Monday, Nov. 12, 1923
Rumored Engaged. Miss Jeanne Eagels, leading lady in Rain, to Whitney Warren, Jr., son of Architect Whitney Warren of Manhattan. Both Miss Eagels and Mr. Warren, Jr., refused to confirm the report. Mr. Warren's father issued an emphatic denial.
Engaged. Mrs. Dorothy Park Benjamin Caruso, 30, widow of Enrico Caruso, to Captain G. R. Ingram, " wealthy Scotsman." He gave her swimming lessons last Summer at the Lido, Italy.
Married. William H. Vanderbilt, a son of the late Alfred G. Vanderbilt and Mrs. Paul Fitz Simons, to Miss Emily O'Neill Davies, in Grace Church, Manhattan. After the ceremony several shop girls and sweatshop workers crowded past the police guard, entered the church, took as souvenirs some of the pale pink chrysanthemums tied in clusters to the pew ends.
Married. Oscar Fredrik Wilhelm Olaf Gustaf Adolf, Crown Prince of Sweden, 41, to Lady Louise Mountbatten, daughter of the late Marquis of Milford Haven, second cousin of King George of England, by the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of London, in the Chapel Royal, London. By his first wife, who was Princess Margaret Victoria, daughter of the Duke of Connaught, and who died in 1920, Prince Gustaf Adolf has four sons and one daughter. Over six feet tall, he possesses an athletic medal, awarded for high proficiency in five different sports. He is a practical archaeologist and a collector of modern paintings.
Married. Brazilla Carroll Reece, U. S. Representative from Tennessee, "Baby of the 67th Congress," 33, to Miss Louise Goff of Washington. They went to the Canal Zone for their honeymoon.
Sued for Divorce. Roscoe C. ("Fatty") Arbuckle, deposed cinema clown, by Mrs. Minta L. Arbuckle, at Providence, R. I. She charged desertion, failure to provide.
Died. Jimmy Ryan, 60, who played for 15 years prior to 1900 on the White Stockings (Chicago National League Baseball Club), in Chicago, of heart failure. Said to be the most accurate and clever thrower in the history of baseball, he had a record of more than 100 hits a season for 17 years, stole 440 bases.
Died. Samuel W. McCall, 72, Governor of Massachusetts (1916-18) and Republican leader for 40 years, at Winchester, Mass., of pneumonia. President Coolidge said of him: "He will remain a national figure in American history."
Died. Rt. Hon. Andrew Bonar Law, 65, former Premier of the British Empire, in London, of cancer of the throat. (See page 8.)