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ESTABLISHED 1888 BArcgy 7-5371 ' PRESS eyPPING BUREAU 165 Chy^^drStreet - New York Marriage Won't Solve Their Headaches Simple Wedding Planned Tomorrow hy Rita, Dick LAS-VEGAS, Nev. [UP1?╟÷Film star Rita Hayworth and crooner Dick Raymes today planned a "simple wedding" with television ani| newsreel cameras grinding away. Then they"U settle down as to what-they hope will be a sedate life as suburbanites in Greenwich, Conn. ?╜W iJliii The ceremony Thursday will be .<hsg| in the Gold Room of the San^sJttotfiL with only nine guests invited, but.news and camera men w^jfe told they could attend. The red-hair.ed beauty is i g h e d happily that she and Haymes "are finally getting married after so many difficulties.'.' Among their recent troubles have been an attempt by the government to deport Haymes, a citizen of Argentina, and death threats against Miss Hayworth and her youngest daughter, three-year-old Yasmin. "We want" a simple wedding," Miss Hayworth said firmly. "This one is too important to me to clutter up with a lot of unnecessary frills. It's enough that we love each other." But the wedding, unlike the final clinch in the movie thrillers, won't see all of their headaches solved. Miss Hayworth, Yasmin, and her other daughter, Rebecca, 8, still are under protective guard and Haymes' difficulties with the Immigration Department remain to be ironed out. It will be Rita's fourth wedding and Haymes' third. The couple plans to honeymoon at the Sands over the weekend and then travel to Philadelphia, where Haymes opens a night club engagement, leaving the crooner's lawyers to handle his case before the government in hearings which resume Monday. PARlS^|#Ep6OT??A- ' Rita, and Dick' Marry Today in Las Vfelfep Fougfh i&t' j&gfc?;' But aiH?Nif?╜^.^v j LAS V?·G&v-Ne|p(UP)?╟÷ Rita IHayworth; andf^ick Haymes, ner vous as begiilllivS, make it foui I apiece today ?√ßvjjpsn they exchanged I wedding vowsjpMd the clicking of dice and whiif ??f roulelte wheels in a gam^^ hotel, d While-:?rpiy:niQb of tourists play their chips.in a casino downstairs, the flamerhaired movie beauty and the crooner ssid their "I do's" in the press conference room of the plush Sands Hotel. { Rita,' 31,-ttuliiiy like ai7 edited bride, made this ceremony the simplest of her career. , Wedding No. 3 to Prince Aiy Khan featured champagne, royal guests and lavish clothes. But for her fourth wedding, Rita chose an old dress of blue linen, a plaui gold wedding band and a simple civil ceremony with no decorations and only 10 guests. The actress, who usually dodges the press, this time invited them] all?╟÷ newsreel cameras included- to the wedding in this gambling] mecca. .Judge Frank MacNamee was I called in to perform the ceremony] only 20 hours after Haymes won his six-week, quick Nevada divorce decree from Nora Eddington Flynn| on grounds "she lost interest in the marriage." Haymes, a native of Argentina, faces possible deportation oh (chafe ges he illegally ' re-entered sjjt h; ijj country from Hawaii. Heglftso sff up to his pug nose in j&monyj troubles with wife No. 2, fuoannej BpfdNora. divorced Haymes lasti Friday, but had Dick and Rila worried when she delayedgsigning a waiver to permit todays mar-! Rita still hasn't settledlher ali-| mony with Aiy Khan. Al armed j hotel guard hovers con sf a n 11 y | around%iY|itoiin daughter of Rita;; and A&jWep$ge--oi threats, pos-|j sibly firelff|reh^us fanatics, to the little girl'S" life. ^C?