Monday, Nov. 04, 1935

Married. George Victor Robert John Innes-Ker, 22, 9th Duke of Roxburghe, Premier Baronet of Scotland, rich grandson of the late, rich Ogden Goelet of Newport; and Lady Mary Crewe-Milnes, 20, youngest daughter of the Marquess of Crewe; in London.

Married. Marie Mclntyre, 23, daughter of Marvin Mclntyre, No. 1 assistant secretary to President Roosevelt; and Frederick Hayes Warren II, 25. supervising architect on an RFC dam at Phoenix, Ariz.; in Washington, D. C.

Married. Sabin W. Carr, onetime world pole-vault record holder (14 ft.), winner of that event in the 1928 Olympic Games; and Laura de Rham, Manhattan socialite; in Manhattan.

Sued for Separation. Arthur Marcus Loew, 38, vice president and general manager of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, one-time son-in-law of Adolph Zukor; by Barbara Mae Smith Loew, 25. onetime showgirl; in White Plains, N. Y. Charges: He treated her like a child, humiliated her before servants, called her a killjoy, drank excessively, abandoned her at parties, allowed women to put makeup on his face, pinched her dog, harassed her canary. Mrs. Loew asked $3,000 per month maintenance, $25,000 for counsel fees, $2.500 for special costs. Mr. Loew: "Preposterous."

Sued for Separation. Edward J. Reilly. 53, owlish, bulky chief defense counsel at the murder trial of Bruno Richard Hauptmann; by Fleurette Reilly, 31, his fifth wife (according to Fleurette Reilly) ; in White Plains, N. Y. Charges: abusive treatment, drunkenness, "association with women of lewd and questionable habits.'' Lawyer Reilly had previously filed a separation suit of his own, charging that his wife tore his clothes, broke his glasses.

Died. Twin sons, born to Lord Charles Cavendish, second son of the Duke of Devonshire, and Lady Cavendish (Dancer Adele Astaire); few hours after birth; in London. Two years ago Lady Cavendish lost her first child, a daughter, the day it was born.

Died. Henry Herbermann, 57, beclouded shipping magnate; suddenly, of a heart attack; in Washington. A onetime railroad laborer, Herbermann bought American Export Lines (without ships) for a song, 18 freighters from the Shipping Board for less than the Board spent to put them in shape. Two years ago the Senate discovered that although the line had received nearly $27,000,000 in Federal benefits and subsidies, it still owed the Government $8,000,000, was in bad shape. Herbermann was unceremoniously demoted from president to vice president (TIME, March 12, 1934 et ante).

Died. Valentine Laura Chandor, 59, headmistress of Manhattan's swank Spence School, founder of the Chandor School which merged with Spence three years ago (TIME, May 16, 1932); in Manhattan.

Died. Dr. Joseph Colt Bloodgood, 67, famed cancer diagnostician and researcher, professor of clinical surgery at Johns Hopkins University; of coronary thrombosis; in Baltimore.

Died. William Irwin Grubb, 73, Judge of the Northern District of Alabama since 1909; suddenly, of a heart attack; in Birmingham. A self-styled Democrat, he was a comfort to the Republican Administrations of the 1920's by his severity with dry law violators, grew famed when he turned a cold judicial eye on the New Deal, pronounced NRA unconstitutional (TIME, Nov. 12, 1934), ruled TVA power sales illegal (TIME, Dec. 10, 1934).

Died. Edward Henry Carson, Baron Carson of Duncairn, 81, "Lion of Ulster," implacable opponent of Irish Home Rule, brilliant lawyer, in-&-out member of the British Wartime Cabinet; of lymphatic leukemia; in Minster-in-Thanet, Kent. Before the War. Carson declared he would fight Home Rule with force: organized a huge volunteer army. The War diverted this activity but after the Armistice Carson resumed his stand and to this day Protestant Ulster remains politically apart from Catholic Ireland. A wizard with juries, Carson successfully defended the cackling old Marquess of Queensbury in Oscar Wilde's libel suit, brought out much of the evidence that sent Wilde to jail.

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