16 Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Monday, February , 1950 r ' r - mi . fc- jMfcMMMtn. jjMaaafaaw.0 'I Am the Father' Italian Film Director Roberto Kossellmi (right) is greeted by the smiling faces of his movie crew as he arrives on the set after a visit with Ingrid Bergman and her baby son in the Villa Margherita clinic in Rome. In an interview with United Press, Rossellini said "I am the father" of Ingrid Bergman's baby or.d stated he would marry the Swedish actress as soon as she gets a Mexican divorce from her now estranged husband, Dr. Peter Lindstrom. (Exclusive photo by Julius Humi, NEA-Acme staff corre spondent) (Acme Radio-Telephoto) Rossellini Admits He's Father Of Ingrid Bergmans Baby Boy By ALDO FORTE (Copyright 1950 by United Fre&O Rome, Feb. 6 U.R) Roberto Rossellini, Italian film director, (aid today that "I am the father" of Ingrid Bergman's baby born four days ago. The registration of the birth will bear the notation "Father Unknown" to prevent Miss Bergman's husband, Dr. Peter Lind trnm from making any tech- nical claim to the child, Rossel lini said. The interview with the United Press was the first Rossellini has Riven since the son was born to Miss Bergman Thursday night. He said the baby's name would be "Robertino Ingmar,1 the second name being the Swedish masculine of Ingrid Jane Froman I Walks Unaided Topeka, Kan., Feb. 8 U.R Radio singer Jane Froman, in jured seriously in a plane crash seven years ago, now can walk without her cane and braces, her press agent said today. Miss Froman underwent 25 operations following the crash of a Pan-American clipper in the Atlantic Feb. 2, 1943, but re fused doctors to amputate one of her legs. Bud Granoss, New York, her publicity agent, said Miss Fro man has spent several weeks at the Menninger foundation here building up her mental courage to walk again. He said she spoke of the psy chiatric center as a "big help in getting over the last big hur dle." Foundation doctors, ac cording to Granoss, described Miss Froman as a "very co-operative patient." "Half the battle was her strong will to walk," one of the doctors told Granoss. Rossellini said he would mar ry Miss Bergman in a civil cere mony as soon as the Swedish actress gets a Mexican divorce from Lindstrom Attorneys for Miss Bergman have filed a di vorce suit in Mexico Rossellini will make a mormal declaration of the paternity of "my son" Immediately thereaftci, he add ed. Rossellini said the full regis tration of the baby's birth would be made In the form of "Ro berto Ingmar, son of Ingrid Bergman, father unknown.' He said that would leave Lindstrom no technical ground to claim the baby. Under Italian law Lindstrom would be registered automatic ally as the baby's father unless the "father unknown" declara tion were made, since he still Is the legal husband of Miss Bergman. Once Rossellini has become Miss Bergman's husband, he can give his own name legally to the child. Rossellini was Interviewed outside Rome, where he is shooting scenes for his new film on the life of St Francis. Work on the film was delayed for some time while his co-workers congratulated him. There is a Roman peasant custom that the fathei of a new ly born son be presented with a basket of "Ricotta," a variety of cream cheese which must be eaten with coarse biack bread in the open countryside. Peasants near the area where Rossellini Is working brought their gifts of "Ricotta " The di rector thanked them and then spread the sheep's milk cheese on the bread and ate it as the peasants shouted their congratu lations. "Ricotta" Is given ns a sym bol of good health and prosper ity for the new child. When he finished the cheese and bread, Rossellini turned and In a mood of sudden exubcr ation seized this correspondent and kissed him on both checks. "I am so happy," he said. "Ingrid Is so sweet." Rossellini said the plan for the form of birth registration had been worked out because it appeared that Miss Bergman would not obtain her divorce In time to marry the director be fore the Feb. 12 deadline for filing the birth statement. He said he and Miss Berg man did not plan to leave Italy any time soon. "There will be no honey moon," he said. "I will have to keep on with my work on the life of St. Francis, and as soon as I finish that I will start a new one with Sir Alexander Korda." (British motion picture producer.) Rossellini said Miss Bergman shared In every phase of his work. "I tell her everything," he said. "I show her everything. As soon as scenes are finished and printed, I run them off for her. She cries at the