Monday, Feb. 24, 1930
Born. To Actress (Coquette, Dancing Mothers) Helen Hayes MacArthur and Co-Playwright (Front Page, Lulu Belle, Salvation) Charles MacArthur; a daughter; at Manhattan. Last year producer Jed Harris closed Coquette because of Miss Hayes' approaching maternity. When Actors' Equity Association sued, he claimed the baby was "an act of God''; lost the suit (TIME., Sept. 16, Oct. 7).
Engaged. Rosamond Marie Farrell, daughter of President James Augustine Farrell of U. S. Steel Corp.; and one Richard Joseph Buck of Bethlehem, Pa.; at New York.
Engaged. Amanda Stewart Bryan, daughter of Publisher John Stewart Bryan of the Richmond, Va. News-Leader; and Richmond Keith Kane, Manhattan lawyer (Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft), onetime (1921) Harvard football captain, Harvard, Oxford oarsman.
Engaged. Edda Mussolini, approximately 20, A-1 daughter of Italian Premier Benito Mussolini; to Count Galeazzo Ciano, 30, secretary of the Italian Embassy to Vatican City, son of Italian Minister of Communications Count Costanzo Ciano; at Rome. The precise legal conditions of Edda Mussolini's birth must become a legend her father has decreed. He will not let her biography be published. Epically he segregates his five children into two classes, those of his First Series, those of his Second Series. All are of the same mother (TIME, Sept. 16). Edda is a stalwart young woman whose semi-public position has given her excuse to throw aside the traditional Italian woman's modesty and proclaim with her father: "Whoever is not a Father is not "a man."
Married. Ugo Zacchini, 31, "the human cannon ball," who is shot from a cannon daily in Ringling Bros.-Barnum & Bailey Combined Circus; to Elizabeth Walker, of Berlin; Bruno Zacchini. 29. who fires the cannon; to Gertrude Reigel, of Berlin; in a double wedding; at Sarasota, Fla.
Awarded. To Camera Tycoon George Eastman; the Medal of the American Institute of Chemists; for "Noteworthy and Outstanding Service to the Science of Chemistry and the Profession of Chemistry in America."
Appointed. Sir William Peel, 55, career administrator and adviser since 1897 in British Malaya (Penang, Singapore, Kedah, etc.); to be Governor of Hongkong, important British naval station and trade mart in the Orient (average annual trade $500,000,000). Sir William succeeds to the post and salary ($30,000) of Sir Cecil Clementi, promoted Governor of the Straits Settlements.
Appointed. Edgar Stephenson Furniss, Ph. D., 39, Chairman of the Department of Economics, Sociology & Government at Yale University; to be Dean of Yale Graduate School; to succeed Wilbur Lucius Cross, 67, retiring.
Resigned. James Milliken Speers. 66, board chairman of James McCutcheon & Co., Manhattan linen merchants; from the presidency of that company; on the 50th anniversary of his arriving from Ireland and joining the firm. To succeed him was appointed William Charles McCutcheon.
Birthday. William Berryman Scott, professor of geology at Princeton University. Age: 72. A member of the faculty for 47 years, he said: ". . . it would have been unthinkable to have demanded so much work from the undergraduate of 25 years ago as is required of him today."
Birthday. Elihu Root, 85, onetime (1899-1904) Secretary of War, of State (1905-09), onetime (1909-15) U. S. Senator, most famed U. S. Elder Statesman; at Manhattan, in good health.
Died. Draper M. Daugherty, 41, son of onetime Attorney General Harry Micajah Daugherty; in Sarasota, Fla."; following appendectomy. Wounded in the World War, in 1923 he was questioned by the police concerning the murder of one Dorothy Keenan ("Dot King"), spent a year in the Ohio State Hospital for the Criminal Insane.
Died. Lieut. Mons Monssen, U. S. N., retired; in Brooklyn Naval Hospital; following appendectomy. In 1904, as chief gunner's mate on the battleship Missouri, he saved 600 officers and men from destruction by leaping into the powder magazine of a flaming gun turret, shutting the door, fighting the fire with bare hands. President Roosevelt pinned the Medal of Honor on his breast.
Died. Alexander Pollock Moore, 62, U. S. Ambassador to Peru, U. S. Ambassador-designate to Poland; at Los Angeles: of bronchial pneumonia. A native Pittsburghian, he rose from copy boy and reporter to be at various times editor of the Pittsburgh Press, the Pittsburgh Leader. In 1912 he married Beauty Lillian Russell, was devoted to her until her death in, 1921. In 1928 he purchased the New York Daily Mirror (tabloid), sold it six months later. At his deathbed was Cinemactress Marion Davies, whose ranch he had been visiting.
Died. Charles James Webb, 71, founder-president of Charles J. Webb & Co., "dean of the woolen industry''; at Elkins Park, Pa.
Died. Dr. David Perrie, 72, moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Canada; at Wingham, Ont.
Died. John J. McGrane, 80, railroader, jeweler, real estate developer, Papal Knight of St. Gregory the Great; in Manhattan. Adviser to Cardinals Merry del Val, Bisleti, Gasparri (see p. 23), he was decorated by Popes Leo XIII, Pius X, Benedict XV.
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