My grandmother's brother was named George Booth MALONE, born in Monroe Co AR, 13 Dec 1884, where his father, a man with the same name, was a doctor. The following entry is from Who's Who in Tennessee, 1911. Paul & Douglas Co., publishers. Page 335: MALONE, GEORGE B. JR., attorney at law. Born 13 Dec 1884. Son of George Booth Malone and Kate Carson Malone. Irish descent. Graduated from the University of Tennessee (LLB) 4 Jun 1907. Fraternities Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Kappa Phi. Office in Memphis Trust Building. Shortly afterward, or in any case before 1918, he went to San Francisco, allegedly because of a scandal, the nature of which I do not know. While there, he changed his name to Henry LIVINGSTON, and retained this name to the end of his life. Whether it was a legal name change or not I again do not know; but the SSDI has him as Henry LIVINGSTON, with a death date in January 1967. He married a woman named Barbara, and had a daughter, also Barbara. I cannot find a marriage license under any name. The daughter married a man named CAMPBELL. The first name I do not know. She was alive in 1975, and probably thereafter. I have several photographs, some of George/Henry with his wife, others of a child, possibly the daughter Barbara, with dates that would make her (the daughter) born in 1925. Two photos of George/Henry and his wife Barbara are identical, but with different inscriptions on the back. One says "Henry and Barbara, Thanksgiving 1918"; the other " 'Velvet Joe' , Richardson Springs, Dec 1st 1918", and in different handwriting underneath, "also Mrs. 'Velvet Joe.'" At least one other photo was taken in Hawaii, and yet another is of an Asian boy, presumably Chinese, in formal clothing, posing for a portrait. The name at the bottom of the says Hing Cheong Photographer Koonsai Soochaw. A letter from the daughter Barbara to my father in 1975 included the paragraph "I also gleefully recall Aunt Julia (my grandmother, and Henry's sister) entertaining Mother with stories of dad's youthful escapades. I must add that after your mother left Dad indignantly claimed that the stories were highly exagerated." I would be grateful for any enlightenment of any of this. John Ottinger Madison, WI