Monday, Sep. 22, 1947

Born. To Bob Feller, 28, star Cleveland Indian pitcher, and Virginia Wintrier Feller, 28: their second child, second son; in Waukegan, Ill. Name: Martin William. Weight: 7 Ibs. 10 1/2oz.

Born. To Teresa Wright, 27, starry-eyed cinemactress (Best Years of Our Lives"), and Hollywood Writer Niven Busch, 44 (Duel in the Sun): their second child, first daughter; in Los Angeles. Name: Mary Kelly. Weight: 5 Ibs. 3 oz.

Married. Louise Gill Macy Hopkins, 42, fashion expert, third and last wife of the late White House adviser, Harry Hopkins; and Geoffrey McNair Gates, 43, director of Manhattan's Parsons School of Design; both for the third time; in Ardmore, Pa.

Divorced. By Bettine Field Goodall, 24, daughter of Publisher Marshall Field (Chicago Sun, Manhattan tabloid PM): Dr. McChesney Goodall Jr., 30; after five years, one child; in Reno, two months after brother Marshall's divorce.

Died. Katharine Smith Dos Passos, 51, wife of Novelist John Dos Passos and an author in her own right (The Private Adventure of Captain Shaw, in collaboration with Edith Shay) in an auto accident which cost her husband his right eye in Wareham, Mass.

Died. Major General Archer Lynn Lerch, 53, capable, legal-minded U.S. Military Governor in the troublesome occupation zone of Korea, wartime boss of M.P.s as Provost Marshal General of a heart attack; in Seoul, Korea.

Died. Alice Frederica Edmondstone Keppel, eightyish, last of the late Edward VII's girl friends after long illness; in Florence, Italy. Mrs. Keppel settled easily into the pleasure-loving royal household; no objections were heard from either the Hon. George Keppel (third son of the Earl of Albemarle) or Queen Alexandra, who at the end graciously asked Alice to sit by Edward's deathbed.

Died. Richard Le Gallienne, 81, top-ranking translator of romantic French verse, tireless romantic poet (Lonely Dancer, The Junk-Man and Other Poems'), father of Actress Eva Le Gallienne in Mentone, France.

Died. Lieut. General Robert Lee Bullard, 86, World War I commander of the Second U.S. army, whose aggressive tactics at Chateau-Thierry, the second battle of the Marne, and the Argonne earned him the nickname of "CounterAttack Bullard" on Governors Island, N.Y. Alabama born Bullard once shocked fellow Southerners by announcing: "I would rather have been named for General Sherman than for General Lee. Sherman knew how to fight a war."

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