Monday, Feb. 09, 1925

Reported Engaged. Roscoe ("Fatty") Arbuckle, deposed cinema clown, to Doris Deane, actress (not to be confused with Actress Doris Keane).

Engaged. Mischa Elman, 34, famed violinist, to Miss Helen Katten of San Francisco.

Divorced. Roscoe ("Fatty") Arbuckle by Mrs. Arminta Durfee Arbuckle; in Paris. She charged desertion.

Married. Gloria Swanson. 27, cinema actress, to the Marquis Henri de la Falaise de la Coudray; in Paris. He is her third husband. Wallace Beery, cinema villain, was first; Herbert K. Somborn of California, second. Both obtained divorces on grounds of desertion. Seriously wounded in the war, the Marquis de Falaise received two citations for bravery.

Married. Herbert Hartley, 50, skipper of the Leviathan, to Miss Mary W. Wilson, of Opelika, Ala.

Married. Marc Klaw, 66, famed Manhattan theatrical manager, to Miss Blanche Harris; in Cuckfield, Sussex, England.

Died. Dorothea, 14-year-old daughter of Mayor and Mrs. James M. Curley; in Boston of double lobar* pneumonia.

Died. Jem Driscoll, 44, famed boxer, onetime British featherweight champion; in Cardiff, Wales, of tuberculosis of the lungs following pleurisy and pneumonia.

Died. George W. Cable, 80, famed writer of romances of the New Orleans Creoles; in St. Petersburg, Fla. After the Civil War (when he served in the Fourth Mississippi Cavalry), he endeavored to revive the former glories of the South by writing of its people, its customs. The Creoles of Louisiana were immortalized in Old Creole Days. The Grandissimes, The Creoles of Louisiana, Madame Delphine, Dr. Sevier. When ignorant and prejudiced persons objected to his delineations of octoroons and quadroons and his delicate ridicule of some of the provincialisms of the Creoles, he went North and made his home at Northampton, Mass.

*Lobar pneumonia is an acute, croupous form in which the entire lobe of the lung is affected.