Monday, Jul. 05, 1937

Married. Louise Converse Morgan, 20, daughter of Banker Junius Spencer Morgan, eldest granddaughter of Banker John Pierpont Morgan; to Raymond Skinner Clark, 23; in Grandfather Morgan's Episcopal Church of St. John's of Lattingtown, Locust Valley, Long Island.

Married. Constance Cutter Morrow, daughter of Mrs. Dwight Whitney Morrow, sister of Mrs. Charles Augustus Lindbergh; to Aubrey Niel Morgan, Welsh cricket player and Cardiff department store executive, widower of Sister Elisabeth Morrow who died in 1934; in North Haven, Me. It was in his family's home that Colonel & Mrs. Lindbergh took refuge after their flight from the U. S. in 1933.

Married. Dwight Whitney Morrow Jr., brother of Anne Morrow Lindbergh and Constance Morrow Morgan (see above), Yale Law School student; to Margot Loines of Manhattan; at Martha's Vineyard, Mass.

Married. Mary Pickford, 44, onetime "America's Sweetheart''; to Charles ("Buddy") Rogers. 32, onetime ''Deb's Darling''; in Hollywood. Her first husband: Owen Moore. Her second: Douglas Fairbanks. Because hitherto unmarried Bridegroom Rogers had a "sentimental aversion" to being married in the longtime Pickford-Fairbanks home, "Pickfair," the ceremony was performed on the estate of MGM Executive Louis Lighten. Only ten close friends witnessed the ceremony, but the reception at "Pickfair" was attended by 300.

Married. Hiram Bingham, 61, onetime (1924-33) U. S. Senator from Connecticut; to Mrs. Suzanne Carroll Hill; in Gloversville, N. Y. Both were previously married and divorced. He has seven sons over 21.

Suing for divorce. Mrs. Maxine Rickard Dailey Gill, widow of late Fight Promoter Tex Rickard; from Thomas Gill, Chicago broker; in Chicago. Grounds: cruelty. After Promoter Rickard died in 1929, Mrs. Rickard married one Frank Dailey. He died and in 1936 she married Broker Gill.

Died. Sir Eric Campbell Geddes, 61, chairman of the Dunlop Tire & Rubber Co., chairman of Imperial Airways; in Hassocks, Sussex.

Died. Hugh Lincoln Cooper, 72, engineer of the Soviet Dnepr Dam, the Wilson Dam at Muscle Shoals, Ala., other large hydro-electric projects; in Stamford, Conn. Engineer Cooper was one of the few foreigners to win the confidence of Soviet Dictator Joseph Stalin. His Dnepr power plant, with a 750,000 horsepower capacity, is second only to the one at Boulder Dam.

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