrator in Philadelphia for some 30 years. In his six years as rector he brought many new things to Catholic University, including a School of Social Sciences.
Died. Nathalie Sedgwick Colby, 67, novelist (Green Forest, Black Stream), ex-wife of Bainbridge Colby, Woodrow Wilson's Secretary of State; in Manhattan. Once a celebrated hostess to Washington society, she satirized the blue bloods in her writings, and Colby, when he sued for divorce in France, complained that she had satirized him. She later got their divorce in Reno.
This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.