Monday, Nov. 05, 1951

Married. Jack Norworth, 72, composer (Take Me Out to the Ball Game; Shine On, Harvest Moon), oldtime vaudeville star with his second wife, Nora Bayes ; and Amy Swor, 56; he for the fifth time, she for the second; in Lovington. N. Mex.

Died. Mady (Marguerita Maria) Christians, 49, one of Broadway's leading old-school actresses (I Remember Mama; Watch on the Rhine) ; of a cerebral hemorrhage; in Norwalk, Conn. Born in Vienna, she first walked on stage at 16 in her father's German theater in Manhattan, returned to Germany to study with Starmaker Max Reinhardt, made scores of European films. After a brief marriage to a Hamburg editor, she came to the U.S. again in 1931, played roles ranging from Hamlet's mother to William Powell's screen mistress.

Died. Robert Isham Randolph, 68, Chicago engineer, who in 1930 formed the famous "Secret Six," an organization of businessmen who helped battle the alliance of gangsters and politicians in Chicago; of a heart attack; in Santa Barbara, Calif.

Died. Carolyn Harding Votaw, 71, sister of President Warren G. Harding; of a cerebral hemorrhage; in Washington, B.C. During her brother's term in office, she worked in the Public Health Service, and her husband, a Seventh Day Adventist minister, was superintendent of federal prisons.

Died. Frank G. Webb, 83, automobile fancier, who got one of the nation's first permits to operate his "automatic pleasure carriage," founded the American Automobile Association in 1902, helped overcome the prejudice of lawmakers against horseless carriages; in San Diego.

Died. Marie Amelie, exiled Queen of Portugal, 86; of angina pectoris; near Versailles, France. A quiet, artistic monarch who dabbled in watercolors and turned out a novel called Chilosa, she led a tempestuous life. She was born in exile in England, the great-granddaughter of France's last King, Louis-Philippe. At 20, she married the heir to Portugal's throne. who as Carlos I reigned for 19 years until assassins surrounded the royal carriage and, before Amelie's eyes, shot & killed her husband and son. Her second son took over the throne, reigned for only two years before a second revolt sent him and the Queen into exile in 1910.

Died. Prince Oscar Carl Wilhelm of Sweden, 90, head of the Swedish Red Cross (1903-45), brother of Sweden's late King Gustaf V, uncle of King Gustaf VI, father of Norway's Princess Martha and of Belgium's late Queen Astrid (who died in an automobile smashup in 1935), grandfather of Belgium's King Baudouin; of a heart attack; in Stockholm.

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