Monday, Aug. 12, 1946

Born. To Mrs. Norma Jean Mauldin 22, who was divorced last May by William Henry ("Bill") Mauldin, 24, Pulitzer Prize cartoonist-creator of weary G.I.s Willie and Joe: their second son. Name: William Timothy. Weight: 8 lbs. 4 oz.

Born. To Jinx Falkenburg, 27, radio & film actress (Two Latins from Manhattan Cover Girl), and John Reagan ("Tex") McCrary, 35, Horatio Algerish man-about-town, ex-chief editorial writer of Hearst's tabloid New York Daily Mirror, who stars with his wife on the radio program "Hi Jinx": their first child, a son; in Manhattan. Name: Patrick. Weight: 6 lbs. 12 oz.

Engaged. The Hon. Patricia Edwina Victoria Mountbatten, 22, great-great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria goddaughter of the Duke of Windsor,'eldest daughter of Viscount Mountbatten, debonair Admiral of the Royal Navy, former Supreme Allied Commander in Southeast Asia; and Norton Cecil Michael Knatchbull, sixth Baron Brabourne, 21, son of the late cricket-playing Governor of Bombay and Bengal; in London.

Married. Ed Wynn (real name: Isaiah Edwin Leopold), 59, lisping, giggling star of stage, screen, and radio, author-producer of Broadway hits (The Perfect Fool, The Grab Bag, Ed Wynn's Carnival), father of Cinemactor Keenan Wynn; and Dorothy Elizabeth Nesbitt, 41, of New Rochelle, N.Y.; he for the third time; she for the second; in Las Vegas, Nev.

Divorced. By Ann Dvorak, 34, onetime Hollywood extra whom Howard Hughes raised to stardom in Scarface: Leslie Fenton, 43, film director-producer, former cinemactor-portrayer of dope addicts, gangsters and moral weaklings; after 14 years of marriage, no children; in Hollywood.

Died. Dr. Alfredo Machado-Hernandez, 58, Venezuelan Ambassador to the United States, onetime Venezuelan Minister of Finance and his country's representative at the United Nations Conference in San Francisco; after a long illness; in Washington.

Died. Mrs. Ethelreda Lewis, sixtyish, onetime physical-culturist who dreamed of writing a big-seller and did it by chronicling in Trader Horn the fabulous and maybe apocryphal ivory-trading, gorilla-hunting adventures of chance-visitor Alfred Aloysius Smith; of a heart ailment; in Port Alfred, Cape Province, South Africa.

Died. Dr. Theron W. Kilmer, 74, child specialist, inventor of famed "Kilmer Test" for spotting drunken drivers by examining heart action, breathing, equilibrium and handwriting; of heart disease; in Rockville Centre, L.I.

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