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* BRflNIFF
TAe SUNOA Y DETROIT ROUND TRIP FIRST CLASS $147.40 TOURIST $2-40 "Let the people know the truth and the country is mfe** Abraham Lincoln. * TWENTI-EIGHTH YEAR. PANAMA, R. P., SUNDAY, OCTOBER It, 1W2. TEN CENTS Panama Canal Pilots < Pay FANTASTIC ARCTIC AIR BASE estimated at $263,000.000. ' Local Lottery ,8/0,779 For Half-Year The National Lottery of Pana- ma made a.net profit of $1,810,- 110 during the first six months of 1952, according to a report published yesterday. All of this sum went into the Nation's treas- ury. During the same period the Lottery office paid out $679,276 in commissions a monthly av- erage of $113,212. This amount was $9,647 more than the com- missions paid out during the first six months of 1951. The net sale of lottery tickets up to June JO this year was $10,- 644,345, an increase of $250,538 over the same period last year although the amount of tickets airlifted- in. Th.r' rrim beauty in this scene, where a .beautiful but mighty dangerous iceberg nSesi th USCG Cutter Eestwing in Baffin Bay, near Thule. Th ship brought supplies for the project. put on sale has been reduced by $804,011. Gatun Residents Don't Wait To Be Asked For Funds Panama CanaJ employes at Gatun are so keen to contribute to the rent-fight fund that the civic council there has found no need to solicit door-to-door for funds. Instead, civic council represen- tatives make themselves avail- able at the commissary during by in On the other side of the ledger ,the hours it is open, delinquent ticket vendors are in- The employes have been seek- debted to the Lottery office for mg out the civic council repre- a sum of $66,079. This sum in- ;Mntatives there, to contribute to eludes money owed by vendors the fund. The Gatun civic council, alrea- dy on record as enthusiastically supporting the formation of the Canal Zone Emergency Legisla- tive finance committee at the Atlantic side anti rent hike meeting at Margarita Friday night, has been called by presi- dent J. A. Cunningham to a special meeting tomorrow night. Father Mchale To Be Honored At Farewell Party COLON, Oct. 12 Father J. Raymond Mchate, until recent- ly pastor of fit. Joseph's Church in Colon and superior of the. VlnceAtlanfpathers on the Isth- mus, will be honored Bo"TflJT"Or- mer parishioners at a farewell, party at the church this even- The program which will be di- rected by John Qulnlan, will fea- ture representatives of each church organisation, *m o n g which are: the Legion of Mary, Holy Name Society, Junior Se- nior Sodalities, Ladies Auxiliary, Rosary Society, CYO, Choir Guild, altar boys, and the chil- dren of St. Joseph's School. The evening will begin with Benediction of the Blessed Sa- crament at 7:15 in the church, at which Fr. Mchate will be the celebrant with the men of the Holy Name Society forming a guard of honor. After Benediction, Fr. Macha- tes' many friends and former parishioners will gather in the schoolhouse area where the pro- gram will be presented. The party will serve as an oc- casion to Introduce Fr. Joseph Komen, CM., the new Superior of the Vlncentlan Fathers and pastor of St. Mary's Church in Balboa, and Fr. John Klne, CM., who is succeeding Fr. Mchate as pastor of St. Joseph's Church. Corps of Engineers construction gangs assemble steel frames to be used In building- the hangars on the Thule airbase. Two heavy mal ntenance hangars, where the biggest pnanes can be taken out of the frigid, were finished during the urgent flrrt year of construction. over a period dating from 1941 up to the first semester of 1952. Churchill: Reds Will Not Ambush US-UK Alliance SCARBOROUGH. England, Oct. 11 (UP) Prime Minister Wins- ton Churchill assured the world today that Great Britain will ne- ver fall In the "ambush" that the Soviet Union has set up to de- stroy the Anglo-American alli- ance. He added that the peace and freedom of the world depend on this alliance and whoever is elected President of the United States, Adlal Stevenson or Dwlght Elsenhower, the Ameri- can natlpn will continue to lead the free nations of the world In the fight against Communist ag- gression. The elder statesman made these statements at the closing session of the annual convention of the Conservative Party. The 4000 delegates at the convention interrupted Churchill with cheers on several occasions. "The basis of our foreign po- licy Is a true and honorable friendship with the U.S. for the defense of the free world against the Immense aggression and in- filtration of Communist imper- ialism," Churchill said. Later he declared: "We are ready to persevere loyally and resolutely in the strengthening of those bonds of friendship and klnshlD which has carried us In- to such an effective alliance with the great English-speaking reoubHc on the other side of the Atlantic. 'This does not mean that we will always be in complete ac- cord with our American ally or that we will hesitate to defend our point of view in matters on which we disagree." Brazil Gets $19,000,000 Export-Import Bank Loan Coalminers Advised To Go By Politico's Record Not Party CINCINNATI, Ohio, Oct. 11 (USIS). The political director of the United Mine Workers of America (UMW) urges that the coal miners of the United States Raises Believed To Range From $868 To $1200 Annual pay raises ranging from $868 for apprentices to over $1,200 for men in certain higher categories have been granted to Canal pilots, according to sources yes- terday. Negotiations which had been under way for torn* time between representatives of the Panam Canal Pilots Association and officials of the Panam Canal Company reached a climax when the Company made a firm offer for an increased wage scale, plus a reduction in the num- ber of years' service required for ratings in the several steps between apprenticeships and senior pilot assign- ments. The offer was accepted by the pilots at meetings held on both Atlantic and Pacific Sides. Acceptance was made, however, with the understanding that the group would be free to work for further increases and better- ments. -day A formal request was made to the Panama Canal Company dur- ing th/ early business hours Fri- day morning for a confirmation of (he wage Increases, and an disregard party lines and sup- outline of other agreements port candidates purely on their voting records. ..... John T. Jones Director of La- bor's Non-partisan League, said in an address to nearly 3,000 de- legates to th miner's conven- tion here. "There should be only one basis for any American working man or woman to support a can- didate and that is his voting re- cord. "But we do not want change for the sake of change. We have no desire to achieve a tax cut and have nothing to pay the taxes with. We care nothing for pork chops at a nickel a chop, if we do not possess that nickel. "We, the coal miners of Ame- rica, want better government. We want better schools, better wages, better hours of work, a higher standard of living for everyone." Jones then Individually re- viewed the records of senators and representatives from 21 coal mining states. Support or opposition was urged for the legislators on the basis of their stand on Issues like federal aid to education, aid to handicapped. Robbers Wife Gets Reward From Bank Husband Held Up WASHINGTON, Oct. 11 (UP) The Export-Import Bank said to- day its board of directors had authorized two credits totaling; more than $19,000,000 to Brazil- ian borrowers. One credit of $18,000,000 is to the recently established National Development Bank and the oth- er, of approximately $1.880,000 to the Compaa Metalrgica Bar- bara. The credit to the bank will be used to buy agricultural machin- ery In the United States for re- the WORCESTER, Mass., Oct. 11! a rented automobile. (UP) A $500 reward for the changing his clothes In capture of a bank robber has,car. been given to the bandit's wife| The tipster jotted down by the bank he robbed. registration of the vehicle and money. telephoned it to day city editor But Mrs. Edward S. Myler of [A. Alfred Marcelle of the Wor- Sterling had nothing to do with cester Telegram. Marcello pass- the capture of her husband ed It along to police who seized who confessed he waited In line Myler near his home while terms, principally to individual Brazilian farmers, with distribu- tion to be carried out through normal channels. The Export-Import Bank said: then ed, his wife and two children Thia equipment will make an slst In expanding Its existing fa- cilities for the manufacture of cast-iron pipe In the state of Sao Paulo. The Export-Import Bank said: 'This company is one of the few Brazilian manufacturers of cast Iron pipe which is essential for the Installation and extension of water supply and sewage systems. The rapid rate of urban growth in Brazil has intensified the de- mand for this product." The Bank said both credits were studied and recommended sale on both cash and credit t>y the Joint Brazll-U.S. Econo- mic Development Commission. the physically mine safety, rural electriclation, tax bills, economic stabilization and others of concern to work-.are trying to get lng people. straightened out. reached between the pilots and the lompany as an outcome of the recent negotiations. In reply, the company wrote: "Recent discussions between the Governor and representatives of the pilots resulted in an ami- cable and fair settlement of out- standing differences." Having also been questioned as to the currant congestion In the Canal, the company said that in anticipation of the continuation Into the foreseeable future "of a heavy volume of traffic. Canal authorities are in the process of augmenting the present pilot f orea to a level which It Is antici- pated will eliminate the need for overtime work for these employ- es except In cases of emergency. This matter of excessive over- time work was one of the princi- pal points that has been In the process of discussion between the nilots and Canal authorities for the past two years." Captain Harold T. Longmore. president of the pilots' group, said yesterday he was happy a- bout the offer and its acceptance. "Relations with the Canal ad- ministration are good now." he remarked, "and I believe they inequities from a work-day that started be- fore dawn, ^pilots wives, as weU as the men, were generally hap- py about the raise and the pros- pect of overtime relief. Unofficial forecast of today's way conM handle up to yester- day. Additional locomotive crews had been authorized for today. Commenting on the Canal's statement, two men said that while the agreement reached was amicable, the pilots did not con- sider it essentially "fair" and would continue to work for what they considered fair remunera- tion in comparison with that of bay and bar pilots In the States and elsewhere. Both pilots and their wives had high praise for Captain Long- more, whose letters to his sena- tor. Republican Henry Cabot Ifldge of Massachusetts, are cre- dited with having been of con- siderable help In getting the new wage scale, and with having the time a man must work before be- ing eligible for senior pay reduc- ed from 17 to nine years. Pilot waee scales, as assembled from unofficial figures, were re- ported about as follows: Old rate for anorentice pilots. $5.810; new rate $6.679. Old rate for probations rv pi- lots $6,640: new rate $7.633. Basic old rate for pilots who Labor's Non-partisan League commenting on the pilots'com-have passed 18-month probation- was the first permanent political plicated overtime situation, now action group set up by American in litigation and also awaiting a labor. It came Into being in 1936 decision of the Comptroller Gen- to help elect Franklin D. Roose- velt and Is now the UMW's sole political arm. Its counterparts In other u- nlons are the Political Action Committee of the Congress of Industrial Organizations and labors League for Political Edu- cation, In the American Federa- tion of Labor. In a Rut FORTH WORTH. Tex. (UP) Detective W. E. Kearney went on vacation after closing the case of a man given a two-year suspended sen tenet for burglary. When Kearney returned three weeks later, he was assigned to another burglary case. The sus- pect was the same man. eral's Office. Longmore said: "Governor John S. Seybold Is agreeable to paying true over- time If we can evtt a favorable ruling from Washington to sup- port It." Meanwhile, for some nights Dast. some pilots have been put- ting In overtime that would total from 14 to 22 hours or more s week. Some are getting $1.56 per hour only for all ever 46 hours, while the men whose salary Is at the ceiling $11,260 are having to work free, with no overtime at all. Even though husbands have arv period, $8.300,; new rate $*,- 541. After onlv four and a h*lf vean, pilot* mev receive $M,- 452; and after nie Tears' serv- ice instead ef the previous 17 veer* pilot* may jo in* the top bask bracket at $11.235. Durin the past three years, the length of service reoulred for eligibllltv for the ton bracket has been reduced frrst from 20 vears to 17 and now from 17 to nine. The new four-and-a-half basic rat* of $10.452 is understood to level off with the nay of a mas- ter of a Class "A" vessel of the Military Sea Transport Service, while the top basic of $11535 matches that for the captain of not been getting home until a- an "A-3" vessel the largest of round 1 or 2 the next morning, the M8TS types. Sept. 29 to rob the Worcester .driving to a physician (with his County,Trust Co. of $31,430 with 4-year-old son. a toy pistol. Bank officials, through Msr- The strange transaction came cello, sought to give the re- adout when a tipster, who ask- ward to the tipster, ed that his name be withheld, refused the reward because he "I want Mrs. Myler to get said his "conscience" would bo- the money," Marcello quoted his ther him "knowing what my,source. "No ifs, ends or buts, tip had done to Mrs. Myler and that's the way I want It." her two children." The tipster said he wanted I', was the tip of this $50-a- Mrs. Myler to have the money ally week clerk that led to the cap- because her husband, a mild- would ture of Myler within six hours mannered ticket clerk with a the r after the holdup. He spotted'bus company, was his family's the were left without Income. important contribution to the Mrs. Myler saidI at first^continued expansion and improv- just couldnt take the reward ^ efficiency of Brasillan agri- rdybe cPt^ the money!<:!tur; ted that ,t wlll ^ from that very bank she said f ,nct ne,p m the pro. rTerrrwbheSt0,('lferwo0uld^ g" < " to W* seem right to some people. Of ** need It. But It wouldn't course I seem right." Myler had told police be stole the money because he was In debt. He paid an associate with the bus firm $600 soon after the robbery. He said he also owed a large sum to doctors who treated his son for an ab- scessed ear. However. Myler s attorney fin- ir convinced Mrs. Myle production of wheat, rice and other crops " "Precise details of purchase distribution and Internal Brasil- lan credit arrangements a to be decided by consultation with Brazilian agencies." Funds for the advanced credit are to be repayable over a period In- Cleopatra Just Like HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 11 (UP) Young men, you may think your girl takes an eon to primp for a date, but did you know that Cleopatra of Egypt spent four days getting ready for her first meeting with Marc An- thony Handsome screen stay Ray- mond Burr has been doing some Could Waste Everyone's Time Today's GirlsMaybe -More So of water containing a rose, ling gum. Cleo sucked myrtle did v """*L^ota ifflk Cleopatra itruck ^^bjgjtfgg*^'^I^^^^^IZ with the lng herself with different *"*? d*ys before she went out on a pTthT^tS for ^empera^e". MW^I?^ kno^orTepfngV ^Z^^A^ an* Bo^T^.2 tBheCm |P*. ^Kfe stone. You couldn't possibly be in research on the fair sex of olden I She used chalk and bismuth ness." SSTof^ N^^ny^lT^. Snek%r h^na! Burr said that .hose ^^^S^ ** * The check he says, shows wo- on her nails and on her hair, dentistry not being what It is a. " " thought It took $0 men "^.^d.^ andI age wtwl^ Her_to mrte, mascara tor ^^^^^UT^ Jy^Z^ Xld up gold of approximately five years, in- picture "Serpent of We Niie.~ :my sain isor. one puv "-1 ="'" ."*",,*" *"rri '^r: t" least 400 servants, tereit rate Is to be four per cent v The checkHie says, shows wo- 'on her nails and on her hair, dentistry not being what" is at Mrs. Myier *t^^^ didn't went todo any- CredlUo^he Compaflia Metal-slaJ2s_w.lUnf_on htt I J* PJc *, "^ hu8Dand MttU tel to ery angle. alter ine noinup. He snotted^bus company, was nis lamiivs nmni-rnv w uu iij- o-.h.. ... .rt. V. wi. . Toe* a bath In Myler tossing a brief case into sols support. When he wa* jail- thmg to harm her husband. .urglca Barbara wu made to as- w* -took a oatn in * -SJg *HE SUNDAY AMERICAN SUNDAY, OCTOBER It, 19$i. Qyiet Ead-Rcom Boys Push Britain wm Swiftly Ahead In Age Of Science TIME OUT IN KOREA Sleepand news from horn. These are priceless luxu ries to battle-weary troops In Korea. Here, caught In moments of relaxation, soldiers are seen as they make the utmost of precious lulls in the grim business of war. LONDON, Oct. 11 (BIS) A number of quiet, reserved Britons have recently caused big headline; in t!ie world's press. Yet even their neighbors had no idea that tire man next c'ocr v as altering history. Every weekend a professor named Arthvr Lovrll leaves his suburban home in the industrial citv of Manchester and .stands on a nearby hill called Jodrell Bank. The site is churned Wl'h mud from bulldozers, but Lovoll is ob- shv men in the laboratories have come bigger and more often. Electronics British electronic specialists, M Mitchell produced 'super' planes like trv: Spitfire. Maj. Qen HA. Lewis produced the 'perfect' artillery, the all-pur- pose 25-pounder, which cracked Rommel's line. Shipping technologists R. C. livious of the earth. His mind is who have already given radar Thompson and Harry Hunter million light-years away. and television to the world are blue-printed trv Liberty ship- He is the man who. on this ESSni'Hd^d.H 2d Si*-0. ^ flrst Liberty ships. ite is leading a team of other nR \an^e rada. devlces ana A host of other men came up 'taHsSktataMMfcfaT- ^ve harnessed TV to reveal the wi.n such historlc war-wlnners 200 ti ndiotdcsconeZSO feet se^S ,f the "ub-oceanlc world. as the Mulberry Harbor, the Plu- frros. which wiH probably ,.1Fo"0W?K the lead of pioneers to cross-Channel gas line, the ,,'., .w .._ like Sir Alexancvr Fleming who RaiiPU Rriripe and n on double the size of the known duced penlcimn> B rb, t s h Bailey Bridge, and so on. universe. The telescope will pick up signals from stars in far outer space invisible to any existing instrument. Mural Engineer A sparse-haired, plpo-smoking o in his late 30's leaves his produced penicillin, chemists 4iave come up with new Problems ranges of wonder drugs such as heoMgln, a pain-killer which is Blllaln must solve serious pro- ten times more powerful than b,ems ,f ncr remarkable pace.in mc.1>" i.nu:.n -.deoxycortone- tne science during the last 400 years is to keep Its momentum. ."}" nti-arthrltic drug. Jets British Jt designers have . - ---- i____i___ desk in an engineering lam in u unWrapped the four-jet Edinburgh each evening and ,,./. ,,, >,rn fion hm01. joins the homeward rush. living wing' Avro 698 bomber His fellow commuters would be ^SoST^ delta'Wing nH^H ta . that C. C Mit- ^/ggg; firms are devel- Surprised to know that C. C. Mit ehell has lnfhonccd naval tac- tics by inventing a steam cata- pult for aircraft carriers whlcn "Wakes these vessels independent of the winds. It is now being fit- ted into U.S. aircraft carriers. Cosmic Rays Flying seven miles high in a Comet jet airliner over Afia, Cecil Powell who had anx- iously teen waved off by his wife and two daughtersis stu- dying a great iron bar lying in the-plane. He has delicate ins- truments lying under that bar which are recording new data on cosmic rays. ecil Pow.'ll. awarded the No- oping turbo-jet autos and the first turbo-jet ship, a British tanker, has already crossed the Atlantic both ways. Agricultural scientists have de- veloped successful weed killers such as Pyroxamine and new technioues of getting rid of agri- cultural pests. Rockets The first difficulty is that many of the new sciences, such as atomic development, require enoormous expenditures of mo- ney and numerous technicians. In pure science Britain has ne- ve lost her leadership and shows no signs of doing so; But at the moment there is a gap in Britain h'tween the laboratory and the * tory. Weakness Britain's lack of resources in raw materials and the shortage of trained technologists make her weaker than she would like to be in the 'pilot plant' stage which covers the transition be- tween discoveries and their a- daptation to commercial ex- ploitation. , i However, the 'back-room boys' have redoubled their efforts. The Universities have mate far- reaching plans to correlate sci- entific progress. The Department of Scientific and Industrial Re- search is helping to push new de- velopments from tr.? formula and drawing board stage to the fin- ished product. Industry Already British industry Is spending 50 per cent more on re- search than It did five years a- o. The result have been propor- tionate. Today the British, looking a- head, are confident that the na- tion which produced Newton, Stephenson. Faraday. Darw i n, Huxley and Lister will have ma- ny more candidates for history. HOW TIRED? It depends on how tired you are, whether you remove your sov and shoes, left, Just your shoes, right, or fall asleep. FOLLOWING THE CAMPAIGN. As the political "war" at home warms up, soldiers near the front listen to a cam- paign speech. European Countries Unsnarl Some More Passport Red Tape Jt Pocket experts have built 2,000 m.p.h. guided anti-aircraft mis- EUROPEAN COUNTRIESP-2 .'be used by governments to re- siles which can twist and turn to WASHINGTON, Oct. 11Sev- guate travel, nursue their quarry however it erai European countries recent- In ancient Rome a bearer of may trv to escape. iy have applied International. Caesar's tractorium, the pass- Naval scientists have invented scissors to travel-entangling red port of Its day, was entitled to Prize in 1950 for Ws work on new tyP" of torpedoes which can tape. They are curtailing the radiation is u<=herln" cepk out tYuiir Prey- need ior passports. Most notable example this Today. British scientists are year, observes the National Geo- engaged on more than a thou- graphic Society, Is the action sand top research projects Be- of Greece and Turkey, ancient vond all this, they have been bu- enemies now allied in a com- cosmlc mankind over frontier. a new scientific Atomist unnum:nc,r,.u <, a* mi- niri SV on important long term re- mon couse. William Penney, a 4 -year-old search m th( worl(, Q{ thjJ atom_ No longer do Greeks or Taaa spectacled $8.000-a-year London- er has been sending letters home to his wife and two small sons ""from Australia. The letters say nothing of what he Is doing on (aV other side of the earth. But |1 Penney Is the key man he- Pd Britain's atom weapon test [the Australian coast, phe "pack-room boy** of Brit have' been even tore |n Usual lately. busy During the war. British ato- mic scientists brought their data to America and worked with American and Canadian nhysicists to produce the first atom bomb. require passports to cross their nations' mutual borders. Another outstanding ending of restrictions has been achiev- ed by Denmark, Norway, Swe- den, and Finland. These nations, in the shadow of the Iron This month. Britain tested her Curtain, have abandoned pass- ov.n atomic weapon. V ports for mutual travel Y; A Swede, for example, now World W"* "' can go to Finland and Denmark ar 11 aere has never been a de- |de during the last 400 years ien a British scientist Was adding important discover- without his passport, and no The "back room boys" have ent2. ?.!* KBLK.S: been key figures in Britain's vic- tories in war: ed by a Dane traveling in Nor- way and Swdeen. Numerous other countries, no- Puring World War n Watson-tabl ,n western Europe, have to the world's knowledge, .Watt and Randall perfected ra- abandoned visas IOr temporary i toe last few years the .dar ke>; to the winning of the travel but passports are still captured by the quiet 'Battle of Britain. Air Commodore necessary ____________________Husklnson developed the 'block- A visa amounts to a permit buster' bombs. Professor F. W. to enter and remain in a state. Shotton harnessed his genius In it js stamped in a passport by geology to the D-Day landing a consular office before the C._ rtL!- l/.l,ni plfns. traveler reaches the nation Is-Sta.es and Canada. for VJnlO IVkCUiiei Agricultural scientists such as suing the visa. Several Latin American na- Sir William Ogg and Sir Jack Passports themselves are of tions have waived passport re RAVENNA, O. (UP) The !o- Drummond discovered new tech- ancient origin, cal produce market is braced, iques which enabled besieged In their best sense they IDT the onslaught of a unique Britain to grow record amounts serve to protect and Identify crop hereabouts figs. ,of food. strangers in foreign lands. Greenhouse Figs ^or Ohio Market special courtesies along the far- flung Roman roads. He could expect post horses at relay sta- tions, rooms at inns and, when necessary, armed guards. The same courtesies were ex- tended, to a degree, to bearers of the conductl nundlnarum of the Holy Roman Emperors. Passports attained a more un- pleasant aspect later. They were found useful to control displaced persons. Instead of facilitating travel they could be used to bar entry to countries. In some police states they became weapons of the govern- ment, to be shown on demand. Revocation was a serious pen- alty. Use of passports greatly In- creased during World War I. They were essential for Inter- national travel, and they have remained so, with the few ex- ceptions of present relaxed re- gulations between neighboring states. In addition to the abar ment of passports for some ropean travel, they are not cessary to cross open borde. such as that between the United LETTER FROM HIS GIRL. Still wearing his armored vest, this soldier reads news from home, after returning from battle front. LUXURIOUS SLEET. A patched-up air mattress makes a palatial couch for a tired Marine, back from the line for a rest period. BOAC Comets To Start 3rd Jet Airline Route London To Singapore -----o--- ;,' fhousands of miles from 3their native soil around the' lediterranean Sea. the fig1 rees belong to Mike Castigllone,' *mo raises them in a green- house. This season, his crop is bring Jlr.g about 75 cents a quart bas- Jcet and better than 100 such Containers will be marketed. 