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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 13
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The Baltimore Sun du lieu suivant : Baltimore, Maryland • 13

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The Baltimore Suni
Lieu:
Baltimore, Maryland
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13
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THE SUN, BALTIMORE, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 12, 1963 PAGE 18 TWIN BOYS DIVIDED Condition Satisfactory After California Operation Los Angeles, Aug. 11 (P Oneday-old Siamese twin boys were separated today by two teams of surgeons one team for each baby and were in satisfactory condition as doctors began the delicate task of repairing the surgery. The boys, born to a 16-year-old girl in Glendale yesterday, were joined from mid-breast to midabdomen. Diagnostic tests shortly after the birth indicated a chance of successful operation, Childrens Hospital spokesmen said, although doctors could not be sure which vital organs might be shared until surgery began. The parents, William Bartley, 19, and his wife, Rebecca, of nearby Glendale, gave their consent to the operation when Dr.

Forest Fuller, obstetrician and gynecologist at the Glendale Hospital, advised it and within: 36 hours after birth. Early Operation Needed Hospital spokesmen said early operation afforded the best chance of success, since babies are "toughened by nature for the birth trauma." The boys, Daniel Clifford and David Eugene, were delivered by Caesarean section at 11.45 A.M. yesterday, weighing a combined 14 pounds, 4 ounces. A previous operation was performed soon after birth to provide protective membranes for the babies' intestinal tracts. An early announcement from the hospital said the boys shared intestines.

The operation to separate the boys, first slated for 8 A.M. today and then moved up to 1.30 P.M., finally began at 3 P.M. slightly more than 27 hours after they were born. Hospital spokesmen said they were separated by 5.25 P.M. and in satisfactory condition, awaiting repair surgery.

Mrs. Chesney Rites Tomorrow A requiem high mass will be offered at 9 A.M. tomorrow for Mrs. Helen Wright Chesney at the Church of the Blessed Sacrament, Old York road and Springfield avenue. Burial will be in New Cathedral Cemetery.

Mrs. Chesney died Friday at her home, 628 Dumbarton avenue, after a lingering illness. She was 88 years old. Born in Baltimore September 10, 1874, Mrs. Chesney was the former Helen Gorsuch, a descendant of Charles Gorsuch, one of the founders of Baltimore for whom Gorsuch avenue was named.

Her first husband, Andrew I. Wright, who was a Baltimore business man and at one time was a member of the City Council, died in 1944. When she was 75, Mrs. Chesney married her second husband, Robert J. Chesney.

Mr. Chesney, also a Baltimorean, died 1960. Survivors include three sons, Leo Stanley Wright, Louis Tyler Wright and Charles Thomas Wright; three daughters, Mrs. Lucille Marie McKeever, Mrs. Sallie Ann Keyworth and Helen Theresa Wright; 18 grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren.

Services Tomorrow For Seth W. Lankford Federalsburg, Aug. 11 Funeral services for Seth W. Lankford, 72, an Upper Dorchester county farmer, will be held Tuesday at 2 P.M. at the Frampton funeral establishment here.

The Rev. W. A. Hill, pastor of the Wheatley Methodist Church, of which Mr. Lankford was a member, will officiate.

Burial will be in the family plot in East New Market Cemetery. Mr. Lankford died Friday at the Nanticoke Memorial Hospital at Seaford, after a long illness. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Ethel Jones Lankford three brothers, Scott of Galestown; Leon, of Rhodesdale, and Percy of Hurlock.

Sub Hunt To Resume Boston, Aug. 11 (P) The newly overhauled bathyscaphe Trieste leaves Wednesday to resume her ocean floor search for the lost nuclear submarine Thresher, the Navy announced tonight. Kennedy Children Visit Mother By PHILIP POTTER (Continued from Page 1) trigued by the fact that John, had had his hair cut American style and now looks less like young British royalty. Mrs. Kennedy walked briefly in her room and in the halls this morning for the first time since she was brought there shortly after noon last Wednesday, followling her delivery by Caesarean section.

She had been able to sit up as early as yesterday. The First Lady, a White House spokesman said, was cheered" by Caroline's visit. She had exchanged messages with her daughter and son, John, through her husband and others, but this was her first opportunity in five days to talk with the little girl. A Marine helicopter shuttled the President and his daughter -and, later, him and his sonbetween the Kennedy's summer home at Squaw Island and the military hospital, about 20 miles. The President brought Mrs.

Kena number of messages of condolence from heads of state, the diplomatic corps, and family friends. One was from Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, who is vacationing the Black Sea, where he was visited last week by Dean Rusk, Secretary of State. Andrew T. Hatcher, assistant White House press secretary, said Khrushchev, upon learning of the American First Family's loss of their son, telephoned Rusk, then still in "the Soviet Union. The message conveying his "personal distress" was cabled here by Rusk from Bonn.

Other messages shown Mrs. Kennedy today included those from Pope Paul VI and France's President Charles de Gaulle. Her only other visitor today was her sister, Princess Lee Radziwill. The President saw his wife again tonight. In the meantime, late this afternoon, he had received by telephone from Washington a report from Rusk on the latter's talks last week with Khrushchev, the Soviet Foreign Minister, Andrei Gromyko, and West Germany's Chancellor Konrad Adenauer about the nuclear test ban treaty and other matters.

