Monday, Aug. 08, 1932

Married. Aviatrix Amy Johnson, 24 (England to Australia 19 days); and Aviator James Allan Mollison, 26 (Australia to England 8 days, 21 hr.); in London.

Married. Isaac Gerson Swope, 28, son of President Gerard Swope of General Electric Co.; and Mrs. Elizabeth Hanson Burr, divorcee; in Salem, Mass.

Married. Thomas Philip Perkins, one-time (1928) British amateur golf champion, runner-up in this year's U. S. open (TIME, July 4); and Cecile Bushal Upton, half-sister of Peggy Upton Archer Hopkins Joyce Morner; in Farmville, Va.

Married. Mrs. Ernestina Calles Robinson, daughter of General Plutarco Elias Calles, onetime president of Mexico and Minister of War; and Jorge Pasquel, merchant; in Cuernavaca, Mexico.

Married. William McFee, 51, retired merchant mariner, author of sea tales (Casuals of the Sea, The Harbourmaster, Aliens); and Beatrice Allender, 34, Westport housekeeper; in Hartford, Conn.

Married, Dr. James Rowland Angell, 63, president of Yale University; and Mrs. Katherine Cramer Woodman, daughter of Stuart Warren Cramer, Cramerton, N. C., textile manufacturer; in Portland, Me.

Awarded. To Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of the American Medical Association's Journal and Hygeia, onetime medical editor of TIME : the insignia of Com-mander of the Crown of Italy, for his services to Italian medicine and physicians; in Chicago.

Birthdays. George Foster Peabody, So; George Bernard Shaw, 76; Henry Ford, 69; Benito Mussolini, 49.

Died. James R. Quirk, 48, editor & publisher of Photoplay, onetime (1928-30) publisher of Smart Set; of bronchial pneumonia and heart disease; in Hollywood.

Died. Aubrey Lyles, 48, Negro comedian (Miller & Lyles); of pulmonary tuberculosis; in Manhattan. The team appeared in Shuffle Along, George White's Scandals. A song that brought Lyles fame: "I'm Just Wild About Harry." '

Died. Pauline Pope Day, wife of Joseph Paul Day, famed realtor and auctioneer; after a brief illness; in Short Hills, N. J.

Died. Edward Kronstrom. Estonia's leading bootlegger; after an automobile accident; in Tallinn, Estonia. During the 13 years of prohibition in Finland he supplied Finns with Estonian potato alcohol.

Died. Raymond D. Little, 52, publisher, sportsman, onetime (1906) Davis Cup tennist, with Gustave F. Touchard national doubles champion in 1911; by his own hand (shotgun) in Manhattan.

Died. Frederick Samuel Duesenberg, 55, automobile manufacturer, racer; of injuries received in an automobile accident; in Johnstown, Pa.

Died. Nelson O'Shaughnessy, 56, old-time U. S. diplomat; of heart disease; in Vienna. He held the posts of secretary and charge d'affaires in many a U. S. embassy & legation. He was in Mexico during the Victoriano Huerta regime when U. S. sailors were arrested in Tampico. President Wilson demanded that the Mexican government apologize by saluting the U. S. flag. Huerta refused; O'Shaughnessy left the country escorted by friendly Huerta troops.

Died. Monsignor Ignaz Seipel, 56, former Chancellor of Austria; of diabetes, tuberculosis and pneumonia; in a monastery at Pernitz, Austria. A professor of moral theology and political economy when the War began, he was Austria's Minister of Social Welfare when the Monarchy fell (1918). By using all his fine craft the bald, beak-nosed cleric put the Christian Socialists in command of the Austrian Republic, fortified his party rule with the Heimwehr (Home Guard). Austria was bankrupt. Chancellor Seipel visited in turn all the European capitals, making the nations believe that Austria planned alliance with one or another. His craftiness brought Austria an international loan, prevented civil war. He resigned the chancellorship in 1929; recalled last year, he failed to form a cabinet. In office and out he always lived as a simple priest in a small stone cloister cell, where each morning he celebrated mass. His noon meal was usually soup taken to him in a convent iron kettle.

Died. Professor Charles Melville Whitney, 70, Tufts Medical School urologist; near Lincoln, Me., while on his 49th consecutive annual expedition photographing wild animals in natural habitats. Famed in his collection is the photograph of a doe chastising her incautious fawn.

Died. Horatio Gordon Hutchinson, 73, British sportsman, writer, naturalist; in London. He is credited with much of golf's popularity in England through his fine playing and written descriptions of the game. In 1908 he was elected captain of the Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrew's, an honor accorded formerly to none but royalty.

Died. Dr. Charles Mills Gayley, 74, professor emeritus of English at University of California, author of Classic Myths in English Literature, member of the Legion of Honor; in Berkeley, Calif.

Died. Thomas Carroll, 78, oldtime fight trainer and athlete; after a brief illness; in Oakland. Calif. Among those he trained: James J. ("Gentleman Jim") Corbett, James J. Jeffries, the late Bob Fitzsimmons.

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