4' CastigliOne brought the tree: rom his native Italy. Aerodynamic specialists like F. In another sense they can tion. gulatlons, although some require travel cards as substitutes. Other Western Hemisphere states retain stringent regula- LONDON, Oct. 11. British Overseas Airways Corporation Comets will inaugurate the world's Jet airline route be- tween London and Singapore Tuesday. It will bring this part of the British Commonwealth to within just over 27 hours of Lon- don. Flying time from London to "ingapore will be about 20 hours. (The/ Argonauts operating this route at present take 2V4 days to complete the Journey.) Present Comet services are to Johannesburg and Ceylon both in well under 24 hours. Singapore will be reached by the Comet in 27 1/4. hours (of which 20V4 hours will be spent in the alt) by way of Rome, Cairo, Bahrain, Karachi, Calcutta, REAL PUSH-BUTTON WAR BLASTS FOE- When the U. S Navy used guided missiles to bombard Korean enemy targets 150 miles away, it was the pay-off on hundreds of experiments n> "push-button" warfare. Pictures below, taken during those experiments, show Just how guided missiles are -re used. Essentially, the routine is simple. A deck controller manipulates electronic Instruments to take the pllotless plane off -e carrier's deck Into the air. When the drone, guided from the deck, reaches 500 feet altitude, the "mother" plane, which has 'en circling above, takes over. It guides the missile plane onto the target, hovering safely above enemy flak range. On the one is a television transmitter. TV receivers on the mother plane and the carrier enable officers to follow every second of ' drone's flight In actual combat, the drone was an obsoles cent Hellcat fighter, carrying a 2000-pound bomb.Tt was guided :v two AD-2 Douglas attack planes, one on the deck of the car rier USS Boxer, the other aloft as the "mother" plane. Each was loaded with secret electronic equipment. **"*"* *" we-struck crewmen watch, robot pla ne is catapulted Into the air by remote control Rangoon and Bangkok a total distance of 7,761 miles. On the return flight from Sin- gapore to London, which will occupy a total time of 94 hours 20 minutes (flying time 28 hours 20 minutes), an additional call will be made at Delhi. The new service will operate on a once weekly frequency in each direction until Oct. 31, when a second weekly Comet service, operating along a slight- ly different 7.892-mile route, will be Introduced. This service will call at Beirut instead of Cairo and at Delhi on the outward flight as well as the Inward, but will not call at Ran- goon. The total elapsed time for the outward flight will be 37 hours 25 minutes and the flying time 20 hours 25 minutes; the inward flight will take 32 hours 10 mi- nutes, with 26 hours 10 minutes spent In the air. The 'first service will leave London on Tuesdays, arriving in Singapore on Wednesdays, and leave Singapore on Thursday, ar- riving in London on Fridays. The second service will leave London on Fridays, arriving in Singapore on Saturdays, and leave Singapore on Sundays, ar- riving in London on Mondays The Comets will replace Argo- nauts along these routes. The two existing Argonauts services that are .being with- drawn take 2Vi days on the Jour- ney from London to Singapore, including a nlghtstop at Ran- goon. The flying time of one of these services Is nearly 37 hours and the other nearly 35. i BUS TROUBLE LINCOLN, Neb. (UP)/. H. Schleckman, manager of Lin- coln City Lines, a bui company, has a theory that transporta- tion Unes have financial trou- bles these days because of tele- vision and suburban shopping centers. TV keeps people home nights and daytime travel is curtailed because shopping can be done near homes. Divining Rods Used To SeeJt' Civil War Buried Treasure i AMBITIOUS One of the youngest exhibitors at the New [jersey State Fair in Trenton is llfht-year-old Caroline Hull- [fren, of Readington, N. J She'f pictured with her wholly entry [ The fair, oldest in America, is also the largest in the East. This Is the heart of "push- button" warfare. A pilot, ma- nipulating buttons on elec- tronic switch-boxes like guides a pilotless Hellcat fighter plane along a carrier's deck and Into the air. At pro- per, altitude, pilot of mother n'ane, with a' similar "key- tare" before him, takes over 'e robot plrnc and guMe* it 'i Ks target. RoV>t piloter . ere to Lt Comdr. W. G. Mau- rez. The drm ! aMM . ^ arse to the Urset nUm to tk. mother plane at Its rear. Dans Dilemma I Dan's pockets had ae silver Uahsg. rr some money he was ptalagi rhea P. A Want Ad be Mod Qot a ted now hf deiUhted CANTON, Miss., Oct 11 (UP) Ever since the Civil War, when Southerners hid their Valuables from the invaders, eerie treasure hunts have re- mained popular in the hills of Mississippi and fantastic tales are told about them. Now they are using quasi- electronic divining rods that allegedly tickle your body and point a stainless steel needle toward the buried coin. At least that's the kind used on a recent search near here one lonely night. A crescent moon slid from behind a cloud as a party of wide-eyed search- ers intently watched the divin- ing rod quiver In the hands of Its owner and makerV. A. Clarkson, 56-year-old Raleigh, Miss., salesman. The needle pointed to a dilapi- dated farmhouse off the old Natches Trace where "land flrates" used to waylay wealthy ravelera. The target for the night was Just over the hill from where eight of the Murrell gang were hanged and where a 93- year-old Negro had said: "That's gold buried some- where aroun' here." With Clarkson in command of the gadget, the divining rod led the curious, excited party into the house, once the home of a wealthy' Madison County family. The needle indicated a point in the hallway floor and the searchers proceeded to r up the boards. Two Negro men, with de faith in tne rod and the Negro's statement, took tud digging while a 60-watt bulb cl shaky shadows. Clarkson fuml led with his leather money bell large enough to hold a fortune" In pure gold. He said he always) carries it on treasure hunts. The Negroes dug a four-foot! hole In soft dirt. All around it was hard clay. But there wasl no pot and no gold. Clarksonl estimated that the "pull" of the! divining rod indicated that I someone had beat them to the pot of $30,000 by some 15 years. Clarkson dldnt explain exact- ly how the rod told him the amount or how long it had been removed. But he said he was convinced of Its accuracy. He said there must be about 150 treasure-divining rods In use In Mississippi. "But they are wildcatters," he declared, ''mine is the only ac>- curate machine I know of to- day." Once. Clarkson said, he un- earthed $60.000 In gold In south- ern Mississippi. "It was far into the night," he said. "Just as we raised the heavy chum, -two men who had been hiding in the bushes Jump- ed on us and carried the money away." ru'B-oiNA TaRRin Korea. U. S. Harinea model the stages of , Sv5oSntT^Tnw,UbT^ed to ""^""ftE the lower abdomen. Cpl. Joe Sanchas, lefVof San Antea*.Tex, wears one design, s square, four-plate "spron"; Cpl. R*,* ***!3i I TRwtoSTcenl. war, streJght. ^^.^SfwbiS Cpl. L Norrls, of Seminla, Tex, wears the ftnal design wmca i L . t^vad from the other two._____________- SUNDAY, OCTOBER It, 1*52. t-HE SUNDAY AMERICAN PAGE Pacific ^ocietu Tfln. Carrot' . JCochsr Bo, 17, Batba Pkon BalLoa 3521 MISS MATILDA ORCHLER WEDS 4JAMES WILLIAMS IN CLAYTON CHAPEL Miss Matilda Gruhler, daughter of Mr. and Mr.Job Gruhler of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, became the bride ol Mr. James G. Williams, son of Mrs. William A. X..Williams of New Rochelle. New York, and the late Mr. Williams, on Thursday evenin* at a ceremony V^tiormt ia the Fort Clayton Chapel by U. S. Army Chaplain William K. Graw. In the absence of her father, the bride was escorted and given in marriage by Mr. PhUlp Thornton. - The bride wore a waltz-length, tlon with the Veterans Admin- gown of white English lace over istratlon Hospital. .. ffiamade with* fitted halt- __Those ^S&,S5BSSI.% er bodice with a peter-pan coi- lar over which she wore a lace Jacket with tight fitted sleeves and Mrs. H. L. Phillips, Dr. and Mrs. Albert Blanshalt, Dr. and Mrs. David Senzer, Dr. and Mrs. Michael J. Takos, Mr. and Mrs. Itovember 2 through November IB at the Hotel Tivoll in cele- bration of American Art Week. The League invited artiste to enter oil paintings, watercolors, graphics, ceramics, carving and sculpture work with the privi- lege of entering six pieces with not more than four in one class. All work should be brought to the Hotel Tivoli on October 29, 30, or 31 between the hours of 4:30 and 7:30 p.m. Elizabeths Coronation Crown \^ALntu Society Worn By US Girl 114 Years Ago Her fingertip veil of Illusion Micnaei,J. laaos MranajMrs. was fastened to a Juliet cap J- . 3f white lace and she carried a white prayer book topped with a bridal cluster of white gar- denias. * The matron of honor was Mrs. Henry Oazdzlanski who wore a gown of bue taffeta and net made waltz length with Webb, Mr. and Mrs.- Myron Fisher, Mrs. M. D. Andrews, and Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Forbes. Farewell Reception Honors Delegates The Diplomatic Corps ac- credited to Panama and their r^V ue n7t band'ed with wives were host..on.Friday at taffeta. 8he carried a nosegay of blue hydrangeas. The best man was Mr. George Rizos. Following the ceremony a re- ception was held at the Nurses Quarters of the United States Army Hospital at Fort Clayton. Mr. and Mrs. Williams sailed Friday aboard the 8. S. Ancon on a wedding trip to be spent in the United 8tates. They ex- pect to return in November. For her going away ensemble Mrs. Williams chose a navy blue faille suit with white accesso- ries. The bride Is a graduate of 1950 from the Lankenau School of Nursing in Philadelphia and has the Commission of Lieuten- ant In the United States Army. She has seerved at Fort Clayton for the past six months. The bridegroom is an alum- nus of lona College in New York. During World War H he served In the European and Asiatic Theaters with the U. 8. Army. He was later employed at the {ona College as the As- sistant Registrar until he join- ed the American National Red Cross. Before coming to Albrook Air Force Base he was stationed at the National War College and at West Point. Dinner Honors Miss Heurtematte 1 Miss Cecl Heurtematte, a luncheon at the Union Club given in honor of and in fare- well to the Minister of Foreign Relations and First Vlce-Presl- dent of the Republic, and Mrs. Jose Ramon Quizado; and the former Minister of Foreign Re- lations and Mrs. Ignacio Moll- no, Jr., all of whom left the Isthmus Saturday morning by plane en route to New York. Minister Gulzado will head the Panamanian Delegation at the United Nations Meeting, and former Minister Molino will serve as a member of the Dele- gation. Inaugural Visitor Returns To Colombia Dr. Jose Gabriel de la Vega, the Minister of Government of Colombia left the Isthmus re- cently by plane after attending the Inauguration as Special Mission Ambassador from Co- lombia. Balboa YMCA Art Class The new art class opened last week will continue this evening at 7:30 pjn. under the tutelage of Mrs. Jeanne Beaudry. It Is open to both the military and civilians. Registrations Accepted Now For New Flower Classes Registrations are being ac- cepted for the two new Flower Arrangement Classes, sponsored by the Balboa YMCA, and taught by Mrs. Charles Morgan: which are due to start on Mon-| day, October 20. Mrs. Morgan I will be assisted by Mrs. Louise Morris. One class will be held at 9:00 a.m. and the other at 7:00 p.m. for seven consecutive Mondays and both classes will concern flowers and plants that are plentiful during the rainy sea- son. The series will conclude with the flower show at which time arrangements by pupils will be on display. Registrations may. be made at the YMCA Information Desk or by telephoning 2-2759 or 2-2839 between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Former Residents Return Here Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Easdon arrived recently from Havana, Cuba, to make their home in Panama and are at p r e se n t guests at Hotel El Panama. College Clab Music Group To Meet The Music Group of the Ca- nal Zone College Club will meet on Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of the hostess for the meeting. Miss Dorothy Moody, Zone Art League Sponsors I Gardner Oil Paintings The Canal Zone Art League is sponsoring an exhibition of 'oil paintings by Beatrice Stur- tevant Gardner which is now I on display In the Jewish Wel- fare Board Gallery and will re- main hanging through October '24. Members of the military and their families and the public of the Canal Zone and the Repub- lic of Panama are invited to at- tend. The Gallery Is open from 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. daily. Visitors are asked to leave a vote for the painting they prefer. Succoth Festival Celebration who meeting. Miss uorotny Mooay, This Evening returned recently from a visit 0435-A Franglpani Street in An-| A holiday dance, commemo- rating the conclusion of the Succoth Festival and the cele- bration of Columbus Day will be held this evening at 7:00 p.m. at the USO-JWB Armed Forces Service Center in Balboa. to Spain and France, was the guest of honor recently at a dinner given by the.Ambassador of Spain to Panama and the Counters -de Rabago at the Em- bassy in the Exposition Grounds. Farewell Dinner Honors Dr. and Mrs. Adams A no-host farewell dinner given by a group of friends was ven last evening at the Hotel Tlvoll In honor of Dr. and Mrs. G. W. Adams, who with their grandson, Jimmy Mara, plan to sail on Friday aboard the S. 8. Panama for New York en route to Iowa City, Iowa where Dr. Adams has accepted a posi- con. Mrs. W. A. Webb is fn charge of the program. "Glamour Boy" Tickets On Sale Tickets are now on sale for "Glamour Boy" the Balboa High School's little Theater's new play which will be pres- ented at the Diablo Clubhouse Theater on Tuesday, Oct. 28 and Wednesday, Oct. 29 at 7:30 P-m. Art Exhibition To Be At Hotel Tivoli The Annual Community Art Exhibition of the Canal Zone Art League will be held from ATTENTION] REX BEAUTY SALON takes pleasure in offering the services of the massage specialist MR. HENAO BLAN- CO, if you want to reduce your weight or , if you want to gain some pounds, or to have a perfect cutis, come in for a consul- tation and you*ll be satisfied. MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT TODAY Phone 2-3346 No. 5, 4th o July Ave. Rosary Altar Society To Meet The Rosary Altar Society of St. Mary's Church in Balboa will hold their regular month- ly meeting on Monday evening after Novena in St. Mary's Hall. NEW YORK, Oct. 11 (UP) A Philadelphia girl, 114 years ago, wore the crown which will be used for the coronation of queen Elizabeth II next June. The portrait of Queen Victo- ria which hangs In the Metro- politan Museum in New York, is the romantic link between Victoria, the American girt and Queen Elizabeth II. When Thomas Sully, the noted American artist, received a letter at his Philadelphia home in 1837, giving him per- mission to paint the coronation portrait of the 19-year-old Vic- toria, Sully decided to take his 24 year ok! daughter Blanch with him. His idea was that Blanch could act as a stand-in for the Queen in case she could not give him enough sittings. -The queen and Blanch be- came well acquainted. They "chattered together like any two girls," Sully wrote in his letters home. Victoria found that the crown was too heavy to wear and a much lighter one was designed for her small, sleek bead. It was this crown, included by Sully In his painting, which Queen Ellabeth will wear at her coronation. When Sully asked whether it would be permissible for his daughter to act as stand-in, Vic- toria replied, "Oh, no! No im- propriety, but do not spare me. If I can be of service I will sit." The Queen gave Sully sev- eral sittings during the spring of 1838the portrait was palnt- the home of Mildred Nourse, Quarters 17, Quarry Heights. Retired Employees Meet Today The regular meeting of the Canal Zone Employes Asso- ciation will be held'this after- noon at 1:30 p.m. In the ball- room of the Hotel Tivoli. Charity Card Party Tuesday Sisterhood Kol Shearlth Is- rael win sponsor a Card Party at community hall on Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. for the benefit of Charity. Door prizes will be awarded. Tickets are $1.25 per person and reservations may be made by calling Mrs. Lindo at 28-2- 0412 or Mrs. De Lima at 28-3- 2608. The public is invited. Pen Women Notice Members of the Canal Zone Branch of the National League! of American Pen Women are! notified of the first meeting ofi the Christmas Bazaar Handi- craft Workshop on Monday at 9:00 a.m. The Workshop will be held at Bingo Tonight at Legion Club Bingo will be played tonight at the American Legion Club in the Fort Amador Area. Members and their guests are invited. Cotillion Group To Begin Tuesday Liona Sears announces the be- ginning of a cotillion class next Tuesday, at 7:00 p.m. In the Washington Salon of the Hotel El Panama. ed after her accession and be- fore her coronation. Victoria had a feminine des- ire to know how she would look in her full regalia of the coronation, so on May, 15 at the Queen's suggestion, Blanch Sully sat on the throne wear- ing the glittering crown with its hundreds of diamonds, com- bined with two rows of pearls, the regalia, the robes and the glittering orders. The great pear-shaped diamond earrings had to be fastened over the tops of her ears with wire since Sul- ly would not permit her to have her ears pierced like the Queen's. Sully himself described what happened after this: "The Queen sent to ask leave to visit us on condition that she would not Interrupt busi- ness but, of course, on her entrance Blanch paid her res- pects. The Queen was very af- fable, asked many questions and then observing, 'I am Inter- rupting business,' curtsied and left the room." Sully's portrait of the* Queen is in Gallery C. 38 of the Metro- politan Museum. Sully later made other studies from the original and these were bought by the St. George's Society, Philadelphia, the St. Andrew's Society in Charleston, S. C, and the Wallace Collection in Lon- don. Wh. Wilton JL YU Box 195, Qal** DoLplio*., Return 378 CAPTAIN AND MR8. WARE ENTERTAIN WITH COCKTAIL PARTY Captain R. L. Ware, the Executive Officer of the Coco Solo Naval Hospital, and Mrs. Ware entertained Friday eve- ning with a cocktail party at their home on the Hospital Grounds. Sixty friends called during the evening.. Mrs. Whitely Visiting Parents Mrs. John T. Whitely arrived last night by plane from New York, for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T- J. BuWer, Sr., of the Hotel Washington. Mrs. Whitely will remain with her parents until the 16th when she will leave for Santiago, Chile, to Join her husband. They will fly to Rio de Janeiro and return from there to New York. Even Home For Old Hard To Get Into ALBANY, N. Y. (UP) A New York State legislative com- mittee report says high costs, overcrowding and long waiting periods seriously hinder an el- derly person's chances of spend- ing his remaining years in a home for the aged. The committee proposes state aid to solve the problem. The report of the group, head- ed by Senator Thomas C. Des- mond, said the money would be used to build old-age homes and allied facilities They would In- clude Infirmaries, boarding and nursing homes and cottages and apartments for old folks. A survey of 56 such homes for the aged showed that most had long waiting lists and oldsters are shunted aside to await an opening. With a continued rise in living costs, they believe, so- cial security payments to retir- ed workers aren't adequate to meet all -costs once admitted. Continued rising expenses have hindered the owners of the homes. The solution, the committee believes, is to lend funds to non- profit institutions lor building purposes. Surprise Birthday Sapper Party Mr. Charles Cheek and his children, Kathle, Loretta and Douglas, surprised Mrs. Cheek with a barbecue supper party given at their home last evening on the occasion of her birthday anniversary. The guests who were present included: Mr. and Mrs. Fabian Pinto. Mr. and Mrs. C. Osmond Kelly. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Whltlock and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Larrlson. Travel Movies at Gatun Union Church The Gatun residents will have an opportunity to see the movies taken along the Pan-American Highway by Messrs Walter Reeves. M. K. Bailey and Luke Palumbo during their trip this summer. The movies will be shown tomorrow at 7:00 p.m. at the Gatun Union Church for the benefit of the Grace Group of the Woman's Auxiliary. A silver offering will be taken^ at the door. . Departures Mrs. Howard Munro sailed Fri- day to join Mr. Munro In Wash- ington, DC. She will also visit her mother In New Jersey and have an opportunity to see her son and daughter who are at school In the East. ed Into the organization. They were: Lt. M. E. Tomlln, U.S.N., Lieutenant (Jg) J. D. Hereford, U.S.N. and Ensign R. J. Dan- lelson, U.S.N.R. The group had the pleasure of having as their guest Major Vic- tor Blalr, of Corozal, who Is a member of the Advisory Commit- tee of 33 of the organization, which has Its headquarters in Washington. D.C. The speaker for the evening was Mr. Leslelgh Davis, who talk- ed on his appointment to Manila in 1939 and of the seven years which he spent there before the war and of the three years when he and his family were the "guests of the Japanese." the 764th AAA Battalion afrfort Davis. f Lions Chib g Plans Benefit Dance Tffe Colon Lions Club is plan ning a dance for the benefit of their Christmas charities to take place November 1 at the Monaco 'Garden from 8:00 to 4:00 a.m. Music will to furnished by the La Magnifica orchestra. Tickets will be a dollar for gentlemen. There will be prizes. Card Party at Fort Sherman The Fort Sherman Women's Club sponsored a card party at the Officers Club recently. Pino- chle, bridge and canasta were played. Prizes for the high scores went to Lt. James Doran at pinochle; Mrs. Charles Gunnerson for {bridge and Mrs. William Healy Hard Times Party Planned A Hard Times Party has been planned at the Atlantic Brazos Brook Saddle Club for the even- ing of October 18, Saturday. Guests for the occasion will be the members of the Joy Group of the Women's Auxiliary of the Gatun Church and their hus- bands. The hostesses for the oc- casion will be the members of the Grace Group, their husbands will also be guests. All are invited" to be present at 7:30 p.m. for canasta. Coral Chapter Meeting The regular stated meeting of Coral Chapter No. 3. O.K.8., will be held Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Gatun Masonic Temple. Mrs. Clifford Maduro of Colon, with her brother and slster-ln- law, Mr. and Mrs. Osmond Ma- duro of Panama city, sailed Fri- day for a visit In New York City. Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Greene were overnight guests at the Ho- tel Washington before their de- parture Friday to make their home In Hendersonvllle, N.C. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Small. Jr.. and infant son. Harold, 3rd. of Fort Davis sailed on the "Gib- bons" for a visit with his par- ents. Colonel and Mrs. H. E. Small at Hudson, New Hamp- shire. Duplicate Bridge Games Duplicate Bridge is played etf- ery Monday evening at the Mar- garita Clubhouse.. All Interested players on the Gold Coast are cordially invited to attend. The winners of last week's pames were: Julius Loeb and W. E. Gibson, 2nd, Major J. B. Humphrey and Mrs. Humphrey; 3rd, Sidney Passailague and Geo. Geiger. East and west, Mrs. Por- ter McHan and Mrs. Russell Weade, 2nd, Mrs. Dudley Shine and Mrs. Bernard Slmms; 3rd. Mrs. Roy Nellsen and Mrs. Gary McKay. Birth Announcement Lt. and Mrs. Rafael Petlton, of Fort Davis, announce the birth of their first child a son, at the Coco Solo Naval Hospital. Mon- day, October 6. Lt. Petlton is stationed with K. of C. to Plan Columbus Day Activities The regular meeting of the Knights of Columbus Council will be held Tuesday, at Margarita, at 7:30 p.m. This is an Important meeting as plans for the Children's party, the Columbus Day activities and tie election of the Columbus Club officers will be on the agenda. for brighter whites'-a ffttfa ROBI.4 BLUE In the final rlnm OCTOBER SPECIAL FINEST QUALITY JAPANESE CHINA DINNERSEIS 93 pcs. SERVICE FOR TWELVE Only $49.50 Nationally Advertised And REPLACEABLE IN THE U. S. A. The French Bazaar JUAN PALOMERAS COLON I dreamed of a bra with firm support... maiaenfms Chansonette... - '"*., **/>*/, *<*> **,"* Circular stitching rounds those precious curves of yours... poked center cup design gives wonderful accentustion. If you .want s really firm lift, Chanson- ette* is for you! In your favorite fabrics. Genuine Maidenform Brassi- eres are msde only in the United States of America. There s mtidet/om for every type of figure. Mrs. Clarence Brown and chil- dren, Brian. Carole Ann and Donald, sailed for New York. They will spend several months with Mrs. Brown's mother in Pittsburgh, Pa. . Mr. Lyman Benthall left Sat- urday for New York, en route to Ryan. Oklahoma. With his daughter, Mrs. A. L. Seay. She will meet Mrs. Benthall who is flying up to Tampa, Florida, next week. The trio will visit relatives to Kentucky and Indiana, before returning to Ryan. Mr. and Mrs. Benthall will spend the holiday seasons with tfvlr son-in-law and daughter on their ranch. AAINTON THE NAME AT ONCE SUCCESTS EVERYTHING THAT IS MOST - CHARMING IN CHINA WARE. THERE IS NONE MORE HONORED IN THE HISTORY OF THE CERAMIC ARTS. Sojonrners Hear Mr. Davis The Caribbean Chapter of the National Sojourners met for din- ner and their monthly meeting at the Bolivar Ave. U.S.O. Thurs- day evening. During thfl business meeting three new members were induct- 6old Below U.S. Prices. ibxcellent selection now available DUTYlba1 tqsmJ afa/fclkh jmvnurt HunpQWsli jr'^.f M M new YORK, Oct. ll _ The sculptor Herman Wald, whose first American exhibition Is at the New Gallery, is a Hun- garian who comes from South Africa via Vienna, Paris and London. The different peoples and places with which he came in contact during his extensive wanderings influenced his ar- tistic thinking as well as his human interests. Whether he chooses Biblical subjects such as "The Sacrifice of Isaac," scenes from everyday life like the "Corn Grinder" or general human attitudes like "The Parting," subject matter remains with him a major im- portance. He tackles a subject with a robust romanticism akin In spirit to the work of the English master, Jacob Epstein. One concludes from his por- trait of the world-famous vio- linist, Jehudl Menuhin, that portraiture seems to be Wald's greatest strength. "African Sculpture Speaks" by Ladlalas Segy is an extensive, richly illustrated book about 'he fear-beset art of a primitive peo- ple (Wynn). These protagonists of a dark and horrible magic age have, however, a more than anthropological interest for us. The fact is that they have ex- erted a deep and lasting in- fluence on some of the most] of our century. This influence | probably can beat least par- tially explained by the fact that, with all its wonderful re- finements, ours too is an "age of anxiety." The study of this strange and terrible world might thus give us some cues to oar own art and, through lt, to ourselves. Paul Moesanyt. RCA Victor Model 4QV8C Radio-Phonograph - With MICRO-TUNING I 25 or 60 Cycle hours of fine music with grut Mists -PLAYED AUTOMATICALLY Phonograph f 1 plays both 78 rpm and 33H rps records. Phonograph #2 is the marvelous RCA Victor *5, 'H system. only RCA VICTOR brings you ALL these features: '0. All nine world-wide bands are now pre- cision-calibrated. Eight dynamic RCA tubes, permea b i 111 y tuning. Automatic Volume Control maintains even volume at all times. . All parts selected for durability undeihumidity and climate extremes; ceramic phonograph pickups are imperious to wear and weather! * EXTREMELY GENEROUS CREDIT TERMS PANAMA RADIO CORPORATION 29 Central Ave. Telephonaa: 2-2364 2-2566 *< ' PAGE FOUR THE SUNDAY AMERICAN SUNDAY, OCTOBER II, 185t ijjecorate eJLittie Ljiris Kg ^ror L^owiforl, -^racticalitu oom 1 - omens World fabrics, ZJrim fflake C.xcitina f/ewi Cjwi/e ~Araa Ljiamor ^/n View ^Unouettea Irooin beautyfrothy enough for any little gIrlch be com- etely washable If you choose such fabrica aa (lazed chinti for i tad bedspread, and quilted plastic for the dressing table leave). Use a soapy sponge to keep these decorative fabrics ately clean (insert). Ji you have a little girl about six years old, better prepare yourself for a sudden change from nursery habits to Ideas be- fitting: her young-lady status. One of the first requests will probably revolve around her bedroom. This is the time in most youngster's lives when1 they crave feminine fuss and furbelow. Of course, the fact you must face is that these del- icate, furnishings will make no difference in her yen to bounce; and climb as well as play with I thugs that splatter and splash. Btrt don't despair. A little SfTi room doesn't have to be' agile Just because it looks thtt way. With the furnishings and materials available today,' you can have easy-to-keep pret- j tine's and durability in every ruffle. The best gauge of practicality Is washablllty. If every inch of the youngster's room can be tub- bed, sponged or s u d s e d. It's' bound to be as suited to t h e | tomboy In her nature as to the suear and spice. rJhere are a variety of ways tsjyhleve hard-wearing fancl- One of the best is glazed Ml chintz. Curtains in a i pattern, with match- lust ruffle for the bed, and rerlet In plain, white, quilt- glazed cotton will give the Miter's room a "marshmal- I look she will love. But even more Important t you, spots and splatters can b 'removed from such material with soapsuds and a soft spong- Just squeeze the sponge throur the suds and smooth it flrml over the spots. Rinse with Or sponge wrung out In clear warm water. When a complete laundry job is necessary', any of these items can be put in the washing ma- chine. Ironing is easy because its done on the right side to revive the surface of the glazed finish. If you would like to contrib- ute a dressing. table to the lit- tle lady's room just the right height and size It can be done inexpensively and prac- tically. 