Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 December 1949 — Page 3
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WEDNESDAY, DEC. 28, 1049.
Ra hi 0K After Bearing Baby Princess
Aly Announces She Will Return
To Film Career (Continued From Page One) the hotel as soon as Aly left s0| none of the 20 reporters and pho-| tographers waiting to cover the event would interfere with the dash to the clinic. . f |
Aly was given a five-minute! start. Then the doors were un-| Jed ed and the reporters raced er dawn. wool they reached the hospital] they found a dozen special Swiss police on guard to prevent them! from entering. However, as they! stood outside they could watch the progress of events by the) flashing of lights in the clinic. | Rita had taken a ‘suite in the clinic three weeks ago when all arrangements were made with Prof. Rodolphe Rochat, her doc-| tor. Reporters standing out-| side saw Rita mount the stair-
case to the labor room shortly}
after down. Announced by Aly
The birth was announced on the steps of the clinic by Prince Aly himself, dishevelled and un-
shaven, after he had paced the F corridors of the clinic for almost 3
seven hours.
At the time of their marriage
last May, Aly told reporters that
any children born of ‘the union*
would be reared in the Moslem
Vie
Bo / or Ray , GP 7 C* “Why TT
i
5 ys gs
Nee ae
vin VI
Born With a Two-Tooth Bie
‘
faith. Rita was born a Roman 3
Catholic but her marriage is not!
recognized by the Catholic x
Church,
Prince Aly had spent weeks ;
here preparing a secret plan for the birth of his child and had briefed the police and hotel staff time and again as though it were a military operation. The plan was that Aly would notify the police that he was about to take his wife to the, “hospital. Two carloads of police, would escort his car from the hotel to the clinic. A secret pass-| word had been arranged. But at the first unexpected cry of pain from his wife Aly was completely panicked. He forgot about the police and the hotel staff, He bundled Rita out into the| cold streets to his car parked at a side entrance. He was so ner-| vous he pushed his chauffeur out| of the front seat and took the wheel himself. Witnesses estimated he drove to the hospital at 60 miles an hour. The chauffeur rode in the rear seat. Meanwhile, Aly’s servants remembered to call the police. They arrived to find Aly’'s creamcolored convertible already streaking toward the hospital. The police set out in pursuit. The screaming cars awakened a number of people, including news-| papermen assigned to cover the story. They rushed downstairs to find every exit locked. - That was part of Aly's plan. The concierge had locked the doors of the hotel, largely owned by Aly’s stepmother, Princess Andre, and had disappeared with . the key, It was several minutes before the concierge could be found. He fumbled with the lock so long that someone suggested shattering the door glass. He was then
IT'S
| Jane Ellis,
HAVE
wt
THIS WINTER
’
1 4
Kathy Jane Ellis
All she got for Christmas were her two front teeth, Kathy born Christmas Eve at Coleman Hospital to wil.
{able to work the Key and the|T newsmen raced out, At the hospital, after the birth, Aly apologized to newsmen: for|
{the trouble he had given them,
“I blew up completely,” he said, “and I ruined the poliee arrangements. You know how it is at a time like that.”
Physicians at the clinics said
ticularly dangerous time.” They sald her labor-—close to seven hours-—was longer than they had anticipated.
Aly and Rita were married in the town hall at Vallauris, France, last May 27, by a Communist mayor. The day after the much-publi-
Rita and Aly were wed again in a secret Moslem ceremony inside Aly’s Riviera residence, the Chateau De I'Horizon. The marriage was the second for Aly and the third for Rita. Aly was married previously to an Englishwoman, Joan Yarde-Bull-er, from whom he was divorced in Paris early this year. They have two sons. Rita first was married in 1937, when she was 17 years old, to 2
Jn TAC) ISO TSAO
Fogvwt
RICH
Rita had a “painful, but not par-|
cized civil ceremony at Vallauris,
"N liam and Margaret Ellis, 504 S,
Woodrow Ave. came complete with two lower front teeth, Here showing off the seven-
Texas oll man, Edward C. . Judson. | They were divorced five years later. In 1943, she married Orson Welles. The marriage lasted four years. They were divorced in 1947. It was understood Rita met
ported together in Madrid while taking an automobile {through Spain in August,
brought them together in Holly-
land, France and Switzerland.
beled “Made in France.”
