Monday, Sep. 03, 1951

Married. Eve Arden, 39, radio schoolmarm (Our Miss Brooks), stage (Let's Face It) and screen (Goodbye, My Fancy) actress; and Actor Brooks West, 35, both for the second time; in Shelton, Conn.

Married. Leon Rothier, 76, famed French-born basso, who appeared in some 75 different roles (best known as Mephistopheles in Faust) in a record-breaking 1,687 performances at the Metropolitan Opera; and Clara Balog, 49, manager of his voice studio; both for the second time; in Manhattan.

Divorced. By Woolworth Heiress Barbara Hutton Troubetzkoy, 38: Lithuanian Prince Igor Troubetzkoy, 39, her auto-racing fourth husband; after four years of marriage; in Cuernavaca, Mexico.

Died. Joseph Kinsey Howard, 45, former editor of the Great Falls (Mont.) Leader, author (Montana: High, Wide and Handsome) and authority on western history; of a heart attack; near Choteau, Mont.

Died. Constant Lambert, 45, British composer, conductor, author; of diabetes; in London. At 20, he wrote a score for Romeo and Juliet (premiered by the Ballet Russe in 1926), soon began to mix conducting with composing, joined the Vic-Wells (later Sadler's Wells Ballet) Company as musical director. In later years he became a conductor for the BBC, and a prolific record maker. In Music Ho! (subtitled "A Study of Music in Decline") he took a gloomy view of most modern music, blasted Stravinsky, Hindemith and Schoenberg and derided "musical snobs" who failed to realize that Duke Ellington wrote "the most distinguished popular music since Johann Strauss."

Died. Jacob J. Golomb, 58, Latvian-born immigrant who started in business with $5 and a sewing machine, built up one of the nation's largest sports equipment enterprises (Everlast Sporting Goods Co.), supplied free boxing gloves and punching bags to scores of boys clubs, summer camps and schools; of a heart ailment; in Manhattan.

Died. Henry Howard, 83, chemical engineer, inventor (89 patents) and yachtsman; of a heart ailment; in Cambridge, Mass. During World War I, he organized 7,000 drugstores as merchant marine enlistment centers, gained his greatest fame among amateur deep-sea sailors for his articles and books (Charting My Life) about his adventures aboard the yawl Alice.

Died. Antonio Sanchez de Bustamante, 86, Cuban lawyer, teacher, author, and onetime Judge of the Permanent Court of International Justice at The Hague; of a heart ailment; in Havana.

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