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T was just a quarter of the District Court pronounced th wor youngest son of J. Hill, from Pauline 11 was exactly 11 utes later—that N of hi many in his aditio and gave her the t room’s salute. For wh Mis. Hill the sccond walked out, she walked rig as Mrs. Hill the third. Ever alert gentlemen press rushed from the to the teleg world how of of pionecring “Jim” Hill had gotten out of matrimony rich son the and into it again in the azingly short space of eight minutes; how his new bride was waiting in a room from which Mr. Hill to make next the walked ngerly, cag his period of freedom a; possible. The ort as new Mrs. Hill, b been fully informed when her husband expected to be in a posi- tion to tak matrimony, with his third plunge into , arrived in Living her mother, s of Long Island, an She took rooms aited the ton R. wnd everyth on her spouse’s dry. appeared in the courtroom door, smiling happily and clinging to her hubt the of arm, gentlemen 2 crowded around and questions. above-mentioned the press with notebooks How did she like being a million- s wife? Would she appear boards of the Gay White forget life happy - and on th Way the to making Mr. again, or would she Follies and devote her Hill helping him spend Were zoing their honeymoon—to Riviera and the smart we places along the Mediter- rancan? “Not so f: Mrs. Hill Nc high W here in Montana and th first days of our After that we may go out to the P for a while, and more than that I ean't say. Mr, Hill is much interested in blooded ¢ I'm sure they lue please,” smiled , and not the k t bit ranch t where we intend to spend th lioney moon coust and T shall enjoy helping him at his ranching. Just say that we are very weh in the public prints. wedding-day int to him. s married and married in probe to 1 views were no getting un- cight minutes to be seemed news ke in a ot into a luxurious ¢ off to a comfort; « for o Hi, Peggy Hopkins Joyce, whose five trips to the altar with rich men makes her the ‘“/dean” of millionaire. marrying Follies girls James And it Allyn King, the Follies gir! who is said to ke suffering from a broken heart because of the crash of her romance with a million- aire suitor if isolated ranch house, set down in the silent Montana praivies, With every intention, of course, of living happily ever after. wk on Broadway, and in a thousand other places whe by the paper comes Bri Son,” " where a “Follies Girl of Railroad Builder's tongues wagged with predictions that boded ill for any “happy ever after” plans the Hills:may be harboring. “Look at what happened to Jessic they gloomed. rybody thought she was the luckiest girl on Broadway when she marricd young Dan Caswell, yourg and handsome and worth Afd all of his male friends envied him for winning ‘the highest paid chorus gitl in the world’ and one of the most dazzling beauties that ever tripped the Follics boards.” millions. How Pretty Mildred Richardson Followed the Golden Trail of a Long Line of Broadway Beauties by Capturing the Immensely Wealthy Walter Hill Petite Mae Daw, cently quit the stage to become the 1 away bride of Grave Young Kaufman, son of a millionaire banker Danicl 0. Ce remembered, Reed two days after met her on a Pullm the road from New Boston. He': fore he died he told a tot story of hi that many et dence that millio lies girls just can’t muk well, it will b married J¢ dead now, b ppy Tomar n as evi nd Fol “I thought 1 w my mother and we would settle d and I'd become the proper young h band and go to work, even thou didn’t need to. But after the first I wondered if my Jessie w ing to keep hou And after the first week 1 if I—or she—would keep our heads or anything much longer. “In two months I squanderec ter of a million dollars on her Follies girl friends. R company gathered in our rool the I quickly bec speak, the bartender husb the drinks for the crowd, w men surrounded my wife, | ~or regular hours wondered after show. me, so to 1. 1 mixed ile other g court to her. If 1 objected, e told me 1 must have known she had iri before I married her, Then she'd ask me what Copyright, 1927, by Johnson Features, Ine. was the mother s old; that ment 1 young Lord Nortl is the holder of one titles in all Scot Reed limmering, Miss Brown de- 1cient nd. after the Casw ro- mance went cided to leave Broadway and There Lord N w hier and fell in lov ent to Paris 1 ki he returned An man still pur Northesk’s family luck in London. ted her. strenuously ¢ his affair with the Follies d g made up. He finally ent to become L , but ran into a snag when he nd that his bride-to-be had been mar: vied and divorced, but not in ac with the laws of New York So ¥y went to Chicago, w tice of the peace did the t the rich and handsom man the happiest of men Brown of the Sta lies the m stately manor house. , there have been rumors that Northesk and his wife were not hitting t off as well as they 1 , but there is no talk of divoree and advices from Eng- land say that these stories are but idle gossip and that the ex-Fe irl has to date, disproved the theory that rich men cannot pick their wives from be- hind the ‘footlights and enjoy Onl other I wedded little wk 1o it was the t an- llies maid deserted foot- Mrs. Walter Hill, the former Mil- dred Richardson, s« the latest of a nu- ; sus list of Fol- irls to marry 1aire husbands The former Jessica Brown, who danced from the Follies into the heart of the young and wealthy Earl of Northesk, and has made a place for herself in the most excl ts to see what li of a millionaire. Tt who cloped with Graver Yo Kauf of Louis G. New York bar Papa Kaufman's affair was not Asked what he th son’s marriage Miss Kaufman is reported to | “Why, we are event. We k man, dent of suppose. with rimony then she, daug g from Chevy Cha Everett Archer, the The match “didn’t ee agent again, In Washingtor. she n ance of Shelburne Hopk of a socially School to Denver ’ and DPeg 1 millic soon a wle the prominent lawyer whose sive English social set was said wi to run into seven fig- two years she was Mrs. Hop- and then came divorce. Next, in vick Hopkins, J. Stan- ley Joyce and Count Costa Morner de Morcland, Swedish nobleman who made toothpaste f icans in Chicago. Her we to J. Stanley Joyce, onaire an, ended in a Chi- with much lurid ¢ that seemed not to phase the In June, 192 ord lumber: o divorce court livoree. m by her work on the tir I'c she is reported v Some of her f < because of what she for a Follies is suffering she was sup- with a swain 1 the wedding day all set wh happened that sent all her hopes to ng. Even when there is no trip to the altar, there ems to be a tragic joker in these af- fairs b favorites and ich in love Follies en