Monday, Aug. 04, 1947
Married. Mary Peabody Fitzgerald, 30, daughter of the Right Rev. Malcolm Peabody, Episcopal Bishop of Central New York, granddaughter of the late Dr. Endicott Peabody, famed headmaster of Groton School; and Ronald Tree, fiftyish, M.P. and Parliamentary Secretary, Ministry of Town and Country Planning in the Churchill Cabinet, rich cousin of rich Publisher Marshall Field III; both for the second time; in Huntington, N.Y.
Married. Josef Cyrankiewicz, 36, bullet-headed, pro-Communist Polish Premier; and blonde, husky-voiced Nina Andrycz, thirtyish, who made her first big hit in The Constant Nymph and is now Warsaw's top leading lady; he for the second time, she for the first; in Warsaw.
Married. Ralph Delahaye Paine Jr., 41, managing editor of FORTUNE ; and Nancy White Dauphinot, 31, associate fashion editor of Good Housekeeping; both for the second time; in Manhattan.
Married. William Samuel Paley, 45, board chairman and principal stockholder of the Columbia Broadcasting System; and Barbara Gushing Mortimer, 30, svelte brunette daughter of the late great brain surgeon, Dr. Harvey Gushing; both for the second time; in Manhasset, N.Y. Five days before, he had been divorced in Reno by Dorothy Hart Paley, 38, who reportedly got a $1,500,000 settlement, after 15 years of marriage, two children (adopted).
Married. Herman Shumlin, 48, bald, bespectacled, parlor-pink Broadway producer (Watch on the Rhine, The Male Animal); and Carmen England, 33, onetime screen bit player; he for the second time, she for the third; in Santa Monica.
Divorced. By the Countess of Carnarvon, 45, the former Tilly Losch, onetime Viennese premiere ballerina who changed her style, rose to fame in the '30s as an interpretative dancer: the Earl of Carnarvon, 58, on charges of adultery which he declined to contest (two years ago he failed to get a divorce on the grounds that Tilly had sailed off to the U.S. in 1940, leaving him and the blitz behind); after eight years of marriage, no children; in England.
Died. Arthur Hamilton Lee, Viscount Lee of Fareham, 78, one-time First Lord of the Admiralty, whose chief claim to fame was his 1921 gift to the nation of his Buckinghamshire estate, Chequers, as a country home for Britain's Prime Ministers; after long illness; in Avening, Gloucestershire, England.
Died. Martha Ellen Truman, 94, the President's mother; in Grandview, Mo. (see NATIONAL AFFAIRS).
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