Monday, Aug. 24, 1931

Born. To the ninth Earl of Bessborough, Governor-General of Canada; a son (he has been married since 1912, has two other children); in Montreal. The child is the first to be born to a Governor-General of Canada since the present Dowager Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava gave birth to a son in 1875. From George V came a request that he might be the boy's godfather.

Born. To Arthur W. Smith, son of Alfred Emanuel Smith; a son; in Manhattan. Name: Alfred Emanuel Smith III.

Engaged. Paul Whitcman, jazz band leader; and Margaret Livingston, cinemactress. In February Mr. Whiteman was divorced from Vanda Hoff. dancer (TIME, Feb. 9).

Married. Byrnece Macfadden, 19, of Englewood. X. J., daughter of Publisher Bernarr Macfadden (Physical Culture Magazine, True Story, New York Evening Graphic); and one Louis Ignatius Muckerman of St. Louis.

Married. Philip Young, 21, third son of Owen D. Young; and Miss Faith Adams, 24, socialite of Washington, D. C.; in Manhattan.

Married. Florence Julia Loew. daughter of Mr. & Mrs. William Goadby Loew, granddaughter of the late Banker George Fisher Baker; and Robert E. Strawbridge, Jr. of Philadelphia, international poloist; at Newport, R. I.

Birthdays. Julius Rosenwald (69); Amos Alonzo Stagg (69) ; Gifford Pinchot (66); Mary Roberts Rinehart (55); Nathalia Crane (18).

Died. C. J. Haskell. 35. son of Charles Nathaniel Haskell. Oklahoma's first Governor; by his own hand (shooting); in San Antonio, Tex.

Died. John Wesley Masury, 50, president since 1906 of John W. Masury & Son (paint); of heart disease; in Center Moriches. L. I. When, at 25, he succeeded his father as president of the company he was reputed the youngest important corporation head in the U. S.

Died. Gitanillo, famed gypsy bullfighter; of spinal meningitis caused by a wound sustained in the arena; in Madrid.

Died. Rev. Latta Griswold. 55. of Lenox, Mass., author (Deering of Deal, Deering at Princeton, The Winds of Deal, Values of Catholic Faith ); of paralysis; in Edinburgh.

Died. Alexander O'Grady, 59, San Francisco attorney and politician; of a heart attack; in the Santa Cruz Mountains, Calif. Son of an engineer employed by owners of the famed "Big Bonanza" mine, he was an intimate boyhood friend of Clarence Hungerford Mackay. The late Mrs. John William Mackay, widow of the Comstock Lode tycoon, was his godmother.

Died. Casper Mayer, 59, famed sculptor of Indians; of heart disease; in Manhattan.

Died. Lester Lonergan, 62, actor (Brass Ankle) who staged Abraham Lincoln, The Command to Love; of heart failure while-sitting on a porch with his wife at Lynn, Mass., discussing Eugene O'Neill's newtrilogy, Mourning Becomes Electro, in which he was to have played.

Died. Rev. Peter Joseph O'Callaghan. 65, president of the Catholic Total Abstinence Union of America; of acute indigestion; at Torrington, Conn, where he had gone to attend the Union's convention.

Died. Alva Clymer Dinkey, 65, one-time president (1903-15) of Carnegie Steel Co., president of the Midvale Co.; after three months illness; at Wynnewood, Pa. Brother-in-law of Charles Michael Schwab who married Emma Eurana. one of his three surviving sisters, he started as a water boy in the Carnegie-owned Edgar Thomson Steel Works.

Died. Uzal Haggerty McCarter, 70, president of Fidelity Union Trust Co. of Newark (New Jersey's largest bank), brother of President Thomas Nesbitt Mc-Carter of Public Service Corp. of New Jersey; of pneumonia; at Red Bank. N. J.

Died. Judge George B. Gardner, 70, chairman of the Board of Appeals. Department of the Interior; of fractured skull; at Sharon, Conn.

Died. Thomas W. Cunningham, 72, sheriff of Philadelphia, treasurer of the Republican State Committee; of heart disease; in Atlantic City, N. J. In 1926 Cunningham was arrested on contempt charges for refusing to tell a Senate investigating committee the source of $50,000 he contributed to the campaign fund of Senator-reject William Scott Vare.

Died. Mrs. Emma Mattoon Thomas, 74, mother of the Socialist leader and one-time Presidential Candidate Norman Thomas; after long illness; in Baltimore.

Died. Damianos Kassiotis, 82. Patriarch of Jerusalem since 1897; after long illness; on the Mount of Olives.

Died. Dr. John Pixley Munn, 83, board chairman of United States Life Insurance Co.; in Manhattan.

Died. Brigadier-General John Isaac Rodgers, retired, 92; of pneumonia and heart disease; in San Francisco. Second oldest graduate of U. S. Military Academy, he fought in the Civil War, was chief of artillery in the Spanish-American War.

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