Monday, Jul. 06, 1936
Married. Myrna Loy, 31, sloe-eyed, Montana-born cinemactress (The Thin Man, The Great Ziegfeld); and Arthur Hornblow Jr., 43, scenarist, associate producer for Paramount; at Ensenada, Lower California, Mexico.
Married. Clarence Duncan Chamberlin, 42, pilot on the second non-stop trans-atlantic flight (1927); and Louise Ashby, 29, daughter of Maine State Senator George F. Ashby; in Fort Fairfield, Me.
Married. Mrs. Samuel H. Long, Herbert Hoover's White House housekeeper; and Isaac Walker of Baltimore, Md.; in Indianapolis.
Marriage Revealed. George Preston Marshall, owner of Washington's Palace Laundries ("Long Live Linen"), the Boston Redskins (professional football team), onetime publisher of William Randolph Hearst's Washington Times; and Corinne Griffith, cinemactress; in Armonk, N. Y., last month.
Sued for Divorce. Charles Ponzi, 54, celebrated Boston swindler, now a Roman tourist guide; by Mrs. Rose Ponzi whom he married in 1918; in Cambridge, Mass. Grounds: he had served "more than five years" (1922-34) in prison. Explained she: "When he was down . . . I stuck to him."
Divorced. Alexander Johnston Robertson, Manhattan stockbroker; by Mrs. Sylvia Conway Robertson, daughter of Chairman Carle Cotter Conway of Continental Can Co.; in Basin, Wyo.
Died. Arthur William Cutten, 65, Chicago grain speculator, "Little Giant of the Wheat Pit"; of heart disease; in Chicago. Last month he retired from the Board of Trade, after the Supreme Court reversed his suspension by the U. S. Grain Futures Administration on a charge of holding 116,000,000 bu. of undeclared wheat futures.
Died. Maude Younger, 66, oldtime feminist, National Women's Party lobbyist in Washington"(1916-20) at the time the 19th Amendment was passed; of an intestinal infection; at Overlook Ranch, Los Gatos, Calif.
Died. Brig. General Charles Hitchcock Sherrill, U. S. A., retired, 69; onetime (1932-33) U. S. Ambassador to Turkey; longtime member of the International Olympic Committee; of heart disease; in Paris. Last winter he was instrumental in persuading the U. S. Olympic Committee against boycotting the games to be held in Berlin next month (TIME, Nov. 4).
Born. To Carnation Ormsby Butter King, 9. world champion milk cow, who last year produced 38,000 Ib. of milk, 1,750 Ib. of butter (TIME, Feb. 24); and Sir Inka May; mixed twins, their third set; at Carnation Farm, near Seattle, Wash.
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