81rrfply place a sheet of plate glass across two quilted plastic shoe chests.' A small stool, skirted in ruffled plastic, topped by a puffy, plastic cush- ion, will complete the effect. Lamps, lamp shades and win- dow shades are also available In a variety of finishes that will take eagerly to soap and water A floor In scrubbable rubber tile or llncleum is another vital asset. Careful planning will keep everybody In the family happy, and will be a step forward in introducing your young daugh- ter to the wonders of growing up. I On hand for fall and winter are these new gloves, keyed to ready-to-wear futalont. Striped love (upper left) arc brand new. are pare wool, cone In many olor combinations. Lattice treatment Is used (lower left) for four-button double- oven rot ton gloves. Both new and unusual (center) Is this glace leather sbortle mottled with color Shown here I the pale yellow against black. Melon treatment appears (upper right) on white, ilx-button gloves In hand-sewn cotton. A new fashion angle Is pro- vided (right center) in these blonde cotton gloves with oblique line and single, covered button. Nylon Is osed for elbow-length gloves (lower right) with doeskin-like, plush finish. Straight and narrow, they are sleekly contoured to the NEW YORK (NEA) The well-gloved hand for fall and winter is sleek and slender, dip- ped in glowing color, thrust In- to nylon or wool or double-wov- en cotton. Both the shortie and the long- er glove appear in silhouettes that are contoured closely to the hand, often have oblique cuff treatments to relieve star); simplicity, are always graceful and minus bulk. In the new collection design- ed by Roger Fare for Wear- Right, the emphasis Is on side treatments. Lattice motifs, deml- cuf fs, apple-s h a p e d melon treatments are a few. Partly- open side seams detailed with shirring, French coins or but- toned tabs are new looking. For both daytime and eve- ning wear, soutache braidings provide luxurious touches. Braidings are used In triangu- lar shapes, bracelet motifs r.nd modified cuff treatment*. Woolen gloves spring a num- ber of surprises. One high fash- ion glove in wool has the look of pebble-like boucle, a new ef- fect in both depth and texture. Woolen gloves are on hand In stripes, checks and herringbone mixtures, a far cry indeed from the mittens on a string that we used to wear to school. Llama wools In many lengths return for fall and winter do the string shorties handmade wool strings that combine warmth with smart appearance. Even the wool-lined leather glove has taken on new life. This year, many of the glace and suede gloves are hand sewn, have sldewalls and fourchettes filled m with soft wool,In con- trasting colors. Color flows through the new glove collections, turning In shifting emphasis from sapphire to teal, from topaz to rose wine, from bright red to a dark, bril- liant green. 'and coiion Cologne oLend ffJcaulij ^4 St J^exnh ~rtl ^rJont Iraihioni cLefoure Wear jfa Ualh \Jf ZJhe ZJc )u/n i There much conversation those days about the new at-home fashions. Here, wo see a two-piece black leotard (left) Is a completely ekwUclsei cotton knJL It has slip-over turtle neck top and long, shinty sleevee. Ankle-length pants simply poll on. Frosty pink felt Is clipped into circular apron that flairs from the waist and ends above the knee. Flannel tamper pajamas (right) are for lounging or sleeping. Fire-engine red shirt with checked collar has bib front, long sleeves, is worn with red flannel turi with adjustable waistband. Both are Harry Berger designs.By Galle Dugas, NEA Woman's Editor. Ruth Mil left Says: Writes a working girl who ad- mits she has been having an affair with a married man for several years: "He has kept me dangling long enough. I am getting a lit- tle tired of keeping him in a good mood by always building up his ego." Unless you want him to drop you completely Instead of "keeping you dangling" you'd better not get fed up with his ego. Why else do you think he's placing around? The married man who seeks out another woman to tell rug troubles to on the grounds that his wife doesn't understand him 1/n't looking for love or even for a permanent love affair. He's a aada ack and a sorry lot who has tp have some woman telling him how wonderful he Isbecause he really knows he Isn t. telling him he is wonderful or hen he starts' taking her so much for granted that her com- pliments no longer have the power to Inflate his ego he starts looking around for another woman. And his Interest In that other woman lasts just so long as she can keep him thinking he u quite a guy. Let her get critical of him, or demanding. Let he*r begin to think of herself and what ahe is getting out of a shady affair. Let her start flnd- Jni ws with him Instead of building him up. Let her do any or all of theseand hell quit her. 80 you'd hotter not decide you are fed uD with feeding this Don Juan's ego, unless vou have enough self-respect to see them for what he Is, to see your- self for what you are, and to admit that the man you think you have taken away from an- other woman actually isn't capable of loving anyone but himself. If you can face at] that, then you can stop the flattery and 'f1,,0*11. * "J0"* certain that will put an end to the affair. HELPFUU.INJS To amuse a youngster who may be sick In bed, provide a bowl of soap bubbles and a wooden pipe. They ant harmless and wont stain. If you are upholstering a chair at home, choose foam rub- ber for the seat portion. It Is wonderfully comfortable and easy to keep clean. Never place any rubber gar- ments In the sun to dry. Accent seam lines and coat dress closures with band Inc. binding, cording or piping In contrasting color or contrast- ing fabric. Dark pans absorb more beat than light, shiny one*, and ac- cordingly could cause over- browned foods. To remove a paint or varnish tain, work on It while it u still fresh. Soften with turpentine, lard or. ail. Then wash la warm soapy water. Here's a brand new lotion cologne that will smooth year Skin to beauty as It adds a de- lightful touch of fragrance. One of the newest and most exciting Innovations In frag- rance is a lotion cologne that softens and soothes your skin as it adds a cooling, delightful touch of perfume. Handsomely packaged, the preparation is available In three famous perfume scents, a.id you will discover the fragrance will cling to your skin hours af- ter most colognes or toilet wa- ters would have evaporated In- to nothingness. Another feature of this lo- tion Is that It dries Instantly to satin smoothness, and though It softens and perfumes your skin, It doesn't leave even the faintest trace of olllness or film. You can use It u a body lo- tion after the bath; carry It In your purse for touch-ups; keep it in your desk for through-the- day usage place it near the kitchen sink for after-the-dlsh- es application. What a delightful way to keep your hands looking smooth and lovely as well as frag- rant. It will eliminate that prob- lem of hand-lotion, scent ver- sus your favorita perfume. Consider this lotion cologne an Important part of your frag- rance wardrobe. la other words, use It In conjunction with your regular perfume and stick co- logne for complete, day-long beauty. Paper Plates Are Wife Savers SUP PAPES PLATES esto candled apple sticks to save' year '.....' akhtaf and anything they may toncb front smears. BY GAYNOB MADDOX NEA Pood and Markets Editor We use a lot of those new paper plates. They cut down dish-washing, give my wife more time make everyone happier. Good looking, some of them with plastic surfaces for serving hot foods on, they save about 14 12 hours a week o f work. , For a career woman they would save about 7 1|* dish- washing hours a week. Now you can Understand. Our husky boy likes candied apples on a stick. His mother makes them for him and serves them on a paper plate. He slips the plate up the apple stick. Lbts of fun but no extra dish- washing or sticky clothes. Candled Apples-On-a-Stick- (Makes 0 apples) Six medium-sized apples, 6 wooden skewers, 2 cups, sugar 1|S cup light corn syrup, 314 cup lemon Juice. Wash and dry apples Insert skewer in stem end of each ap- ple. In a saucepan, combine sugar, corn, syrup, water and lemon Juice. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly until mixture begins to boll. Contin- ue cooking without stirring un- til mixture reaches hard crack stage (300 degrees F.i. While syrup Is .cooking, oc- casionally wipe sugar crystals from sides of saucepan with fork wrapped In clean, damp cloth. ^Holding apple by skewer, dip it quickly Into hot syrup, covering entirely. Remove and twist to spread syrup evenly. Place upright In rack or on buttered baking sheet to cool. THE LONELY HEART Loneliness, my many lonely nights, u are not here to haunt me anymore, for even I have learned the happiness of having something to live fort To. you, lonely heart, who life drags and twists in its Whirl wind, rudderless soul, soul lost in th darkness', my close- com panlon, you are the faithful reflection of my loneliness and restlessness. Like you I have believed that Ufe has no object, you I can speak with complete frankness, because you can un-1 derstand me for you know the suffering that loneliness can bring and how the hours can seem like days. It Is for you that I write this, with the secret wish that my poor words may echo in your soul to let you know that we were so very wrong, that there Is so much to live for I Do not be afraid, it is I who speaks to vou. You do not know me? I un- derstand. It seems impossible that I could speak to you this way. I, who Just yesterday believed just like you still do that the best one could v.lah for Is that the days of his existence be shortened, is saving that life Is beautiful! I seeyou do not believe meI am not in my right mind. Ah! If you only knew! If .only I could change my soul with yours to make you enjoy a part of this exquisite happiness of mine! Unbelieving soul! Listen! Like what It once did to me, self- ishness has bunded you, you pass your hours and your days washed in tears and wrapped In self-pity over things that are really not worth the while. The thing to do Is to cast off ths blindfold. See yourself as you actually are. The rest is quite easy. You and I nave always believed that It was useless to hope that that "something to live for" could enter our lives. But it it I who tells you that that "something" does exist. That "something" is in life Itself, In the very fact that you live, that you see, that you hear, In the sun. In the moon, in the stars, even In the darkness of night, In a friendship, in love. You do not understand? See here, do not deceive yourself, you just do net want to understand me. The whole thing consists In havlrut faith in something and that "something" makes our faith. Bind a noble and generous heart, positive and firm In Its beliefs. That could never exist? Come. come. You begin to doubt again. I say you should have faith In something. Have faith In me now, do not believe I am lying when I sav that there do exist noble souls, souls whose upright principles resist the misfortunes of Ufe with courage, souls so firm that not even the great temptations of life can make them stray from the right path they have trodden. I can now say that vou believe my words because at one time I also was ignorant of all this but now I know. I think it has been worth the while that I have lived to see this moment that I am fully convinced that I have been able to evaluate life for what it Is really worth, when I can fearlessly say that there Is so much beauty and good around us. And now I beg of you, I Implore you. Say like I do: "Uh- happlness! Oet thee far from me, you are an unwelcome guest in my soul." received. Such a wide variety of styles and colors.. .Most of all I was thrilled with the lovely Cdro costume Jewelry and the artifi- cial flowers. They're simply gor- geous! A OUT for the baby, a lovely gift that will last forever; I'm sure you'U love this set that the French Basa a r has just re- ceived: t large size botase and 9 small sise bottles with nipples; special scissors; cold and hot water pads and nos* syringes. ITS HO gECRET the lovely 1 dresses that La Reins had ^m f M ECHANICAL TOYS thru Club SystemThat's what CASA SPORT U offering to their cus- tomers: it's such a practical way to buy your toys for Christmas OFFICE SUPPLIES?...Then it Is Office Service, ths store that will supply all youi needs and besides It Is the house of the Royal Typewriter. Remem- ber: for office supplies there's nothing like Office Service. / TODAY, OCTOBER It, 1M. THE SUNDAY AMERICAN PAGE FIVE Radio Programs - Your Community Radio i'r lion HOG-840 Where 100,000 People Meet Presents Sanaa?, Oct. II 8:80Sign Ort |4utcal inter- lude 1:15Radio Varieties, U.S.A. 1:30Hymns of all Churches 100BIBLE AUDITORIUM OF THE AIR 8:16-Good Neighbor Tim 1:10London Studio Mloc,les V0:00-.Mulc in the Tempo of MM 10:J0Meet the Band 11:00 NATIONAL LOTTERY 11:15Sacred Heart Program 11:80Music for Sunday A IS- 00American Round table (VOA) FJNL H: 10Salt Lake Tabernacle Choir 100Jo Stafford Show (VOA) 1:16OIO Program 1:30The Very Rev. Albert Steer S: 00Opera and Symp n o n y Hour 4: SOWhat's Your Favorite :00OueitSUr :15Light for Living 4:10The Orea teat Story Ever Told 7:00Musical Notebook (VOA) 7:10Thru the Sport Glass 7:45Lean Back and Listen 0:00BBC Play home . 0:00BBC Concert Hall 10:00Dance Music 10;80Time for Muilc (BBC) 11:00Sign Off Monday, Oct. 11 A.M. 0:00Sign On The Alarm Clock Club 7:30Morning Salon 1:15Morning Varieties 0:30 Musical Reveille 0:00News 0:15Come and Get It 0:30As I See It 10-00News 10:05Off the Record 11:00News 11:05Off the Record (contd) 11:30Meet the Band lajOO-ews 13:05Luncheon Music 12:30POflujar Music 1:00News , 1:15Personality Parade 1:45Promenade Concert 2:00Milt Herth Trio 2:15It's Time to Dance 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Battle of the Bands 1:00All Star Concert Hall 1:15The Little Show 1:10Music for Monday 4:00Music Without Words 4:15Singers on Parade 4: SOWhat's Your Favorite 0:10New 1:11What's Your Favorita contd) 1:00FADS AND FASHIONS 0/15Singers on Parade 0:10Firestone Hour 0:4lLowell Thomas T:0CTake It from Here (BBC) 7:10BLUE RIBBON SPORTS REVIEW 7:45Here Comes Louis Jordan 1:00Evening Salon 1:45U.P. Commentary 0:00Oliver Twist (BBC) 0:10Playhouse of Favorites 10:00The World at Your Wv dow (BBC) 11:00The Owl's Nest 11:00Sign Off Taea4ay, Oct. 14 - I: -Sign On The Alarm Clock Club 7:10Morning Salon 0:10Morning Varieties 0:10Music Makers 0:45Hawaiian Harmonies 0:00Ntwa __ : 16Sacred Heart Program 0:30 As I See It 18:00News 10:05Off the Record 11:00News 11:05Off the Record (contd) 11:30Meet the Band 12.00New NkV 11:06Luncheon Music 11:30Popular Music 1:00News 1:15Personality Parade 1:45Rhythm and Reason 1:00A Call from Les Paul 2 15A Date for Dancing 1:10Spirit of the Vikings (RNS) 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00All Star Concert Hall 1:15The Little Show 3:10Music for Tuesday 4:00Sunnv Days 4:15South of the Border 4:30 What's Your Favorite - 5:30News 5:15What's Your Favorite (contd i 0:00FADS AND FASHIONS 0:10Hawaii Calls 0:46Lowell Thomas ':60Ray's a Laugh BBC) T: 10BLUE RIBBON SPORT? REVIEW 7:46American Legion Auxiliary 0:00Perry Cosno Show (VOA) 018Fred Waring and his Pennaylvanians ISOFrankle Masters Enter- tains i:46U.P. Commentary : 00Rhythm Rangers 0:10Piano Playhouse (VOA) 10:00 Dance Music 10:16Musical Interlude 11 10Variety Bandbox (BBC) 11:00The Owl's Nest 12:00Sign Off Wednesday, Oct. 15 A* fl:(M-8gn On The Alarm . Clock Club 7:30Morning Salon 6:16Morning Varieties 8:30Musical Reveille 8:00News 9:15Come and Get It 0:30As I See It 10:00News 10:05Off the Record 11:00News ll:05^-Off the Record (contd) 11:30 Meet the Band 12:00News PJH. 12:05Luncheon Muele 12:30Popular Music 1:00News 1:15Personality Parade 1:45Jack Smith Variety Show (VOA) 2:00Three Quarter Time 2:15It's Time to Dance 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00All Star Concert Hall 3:15The Little Show 3:30Music for Wednesday 4:00Music Without Words 4:15Sepia Parade 4:30What's Your Favorite 5:30News 5:35What's Your Favorite (contd) 8:00FADS AND FASHIONS 6:30Ricky's Record Shop 6:46Lowell Thomas 7:00Over-to You (BBC) 7:30-^BLUE. RIBBON SPORTS REVIEW 7:45Frerich in the Air (RDF) 8:00Vening Salon 8:45UP. Commentary 9:00The Small.House at Al- llngton (BBC) , 9:30 The Haunting: Hour 10 00THEATER GUILD ON THE AIR (VOA) 11:00The Owl's Nest 12:00-Slgn Off Thursday, Oct. 16 AM. 6:00Sign On The Alarm Clock Club' 7:30Morning Salon .8:15Morning VarJines . 8:30Music Makers 8:45Jerry Sears Preserita 8-00News 0:15Sacred Heart Program 0:30As I See It 10:00News 10 05Off the Record 11:00News ' 11:05Off the Record (contd) 11:30Meet the Band 12:00News TM. 12:05Luncheon Music 12:30Popular Music 1:00News 1:15Personality Parade 1:45Excursions in Science 2:00A Call from Les Paul 2:15A Date for Dancing 2:30Afternoon Melodies . 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00American Debut 3:15The Little Show 3:30Music for Thursday 4:00Great Artists 4:15Bob Eberly 4:30What's Your Favorite 5:30News 5:35What's Your Favorite (contd 6:00FADS AND FASHIONS (Faith Foster) 8:30Ricky's Record Shop 8:45Lowell Thomas 7:00Make Believe Bal 1 r o o m (VOA) 7:30BLUE RIBBON SPORTS REVIEW 7:45Jan< Session 8:00Halls of Ivy (VOA) 8:30Gay 90's 8:45U.P. Commentary 9:00 Unusual Tales (BBC) 9:30Opera Concert (VOA) 10:00Dance Music 10:16Musical Interlude 10:30Moonlight Mood 11:00The Owl's Nest 12:00-rSlgn Off A.M. Friday, Oct. 17 . The * Answer to Pravlout Puxzle F Alarm 6:00Sign On Clock Club 7:30Request Salon 8:15Morning Varieties 8:30Musical Reveille 9:00News 9:15Come and Get It 9:30As I See It 10:00News 10:05Off the Record 11:00New 11:05Off the Record (contd) 11:30Meet the Band 12:00News P.M. 12:05Luncheon Music 12:30Popular Music 1:00New 1:15Personality Parade 1:45 Promenade Concert 2:00American Journal (VOA) 2:15Song of France (RDF) 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:00The Old Chsholm Trail HORIZONTAL 1 Aetna Lupin 4r Hayward 0 Actor-----1 O'Brien 12 Rodent 13 Custom 14 High note of Guldo'i Kale 13 Bury 17 Short beards 10 Piquant appetizers 21 Cramps 22 Nostrils 24 Born 25 I m Hated 27 Delayed 31 Yugoslavian city 12 Pet 31 Artificial language 34 North Carolina (ab.) 15 African badgers 36 Decay 37 Relief, 39 Cape ' 40 Light knock . 41 Weird 43 Creature 46 Actor-singer ------Day 40 Imposing home 51 City in India 52 Choose 53 Fumble 55 Work uait 5 Legal matters 37 Inborn 50 Fish eggs VERTICAL 1 Part of organ of sight 2 Actor----- Andrews f 1 Puts into harmony 4 Safer 5 Pronoun Droop 7 Eager I Closeness 9 Eye (coll.) 10 Toward the sheltered side 11 Russian news agency 16 Habitat form 18 Rows , 20 Staid 23 Calm ' 25 Actress Baxter & 1 m N carjLiracj rjucjaajna Department Store Auto Speed Does Errors Surveyed Not Keep Pace CHICAGO (UP> A Univer- With Power slty of Illinois survey shows Marines Roll Out} -, Carpet For Jets \ TOLEDO, O. (UP i The U.8. Marine Corps is rolling oat "Bit 1" r*4 1 n o T a| Is T m v,| plant 26 Type size 28 Matted fur together 29 Greek love god 30 Specks 32 Political drive 45 Girl's name 35 Paper 47 Nested boxes measures 48 Herb 36 Come in again SO Negative worq 38 Restricts 54 Parent that the failure oi department DEROIT (UP) Automobile carpet for its let fighteri stores to exploit their sales engines are getting more pow- Tne Jets ^^ in a loVoT.air, advantages lias helped cnain ful with each new model. eVen when they're just Idling stores and mall order firms cut put mat aoesn t necessarl- on tne ground, and if they don't into their business. mean that modern cars have nave concrete runway, t' The consumers In areas serv- ragner top speeds. is ttlil of wt ^j gofs ln ed by five midwestern depart- The Automobile Manufac- intakes and wears on the ment stores were questioned facturers Association r epor ts ing parta, about recent purchases, why that since 1935 there has been Conventional,, steel they shopped where they did, no substantial speed increase, used at forward fields ana on their criticism of the In the last 10 years, the top help, because It is full os store being surveyed. speed of cars has gone up only So the Marines decided' The survey found that depart- three per cent. a carpet under the mat However, horsepower has ris- keep the dust down. 39 Actress----- Mae McKJnney 42 Throw back 43 Love (Latin) 44Back of neck ment store merchants were fall-' 3:15The Little Show 3:80Music For Friday 4:00Music Without Words 4:15Casa Loma Time 4:30What's Your Favorite 5:30News 5:35What's Your Favorite (Cont'd) 6:00FADS AND FASHIONS 6:30Phllco Rendezvous 6:45Lowell Thomas 7:00Come Into the Parlor (BBC) 7:30BLUE RIBBON SPORTS REVIEW SOUTH 7:45Here Comes Louis Jordan yvho said 8:00Request Salon 8:49UP.' Commentary 9.00-Storv .S.A. (VOA) 9:3fc-London studio concerts (BBC) 10:00Cavalcade of America (VOA) 10:30Adventures of P.C. 49 11:00The Owl's Nest 1:00 a.m. Sign Off ing to exploit one of t h e 1 r en 21 per cent on the average. Textileather Corp. he best sales argumentsthe con-The AMA also says that accel- making the special cq venience of purchasing ielated erating ability has climbed 16 for the Marines to land pn* It merchandise ln one place. OnPer cent since 1935. while fuel is proof against the eheJaJKais the average, only one out of consumption has decreased an and fuels used ln Jets, resists five customers bought any twoaverage 14.6. rot and is flame restataslt. store. Although 50 per cent of the customers had charge accounts, only 15 per cent used them regularly. Parking facilities appeared to be a major complaint, with "slow service" also mentioned [frequently. "Poor salesman- ship" and "high prices" also were frequent criticisms. But the stores appeared to have the reputation among cus- tomers of being "quality" esb- lishments, known for their fair dealing. A.M. Saturday, Oct. II 6:00Alarm Clock Club 7:30Jazi Salon , 8:19Strictly Instrumental 8:30v-BBC Feature 9:00News 9:I5-^Wpmen's World 9:34t4UI See It 10:0fv-ew 10:05Off The Record 11:00Hew 11:06Off the Record (Contd) 11:30Meet.the Band 12:00News TM., 12:05New Tune Time 12:30The Football Prophet 1:00News 1:19Personality Parade 1:45David Rose Show - 2:00VOA Stamp Club 8:10 Dance Music 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Battle of the Band 3:00Band of America 3:15The Little Show 3:30McCleans Program r 3:45Musical Interlude 4:00Music For Saturday 4:30What's Your Favorite 5:30News 5:35What's Your Favorite (Contd) 6:00On Stage America 6:30The Railroad Hour 7:00Paris Star Time (RDF) 7:30-BLUE RIBBON SPORTS REVIEW 7:45Jam Session (VOA) Maine Twins Defy Sail-Holding Gland Shorter Life Theory May Affect Heart INDHAM, Me. (UP) j STANFORD, Calif. (UP) twins don't live as:A small gland located above the long as persons born alone? (kidneys may be an important Twin brothers Mace F. and factor ln heart failure. SreXSrA Augustine Hawkes, 84. All four, b'lleve thto gland, called the still do some farming or gar- adrenal cortex, may play a slgr denlng. nlficant role In retaining exces- alum-s've amounts of salt In heart " If research they Clicking Train Wheels Headed For Oblivion CHICAGO (UP) The cllck- jlty-clack of railraod wheels may share the fate of the funnel smokestack, according to offi- cials of the Chicago Si Eastern Illinois Railroad. The road has laid two and a half miles of all-welded track south of the city limits, and not a click or a clack can be heard as trains pass over the stretch. I. A. Moore, chief engineer, said tests show the new rail is safer, smoother, longer-lasting and cheaper to maintain. The regular. 37-foot rail lengths were butt-welded into 1,200-foot strips at the road's Danville. 