Married. Renee Carroll, fortyish, Manhattan's taffy-haired, mink-coated No. 1 hatcheck girl, since opening day in 1927 queen of the cloakroom at Sardi's restaurant; and Louis Schonceit, 50, Broadway ticket broker and show backer; he for the second time; in Cuernavaca, Mexico.
Married. Rear Admiral Arthur Japy Hepburn (ret.), 72, onetime (1936-38) commander in chief of the U.S. Fleet (CINCUS); and Agnes McMahon, 47, wartime Red Cross worker; he for the second time; in Washington.
Died. Dr. Johan H. W. van Ophuijsen, 68, Sumatra-born psychiatrist, editor of the Journal of Clinical Psychopathology, director of Long Island's new Creedmoor Institute for Psychobiologic Studies; of a heart ailment; in Manhattan.
Died. William Lemke, 71, eight-term U.S. Congressman from North Dakota (he listed himself as "nonpartisan, elected on the Republican ticket"), co-sponsor of 1934's much-debated Frazier-Lemke Farm-Mortgage Act, 1936 presidential candidate of the short-lived Union Party founded by Father Charles E. Coughlin and the Rev. Gerald L. K. Smith (he polled 882,479 votes); in Fargo, N. Dak.
Died. Archbishop Ismael Perdomo, 78, political-minded Roman Catholic Primate of Colombia; in Bogotá. A conservative on most issues in his nation's fiercely partisan politics, Archbishop Perdomo sternly condemned the political use of violence and fraud, gained the enmity of Conservative Strong Man (now President-elect) Laureano Gómez.