Monday, Nov. 13, 1950

Married. Mrs. D. H. (Frieda) Lawrence, 71, German-born widow of the English novelist (Lady Chatterley's Lover, Women in Love), who died in 1930; and her longtime friend, Angelino Ravagli, 59, Italian-born painter and ceramist; she for the third time, he for the second; in Taos, N. Mex.

Died. John Boettiger, 50, Chicago newsman who became a national celebrity as the husband (1935 to 1949) of Franklin Roosevelt's only daughter, Anna; in a leap, from a seventh-floor hotel room; in Manhattan. Reporter Boettiger met energetic Anna Roosevelt Dall while covering her father's 1932 campaign for the Chicago Tribune. Three years later, after both won divorces, they were married in the Roosevelts' Manhattan town house. In 1936, Hearst hired the Boettigers to take over his shaky Seattle Post Intelligencer. Publisher John and Women's Editor Anna made the paper editorially pro-Administration, financially healthier. Leaving Hearst in 1945, they lost a fortune trying to start a paper in Phoenix, Ariz. Boettiger left the paper in 1948, shortly thereafter was divorced from Anna, married again and went to work as a pressagent for The Netherlands government.

Died. Michael Strange (real name: Blanche Oelrichs), 60, sometime actress, dabbler in poetry, propagandist for woman suffrage, socialism and isolationism, onetime wife (1920-28) of the late Actor John Barrymore, mother of Actress Diana Barrymore; of leukemia; in Boston.

Died. General Kuniaki Koiso, 70, one of the fanatic militarists who led the Japanese Empire into war and destruction; of a chest tumor; in Tokyo, where he was serving time on a life sentence for war crimes. Wizened, jovial Warmonger Koiso commanded Japan's famed Kwantung army in Manchuria, earned the title "The Tiger" because of his cat's eyes and ruthless behavior as governor general of Japanese-occupied Korea.

Died. Samuel Candler Dobbs, 81, a director, onetime (1919-20) president and longtime (1892-1919) chief booster of the Coca-Cola Co.; in Lakemont, Ga. At 18, Dobbs came out of the Georgia backwoods, got a job as porter in the Atlanta drugstore of his uncle Asa Griggs Candler. When Candler bought the Coca-Cola formula from the druggist who invented it, young Dobbs became its first salesman, boomed it locally as "Delicious & Refreshing" instead of as a headache remedy, later began to make it a national habit by spending millions (over Candler's objections) on advertising.

Died. George Bernard Shaw, 94, genius, playwright, wit, critic, Irishman, unsocial Socialist; of complications following a fall; in Ayot St. Lawrence, England (see p. 30).

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