Monday, Mar. 06, 1933

Married. Thomas James Walsh, 73, Montana's senior U. S. Senator, Attorney General in the Roosevelt Cabinet; and Mina Perez Chaumont Truffin, wealthy relict of a Havana sugar broker; in Marianao, suburb of Havana, Cuba. (See p. 12).

Married. Hazel Elaine Blood, daughter of Utah's Governor Henry H. Blood; and David J. Ellison, Utah beet sugar scion; in the Washington Memorial Chapel, cleared of sightseers; in Valley Forge, Pa.

Married. Margaret Whigham, daughter of Board Chairman George Hay Whigham of Celanese Corp. of America ; and Charles Sweeney, onetime U. S. captain of the Oxford golf team; in London's huge Brompton Oratory (Roman Catholic).

Divorced. By Charlotte Louise Juliette Goyon de Matignon Grimaldi, hereditary princess of Monaco, duchess of Valentinois, 34, only daughter of Monaco's Prince Louis II: Pierre Marie Xavier Raphael Antoine Melchior, 37, born Count de Polignac, crowned Prince Grimaldi of Monaco at his 1920 wedding; in Monte Carlo. Grounds: some Monaco republicans wanted Prince Pierre for President. To get Louis II's permission for divorce, Charlotte signed over her hereditary rights to the throne to her only son Prince Rainier Louis Henri Maxence Bertrand, 9.

Died. John R. Fell, 43, Philadelphia socialite polo-player and Paris banker, divorced husband of Dorothy Randolph Fell Mills (wife of U. S. Secretary of the Treasury Mills); mysteriously, of a knife wound in his chest, while on vacation from his Paris bank with his third wife Martha Ederton Fell, onetime Follies girl; in their hotel room in Solo, Java. Following the fiction pattern of Novelist Somerset Maugham, a guest broke in the Fells' room when he heard Mrs. Fell's screams, found Fell on the floor gasping, "I did it myself. It's my fault." Mrs. Fell testified her back was turned when she heard him rise from the table, stagger and fall with a big table knife in his chest. She pulled it out, had hysterics. His stepfather Alexander Van Rensselaer, president of the Philadelphia Orchestra Association, called Fell "not the kind of man to take his own life . . . not a quitter." In 1923 Fell was fined $500 and costs on his discharged butler's complaint that Fell and two servants had beaten him and tried to brand him with a torch because the butler knew Fell rang false fire alarms for excitement. Next month his wife divorced him on grounds of drunkenness.

Died. Brigadier General Francis Conway Jenkins, 44, one of the Royal Air Force's wartime nucleus of 13 officers, last month elected board chairman of Britain's Chrysler Motors, Ltd.; of an operation for appendicitis; in Windsor, England.

Died. Daisy Canfield Danziger Moreno, 45, California oil heiress, estranged wife of Film Actor Antonio Moreno: of injuries when her automobile ran over the edge of a cliff as her companion, one Rene Dussac, tried to brighten the headlights in a fog, turned them out instead; on Mulholland Highway, Hollywood.

Died. Davis Edward Marshall, 62, famed war correspondent, newspaper-syndicate head (Edward Marshall Newspaper Syndicate, Inc.); of lobar pneumonia ; in New Brunswick, N. J. While he was one of Theodore Roosevelt's Rough Riders in the Spanish-American War, a bullet in his spine nearly killed him, cost him a leg, paralyzed him below the waist. Famed Panama Canal Doctor William C. Gorgas, expecting him to die, found him under a Cuban mango tree dictating his newspaper story to Richard Harding Davis and Stephen Crane. Later he survived three train wrecks, two hotel fires, the bombing of Russell Sage, a lake steamer wreck and the 1916 torpedoing of the S. S. Sussex. (Unable to swim with one paralyzed leg, he clung to wreckage.) His hobby: improvement of slums.

Died. Grand Duke Alexander Michailovitch Romanov, 66, cousin and brother-in-law of Russia's late Tsar Nicholas II, refugee from Lenin's Revolution deathlist, author (Once a Grand Duke); of cancer of the stomach; in Mentone, France. Third son of the fourth son of Tsar Nicholas I, he was not in the line of succession.

Died. Mattie Elizabeth Mitchell de La Rochefoucauld, Duchess de La Rochefoucauld, 66, Paris socialite, daughter of Oregon's oldtime Senator John H. Mitchell; in Paris.

Died. Benjamin Bowditch Thayer, 70, first vice president of Anaconda Copper Mining Co. whose board chairman John D. Ryan died last fortnight (TIME, Feb. 20); after an operation to remove an embolism; in Manhattan.

Died. Thomas Watt Gregory, 71, onetime (1914-19) U. S. Attorney-General under President Wilson, trustbuster and wartime alien-prosecutor ("Obey the law and keep your mouth shut"), Houston (Tex.) lawyer, Democratic "elder statesman"; of pneumonia; in Manhattan.

Died. Andreas Lang Sr., 71, woodcarver, Petrus in Oberammergau's 1900, 1910 and 1922 Passion Play, distant cousin of famed Potter Anton Lang (the Christus); in Oberammergau, Germany.

Died. Therese Loeb Schiff, 78, relict of Manhattan Banker Jacob Henry Schiff, daughter of Kuhn, Loeb & Co.'s co-Founder Solomon Loeb, philanthropist (hospitals, slums, Jews, Boy Scouts); of cerebral thrombosis; in Manhattan.

Died. Edward R. Biddle, 81, patriarch of Philadelphia's famed Biddle family, lawyer and art collector; of old age; in Philadelphia.

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