Monday, Jul. 17, 1944

Married. James Jordan, 21, son of radio Comics Fibber McGee & Mollie; and Carmelie Bergstrom, 19, cinemaspirant; in Hollywood.

Married. 2nd Lieut. Angela Bertolo Bertelli, 23, last season's Notre Dame All-America forward-passing quarter back, Heisman Trophy winner (1943); and Gilda Lena Passerini, 22, his longtime girl friend; in West Springfield, Mass.

Married. Mrs. Ernest Lundeen, 48, comely widow of Minnesota's late isolationist Farmer-Labor Senator Lundeen; and Oregon's isolationist Republican Senator Rufus C. Holman, 67, defeated last May for renomination; in Minneapolis. Senator Holman courted Mrs. Lundeen between sessions of the Republican National Convention, where she appeared (on the fringes) with the stentorian, fascistic Rev. Gerald L. K. Smith.

Married. Lionel Atwill, 59, matinee idol of the '20s, now coasting along in Grade B cinema horrors (Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man); and Mary Paula Shilston, 28. concert singer and radio writer; he for the fourth time; in Las Vegas, Nev.

Died. 2nd Lieut. Beaufort George Swancutt, 31, handsome lady-killer of La Crosse, Wis., under death sentence by an Army court-martial for running amuck in Camp Anza (Calif.) Officers' Club and killing his fiancee and three others (TIME, March 20); by his own hand (hanged with a bed sheet); in San Francisco.

Died. Daniel Joseph ("Danny") Danker Jr., 41, fireball advertising man (J. Walter Thompson); of a heart attack; in Hollywood. At 24, Phillips Exeter and Harvard-educated, Danker arrived in Hollywood scared stiff, green as grass, with a cultivated Brooklyn accent and a way about him that eventually collared the biggest names in cinema for such radio shows as Lux, Kraft Music Hall, Charlie McCarthy.

Died. Fred L. Mills, 49, juke-box developer, president of Mills Industries, Inc. of Chicago (slot, pinball, vending machinery), onetime partner of James Roosevelt in juke-box movies; of a stomach ailment; in St. Charles, Ill.

Died. Paul Emile Janson, 72, Belgium's first Liberal Premier (1937-38) since 1884, Minister of Justice when the Germans invaded his country; in a prison camp near Weimar, Germany.

Died. The Rev. Dr. George Washington Truett, 77, internationally famed Baptist leader, onetime (1934-39) president of the Baptist World Alliance, for 47 years pastor of Dallas' First Baptist Church; after long illness; in Dallas.

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