Monday, Jun. 04, 1934

Engaged. Princess Marie-Antoinette Michelle Raphaelle Gabrielle Adelaide Franc,oise Xaviere Josephe Expedite Gregoire de Braganza, 31, daughter of the late Duke Miguel de Braganza, pretender to the throne of Portugal; and Ashley Chanler, son of the late William Astor Chanler.

Married. Eleanor Post Hutton Sturges Gautier, 24, stepdaughter of Edward F. Hutton (General Foods); and George Curtis Rand. 24, Manhattan socialite, her third husband; in Roslyn. Long Island.

Married. Evelyn Dewey, 45, psychologist daughter of Philosopher John Dewey; and Granville Moody Smith Jr., 40. Missouri rancher; in Manhattan.

Married. Louisine Elder Munn, daughter of Orson Desaix Munn, publisher of the Scientific American, and of the late Actress Margaret Lawrence; and Berkeley Wendell Jackson; in Manhattan.

Sued for Divorce. Bertrand Arthur William, 3rd Earl Russell, mathematician, philosopher; by his second wife, Dora Winifred. Countess Russell; in London.

Divorced. John Gilbert, cinemactor; and his fourth wife, Virginia Bruce Gilbert; in Los Angeles.

Left. By Mrs. Elisabeth Mills Reid, widow of onetime Ambassador to the Court of St. James's Whitelaw Reid: a net estate of $18,589,916; mostly to her children, Lady Ward and Ogden Mills Reid, publisher of the New York Herald Tribune. The estate included 16 automobiles, a $290,000 77-pearl necklace, a $15,000 Gainsborough, clothes valued at $50, a debt of $6,543 due from King Prajadhipok of Siam.

Birthdays. Adolph Lewisohn, philanthropist, 85; Queen Mary of England, 67; Eduard Benes, Czechoslovakia's Minister for Foreign Affairs, 50; James Joseph ("Gene'') Tunney, 36. Died. Henry T. Koenig, 42, radium authority, developer of a reduction system which greatly cut radium costs; of cancer of the hip; in Denver. He was the last to die (from radioactivity) of 21 onetime assistants to Mme Marie Sklodowska Curie.

Died. Francis de Sales Casey, 52, one-time (1920-28) art editor of Life, color consultant for Powers Reproduction Corp.; of pneumonia; in Manhattan.

Died. Dr. George Byron Roorbach, 55, professor (since 1919) in the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration; adviser on foreign trade (since last month) to the U. S. State Department; of a heart attack; in Washington, D. C.

Died. Frank Lascelles, 58, sculptor, pageant director (Canadian tercentenary pageant, 1908; Coronation Durbar in Calcutta, 1912; British Empire Pageants, 1924); after long illness; in poverty; in Brighton, England.

Died. Arthur Warner, 59, associate editor and columnist ("The Drifter'') of The Nation; after a brief illness; in Manhattan.

Died. Brand Whitlock, 65, author, onetime (1919-22) U. S. Ambassador to Belgium; following a bladder operation; in Cannes, France. Reporting in Chicago and law in Toledo interested him in politics, led to his election in 1905 as a reform mayor of Toledo. In 1913 he was appointed Minister to Belgium; in 1919. Ambassador. He was credited with saving many a Belgian life by persuading Brussels not to resist Germany's Wartime invasion, gained fame by his efforts to stay the execution of Nurse Edith Cavell.

Died. Edward Marriott Hewlett, 68, electrical engineer; of cerebral hemorrhage; in Schenectady, N. Y. Mr. Hewlett installed the illumination of the Statue of Liberty for the Columbian Exposition of 1892, designed the electrical controls of the Panama Canal locks.

Died. William Bauchop Wilson, 72, miner, labor leader, first U. S. Secretary of Labor (1913-21); suddenly, of a heart attack; on a Miami-Washington train, near Savannah, Ga.

Died. Cecil Talbot Clifton, Baron Grey de Ruthyn, Hereditary Bearer of One of the Great Gold Spurs, onetime Montana rancher. 72; of a heart attack; in Fownhope, Herefordshire, England. Childless Lord Grey de Ruthyn's title becomes extinct, since neither of his two co-heirs predeceased him.

Died. David Wesson, 73, chemist who developed Wesson oil and synthetic meats from cotton seed, technical director of Southern Cotton Oil Co.; of a heart attack; in Montclair, N. J.

Died. Dr. Howard Russell Butler, 78,

lawyer, physicist, painter; in Princeton. N. J. Using a system of shorthand color notes which he devised when he painted impatient Andrew Carnegie, Dr. Butler gained fame by his paintings of eclipses, the aurora borealis.

Died. Alphonse-Marie-Joseph-Albert, count of Caserta, 93, claimant to the thrones of Sicily and Naples from which his halfbrother Francis II was deposed by Garibaldi's 1860 plebiscite; of uremia; in Cannes, France.

Died. Augustine Brendan Ford, 94, publisher, Civil War veteran, co-founder with his brother Patrick of the Irish World (weekly, circulation: 100,000), one-time publisher of the defunct Catholic New York Freeman's Journal; of old age; in Brooklyn.

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