Monday, Jul. 22, 1946

Married. Gladys George, 41, lush blonde cinemactress and Broadway star (Personal Appearance, The Skin of Our Teeth, Madame X); and Kenneth C. Bradley, 32, Los Angeles bellhop; she for the fourth time, he for the first; in Riverside, Calif.

Married. Frances Margaret (Judith) Anderson, 48, versatile veteran stage & screen actress; and Luther Greene, 38, Broadway theatrical producer; both for the second time; in Manhattan.

Married. Colonel Anthony Joseph ("Tony") Drexel Biddle Jr., 49, dapper ex-playboy, prewar U.S. Ambassador to Poland, now Allied contact officer at U.S. headquarters in Europe; and Margaret Atkinson Loughborough, 32, a Canadian and former UNRRA worker; both for the third time; in Frankfurt, Germany.

Divorced. Jay Gould III, 27, wartime AAFlyer, namesake and great-grandson of the Erie railroad tycoon; by Jennifer Bruce Gould, 21, pert, pretty daughter of Cinemactor Nigel Bruce; after nearly two years of marriage, one child; in Los Angeles.

Died. Sidney Hillman, 59, Lithuanian-born president of the C.I.O.'s well-disciplined Amalgamated Clothing Workers, founder of the P.A.C. and one of U.S. labor's political spokesmen; of coronary thrombosis; in Point Lookout, Long Island (see NATIONAL AFFAIRS).

Died. Ray Stannard Baker, 76, author, essayist and journalist, friend and official biographer of Woodrow Wilson and one of the last of the "muckrakers" (others: Lincoln Steffens, Ida M. Tarbell), who flourished on the late great McClure's magazine at the turn of the century; in Amherst, Mass. Under the pen name of David Grayson, Baker wrote nine popular volumes of philosophical essays about nature and people (Adventures in Contentment, The Countryman's Year); under his own name 27 volumes about political, social and economic problems and biography. His greatest and Pulitzer Prize work: Woodrow Wilson--Life and Letters, the monumental, eight-volume biography which took 14 years to write, was based on five years of personal association, five tons of documents and letters.

Died. Alfred Stieglitz, 82, world-famed photographer, founder of the "photo-secession" movement that emphasized realism and sought to make photography an art, husband of Artist Georgia O'Keeffe, the obscure Southern art teacher whom he sponsored; in Manhattan. Stieglitz introduced to the U.S. the works of Rodin, Cezanne, Matisse, Rousseau, jolted the orthodox art world by hanging paintings and photographs side by side in his Manhattan gallery.

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