Monday, Feb. 11, 1935

Born. To Col. Theodore Roosevelt: his first grandson, son of Grace Roosevelt McMillan and William McMillan. Baltimore architect; in Baltimore. Weight: 7 lb., 1 1/2 oz. Name: William McMillan Jr.

Born. To Alvin Karpis, "Public Enemy No. 1," now at large; and Dolores Delaney, 19, whom he left behind when he shot his way out of an Atlantic City hotel last month (TIME, Jan. 28) : a 7 1/4 lb. son; in Philadelphia.

Married. Paul Mellon, 27, only son of Andrew William Mellon, banker (Mellon National) and associate in other Mellon enterprises; and Mrs. Mary Conover Brown, 30, divorcee, daughter of a Kansas City physician; in Manhattan.

Died. Inez Yvonne Raskob, 22, sixth of the 13 children of John Jacob Raskob; of pneumonia; at the College of Mount Saint Vincent, Riverdale-on-Hudson, N. Y.

Died. Prentiss Nathaniel Gray, 50, naturalist, big-game hunter, president of Manhattan's J. Henry Schroder Banking Corp.; in the wreck, presumably by explosion, of a boat in which a guide was taking him to Shark River to join a fishing party off the lower west coast of Florida. Editor of Records of North American Big Game, Prentiss Gray in 1930 headed an African expedition of the Philadelphia Academy, of Natural Sciences, of which he was a trustee. Before his death he had been hunting panther on horseback in the Everglades.

Died. Richard Washburn Child, 53, onetime (1921-24) U. S. Ambassador to Italy, onetime (1919) editor of Collier's Weekly, sometime lawyer, journalist, novelist and behind-scenes politician; of pneumonia; in Manhattan.

Died. Walter Stanley, 72, aquiline-faced, highbrowed British artist who, in a deerstalker cap, was the model for drawings of Sherlock Holmes done by his brother, Artist Sidney Stanley; in Bromsgrove, Worcestershire, England.

Died. Joseph Smith Fletcher, 72, British detective story writer, antiquarian, onetime journalist; in Dorking. His Middle Temple Murder was the favorite of Woodrow Wilson.

Died. Dr. Hugo Junkers, 76, pioneer aircraft designer and builder; following an operation; in Munich. At first a gas stove manufacturer, Dr. Junkers took out patents for all-metal airplanes and motors, the first in 1910. By 1930 one-third of the world's airlines were using planes and motors from the big Junkers plant at Dessau. A Junkers plane, the Bremen, was the first (in 1928) to fly the Atlantic from east to west.

Died. Adrian Iselin, 88, senior partner of A. Iselin & Co., international banking house which his father founded; of old age; in Manhattan.

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