Monday, May. 18, 1925
Married. Miss Jean S. Roosevelt, daughter of John E. Roosevelt, cousin of the late Theodore Roosevelt, to Philip J. Roosevelt, her second cousin; at Glen Head, L. I. Both are descendants of Cornelius Van Schaak Roosevelt, grandfather of the late President.
Married. Miss Dorothy Gould, 21, daughter of Frank Jay Gould and his onetime wife, Princess Vlora, now the divorced wife of Prince Houreddin Vlora of Albania, to Baron de Graffenried de Villars, 25, of Switzerland; in Paris.
Married. Mischa Elman, famed violinist, to Miss Helen F. Katten of San Francisco; in San Francisco.
Married. Russell A. Firestone, son of Harvey S. Firestone, tire man, to Miss Dorothy L. Bryan of Fort Worth; in Manhattan.
Married. Franklin P. Adams ("F. P. A."), 43, colyumist for The New York World, to Miss Esther S. Root, 30; at Stamford, Conn. He was divorced privately, last month, from Mrs. Minna Schwartze Adams.
Remarried. John A. Hartford, President of the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., to Mrs. Pauline A. Hartford, who divorced him in 1920; in Paris. In 1923, he married Miss Frances Beiger, modiste, who divorced
him recently.
Died. Giorgio Calvi di Bergolo, Prince of Montemagno, 6 days old, only grandson of King Victor Emmanuel of Italy, son of Princess Yolanda, the King's eldest daughter, and Count Calvi di Bergolo; in Pinerolo, Italy, of bronchial pneumonia.
Died. Fredrik W. Thorsson, 60,
Swedish Finance Minister in the late Premier Hjalmar Branting's three cabinets (1920, 1921-22, 1924-25) ; in Stockholm, following an operation. He succeeded M. Branting as head of the Social Democratic Party.
Died. Herbert Quick, 64, editor, author; in Columbia, Mo., of a heart attack. From 1909-16, he edited Farm and Fireside; during the War, he served on the Federal Farm Loan Bureau, was Chairman of the Far Eastern division of the Red Cross. His best-known novel is Vandemark's Folly.
Died. Admiral Sir Frederick C. Doveton Sturdee, 66, in command of the victorious British fleet at the Battle of the Falkland Islands in November, 1914, where he sank the German cruisers Scharnhorst, Gneisenau, Leipzig, Nuernberg which had previously defeated a British squadron at Coronel, off the coast of Chile; in Camberley, Surrey, England, of inflammation of the brain.
Died. William F. Massey, 69, Premier of New Zealand, in Wellington, N. Z. (see COMMONWEALTH).
Died. William Hesketh Lever, Lord Leverhulme, 74, British soap man; in London, of pneumonia (see BUSINESS).
Died. Dr. Johann Palisa, 77, Austrian astronomer, director of the Vienna University Observatory; in Vienna. He discovered 124 minor planets without photographic aid.
Died. Henry O. Wilbur, 90, famed chocolate maker, founder of the H. O. Wilbur & Sons Co.; in Philadelphia, after a short illness.