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Elected. Harold Stanley, 42, president of the Guaranty Co., Manhattan, to be a partner in J. P. Morgan & Co., Drexel & Co. of Philadelphia, Morgan, Grenfell & Co. of London and Morgan & Cie. of Paris (see p. 31).
Elected. Jacob Bertha Levison, president of Fireman's Fund Insurance Co., founder of the San Francisco Symphony Society; to be president of the Musical Association of San Francisco (sponsors of the orchestra).
Died. B. C. Edgar, 50, vice president and general manager of the Tennessee Electric Power Co., president of the Nashville Light & Power Co.; in Chattanooga.
Died. Gavin McNab, 58, onetime hotel clerk, then lawyer, prominent Democratic leader of California, legal adviser to Oilman Edward Laurence Doheny, Jack Dempsey, Roscoe Conkling ("Fatty") Arbuckle, Mary Pickford; suddenly, in San Francisco.
Died. Count Teofilo Rossi Di Montelera, 67, onetime Italian Minister of State, head of famed firm of Martini & Rossi, vermouth manufacturers ; at Turin.
Died. Emily Stevens, 45, famed actress, cousin of Mrs. Fiske; in Manhattan; of pneumonia complicated with an overdose of nerve sedative. Onetime star of The Unchastened Woman, Fata Morgana, etc., etc.
Died. Charles M. Kittle, 47, president of Sears, Roebuck & Co.; in Chicago. He worked his way from section gang water boy to senior vice president of Illinois Central Railroad from which he resigned to rule the great mail order company.
Died. Algernon Sidney Crapsey, 80, author (The Last of the Heretics, an autobiography), lecturer, onetime Episcopalian clergyman, convicted of heresy in 1906 for denial of the doctrine of the virgin birth and the divinity of Jesus; in Rochester, N. Y.