111., shoos. These strips were taken to the site of the -<-'AeaHIHBBBBHSBBHHBs1BBsSMaaBHBBsBB THROUGH THE YEARS FOR IKE-Four generations of Eiserff "- hauers appeared at GOP women's headquarters in Chicas sign up as "Volunteers for Eisenhower." Lett to right, they pr Mrs. Waller O. Eisenhauer, 84, the great-grandmother: Mr Dorothy Dunn, her granddaughter; Mrs. Charlotte Norell, hi daughter, and lwo-and-a-hiilf-year-old Laurie Ann Dunn, In great-granddaughter. the are now. undertaking proves this,new trackage* on of modi- ssws the aWr-iSiSE. srafcfc" that once received a barrel of I The rMearch will "beef" containing a horses leg:by Dr. j0hn A. Luetscher, Jr., with the iron shoe still on the associate professor of medicine, hoof. 'under grants totalling $17,000. . Gene Hawkes Is 15 minutes Patients suffering from kid-1 younger than Gus and dldntney dlsease wjth edema (swell- marry until six year after Gus.lng of tissues due to accumula- Aslde from typhoid fever in Uon of nuld, also retaln abnor. their boyhood, neither has been|mai quantities of salt, seriously ill. "He didn't leave me any me- In related studies by Dr. Luet- diclne," said Gene after a doc-jscher, some of these kidney pa- tor checked him recently. j tienta have shown great im- The Willises live on adjoin-1provement after treatment with lng farms. Beside their field j the hormones cortisone and work, they also raise beef cat- ACTH, which modified the salt- tle and train oxen for lumber retaining activity. Similar re- operations. Mace has been deaf suits may be possible with i for a long time. Morse, who has heart disease, Dr. Luetscher be- operated a sawmill for 50 years! lleves. In addition to a real estate and! tandem. They were laid on the cross ties and spot welded Into one e directed contlnuous stretcn * two and a half miles. bullding-movlng business, says he's too busy to think about re- tiring. Drive On To Make Dad Smell Nice ST. LOUI8, Mo. (UPI If cosmetics manufacturers have their way. Dad will smell like a pine forest after next Christ- mas. The -firms exhibited a wide as- sortment of men's toiletries in a holiday gift preview here. Some innovations included a two-way shave stick with after- 8:00 Masterworks from Prance shave on one end and cologne (RDF) 8:30American Folk Mualc 8:45UP. Commentary g; ooThe HOG Hit Parade 8:30Your Hit Parade (VOA) 10:00 Dance Music 10:30Symp h o n y Hall USA (VOA) 11:00The Owl's Nest 1:00 a.m.Sign Off Explanation of Symbols RDF Radiodifusin Francalse RNSRoyal Norwegian Service VOAVoice of America BBCBritish Broadcasting Cor- poration PANAMA AMERICAN WANT AD$ aHOM NC0A CAN FILL YOUR SEEDS! on the other. There was a hand cream containing lanolin for those males who although they probably never would ad- mit it utfer from dishpan hands. Although one manufacturer's representative described sales of men's cologne as "booming," most exhibitors agreed that it's still an uphill battle to per- suade the average man thai it' nos sissifled to smell good. To help offset this general dread, the trade never tag on glamorous names to any of, Its products for men. Cologne Is known simply as "Cologne for Men." and a spray deodorant Is 'clearly marked. "For Men On- ly."_________________ Astronomer Doubts Planet Saucers BERKELEY, Calif. (UP) The chances that flying saucers come from another planet are small Indeed, according to Dr Otto Struve, University of Cali- fornia astronomy professor. He said that the other planet 'in our solar sysiem are not capable of supporting Intelli- gent forms of life. 1 If there are planet in other star systems on which there are intelligent forms of life, they probably would be 50,000 light years (300,000,000,000,000, miles) away. If there were telescopes or like equipment on such a pla- net which could pick up light waves from the earth, they would see the earth as It was 50,000 years ago ln the time of prehistoric Neanderthal man. Dr. Struve felt that Intelli- gent forms of life wouldn't be Sirticularly Interested ln eanderthal man certainly not Interested enough to take a trip that far just to Investigate. Fastest service/ CONSTSUMTlOh -YVPt CUPPBRS r**j Oi CUOUO0l NEW ZEALAND PRODUCT DISTRIBUTORS: CIA. CYRNOS, S. A. fbrvncA 7bc/a(/ LUijlers Chicken Noodle .-- Soup . QUICK10 minui* cooking tim< Always rich in chicken flavor it is made with real chick by Wyler's exclusive process Buy and try fhM olsoi Wyler's Real French Onmt Tyler's Chiche Rice Soup Wyler's Cream of Cbkhen Snip YOl'R STORE. "*GF. SIX THE SUNDAY AMERICAN SUNDAY, OCTOBER U, U51 H \ You Sell em...When You Tell em thru P.A. Classifieds! I eave vour Ad with one of our Agents or our Offices hi No. 57 ' "H" Street Panama No. 12,179 Central Ave. Colon Lewis Service Saln de Belleza Americano 4 Tivoli Ave.Phone 3-2291. and #55 West 12th Street Garitn Drug Store 10.059 Melei.dM Ave Phsne 266 Coln Murrison's Agencia Internacional de Publicaciones Propaganda, S.A. Fourth of Julv Ave.-Phone 2-0441 #3 Lottery Plaza Phone 2-31W "Kv^tSVnf'ww* ^ Minimum for 12 words. 3c. each additional word. s-OR SALE Household FOR SALE Coldspot refrigerator. 9 cubic feel, porcelain ">s'de and out. nerds repairs. $50.00; single bed Irome;. $5 00 each; 2 children's wall desks,_ So 00 each. tc,'-' Bel. c 3433. FCr? SA E:Twin mahogany beds, no springs or mattress. I quarts- master mattress and 'pring. 5611- A, Drable.___________ FOR SALE:Phrlco refrigerator with freeier locker. I dining table and four chair (quartermaster!, che 043 I -E. Frangipori St. FOR SALE Large Elizabeth Period. 9 piece oak dining sr-t, 3 piece livingrcom set, nwls rcupholster- ing. 9 It. porcelain Cold.pot re- tnq.Motor. console type. G. E redo and misc. household effects Tel. 2-4419. House 1546-A. Mongo St., Enlboo._______^__ MISCELLANEOUS Do you hove o drinking problemt Writ* Alcoholice Anonymous. Bol 2031 Ancn. C. Z. DR. WENDEHAKE. Medical Clinic. Estudiante street No. 140. Between "K" ond "J" Street. Phone 2- 3479, Panama. FOR SALE Automobile* SPECIAL EXCURSIONS! FROM PANAMA TO MEXICO one way $85. round trip $135 115 day-limit), $160, 'food one year); to LOS ANGELES, one way, $149 15. round trip $252.35, 90 doy limit! Panama Dispatch Service, opposite Ancon bus stop. Tel. Pan- amo 2-1655. FOR SALE:Until Tuesday. Leav- ing Isthmus, apartment furniture: sofa. 2 upholstered orm chairs, 2 small tables. Drop leaf toble. 4 choirs. Smoll wardrobe. Bed. com- pete. Vanity, chair, desk, 4 word- robes. Rocking choir. Standing ton. 2 stonding lambs. 3 iron tables Phillips radio. Can be se3n daily from 10 to 12 m. "F" Street corner of "G" La Florida Building Apt. 5. "El Congrejo," Ponamo. Service Persor.no! and Civilian Government Employe Insist on Government Employe Finance Co. When you finance your new or used cet. AGENCY PEHLINGER No. 43 Autemobile to Phone 3-4984 J-4935 FOR SALE:Used tire, possenger j commercial at Agencos Cosmos, on Automobile Row No. 29. tele- phone Panamo 2-4721. Bids will be received in the office of the Supply and Service Direc- tor, Balboa Heights, or General Manager, Commissary Division, ot Mount Hope, Canal Zone, until 3:00 p. m. Wednesday, Novem- ber 12, 1952, when they will be opened in public, for furnishing 2,200 fat beef steers, from Feb- ruary I. 1953 through July 31. 1953. Forms of proposal, with full particulars, may be obtained in the office of the Supply and Ser- vice Director, Balboa Heights, or of the General Manager, Com- missary Division, Mount Hope. Canal Zone. FOR SALE:M. G. Roadster 1951 in very good condition, cream co- lor red upholstery. Apply "Porras" Piara 5 de Mayo, Panama, Tel. 2- 2638. FOR SALE:1938 Ford Sedan, as is. where is, $95.00; without tires ond battery. 525.00. Telephone Bal- boa 3433. FOR SALE:12 tube Silvertone ra- dio Console, 25 ond 60 cycles. Excellent condition $80.00. Dining- room table with 4 chairs, dinette table 4 choirs, qt. buf!(t, bamboo 3 chairs. settee. I toble. vene-| tian blinds. 2 large porch blmds. 5 window blinds, I ice box 9 cu ft. all porcelom. 752-B, Balboo Rd. Balboa. FOR SALE: 7 Cu. Ft. F-igidaire. __porcelain, $55. Wardrobe trunks r $10.00. IroniiNo board, clothes bosket, potted plants ond stands. Igolvoniicd rub. 2-1695. 721-A, the Good Neighbor" NO INCREASE IN PRICES!.. FREE MEALS AND COCKTAILS! One-woy to MIAMI. $67.00 ...NEW YORK, $101... GUAYA0UIL. $75.00.. ..QUITO S86.00 Round trip MIAMI, $120 60...NEW YORK $208.60 ____ GUAYAQUIL. $135.00..:. QUI- TO, $154.80. BOEING 4-engme planes. For more details see PAN- AMA DISPATCH SERVICE, oppo- site Ancon Busstop. Telephone 2- _J 655.__________________ FCR SALE: Salt water Penn 67 reel, 2C0 yards. 45 pound tesi line, 5 1-2 foot Montague bam- boo Rod. Outfit used only once Entire outfit for $20.00. Coll Al- brook 86-2200. FOR SALE:Plymouth 1948 Station Wagon, new engine, four door, duty poid. Coll Panama 3-2333. FOR SALE: 1946 Plymouth De Luxe, four door sedon, first class condition, $760. 510-C, Curun- du Heights, 83-4243. FCR SALE:Red Pontioc convertible, purchased Dec. 1949. Hydramatic W/W 23.000 miles. Excellent con- dition. Phone 86-5235. FOR SALE:1940 Buick. good con- dition. Leaving for States. Phone Navy 3146. FOR SALE: 1932 Ford car, good running order. Reasonable. House 604, Tamarindo Ave., Cocoli. All day Saturady ond Sunday and c\cningi. DR. WENDEHAKE. Medical Clinic Estudiante Street No. 140. Between "K" and "J" Street. Phone 2- 3479, Panama, FOR SALE Real Estate R IMMEDIATE SALE BECAUSE OF HEALTH $8,000.00. mpletely furnished home wtih Tiested Drinking Water. Bottled Gas . ond Electric plant on- beautiful plot fi' of land with good rood frontage on J Trans-Isthmian Highway. Well cared for raised house containing 1 large J ond 1 small apartment. 3 cor gorage. utility building and unused poultry house, all buildings with concrete foundations. Approximately 700 gal- * Ion steel water tank on concrete sa tower. many bearing fruit trees. | miscellaneous tools ond equipment. V' located approximately 23 miles from Co'on, 1 st house on Colon side of '' Gatuncillo bridge.Fred S. Bitter. > for further information call Bolboo 2-1502. , FOR SALE Miscellaneous FOR SALE:"Super Defiant" Sx 25 Hallicrofter radio, $35.00, c o r heater $12.00. House 104-X B, Gamboa. Telephone 6-398. FOR SALE:Winchester model 12. pump shot gun 12 gauge. H & R Target pistol. 22 caliber. Corono sterling portable typewriter. House 2132 Apt. B, 6th St. Curundu. Tel. 83-5279. FOR SALE: Electrical new Home sewing machine, console, with but- tonhole attachment. 548-B, Cu- rundu Heights. FOR SALEOld upright piano, re- cently repaired an dtuned $95.00. Large toble. sideboard, desk, all steel. 116-A, Jadwin Ave. Gam- boo. FCR SALE:Late 49. Cadillac. Club Coupe, low mileage, excellent con- dition. Coll Albrook 6293 or see ot quarters 45-A. FOR SALE: "1950 Oldsmobile Rocket 88. Excellent condition. Call 3-3409. Position Offered WANTED: Salesman or saleslady, wanted for large concern. Excel- lent working condition, good so- lary. Write Coso Fostlich, Box 323, R. of P. stating age end expe- rience. WANTED Miscellaneous WORK WANTED:Reliable English speaking woman wonts to cook and housekeep for working couple. Call 6-287, before noon. RESORTS Phillips. Oceans ide cottages, Santa Cloro. Box 435. Balboo. Phone Panama 3-1877. Crutobol 3-1673. Gramlich Santa Clere- beoch- cottages. Electric Ice boxes, gas stoves, moderate rates. Telephone 6-441 Gamboa. 4-567 Pedro Mi- guel. _________' FOR RENT Houses ^wiYiMtKUAL tj PROFESSIONAL FOR RENT: Furnished residence, office, livlngroom, diningrcom, porch, interior patio, 3 bedrooms, with oir conditioned, hot water, kitchen, moid room, big garden. Pr.ce $275.00. Tel. 3-3444, after 6 p. m. ar phone 3-1477, during office hours. FOR RENT AnirTtmenti ALHAMBRA APARTMENTS Two and five room furnished ond unfurnished oportments; private en- closed gardens. 8061. 10th Street. New Cristobal. Telephone Colon 1386. FOR SALE Boats & Motors FOR SALEElectric Motors 25 cycle; 1-5, 1-4, 1-2, 3-4, and 1 hp. 60. cycle 1-2, and 2 hp. Also several slow speed 25 cycle mo- tors 1445-A Owen St. 2-3630. FOR SALE: 20' x 40' boot shed, 33' Cypress hull, Chrysler Crown Marine Engine, power sows, pine flooring, bronze fittings, stoinless sti'.l (alley -ink, fire extinguishers, water pumps, port lights, propel- lers, shaft, onchor, steel locker, work bench, Poragon Reduction geor, etc. Leaving Wednesday. Make on offer. 7l8-b\ Prado, Tel. 2-2911. FOR SALE Motorcycle FOR SALE:.2 Cushmon scooters, one a three wheeler, one Whizzer bike, all in running order, reason- able. House 604 Tamarindo Ave. Cocoli. All day Saturday and Sun- day end' evening. PERSONALS Attention pupils and Students.' Ivy Hornett will resume Ballroom danc- ing Instructions, first week, in November. Hornett Gr Dunn. The Coribbean Air Command Welfare Fund offers for sale the following type of material: Rock cork insulotion; occoustic cement; theater stoge floodlights; copper tubing; bushings; electric conduit and cutouts; copper wire; abestos cement tronsit pipe; vol- ves 1 Va" to 4". etc. Sealed bids for part or all of this excess pro- perty may be submitted until 3:30 P. M. 20 October 1952 to Cus- todian, CAirC Welfare Fund, Room No. 113, Building No. 861, Albrook AFB, C. Z. Property to be sold is located in building No. 672, Albrook AFB and may be inspected during the hours 7-12 A. M., and 1-3:30 p. m. Monday thru Friday. Lists of the excess property may be obtained by coll- ing the Office of the Custodian, CAirC Welfare Fund, Albrook 5125. FOR SALE:Two handmade crochet single bedspreods. $30.00, pair. Tel. 2-0290. FOR SALE:Parade Drum $15.00. Upright Piano $75.00. Newhord 8124-A, Margarita. FOR SALE:Ldwn mower $15.00. baby carriage $15.00; boby jump- er chair $3.00; baby bed screen- ed sides $15.00. House 8036-C, Morgn to, phone 3-2312 I FOR SALE:1951 Mercury Sedan. 1940 Mercury Sedon, mahogany dmingroom 9 piece set. Vz motor, plotform rocker radio ond record chonger. 0260-C. Gomboo, 6-219, RATS are EXPENSIVE GUESTS. IF YOU REALLY WANT TO GET RID OF THEM USE MAR.FRIN Rat & Mouse Killer (contains WAR-FARIN) GEO F. NOVEY. INC. 279 Central Ave. Tel. 3-0140 MODERN FURNITURE VISIT OUR SHOW-ROOM Slipcover Reupholstery "HERES" 77 Auto Row Tel 3-a at un Transportes Baxter. S A. Shipping, moving storage. We pack and crate or move anything. 'Phone 2-2451, 2-2562, Panam. CHIROPRACTORS Dn, A. and T.. ORII.I.AC (Palmer Graduate*! OFriCE HOURS: 812 and 2 8 p.m. Saturday: 8 12 noon. 53 Per Avenue Tel. J-USe (1 block from Lux Theatre) HX HOUSEHOLD EXCHANGE For the beat value in both new and reconditioned fur- niture. WE BUT AND SELL 41 Automobile Row Tel. 3-4911 Baltxi- YMCA BALL ROOM DANCE INST. FOR VOUR REQUIREMENTS in NATIVE LUMBER CALL ROY WATSON Telephone: 3-4963 Avenida Nacional 43 (Boo/, #/ By United Press Every 53 minutes a child is born with dread cerebral palsy. Such a child was Karen KUlllea. Doctors told her dismayed parents that she was doomed to life as a hopeless cripple per- haps even an Idiot. They advis- ed them to put her into an in- stitution and forget her. But Marie and Jimmy Kll- lilea were made of sterner stuff. They refused to accept the ver- dict, even though It was given by doctor after doctor to whom they took their .baby. And eventually when Kar- en was three and a halfthey found a doctor who told them that she could be taught to sit up and use her hands, and ul- timately to walk. In Karr4n (Prentice-Hall Mrs. Killilea tells of the long, heart- breaking but rewarding .years that followed. It is a true, in- spiring, beautifully-written sto- ry of the lamlly next door and their successful struggle against, seemingly overwhelming odds to give their afflicted daughter a nearly normal life. ... John Steinbeck deals with good and evil In his new novel, East of Eden (Viking>. Evil is personified by Cathy, wife of Adam Trask, from whose make- up all the virtues seemed to have been omitted. Adam was a saintly sort, deserted by Cathy when the twins were born. The twin boys were brought up believing their mother had died, while in reality she was running a broth- el In a nearby town. One boy seemed destined to fall under the spell of his mother's evil heritage, but was saved chiefly by the Chinese family friend Lee, who apparently Is the voice of conscience In the novel. It is a long, meandering tale In which Steinbeck interwinea the story of his own family who settled in the Salinas Valley, and Indulges in much moralizing, both devices tending to strain the patience of the reader.... The school teacher didn't know what she was getting In- to when she married the lum- berjack. But she soon found out. The lumberjack carried the bride through the tentflaps of their first home and philo- sophically pointed out the ad- vantages of living under can- vas: "Now, Baby, Just think you won't have to pull any blinds when we want to pitch a little woo, no windows to wash!" It was a stern test for any bride, but Olive Barber final- ly made the grade even though she flunked out for a few months. She tells all with gus- to and good humor in the au- tobiographical The Lady and the Lumberjack (CrowelD... The history of the automo- bile from its first faltering be- ginnings is reviewed In absorb- ing style by Bellamy Partridge In Fill 'er Up (McGraw-Hill). Partridge Is a veteran automo- blllst of 50 years behind the wheel and much of his book is a record of personal reminls- censes although he has re- searched and interviewed to good effect. He harks back- to such subjects as the Duryea borthers' first gasoline wagons, the Stanley twins and their re- markable steamers, the meteo- ric rise of the Ford Model T, the Vanderbilt Cup races on the Motor Parkway, the Glldden tours, and, last but not least, the growth of the AAA which celebrates its golden ubilee this year. "UNSINKABLE" SUIT SUITS HER-Carolyn Keen, U-month- old water-baby, floats along with utmost confidence. She's wear- ing an "unsinkable" bathing suit, which Is being tested by the Infantile Paralysis Fellowship ot London, England. Particularly useful in supporting polio patients undergoing water therapy treatments, the suit may also be worn under street clothing, and la aid to be able to support a person indefinitely. Dr. E. A. PERE. Veterinary Sorceotj (with Knowledge of English) 42 Belisario Porras Tel. 3-2113 Loes/ Seut en NURSES NEW CAREER- Christine Palmer, who has been 3 registered nurse at Doctors Hospital in New York City for the past five years, has just made her operatic debut with the New York City Opera Co. She:. pictured rehearsing the part of Musette, the coquette in Puccini's "La Boheme." J n-v*r the pains of I:u. uiii.itlara, Arthritis, Neuritis, l.umt,ai:o. Hcj- ri ;,. stiff muirles -nd swotlea lolnt. make you miserable, f*'.s ROMI.NI) f.nm your druggist at a <. ROMIKD quickly (trinas fsn- as'.ir relief so >ou ran sleep, r.crk in-1 live in comfort. Don't suffer ''.mtr. Oat ROM1ND today. ~ Young Hungarian Shows Enterprise In United States DECATUR. 111. (UPl A 4- year-old Hungarian boy, who came here with his family as a displaced person, has taken quickly to the American system of free enterprise. Csaba Kurtossy, called George by friends, looked the situation over for three months, th n took a newspaper route, and an- nounced that he would accept students for paid lessons in Ger- man. He expects to branch out by teaching Hungarian, Esto- nian and Danish and will be glad to tutor in English. If there is a demand for such a service JEEP RAILBIRDDon't be surprised if you see a Jeep zipping along a railroad track. Photo shows new special-duty version that 30 railroads have ordered to replace the traditional bandear used to transport section gangs and inspection men along the line. New railroad Jeep is versatile, with special extra wheels that per- mit it to leave the tracks at any location, go in and out o terminals at u ill, make inspection trips without interrupting workers ur train schedules alona the SEEN FRIDAY NIGHT at the gala Knights of Columbus Ball held at Hotel El Panama are, left to right: Exalted Ruler ot the Elks, Robert H. Adams; Grand Knight of the K. of c, Milton J. Haltey; Acting District Deputy. Albert E. Greene, William G. Mun.maw, and H. O. Paxson, Lt. Governor of the Panam Canal. -----,------ FOUR-LEGGED MINE DETECTOR "Teddy," le-year-oid British army dog, knows that Communist non-metallic mines planted in Korea really smell. He is one of 12 dogs attached to the 1st Commonwealth Division in Korea, that are used to delect mines which cannot be located with a regulation detector. His master, Sgt. Stanley Barker, of Melton, England, above, is con- gratulating him on his latest And. ] -----------. i i, German N-eo-Nazi Groups __ i (Compiled by Publishers' Week- ly) Fiction THE CAINE MUTINY . Herman Wouk. THE HOUSES IN BETWEEN Howard Spring. THE 8ILVER CHALICE Thomas B. Costaln. THE GOWN OF GLORY Agnes Sllgn Turnbull. MATADOR Barnaby Conrad. Non-Fiction WITNESS wnittaker Chambers. ANNE FRANK The Diary of a Young Girl. A MAN CALLED PETER Catherine Marshall. THE SEA AROUND US Rachel L. Carson. WINDOWB FOR THE CROWN Prince Elizabeth Oray Vlnlng. SUBMARINE! Cmdr. Edward L. Beach. JOURNEY TO THE FAR PA- CIFIC Thomas JC Dewer MrtafVa dtermWiy/'Oc. 'ir (UP)Twenty-six known neo- Nazi organizations are now operating in West Germany, but authorities believe they will present no real danger unless a leader strong enough to unite them appears. The neo-Nazis Jumped back Into the news recently with the announcement that, the largest of the groups, the Socialist Reich's party, with a paid-up membership of 40,000 was dis- solving Itself. The first explanation for this move was that the constitution- al court in Karlsruhe was a- bout to declare the party illegal. A second explanation, put out by the Socialists who control the provincial government In lower Saxony, where the SRP garnered 11 per cent of the to- tal popular vote in the election 16 months ago, was that the 16 SRP deputies now will Join with the other Conservative parties to overthrow the Socialist re- gime. No one actually believes, however, that the political organization so carefully built up on what was approaching a national scale by SRP lead- ers will now be thrown away. Until now, the known neo- Nazi groups have been unable to unite, mainly because of personal Jealousy among the various leaders and because of lack of fnuds. Nevertheless, the. neo-Nazis do have two members in the West parliament Wolfgang Hedler, a rabid anti-Semite, and Fritz Doris, a charter mem- ber of the 8RP. A third neo- Nazi deputy, Franz Rlchter, was thrown out of parliament last year, when it' was learned he was using an assumed name to hide a highly colored war-time a NaalbackgrmndJ >'.' All the neo-Nazi groups their main political attack the western allies and the pro- western Bonn government, sol much so that' many authorities believe them to be subsidized by | the Corrunnnists.t The Nazis themselves dens | this, but say simply It is non* of their business, what goes oh In the Soviet zone, while "}t ii their affair what happens here. All the neo-Nazi organization! employ the trappings of the old Nazi party.. the sharp-clawed eagle on the banner, the thump- ing march music, the jackboots, the uniforms, the fantastic titles for party officials, the insisjnla. Most of the leaders are forjnei Nazis now unable to get decent Jobs. It is alleged that by selling pamphlets and charging admission to their" meetings, most of them make a good living out of Naziism. The political thinking of these leaders is aptly illustrated by recent exchange between a re- porter and Herbert Munchow, leader of a. youth organisation patterned after the Hitler Ju- gend, of which Munchow was a leader. Munchow declared it was ''shameful" for the Americans, who he said had "stabbed us In the back while we were fight- ing- Bolshevism on the Vota," now to ask the Germans to help them fight Russia. The reporter pointed out that the U- s- dldn'' ***> OtnhMBy in the back, but that Germany's ally Japan stabbed America. '"Well, If you are going to re- write history like that," Mun- chow retorted, "I suppose you could also cla,lm that Germany attacked Britain and France In 1939." YOUNG VETYvonne Chou- teau, a too ballerina with the Ballet Ruase de Monte Carlo, is only 33 years old but Is al- ready a veteran in the ballet field. She has Just signed her tenth yearly contract and is now on tour in South America with the troupe- ir a laijr*er causes you to suffsr from IndlaeWlon. a. >"": burn, constipation, headaehaa. bad breath, dlstlnsaa. blllousnsss and kin blamlshta. gat HIOAUON from your thimlii ted ay. HIOAl.i'N la s real Ionio to Uia llvsr and Iniesttnea. flat HIOALON tod\r and 1*1 astlsr tomorrow. A COMPLIMENT TO YOUR GUESTS ma? DISTILLED AMD BOTTLED IN CANADA WAIKIUVIUI CANADA ISTAilliHID USt < / . SUNDAY. OCTOBER It, .1951 . u___-.- .____.....