Monday, Apr. 05, 1954

Born. To Audie Murphy, 29, most decorated soldier of World War II, now a Hollywood cowboy (Duel at Silver Creek), and his second wife, Pamela Archer Murphy, 31: their second child, second son; in Hollywood. Name: James Shannon. Weight: 8 Ibs.

Married. Elizabeth Montgomery, 20, daughter of Robert Montgomery, veteran cinemactor turned television producer (Robert Montgomery Presents) and White House TV adviser; and Frederic Gallatin Cammann, 24, TV casting director; in Manhattan.

Married. Louis Shoulders, 55, onetime St. Louis police lieutenant, who arrested the kidnapers of Bobby Greenlease, and is now awaiting trial on a federal perjury indictment charging that he lied about his handling of the $600,000 Greenlease ransom (TIME, Nov. 2, 1953); and June Marie George, 30, his ex-landlady; he for the third time, she for the second; in St. Louis.

Married. Canon Charles Earle Raven, 68, chaplain to Queen Elizabeth II, one-time vice chancellor (top administrator) of Cambridge University (1947-49); and Ethel Lyman Paine Moors, 82, widow of millionaire Boston Financier John F. Moors (who died last March); each for the second time; in Boston.

Marriage Revealed. Jon Morrow Lindbergh, 21, Stanford senior (majoring in biology), mountain-climbing, eldest son of Airman Charles A. Lindbergh; and Barbara Robbins, 21; in a small family ceremony; in Northfield, Ill., March 20.

Died. Sir Nelson King Johnson, 62, retired director of Britain's Meteorological Office, who during World War II directed weather forecasting for every major Allied landing in Europe and the Mediterranean from North Africa (1942) to Normandy (1944); by his own hand; in London.

Died. Francis Brett Young, 70, British surgeon and novelist (My Brother Jonathan, A Man About the House); after long illness; in Cape Town, South Africa.

Died. Rose Frances Witz Whitney Hull, 79, wife of Cordell Hull, longtime (1933-44) Secretary of State under F.D.R.; of pulmonary edema; at her childhood home in Staunton, Va.

Died. Dr. John Frederic Erdmann, 90, retired Manhattan surgeon, who performed more than 20,000 operations, including chest surgery on Tenor Enrico Caruso, a secret operation (to avoid public panic during the great 1893 free-silver debate) on President Grover Cleveland for cancer of the jawbone aboard a yacht in Long Island Sound; of a coronary occlusion; in Manhattan.

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