Friday, Jul. 02, 1965

Married. Edith Dulles, 23, granddaughter of the late Secretary of State, a graduate student of political science at the University of Texas; and Lewis Wilson Jr., 27, University of Texas law student; in Washington.

Married. Lana Turner, 44, still well-knit Hollywood Sweater Girl (Love Has Many Faces); and Robert Eaton, 34, Hollywood businessman; he for the third time, she for the sixth (her others: Bandleader Artie Shaw, Restaurateur Stephen Crane, Tin Millionaire Bob Topping, Movie Tarzan Lex Barker, Rancher Fred May); in Arlington, Va.

Married. Chester Conklin, 78, known to oldtime moviegoers as the walrus-mustachioed Keystone Kop; and June Gunther, 65, sometime movie actress; he for the fourth time, she for the third; in Las Vegas.

Died. David O. Selznick, 63, producer of some of Hollywood's best movies; of a heart attack; in Hollywood (see SHOW BUSINESS).

Died. Dr. James Bertram Collip, 72, Belleville, Ont., biochemist, purifier and co-developer (with Nobel Prizewinners Sir Frederick Banting and Dr. J.J.R. MacLeod, and Dr. Charles H. Best) of insulin for the treatment of diabetes, who also won world renown for his study of hormones, which regulate the body's metabolic functions, becoming one of the pioneers in the isolation of wonder-working ACTH and cortisone; following a cerebral hemorrhage; in London, Ont.

Died. Murray Ireland, 72, president from 1954 to '60 of McGraw-Edison's Toastmaster division, a designer-engineer who in 1925 adapted for domestic use a bulky device formerly found only in restaurants, which lowered a slice of bread, grilled it, and at just the right moment popped it up, golden brown (or black), bringing sales of untold millions over the next 39 years; of a heart attack; in Elgin, Ill.

Died. Mary Boland, 80, light-headed comedienne, who starred opposite the late John Drew in a number of serious roles before taking a comedy part with Alfred Lunt in Clarence in 1919, won such raves that she thereafter played the fluttery dowager or scatterbrained mother for 35 years on Broadway (The Rivals) and in Hollywood (Pride and Prejudice), last appearing on Broadway as the mother-in-law to end them all in 1954's Lullaby; of a heart attack; in Manhattan.

Died. James Finney Lincoln, 82, Cleveland industrialist, president (since 1928) and board chairman (since 1954) of Lincoln Electric Co. founded by his brother John in 1895, world's largest manufacturer of arc-welding equipment, who in 1934 instituted a program of employee bonus incentives on the premise that "selfishness is the motivating force of all human endeavor," which was so successful in boosting volume and cutting costs that he was able to sell his products for less than any competitor, while giving his employees almost double the money (an average $13,000 annually) paid elsewhere in the industry; of heart disease; in Cleveland.

Died. Claud H. Foster, 92, Ohio inventor and philanthropist, who in 1911 patented the first practical automobile shock absorber, netted nearly $10 million selling the device to Detroit's automakers before he sold his company to Otis & Co., investors, for $4,000,000 in 1925, whereupon he retired to a $3,500 bungalow on Lake Erie, emerging in 1952 to host a huge dinner party at which he distributed $3,879,700 to 16 charitable and educational Cleveland organizations because "too many institutions get their money from dead men"; of cerebral arteriosclerosis; in Bellevue, Ohio.

Died. Bernard M. Baruch, 94, legendary speculator and park-bench philosopher, advisor to seven presidents; of a heart attack; in Manhattan (see THE NATION).

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