Monday, Dec. 30, 1929

Engaged. Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller, 21, Dartmouth senior, second son of John Davison Rockefeller Jr.; and Mary Todhunter Clark, 22, of Cynwyd, Pa., Foxcroft graduate, granddaughter of the late President George B. Roberts of Pennsylvania R. R.; at Philadelphia.

Engaged. Prince Takamatsu, younger brother of Emperor Hirohito of Japan; and Kikuko Tokugawa, granddaughter of the last of the Shoguns (feudal lords); at Tokyo.

Married. Helen Wills, champion lady tennis player; and Frederick S. Moody Jr., San Francisco broker; at Berkeley, Cal. At the simple ceremony witnessed by only eight people, Miss Wills wore a tailored suit, was unattended.

Married. Representative William Ignatius Nolan of Minnesota; and a Mrs. Estelle Flanders of Minneapolis; at Washington.

Married. Representative Frederick Haskell Dominick of South Carolina; and Miss Alva M. Seger, daughter of Representative & Mrs. George Nicholas Seger of New Jersey; at Washington.

Suit Dropped. A breach of promise action against James Joseph ("Gene") Tunney, retired champion fisticuffer; by Mrs. Katherine King Fogarty, divorcee, of Fort Worth, Tex.; at Bridgeport, Conn.

Sued. Mrs. Katherine King Fogarty; by James Joseph Tunney; at Bridgeport, Conn. The charge: Extortion, defamation of character.

Divorced. George Palmer Putnam, Manhattan publisher; by Mrs. Dorothy Binney Putnam; at Reno. Grounds: failure to provide.

Elected. Philip R. Clarke, of Chicago; to be president of Central Trust Co. of Illinois. Joseph Edward Otis, retiring president, will become board chairman. Retiring Board Chairman Charles Gates Dawes will be Honorary Chairman.

Promoted. Commander Richard Evelyn Byrd, polar explorer; to the rank of Rear Admiral, U. S. N., retired; by act of Congress.

Discontinued. The famed architectural firm of Carrere & Hastings (Manhattan), builders of New York Public Library, Arlington Memorial Amphitheatre to the Unknown Soldier. Reason: the death of Partner Thomas Hastings (TIME, Nov. 4). Partner John Merven Carrere died in 1911.

Birthday. Paul Allman Siple of Erie, Pa., Sea Scout (branch of Boy Scouts of America), youngest member of the Byrd Antarctic Expedition; in Little America. Age: 21. National Scout Commissioner Daniel Carter ("Duffle Bag") Beard, felicitated him over the radio, announced his promotion to grade of mate of the Sea Scout Ship Niagara. Concluded Commissioner Beard: "Oh, say! Don't forget to bring back a coop of penguins and a school of killer whales. They will need them to guard you on the flagship Niagara."

Birthday. Albert Abraham Michelson, measurer of light, first U. S. Nobel Prizeman in science (physics, 1907), whose optical studies gave Albert Einstein a main clue to the Relativity Theory.* Age 77. He marked the week by resigning as head of the physics department at the University of Chicago because of ill health. Next spring at Pasadena, Calif., Professor Michelson, now convalescing from an operation, will peer through a very straight corrugated iron pipe, from which air will have been evacuated, to determine more accurately than heretofore the speed of light.

Birthday. Prince George of England; at Sunningdale where he has been suffering from insomnia. Age: 27 (see p. 17).

Birthday. Joseph ("Soso") Dzugashvili, alias Josef Stalin, "Steel Man' Dictator of Soviet Russia, wielder of greater authority over a greater area than any man since Tamerlane the Great. Age: 50. Because of the proximity of his and Christ's birthdays, his parents destined him for the church. Expelled from seminary at the age of 17, in 1898 he adopted 100% communism as his philosophy, his religion. He has never deviated. On his birthday last week every newspaper in Moscow devoted its first four pages entirely to "Soso" Stalin.

Died. Hunt Wentworth, 34, Chicago socialite, Harvardman, Lampoon editor, voted the handsomest and funniest man in his class (1917), War veteran, grandnephew of twotime (1857-60) Mayor "Long John" Wentworth; at Chicago; by his own hand (pistol) in his mother's house. He was engaged to marry Miss Eileen Smith (TIME, Nov. 4), whose mother was Commissioner of Public Welfare. Reason advanced by his brother: despondency over idleness.

Died. Representative William Kirk Kaynor of Massachusetts, with four others; at Boiling Field, Va.; in an airplane accident (see p. 44).

Died. Governor Isaac Lee Patterson of Oregon, 70, oldtime state politician; at Salem, Ore.; of pneumonia.

Died. Judge Henry De Lamar Clayton, 72, longtime (1897-1914) Representative from Alabama, author of the famed Clayton Act (to release labor from the strictures of the anti-trust laws); at Montgomery, Ala.; of pernicious anemia (see p. 11).

* Professor Einstein is just three months older than Professor Michelson's son by his first wife, Truman Michelson, 50, professor of ethnology at George Washington University.

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