Monday, Dec. 30, 1935

Married-- Bertrand L. Taylor, socialite Manhattan stockbroker, father of Mary Taylor, famed photographers' model; and Olive McClure, Broadway dancer; in Manhattan.

Married, Mrs. Mary Ann Payne Clews, 35, relict of Manhattan Banker James Blanchard Clews; and George Blumenthal, 77, retired Manhattan banker (Lazard Freres) and philanthropist; president of Manhattan's Metropolitan Museum of Art, Mount Sinai Hospital and of the American Hospital in Paris; in Manhattan.

Sentenced, Gustav Lindquist, onetime insurance commissioner of Minnesota, and Abraham Karatz, onetime St. Paul lawyer, later a barker at Chicago's Century of Progress; to one to five years in Joliet penitentiary, fines of $1,000 each; for conspiring to loot Abraham Lincoln Life Insurance Co. (TIME, Dec. 10, 1934).

Died, George Washington Olvany Jr., 22, son of a onetime (1924-29) boss of Manhattan's Tammany Hall; in Manhattan, where he had been taken after shooting himself twice in the head at Saranac Lake, N. Y.

Died, Sophie Braslau, 43, onetime Metropolitan Opera Company contralto whose voice had a three-octave range; after long illness; in Manhattan.

Died, George D. Buckley, 55, vice president of Manhattan's National City Bank and City Bank Farmers Trust Co.; onetime president of Crowell Publishing Co., onetime publisher of the Chicago Herald & Examiner, head of the newspaper and publishing division of NRA; of a heart ailment; in Manhattan.

Died, Edward Tracy ("Ted") Clark, 57, vice president and Washington representative of United Drug Inc., onetime (1906-17) secretary to the late U. S. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge; White House secretary during the Administration of Calvin Coolidge; of acute indigestion; in Washington.

Died, Thomas David Schall, 58, U. S. Senator from Minnesota, in Washington, D. C. (see p. 7).

Died. Arthur Frederick Sheldon, 67, co-founder of Rotary International, coiner of Rotary's slogan, "He profits most who serves best"; in Mission, Tex.

Died, Walter Leighton Clark, 76, painter, retired machinery manufacturer, a founder & president of Manhattan's Grand Central Art Galleries; after an illness of six months; in Stockbridge, Mass.

Died, Lizette Woodworth Reese, 79, poet (A Branch of May, Wayside Lute), author of the sonnet "Tears," for 48 years a teacher in Baltimore's public schools; in Baltimore.

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