Monday, Jan. 06, 1947

Married. Gardner ("Mike") Cowles Jr., 43, publisher of the Des Moines Register & Tribune, chairman of the board of the Minneapolis Star-Journal & Tribune Co., president of Look; and Fleur Fenton, 33, Manhattan advertising consultant; both for the second time; in Stamford, Conn.

Died. Ellen McAdoo de Onate Hinshaw, 31, telephone-operator granddaughter of Woodrow Wilson, daughter of the late Senator William Gibbs McAdoo; by her own hand (she swallowed an overdose of sleeping tablets, then phoned a friend: "Well, I've done it"); in Santa Monica, Calif.

Died. Dixie Tighe (rhymes with Zweig), 41, famed New York Post and I.N.S. foreign correspondent, one of the first newspaperwomen to go overseas in World War II, ex-wife of British Journalist C. V. R. Thompson; of cerebral hemorrhage; in Tokyo.

Died. Hugh Robert Wilson, 61, last U.S. ambassador to Nazi Germany, whose recall in 1938 "for report and consultation" ended full diplomatic relations between the two countries three years before Pearl Harbor; after long illness; in Bennington, Vt.

Died. Edward J. Reilly, 64, flamboyant, old-style criminal lawyer, who in the Roaring Twenties won fame of a sort as the Great Mouthpiece for mobsters and gun molls, was said to have handled nearly 2,000 murder cases, chief defense counsel at the trial of Bruno Richard Hauptmann for the murder of the Lindbergh baby; of cerebral thrombosis; in Brooklyn.

Died. Baron Robert de Rothschild, 66, who, with his cousin Baron Edouard de Rothschild, headed the Rothschild bank in Paris before the Nazi occupation; of pneumonia; in Lausanne, Switzerland. A lifelong racing enthusiast, he owned one of the most famous stables in prewar France, a private track, a polo field (where he played under the name M. Errer). Another property: Chateau Lafite-Roths-child, producer of one of the world's best red wines.

Died. Max Warburg, 79, famed international Hamburg banker, brother of Manhattan bankers Paul and Felix Warburg; after long illness; in Manhattan. Though a Jew, he remained in his homeland after Hitler rose to power, devoted himself to aiding and rescuing Jews marked for persecution, finally in 1939 fled to the U.S., in 1944 became a U.S. citizen.

Died. Carrie Jacobs Bond, 84, whose sentimental ballads (I Love You Truly, Just A-wearyin' for You, A Perfect-Day) have become almost U.S. folk songs; in Hollywood.

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