Monday, Aug. 19, 1946

Married. Moss Hart, 41, Pulitzer Prizewinning playwright (You Can't Take It With You, Lady in the Dark, The Man Who Came to Dinner); and Kitty Carlisle, 30, musical-comedy star (Three Waltzes), cinemactress (She Loves Me Not, A Night at the Opera); both for the first time; in New Hope, Pa.

Married. Harry P. Davison, 48, Morgan-partner-son of Morgan-partner Henry P. Davison; and Eleanor Sparks Martin, fortyish, daughter of Sir Ashley Sparks, K.B.E., Cunard White Star Line resident director in the U.S.; he for the second time; she for the third; in East Norwich, N.Y.

Divorced. Oscar Homolka, 45, stage star (I Remember Mama), film character actor (Rhodes, Ebb Tide); by third wife Florence Meyer Homolka, 35, daughter of Washington Post Owner and World Bank President Eugene Meyer; after seven years of marriage, two sons; in Hollywood.

Died. Tony ("Poosh'em Up") Lazzeri, 41, onetime hard-hitting, pantherlike second baseman and infield sparkplug of the New York Yankees (1925-37), who starred with Titans Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig as a member of the famed "Murderers' Row"; after a fall apparently due to a heart attack; in Millbrae, Calif.

Died. Metropolitan Eulogius (born: Vasiliy Georgievsky), 78, grey-bearded Archbishop of the Orthodox Church in Paris, titular head of all Russian Orthodox dioceses in Western Europe and North Africa; in Paris. Eulogius broke with the Moscow church in 1931, accepted the Patriarch of Constantinople as his chief until 1945, when he returned to the Soviet fold.

Died. Leon Gaumont, 82, French cinema pioneer, who synchronized film and sound as early as 1903, experimented with the first color films, showed the way to newsreel making; in Sainte Maxime, France.

Died. Mrs. George (Blanche Bingley) Hillyard, 83, pioneer woman tennis star in the age of whalebone and bustles, six-time winner of the Wimbledon ladies' title between 1886 and 1900; in Pulborough, England.

Died. Dr. Wilhelm Marx, 83, scholarly Chancellor of pre-Nazi Germany (1923-24, 1926-28), who tried to solve the knotty reparations problem by agreeing to the Dawes Plan, in 1925 the unsuccessful opponent of Hindenburg for the presidency; in Bonn, Germany. The Nazis indicted him for fraud but they never pressed the charges, allowed him to sink into obscurity, where American troops found him in 1945, "bewildered by events," ignored by his people, all but forgotten by the world.

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