Monday, Jun. 08, 1931

Born. To Samuel Insull, Chicago utilities tycoon; his first grandson, Samuel Insull III, son of Samuel Insull Jr., 31, and Mrs. Adelaide Pierce Insull, 31; in Chicago. Weight: 8 lb. 2 oz.

Engaged. Glenna Collett, 27, five-time (1922, 1925, 1928, 1929, 1930) U. S. women's golf champion (a record), one-time (1925) winner of the French championship; and Edwin H. Vare Jr. of Philadelphia, construction engineer, golfer, son of the late State Senator Edwin H. Vare, nephew of U. S. Senator-reject William Scott ("Boss") Vare.

Engaged. The Infanta Beatriz Isabel Federica Alfonsa Eugenia Cristina Maria Teresa Bienvenida Ladislaa, 21, daughter of King Alfonso XIII; and Don Alvaro Antonio Carlos Felipe Fernando of Orleans, 21, son of her father's cousin; at Fontainebleau, France.

Engaged. Margaret Morton Eustis of Washington, D. C., granddaughter of the late Levi Parsons Morton, Vice President of the U. S. under President Harrison; to David Edward Finley of York. S. C., Special Assistant to Secretary of the Treasury Mellon; at Washington. Her aunt is the wife of Harry Frank Guggenheim, U. S. Ambassador to Cuba.

Engaged. Elizabeth Brinton Kent, daughter of Arthur Atwater Kent (radios) of Philadelphia; and William Laurens Van Alen,* member of the Oxford-Cambridge tennis team which played against Yale-Harvard at Newport in 1929, descendant of the first John Jacob Astor, grandson of the late Ambassador to Italy James J. Van Alen.

Engaged. Sir Robert Gilbert Vansittart, permanent undersecretary of the British Foreign Office, likely candidate for Ambassador to the U. S. some day (he prepared all for Ramsay MacDonald's U. S. visit), widower son-in-law of General William Christian Heppenheimer of Jersey City; and Lady Barclay, widow of Sir Colville Barclay, onetime British Minister at Budapest.

Married. Ethel Mallinckrodt Dorrance, daughter of the late President John Thompson Dorrance of Campbell Soup Co. and heiress to one-eighth of his $150,000,000 estate; and Tristram C. Colket of Haverford, Pa.; in Radnor, Pa.

Elected. William Harridge of Chicago, secretary of the American (Baseball) League; onetime private secretary to the late Byron Bancroft ("Ban") Johnson, to be American League president, succeeding the late Ernest Sargent Barnard (TIME, April 6); in Cleveland, Ohio.

Resigned. John Mark Glenn, 72, general director of the Russell Sage Foundation since it was established in 1907; succeeded by Shelby Millard Harrison, vice director; because of age.

Died. Charles A. Mooney, 52, U. S. Representative from the 20th Ohio District (Cleveland) from 1919 to 1921 and since 1923, member of the Rivers & Harbors Committee; of pneumonia; in Cleveland.

Died, Matthew V. O'Malley, 54, Brooklyn broker elected last February to be U. S. Representative from the 7th New York Congressional District, succeeding the late John Francis Quayle (TIME, Dec. 8); of heart disease; in Brooklyn.

Died. George J. Wise, 57, founder with his brothers Edward and Albert of the tobacco business which became United Cigar Stores Co. of America; suddenly, in Providence, R. I.

Died. Albert Earl Clift, 61, president since 1929 of Central of Georgia Railway and Ocean Steamship Co., onetime (1924-29) vice president of Illinois Central Railroad; after an operation for stomach ulcer; in Savannah, Ga.

Died. Cardinal Felix Raymond Marie Rouleau, 65, Archbishop of Quebec; of angina pectoris; in Quebec. Elevated in 1927, he was Canada's third appointed Cardinal.

Died. Robert Edward Harris, 70, Chief Justice of Nova Scotia since 1918, member of the Supreme Court since 1915; after long illness; in Annapolis Royal, N. S.

Died. Augustus Hemenway, 77, one-time (1890-91) member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, Harvard overseer and donor of Harvard's Hemenway gymnasium; in Readville, Mass.

Died. Dr. Charles Karsner Mills, 85, Philadelphia alienist, emeritus professor of neurology at the University of Pennsylvania; in Philadelphia. His two most famed cases: Charles J. Guiteau who killed President Garfield in 1881; Harry Kendall Thaw who in 1924 sought (and gained) release from a Philadelphia sanatorium.

Died. Daniel Nash Morgan, 86, retired banker. Treasurer of the U. S. in President Cleveland's second Administration (1893-97), twice Mayor of Bridgeport, Conn., sometime member of the Senate and House of Representatives of Connecticut, president of two Bridgeport banks; after an automobile accident; in Bridgeport.

Died. Kathleen ("Old Kate") McNeil, 88, race card seller at the Derby and other tracks for the last 61 years; in London. King George V, Queen Mary and the royal princes were patrons of hers. At the Thanksgiving Service held in Westminster Abbey in 1928 Old Kate was given a seat in the front row among the foreign ambassadors to the Court of St. James's.

* His sister Louise married Prince Alexis Mdivani last fortnight, thus becoming sister-in-law to Prince Serge Mdivani who was divorced last April from Cinemactress Pola Negri, and Prince David Mdivani who married Cinemactress Mae Murray.

This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.