Monday, Jan. 27, 1930

Engaged. Alice Bigelow Lee, daughter of Ivy Ledbetter Lee (Rockefeller Press Agent); and Chandler Cudlipp of Jersey City, N. J., department store executive; in Manhattan.

Married. Elizabeth ("Betty") Huyler, "flying saleswoman'" of Curtiss-Wright Flying-Service, daughter of the late Frank De Klyn Huyler (candy); and B. Allison Gillies, Vice President of Grover Loening Inc. (aircraft); at Stony Point, L. I.

Married. Margery Lee ("Peggy") Mastbaum, daughter of the late Jules E. Mastbaum, rich Philadelphia movie-chain owner; and Representative Benjamin M. Colder of Pennsylvania; at Philadelphia.

Sued for Divorce. McClelland Barclay, commercial artist (Fisher Bodies); by Mrs. Nancy McClelland Barclay, his first cousin; in Chicago. Grounds: infidelity.

Sued for Divorce. Lewis Luckenbach, Vice President of Luckenbach Steamship Co.; by Mrs. Lillian Luckenbach; in Manhattan. Grounds: infidelity. "Preposterous!" said she to his offer to live both with her and with the corespondent, one Delia Louise Stone, at the same time.

Divorced. Norman Rockwell, illustrator (Saturday Evening Post covers); by Mrs. Irene O'Connor Rockwell; at Reno. Grounds: mental cruelty and neglect. Straightway she married one Francis Hartley. Jr., chemist, of Belmont, Mass.

Elected. James R. Page, popular California sportsman and sports patron; to be president of the Bank of California.

Elected. Ernest Tener Weir, president of Weirton (W. Va.) Steel Co.; to be board chairman of National Steel Co., a combination of Weirton Steel Co., Great Lakes Steel Corp. and subsidiaries of M. A. Hanna Co. of Cleveland.

Elected. Hale Holden, President of Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. R.; to be a director of Western Electric Co.

Elected. Rudolph Spreckels, President of Federal Sugar Refining Co.; to be President of Sugar Institute Inc.; in Manhattan.

Died. Mme. Louis Jean Barthou, wife of onetime (1913) Prime Minister Barthou of France; at Paris; after a long illness. Because of his wife's failing health. M. Barthou did not accept a portfolio in the recently formed Tardieu Government (TIME, Nov. 11).

Died. George J. Long, 77, oldtime turfman, twotime winner of the Kentucky Derby (Azra, 1892; Sir Huon, 1906); at Louisville, Ky.; of heart disease.

Died. Right Rev. Beverley Dandridge Tucker, 83, Protestant Episcopal Bishop Coadjutor of Southern Virginia, onetime Confederate Artilleryman; at Norfolk. Va.

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