Monday, Sep. 02, 1935

Born. To Gerald Felix Warburg, son of Banker Felix Moritz Warburg (Kuhn, Loeb), and to Natica Nast Warburg, daughter of Publisher Conde Nast (Vogue, Vanity Fair, House & Garden): a daughter, their first child; in Manhattan. Weight: 8 1/2 lb. Name: Jeremy.

Married. James Vincent Sheean, 35, wandering, introspective journalist and autobiographer, author of Personal History (TIME, Feb. 4); and Diana Forbes-Robertson, youngest daughter of Sir Johnston Forbes-Robertson, retired classical actor; in Vienna.

Married. Mrs. Delphine Dodge Cromwell Baker, daughter of the late Motor-maker Horace Dodge, divorced wife of James H. R. Cromwell (currently the husband of Tobacco Heiress Doris Duke), widow of onetime Director of the U. S. Mint Raymond T. Baker; and Timothy Godde, free-lance London importing agent; in Bracknell, Berkshire, England.

Married. Harry Content, 74, Manhattan broker; and Mrs. Margaret Hawkesworth Bell, onetime dancer; in Deal, N. J. In Mrs. Bell's hotel suite in Miami last winter the two were surprised by hold-up men who deprived them of $185,000 worth of jewelry, return of which under mysterious circumstances led to the conviction for perjury of Noel Scaffa, spectacular private detective (TIME, Aug. 5 et ante).

Died. Robert Van Horn Work, 38, Hollywood storage executive, son of Calvin Coolidge's Secretary of the Interior and Herbert Hoover's 1928 campaign manager, Dr. Hubert Work; by his own hand (pistol); in a Los Angeles hotel.

Died. Louise Clarkson Connally, 50, wife of Senator Thomas Terry ("Tom") Connally of Texas; of a heart attack, after collapsing in a Senate Office Building elevator and being carried to the office of her husband; in Washington.

Died. Isabel Stillman Rockefeller, 59, widow of Percy Avery Rockefeller (nephew of John D.), daughter of National City Bank's late President James Stillman; in Greenwich, Conn.

Died. Thomas Alva Edison Jr., 59. electrical and mechanical engineer for Thomas A. Edison, Inc., eldest son of the late great inventor; suddenly, of coronary thrombosis; in a Springfield, Mass. hotel, where he registered as "J. J. Griffin."

Died. John North Willys, 61, automobile manufacturer, onetime (1930-32) U. S. Ambassador to Poland; of heart disease; in Manhattan. Stepping in on a "shoestring" during the 1907 panic, he prospered mightily for two decades, sold his common stock shortly before the 1929 collapse, stepped out.

This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.