Monday, Apr. 10, 1933

Married. William Randolph Hearst Jr., 24, president of his father's New York American; and Lorelle McCarver Moore, 24, actress; each for the second time; in Palm Beach.

Married. Jesse Lauriston Livermore, 55, famed stock speculator; and Harriet Metz Noble, 38, concert singer, Omaha brewer's daughter; each for the third time; in Geneva, Ill.

Married. Virginia Clayton Willys de Aguirre, 22, divorced wife of Argentine Luis Marcelino de Aguirre, only child of Automan John North Willys; and Jose de Landa of Paris, son of a onetime Governor of Mexico's Federal District; in a Roman Catholic ceremony at Miami Beach.

Divorced. Lammot du Pont, 52 board chairman of General Motors Corp., president of E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.; by Caroline Hynson Stollenwerck du Pont; in Reno. Grounds: "extreme cruelty."

Awarded. To Jerry Farnsworth, 37 portraitist for TIME & FORTUNE, newly-elected associate member of the National Academy of Design: the Academy's Thomas B. Clarke prize of $300 for "best figure composition" for his The Guide.

Died. Frank Theodore Hulswit, 57, onetime utilities tycoon; when he fell/jumped from his apartment on the fifth floor of Manhattan's Hotel Astor. President of United Light & Power Co. since 1910, he resigned, lost a reputed $10,000,000 when his New York Curb Exchange bull pool in the company's stock collapsed in 1926. Next year he came back as president of American Commonwealths Power Corp., was elected a director of United Light & Power in 1931.

Died. Andrew Cameron Pearson, 59, board chairman of United Publishers Corp. (trade journals), president of National Publishers Assn., national chairman of the American Publishers Conference, brother of Governor Paul Martin Pearson of the Virgin Islands; of a heart attack; in Montclair, N. J.

Died. Bertha Martin, onetime Washington apartment house telephone operator, later society editor of Edward Beale McLean's Washington Post, frequent visitor to "the little green house on K Street" and intimate of "The Ohio Gang"; by her own hand (gas); in Washington.

Died. Sir Ranjitsinhji Vibhaji, Maharajah Jamsaheb of Nawanagar, 60, famed oldtime cricketer, Chancellor of India's Chamber of Princes, First Indian delegate to the League of Nations; of heart disease; in Jamnagar, India. Popular throughout the Empire as "Ranji," he was considered one of the greatest batsmen of all time.

Died. Jonathan M. Denwood, 63, author of Red Ike; after long illness; in Cockermouth, England. Day-time tailor, night-time poacher, spare-time writer, in 1931 after nine years of hawking the manuscript Denwood saw his novel Red Ike chosen book-of-the-month by the English Book Society, sell 30,000 copies within two months. A London literary group invited him to dine. Wrote he: "When my novel was being kicked about from publisher to publisher, I desperately needed money for the first time in my life,--money for the skilled medical attention that would have arrested my malady [arteriosclerosis]. Now it is too late. . . . Success is ashes in the mouth."

Died. Sir Frederic John Napier Thesiger, 1st Viscount Chelmsford, 64, onetime (1916-21) Viceroy of India and (1924) First Lord of the Admiralty; of a heart attack; in London. A onetime Governor of Queensland and of New South Wales, he was appointed Viceroy while serving as captain of a territorial battalion in a remote corner of India. Faced with widespread native unrest, he, with the late Edwin Samuel Montagu, in 1918 sponsored the plan which brought limited home rule to India, has since been the keystone of British policy there.

Died. Charles Frank Borah, 65, attorney, father of Federal Judge Wayne G. Borah of Louisiana's Eastern District, brother of Senator William Edgar Borah; in New Orleans.

Died. Countess Tokiko Yamamoto, 73, Japanese "Cinderella"; of a stomach ulcer; in Tokyo. Third daughter of a poor fisherman, she was sold at 14 to the proprietor of a house in Tokyo's Yoshiwara (prostitution) district. A young naval officer fell in love with, kidnapped, married her. He became Admiral Count Gombei Yamamoto, twice (in 1913 & 1923) Premier of Japan.

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