Monday, Feb. 04, 1924

Born. To Count and Countess Calvi di Bergolo, a daughter. The Countess is Princess Yolande, 23, eldest daughter of King Vittorio Emanuele of Italy. She was married (TIME, Apr. 14) to Count Calvi, war hero.

Married. Margaret Wilson, author of The Able McLaughlins, Harper prize novel (TIME, Oct. 29), to G. D. Turner, tutor in Brasenose College, Oxford; at Paris.

Divorced. Max Reinhardt, producer of The Miracle (TIME, Jan. 28), by Else Heims Reinhardt, famed German tragedienne; in Czecho-Slovakia. They separated six years ago because he refused to give her the parts she chose in his productions.

Divorced. Charles Holland Duell, son of the late Judge Charles H. Duell of the U. S. Court of Appeals, and cousin of Elihu Root, by Mrs. Lillian Tucker Duell, onetime actress. She charged that he had refused to renew marital relations. It was rumored that he would marry Miss Lillian Gish, cinema actress.

Died. William Jaeger Poyer, four months, grandnephew of Thomas A. Edison; at Saranac Lake, N. Y., from a weak heart.

Died. Margaret Eliot Harding, 23, daughter of W. P. G. Harding, former Governor of the Federal Reserve Board; at Boston; suicide caused by ill health.

Died. Ex-Grand Duchess Marie Adelaide of Luxembourg, 29, Carmelite nun since 1920 when she abdicated in favor of her sister Charlotte, now reigning Duchess of Luxembourg; at Hohenburg castle, Bavaria. When the Germans demanded passage through Luxembourg on their way to attack France, she formally protested by drawing her automobile across the street in front of the advancing army. Neither she nor the Luxembourg Government (Germany's forced auxiliary) opposed forcibly, however.

Died. Mrs. Feng Yu-Hsiang, wife of Major General Feng Yu-Hsiang, Chinese General; at Peking. The 30,000 soldiers encamped outside of Peking were said to be wearing mourning bands on their uniforms. An American officer reported (TIME, May 19) that General Yu-Hsiang's army sang Christian hymn-tunes, but that the words "meant something different."

Died. General Lee Christmas, 61, famed soldier of fortune, simultaneous general of five Central American armies, friend of the late Richard Harding Davis and original of the hero in Soldiers of Fortune; at New Orleans, of acute anemia.

Died. Henry Harris, father of Mildred Harris, cinema actress and one-time wife of Charles S. Chaplin; at Chicago, from injuries received in a fight with a taxicab driver.

Died. Richard Green, for 50 years Negro messenger to the Secretary of the Treasury; at Washington. On his 50th anniversary, a public reception in his honor was attended by ex-Secretaries Cortelyou, Gage, Glass, McAdoo, MacVeagh, Shaw, Houston.

Died. Field Marshal Viscount Yoshimichi Hasegawa, 75, famed Japanese militarist, senior military Elder Statesman, onetime Governor General of Korea; at Tokyo.

Died. William W. Appleton, 78, Chairman of the Board of Directors of D. Appleton & Co., publishers; in Manhattan; of pneumonia.

Died. Dr. Edward Lawrence Keyes, 80, famed surgeon and dermatologist, frequent contributor to medical literature; in Manhattan, of pneumonia.

Died. Mrs. Roberta Marez, 135, "oldest woman in the U. S.;" at Segundo, Col.