Monday, Jul. 01, 1935
Married. Joan Diehl, 23, daughter of President Ambrose Nevin Diehl of Columbia Steel Co.; and Henry John Heinz II, 26. son of President Howard Heinz of H. J. Heinz Co. ("57 varieties"); in Manhattan.
Married. Renee Wilcox Baruch, 29, younger daughter of financier Bernard Mannes ("Barney") Baruch; and Henry Robert Samstag, Manhattan broker; in Manhattan.
Married. James Grover Thurber, 40, famed one-eyed author and artist of The New Yorker; and Helen M. Wismer, pulp writer; in Colebrook, Conn.
Divorced. Maurice ("Buddy") Maschke Jr., Cleveland attorney and son of Cleveland's onetime Republican boss; by Helen Morgan, piano-sitting soprano; in Los Angeles. Grounds: he was cruel to her, mistreated her goldfish.
Sentenced. Harmon M. Waley, 24, kidnapper of George Weyerhaeuser (TIME, June 17): to 45 years in prison; after pleading guilty at Tacoma, Wash.
Died. Mrs. Rosalie Rayner Watson, 36, wife and collaborator of famed Child Psychologist John Broadus Watson, founder of Behaviorism and vice president of J. Walter Thompson Co.. Manhattan ad-firm; after brief illness; in Norwalk, Conn.
Died. Karl Kingsley Kitchen, 50, Manhattan columnist, epicure and man-about-town, onetime War correspondent and author (After Dark in the War Capitals, The Night Side of Europe); of a streptococcic infection and pneumonia; in Manhattan.
Died. Mrs. Alice Brown Davis, 82, chieftain of the Seminole Indian nation; of heart disease; in Wewoka, Okla. Daughter of a Scottish physician and a Seminole princess of the Tiger clan. Mrs. Davis was appointed chief of the Seminoles by President Harding in 1922 to succeed her brother, the late Governor John F. Brown Jr. of Oklahoma.
Died. Edson Bradley, 83, retired broker and distiller; after long illness (pneumonia); in London. Broker Bradley entered the whiskey business as a young man at Frankfort, Ky., was president of the "Whiskey Trust" for twelve years. Famed Bradley brands: Old Crow, Old Hermitage. No less famed was the Bradley mansion in Washington, with its 500-seat theatre, known as Aladdin's Palace. Tiring of Washington, Distiller Bradley had his home moved stone by stone to Newport, R. I. in 1923.
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