Monday, Oct. 16, 1944

Born. To Arthur Lake, 35, "Dagwood" of the "Blondie" cinema series, and Patricia Van Cleve Lake, 25; a second child, first daughter; in Hollywood. Name: Marion Rose. Weight: 8 Ibs. 4 oz.

Born. To David Rubinoff, 47, schmaltz king of the fiddle, now on a concert and bond-selling tour of U.S. schools; and his second wife, Mertice Dean Rubinoff, 30; their first (his second) child, a son; in Wichita Falls, Tex. Name: Ruben. Weight: 6 Ibs. 12 oz.

Married. Agnes Pyne Bacon McLean, 29, golden-haired Manhattan heiress (National City Bank), former wife of Socialites John R. ("Jock") McLean of Washington and Robert 0. ("Bunty") Bacon Jr. of Newport; and Ronald ("Ronnie") Hudson, 27, Australian-born in surance man; he for the first time; in Manhattan.

Married. The Aga Khan, 67, melon-faced Mohammedan multimillionaire (TIME, Oct. 2) ; and Yvette La Brousse, 38, '"Miss France" of 1932; he for the fourth time ; in Vevey, Switzerland.

Divorced. By Gypsy Rose Lee, 29, ecdysiast and author, whose baby is expected in February (TIME, Aug. 28) : Actor Alexander Kirkland, 40, her second husband, after over two years of marriage; on grounds of mental cruelty; in Reno.

Died. Wendell L. Willkie, 52, of coronary thrombosis following streptococcus infection; in Manhattan (see U.S. AT WAR).

Died. Alfred Emanuel Smith, 70, of acute heart disease and lung congestion; in Manhattan (see U.S. AT WAR).

Died. Major General Sir George John Younghusband, 85, bemonocled veteran of five wars (excluding World War II), since 1917 keeper of the Crown Jewels of England; in Neuadd Crickhowell, Wales. Sir George once worriedly reported that two thieves had looted his apartment in the Tower of London, absconded with his radio.

Died. Mitsura Toyama, 89, longtime leader of Japan's arch-terroristic Black Dragon Society, often regarded as the secret center of the most determined Japa nese militarism; in Gotemba, Japan. Born into Japan's Samurai class, Toyama worked for recovery of Japan's military prestige,, became so feared that newspapers printed asterisks instead of his name. While the Black Dragon was credited with many of the political assassinations paving the way toward military domination of the Empire, frail, aloof Toyama kept largely to his mean wooden house near Fujiyama, was never convicted of a crime, seemed unwilling to kill even a mosquito.

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