╜-M%\ 'A-M After *<$R0 ceremony, Rita was schedulecrio play hostess at a luncheon for the guests and press. |j The happy couple had no plans Ij for the rest of the day and will. | honeymoon here until S u n d ay.! Then they'll trek to Philadelphia,! where Haymes begins a singing en- gagement. ESTABLISHED 1888 BArclay 7-5371 PRESS "CLIPPING BUREAU 165 Church St#et - New York ANDERSON, S. C. Jtwat . KjH 4,976 Rita And Dick Wed At Las Vegas Hotel Take New Gamble On Marriage As Dice Roll On Tables Nearby i^SJ^E^^j^ Nev. (AP) -?╟÷While nearft-f crapshooters trie^^o^ma^ie^^vens and elevens, Rita Hayworth and Dick Haynies today gambled! once mpre with matrimony. The 34-year-old actress and herldi :-cr??6ner, 35, will recite wows j each, i lhas s^^t&ree times before/in aj* I simpp^ser^iony in the ?√ßJ6tfldf''^Bgja' j Of the. Sands. Hotel. __ " Di|trict JudfWPvank MacNamee will!?║Ejfficiate ?√ß??^-'^ie>: five-minute cerjippny. Jack^ptratter, gertej^|J manager of "the Sands, Will bev|S| onltrattendant. Photographers and rep$ffi|ers will outnumber. the ?? vited guests three to one. Only guests invited are businessf and legal associates of the'couple- The aflfty. relatives on hand will he; the'bride's two daughters. - Both Haymes and Rita claimed permanent residence in Nevada, but said thelrwtUs^K-move near Gree^^h^ {f?onn&>?╜|feYe they are looking for a lidSBw?½^* "AlK^^ wor^^iai^L the East," the crooner explairiSq*. . Miss*' feaywortfe'lfa^' She "plans to ?╟≤ co&lptte . B^^ippoiihe East Coast aadsvHfH^pbd' for picture makxngl^f ^^^^M^' The erooner^^JpT will move into Miss HayTvqH(Ps suite at the Sands right after the wedding. A ;r^prter asked him if he had ever tasted any of Rita's cooking. 4<Who 1 marries Rita Hayworth fSfycbdking?" the singer asked. :3E?╟÷?╟≤?╟÷!?╟÷a?╟÷y\ mzr- ESTABLISHED 188S BArclay 7-5371 PRESSJILIPPING BUREAU 165 Chi^h Street - New York HUfeSVILLE, ALA. IilPMES Cip-D:%^56 - S. 16,923 q||& 1953, _ Haymes Takes License | JTo Wed Rita Hayworth j I LAS VEGAS, Nev. ?╟÷ (&)?╟÷Dick Haymes, a crooner wbb has had plenty of trouble with wives and Uncle Sam, takes out j||marriage b license todays with Rita Hayworth, a gal who* has had her share of husband trouble. g\ Haymes and the glamorous screen star pick sUj> the wedding license at 3 p.m., just one hour after he gets a divorce from Nora Eddington Flynn Haymes. The Argentine^brn singer and the actress will be married tomor-' row at 11 a.m. in the Saijd^HQtfiL where both have been guests for some time. It will be marriage No. I for both. PRESS CLIPPING BUREAU 165 Church Street - New York NIW YORK, 2*. -Y. H^mm TRIBUNE Circf"6;.33t,853 m'S. 567,298 !yU I 0 P53 "EARLY BIRD' w f/CoAST to Coast =By HY GARDNER* It's .a baby boy, .their first, for the Walter Goulds; a nine ayem heimvai at Hafkness Pavillion. Mom is the Met-tevee songstaif,Mimi Benzell. ?╟≤ ?╟≤ ?╟≤ Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis have doubled their life insurance policies on. each other?╟÷upped to $100^000 per zahey. Probably need it if they return to London When George Jessel is feted hx* [the Prials. on Feb. 21*. he'll be flanked on the dais by Adlai Stevenson ands'alHF' Tarry ST. Truman, unless mat- ters of more moment crop up , at the time. . . . Sugar Ray Robinson no longer is a freak attrac- ! tion as a night j club personality. | H i s Bandboxing iappearanceg reveals the champ can hoof and Hy Gardner mug and trade ' .fee. . . . The frisky Dwight Fiske returns to the-saloonitery circuit tonight via the Blue?╟÷in1' this instance the Very Blue?╟÷ I Angel. . . . Henry Costello was about to enter his Press Box restaurant last night when a well groomed chap approached himl and asked for a quarter. When Henry fumbled around his change pocket the bum got impatient and asked him to please hurry it up. "I've got my Jaguar double-parked!" he explained. Subtle (?) Propaganda Dep't: I A chap named Jerry Kaufman I thought it might be. fun to be small talk with the best of them, able to toast""'To Y6urHP?