Monday, Apr. 01, 1935
Died. Gerald Charles MacGuire, 38, bond salesman (Grayson M.P. Murphy & Co.) whom Major General Smedley D. Butler last November charged had approached him with an offer to lead a Fascist march on Washington (TIME, Dec. 3); of uremia and pneumonia; in New Haven, Conn. His brother, William J. MacGuire, declared that his death was the result of the "unjust charges."
Died. William Boyd, 45, saturnine stage and cinema actor (not to be confused with William ["Bill"] Boyd, younger film actor); of gastric hemorrhage, in Los Angeles. His most famed role: as Sergeant Quirt opposite the late Louis Wolheim's Captain Flagg in What Price Glory?
Died. Clifford S. Heinz, 52, vice president and director H. J. Heinz Co. (food products), son of its Founder Henry John Heinz, brother of its President Howard Heinz; of complications following pneumonia; in Palm Springs, Calif.
Died. Alexander Moissi, 54, trilingual actor (Italian, French, German) famed for his performances under Max Reinhardt; of pneumonia; in Vienna. In 1927 and 1928 he played in the U. S. in Everyman, Tolstoy's The Living Corpse, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Ghosts.
Died. Mrs. Abigail Harding Lewis, 59, onetime school teacher, sister of the late President Warren Gamaliel Harding; of heart disease; in Marion, Ohio.
Died. Rev. Dr. John William Cavanaugh, 64, onetime (1905-19) president of the University of Notre Dame; of nephritis and diabetes; in South Bend, Ind.
Died, Louis Wiley, 65, business manager of the New York Times; of cerebral thrombosis following an operation; in Manhattan.
Died. Dr. Jabez North Jackson, 66, able surgeon, director of health in Kansas City, onetime (1927) president of the American Medical Association; in Kansas City.
Died. Carl Duisberg, 73, organizer in 1925 and chairman of Germany's great dye trust, the I. G. Farbenindustrie, head of the Reich Federation of German Industry until he resigned in 1931; near Cologne. While employed by Fr. Bayer & Co. (Aspirin and other chemical products), he produced such coal-tar dyes as benzopurpurin (red), azo-blue, benzoazurin, sulfonazurin.
Died. Mrs. Mary Hone Ogden Adams, 92, relict of Charles Francis, grandson of John Quincy Adams, sixth President of the U. S.; in Concord, Mass. Matriarch of the famed family, she had eleven grandchildren, three great-grandchildren, was the aunt of onetime Secretary of the Navy Charles Francis Adams.
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