Monday, Sep. 15, 1930
Born. A son, heir apparent to the Belgian throne; to the Crown Princess Astrid Sophie Louise Thrya, niece of King Gustaf V of Sweden; and Crown Prince Leopold Philippe Charles Albert Meinrad Hubertus Marie Miguel, Due de Brabant. Weight: 8 Ib. 11 oz. Name: Baudouin* Albert Axel Marie Gustave.
Engaged. McClelland Barclay, famed painter of advertisements for Fisher Body Co. and Camel Cigarets; and Helene Marie C. Haskin, his model for Fisher Body advertisements, a member of the cast last year of Fred Stone's musical comedy Ripples; in Manhattan. He is notably adroit with red.
Married. Clarence Cook Little, 42-year-old director of the American Society for the Control of Cancer, onetime (1922-25) president of the University of Maine, onetime (1925-29) president of the University of Michigan, director of the American League for Birth Control; and Beatrice W. Johnson, his pupil at Maine in 1922, his assistant in 1924, a women's adviser at Michigan when Dr. Little was its president; at Fredericton, New Brunswick. (Year ago, Dr. Little divorced his first wife.)
Married. Lammot du Pont, 49, of St. Amour, Kennett Pike, Wilmington, Del., president of the E. I. du Pont de Nemours Co.; and Mrs. Caroline Hynson Stollenwerck of Scarsdale, N. Y.; in Wilmington. Lammot 3rd, eldest of seven children, was best man.
Married. Alexander Winton, 70, old-time automobile man; and Mrs. Mary E. Avery, 47 (his fourth), three weeks after his divorce from Composer Marion Campbell, 30 (TIME, Sept. 1).
Divorce Rumored. Mildred Zukor Loew (now in Reno), daughter of President Adolph Zukor of Paramount-Famous-Lasky; from Arthur M. Loew, vice president of Loew's, Inc., son of the late Film Producer Marcus Loew.
Sued for Divorce. Michael John Cudahy, 23, Chicago meat scion (poisoned by liquor three weeks ago, TIME, Aug. 11); by Mrs. Muriel Evans Cudahy. Charge: cruelty.
Died. Charles E. Bedford Jr., 30, son of Vice President Bedford of the Vacuum Oil Co.; by his own hand, in a dollar-a-night Brooklyn hotel. When only 19, Bedford came home from the War mentally sick. The same year he stole a car to escape from a physician, went to gaol in Indiana, later to a New York asylum from which he ran away. Ashamed to go home, although his family used every possible persuasion, he wandered, hid himself in crowds, spent the past five years in Brooklyn slums.
Died. Patrick Joseph Tuohy, 36, able one-armed painter of the Irish artistic revolution, for five years a student under Sir William Orpen who called him "the best painter Ireland has produced in generations"; by his own hand, in Manhattan, where he had lived for four years.
Died. Robert J. Firestone, 57, brother of famed Rubberman Harvey Samuel Firestone, 61; of heart disease, in Cleveland. Until 1919, Robert was a vice president of Harvey's company; subsequently he engaged in local businesses.
Died. Simon William Straus, 63, Manhattan banker, chairman of S. W. Straus & Co. (Manhattan financiers), Chicago's Franklin Trust & Savings Bank, the American Society for Thrift, financial backer of Manhattan's Chanin and Chrysler buildings; after long illness, of anemia, at his home in Manhattan.
Died. Sir James Guthrie, 71, leading force in Scotch painting, for 17 years president of the Royal Scottish Academy; at Rowmore, Dumbartonshire, Scotland.
Died. Rev. Father John G. Hagen, 83, longtime director of the Vatican Observatory in Rome, only American-born citizen of the Vatican State; after a short illness, at Vatican City.
* Baudouin was the sixth name of Phillipe, Duc de Saxe, father of King Albert, brother of late King Leopold II.
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