Monday, Sep. 01, 1947

Married. Jane Greer, 22, cinemactress; and Edward Lasker, 35, son of Millionaire Adman (Lord & Thomas) Albert Lasker; she for the second time (her first: oldtime Crooner Rudy Vallee), he for the second; in Las Vegas, Nev.

Married. Louise Van Alen Mdivani, 37, Astor heiress; and Alexander Saunderson, 29, London lawyer; she for the third time (her first and second husbands were both "Marrying Mdivanis"), he for the first; in Newport, R.I.

Remarried. Rt. Hon. Sir Archibald John Kerr Clark Kerr (pronounced "car"), Lord Inverchapel, first Baron of Loch Eck, 65, Britain's tweedy Ambassador to the U.S.; and Chilean beauty Maria Teresa Diaz Salas, fortyish, whom he divorced two years ago; in Edinburgh (see FOREIGN NEWS).

Died. Roy A. Chadwick, 54, designer of the Lancaster, the R.A.F.'s highly successful World War II heavy bomber; in a take-off crash during a test of the Avro Tudor II, his design for a new long-range British transport; near Woodford, England.

Died. Princess Olga Radziwill, 60, wife of Prince Leon Radziwill of Nieswiez and Kleck, who owned an estate in Poland (until the Russian invasion in 1939) which was once larger than Belgium; in Monaco, where the couple lived in exile.

Died. The Rev. Paul Dwight Moody, 68, onetime president of Middlebury College (1921-42), ex-senior chaplain of the A.E.F., son of the late famed Evangelist Dwight L. Moody; of a heart attack; in Shrewsbury, Vt.

Died. Theodore G. ("The Man") Bilbo, 69, who rose to be senior U.S. Senator from Mississippi on a platform of belligerent bigotry; of "progressive heart failure," cancer and other complications; in New Orleans (see NATIONAL AFFAIRS).

Died. Lieut. General James Guthrie Harbord, 81, World War I hero (he rose from the ranks to become Pershing's chief of staff, commanded the Marine Brigade of the 2nd Division in the desperate fighting at Belleau Woods and Chateau-Thierry), onetime president and board chairman of Radio Corp. of America; of coronary thrombosis; in Rye, N.Y.

Died. Mina Miller Edison, 82, widow (second wife) of Thomas A. Edison; of a heart ailment; in Manhattan. She was a noted supporter of the G.O.P. (but not during Democratic son Charles Edison's successful campaign for governor of New Jersey), of the Chautauqua Institution (cofounder: her father, Lewis Miller), and of the temperance movement.

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