______._ THE SUNDAY AMERICAN PAGE SEVEN Private Lives Of Public Enemies In Warm Film Coming To Lux i wonderful story y at the Lux Humbla Pictures' A warm a: opens Thurs Theater In "My Six Convicts" The new Stanley Kramer Company, production, based on the best-seller by Donald Pow- ell Wilson, does a perfect Job of transferring to the screen the private lives of six public ene- mies, the moat astonishing char- acters you've ever known in or out of any Jail! -, ,_ As readers of the book know, "My Six Convicts'' offers a new slant on prison life, told by the psychologist who went "inside to study the inner workings of a group of criminals. My Six Convicts" is a warm and won- derful story of six astonishing individuals. . My Six Convicts" casts John Bel a the prison psychologist who suddenly discovers to* meS'hTls working with have bkSrV&K- Mitchell, Gil- bert' oUund, and Marshall Thompson are also featured promjSTntry. Mitchell plays Connie, who takes' from the rich to give to the girls. Roland Is cast is' Puneh, Public' Enemy No. 5 but gaining iU the time! Thompson plays Scatty, a yonng felon learning a trade ~ pWng pockets! The remainder ol. My x Convicts" are Dawson, the twisted brains behind a prison btrfaV slaved by Henry Morgan KopM^whosaonly home was the Srisott played by Jay Adler, and mUJW stlr-jcfazy n a g lv to -"ftf* woman 'Inside the d^Jttatad *y Alt KjelUn. All six perform with authority and with real .insight into the-cogs Which make criminals tick. "My- Six Convicts" has a num- ber o wonderful events, some brutal. One of'the more hilari- ous highlights is the smuggling In and out of the Jail of Ran- dall's "wife, engineered by the Doc's six convicts. More drama- tic is the mass jail-break which places the "bug doctor" in Jeop- ardy, and from which he is res- cued by his convict aides. . Michael Blankfort wrote the screen play of "My 81x Con- victs," which was directed by Hugo Pregnese. Edna and Ed- ward Anhalt were associate, pro- ducenMlh4jLad the other/mem- bers or the" Stanley Kramer or- ganization merit hosannas for a marvejo^isly entertaining film- Judy Garland To Make Screen Return January Hollywood' calif. Oct. u (UP) Judy Garland, who was forced to abandon the screen temporarily due to ill health which caused her to give up several coveted roles will make Mo\ie gossip day that Mexican screen Maria Flix has no intention of mar- a comeback In the remake of rying Argentine movie star Car- On The Records Four 3-Dimensional Feature Pictures Planned By Cinerama HOLLYWOOD, Oct. If (UP) The Cinerama Corp., producers of the new three-dimensional movies which are astonishing New York where they made their debut recently, is planning to produce four feature pictures in technicolor and also stand- ard 35 millimeter cameras for exhibition on standard size screens. Merln C. Cooper,. who coop- erated in preparing the Clne- for experimental exhib- Dolores Del Rio, First Lady Of Fashion In Native Mexico NEW YORK, Oct.,8 (UP) Bing Crosby and Jane Wyman merge their considerable vocal fama. talents in a new Decca album i"0" in New Yor.k- nas bee.n "Just for You," featuring songs sned, as general manager In from their new movie musical of charge of the Production. The experimental film ap- pears on the screen three times as wide as ordinary film and the three dimensional tech- nique gives a startling visual effect. Audiences gasp as onrushlng water or vehicles seem to fall RAY BOLGER and ALLYN McLERIE are paired in romance and the dance for "Where's Charley?" the new Technicolor comedy from Warner Bros., at the Balboa Theater today. New Technicolor Movie Today At Balboa; Ray Bolger Stars Gossip Writers Say Maria Felix Won't Marry Thompson Hoirvwnnn rvt 11 tip Colle8e lad who ^ forced to im- Ray Bolger, Allyn McLerle, Robert Shackleton and Horaee Cooper, stars of the recent Broadway musical hit, "Where's Charley?", reenact their stage roles in the Warner Bros. Tech- nicolor adaptation today at the Balboa Theater. Set in Oxford, England, Where's Charley?" concerns a "A Star Is Born," wherein Jan- et Oaynor and Frederic March co-starred many years ago. The screen colony thought Judy was through and In des- pair she slashed her wrists but her husband saved her llf>. Then Thompson. los They clalnr the flurry caused by the report that the beautiful Maria would marry Thompson was purely a publicity stunt. All week movie circles heard persistent rumora that Miss she started a slow uphill climb)Flix plans to marry Jorge via vaudeville scoring a sensa-; Negrette, the singer-actor, ln- tional bit In London and New York. At the Palace Theater in New York she broke all attend- ance records. Astonished, Hollywood beckon- ed again. Production will start In January after the birth of her baby. stead ed a of Thompson, as report- few weeks ago. Newsmen's efforts to get con- firmation or denial from her and from Negrette proved fruit- less. Miss Flix, through her secretary who answered the whose arrival has been delayed. This deception leads to a series of amusing complications, cli- maxed when the real aunt does show up and sees Charley In costume. Popular tunesmlth Frank Loesser wrote the popular melo- dies featured In "Where's Char- ley?". David Butler directed the film. ------------------ . "7----- phone, eluded Interviews on various oretexts. Negrette similarly dodged newsmen by .secretly leaving the studio where he presently Is making a picture. the same name. Jane's acting has obscured the fact that she first made a name for herself as a singer of hot jazz, blues and swing, but this al- bum shows she has lost none' of f.r *!^e.-.?l"?:^c,riie' HSSElBiV tnmjb cw In- to the theater seats. Cinerama, though still considered In a nov- elty stage, Is practical only for scenes that can be enhanced by panoramic treatment. Observers feel the new tech- nique has undreamed of possi- bilities for entertainment. his usual suave, relaxed self. Jane's best solo number Is the provocative "Checkln' My Heart," and she also does well with Bing In the duet, "Zing a Little Zongs" Blng's songs run from the bal- lad "Just for You," to the novel- ties, "On the 10:10 from Ten- Ten-Tennessee" and "I'll 81-81 Ya In Bahla-," the latter with the Andrews Sisters. Russ Morgan and his orches- STILL RIDING HERD The Lone Pine, Calif., desert and mountain areas, where Warner Bros.' Gary Cooper star- rer, "Springfield Rifle," was tra offer music for dancing In | filmed on location, was famll- another new Decca album, "Ev-'lar ground to director Andre De erybody Dance." The program I Toth. De Toth's first Job in the comprises three fox trots, two [United States after fleeing Hit- waltzes, a rumba, a samba and a i ler's Germany, where he had tango, all In the silky "Morgan been both director and ace cam- manner." jeraman, wa a cowboy on a ranch near Lone Pine._________ The Chordettes, female ver- I------------- ; sion of a barber shop quartet. DALLAS, Tex. Oct. 11 (UP( Dolores Del Rio, the Durango, Mexico girl who left Hollywood stardom to be a leading produc- er and actress In the up-and- coming Mexican movie Industry, has become known as "Latin America's First Lady of Fash- Ion." Miss Del Rio first appeared in a Hollywood film In 192S. By BEN COOK OLLYWOOD (UP) {The en dress extremely well. I am greatly Impressed with their el- egance. They follow the French fashion." In Mexico City, she explain-.world film capital may be in ed. the American Influence Is' Hollywood, but you couldn't greatest. prove It by talking to Leo Genrr. It is the Mexican movie Indus- I The British stage and screen try, however, about which Miss star is here making a picture at Del Rio Is most enthusiastic. .the moment, but he cites his The Churubusco Studios in own career as proof that good she made the jump from silent Mexico City are as fine as anyjmotion pictures and picture to talking pictures successfully. ' She has lived in Mexico City with her mother the past 10 years. She has always taken good care of herself, always dressed carefuUy. The beauti- ful flve-foot-three-lnch actress still weighs 115 pounds the same as when she llrs^ went to Hollywood. Early this month, Miss Del Rio was given the Nieman-Mar- cus award for her "great per- sonal taste and "beauty as well as her professional prestige as an actress and film producer. She was the first Latin Ameri- can to win the honor. Latin-American fashions usu- ally follow those of the United States and Paris, Miss Del Rio said. But some designers are be- coming outstanding in L a i n America, particularly In Buenos Aires and Mexico City which she added, are the fashion cen- ters of Latin America. "They are doing some very Interesting work, based on native things." Miss Del Rio continued. "Each country is taking from its native fash- ions. "The shops are wonderful in Buenos Aires. Argentine wom- sion of a barber shop quartet, -r* j rt o TV/ _> &&!Sfi3f& i Producer Says Stop Worrying About Vanishing Ameritan to "The Anniversary Walts" in "Harmony Encores," a Colum- bia album. On the singles, Ralph Flana- gan and his orchestra do a fine Job on the rhythmic instrumen- tal. "TlpphV In," backed by the ballad, "I Should Care" (Victor) Ztggy Elman's trumpet is fea- tured with the George Gates or- chestra on "Babalu," while on the flip-over Gates provides a musi- cal background for Marvin Wright's piano on* "Carmen's Boogie," a boogie-woogie version of the toreador song from "Car- men" (Coral).... Pianist Jan August joins Jorry Murad's Harmonlcats for a pleas- ant arrangement of "Wish You Were Here," backed by "Meet Mister Callaghan" (Mercury)___ Two more arrangements of "The Gjrls Are Marching," a song for cur women soldiers, have ap- peared. One by Mercury features Vic Damone, now a soldier him- self with "Come Hell or High Water" on the reverse side. The other, on Decca, Is by Sv Oliver, with "Slick Chick'i- on the other side.... Lisa Kirk revives "How Come You Do Me'Like You Do?" in lowdown blues style, with "If Your Heart Is Breaking" on the reverse side (Victor)___Helen O'Connell combines the novelty. "You Like?," and "You Darlln'" (Capitol).... The Ames Bro- thers, one of the better vocal big-hearted whlte'chlef and of- groups around the-,? days, should fer the tribal bosses $200 a week HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 11 (UP) you can atop worrying about the vanishing American, pro- ducer Herman Cohen sighed today. He'll do all right as long as movie fans go lor cowboys and Indians. Cohen hails from Detroit, where Indians are very scarce Indeed. But he Just got a liberal education In the ways and wiles of the red man, and be reports that they're doing very nicely, thank you. The young producer went In- to Injun country to make "The Battles of Chief Pontiac." an historical movie about the fam- ous Ottawa chief's siege of Fort Detroit. As a native of the Motor City, he would have liked to film the picture right where Pontiac made history, but he soon found out that would have meant tearing down most of Detroit a very expensive proposition even for a movie studio. So he settled for Rapid City. S. D., where the terrain is al- most identical to that of Detroit and the landscape abounds with Indiana. . The first thing we did was arrange for a pow-wow with the chiefs of the tribe to sign up the Indians we needed," he said. "I went prepared to be a make new friends with "String Along" and "Absence Makes the Heart Grows Fonder" (Coral). Homer Jenks each. "Now what happened; one of them calmly announced that he wanted (2,50o a week; It Just about floored me. For that price I'd have turned In- dian myself." Cohen got over that handle by crossing the chief's name off his list. In a little while, the Indian came back and accept- ed $150 a week. Seems his braves wanted to be in the picture,1 and his tenure as chief might have been cut short If ht hadn't put his name on the dotted line. *'A lot of the younger Indians were plenty hep, about pic- tures," said Cohen, "but we couldn't use them because they couldn't shoot bows and arrows or ride bareback. We had to go right to the reservation for our Indians, and even then we had to teach some of them how to use tomahawks." Cohen learned Just how "hep the red men were when he picked out four chiefs for an important scene. After the first day of shooting, they packed up and started to leave. "I explained that we weren't through with the scene but they said they just didn't like the work and thev could make more money at a fair near there. "Those guys knew they were established in the picture and I had to keep them or spend extra money shooting the scene over. Funnv thing, thev spoke good English when I hired them, but when they got ready to leave, thev couldn't under- stand a word I said. They beean to understand when I doubled their salaries, thnueh. and when we paid them off. thev left In a new Cadillac convertible." studio In the world," she said, making are no respecters of "They were built only five geography. / years ago. They aren't like Hoi- "Looking back over the last lywood studios, remodeled time five years," he said, "the films after time to keep up with im- hat proved most valuable for proveniente. The Churubusco my .career, apart from 'Henry studios were built to modern V,' wire, "IT.? Snake Pit," made standards to start with. (in Hollywood 'Quo Vadls,' fllm- The Spanish-speaking audi- ed in Italy, and 'The Wooden ence for movies is second only j Horse,' made In Germany, Den- to the English-speaking audi- mark and British studios ence, she said, and Mexico City | Genn Is making "Pleasure Is- is the third largest movie pro- land" here now at Paramount ducer behind only Hollywood studio. He follows that with and Britain. "The Red Beret" in England and "There are 51,000,000 peo- expects to return to the United pie in the Spanish-speaking au- States for a stlll-undesignated dience," she said. "Think of it. :fllm next year, all Central and most of South "Anything artistic should be America. In Europe there's!international," he said. "I don't Spain." I think that place or nationality Miss Del Rio said the movie*, really makes a great deal of being turned out by the Mexl- difference. can studios are as good as those from Hollywood and Britain, adding: "Of course, we are like Brit- Advocates Travel "I think the more we travel the more Englishmen travel part in 'Pleasure Island' appeal- ain and France. The motion i to America and Americans""to picture industry in Mexico is I England the better. Everyone very short of capital. We have'should go where he finds good to be very economical." scripts. That's why I came to In Mexico alone, she say s, this country. The script and the from 130 to 140 pictures are ed to me. produced each year. "Place or nationality don't We have the best camera- make any difference so long as man In the world (in Mexico 1," we follow the ordinary artistic she said. "He is Gabriel Figuerna. I canons, and provided we use the limed The Fugitive.' He right story, the right people and the right parts." Genn pointed out that a re- has won 11 trophies over the world more than any other cameraman." She said the Mexican movie Industry was not alarmed by the rapid growth of television cent poll of Important directors who named the 10 greatest films) of all time resulted In a list of pictures that had been made in Mexico. Mexican moviemak-'in widely scattered parts of the ers are even making pictures!globe. It even included Eisen- Del' stein's "Potempkln," filmed in for the new medium. Miss Rio, herself, Is Just starting a TV series. "People will always go to see good movies," she said. Com- petition won't hurt the movie industry. We'll just have make better pictures. Then peo- ple will take the trouble to go to the theater." the USSR. LEND AN EAR Times does go by. Before he was a star in Hollywood, John to "Big Jim McLain," became the first "singing cowboy" on rec- ord with his series known as Singin' Sam." JOHN PAYNE RHONDA FLEMING, in "CROSSWIND" IN TECHNICOLOR! BELLA 3:M fjSJ T:( VISTA I :M p m._ A Tale of Intrigue. Romance and Adventure in Haiti! DALE ROBERTSON ANNE FRANCIS, la LUX THEATRE Savage Passions and Spectacular Adventure In the White Jungle of the North...! "The Wild North" Stewart' GRANGER tyd CflAKISSE Wendell COBEY on! TROPICAL Randolph SCOTT Lucille NORMAN, In "CARSON CITY" DRIVEN-IN THEATRE Adventure's Favorite Hero...! RICHARD TODD JOAN RICE, in "STORY OF ROBIN HOOD" IN TECHNICOLOR! CECILIA THEATRE Adventure. Intrigue. Romance...! "CASANOVA. THE MYSTERIOUS CAVALIER" with Vinario aaauaaa Also- WALT DISNEY'S Production "THE WORLD OF NATURE" E N C ANTO WALCOTT va. MARCIANO FIGHT! Jane Russell, in "THE OUTLAW" Also: TCHABOD AND MR. TOAD" T IV OLI "LOS TRES ALEGRES COMPADRES" -and - "HOMBRE SIN ALMA" CAPITOLIO Lucille Ball John Afar - In - "MAGIC CARPET" ' Jon Hall, in "Hurricane Island" VICTORIA Burt Lancaster, In TEN TALL MEN- - Also: - JUNGLE MANHUNT" IDEAL "Pl-AM* or ARABY" with Maureen O'Hara "RED BALL EXPRESS" PAGE EIGHT THE SUNDAY AMERICAN ''.................ni.......... ii i........i.. _ ni ..... -------------- .......-- ------- SUNDAY, OCTOBER If, 1052. _____ ' ^________m__mm1 Tesis, Green Trade Punches At Panam Gym Tonight Fishing Where There's Fish Today ram Fishing continues good in the inner bay area, this last week several boats out with fair to good luck. The Serl now fishing with feathers Instead of the regular cut bait raised 5. Wally Pears- son landed one of them, look like Wally is really developing lmto a fisherman. , Soltura, Seri. Caimn II, and Tin Goose all have flags fly- ing. Mrs. Virginia Spencer fishing off her husband's boat the Ttfi Goose landed a 417 lb. Marlin this makes two for her this year. From records available this is the first time any woman has landed two Marlin in Panam Bay and with her nine thread WOrld Record for sail fish still unbroken puts Virginia right on top as far as the women are concerned and I can name lots ol men who haven't done nearly as well including yours truly. Con- gratulations Virginia. 1st Race "F-l" Native 6H Fgs. Purse: $275.00 Pool closes: 12:45 FIRST RACE OF THE DOUBLES 1 Resorte 2 Sin Fin 3 Diez de Mayo 4 Cosa Linda 5 Opex 6 Don Jaime B. Aguirre 117 V. Ortega 115 A. Mena 115 G. Cruz 117 B. Pulido 115 A. Ubldla 110 7 Buenas Tardes R. Gomez 112 8 Juan Hulncho J. Bravo ill Not too many years ago the majority of boats In Panam would be laid up or at least not finishing this time of the year. It Is hoped that enough will be out this month and next to see what October and November are really like. The Panam Hotel has 5 bookings for this period from states side fishermen and if a few more go out maybe we can build this years total up to where it will be something hard to beat. From the boats who have responded to our request for total bill fish landed this year it is certain 1952 is well ahead of any past year. We definitely need information from a few of the leading boats to complete this information. How about it fellows, its for the records. - Sam Moody and Barney Forgeson shoplng around for a new fishing boat hope they get one soon, we have lost too many good fishermen the last few years. Walter Gorman and party returned Friday from a Pina Bay Trip. Walt reports that the sail fish are thick in shore and along the islands but the bay outside is dead with very little or no bait. Sailfish see to be feeding close to shore more this year than usual. This is good if you are looking for sailfish but of course anyone going to Pina wants Marlin and if you fish off shore without raising Marlin people jump to the conclusion that fish- ing is poor while all the time you can catch sails till your bait rifts out. - Lloyd Kent of Gamboa fishing from Walt's boat Joined our club and graduated on the same trip. He caught his first sail.] then 5 more and topped it off with a nice Black Marlin. From, this'trip it seems the inner bay is paying better returns than fW' 2nd Race "F-2" Native 4% Fgs. ped up the best semtflnallsts in Purse: J75.00 Pool close*: 1:45 his division. His handlers think Inter-City Boxing Card Should Produce Thrillers Colon's Pedro Tesis gets his big chance tonight when he tackles Isthmian Bantamweight Champ Baby Green in the ten-round main bot at the Panam Gym. Green is a slight 5-to-4 choice to outpoint the up-and-coming rugged youngster from the Gold Coast. But there is plenty Of support for Tesis. The Coln slugger has come on fast in less than a year of pro- fessional fighting and has mop- SECOND RACE OF THE DOUBLES 1 Raymond 2 Little Lulu 3 Don Joaqun 4 Malaya 5 Rosa B. 6 Casablanca 7 Volador) 8 Duque) V. Castillo 115 G. Sanchez 120 A. Vergara lllx A. Mena 120 B. PuUdo 120 J. Bravo 120 C. Ruiz 120 R. Guerra 115x 3rd Race "F-2" Native 414 Fgs. Purse: $275.00 Pool closes: 1:45 ONE TWO 1 Tap Lady 2 Galon 3 Fensador 4 Kon Tiki . 5 Pesadilla 6 Danubio 7 Yoslkito F. Rose 115 A. Mena 115 E. Darlo 115 G. Sanchez 115 R. L. Gil 115 J. Rodriguez 115 B. Agulrre 115 4th Race '1-2" Imported 4W Fgs. Purse: $375.00 Pool closes: 2:24 QUINIELA 1 Pincel 2 Dominador 3 Turf Lodge 4 Black Sambo 5 Apprise 6 Piragua 7 Wild Wire 8 Mimo 9 Nijlnsky F. Ramos 115 C. Lino 120 A. Vasquez 115 J. Bravo 120 B. Aguirre 117 A. Mena 117 J. BaezaJr! 118 B. Pulido 115 G. Cruz 115 5th Race "C" Native V Fgs. Purse: $235.00 Pool closes: 2:25 ser down the coast. -i.-. GOLD COAST FISHING 1 Lolito 2 Tuira 3 Mandinga 4 Valarla 5 Elona 6 Annie N. V. Rodriguez 107x R. Guerra 107x J. Chuna 103x B. Pulido 112 G. Moran 109x H. Reyes 117r ?Something new has been added and boy oh! boy it is hotter, tljfln a depot stove. Spinning and fly fishing has been discovered bWhe gold coast fishermen and Is it paying dividends, ghagres river and the spillway have for years been good places to fish fur Tarpon Snook. How thines have changed, to quote one old timer (son you alnt seen nothing yet we have fishing we never kftaw existed). For the fisherman who likes to spend a few hours after work or oart of his week and fishing with some assurance nis efforts will resu't In fish to convince the little woman he revllv has ben out ftsh'ne with the boys. This type hps develop- vt'lnto a void mine. It has been proven that a man with a spln- n'ng rod or flv can eo out and in an hour return with 12 to 18 nice fish (while other* fishine the same area with the old cast- in or trolling pole will turn up with one or two fish and all to often none. j&fce do not claim you can buv a spinning rod and go out any tirWhto return in an hour with 18 nice fish, but it Is an establish- ed fact under certain conditions such as not during a heavy run or spawn that the above figures have been the rule rather than the exception on the Chagres River these last few weeks. The possibilities of this type fishing paving dividends on the Pacific side are good and if I can talk Bill Brooks of the Tarpon Club into lending me his rod some weekend I intend to give it a try. Casting and trolling at certain time of the vear have always been good both on the Atlantic and Pacific side, what the1 boys at the Tarpon club have done Is to find a way to have good fishing all year and when that is accomplished anywhere it is news. How about some of the fellows from the Atlantic side coming over to show the locals how its done.' JOIN CASA FASTLICH'S .CHRISTMAS GIFT BANK Choose your gift now, for Christmas. Have it beautifulv giftwrapped. Have it stored in our vaults, until Christmas. Pay as you go, as little as you want, at no extra charge: For the gift you give with pride, Let Casa Fastlich be your guide. ' CASA FASTLICH 6th Race "H" Imported 1 MUe Purse: $400.00 Pool closes: 3:35 FIRST RACE OF THE DOUBLES 1 Visir E. Julian 118 2 The B .th Road) V. Cast. 115 3 Pincelazo) 4 Trafalgar 5 Polvorazo 6 Pia 7 In Time 8 Scotch Chum M. Hurley 115 G. Sanchez 111 O. Castillo 109 J. Bravo 117 B. Moreno 120 A. Mena 115 7th Race "F" Imported 8V4 Fgs- Purse: $580.00 Pool closes: 4:45 SECOND RACE OF THE DOUBLES 1 Anglla R. L. Gil 120 2 Pamphlet H. Reyes 117x 3 Bracmour A. Phillips 115 4 Choice,Brand K. Flores 110 5 Begonia A. Ubidia 112 6 Lujoso L. Martinez 107x 7 Sir Boss R. Vasquez 110 8th Race "1-1" Imported 6> Fgs. Purse: $375.40 Pool elate: 4:40 QUINIELA 1 Ventre a Terre J. Bravo 120 PANAMA Distilled, Blended and Bottled in Scotland 2 Cocaleca 3 Gran Dla 4 Prestigio 5 Delhi 8 Pampero n 7 Full 8 Caonazo O. Oraell 120 G. Sanchez 114 R L. Gil 116 J .Avila 120 E. Julian 120 R. Gomez 120 B. Pulido 120 that he is now ready, for bigger things. ' Tesis was unbeaten as an ama- teur and has kept up his bril- liant ring work in the fight-for- durlng his quick but spectacular pay ranks. He lost only once rise to the top. That loss, a deci- sion verdict to Leslie Thompson of Colon, was later avenged with a sixth round knockout over the flashy Thompson. This fight could establish Tesis firmly in the local boxing firma- ment or retard his progress to- wards the championship. Tesu, has his sights aimed at the now vacant 126-pound title. On the other hand. Green who reportedly cannot make the 118-pound limit any longer Is also aiming at the featherweight crown. . Green's big advantages of su- perior height and reach plus bet- ter boxing know-how are ex- pected to see him through to victory but not before a hard struggle to the finish. Tesis hits with authority, as Is attested by his ring record in which it can be noted that the majority of his fights ended in a knockout by Pedro. He hits well enough to turn the tide in his favor with one well placed punch right down to the last ten sec- onds. Both boys wound up their training programs in excellent condition and a real thriller can be anticipated. The same may be said of the rest of the card, bi which all the bouts are between Coln and Panam City boxers. The pro- gram shapes a'an inter-city tournament. The semifinal will be a six- rounder between Panama's Cal- vin Lloyd and Colon's Francisco Benty. These lads signed to make a limit of 135 pounds. A special six-rounder between Horacio Ottls of Panam and Manuel Prescott of Coln may turn out to be the best of the evening. These 128-pounders like to slug from start to finish. A four round preliminary bet- ween Baby San Bias II and Al Hostin will get things started. Hostin and 8an Bias are expect- ed to weigh-in at no more than 116 pounds. Admission prices are $2, $1 and 50 cents. Football Results By United Press Penn State 35, W. Virginia 21. Penn 13, Princeton 7. Ohio State 23, Wisconsin 14. Maryland 37, Georgia 4. M'-*-1i State 48, Texas A. AM.*. N-.y li, William & Mary 0. Army 37, Dartmouth 7. Michigan 28, Indiana 13. Yale 35, Columbia 28. Colgate 13, Rutgers 7. Harvard 42, Washington U. 0. Holy Cross 35, New York U. 4. Bowdoin 31, Amherst 7. IVaine 24, Uew Hampshire 7. Syracuse 26, Cornell 6. Georgia Tech 14, Tulane 4, Williams 9, Middleburv 4. nijerUn 28, Depauw 0. Tech 44, Johns Hop- kins 6. 26,'Chattanooga i. . I. C'lemson 13. \" i a 50, George Washing- ton 4. Little Guys Make Best Umpires, Says Stewart, Target For All By HARRY GRAYSON NEA Sports Editor Juan Franco Mutuel Dividens 9th Race "C" Imported 7 Fgs. Parte: $654.00 Pool closes: 5:15 ONE TWO 1' Dictador 2 Phlox 3 Montmartre 4 Roadmaster 5 Cheriberibln 6 Rathlln Light 7 Coraggio F. Rose 116 J. Bravo 120 R. L. Gil 115 R. Guerra lOOx B. Pulido 112 V. Castillo 112 E. Darlo 102 10th Race "F-l Purse: $275.00 1 Tin Tan 2 Bljagual 3 Strike Three 4 Pregonero 5. Proton 6 Golden Babe 7 Manolete 8 Villarreal Native 6H Pool closes: B. PuUdo A. Vergara H. Alzamora G. Graell B. Aguirre J. Phillips A. Mena A. Enrique CANDIDATE Fred Haney,- above, is considered for the Pittsburgh manager's job, va- cated by Billy Meyer. He won the pennant with the Holly- wood Stars. ITS NEW! PLASTIC ENAMEL lor every use FIRST RACE 1Miranda $7.60, 4.40, 2.80 2Domino $5.20, 2 80 3Romntico $3.60. . SECOND RACE 1La Negra $5.20, 2.40 2Mueco $2.20 First Double: (Miranda-La Ne- gra) $18.84. THIRD RACE 1Don Mario $28.20, 4.40, 3.60 2Coran $2.80, 2.20 3Piscina $2.40. Quiniela: (Don Mario-Coran) FOURTH RACE 1Rlstia $8.20. 3, 3.40 2Avivato $2.40, 2.60 3Tap Girl $7. Quiniela: ( RI 11 a-Avlvato) $7.40. ___ FTTH RACE 1Gaywood $5.40. $3, 2.20 2Porters Star $4, 2.40 3Mariscalito $2.20. SIXTH RACE 1Doa Eleida $9.40, 4.20, 2.80 2Curaca $8.60, 3.60 3Mon Etolle $3.60. SEVENTH RACE*''* 1Piropo II $7.40, 8.20, 2.20 2Carmela II $3.80, 2.20 3Rose Hip $2.20. Second Double: (Doa Eleida- Piropo II) $48. EIGHTH RACE 1Levadura $5.40, 3.40, 2.20 2Cipayo $2.60, 2.20 3Betun $2.20. Quiniela: (Levadura-Cipa y o ) $8.60. NINTH RACE 1Hechizo $7.20, 3.40, 2.20 2La Chata $19.60, 2.20 3Alejandro $2.20. One-Two: (Hechizo-La Chata) $218. TENTH RACE 1Breeze Bound $8, 7.60, 3 60 2Callmedear $24.40, 9.80 3Danescourt $3. ELEVENTH RACE 1Picn $2.40, 2.20. 