Rusk arrived back in the capital this afternoon. He and Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara will confer with the President at the White House about 5 P.M. tomorrow. Rusk earlier will testify at hearings by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on the test treaty he signed in Moscow.

To Fly To D.C. Mr. Kennedy will fly from Otis at 3 P.M. tomorrow to the capital in Air Force the Presidential jet transport. This will follow another visit with his wife.

In the morning there is to be a memorial mass at St. Francis Xavier Church here for Lt. Joseph Patrick Kennedy, eldest son of former Ambassador and Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy, who was killed in 1944 when his explosivesladen plane blew up over Eng- Mrs.

Steinhauer Funeral Today Boca Raton, Aug. 11 (P- Services will be held Monday at the Delray Beach funeral establishment for Mrs. Thelma A. Steinhauer, a native of Hagerstown, Md. Mrs.

Steinhauer died Saturday a hospital at Boynton Beach after an extended illness. She lived here for two years after living in Hagerstown. Survivors include her husband, J. Earl Steinhauer; one son, J. Lawrence Little, of Miami; daughter, Mrs.

J. J. Looney, of Kensington, and ten grandchildren. Burial will be in Boca Raton Cemetery. WINDOW SHADES Venetian Blinds Aluminum Screens FOR Before FREE you buy--Call American Arst" Harry H.

Tillman Sons 815 M. Howard St. VE. 7-5891 AMERICAN SHADE CO. Cab Driver: Are all you fellows getting married? Groom: Nopel I am.

These are my ushers and best man. We're going to Hiken to be fitted. Cab Driver: That's where rented my wedding formal 35 years ago. S. HIKEN FORMAL RENTALS Baltimore St.

at Broadway BR 6-0311 DR. SEYMOUR, OF YALE, DIES Former President A Scholar Of Wilsonian Diplomacy Chatham, Aug. 11 UPDr. Charles Seymour, a noted historian who served as president of Yale University from 1937 to 1950, died today at his summer home on Cape Cod. He was 78 years old.

A champion of academic freedom while president of Yale, Seymour earlier had won a reputation for scholarship by his writings on United States diplomacy during and after World War I. Although in poor health fort the last two years, he remained active. Last month American Heritage published his article on the long-baffling break between President Woodrow Wilson and Col. Edward M. House, Wilson's one-time confidant and personal ambassa- dor.

Peace Agency Aide Seymour had first-hand knowledge of Wilson-era diplomacy. As a young Yale professor, he was named to the American Peace Commission, and arrived in Paris in 1919 as chief of the AustroHungarian division of the commission. Son of a Yale professor of Greek, Seymour followed in a family tradition when he became president of Yale, succeeding the late James Rowland Angell. Seymour's great great grandfather had been a president of Yale College. His great-uncle was also a Yale president.

Family ties to Yale went back to 1702. Freedom Stressed Seymour pledged from the start of his tenure that he would work to guarantee an atmosphere of freedom for scholarly work at Yale, the nation's third oldest university. "We seek the truth and will endure the consequences," he said in his inaugural speech. "Unless the spirit of complete freedom prevails among students and teachers, freedom from external influence and internal pressure, we commit the unforgivable sin against the first of educational principles." As president of Yale, he completed: a university-wide building program begun in the 1920's, increased the size of the faculty from 958 members to 1,356 and sponsored several major changes in the educational program, including the integration of science training with the college's liberal arts program. KEFAUVER'S FUNERAL SET Rites, Burial Are Tomorrow In Tennessee Hometown Washington, Aug.

11 Senator Estes Kefauver who died yesterday, will be buried Tuesday at his hometown of Madisonville, it was announced today. The body of the Senator, who died early yesterday of a heart ailment, will be flown by military plane from Washington to Knoxville, Tuesday morning. It will then be taken to Madisonville where it will lie in state from 10 A.M. until 2.30 P.M. at the First Baptist Church.

From the church the body will be taken to the Kefauver family farm at Madisonville for simple services to be conducted at 3 P.M. from the porch of the family home. A member of the Senator's staff said it was felt that these arrangements would enable more of the Senator's friends to be present at the service. Burial In Family Cemetery Burial will be in the family cemetery near the family home. An estimated 500 persons or more paid their final respects here today at the Gawler funeral where Kefauver's body awaited transfer to Tennessee.

Mrs. Kefauver and the Kefauver children, designated members of the Senate and Tennessee members of the House of Representatives will fly to Tennessee aboard a Presidential jet plane for the funeral services. The plane is tentatively scheduled to arrive in Knoxville at 10.50 A.M. Tuesday with those aboard to proceed by automobile to Madisonville. The group plans to return to Washington by plane after the burial.