sad parts, laughs at the funny ones. She is wonderful." Priests Visit ingrid Bergman Rome, Fob. 6 (ff) Ingrid Berg. man was visited this morning by a Catholic priest, heightening speculation that she might be arranging the baptism of her baby son, Robertino. Yesterday she saw a priest and t'.v' monks in her three- room maternity apartment at Santa Margherita clinic. Italian Film Director Roberto Rossellini, whom Ingrid report edly has named as the father of her son and whom she plans to marry when she gets her divorce from Dr. Peter Lindstrom, was believed to have left the clinic just before dawn. Rossellini spent the week-end there with Miss Bergman. Associates said Rossellini was very busy with legal affairs, in addition to his work on a film of the life of St. Francis of As-sisi. Miss Bergman also was visited by her personal physician today just before noon, the time of his usual daily calls. S.P. Freight Cars Derailed in Cascades San Francisco, Feb. 6 W) The Southern Pacific said five cars of a freight train derailed in the Cascades 00 miles south of Eugene, Ore., last night. No one was hurt. The accident, blamed on a broken wheel flang, will cause some delay in the arrival at the Oakland, Calif., terminal of the southbound Cascade and Klam ath passenger trains from Portland. The line was cleared at 7:30 a.m. today. Denham Lauds Taft-Hartley Act Los Angeles, Feb. 6 U.R) Rob ert N. Denham, general counsel of the national labor relations board, described the Taft-Hart ley act today as "the biggest step forward this nation has ever made" toward stable labor relations. He credited the controversial labor relations act with giving labor unions "an opportunity to clean house; it has given them an opportunity to throw out the communists who have infiltrat ed into so much of our labor movement as well as into other places throughout the structure of the nation." In reviewing the accomplish ments of the Taft-Hartley act before a Town Hall luncheon, Denham avoided any specific reference to its place in the coal strike controversy. "I am not going to dwell on the coal dispute," he said. "It has already received enough publicity so that I believe the general public, if they do not know what it is all about, at least have some decided opin ions on it." Denham said that the rights of the labor union were para mount under the Wagner act, which controlled company - un ion relations before adoption of the Taft-Hartley law. "The Taft-Hartley act is built around the rights of the indi vidual," he said. 'Under this act, the basic right not to jpin a labor organ ization is as fully recognized and protected as is the right to participate in union activities." Lila Leeds to Marry Son of Chicago 'Boss' Memphis, Term., Feb, 6 Ex-Movie Starlet Lila Leeds, now on the comeback trail, and Erwin (Bud) Arvey of Chicago, announced last night they would be married. The 32-year-old son of Jake Arvey, democratic leader in Illi nois' Cook county, said no date had been set. Miss Leeds, who hit the na tion's front pages when she was arrested on a narcotics charge in Hollywood last year, is on the nightclub circuit as a singer. She's currently appearing at a night club here, warbling blues and "special material." I NEW! V SAFE! . ABU n I soo 3 I Clean! MO I i j 'it. .V ASK 'fVV f V ABOUT IT! Dissolves sludge and carbon! Minimizes strainer clogging! Insures top peak fur nace efficiency! Can be stored with absolute safety! Reduces stack fire hazards 75! Cleaner burning throughout! DIAL 3-5622 or 3-5606 Grand Coulee hydroelectric plant is rated at 1,316,000 kilo- . watts. INVESTIGATE! NOW! TODAY! Sold Exclusively at Howard J. Smalley Oil Co. 1405 Brpadwoy In Salem Hubbard Woman Recovers, Others Hurt in Accidents Mrs. Alia Mead, 57, of Hubbard, who was hospitalized Satur day at Salem General after an automobile collision on Highway 99E north of the underpass, was resting well today Miss Ruth Betts of Lebanon, in another car in the same ac cident, was released from the hospital after treatment for minor injuries. They were hospitalized after a head on collision of auto mobiles driven by Ernest Mead, Hubbard, and Robert Joseph Moersch, Lebanon. Mrs. Mead received a fractured right arm and kneecap and chest injuries. The southbound Mead vehicle went out of control on an icy place on the pavement and skidded into the path of the northbound Moersch car. Both automobiles were extensively damaged. John Wiggins, janitor at the Detroit grade school is recover ing from leg bruises received when he was knocked down by a two-foot deep snow slide from the roof of the