Power Lineman Dies Of 13,000-Volt Shock
RICHMOND, Dec. 28 (UP)—A power lineman died of shock here last night about two hours after|
touching a 13,000-volt wire. Ernest Salato, about 37, Albion, Ia., was replacing a fuse in a box atop a power pole when he acci-|
DRINK Mith FOR VITALITY
‘IN VITAMINS A-B&G
trip| ass og 1948.17 Their romance subsequently] |
wood, Mexico, Cuba, Ireland, Eng-| Rita and Aly's Christmas card]
this year showed the picture of| a baby, tagged 1950. It was la-
dentally brushed against the wire, sepa He was employed by the Morri- A N son Construction Co,, Cambridge fois: City.
canis. *Gibral Iter
urse e Marcia Barkey
pound, eight-ounce pride of the | maternity ward is Nurse Mar- | cia Barkey.
ed Priest to Address Te Deum Group |
The Iridianapolis Chapter of| Te Deum International will present the Rev. Fr. Joseph Treinen,
Aly last year. They first were re- C. 8. 8. R., of Glenview, IIL, in an
address at the 6:30 p. m. dinrier meeting tomorrow in the K. of C. Auditorium. Father Trelnen, a native of Luxembourg, has spent five years leading a missionary band
Midwest and lower Mississippl Valley. He Is
Fr. Treinen
a Redemptorist priest and former teacher in the Redemptorist Minor Seminary, Kirkwood, Mo,
'Ship Movements
New. York Arr Jyals—Gen. W G. Haas Bremerhaven en. E. Callas South mpten; Panama, ; Gastal bal: Queen of muda, Santa - Paula, Cor te-
pg Bremen: Erermont Ri eet? forte Belk donigon:
ba i npn Li
“ty Aa
THE INDIAN APOLIS TIMES
throughout the}
: hata : o RY inf ed dey ll) on A HE
hyp
STRAU
SAYS: USUAL STORE HOURS RESUMED—DAILY 9:30 TILL §
i LE SIR
If we may use a phrase that we heard over the Radio (We didn’t win a thing)— (an we help it—,
if_we can't help i
We couldn't help it—that the crowd filled the Arcade and extended quite a bit East and West on the sidewalk— and af the Illinois Street door— and af the Pearl Street door— awaiting the opening gong!
For a while—we were complefely snowed under— there were fimes when service got enfirely out of hand— We're very sorry—but we just couldn't help if!
if you were in—and failed fo find what you wanfed—won'l you fry again, please— Now that we've dug ourselves oul—and sfocks are in shipshape— - you can counf on smooth, orderly service!
= a [4 / { | N \ = on Y ) / \ N
It Started Tuesday Noon—With = 1370 MEN'S AND YOUNG "MEN'S SUITS
1130 MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S TOPCOATS AND OVERCOATS 1000 PAIRS MEN'S ALL-WOOL SLACKS 300 PAIRS MEN'S OXFORDS
And on the Boys" Floor—the SIXTH Sizeable Groups of SUITS AND SLACKS AND _ TOPCOATS AND JACKETS AND WARM CLOTHES FOR THE COLD DAYS AT HAND—
Deeply, Sharply Reduced.
And on the THIRD Floor—It Started With 640 WOMEN'S COATS—Fur Trimmed and Unbinméd— 230-WOMEN'S - SUITS—including 3-Pc. Suits ry 1500 PAIRS JOSEPH SALON SHOES
On the FOURTH Floor—af Sharp Reductions— 460 WOMEN'S DRESSES—and Costume Suifs— Assoriments- of WOMEN'S JACKETS AND RAINCOATS.
THE SALE.IS ON!
L STRAISS & C0. =. THE MANS STORE