2Haste Star $7.80. Duke 33, South Carolina 7. Auburn 54, Wofford 7. Va- .iiabaia ii, Virginia Tech 4. Minnesota 27, Northwestern 26. Illinois 48, Washington 14. Pittsburgh 22, Notre Dame 10. Purdue 41, Iowa 14. Kansas 43, Iowa State 0. S.M.U. 25, Missouri 7. Oklahoma 49, Texas 20. FRIDAY NIGHT SCORES. Boston College 20, Drake 14. Boston U. 9-. Miami (Florida) 7. Bucknell 19, Temple 12. So. California 20, San Diego Navy.. , ----- -----__________ Sports Briefs NEW YORK. The director of the NCAA television program has made his reply to the Notre Dame athletic director's charges that the group Is working on a "Socialistic and Communistic" plan. Asa Bushnell denies that the NCAA group has presented any "share the wealth" program whereby member colleges would share In receipts' from games that are telecast. Bushnell says that a long range policy on tele- vision will be presented at the next NCAA convention in Wash- ington this December. But, says Bushnell, it is "cer- tainly premature," to call the Elan Socialistic and Communls- c when it has not yet been completely formulated. Earlier yesterday, Notre Dame's Ed Krause said he would like to see what the plan calls for. "Even If they dont take all the receipts," said Krause, "but just a portion, no matter what It is. it's Socialistic and Unamerican." CHICAGO Four of Ameri- ca's foremost golfers have been Invited to play an exhibition tour In Japan, but they probably won't he able to accept despite a lucrative offer. The Professio- nal Golfers Association says the gayer Lloyd Mangrum, Ed liver, Jimmy Demaret and Jim Turnesa are scheduled to leave the middle of the month for a match in Australia and that the Japanese invitation "came too late." NEW YORK, Oct. 11--- Little men make the best umpires, says Bill Stewart, pointing to Babe Plnelll, Bill Summers, Joc- ko Conlon and Artie Oore. The National League veteran stands only five feet five-and-a-half Inches. "If a little guy,has any back- bone at all he will develop it early in life, because so many big guys will try to push him aroud," says Stewart. An umpire needs all of it, for since being nearly killed 20 years ago In landing his major- laegue Job Stewart has been hit by pot bottles, stones, rotten eggs, firecrackers, tomatoes, seat cushions, umbrellas com- pacts, beer cans and left-over liverwurst sandwiches. Knives and blackjacks have been pulled on him. He has been sat and spat on, punched, pommeled and choked. Stewart recalls, in The Amer- ican Magazine, first attracting major-league attention by be- ing mobbed in a New York- Pennsylvania League game in York, Pa., for over-ruling ano- ther umpire and calling inter- ference. Bill Emslle, then of tbe National League staff, was in the stand, admired his .courage. Stewart stresses the difficulty of an umpire's job. He has to carry hundreds of rules and In- terpretations in his head, make 300-odd split-second decisions In a game. A mistake by the margin of a half-inch can mean a difference of $250,000 to a club. FRISCH TROUBLESOME IN ONLY TWO CITIES That' no gag about players and managers nagging an um- pire in order to keep an ap- pointment downtown. "Bench jockeys get bored in the dugout, so they Insult the ump, hoping to get kicked out and catch an early dinner," as- serts Stewart. He recollects Frank Frisch stirring up a lot of trouble, but only in two cities. "In the New York area, Frltch seemed to sniff the scents from his garden in nearby New Ro- chelle, and tried to get kicked out so he could plant his rose- bushes," says Stewart. "In Boston, he would develop an insatiable yearning to make off for a swim along Cape Cod. One afternoon the temperature hit 99 degrees, and Frankie kept Insulting me on almost every play. Finally I turned to him and said: "Look, Frankie, I've got to stay here and sweat, so you're gonna sweat right with me. There'll be no Cape for you today!" Frankie sighed, went back to his station, and found nothing to complain about the rest of the day." Stewart must admit that Leo Durocher calmed down quite a bit since he married Laraine Day, but points out that the Giants' manager suffered a re- ltese the past Summer. THANKLESS UMPIRE'S JOB NOW SLEEPLESS Stewart rightfully calls the umpire the loneliest man in town. "It's hard to resist being friendly to a stranger trying to make conversation," he saya, "but you never know when that stranger may turn out to be a gambler, fixer or a generally- shady character. If he's pure in heart, he may be a disgruntled fan trying to start a brawl. "I don't read or go to the movies too much, because excel- lent eyesight is indispensable. I saw my first movie in months in New York this past Summer, had to take a front-row seat because the house was crowded. I felt a ringing slap across my back. A fan in the row behind had recognized me.- 'I always knew you umpires couldn't see five feet in front of you,' he cackled." "But you cant beat them hours," Tim Hurst once said, to a fellow umpire complaining about how thankless was his job. Now an umpire has to stay up half the night. By BEANS REARDON 24 Yean In National League Written for NEA Service Question: There's a runner on third base with one out. Sud- denly he breaks for the plate. The batter refuses to get out of the box, interferes with the catcher trying to tag the run- ner. Who should be called out, the runner of batter?Anthony Clofalo. Answer: In this case, the run- ner. If the batter interferes with the catcher as the runner Is crossing- the plate, the runner is ont if there are fewer than two ont. If two are ont, the batter Is out. Q. Mathematically, there are how many different possible ar- rangements of the final stand- ings of major-league clubs? , Ernie Gllckman. A. A figure filbert once cairn- 1 lated that there are 40.320 dif- ferent possible wavs for the clubs to finish in the final standings. Q. How many days off does a big league team get a season? Joe Berg. A^ The average major-league club's schedule includes 23 days off during the regular season. CHICAGO. The Chicago White Sox alreadv have gone to work on buildinr no their 1953 roster. The White Sox have announced the purchase of first baseman Earl York from the Cincinnati Reds to bring their total of first Back- ers to five. York played with Tulsa last season, hitting .307. which included 15 homers and 141 runs batted in. 11th Race "D" Native 1 Mile Purse: $300.00 Pool closes xxx 1 Arranquin 2 Rio Mar 3 8un's Moon 4 Diana V. Ortega 112 R. L. Gil 109 B. Aguirre 112 V. Castillo 110 * ,,, MB*" lmes Buchanan a Co. Ltd., Glasgow, Scotland >*trioutor,: AGENCIAS W. H. DOEL, S.A. No. 14 Central Ave. TeL 2-2766 Juan Franco Tip By CLOCKER 1JUAN HUINCHO-Resorte 2CASABLANCAosa B. 3 YosikltoPesadilla , 4MIMOApprise 5ELONATuira 6 VISIR Pincelase (e) 7CHOICE BRANDBegonia 8VENTRE A TERREFull 9PHLOXRathlln Light 10PREGONEROProton 11ARRANQUINSon's Moon NEW YORK. A 8am Hous-, ' ton State player who failed to win a high school letter is the top ground gainer among the na- tion's small college players. Don Gottlob has racket up a total of 721 yards in three games, a big margin over second place Bob Noll of New Mexico Western with 505 yards. All of Oottlob's yard- age was gained passing, and all of Noll's rushing, so Noll is the leading ball carrier. People like Coke . serve it! Brush it ot Spray it on Metal, Wood or Plaster For your car, rafrigarator. kitchen or bath, walla, cab- nata, kid'a toy, rtc., etc v 9 Brilliant Gloss * Plastic Smooth Finish * Startling New Colors * Dries In Minutes For Salo In Panam <*. all P.C. Commissaries and Army Port Exchange. Guests refreshed enjoy themselves.. contribute to the occasion IOTTIIO UNOIt AUTI THE PANAMA COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO., SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1152. _ HJt SUNDAY AMERICAN -. ONE DAY'S CATCH IN PANAMA BAY(Left Baughner, Charles Abernathie, young Baughn one-day catch taken aboard the "Alabama," w Baughner of MIraflores Locks. Abernathie, p guide, left Balboa at 8 a.m. running 140 degre ed driftwood and circled In that area for three proxlmatley 400 pounds of fish. Including two of the sallfish, boated by Bobby Colson of Bal rod. No. 0 Penn reel, with only 175 yards of 11 feather. Hard to believe, but true. The sail scales. The second sail was hooked while wor ond catch was Baughner's. Abernathie had t make both catches possible. to right) Bobble Colson, Mrs. Baughner Jim er and C. R. Baughner are shown with their hich was recently bought from Abernathie by erforming the double chores of skipper and es for two-and-one-half hours. He then sight- h0.usudur,n5 whlcn tlm8 the party boated ap- sallflsh, wahoo. dolphin. Jack and bonita. One boa High, was caught on an old Tonkin cane ne and four feet of leader wire, using a white -weighed 96 pounds on the Balboa Yacht Club king Colson's fish. Both were landed The sec- o maneuver the wheel for some 35 minutes to Tactician Catlin Key Man In Oklahoma Line With His Clever Head Fake And Crab Block By JOHN McCALLUM NEA Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Oct. 11The science of offensive football ad- vances with every play. One of the keenest tacticians on the college front this Fall Is ham-fisted, 195-pound Tom Catlin. Oklahoma's v e te r a n center and co-captain is a hu- man demolition charge, softens the other side's Iron Curtain With vicious blocking. The Sooner savant asserts that it takes more than brute power to get the job done up front these days. "You've got to play with your head," he ays. i * . Though completely overlooked by the baroer-shop strategists, Catlin's head fake and crab block Is a skill ranking right alongside the backs' black magic. "A blocker always tries to put his head between his opponent and the ball carrier's path," says Catlin. "The defense some- times watches the Mocker's nead and adjusts accordingly I try to keep the defense honest by putting my head on the wrong side. It prompts them to react the wrong way, leaves 'em flat-footed for a reverse body block." Catlin furnishes Oklahoma with one of the slickest block- ing centers in college football. The resourceful operative goes both ways in Bud Wilkinson's split T, prefers llnebacklng. When the Sooners are rolling, Wilkinson rests Catlin on de- fense. But there's invariably a quick substitution if the other side gets too close to the goal line. Reminds you of Joe Black and the Dodgers. by --------------- JOE WILLIAMS No intercollegiate squad is so pressed for time as Army. The cadets are restricted to 90-mln- ute practice sessions. Which Isn't much time to cram in chalk drills. Individual instruc- tion, dummy and live scrim- mage and reviewing past games via movies. Red Blaik uncovered a way to lick the time element for pictures. The Army generalissi- mo simply erected a tent on the practice field with a built-in projector and screen. Blaik employs the shuttle sys- tem. While the offensive platoon is on the field, the defense studies the films and vice versa Most unpopular film is the 1951 Army-Navy game. Talk about platoons. The standard football bench for a game is equipped with one tele- phone for communication be- tween the eoacb and his scouts in the press box. Texas has two. One for the offensive unit, the other for the defensive forces. I WATER BOY KICK8 William and Mary has a water boy who ta also the team's extrapolnt specialist. Qulnby Hines, who weighs on- ly 135 pounds, last season drop- ped his bucket lent enough to make 22 of 25 attempts. Indiana lost its first game of the season to Ohio State Ber- nie Crlmmlns was asked if he thought the Howlers would win any of the remaining games "Yes and no," replied the new coach. "What do you mean yes and no?" he was asked. "Yes, I think we will, but no we won't." don'w!rt*"?,Ji0m^thm?V.ou.,nat dont d0 ,n r town. You S-E. f *h* dnel *"> Pitob in Central Park, cook opium in AnS k a *?,' be^tJthe New York Yankees, either. Not often if ftSt &TC Dodefr don,t eTer ** them. A, a matter TW ! ,BT8 don\ bwU y* In the World Serte in Vhi7L?. I AU to* they've had six cracks and lost them in t?e Seventh^aS^fe! *" down to the seventh uttaf .? h*? *AT:i.The best y0u e*" y 'or the Bums is to EF..M^. ne of their sympathetic albeit disconsolate Ioyal- gJSaJ .** .<**?"* down the ramp after Capt. VSiSt^TSM ,Hed..tet'or the final out. Well, anyway thev loJe To^h.^rK^h!KH'rT*rds put differently wh tney lose to the Yaies bat they mean the same thing. in J^*S*m&22&!S& ififi !?* tataau* d their fourth ih < w r ine NaP0leonic direction of Casey Stengel who thus Joins Joe McCarthy in a similar achievement wWcrT to otherwise without parallel in the history of basebal" Thevwon Wtterf tehthdB b5RSWf{ more able reserves an7hyarder fne nom? ?mUlhodaLFabeuRuthv.lrst donned Yw* flannels ifn ?Ke .run na* bteri the club's most potent weanon anri g*M- not one of the more dtoUngutotodStadtaKtoSS t still features the knockout punch. In each of the fou> games thr^noTth^-|T^.theonK,,b,^WM a enchant factor%nTin three of them it was the clincher. Altogether thev hit in intn th? "S?hf5 **" f thf parks t0 set a eord hat was beyond he ,ftid thflHm"8C^e S eve" iabled Murderers Row it cannot mavhl t ~Si Yankees d0 o know their own strength but maybe the experts who muse so wistfully over the old day* don't. -i'JSf*! hVe been b*tter *i*ee teams there hare been htad in' ./7* !?. Throe time, they earn, from be" bW.^H T?..*0 dnw trtn ** ,n the end they beat the B^L thetatter's own cory backyard, winning the last two BT^SE'g*! n S*e.two mes other yonnV "nke^ 2S. . * * 5S2. W ce alongside Illustrious heroeTof m m ii WM Bfh*,y M**"''* t that struck thT dectoive home-run Mow on two successive afternoons. A Ruth roes and ImZ?S uakeS, ^ SV D,M-"i0 *oes nd alon^ come. ?h^YankV Ti"* hard. * ex,plain the continuing mastery of .J A* v W." ThV nnP'y ake it a business to go oat and KLS **H-*S$ more a matter of expert operaSon E^E. J^n0""'. ?*?/ haTe the bMt ,ront officrorganiraSon his ftold m Ge0rCe WelM the most eompetent^aV'IS Bn,TheiYannees ako had more genuine old pros than the SSS^-nSS Revnolds for one. It was old Sam Warnalnt as to^s2P?VK2Sn "2?. leaguc' wh0 sPun a iour-hrt shutoul L, L3oe B1^?tln. the vital fourth gamethe one game wb5,e*3!l2Sjr.oth*t na-d the most influence on the ultimate "t ^nd w, the college-trained Indian whose ove ?m ?n thito J*cn,n,r P'it down an omlnoUs Brooklyn up- r".w^ 2 sixth game after extra base hits had driven Vic SdEdt't th elBhth. And again Tuesday Reynolds llf tvddfeJLopa after the Bums had filled the bases In hhLf0i?rv and^hlI.e h? d,d not escape unscathed and retired hlT?.eUobei0r1 the naiah- Ws wrk was much more than ade- ?n ia8teRel.n!ver heslUtes when one of his pitchers gets SeaindUn?ei-karararm.the ^ ^ *<* "* B*- viL*?* eeond year In a row Bob Kusava protected the SS??*!?1 .n,?m^nt ?f dln erU- Just M w* the ease **tut tP 9tants ta the final game, the left-hander, who sedom hits the headlines untU the World Series, came on in 1 dth the bases full, only this time it was in the seventh ^to*Jn,tad ! ^e n'nth. and there was one out instead of none. The first hitter he had to deal with wa, Duke Snider, the Bum" hottest bat with 10 hits, including four homers Snider popped innocuously to third for the second out. This' raagbt up Jackie Robinson who had been hitting the ball 5t vif *""> despite his enfeebled .174 batting average. He hit under a tricky Kusava pitch and lofted a soft infield > which got caught ta the wind and Billy Martin ran in second to make the catch two feet from the ground close taCTJ,.hert i0^*" the h,*h nD Pun !,tU>' nd mock- ruu .. hf*'?,rk *h** w" Beginning to gather over the old u cutely tuned ear could have heard the strains of an unending Brooklyn refrain, "Walt till next year," for that was to be the funeral chant to the Bums* tost dying hope. But for an erret not another Brooklyn hitter was to see first base. i- ?hhtrl,LP,,a5n's hopes that Black, who had put the Bums flWfi?,.v !**& """"'eent relief pitching, had won the SZ- It em*t& i0*! the fourth to Reynolds' shutout, would Krlf tn? FiatDu*h Faithful their first series victory, were to be *. ^.e.^0ri ,hr.ee hinlngs the young Negro right-hander 7J? - g"*velr strong. In the fourth the Yankees began to i hmBd1.th* aUth they belted him out and as he !^5?Tk? !S! -ld.^_riaU,uc Brooklyn rooter, resigned to the inevitable,^veiled: There ain't nothing to do now but start selling Ucketa tor next year." That's how It was, too. If Black couidn t hold the Yankees nobody could. And when It devel- i oped theiBums, with all their right-handed hitters, couldn't me.n^cetvthe.Jeit"handed Kusava there wasn't the slightest doubt that they were through for 1952 .k iLta the 'told did the Yankees fail to measure op to their lofty standard. They committed 10 errors to the Bams' L*Af-2iU.MeIi0**,l?d wlth ,our had a particularly trying series. Nor dM the AL champs make as much use of the double-play as they usually do. They had six to the Bums' four. A year agoJn only six sames thsy had a record 10. They had plenty SLJ,eII MaS.,,t:- "eynold. Kr ava an* even Old Jawu Mise. .* ^ *' *"et eftosr It h-d , be Gil Hodges, the Bums- first baseman who hasn't got a hit jet. :* - d* Homers In Series Changes Mile's Mind About Retiring By HARRY GRAYSON NEA Sports Editor NEW YORK, Oct. lO.-ohn Robert Mlze was thinking seri- ously of retiring at Just three months short of 40. Johnny Miae has Just closed hto 23rd season in organized baseball, not counting the three years In the military. He has spent 17 campaigns in the ma- jors. "I got off to a slow start in the Spring," recalls the gigantic Georgian. "The bat felt Tike a Liar bell. I couldn't get any dis- tance." A friend offered to buy Mlie i minor-league club. The Big Cat decided it was time for an old guy like him to call It a ca- reer. But Joe Collins couldn't buy a jbase hit in the first three games.'.* Jof the World Series. So Casey Stengel called on Mlze, the old pro, as a plnch-hltter, and he Preacher Roe came through with a home run. That put Mlze back in the lineup as the regular first base- m&n- He won the fourth game with a home run off joe Black . .Hlsi1.me"run hitting reached a crescendo In the fifth lnnlne 2 ,th$ "Jtn game with a majestic smash into the lower right- field deck for three runs that put the Yankees temporarily ahead 5-4. It was his third homer m as many games. ,I5ze.,was tne vlctlm of downright larceny In the 11th, when Carl Furlllo created something In the way of a new high-Jump record to pluck what, would have been his second homer out of the second deck, or so it seemed. This changed Mlze's mind about retiring. He needs Just 15 hits during a championship season to reach the select ?000 mark, and will be back with the New York Ameri- cans next Spring to get them. Johnny Mlze wasn't Leo Durocher's kind of ball player He helped the Yankees to four straight pennants, and wound Johnny Mlze ____________ TtXU A- Un verheadUoffen"seaeAH Rt^foSSiFT' & **"" ? Lattner, 50-Minute Man, Classed As Notre Dame's Finest Back Since Lujacfc y up playing first base in the World Series. THE MA II ATM A WANTED. TO COMPORT PREACHER Preacher Roe's six-hitter in the third game of the Series re- called-how Branch Rickey mousetrapped the Pittsburgh club Into throwing the slight and sleight-of-hand southpaw into a pack- age deal In December. 1947. The original proposition was tor Outfielder Dixie Walker and Pitchers Hal Gregg and Vic Lombard! to move from Brooklyn to Pittsburgh tor Inflelders Billy Cox and Gene Mauch and con- siderable cash. When it was practically sealed. Mahatma Rickey, then vice- president and general manager of the Dodgers, said: "By way of a clincher, how about also giving us that little skinny left-hander. Let me see. I can't think of his name, I know him so well, too. Used to be In the Cardinal chain. He wouldn't help the Dodgers, but maybe one of the farm clubs could use him "He had hto skull fractured. He has lost hto fast ball "Perhaps I can comfort him. ROE AND COX IN RICKEY'S GREATEST DEAL "You mean Roe." said General Manager Fred Hamey of the Pirates. The Preacher was chucked in. He has been a mainstay of the Brooks tor five years, led the National League in winning percentage in 1949 and '51, won 19 and 22 games In '50 and '31, beat the Cardinals End Giants in key games during the season Just closed. Billy Cox to the most-polished third baseman In baseball. Branch Rickey has made many Dart deal, but- thto one certainly ranks among the best. By MURRAY OLDERMAN NEA Staff Correspondent NEW YORK Oct. 11 In the wake that followed Notre Dame's opening game 7-7 tie with Pennsylvania, an angular young halfback sat, head bow- ed, In the glum dressing room and ed Johnny s t a r t e d as an end.lference for offense, which Is on- switched to the backfleld. )v natural Tuli.lf .>. k.*.TM He's a strong runner with ust enough touch of eluslve- ness to make him a constant all-the-way throat. For a change of pace the Irish have him pass occasionally on the tag end of laterals. Johnny, who's registered ly natural. Lujack says he's |_ shade better with a ball clutch- ed to hto stomach. Oct. 24, the eve of the Nortti Carolina game, will be hie 20th birthday, promoting Johnny Lattner to recall: "Last time my birthday feH the night before a game was. in I muVVd "The way 1 ptoy" g? tfMJg" bS?B"10' high ^^T and"l Teally" ha- I shouldn't even have been!? .iltlmSj?.ad "LflSf pla" S*1* a celebration. Scored ROYAL NETHERLANDS STEAMSHIP COMPANY K N S M TO EUROPE: AGAMEMNON.....................Oct. 14 BENNEKOM.......................Oct. 24 HERA.............................Oct. 25 TO THE CARIBBEAN: AGAMEMNON .....................Oct. 14* INO .............................Oct. 19 BENNEKOM .......................Oct. 24 TO WEST COAST SOUTH AMERICA: HERSILIA (not calling Chilean ^ ports)............................Oct. 25 BREDA ...........................Nov. 2 HESTIA (not calling Chilean porte) ..................Nov. 23 KNSM CRISTOBAL, 3-1213-12183-121 BLOK AGENCIES, BALBOA, 2-3719 (Freight Only, BOYD BROS. PANAMA CITY. 2-2*01 (Passengers Only) UNITED FRUIT COMPANY Great White Fleet NEW ORLEANS 8ERV1CE I . Arrives Cristobal S.S. "CHIRIQUI" 8.S. "LEVERS BEND S.S. "CHIRIQUI" ... > ---------- .....Oct. 1 .....Oct. 24 .....Nov. t out there today." Johnny Lattner needn't have been so self-depreciating. The 19-year-old kid from Chi- cago did everything but dry Frank Leahy's handkerchief. He scored the only Irish touch- down, punted, passed played al- most all the way on defense. Only an off-balance lurch by Penn's Ed Bell Jarred his elbow loose from the ball after Lattner spun free with a pass for the possible winning TD late in the going. It's a tribute to the 19- pound Junior that Leahy lets him linger in a game tor 50 or more minutes. He's the finest all-around back at Notre Dame since John- ny Lujack. He was a popular pre-season All-America selec- tion. REASON TO CHEER Last year In his first varsity season Lattner topped the Irish in playing time. He had the leading ground-gaining average five yards, Intercepted the most passes, was the second leading scorer. "He does have good endur- ance," confesses the cautious Leahy. "He to a Very strong boy." Lujack, now his backfleld coach, goes a step farther: ___ Johnny's the kind of boy who welcomes the chance to play 50 or 80 minutes. He's good now, but he's going to be bet- ter." If there's going to be any- thing to cheer about tor old Notre Dame, it'll be youngsters like Lattner who provide it. His clutch talents were never bet- ter evident than during the last basketball season when he scor- ed a last-second field goal to upset New York University in overtime. At six-feet two he's a replica In structure and disposition of Stanford's Bob Mathias. His Fenwick High School exploits In Chicago rated him All-America mention as a prepster. Tall admits Tennis Hall Of Fame To Be Made At Newport NEWPORT, R. I. (UP The Newport Casino's executive com- mittee has authorized establish- ment of a U. S. Lawn Tennis Hall of Fame similar to the baseball shrine at Cooperstown, N. Y. James H. Van Allen, the orga- nization's president, described the Casino as the "cradle" of1 lawn tennis in the United States because the first national championship was held there in! 1881. SOME .SOMERSET! New Austin A40 puts up great performance in Road Tests HiHIIh, RerrlsmM CMttW u< Ownl Ciro Arrives NEW YORK SERVICE__________ Crlsteb! | "COPAN".............;...-,...................Oct. 12 S.S. "PRA BKRLANGA" ..........................Oct. 14 8.8. "CAPE ANN" ................................Oet II 8.S. "JAMAICA" ..................................Oet. II '"sr fwlfhl utllngs from Crl Passenger Sailings to New Orleans via Tela, Honduras Sails from Cristobal 5-5- &S92SS3T..................................^ " 8.8. "CHIRIQUI" ................................Nov. 4 fftckl? SatUaft hT*Hii tmmm SMm m Haw Iwk, MaMI*. ChartatM. U* An.l. San frairtw. in* StatU* SPECIAL NOTICE We wish to announce a ne Special round trip rate of l27f.M tor passage on oar twelve passenger ships sailing weekly from Balboa to Los Angeles or San Francisco, returning from Us Angeles, ticket limited to fear months, effective September lltb to May 18th. TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL 1121 PANAMA 2-28M COLON M . A Masterpiece of the Distiller's Art SCOTCH WHISKY Acceleration 0-30 m.p.h.......6.9 sees. Speed...................71 m.p.h. Austin again makes world newswith this ex- citing, 'handsome new saloon ... the A40 Somerset. NEW REFINEMENTSlarge, deep, curved windscreen and rear windowsteering-column gear control wide rear opening doors with push-button handles safety door locks at rearexternal side-lamps visible to driverluxurious, leather covered foam rubber seatingmore room all round. PERFORMANCE PLUS STAMINAthe Somerset has the famous record-breaking 4-cylinder. overhead valve Austin A40 engine, with improved induction and cylinder head design" for extra top gear performance. SEH THE SOMERSET AT 31, AUMOBILE ROW. j Pennsylvania. 13 Ohio State.... 23 Maryland.... 37 Mich. State .. 28 La. State .... 34 Minnesota ... 27 Pittsburgh ... 22 Army..___.37 Princeton___ 7 Wisconsin 14 Georgia..... OTexasA&M. 6 Kentucky.... 7 Northwestern. 26 Notre Dame.. 10 Dartmouth... 7 Ike To Reveal lis Finances iefore ; 1 ----- ------- 7e SU NO A Y TWENTY-EIGHTH IEAR. . EN ROUTE WITH EISENHOW- JER, Oct. 11 i UP i Dwight D. Elsenhower changed his mind to- "day and said he would reveal his pfmte finances before the elec- tion. 'His announcement was a def- inite shift in his attitude of less j than a week ago. He told report- ers In an off-the-record meeting . last Sunday on his train that he law no reason to make a finan-1 cial statement or disclose income j ..tax returns in the manner of tlov. Adlai Stevenson, his Demo- - cratic opponent for the presiden- cy. Stories of the off-record talle; ' were published today, leading re- Sorters to ask Eisenhower about is plan* on a financial and ln- come tax statement as he cam-, '-panned in Arizona, New Mexico d'eates that the proposal to withdraw U. S. troops from Ko- rea was advanced first by mi- litary leaders In early 1947, and was opposed initially by the Let tiu people know the truth and the country I safe" Abraham I PANAMA. R. P SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1952. TEN CENTS Military Asked To Take GIs Out Of Korea Back In 1947 Crime Trend Continues Up, Says the FBI By MICHAEL J. O'NEILL WASHINGTON, Oct. 11 (UP>- The diary of the late Defense Secretary James V. Forrestal ln- and Utah. -. Through his press secretary. J James Hagerty. Eisenhower r- ylieri: "Of course If anyone is .""Interested they can have the re- _jjort as soon as it is completed. It is virtually all a matter of public record, anyway." He referred to a report of his financial records that has been' in preparation since the political controversy developed over Sen. Richard M. Nixon's private fund I of contributions to defray hls Sente expends. The report rovers an undisclos-; ed pumper oi year-}* Lsbt (; lday Eisenhower had saidldec v.lio hnd helped him in I tax* matter.; had bo an compiling his financi:! -c.c'.s, in event he needed them. 