Monday, Jul. 21, 1930

Named. Charles Augustus Lindbergh Jr.; 16 days after his birth (June 22), the third consecutive Lindbergh to bear the name.

Engaged. Lyle E. Womack, divorced husband of Flyer Ruth Elder (now Mrs. Walter Camp Jr.); to Ella Bisset, Minneapolis socialite. Said he: "It's a darn sight easier to tame foxes than to tame a woman."

Engaged. Richard Norrls Williams II, 38, a widower since April 1929, U.S. tennis singles champion in 1914 and 1916, national doubles champion (with Vincent Richards) in 1925 and 1926, many times a member of Davis Cup teams (captain in 1923); and Miss Frances West Gillmore, Manhattan socialite.

Engaged. Lammot du Pont, 50, president of I. E. du Pont de Nemours & Co., board chairman of General Motors, father of seven children, and Mrs. Carolene Hynson Stollenwerck. widow of E. Carroll Stollenwerck of Baltimore; at Wilmington.

Married. Doris Doscher, model of the present U. S. 25-c- pieces, because in the opinion of Government authorities she best represented "the highest type of American womanhood"; and a Dr. H. William Baum, physiotherapist; at the Jewish Institute of Religion in Manhattan.

Married. General Emilio Aguinaldo, famed Philippine insurrectionist (1899-1901); To his third wife, Senorita Maria Agoncillo, 49, sister of much-moneyed landowning Filipino Gregorio Agoncillo; at Manila.

Married. George A. Gordon, member of the drafting committee which wrote the London Naval Treaty, secretary of the U. S. Embassy at Paris, leading U. S. "continuing expert" on Disarmament since the Naval Limitations Parley in 1927; to Mrs. Alice Vandergrift Garrett of Washington, D. C.; at Dublin, where she was given in marriage by the U. S. Minister to the Irish Free State, Frederick A. Sterling.

Elected. Lawrence Henry Rupp, Allentown (Pa.) lawyer; to be Grand Exalted Ruler of the Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks; at the Elks' 66th annual convention in Atlantic City, N. J.

Elected. Dr. Warren B. Davis. Long Beach, Calif.; to be president of the American Osteopathic Assn.

Died. Margaretta. 16-month-old daughter of Ralph Pulitzer, retired president of Press Publishing Co. (New York World and Evening World); at St. Jean de Luz, where the Pulitzers were vacationing.

Died. Helen Bowen Blair, 17, only daughter of Mr. & Mrs. William McCormick Blair, Chicago socialites; from injuries received when her horse, Pitennis, threw her at Onwentsia Country Club, Lake Forest, Ill.

Died. Murat Boyle, 47, president of the Missouri Bar Association, three Kansas City friends, and a pilot; when an airplane in which they were returning to Kansas City from fishing near Corpus Christi, Tex. lost its wings at Aransas Pass, Tex.

Died. Mrs. Janis E. Bierbower, 60, mother and tutor of Actress Elsie Janis; at Hollywood; of pneumonia.

Died. Oliver Sylvester Hershman, 71. oldtime Pittsburgh publisher; after an illness of three weeks; at Pittsburgh. In 1873, Publisher Hershman started on the Evening Telegraph. He acquired a majority interest, merged the Telegraph with the Chronicle, published the combine as the Chronicle-Telegraph until 1900 when he bought The Press. In 1923 he sold The Press to Scripps-Howard.

Died. George Gulden, 80, vice president of the Mustard Company founded by and named for his brother the late Charles Gulden; at Flushing, N. Y.

Died. Signora Elvira Donturi Puccini, widow of Composer Giacomo Puccini (Manon Lescaut, La Boheme, Tosca, Madame Butterfly); of heart disease; at Milan, Italy. In 1909 Signora Puccini served five months in jail for driving to suicide a servant girl whom she accused of having an affair with her husband. After the girl died she was cleared of Signora Puccini's accusation. Puccini died in 1924, aged 66.

Died. Mrs. Ida A. Flagler, 81, divorced wife of the late Henry M. Flagler (died 1913) one of the original Standard Oil organizers, the great developer of southern Florida (by means of his Seaboard Railway, his hotels); after being a patient at a Central Valley sanatorium (N. Y.) since 1897; at the sanatorium. Estimated estate: $15,000,000, increased in 30 years by Standard Oil cash and stock dividends from an original (1901) $1,000,000 trust fund.

Died. Mrs. Mary A. Ladley Wrigley, 91, mother of Gum Tycoon William Wrigley Jr.; at Philadelphia.

Died. Vincenzo Cardinal Vannutelli, 93, since 1915 Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, thrice mentioned for the Papacy (at the conclaves which elected Pius X in 1903, Benedict XV in 1914, Pius XI in 1922); Papal legate to Eucharistic Congresses at London in 1908, at Montreal in 1910 (after which he toured the U. S., was the guest of President Taft); on many occasions a Papal representative, envoy, nuncio, or internuncio (among them: coronation of Tsar Alexander III of Russia in 1881, at Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee); great & good friend of the U. S. (said he: "America is a dollar nation, but it is not dollar-mad-- it is the future stronghold of the Church"); of uremic poisoning and nephritis after being in poor health since 1927; at Vatican City.

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