Monday, Nov. 19, 1923
Married. Leonard Wood, Jr., theatrical promoter and son of the Governor General of the Philippines, to Miss Dolores Graves, of San Francisco, actress in his company.
Married. Brigham H. Roberts, 66, of Manhattan, former President of the Mormon Church, now President of the Mormon Eastern States Mission, to Miss Margaret Curtis, 64, of Chicago. In 1900 Mr. Roberts was excluded from his seat from Utah in the U. S. House of Representatives after having been tried by the House on charges of polygamy. Two of his three wives, married before polygamy was barred by the Mormon Church and the laws of Utah, are still living.
Married. Miss Mary E. ("Hope") Jampton, cinema actress, 23, to Jules E. Brulatour, 53, general manager of the Eastman Kodak Co., her manager, in Baltimore, August 22. The marriage was made public last week when an official in the Baltimore Marriage License Bureau, seeing the cinema version of The Gold Diggers in which Miss Hampton appears, recognized her.
Divorced. Spencer Eddy, diplomat, 49, by Mrs. Lurline Elizabeth Spreckels Eddy, in Paris. She charged desertion. Private secretary to the late John Hay (the then U. S. Ambassador at the Court of St. James), and later Third Secretary of the American Embassy in London under the late Joseph Hodges Choate, he was often called "best dressed American."
Died. Fusakichi Omeri, 55, eminent Japanese seismologist, professor at the Imperial Tokyo University.
Died. James O'Neill, Jr., actor, 43, son of the late James O'Neill (actor, hero of The Count of Monte Cristo), brother of Eugene O'Neill, playwright (The Emperor Jones, The Straw, Anna Christie, The Hairy Ape), at a Trenton, N. J., hospital.