school. James Edward Saylie, Silver ton star route, was arrested for driving while intoxicated and Carl Benton Riggs, Silverton, a passenger, for being drunk on a public highway, after their automobile collided with a northbound vehicle near Hayes ville Saturday night. Both are in the Marion county jail. Mrs. Edith Parker, route 7, was hospitalized late Saturday night after an automobile driven by her husband, Charles Lent Parker, collided with one oper ated by Cyreno Melvern Stebeds, Springfield, on Lancaster Drive near the Silverton Road, Mrs. Parker was not seriously injured. An automobile owned by Larry Fitzwater was destroyed by fire Saturday in front of his residence in Rickreall. The ve hicle was a total loss, according to Dallas firemen, who report the loss of a large tarpaulin from their truck as it was answering the call. Two men were hospitalized Saturday with fractured hips. Frank E. Needham, 1000 McGil christ, suffered a hip fracture when he fell from a stable door, and Jesse Lucas, 81, of 623 North Commercial, when he fell on the ice near his home. Needham is at Salem General hospital and Lucas at Salem Memorial. Typist Who Married Chief Ouf as 'Queen' London, Feb. 6 (UP-) Inform ed sources said today that Ruth Khama, 24, a former London typist who married an African tribal chieftain, probably never would become the "white queen" of the Bamangwato tribe in Bechuanaland. The source said the British cabinet decided not to recognize her husband, 27-year-old Ser- etse Khma, as chieftain of the tribe because of native unrest stirred by hostility against his marriage. Seretse and Ruth are now liv ing in a small bungalow in Bechuanaland. They went to Africa from London, where Ser etse was studying, late last year. Officers of the U.S. Public Health Service bear ranks like those of Army officers. POW's Educating 2 Filipinos Who Smuggled Food in War By ANTONY ULLSTEIN (United Press 8taff Correspondent) New York, Feb. 6 U.R) A Filipino girl and her brother whose parents were executed by the Japanese for smuggling food and medicine into wartime prison camps in the Philippines are being put through college in the United States by the American internees. - Maria Escoda, 22, was a guest of honor at a dinner the other night at which about 100 sur vivors of the Santa Tomas camp near Manila celebrated the fifth anniversary of their liberation by American troops. She is studying for a B.A. de gree at Barnard College. Her brother, Antonio, Jr., 19, is a freshman at Yale. To bring them to the United States and pay for their tuition the former internees of Santo Tomas and other camps the Philippines created the Escoda Memorial fund. Time had erased the marks of illness, malnutrition and mal treatment which years of intern ment had stamped on those pres ent at the dinner, but everyone there knew of their debt to a Manila newspaperman named Antonio Escoda and his wife Josefa. Mrs. Escoda, they reported, was president of the National Federation of Women's Clubs in Manila. By cajoling, bribing and tricking the Japanese she man- Nothing Down I'ay Monthly VENETIAN BLINDS And Shades We also wash, relnpe, paint and re-slat your old Venetian blinds. ELMER, The Blind Man Call anytime for Free Estimates Phone 3-1328 1453 Ruge St. West Salem We give S & H Green Stamps aged for almost three years to smuggle food, medicine, clothing, money and news into two civil ian and two prisoner-of-war camps. Her husband helped her. Sometimes the items would be hidden in tennis ball tins, sometimes in shoes the internees were allowed to send out for repairs. "She had many ruses," said Ralph L. Reynolds, one of the internees. "She got the Jap anese commandant to let her run a women's center in our camp. That made it easier. But mostly she worked by underground methods. were arrested and excuted be cause of what they did. Four of their contacts in the camps were executed, too. "I was at home when they came for my mother," Maria said. "I was 18 then. I never saw her again." After the war the internees formed the Memorial fund. Last night was their first formal re union. Among the business of the day was their desire in the words of William E. Murray. chairman of the American Inter nees' association to pay hom age "to the Filipinos who risked their lives, and sometimes lost them, so we might be here to night." "We are proud," he said "to have their representative here among us." He motioned toward Maria, sitting at the center of the speaker's table. She rose. The banquet hall filled with ap- plaus. 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