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Died. Mme Michalina Moscicki. 62, wife of Poland's President Ignace Moscicki; of cancer; in Warsaw, Poland.
Died. Junius Spencer Morgan. 65. one-time banker, art collector, cousin of J. P. Morgan; in Valmont, Switzerland.
Died. Professor Edward Everett Hale, 69, author, great-great-nephew of Patriot Nathan Hale; of a heart attack; in Schenectadv, N. Y.
Died. Wilton Lackaye, 69, famed actor; of a heart attack; in Manhattan. Famed chiefly for his role of Svengali in Du Maurier's Trilby (1895), he played for years on Broadway. One of the founders of the Actors' Equity Association, he was an early member of the Lambs' Club and the Catholic Actors' Guild of America. His first wife, Alice Evans, died in 1919. In 1928 he secretly married Kathryn Alberta Riley, 37, who had nursed him back to health. In 1920 Lackaye paid a visit to John J. McGraw, during which it was claimed he insulted Baseballer McGraw. Lockaye said that McGraw put out his right hand in friendship, then struck him on the jaw with his left. After the fracas Lackaye nursed a broken ankle, had McGraw suspended from the Lambs' Club.
Died. James Edward Gaffney, 70, one-time owner of the Boston "Braves," politician, great & good friend of the late Charles Francis Murphy, Tammany Hall leader; of a cerebral hemorrhage; in East Hampton, L. I.
Died. Samuel Taylor Bodine, 77, board chairman of Philadelphia's United Gas Improvement Co.; after a year's illness; in Villanova, Pa.
Died. Bishop Earl Cranston, 92, dean of bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church; of old age; in New Richmond, Ohio.
