Monday, Feb. 13, 1928

Engaged. Miss Dorothy James Smart, blonde, beautiful model for hundreds of clothing ads; to Edward Lyman Bill, Manhattan publisher (The Music Trade Review, Talking Machine World, Carpet & Rug News, etc. etc.).

Engaged. Miss Mary Morris Hincks, direct descendant of John Hart, first graduate of Yale, of Bridgeport, Conn.; to Florimond Joseph Dusossoit, onetime (1917) captain of the Dartmouth football eleven, Southern Advertising Manager of TIME, the newsmagazine.

Married. Edward Coleman Delafield, 50, president of the Bank of America, director of many corporations; to Miss Clelia C. Benjamin, amateur actress, of Manhattan; in Greenwich, Conn.

Married. Eugene Dieudonne, recently pardoned life-term convict who escaped from Devil's Island; to his former wife who divorced him 16 years ago, at his own command, when he was first sentenced; in Paris.

Married. Reinald Werrenrath, 44, famed baritone; to Miss Verna Nidig, of Washington, D. C.; in Weehawken, N. J.

Married. Captain the Hon. Michael Bowes-Lyon, brother of the Duchess of York; to Miss Elizabeth Cator, one of the bridesmaids at the wedding of the Duchess; in London.

Died. Leopold Guy Frances Maynard Greville, Sixth Earl of Warwick, 45, hero of three wars, British attache in 1917 to the staff of General Pershing; after a long illness; at his home in Hove, Sussex.

Died. William Cordes, 55, onetime newsboy, president of the Prophylactic Brush Co. Inc.; of pneumonia; in Northampton, Mass.

Died. Hugh Ambrose ("Hughey") Jennings, 58, famed, friendly, freckled, red-haired shortstop, onetime manager of the Baltimore Orioles, the Detroit Tigers (when they won three pennants in 1907, 1908, 1909) and field manager of the New York Giants; of meningitis; at his home in Scranton, Pa.

Died. Dr. Johannes Fibiger, 60, famed for research on cancer, winner of the Nobel prize for medicine in 1926; at Copenhagen, Denmark.

Died. Aram J. Pothier, 73, social-minded Governor of Rhode Island, long in office (1909-15. 1925-27), first person of French-Canadian birth to become governor in any State; at his home in Woonsocket, R. I.

Died. The Rev. Dr. William Elliot Griffis, 84, organizer in 1870 of Japan's first public schools, of heart disease; in Winter Park, Fla.