BORGLUM, SOLON HANNIBAL Ameri can sculptor, was born in Ogden, Utah, on Dec. 22, 1868, the son of a Danish wood-carver and the brother of Gutzon Borglum (q.v.). He studied under Louis F. Rebisso in the Cincinnati art school in 1895-97, and under Fremiet in Paris. He took as his early subjects incidents of western life, cow-boys and Indians, with which he was familiar from his years on the ranch, notable works being his "Last Round-up" and "Burial on the Plains." In 1911 he completed his bronze "God's Command to Retreat," representing Napoleon on horseback in a snowdrift. His "The Little Lady of the Dew" and "Inspiration" and "Aspiration," two statues of Indians, in stone, were unveiled in 1920 in the church yard of St. Mark's-in-the-Bouwerie, in New York city. He was Y.M.C.A. secretary with the French army in 1918, won the Croix de Guerre and later was engaged in work with the A.E.F. in France. He died on Jan. 31, 1922.