Monday, Sep. 16, 1935

Born. To President Robert Maynard Hutchins of the University of Chicago; and Maude Phelps McVeigh Hutchins: a daughter, their second; in Chicago. Weight: 7 lb., 13 oz.

Engaged. Joe ("Brown Bomber") Louis, Negro heavyweight boxer; and one Marva Trotter, Chicago stenographer.

Married. George Vanderbilt, 20, big game hunter, heir to half the $30,000,000 fortune left by his father, Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, Lusitania victim; and Lucille Parsons, 22, expert golfer, horsewoman and rifle shot; at "Broadacre," her parents' estate near West Orange, N. J.

Married. Lucile Brokaw, 20, daughter of Irving Brokaw, Manhattan socialite and ice-skater; and James Duane Pell Bishop, socialite rug company employe; in Locust Valley, L. I.

Married. Lenore Kight, 22, fastest U. S. woman swimmer; and Cleon J. Wingard, 24, Pittsburgh physical education teacher; in Wellsburg, W. Va.

Divorced. Edward F. Hutton, board chairman of General Foods Corp.(see p. 54); by Marjorie Post Close Hutton, daughter of General Foods' late founder Charles William Post (Postum, Post Toasties); in Nassau Co., L. I.

Left. By "Aircraftsman Shaw" (Thomas Edward Lawrence), War hero of Arabia who died in a motorcycle crash in Dorset, England (TIME, May 27): $36,684, mostly to his brother.

Died, Edward Harris ("Ted") Coy. famed Yale footballer (1907-09), twice All-America fullback, member of the late Walter Camp's All-Time All-America team, onetime husband of the late Jeanne Eagels; of pneumonia following a heart attack; in Manhattan.

Died. "Mrs. Wilson Woodrow" (Nancy Mann Waddel Woodrow), 50 plus, novelist and magazine fictionist, widow of James Wilson Woodrow, distant kin of Woodrow Wilson; of heart disease; in Manhattan.

Died. George Charles Hanson, 52. U. S. Consul General at Salonika; by his own hand (pistol); on board the President Polk en route to the U. S. (see p. 14).

Died. Edward Laurence Doheny, 79, Los Angeles oil tycoon; after a three-year illness; in Los Angeles. A mule-driver at 16, he looked for gold for 20 years, found little, switched to oil. tapped the Los Angeles field and another great pool near Tampico in Mexico, built up a $155,000,000 petroleum empire. He was indicted for bribing Secretary of the Interior Albert B. Fall with $100,000 to secure the Elk Hills oil lease from the Government. was acquitted in 1930 when he convinced a Washington jury that the $100,000 in a "little black bag" was a personal loan to an old friend.

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