Both House and Senate are expected to formally name delegations tomorrow to represent them at the services for the man who had been a member of Congress since 1939. Kefauver, a leader of the bloc of liberal Democrats in the Senate since his election to that body in 1948, died early yesterday when the main artery of his heart ruptured. He died in Bethesda Naval Hospital where he had driven himself Thursday night after sustaining what doctors termed a mild heart attack. Even as he died the hospital was preparing for surgery later in the day to correct an aneurysm, AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS ACADEMY AWARD WINNER- -BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! Production of 2 SHOWS DAILY 2:00 and 8:15 p.m. I Now Reserve Your Seat by Phone OF ARABIA MAY (Mon.

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Passwaters was the widow of Everett Passwaters, of Hickman. She is survived by two sons and six daughters, the sons are Theodore Passwaters, of FederaIsburg, and Gilbert Passwaters, of Denton. Federalsburg, Aug. (Special) Private funeral services for Mrs. Ida D.

Passwaters, 75, will be conducted at 2 P.M. Tuesday at the Williamson funeral establishment here. Mrs. Passwaters died yesterday Davis, Mrs. Robert Elliott and The daughters are Miss Marie Passwaters, of Easton; Mrs.

Edna SINCE E1850 Fall in HOCKMEYER Now save almost requirement. Ours Mrs. Hazel Tull, all of Denton; Mrs. Catherine Elliott, of Rehoboth, and Mrs. Mary Wood, of Preston.

She also is survived by eighteen grandchildren. Burial will be in Bloomery Cemetery near. here. Lausche Cool To Treaty Cleveland, VP -Senator. Lausche, "Ohio), said today that if he had to vote now on the limited test-ban treaty his vote would be "no." WE CLEAN RUGS Call Herb Kraft TU.

9-4611 Oriental Rug Co. SHOPPING TODAY Downtown, 9:30 to 5:30 Branches, 10 to 9:30 foretaste. "WHERE'S was the question John Kennedy, directed at his father yesterday as they arrived at Otis Air Force Base hospital for a visit with Mrs. Kennedy. land.

The President's brother volunteered for a hazardous World War II bombing mission. The mass is to be said at 8 A.M. by Msgr. Daley, who at today's regular service the cruciform white shingle Catholic church in Hyannis Port, conveyed his own and his parishoners' sympathy to the Presidential family for the loss of their infant. Church Crowded policeman.

Gospel Is Read All 1,200 seats were occupied at the 10 A.M. mass, and hundreds of beach-clad people were outside as the President arrived in a black Lincoln convertible driven by a Secret Service agent. The outside crowd applauded the President briefly as he emerged from his machine with David Powers, White House receptionist and longtime intimate friend, and the two entered the church. There was more applause when he left after the service, and a few youngsters cheered. "They don't know how to behave -people," muttered a disgusted Msgr.

Daley read from the gospel of St. Luke, XVIII, 9-14. It tells of the pharisee who thanked God that he was "not as other men" and the publican who prayed: "Be. merciful to me, a sinner." The moral: "Everyone who exalted himself shall be humbled and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted. Hatcher said Mrs.

Kennedy is "making steady progress" in her convalescence, but that there still is no indication as to when Dr. John W. Walsh, attending physician, will permit her to leave the Air Force base hospital. The President, Hatcher said, plans to return to the Cape Tuesday at after the close of business the White House to spend the evening and part of the next day with his wife and family. He will fly back to Washington either Wednesday evening or Thursday morning for two full days of business before the weekend.

To Fly In Caroline It is understood that he will have his regular Tuesday morning breakfast session with Democratic congressional leaders It probably will center on plans to achieve prompt Senate ratification of the nuclear test-ban treaty. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy is flying back to Washington tomorrow in the Kennedy family's own plane, the Caroline. He flew to Boston late Thursday to be with his brother as little Patrick's respiratory ailment, which developed a few hours after birth, took a sharp turn for the worse. The Attorney General stayed close by the President's side from then until the funeral yesterday.

He, too, has a summer home here. 2 Airmen Deliver Card To First Lady Otis Air Force Base, Aug. 11 (-Two airmen, off duty today and dressed in their civilian clothes, walked over to the base hospital to deliver a condolence card to Mrs. John F. Kennedy from the 19th Communications Squadron, an air refueling unit based here.

"We share your sorrow," said the card the young men handed in at the door not long after President Kennedy had visited his wife with their daughter, Caroline. Airman 2.C. William P. Kelly, 22, of Edison, N. and Airman 1.C.

Feler: Niteler, 21, of Hunting. ton, who represented their squadron on the sympathy mission, had hoped they might catch a glimpse of the President. 73 YEARS of SAFETY with HIGH RETURN Consecutive dividends since 1890. INSURED SAVINGS Savings Accounts insured up to $10,000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. PROGRESS FEDERAL Savings Loan Association Park and Saratoga SAratoga 7-3636 There's 1 RUN RIGHT JO Read's Store Near Your Home 'Drug Stores Worthy of Your Contidence or Office Fast Film Developing and Complete Photo Service Read's Photo Depts the basket for boys LIGHTWEIGHT JACKET PATCHED FOR NEWS $5.95 We've got patches smooth suede ones right on the elbow of our boy's washable jacket.

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