'I don't see the need vet." he | EDITORS NOTE: The decision to withdraw U. S. occupa- tion troops from Korea, in .IMS has become a major campaign issue. Republicans charge it waa a "political'' decision, which left South Kotea wide open to the Communist attack which materialised in 195*. Democrat, contend it was a "military" decision endorsed by GOP presidential nominee Dwight D. Eisenhower at the tine he waa Army Chief of staff. The fol- lowing dispatch records the available historical data on how the decision was reached. State Department. In an entry dated May 7, 1947. Forrestal wrote that Robert P Patterson, then secretary of President Truman asserted re- cently Eisenhower concurred in the military recommendation to war. brought up the m*^\"&!&-&StWZ plan at a Cabinet meeting. "Mr. Patterson reiterated that we should get out of Korea at the earliest possible time," For- restal's diary says. "He stressed the expense and the insignifi- cance of the strategic and econo- mic value of Korea." Forrestal else wrote that Gen. George C. Marshall, then secre- tary of state, "did not agree with these Patterson's views. er has not denied this. He has said that in the final analysis, the decision was a political one, made by civilian officials of the government. In April. 1948. several months after the Korean resolution was adopted by the U.N., the State and Defense Departments, Na- tional Security Council, and Mr. Truman formally agreed to pro- ceed with the troop pull-back. This began in September but halted in November because of unstable conditions in Korea. The President and his top ad- visers again reviewed the ques- tion and in March, 1949, accord- ing to State Department report, agreed that continued withdraw- al was "both politically and mi- litarily desirable." The report said the decision was based on the U.N. resolution, the fact that South Korea was an Independent nation, that Russia had withdrawn its forces, and the Judgment of U. S. mi- litary leaders In the field, in- cluding MacArthur, "that the state of combat readiness of the Korean forces was such as to justify the withdrawal..." The last troops left on June 29, 1949. However, the State Depart- ment apparently had done an a- bout-face by the fall of 1947. It . went on record then in favor of said then. I am just thinking K, lvlng South Korea lts lndepen. ovf.' ,_ .u tl dence. There is no public record He said that up to that time, wnether tne department yielded he had not received one letter: to tne military views or whether asliirHt him to bare his finances. ( ^ was prompted by its own di- ajyhy should I dance to the j piomatic motives. otrrer OUow's tuner' he asked.| in any case, the department referring: to Stevenson's move in submitted a resolution to the revealing his own tax returns for United Nations that called a- it) years and suggesting all can- didates follow suit. "I haven't any political fund." Elsenhower added last Sunday. "I never had any." .jAsked today whether the report WCuld Include actual Income tax rturns, Hagerty said he did not know nor did he know just when the report could be expected. In his tour through Arizona to- day. Eisenhower promised cheer- President Truman Endorses Community Chest Campaign mong other things, for the with- drawal of U.8. and Russian troops from Korea. It was adopt- ed the following month. Gen. Douglas MacArthur testi- fied last year, at Senate hear- ings on his recall as Far East commander, that all ton U.S. mi- litary leaders believed in 1947 that it would te "dangerous" to leave U. S. occupation forces in Korea because "they might be i be trapped" in ease of a major ing crowds at Phoenix and Tuc- communist attack. son that they would be given There is no public record to greater control of their reclama- show what position was taken by tion projects if they elected Re-' Gen. Dwight D. Elsenhower, then BUblicans In November. i serving as Army chief of staff. Hope that all Federal employes will give generously to their Community Chests was expres- sed by President Harry S. Tru- man in a letter from the White House recently. The President's letter was di- rected to the heads of Executive Departments and Agencies and asked them to extend their full cooperation to the Community Chests in their areas. "Such cooperation," the Presi- dent writes, "would logically in- clude the assumption of equita- ble unit goals, the effective so- licitation of all employes and the setting up of an adequate col- lection method for the conve- nience of those who wish to make contributions on an instal- lment basis." The President's letter follows: "Community Chest and United Funds all over the country will conduct their annual campaigns this fall under the designation. 'United Red Feather Campaigns of America.' "In addition to some 17,000 health, welfare and recreation organizations, these appeals will provide financial support for the United Defense Fund whose job It Is to furnish USO services to the armed forces, help to com- munities disrupted by defense activities and relief to Korea. "The goals of these campaigns will aggregate over $250.000,000. By virtue of their size and the range of their services, these campaigns are clearly of great importance. "I have approved the appoint- ment of the Honorable John W. Snyder. the Secretary of the Treasury, as Vice-Chairman of United Red Feather Campaigns of America, and through him. have assured them that they will have the full support of all per- sons In authority In the Federal Government. "I am confident that you will extend the full cooperation of your department in each com- munity throughout the United States and Its territories and po- ssessslons where it conducts Its operations. "Such cooperation would logi- cally include the assumption of equitable unit goals, the effec- tive solicitation of all employes and the setting up of an ade- quate collection method for the convenience of those who wish to make contributions on an Ins- tallment basis. "It is my hope that all em- ployes will gives generously keek- ing in mind the fact that their gifts will be used .to support a number of different organiza- tions for a full year." Presidential Candidates Learning US Geography OAT ON WHEELSIn Parti. France, a woman passerby tops to look for the power plant in this boat-like vehicle. She discovered it m nothing but fancy. lu-eamlined tricycle, using good old- Modified Virus May Bring Polio Immunity Nearer was modified byj BERKELEY, Calif., Oct. 11 The virus (UPt Dr. Harold R. Cox. o consecutive passages Lederle Laboratories, New York, the brains of more than 100 announced today that he and laboratory hamsters before in- ftssociates have succeeded in jection in the chick embryos, growing a modified pollomyell- Cox said. WASHINGTON, Oct. 11 Ma-i jor party presidential candidates may find themselves exhausted! by election day, but, win or lose, they have one compensation ar almost unparalleled oppor- tunity to learn the nation's geo- j graphy first hand. Today's campaign tours take The 1840 campaign inspired former President John Qnincy Adams to write that "the prin- cipal leaders of the political parties ue traveling about the country, from state to state, and holding forth, like Metho- dist preachers..." The Van Buren and Harrison Labor Parly's Alf.ee To Bevanile Rebels: 'Work With Team' LONDON, Oct. 11 (UP) Ex- Prime Minister Clement Attlee said today he was prepared to lead the British Labor Party "just so long as it wishes me to do o." He warned left-wing leader Aneurln Bevan and his followers to work as a team in the House of Commons. "If there are dif- ferences on personal grounds, I say that the Socialist move- ment is far more important than individuals." Attlee spoke at a party meet- ing to protest Conservative Par- ty plans for denationalizing trucking and steel industries. He seized the opportunity to deliver his first retaliation since Sevan's recent popular victory with rank and file party mem- bers at the Labor Party's Na- tional Convention. Leadership of the party in the Commons is chosen by members there, Attlee pointed out. He still has a selzeable margin over Be- van among the Labor members of parliament. Attlee said party leadership and policy in '.*- Commons was decided democratically, and the "decision taken by tne Party should be honored. He added: "What U quite In- tolerable Is the existence of a party within a party with se- parate leadership, separate meetings, and supported by its own press. It Is inimical to ef- fective action in breeds suspi- cion and uneasiness throughout the movement. '1 am certain the vast major- ity of members of the Labor movement throughout the coun- try will agree with me when I say to those concerned drop it. Stop this sectionalism, work with the team. Turn your guns on the enemynot your friends." The nation's crime rate for the first six months of 1952 Is up 6.4 percent over the similar per- iod of 1951. This Is the result of more than a million crimes be- tween January and June, 1952. FBI says if this rate of Increase continues, more than two mil- lion crimes will b* reported by 1952's end. Newscharts here, based on data from the semi- annual report of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, show (right) the national crime rate and (below) the breakdown on major crimes in cities and in rural areas. Nationally, all major crimes exeept rape, showed substantial Increases. Greatest Increases were in crimes Involving property theft. PERCENT CHANGE 1951-52 By and large, city crime reflects the national trend. The largest cltlei Incidence of all crime except negligent manslaughter and larceny. biggest RURAL CRlMfc Murder trend in rural areas decreased radically in robberies was nearly parallel In cities and rural towns. it increased in country. while city rate was increasing. Upswing While rape decreased in cities It had no de- candldates from one ocean toj precedents, however, did not es- anbther. from the deep south to tabUsh a pattern, and presiden-1 the Canadian border, by train, | tlal campaign was limited to few plane and motor car. All the can- speeches and less traveling for! didate has to do Is to look out some time, although some can-' NEW YORK. Oct. 11 (UP), Furthermore, the window to learn the face of .didates made what were billed A Bos.on physician reported to- layed effect on 'ertimy. women the United States. as "non-political tours." Stephen.day be had controlled the fer-iconcieved and i It was not always so, says the A Douglas was criticized in 1860 tillty of 298 National Geographic Society. In lor his campaign activities. Lin- couples by 7thf early days of the Republic it |coin won without leaving his was considered undignified for a i home state of Illinois. Boston Doctor Announces Easy-To-Use Anti-Fertility Drug, Cites Results out of W married nancies and deliveries after giving them pilU'tney and their husbands stop- three times a day to the'ped taking the pills man as well as the woman. All of the < The two who flunked the ex-had tls viras m chick embryo a Previously the virus had been' lndul8e 'n the practice, possibly important step toward cultlva.ed only in monkey or1 until m th- nominee sd development of an immunizing human tissues, a means which L JJUS surfaceto tre idea agent against the disease. could never provide sufficient 112,lfwUUam I owndesol Cox made the announcement culture for quantities of vac- \V\iSpd.XJ:U"tm ^?n ,91 at the formal opening ceremon- cine and which offers additional liW.SK'SM&^S-S les ior the University of Call- dangers. Cox said, in the pos-,*1 *h e P *S*ncy ,1s,."l an fornla's $2 000.000 virus labora- slbility of passing on other in-!?,* ,ce t?.,biLeUner soUc}ted, or, tory. fectious agents. (declined. There was plenty of He said the modified virus Cox said he believed the mostlcar"Pai?nlnK ca'Jed election- ao obtained apparently had pro- logical way to immunize in- |eerlnK >n those early daysbut vlded immunity against one fan; and children against polio," was not as Pen M today- specific polio virus in six mon- was to "induce infection via! feeding a modified or attenuat- presidential nominee to stump! In 1880. James A. Garfield de-! The two who nuoaca we couples had children, to partner 65 were to 40; and Chick embryos are already ed live virus.' used for produc.lon of number.: Such a virus not that pre- :>ie"coneering,'"the7we~con-L Campaign trips, although some- him i leaving the actual public work to """'*" pontea] spoilsmen and friendly Journals In 1936, William Henry Harri- son violated the early principles of vaccines against other dis- pared through the chick em eases but scientist had pre- bryos has been fed safely in vfously been unable to grow aa one experiment to 20 infantile paralysis virus in this volunteers, he said, medium which is among the' He said he did not believe least expensive and is believed i that the gamma globulin serum among trie most nearly fool-,which has been used la con- proof medjums for such culture, trolled tests in polio epidemic ICox said the Lansing strain areas this year offered a "kmg- of lnfan ile paralysis virus term answer'* to polio Immunl- one of three major isolated zation atrr ins of the virus had been He said such immunization! far west as Illinois. He lost. In used In the laboratory's work, .aa the gamma globulin offers i 1840 the situation was reverrad. The monkey tests involved lm- Is "fleeting-' and that the avail-! Harrison confined his traveling iminitv against only that par- able supply of this blocd com- to his home state of Ohio while tftular strain considered the ponen t would be sufficient for i Van Buren made limited presi- Icond mos common ar>1 pos- adequate treatment of leas than rientlal visits to New York, Penn- ilb!v the most deadly of the two per cent of the nation's vvanla and New Jersey. Harri- tfree types. children under 10 years of age. son won. not exceptions, rule o b aa w. ,d o; KjsnKS ?&a ffi 8 ,"*" The chemical compound la easy, "Fertility control" wa de- to produce and cheap. monatrated In 298 lor periods 'ranging from three months to Dr. Benjamin F. Steve made 30 months. ins report, which gave promise ,._.i, f of putlng birth control within I Dr. Sieve aid 21 females of the easy reach of all clasaea of,the first group, f of the sec- people elsewhere. In "Science," lond, 27 of the third, and Ix ff ...v K.v .^...c.. wwriai -- ---- a publication of the American the fourth "terminated rtiiiiy statements on controversial poll-1*nIey' won the election with his Association for the Advance- control... voluntarily for tne Mz.ai ..o. in.i..j m .Xti.. in Dorch" tarti ment of Science purpose of having a wantea It was labeled "a preliminary,child." and all conceived In tent to remain behind the scenes, ,'mes owned upon, became report." normal times.- public appearan c e s, or Cleveland, who had conducted a comparatively quiet campaign, won. William Jennings Bryan start- ed the vogue for vigorous elec- tioneering trips in 1896 when he > traveled 18.000 miles and spoke' to an estimated five million peo- ple His opponent. William Mc- ;kin" more and more the custom in the 2Cth century, culminating in President Truman's ambitious 'whistle stop"- travels of 1948, and the extensive trips nowoc- vhile running against Martin ^"Pylng so much of the time of Van Buren. He took to coach and ! horseback, covering the Middle j Atlantic states and traveling as the major party nominees. Insult to Injury BRIDGEPORT. Conn. (UP) Mrs. Marie Sheehan filed a $25,- 000 damage suit against her hus- ban after the car ho was driving crashed. She said she dldnt mind the minor injuries she suf- fered, but the auto landed in some poison sumac bushes and she was poisolned. In addition to that caution, Dr. Sieve added this specific warning: "It must be realized that this preliminary report la presented for its experimental value only Much more clinical data must be accumulated be- fore the general use of antl-fertlllty fac'.or U ranted.r "The medication must be tak- en for 10 consecutive days by both partners balare antl-fer- tlllty action can be assured, he said, "and thereafter, con- inaousiy by both Partners this the prescribed daily Fertility can be restored j at divided Dr. Sieve saM he had demons- merely by omlUlag the drug for tratad conclusively with his 3001 a -hour period- f0"!! m*,i: married couples, and In a series!cation be omitted for Jf hours of experiments with laboratory bv either member of the cou- anhnals. that the chemical la j pie. the 10 eonaecutive, days of non-toxic and without side ef- therapy must be P?*1** fecU. even when taken for long both partners In order to i periods in large doses. establish fertility control. re- "PLOTY OF ROOM UP FRONT"Though It might be Imprac- tical In a big city like London, shopping mothers elsewhere may find this new baby carriage-toting bus a big help. When Mom wants to go downtown to .hop. .11 .he has to do U hang her car- riage from on. of the hook, beneath the windshield. Now on eat bibition in London, the bus will be shipped to New Zealand, tf ' if- mmmmm "mm: Can You Trust Your Judgment? Missing Words All Out Try ** r -THI sllhou- 1 eti They're on the Job THREE men are working on a new house. Fst* i and Mr. Johnson aro not plumber*. Neither aro Mr. Gross and Bert carpenters. There la also a Mr. Maaon on the job, but he ia not a bricklayer, and ha la not called Tim who, you ahould know, la the plumber. Juat who la who on the Job? See how long It takea you to Identify each. Jaqoinid ttoif) uirr, "iet -Ho|jq -nonrqor jjh uiadjj 'Bonn i*d :n ^j ettea at left ^^B^^K romprlae sn in- ***^ L- tereatlng teat Q aometlmea used In c h o o 1 a. ,__,,,,_, When tried on Hn both children P^ and older per- ^M^il^ oni, children H usually eco re beat. TThe object ia to determine by eyealght alone which of the ob- v* Ject* ahown has the largest black area. It isn't necessary for you to know what they represent specifically to de- cide. For example, the cocktail glasa (M) ia smaller than the dog (D), but which, la the largest in area, of all the allhouettos? See how close you can come to rating their sisee in order. n 'i -*. 'a, 'o T 'i o #h J > T :w i\s it jo upio u| pijtj )j*rqo iix :sj*t*r piLL in the two blanks in each F O th* following sentences with words spelled with the same letters rearranged. For instance, the answer to No. 1 ia hate, heat. Now go on: 1. "I ----------- such weather," John complained. "The ia more than I can bear." J. Having drawn in hi* <------, the fisherman counted-----------Ah in it I. Ancient Romana wore a . which was sometimes made of-----------hair. 4. The burglars tried to Your Move to Win Dea^ Drunk VFmiTE elim- T Instes his opponent in four a h o r t moves. See If you can turn th* trick with the fineses of master checker player, Millard Hopper, who originated this problem. White to move and Tin. (White aoves upboard.) sai* ejmsv tX-L II- l-II ttnaiieoo- ii-ct aiunf *>ih 'SI -oe ssaoui stniM aJq) 'fl-C (liiinf hjih 'fax ouj I1M :jmV TEASER What gar- mint does a dog put on for a feat trip? , **SJ :.? Enigma IH everything I exist, . In nothing I'm also found. I'm present when all is silent; Also when there's sound. I'm always found in the night, Though ever in f he day. I'm ths end of very man. Now guess what I am, I say. .a, ji qj t\ 00[jnB eqi oi Jiwr :!>! Put Three in a Row "TRANSFER the numbers in the circles to ths 1 boxes, squares or celia so that the total of the three numbers in each row, horizontal or vertical, will equal 135. You may find it easier to solve if you cut out the numbers and switch them around to meet the requirement. uoimod ialmp nj mq turn so) q HI* nj a nj usquinu qi 'J>Ajtoq iJluJ eqi B[ lo.ni -liruxs iujuip .? xuj suormtof j.tno 61"toiioq :* '13 'tlMOJ pjitr .e "K 'at*J psooee :o> HTH ice cubes tinkled as In- 1 spector Sharpe held up the glass. "Did he always take his drink with a chaser?" asked the In- spector, pointing to the recum- bent figure in the chair. "Tea, air. Aa usual, Mr. Gar- nelle asked me to bring in the soda and ice," the butler replied. "At what time did you hear the shot?" "It was about seven o'clock, air." Inspector Sharpe glanced at his watch. "It la now eight-thirty. Were there any,visitors thla eve- ning?" "None at all. He had asked th* rest of the servants to take the night off and Instructed mer that he waa not to be disturbed. There waa no one home besides myself." "You did well to call me Im- mediately and to see that nothing has been disturbed. Do you know of any reason why your master ahould want to commit suicids?" "I'm afraid I don't know ex- cept that he hat been drinking a lot ljttely." "And you believe that exces- sive intoxication might have brought on a fit of despondency? I am going to have the medical examiner check the victim for alcoholism. However, ttVel com- pelled to hold you tat murder!" What single clue eaused Sharps to make thla decision? aOASJ e.jnnq .qi o| HI* pun pq \[a -j0 in peoinj i mini J( j.qi np oi uomj ou pq savd pino eu Jiiod joj n3s m ..an pessejp" p.q Jnnq eq) ppn|Duoa joiMdiui qi JOjJqi \l*nnq eqvjo uofltloj -lijuj t.d4qB JOjDedtai jo .uirh.qi Ilion loq *qj pjq .q piu|tia Jrinq qj ai|i uiojj ntq pas jnoq qi u\ p*)hki Aq pin mil iq, t r>i c|i m[ t|q m soup eqi Sn, -eiJp nl peq eneano ji ueiieer Brainteaser SUPPOSE you were to take thla page and fold it in half, then fold it in half again at right an- gles to ths first fold. Tou'd have four thicknesses of papar. Now suppose you tore It In half. How many piece* of paper would you hav* then? Tou're supposed to answer without actually folding the paper. mm id eeiqi eAvq p.nej issetseV* the carpenter ehop, but were frightened away after breaking open on* of th*----------cheats. 8. Sightseers are kept by a -----------from getting too clove for safety when viewing th* Inside of the -----------. "1*1 'ire 1 '1*01 "joen -ito 'oj, -i ! JH * eeH -x ihmiit Word Ladder ITS as true aa ever that you must save to become rich. SAVE become RICH in just four step* by th* word ladder method of changing ons letter each atep to leave a complete word. Try it. 'qirg 'sou >.! 'Ai 'At 1 AM tuo :|l|S Enigma My first is in dark but never In fair. My second is in horse and also in mar*. My third is in aver, but not in now. My fourth ia in animal, but not in cow. My fifth comes both in main and might My all comae often In the night. uiMjp v l*MM SCORE of the baseball game was 0 to 0 ia ths 4th inning, when the Btinksville Nine put runners on first, second and third bases with none out. Breeaer Bye, Blinkaville pitcher, was the next batter. Breeaer was a good pitcher, but a poor hitter. Since It was early in ths game and Breeaer was doing well on the mound, the msnager let him bat. The opposing pitchsr threw just three pitches and with them retired the side. None waa hit by the batter and no double or triple play took place. Furthermore, Breeaer didn't hit a foul. What could have happened to enable the opponent* to make thre* putouU on just three pitches, nons of which was hit? nO|lll|Ot l[l D| ;ii|.iw\ iqieso* j* eieiu, ino njn.ni Jiq qj 'qo|d pjjqj eqi u qjiia eqi j hjiuii Ju*q eqi miiy in x|d euite eqi XdiiidSii Xq cl uouiioddo em so M|Jdjns uml p,*q iqSnoqi jS*atuj eqi 'qoiid puosM eqi no -x|d qi no pj.imAp puooi in, Kaanj eqj, ino tm ui . pjfqi ruoj; Suiuio.i Jiannj eqi pa q.>iid i|i liifiiui a>u*q qx \<|d eieanbt jnj |1US1 UI \S JSU1IU I||ABS|UI in *i|l qjlid luu eqj BO :iuv Test Your I Q. GIVE the next term In each of the following series, if you canand tak* no more than 10 seconds to figure out each cor- rectly. A. 1, 4, 9, 16, B. 30, 27, 24, 21. C. A, E, T, B, X, D. 2, 6, 10, 17, E. , b, d, h, F. 1/2, 2/8, 3/4, ----------- Q. 6, 2, 1, 4,------- H. 2 3/4, 3, S 1/4. 3 1/2,----------- I. a, a plus d, a plua 2d,---------- J. r, 8.5r, llr,----------- -J eti 'r :pt en|d i \\t 'U,'L- 'p :/ 'J :d i K "a 'M. o it 'a fee v laststni Troubles in Threes in This Maze ( i.i .- DOODLE" aOLCTION |N THIS design of the age-old but ever fascinating mass puzzle, you will not* that dots appear in groups of three. In finding your way from one portal to the oppo- site portal, if you paaa one dot of any group you must paaa all three. That's a nil*. Another rule 1* that channels one* traversed must not be used again. It's a good idea when working maze to cover them with tracing: or tissue, paper so that if you make a mistake you can discard th* tissue and try again. ANYTBINO less than a perfect score in this tar- get game fust wUl not do. Obviously, it takes some square shooting. Each question below has as its answer a number which is to be inserted la iA correspondingly let- tered box of the "target" above. When all the boxes have been properly filled, a magic square is formed in which all of the horizontal, vertical and diagonal rows have the same sum. Ready to take a shot at itf All right, fire axray! A. How many horses pulled the shay that waa the "deacon's masterpiece" ? B. The Gilbreths made a beet seller of the Idea that It's.cheaper to raise a family by the ? C. Saturday is really what day of the week? D. How many Unes in a sonnet? E. How many letter In the last name of this beauty above, Cyd--------------, who's making a hit in movie* if not in archery ? F. What's unlucky when it comes on Friday? G. How many were on base when mighty Casey truck out? H. When things come in the nick of time, it's said to be the th hour. I. '.Thou shalt not covet" Is the th Command- ment. J. Slices of bread In a double-decker sandwich? K. "Sweet end never been kissed." L. What made the Dionne children famous was that there were of them. M. Winning first sO-oke In lawn tennis counts how many? N. Keen intuitive power is termed a th sense. O. From whst Latin number doe* ffovember get its name? P. National election dey comes on Nov. ? 'km - .uin -o !*M! N omijijI Tt :nii "T :umis 71 'JUX T '<>S. I :tA|g h :o*j. O :aejj|qi :iMlr*iu iql|3 a :uunoj a :uas "0 :a|3x '8 :B0 T :wmm- The Patchwork Quilt GRANDMOTHER Is making an old-fashioned patchwork quilt of odd-shaped, varicolored scrapa. She wants to work out a design so that in the completed quilt no two adjoining patches are of th* sams color. She has six different colors of cloth. I* thla the right number? If not how many doea ah* need? taipiwd eqi jo tadeqs eq) jo ee[pj*S By D. K. Woodman THIS is not a sketch of what is * left over after an amateur cook slices a ham. It is a doodle that conceals something almost every fisherman uses. You can find the answer by drawing a continuous line that crosses all of the lines In the diagram, ex- cept one. You'll have to guess which line to miss, but here is a clue: the solution may send you reeling. Solution Is given elsewhere on the page. (There'll be a new Clue-Doodle here next week.) Flowers for a Star Performer \ 52 ' .50 55 ,sfc 3 "M ST .'.5 H .tjt HI 42 Hi H*~et*V - 3i. ^m IV. / 37 17* %/ How Long? TWO men, in training for a track meet, run around a cir- cular course, 440 yards in cir- cumference, starting from the same point in the same direction at the asm* time. If they run respectively at eight and nine miles an hour, how long will it be before the faster runner gains one lap on the slower? MSBBsaj n*og *q ma it umrt Do You Count? '20 j n 2Z 23 24 21 2*. *3M #3S 2 25. tt 30 \ 32 A BOUQUET of Bowers has th* p*r(prm*r appear by drawing been placed in th* corner of a continuous Un* from dot 1 to thla tag* for a performer whom dot 67. AfUrwarda you may you ao not see. Tou can make wish to color th* drawing. By euoene Shtfi HORIZONTAL 1What u th* second book of th* Ntw Testament? 