Monday, Jan. 24, 1938

Engaged. Helen ("Billie") Hicks, 26, sturdy golfer who won the U. S. women's amateur championship in 1931; to Widower Whitney Harb, 44, president of a North Little Rock, Ark. auto agency; in Little Rock.

Married-Pauline Louise du Pont, 19, daughter of General Motors Director Henry Francis du Pont, second cousin of Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr.; to Alfred C. Harrison III, 27, Manhattan lawyer; in Christiana Hundred, Del.

Married. Randolph Apperson ("Randy") Hearst, 22, one of Publisher Hearst's tall, twin youngest sons; to Catherine Wood Campbell, 20; in Atlanta, Ga. Of the five Hearst brothers, only Randolph's twin, David Whitmire Hearst has not been married' at least once.

Married. Mark Sullivan Jr., 26, son of the conservative columnist-reporter, to Martha Davidge. 21, granddaughter of the late John Wingate Weeks, onetime U. S. Secretary of War and Senator from Massachusetts; in Washington.

Married. Mrs. Emily Flamm Gilchrist, 70, who seven years ago inherited $2,000,000 from her lumberman husband, William A. Gilchrist; to Roe Wells, 50, $25,000-per-year vice president of Doughnut Corp. of America; in Valparaiso, Ind. Said he: "Mrs. Wells and I have agreed to pool our interests and carry on. We shall be very happy working together."

Divorced. Lois Clarke de Ruyter Spreckels Clinton, 26, daughter of retired Manhattan Banker Lewis Latham Clarke, from Frank C. Clinton of Boise, Idaho, whom she married day after her 1935 divorce from Sugar Heir Adolph B. Spreckels Jr.; in Reno.

Died. Albert Ottinger, 59, onetime New York State Attorney General who, as Republican candidate for Governor in 1928, came within 25,564 votes of tying his opponent. Franklin D. Roosevelt; of a heart attack; in Manhattan.

Died. Annie Griffin Baruch, 65, wife of Financier Bernard Mannes Baruch; of lobar pneumonia; in Manhattan.

Died. J. Waddy Tate, 66, onetime (1929-31) mayor of Dallas, Texas; after brief illness; in Dallas. In the 1927 mayoralty campaign, Tate wore blue overalls, carried a fishing rod, lost; but two years later he spent only $218 campaigning, bought frankfurters for 10,000 voters, won hands down.

Died. Juan de la Cierva, 74, reactionary Minister of Justice in Spam's last cabinet under King Alfonso; of diabetes; at Madrid's Norwegian Legation, where he had hidden all through the civil war. He died not knowing that his namesake son, inventor of the autogiro, had been killed in a K. L. M. air crash 13 months before (TIME, Dec. 21, 1936).

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