·ith?? Jle'll open at ^Palladium in in RussianAo L 'Xo^ the London early m '54.,^ Looks|Russian. Languangee g?·g?· *Jj (like Helen Traubel will be Cotillion Room ^mWadn in February. .,. Isn't that former night club singer Gigi Durston toiling as a salesgirl at Wana- j4B^J^2d^gi is best remem- ?√ß bered as the"attractive girl who I walked half way down the aisle ?√ß with Elliott Roosevelt, at least I in the headlines, then changed I her path. , . . A. bookshop near I the Beekman Towers advertises - the Kinsey Report on Pemales las "The She Around Us"1 I Fred Allen pulled a funny at ?√ß Ricky's in the Village. Said his I eunt in Brooklyn, hearing that ?√ß you don't have to-wear glasses I to see the CinemaScopic "Robe" I left her glasses home?╟÷and then I couldn't find the Roxy! ... * * ..* Big Jack Entratter would like [Ava. Gardner to co-star with [Frank Sinatra when tiieSands unfurls its first cafe edfflro the Ziegf eld Follies in Las Vegas j on Dec. 17. . . . June Haver admitted to Hollywood newsmen | that "there's no reason why I I shouldn't make pictures again f^tjU at the moment, though, I haven't any strong urge." . .". Mrs. Sugar Ray Robinson (Edna dMae) will play the lead in a roving company of "Born Yesterday" to open in either Hart- . ford or Providence on Oct. 27. | . . . Roger Price has another I one of his goofy doodle books ready for Simon & Shuster pub- | Hcation. . . . Lord Halifax's es- the IJ. N. The pleasant sounding voice at that office told him it was "va vas zadorova" and when Kaufman asked her to spell it (phonetically she obliged and fi^^P?ated it back. "You are right aboutgvaSTnaifl vas. " ] she agreed, "but the last word is not z-a-g?╟÷it's z-a-d, like in [disarmament!". , , Olivia deHavilland called the! [Federal Building in Los Angeles to determine whether or not she'd lose her citizenship if she marries Pierre Galante and lives in Paris. She was told she wouldn't lose it provided she keeps her passport renewed. This may be the green light to that marriage... The Book Find Club's November selection will be Eleanor Roosevelt's "India and the Awakening East.". . Pentagon cafeteria, napkins now carry this printed message: "A Safe can be locked, but only YOU can lockyour lips. Don't discuss classified information in public". . .Dean Murphy, who reflects the voices and mannerisms of familiar figures with cartoon-copy accuracy, says one of the "most difficult problenfs confronting a mimic today is to properly shade ( an impression Of Clark Gable so it doesn't sound like- .Present Efsen-. hower?╟÷they're^&bst identical sound-alikes. . . Susan Hayward j claims she isn't dating Jeff Chandler. "I won't go out with same neighborhood in Brooklyn I He lived on 37th Street?╟÷she on 35th... You'd think James Melton would be the last guy to spot this sort of thing but we thank him for .paf^ttjg it along. Sign on a hot ^Ir^nkfurter stand: "Special Attention Given ; to Outgoing Order^^Q* S-al^Bri Victor Borge, w^^a|?Sf||rs announces thaUfth^^mn. people have asked ,m^>^/Siounce that this is a's^iftwaw recalls the. time .DcibC^Kel was [asked to?╟≤;?╟≤ ehdorse^W" certain' | piano. She readily agreed, but the company never used the testimonial. It simply read:' ["Your piano is the finest piano I ever leaned against. Sincere-. ly, Denise Darcel/.*, g. ;o-i^?╜??"?╜?╜j*. j. wuu i/ go out witn tate will "be open for public in- married men," she says bluntly, spection on certain days in ex-J Incidentally Miss Hayward and "change 'fflfeaggsUght admission Mr. Chandler come from the