Monday, Sep. 30, 1946

Divorced. Stewart Birrell Iglehart, 36, top U.S. polo player (ten-goal handicap); by Marjorie Le Boutillier Iglehart, 30; after eight years of marriage, one child; in Jacksonville.

Died. Evalyn McLean Reynolds, 24, fifth wife of ex-Senator Robert R. Reynolds, daughter of wealthy Evalyn Walsh McLean, owner of the "unlucky" Hope Diamond; reportedly of an accidental overdose of sleeping pills; in Washington.

Died. Raimu (real name: Jules Auguste Muraire), 63, great French stage and cinema comedian (The Baker's Wife, The Well-Digger's Daughter); of a heart attack; in Neuilly, France.

Died. Clayton Hamilton, 64, playwright, critic, 16-time Pulitzer Prize juror, who swung the 1920 play award to Newcomer Eugene O'Neill's Beyond the Horizon; of a heart attack; in Manhattan.

Died. Edwin Meade ("Ted") Robinson, 67, literary critic, Cleveland Plain Dealer columnist since 1910; of a heart attack; in Provincetown, Mass.

Died. Alexander Carr, 68, stage and film actor, onetime Louisville street singer who won fame & a fleeting fortune as the irascible Mawruss Perlmutter in stage versions of Montague Glass's adventures of Partners Potash & Perlmutter; in Hollywood.

Died. Charles Oscar Andrews, 69, old-line Democrat, onetime Florida circuit judge, Townsend Plan booster, U.S. Senator from Florida since 1936; of a heart ailment; in Bethesda, Md.

Died. Stewart Edward White, 73, sportsman, explorer, author; in San Francisco. In his best-selling novels (Blazed Trail, The Silent Places, The Rose Dawn) he shared with a whole generation of U.S. men & boys his experiences as Black Hills gold-rusher, Wyoming cowpuncher, Hudson Bay camper, African lion hunter.

Died. The Rev. Dr. Alexander Griswold Cummins, 77, owner-editor of the low-church Protestant Episcopal monthly, The Chronicle, stout opponent of Anglo-Catholic influences within the Episcopal Church; in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

Died. Miles Poindexter, 78, onetime U.S. Senator from Washington (1911-23), who joined Theodore Roosevelt's Bull Moose Party, fought the League of Nations, later became U.S. Ambassador to Peru (1923-28); in Greenlee, Va.

Died. Charles W. Seiberling, 85, longtime rubber tycoon, who, with his brother Frank, founded the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., lost control of it in the '20s, bounced back with the Seiberling Rubber Co.; in Akron.

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