Saturday, Apr. 28, 1923
Engaged. Consuelo, Comtesse de Maupas, daughter of Harry Hays Morgan, American Consul General at Brussels, and sister of Mrs. Reginald C. Vanderbilt, to Benjamin Thaw, Jr., American charge d'affaires at Brussels. She was divorced from Jean, Comte de Maupas du Juglart in Paris last November.
Married. Marguerite E. House (screen name Marjorie Daw), 21, motion picture actress, to Alfred Edward Sutherland, 26, Chaplin's assistant director, in Los Angeles.
Married. Miss Emily Stuart Taylor, divorced wife of Ernest K. Wiltsee, to Prince Carlo Cito-Filomarino di Bitetto of Rome, in Paris. Ambassador Myron T. Herrick gave the bride away. The bridegroom was " officially assisted" by the Italian Ambassador at Paris, Baron Romano Avezzana.
Died. The Right Rev. Daniel Sylvester Tuttle, 86, presiding Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States, at St. Louis. (See page 19.)
Died. Mrs. Nellie McCormick Flagg, wife of James Montgomery Flagg, the artist, in Manhattan, following a short illness.
Died. The Rev. Dr. George Clarke Houghton, 70, rector of the "Little Church Around the Corner," of heart disease, in Manhattan. The true name of his church is the Church of the Transfiguration.
Died. Lawrence Ginnell, 70, " Representative of the Irish Republic in America," at Washington, of heart disease. Formerly a member of the House of Commons, he cast the only vote against a resolution expressing the thanks of Great Britain to the United States for entering the war. He was ejected from Parliament in 1917 after accusing the government of a bomb plot against his life. He joined with De Valera, and lately has represented the "Irish Republic " in South America and the United States.
Died. Judge Mayer Sulzberger, 79, former President Judge of the Philadelphia Common Pleas Court and one of the most eminent figures of the Pennsylvania judiciary in a generation. He had a national reputation as a Jewish scholar and was the possessor of one of the finest private libraries in America.
Died. Willis G. (" Bill ") Wiser, 64, campus cop at Yale University since 1894. Author as well as diplomat, his books include Yale Memories (1915), Nonsense Verses (1922) and several on religious subjects.