Monday, Dec. 05, 1932

Married-Rachel Lowe Lambert, eldest daughter of Gerard Barnes Lambert, drugs tycoon, president of Gillette Safety Razor Co.; and Stacy B. Lloyd Jr., Philadelphia socialite; in Princeton, N. J.

Married. Harryette H. Post De Tarr De Tarr, Denver heiress, divorced wife of Brothers James Major De Tarr and Noble Arthur De Tarr; and Beverly Keith De Tarr, a third brother; in Los Angeles.

Married. Margaret Ravior, three-time winner of the Toronto women's marathon swim; and George Young, winner of last year's Toronto men's marathon; in Philadelphia.

Married. Carolyn McDonald Walters Bronson Burgess Chevallier Garden White Luigi Hatfield Willis Paschal, 57, Louisiana's most-wed woman (TIME, May 18, 1931); and Robert McManus, 50, wholesale fish dealer; in Columbus, La. Widowed three times, divorced eight times, mother of 16, the bride uses the name of Hatfield, her ninth.

Honored-Connecticut's Governor Wilbur Lucius Cross, with the Montclair Yale Bowl, as a Yaleman who has "won his Y in life"; Dr. George E. Hale, honorary director of the Mount Wilson Observatory (Pasadena, Calif.), by the British Royal Society's Copley Medal, for work on the sun's magnetic field; Nobel Prizeman Dr. Fritz Haber, by the Royal Society's Rumford Medal, for work in thermodynamics; Munich Professor Richard Willstatter by the Davy Medal, for organic chemistry researches; Cambridge Professor Dr. James Chadwick, by the Hughes Medal, for demonstrating the existence of neutrons (TIME, March 7).

Appointed. General Sir Archibald Armar Montgomery-Massingberd, aide de camp to George V; to be Chief of the Imperial General Staff, succeeding Field-Marshal Sir George Francis Milne.

Died. Senora Leonor Llorente Calles. 27, second wife of Mexico's political boss and onetime President. General Plutarco Elias Calles; of a brain tumor; in Mexico City. Last June General Calles took his wife to Boston for a brain operation by famed Dr. Harvey Gushing who operated but told General Calles the tumor was mortal. General Calles' first wife, Natalia Chacon Calles, mother of nine, died in 1927 at Los Angeles whither Mexican law forbade Mexico's President to follow during his administration. The second wife, mother of two, singer, law & dentistry student, whom General Calles married in 1930, died with a double line of infantry in the street outside. Mexico's President Rodriquez & Cabinet calling at intervals. At her death the Chamber of Deputies went into mourning for three days.

Died. Ellery Sedgwick James, 37, Philadelphia partner in Manhattan's private banking house of Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.; in Manhattan.

Died. Col. Robert Edwin Olds, 57, U. S. member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague; suddenly, of a cerebral hemorrhage; in Paris. Beginning as a St. Paul lawyer, partner of Frank Billings Kellogg, he served as a U. S. member of League of Nations tribunals & commissions, Assistant Secretary of State (1925-27), Undersecretary of State (1927-28).

Died. Otto Kahn, 53. (no kin to U. S. Banker Otto Kahn), Frankfurter Zeitung's Rome correspondent; of injuries received by falling off the top of Rome's Colosseum.

Died. Dr. William Engelbach, 55, endocrinologist, author of first-published, authoritative, 4-vol. Endocrine Medicine; of heart disease; at Springfield, Ill.

Died. Edwin A. Van Valkenburg, 65, longtime (1899-1924) president & editor of the Philadelphia North American (merged in 1925 with the Public Ledger"); of heart disease; in Philadelphia. For his battles against Pennsylvania's Republican bosses, Theodore Roosevelt in 1916 called him "on the whole the most useful American citizen now alive."

Died. Herbert Foster Gunnison. 74, longtime publisher of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle; of hardening of the arteries; in Brooklyn. He rose from Eagle cub reporter covering Dutchtown (now Bushwick) in 1882 to president in 1924 (ending 83 years of Van Andens and Hesters as presidents).

Died. Jay Cooke, 60, Republican National Committeeman from Pennsylvania, grandson of the famed post-Civil War freebooting banker; of heart disease; on a grouse-shooting trip at Amport-St. Mary's, near Andover, England.

Died. Joseph Deighn Redding, 73. San Francisco corporation lawyer, composer of San Francisco's famed Bohemian Club musical plays; in San Francisco.

Died. Francis Landey Patton, 89, old-school Presbyterian theologian, Princeton's onetime (1888-1902) president and Grand Old Man; in Hamilton, Bermuda. Twelfth president of Princeton (between James McCosh and Woodrow Wilson) he made Princeton a university with courses in engineering, increased its registration from 603 to 1.354. When Woodrow Wilson became president in 1902, Patton went to Princeton Theological Seminary as president, served until 1913. Since then he had lived at "Carberry Hill," Warwick, Bermuda, calmly going blind.

Died. Charles Mumford, 92. oldest active stockholder of U. S. Steel Corp., longtime lecture tour manager (Henry Ward Beecher, Wilkie Collins, Theodore Tilton, Reformed Drunkard John B. Gough); of collapse after a hip fracture in September; in Newark, N. J. For years his speech and (at his suggestion) pumpkin pie were fixtures at Steel's annual stockholders' luncheon.

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