Milestones: Oct. 6, 1930

Engaged. Vera, Countess of Cathcart, fortyish, divorced wife of the late George Cathcart, 5th Earl of Cathcart, previously Vera Fraser of Cape Town, later the widow of Capt. de Grey Warter of the 4th Dragoon Guards; and Sir Rowland Frederic William Hodge, seventyish; famed shipbuilder; in London, a week after the marriage of Lady Cathcart's son Henry de Grey Warter to Mabel Bowers Rean of British vaudeville. In 1926 Lady Cathcart was temporarily refused entry to the U. S. in a famed case of "moral turpitude." Three years prior she had gone to Cape Town with the Earl of Craven, never her husband.

Married. Eleanor Steele, operatic soprano, prima donna last year of Brooklyn's Little Theatre Opera Company, daughter of Morgan Partner Charles Steele, sister of the wife of retired Poloist Devereux Milburn of Westbury, L. I.; and Hall Clovis, operatic tenor, singer of leading roles for two years with Little Theatre opera; in Chicago. Mrs. Clovis has had two previous husbands: Count Jean de la Greze of Paris (divorced), Dr. Louis Debonnesset of Paris (died).

Elected. William Phene Neal, London solicitor: to be Lord Mayor of London for a year.

Elected. To the presidency of the Board of Overseers of Harvard College: Col. Albert Thompson Perkins, vice president of City Utilities Co., St. Louis bus owners, onetime president of the Associated Harvard Clubs of the U. S., holder of the Distinguished Service Medal and Britain's Order of St. Michael & St. George. In 1887 Col. Perkins was graduated by Harvard, magna cum laude. He started then with the Chicago Burlington & Quincy Railroad, became a leading force in St. Louis railroading. He was an adviser to many cities on their terminal systems. He brought the United Railways (St. Louis street cars) through long years of wavery receivership into reorganization as the Public Service Co. During the War, he left the British Army to manage transportation of munitions for the A. E. F.

Elected. Alanson Bigelow Houghton. onetime (1922-25) U. S. Ambassador to Germany and (1925-28) to Great Britain: to succeed Economist Samuel McCune Lindsay of Columbia University as president of the Academy of Political Science.

Sued. Princess Serge (Pola Negri) Mdivani, famed cinemactress: for $5.000; by Beltran Masses, Spanish painter; in Paris. Senor Masses alleged that Pola Negri had ordered a $5,000 portrait of herself, that she had specified a background to contain a dim, spectral Rudolph Valentino, that when the portrait was finished she refused to pay. Pola Negri said Senor Masses had begged for permission to paint her. He refused her offer to settle for $1,000.

Murdered. Maxwell Cunningham Byers, 52, president of Western Maryland Railroad; by Dudley Guy Gray, vice president of the road, who then committed suicide; in Baltimore (see p. 51).

Died. William C. Hammer, 65, since 1921 Democratic Representative in Congress from the 7th District of North Carolina, previously (1914-20) U. S. attorney in the western district of North Carolina, owner & editor of the Asheboro Courier; second Representative from North Carolina to die last week (see below); after a heart attack, in Asheboro, N. C.

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ROBB LEVIN, resident of Fairfax, Virginia, on the $15,000 lawsuit settlement made against Tareq and Michaele Salahi, the White House gate crashers, who are also involved in at least 15 other civil suits

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