Monday, Jul. 13, 1936

Married-- Dr. Katsuma Dan, 29, youngest son of Japan's late, great Banker Baron Takuma Dan (Mitsui), who was assassinated by militarists (TIME, March 14, 1932); and Jean McNair Clark, 26, of Milford, Conn., his associate in biological research at the University of Pennsylvania; in Philadelphia.

Divorce Revealed, Mrs. Doris Mercer Kresge, divorced wife of 5-c- & 10-c- Store-man Sebastian Spering Kresge, who claimed she wanted $10,000.000 to bear a child; and Iranian Prince Farid of Sadri-Azam, the Nezam-ed-Dowleh of Isfahan, whom she married in 1933; in Paris; in May 1935.

Appointed. Gertrud Wettergren, able Swedish mezzo-soprano of Manhattan's Metropolitan Opera (TIME, Dec. 2 et seq.): to be court singer, by Sweden's King Gustav V.

Died. Roscoe Fawcett, 49, Minneapolis sportsman, brother and publishing partner of Wilford H. ("Captain Billy") Fawcett (Captain Billy's Whiz Bang, Jim Jam Jems, Smokehouse Monthly, Hooey); in Rochester, Minn.

Died, John Patrick Sullivan, 61, potent Louisiana politician, archfoe of the late Huey Pierce Long, onetime (1911-12) Grand Exalted Ruler of the Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks; after a sunstroke; in New Orleans.

Died. Alexander Berkman, 65, celebrated oldtime anarchist; by his own hand (revolver); in Nice, France.

Died. Amos Parker Wilder, 74, one-time (1909-14) U. S. Consul-General in Shanghai, later the prohibitionist co-editor of New Haven's Journal-Courier, father of Novelist Thornton Wilder; of heart disease; in New Haven, Conn.

Died. William Fahnestock, 78, senior member of the New York Stock Exchange. head of Wall Street's Fahnestock & Co.; of heart disease; at Katonah, N. Y.

Died. Sir Lionel Phillips, 81, South African gold miner, longtime head of Rand Mines, Ltd.; in Capetown, Union of South Africa. In 1896 he and the late John Hays Hammond were condemned to death for complicity in the abortive Jameson Raid, freed after paying fines of $125,000 apiece.

Died. George Arthur Plimpton, 81. publisher (Ginn & Co.), philanthropist, scholar (The Education of Shakespeare), for 45 years the able, money-raising treasurer of Manhattan's Barnard College; of pneumonia; at Lewis Farm, Walpole, Mass.

Died. Charles Rohlfs, 83, originator of ''Mission style" furniture, husband and onetime collaborator of the late, famed Mystery Writer Anna Katharine Green (The Leavenworth Case); after a long illness; in Buffalo, N. Y.

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