Monday, Jul. 27, 1942

Married. Walter C. Pew Jr., 23, son of the general manager of Sun Oil Co.; and Sophie Boychuck, 22, service girl at a Sun Oil Company station; by a Justice of the Peace near Philadelphia.

Married. Cinemactress Lana Turner, 22; and Stephen Crane, 27, Hollywood businessman; in Las Vegas, Nev. Said Miss Turner, her first marriage (to Band Leader Artie Shaw) "was just fight, fight, fight, all the time."

Died. Maury Henry Biddle Paul ("Cholly Knickerbocker"), 52, Hearstling society columnist; of a heart ailment; in New York.

Died. Dr. Roberto M. Ortiz, 55; after long illness; of bronchopneumonia, 21 days after he resigned as President of Argentina; in Buenos Aires.

Died. Moses Louis ("Moe") Annenberg, 65, former Chicago newsboy, veteran of newspaper circulation wars, multimillionaire operator of racing news services; of pneumonia, in Rochester, Minn., seven weeks after parole from the Federal prison at Lewisburg, Pa., where he served 23 months for income tax evasion.

Died. William Braden, 71, founder of Braden Copper Co. of Chile and father of Spruille Braden, U.S. Ambassador to Cuba; of a heart ailment; in Reno, Nev. With Messmore Kendall, he mined the great copper deposits at El Teniente and Potrerillos, Chile.

Died. The Rev. Frederic Anstruther Cardew, 76; in London. An Englishman, he went to Canada in 1884, volunteered to fight Indians and became a U.S. cowboy. Returning to England, he entered the Anglican Church and was assigned a parish of 120,000 square miles in Australia. In 1907 he became chaplain of St. George's Church in Paris, there founded the Cardew Theater Girls' Hostel in Montmartre for American and English chorus girls. He was known as the "chorus girls' friend'' and the "cattle punchers' padre."

Died. George Sutherland, 80, onetime Justice of the United States Supreme Court; of a heart attack; at Stockbridge, Mass. Appointed by President Harding in 1922, Justice Sutherland served 16 years. Called "the living voice of the Constitution" by Lord Bryce, and branded as a foe of social progress by liberals, he himself best outlined his judicial philosophy: "Whether the legislation under review is wise or unwise is a matter with which we have nothing to do. The only legitimate inquiry we can make is whether it is constitutional." He retired in 1938, the second foe of New Deal legislation to take advantage of the court-retirement plan (the first: Willis Van Devanter).

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