Monday, Mar. 11, 1935

Born. To Authors Kathleen and Charles Gilman Norris: their first grandchild, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Frank Norris; in San Francisco. Weight: 8 lb. Name: Kathleen.

Born. To Sir Walter Gilbey, 75, British sportsman; and Lady Gilbey (Marion Broadhead), 39; a son; in London (see p. 34).

Married. Don Jaime, 26, second son of ex-King Alfonso XIII of Spain; and Emanuela de Dampierre. 20, granddaughter of Princess Ruspoli Poggio di Suasa, (nee Josephine Curtis of Boston); in Rome. Born a deaf-mute, Don Jaime has learned to speak croakingly.

Married. Mrs. Daisy Baum Lippmann, mother of Pundit Walter Lippmann; and Isidor M. Stettenheim, Manhattan insurance man; in Manhattan.

Married. Helen Hall, fortyish, director of Manhattan's Henry Street Settlement, president of the National Federation of Settlements; and Paul Underwood Kellogg, 55, editor of The Survey and The Survey Graphic; in Jersey City, N. J.

Married. Grant Wood, Iowa artist (American Gothic, Dinner For Threshers --TIME, Dec. 24); and Mrs. Sara Sherman Maxon, music teacher in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where both grew up; in Minneapolis.

Divorced. Tallant Tubbs, Republican opponent of California's Senator William Gibbs McAdoo in 1932; by Mrs. Olivia Pillsbury Tubbs, daughter of President Horace Davis Pillsbury of Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co.; in Reno. Grounds: cruelty.

Died. Roger Harrington Bullard, 50, architect; of pneumonia; in Plandome, N. Y. He designed country clubs and socialite country houses, won a gold medal in 1933 in a Better Homes in America competition, with a 1 1/2-story cottage which a jury found "admirable, compact, convenient, well lighted and well aired." He planned the model ''America's Little House" which currently stands in Manhattan at the corner of Park Avenue and 39th Street.

Died. Arthur ("Art") Young,* 52, famed archer; after an appendectomy; at Harvey, Ill. An expert pistol and rifle shot, he turned to bows & arrows "because it gives the beasts a chance." In 1925 he went to Africa with Stewart Edward White and the late Dr. Saxton Pope, killed seven lions with his dagger-pointed arrows. He slew walruses in Greenland, a 1,300-lb. bear on Kodiak Island.

Died. Charles Denison Holmes, 64, Wartime inventor of high-powered motors for submarine chasers, mobile artillery and tanks; after long illness (arthritis); in Mystic, Conn. For his services he received last month from President Roosevelt a letter of thanks which, because he was nearly blind, had to be read to him.

Died. Fremont Older, 78, crusading editor of the San Francisco Call-Bulletin; of heart disease while driving his automobile; near Stockton, Calif. Campaigning against graft in the city government, Editor Older of the Bulletin in 1906 piled up enough evidence to send Grafter Abraham Ruef to jail. Then, believing him scapegoat of a corrupt system, he fought long to get Ruef freed. Older in 1916 started a vehement crusade for Thomas Mooney and Warren K. Billings, during which he accused District Attorney Charles M. Fickert of "framing" the pair and was assaulted by Fickert in a hotel lobby. Refused support by his own paper, Older went to Hearst's Call, remained when the two were merged in 1929. Latter-day Older crusades were against billboards, free publicity, newspaper-owning power interests, unlimited powers for judges in contempt cases.

Died. Samuel Sachs, 83, retired senior partner of Goldman, Sachs & Co., Manhattan investment house which before 1929 was a spectacular moneymaker; of heart disease; in Manhattan.

*Not to be confused with famed Cartoonist "Art" Young, 68, of Manhattan.

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