5Indifferent. 10-Woe la me. 14Plant of lily family. 15Fished for lamprey. 18Lateral boundary. 17-FaUlnf back^ 18-8maUquarr*l. Tpume*. lebrew prophet In. i sis-nal. colony. 32ScuIptureS stone Ublet 3The rainbow 37-Realm 38Animal Aaron was com- manded lo use for s burnt offering to Ood (Lev. 8:2) 40Juvenile gam* 1Cry of th* iheep. 42^rfncnlj bU* In Ethiopia. 3Japane aath. 44East-southeast tabbr.) 45-Wber* A b I m ) e b dwelt (Judg 8:41) 47-P*tb*r of Cam and AbeL 4Small gr**r*isb finch. SOMournful MAdol.icenl tear ".2Democrat cabbr.) 84Offer objections. 58Anmete. 98Humbl*d. 83What la th* hypocrite warned to cut out of his own eye? (Luk* Ml) AOrnamental SBCold northerly wind in Switz- erland. 89Short jacket*. 70Charlee Lamb. 72 Wtteof' Abraham. 78-V*nd*d. VERTICAL 1To whom did Paul sand greet- inss? (Rom. 18:8) 2Toward the sheltered side. 3Ecclesiastical court 4-Trousers. 5Whst did Psul shake from hi hand loto the fire? (Acts 28:5) 8 Allow. 7Fourth caliph. 8Japanese coin. 8Rima 10Help. 11"My ------ shall praise thee' (Pa 3:3 12Mother of Jaba) (Gen. 4:20) 13Bristle. 18Stove for heating small amounts of liquids. 22Mislay*. 24Jesus appeared to two of his people on the road to this place (Luke 24:13) 25Knock. 27Birds of or*y. 28Effsc*. 28 Africsn river. 31Lengthy harangue. 33Gnaw away. Phantom Digits STUDY this multiplication prob- lem and complot* It by replac- ing the tara with fitting figures 9*1 * e 34 Rebeksh's brother (Gen. 24:28) 35A great people, tall, ai the Anakims (Deut 3:10) 37Auditory organ. 38College cheer. 41-Ru- iuinoui thingi 48 I Diane 47Oxygenate*. 48On* of th* places from which people cam. to follow Jesus (Mark 3:8) 31Ancient Roman trumpet 53Peoples taking over Belshaz- zar'i kingdom (Dan. 3:28) 55Swamp. 58Biblical word for father. 57-Check. . 58 Hop kiln. 80Fodder storsge tank. 61Iniquity. 62Lifeless. 65Greek letter. 66The heart 67Tierra del Fuegoan Indian. I * * gt i Aa starter, not* that th* first digit in th* multiplier must be a 8. because no otter product would and la X. Now go on from there. xi* ..jqi rae Aq p*lie -nini* MAM jno; iqS|j :j*JUf Otsjriiht. 1888. Klaa reaSarw SyeeUcaU. Ism. 1 3 4 f< \- 7 % t % 10 II 12 '9 14 % 15 fa w 17 18 K r 20 % % y, 2/ 22 % % % fi *4 ii V/A ? yA % % 27 m f VA 5 31 % 52 95 54 55 36 % V 38 '?< yr t % 4i % 42 'A M 44 Y/t 45 46 '& 47 48 I m 50 % 57 % f v 52 53 ?<> 54 55 % '& V/t 5* W Y % 5T 60 1 6 3 '& (4 65 u 47 68 Y *T % TO n '!< 7Z il "1 DO YOU know all the angles? This simple drawing will see if you do, and gauge your ana- lytical ability. Just count the number of an- gles In the drawing above. The task may seem simple, and .one that can be done quickly. But there are at least 40 angles. How many more than 40 la for you to determine. mnu .Aoq. .1 a\ timxn 04A1-AUV J. JqX i*..T riHHnfria%*iH&Mnifi MBJRie:DiHHn*nDPHH DtJa^Kfit-i^nCsC-^FA' KW&jEEwmF*!}!.*':*.*;*. imMWm ROHH^BEiHHr-Iii'E.'Piail l KOSSWOBD Pl'ZXI.B IlllKIN I - * r a s ' 6 I. i: i A ***. . m m ures -THIS IS NO DISASTER SCENE, but just a training center at Olncy, Md., for civilian defense Instructors from all over the United States. Two instructors are treating the needs of a 7$ombing victim" found lying amid the rubble left in the wake of a make-believe raid. 41 *" ill MKJi M| m J ^^B ^** Jfe^< Crt. ^*t*i". " CS""'mt . ~ ** -'t '"'*. **8*; y*'* -. s > ... , CUTTING THROUGH a thousand reflections of the noonday sun. a Coast Guard Albatross slashes to a landing on Grand Traverse bay. Mich. The pjane is equipped tor snow operations. LADY FISHERMEN can show this picture to their male friends asproof that the distaff side can hook the big ones. Mrs. W. T. Wilkins, Jr., of Piqua, 0., landed this 279-pound blue marlin while trolling near the western edge of the Gulf Stream off WORLD'S LARGEST prestresscd concrete bridge is this one on the "Autopista," highway link- r JZ,, ii> k IFS Y ?" ,ng Caracas, Venezuela, with the seaport town of La Guaira. This bridge is one of three that fX^^l^It iTlt^^lV^ 2? is nearing completion near the foothills of the Andes. Some 2,000 men work on the project. f i inches from stem to stern and about 47 inches for the girth. E'?TAJl?.ND P,GLET* are n disp,,ay as tnree-yM>--old Shirley Couch shows off her baby Poland China pigs, which she will enter in a contest at the New Jersey fair at Trenton. UNDERNEATH SUNSET ARCH, deep in Montana's Glacier National park, several tourists pause to admire its grandeur. IS SHE the prettiest one of the bunch? Jeanctte Moynier hopes CRAZY RHYTHM is what band leader Spike Jones and his sne will be when she competes against 10 other lovelies jive-minded son. Spike, are beating out at a Las Vegas hotel for "Queen of Ihe Silver Jubilee" honors in Los Angele ' Ml IT'S SHORE-LYAGOOD BUSINESS EVERYONE in the town of Bonita Spring*, Fia., makes hit. living by working the shell game. This isn't a form of gambling, but just the gathering and selling of sea shells in. the world's largest shell factory. Shells of all sizes, from pin- head size to giant bear paw clams, weighing more than a quarter ton, are sold the year round to visitors, chain stores^ resort hotels, gift shops and. drug stores. The factory, located 20 miles south of Ft. Myers, gets its raw^materials from the islands of the Pacific to Siberia. In addition to turning out sea shells, the factory contains a large display of marine life. Giant clem shells can held a person until he Isj drowned Porcupine blowfish fights off enemies with spiny exterior. A iff, Shells ara moda ate figure* a1 do!!, bird: and even lamps. Shell: from avry ocean In the world And (heir way here. King Feature* Syndicm* _;_ i .1' /. : i- ------------------------------------,------------------------------------------------------------------------------... m BP' J |j i! 0 -*':'', < M 1 i v&? .JH ^ 1 1 W -i IfaK^ S i V v Wk s JL" >^ i. -:: '* v ^JH /* ^ '-. 1 3 *\ ... **' * | ^k tH^VH v^SripJ> ~ *9fc i 1 t V 1 CL. ^^HHk^^^*t* [ P ?'t' '; 1 0 1] One of the oddest sensations in a man's life is felt when he goes over the side in full diver's dress for the first time. Step by step he goes clumsily from one world to another entirely new to him. Perhaps the sensation is best felt as he watch- es the water rise to his chest, then to his neck, his nose and on up over his head. And yet he continues to breathe and live ... he is in another world. This diver is Louis P. Ceorge, SA, of the USS Recovery (ARS 43). (Official U. S. Navy Photo.) * 71*SUNDAY American Supplement 3 i **. PANAMA. K. r.. SUNDAY. OCTOBER 12, 195? Review Of The Week -WIDE ISTHMIAN THE RUSSIAN COMMUNIST Party held its biggest convention since 1939 In Moscow last week. There was much applause and a good deal of Red hot air, all of which the Western world acknowledge with abstract- ed Indifference, aware that the matters of greatest concern to the West would not be aired from the con- vention speaker's rostrum, but In the party conclaves which would accompanying the convention. In these conclaves local Communist leaders from within Russia and without would be getting their rid- ing orders for the next change of pace against the West. As for the proceedings on the convention floor, there's nothing much the Russian Communist Party can do about Itself which would Interest the West, except maybe suicide. So the West, while appearing to ignore the whole thing, Is only waiting till the first chill winds indi- cate from which direction the new Red strategy has elected to attack. Further to the matter of Communist conferences which are not what they seem Is last week's flare up of fighting on the Korean front. Battles were the heaviest for 12 months, yet did not amount to an at- tempt to break right through the UN lines. Could be this resurgence of fighting stems In some ifshlon from decisions taken at the recent top-level Chinese-Russl8n conference In Moscow, or the still more recent Pe~ce Rallv in Peiplng. marking the third anniversary of the coming to power of the Commun- lts regime. One event it almost certalnlv had nothing whatever to do with wss the United Nations declaration that ,the Panmunjom armistice talks were "lndefenltely recessed" 01 t*e Reds decided to come ud with some- thing new in the matter of prisoner of war repatria- tion. The Panmuriom armistice talks have had nothing whatever to do with a nv thing for months. Voted In the fighting last week was that the Chin- ese were takhv? more and more of the touch p-ssl-m- ment* for themselves, leaving North Koreans to les- se- military task* and behind-the-'lnes supnort chores. Whefher the Chinese are trvlne to prove to the Rus- y^ns that thev merit more smvort for the kindness t>ev are doinf Joe St'in in tvlne; uo the best part o? the United P'stes military forces in a luck'ss. far- away nennlnsr'o on one wnts or whether thev are after their farb'nn eroreinor their th.-nks from se- cret promises p'rerrlv received from the Russlrns co"id be anyone's spam, Yo doubt some of the more serious puessing |n t*>l .'"here has 'ate'" ben roin on In Jamis A. Van Fleet's nth Army head"uarters. pot to mention quite a few foxholes along the front Une. With about three weeks to go before the United States presidential elections the shout in? was getting hoarser, but no one whit more courteous. Even the gentle Adlal Stevenson seemed to be as much as su-eestlr*". that it would be a bad thin for the White House to have Ike for a ten-nt. and Ike W savins; exaetlv the spine about A*"I. '"thexto these two reserved cmrjlner* hM held *he*r fire from e->ch other personally, bound as It were bv the wretched crmaraderle of unfortunates In the sr'e plight. ">rf-'* n-esldentlr I tr*n as It wind about tb*> coontrv W*en "1ST fro*, go'ng mavhe both Ike and Adl8l floured thev hfd better r"o s"mething of the same sort of thine no tiw, the vo*ers knew It they were both in the fight. "^ere seemed neril at one tare that an elector who too!: hlnvelf off to vote and found no mention of T-ft or Truman on the ticket would have wandered off frustrated, eoncindlne that he had appeared at the oo! for some different office altogether may- be chairman of the llbrarv board. Tn fxitlrnd Dr. Ewan Forbes Semnll'. after 38 vears f lrl and woman, up and marrlM the housekeeper a''* onW on month ps.a man. If there's a seed of phuosophv In th's orrorpn-e it's hardlv worth cult'- "Ptlno-, because Deoole switch from womanhood to T"--'-'>oa in Dr. Rpmnill's casual f-shion hardly often enough to establish standards of deportment. The next-worst train wreck In Britain's history killed 100 persons at Harrow, a commuters' station in the suburbs of London. A London-bound express ploughed Into the back of a commuter train as it stood at the crowded Harrow platform, spilling the wreckage onto another track where, seconds later, an express northbound out of London crashed into the sollntered, sprawled coaches. Iranian Premi-r Mohammed Mossadegh spent a ou.et week, interspersed, it Is to be supposed, with re- gular weeping rnd fainting, but with no deeds or words to startle the Western world, which seems to be taking the view that the old man Is about getting to realize that if he lets his country fall to the Rus- sians, he'll have more cause to regret the event than Will Britain. France was Involved in some altercation with the United States e' vee'e's end, and all hands were play- in" domestic prllt'cs. The State De irrtment. Interested In countering any present or possible Republican campaign charges that the US taxpaynr's dollars is being handed out to for- eign countries 'o sauander how they like, seems to have demanded some sort of a veto or supervision over France's ir?n tomary lor a French premier, seized on this happy chance to pull the regular play about "Interference In the domestic affairs of our sovereign nation," and hoped Frenchmen would admire his dauntless de- fiance of the transatlantic giant sufficiently to for- get far a while about the cost t>f riving, and such other lp~ldcnrals as are apt to land French premiers In the . street at -short artice,- ---------- SPORTS e PANAMA CANAL EMPLOYES were out to prove they are living under a working democracy. Dissatisfied with conditions generally, they found the newly-proposed rent Increases to be the "last straw." Last week housewives, white-collar workers, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Zonian were turning out reams of let ters aimed at Senators and Congressmen in Wash- ington urging immediate action In suspending the rent Increases which will hit Zonlans hard where It counts in the pocketbook. With the powerful American Federation of Labor backing them. Zone civic and labor groups, have band- ed Into a general committee called the Canal Zone Emergency Legislative Finance Committee to combat not only the rent increases, but anything that might threaten their general welfare. - Legislative representative of the Central Labor Union, Howard Munro, was already beginning the bat- tle In Washington with plans to see not only high la- bor officials, but also members of the Bureau of the Budget, Secretary of the Army. Frank C. Pace Jr., and possibly President Truman. Munro Is the person- al representative of hundreds- of Zone families who have already begun contributing then- dollars to the fund to fight the rent increases-and other threats to their security. And, lest Washington officials lose sight of the big issue at hand, labor and civic leaders here have stressed over and over that "we want the whole Ca- nal setup Investigated, not only the housing." Panam Canal traffic was at an all-time high last week as the first big tie-up of transiting ships in seven years due to overload was recorded. The last similar tie-up was at the end of World War II when scores of ship were stopped or re-routed at the Canal. A 48-vear-old Puerto Riran defendant charged with rape will face a new trial come Oct. 28, In the U.S. District Court at Ancon. Ezequiel Labiosa was found guilty by the Zone court, but a new trial was ordered after the case was aopealed. A motion for another new trial was made In court last week by attorney Woodrow de Castro, who claim- ed the Jury on the Sparrow Gang robbery trial were prejudlcled when they asked for and received a dic- tionary to look ud the word "abet." The three defend- ants, whom the Jury found guilty, were Lincoln Bynoe, Clarence Mart erroneously provided the Jury with the dictionary. One of those stranee oulrks of fate occured last week when the First Air Rescue Souadron at Albrook Field was demonstrating a theoretic rescue. The In- terruption came In the form of a real reouest for aid from a tuna boat fishing off Punta Marlato about 130 mi'es from Parama. Onlv 15 minutes after the emergency call came through a Grumman Albatross left Albrook to nick un the seriously injured skipper of the Yolanda Ber- th!. At Qorgas Hospital, 30-year--old Henry Shlmada was slowly recovering from a bad head wound suf- fered when he fell from a ladder of the shro on which he was a new skipper and struck his head on. He Is still on the seriously ill list, however. An announcement from Panam Canal officials that gas had dropped one cent again, sugar was down and other commy staples would drop, seemed over- shadowed this week by the more Important Issues at hand of fighting the rent increase. However, the price cuts represent an important de- cre-se in such fast-moving items as soaps, canned milk, bacon, and other commodities popular with Zonians. ' Simultaneous with the price cuts on commy food came the word that electricity rates for Pan Canal workers would be upped two cents per kilowatt hour for current up to 150 kwh a month and one cent for 151 to 100,000 kwh a month, with the minimum month- ly bill pegged at $1. One more polio victim was admitted to Qorgas Hos- pital this week bringing the total up to seven stricken in the Canal Zone or Panam within the past six weeks. The latest case, a two-year-old American girl, who had recently spent some time In Panam with her grandmother. Alleged laxity regarding the sale and care of usable scrap left to the Panama government when the U.S. Army evacuated former defense sites in 1948 was brought to light during the Week by Antonio Mosco- so. secretary of the Finance Ministry. Moscoso said a mere $20.000 had been received by the Panamanian government on the sale of scrao material during the last two years. He figured that "hundreds of thousands of dollars" would have been made if the government had immediately taken an inventory of all material like underground pipes and tanks and had set up guards to prevent the material being'stolen before It could be sold. The Dipes are being stolen and the tanks are dis- appearing "like magic." Moscoso said. Word that $50,000 in cash disappeared from a Pa- nagra Diane, which only made two stops one of them Tocumen came from Miami and was con- firmed by the airline's senior representative In Pan- am, W. J. Bird. The airline was convinced the money was stolen ' but so far the Investigation was concentrating on Miami, with Tocumen, Guayaquil and Lima next on the list. Charles H. Whlttaker. U.S. Consul In Coln explain- ed how Panama's $4.000.000 corn crop can be doubledd immediately: by substituting ft new Improved seed for the one how being used by Panamanian farmers. Whlttaker said the seed was developed by the Pan- r.\ AsWfo 'i'^' SufJir ftfrtftr Swrilkl>tJtip>^ THE NEW YORK Yankees' dressing roonj.-wa a madhouse late Tuesday afternoon... Almost nobody paid any attention to the i of the Brooklyn Dodgers, Charlie Dressen. standing there, waiting to offer his congratu to Yankee Manager Casey Stengel... But Stengel was talking too fast and too much even to notice him at ftrst. The boss Of the World Champion Yankees was really steamed up... and so was his club. It was no bored bunch of perfectionists. They yelled and pounded each other's Mesa and act- ed like a bunch of kids who had hit the- Jackpot when they least expected to. Mickey Mantle, Bob Kuzava and Gene Woodllng were the heroes of the hour and of the Yankee triumph. Their teammates pounded them... climbed all over them and Mantle, the 20-year-old kid whose homer climaxed the Yankee win stood there grin- ning, with his hat on backwards. Stengel finally slowed down, after announcing, "That's a great team we beat... those Dodgers play- ed... all the way, I'll tell you, and we had to give 'em everything we had." Then Dressen got in his word of congratulations... and went back to the defeated Dodgers. They were sitting around sadly, still talking over that heart- breaking 4-2 loss at the end of the see-saw Series. Nobody had much to say but finally, Dressen summed It up 'We did the best we could all the way. Just a few fly balls in right spots would have given us enough runs... and the Series." But in Brooklyn, they bounce back fast. By night- fall, the fans already were assuring each other "Walt 'til next year." Light Heavyweight contender Harold Johnson has wiped out the sting of a split decision setback with a second round knockout victory over Bob Satterfield at Philadelphia. Satterfield took a disputed decision over Johnson in Chicago last August, Satterfield started off well in Monday night's sche- duled 10-rounder as he banged away with a two hand- ed attack and kept Johnson on the defensive in the first round. But Johnson, who Is planning to moVe into the heavyweight class, came back strong In the second round. A right to the chin was the payoff punch which set Satterfield down for the count at one mi- nute and 58 seconds. Brooklyn Dodger Manager Chuck Dressen already Is looking ahead to next year and it's a good bet there wUl be some new faces on the National League champions. "I know my club much better now," says Dressen, "and there will be seven or eight who won't be around next season." Dressen declined to mention any names. But base- ball men predict pitchers Ralph Branca and Clem Lablne and Inflelders Rocky Bridges and Bobby Mor- gan may not be back In 1953. Dressen already is talking about beating the Yan- kees In the 195S World Series. "They jan be beat- says the Dodger pilot, "andl think well be the ones to whip 'em next year." Dressen says the Dodgers have several good pros- pects coming up from the minors next year. "The first thing I'm going to do next spring," says Dressen, "is bring all the pitchers in our organiza- tion to our training camp. Who knows... we may come up with another Joe Black or Billy Lees "On the whole," adds Dressen, "I'm satisfied and hopeful about the prospects for 1953." It's a close race for punting honors, according to latest figures released by the NCAA. Max McGee of Tulane leads with a 48.8 yard aver, age. but two former champions are close' behind. Zach Jordan of Colorado, the 1950 punting champion, is second with a 48.2 vard average. Last year's leader- Chuck Spauldlng of WyomingIs third with 45.3 yards. Joe McClaran of Drake leads pass receivers. He was caught 17 passes good for 333 vards and four touch- downs. Bill Earlev of Washington also has caught 17 passes but gained only 253 yards and scored twice. In New Orleans, death struck in the ring Monday night for the second time In three days. Former Ban- tamweleht Chamolon Ashton Donze collapsed while i-e'ereelng end died of a heart attack. He was 50 years old. Welterweight J'mmv Taylor was knocked out last Friday nieht and died Sundav following surgery for brain hemorrhage and concussion. The race for rop'f"~th~' rating has settled Into a r>~-ftoht hetweon a Far western team and two Mid- Western clubs. Latest vothi" bv the United Press Board of Coaches sho-> last wec'-'s Te"*-r unbeaten M^h'^an Pt-te still on to", put C8"fornI. rated wind last time, has moved closer in the votin- nnd Wisconsin has tnmned from eights- to tht-H The ro-"hes l't 'he Pnortans on tor evwt ?* points 11 more than fta- liforpia polled. sTf"yw*vln has 250 points for third piare. Unbeaten Vrv'-nri pr-veri un one notch to fourth. r'-"-e. and Oeorclo OP""! riimtied from Seven** to fifth. p~/!r,o> out ?* ton 10 rre p^'-t^-rn Ca'lfor- '" in tirt.h Pla o,-'-v'*~-' In s-ve-'h Duke, eighth, Notre Dame, ninth and Kansas, tent*. ip* Ministry of r"r'oulture anfl UP. Point Four tech- nlclrn*-,.,. __;__ Adrol'sfon nri. t lo-M first-rat theatres were lnoxep"'d frorn *o to 5 e-pt this rv hut He five- rent hie ]ps*-1 on'v one day - t ""mi Price Reonifltin Office ste"r**d Into the ni^lure. - Theatre ownrs a"id thev we-e on'v oasslnr on to t^e-ter.-o s r.v (rctvr,Hpent tr to Provide pen- sl*->, fr trie pMtr 0f IndePendenc." Dr. Carlos F. *-",owi nrl<*e re-nii"t|ni chief, said the Increase would be suspended for the time beine. SUWDAY,X)CfrOBBR 1% 1802.; ' ,lt , DOLLARS OF FRIENDSHIPMrs. Portia Washington Pittman, i only living daughter of the late Negro educator, Booker T. Wash- ington, presents a collector's set of Carver-Washington commemo- rative half-dollars to Francis Cardinal Spellman, at headquarters of the Archdiocese of New York. By authorization of Congress, the coins are being sold at a premium by banks throughout the t country to help finance the Booker T. Washington Birthplace 1 lUaiorial of Virginia. The Memorial has been instituted to aid underprivileged Negroes. If O newspaper advertisement describes merchandise of a Certain quality, yea the reader, may be sure it is of that quality or the advertiser wilt bear from the paper. Nowadays ... as was oat always true .. the ethics of newspaper advertising art held at extremely high stand- ards. No ranking newspaper will knowingly occept or print untrue or unreliable advertising. Many newspapers have a printed coa* to which advertisers matt conform. Advertisements aro the KfaMood of year newspaper. In reality ads re news. Ask any housewife who watches the newest styles. To a home-maker, advertisements tell a story as vital and interesting as the latest information from world trouble-spots it to her usband. To the lady, Hit ad's message is on important news story. It tells her something she needs to know and could learn no atoar way. It it just as necessary as any newt item, just occarata and therefore at roliebfe. lut only because yoar newspaper insists that it be so. ! 1Roughen the skin SYoungsters 10Had affec- tion for 15Conceal 19Storm 20Hard wood 21Pointed arch 22Daya in the Roman calendar 23Masculino name 24Beaches 25Pertaining to some particular attitude (Gram.) 26Numbers 27Virtue 29- Scottish cap 31Toothless S3Mineral deposit 34Criminal 3Case for small articles 37Labor hard 40Barrier 41 Incline the head 43Lure 47 -Passing fad 48Animal covering 49 Hinder 81Antitoxin HORIZONTAL 82Destroy 99Occurrence 83Legislator 101Remained 88Scatter on the feet seed 103Reclined 87Satisfy 104Pattern 88Fuss 106Waits on 89Mongrel 107Title of dog respect 60Obscure 108Deface 61Broader 109Compulsion 63Noise 110Peruvian 64Private Indian 67Bishop s 112Bodies of headdress water 69Rely 114Blast of 71Birthplace wind of Abraham 115Pastes 72Having 119Aeriform layers 75Negative 76Took up food with fluid 120Promoted 124Verdi opera the tongue 125Daughter 80Form of of Tantalus polite 127Competl- address tlve game 81Least clean 129Roman 86Wmg tyrant 87Rescued 130Haul 89Beverage 1Bronze in Roman antiquity 92Greek letter 93In the place of 95Storage enclosure 96Rankles 98Variety of billiards 131Pertaining toa web 132Uneven 133Labels 134 Identical 135Narrow openings 136 Furnished a shoe bottom 137Fruit of the blackthorn 1Stuff 2Nimbus 3Culture medium 4Punish 8Next to 6Crow less 7Like a skeleton 8Conclusion 9Definite scheme 10Not of the nobility 11Past 12- -Be borne 13Elude 14Erase 18An ancient people 16Mental image 17Depression 18Being 28Adore 30Indian madder 32Women under religious vows 34Unit of electrical cspac'tv 35Negative 37Discarded material 38Commerce 39Instrument far shaving Vr.BTICAL 40Ask for payment 42Wanted 44Decree of the sultan 45Ingredient of plant cuticle 46Correct 48Untamed 49Controlled 80Land measure 83Source of light 84Shy 86Marry 59-Central parts 61Moist 62Leases 66-Dine 66Mourns 68Domesti- cates 70 Hawaiian food 73Insane 74Dally record 76- Bathes 77Breathing 78One who setathe speed 79Small quantity 82Thlns; (law) 83Wear away 84Co veringa A for the feet 85Sounds a bell 88Force 90 Collection of maps 94Visualise | 96Ravagera 9ZSense organ 98Evil omens 100Canvas shelter 102Lubricate 104New wine 106Odors 108Muddles 109Removed soot 111Shake- spearean sprite 113Genius In Egyptian religion 114Furze 115Cushions 116Italian coin 117First man 118Unaccom- panied 120- Simpleton 121Actual 122Therefore 123Quantity of medicine | 126- Baseball club 128For the affirmative Average time al aladea: at mnate*: DtnrlbuUd r Kim rwnni SraSleale .Answer U D*> found elsewhere lb the Sunday American 1 I I OT* IN A NAMEBichard Nixon, left, of Charlotte, N. C, Si hands with "Ike" Isenhower of Conover N C during Freshman Week ceremonies at the University of North .Caroling Tho namesake of the GOP presidential candidate sayt hes a true Feni.i>li.^n'"but Nixon says heV "A-Deipocrst front way back. t. For the Best in Fotos & Features ... It's The Sunday American -,>..... i m I si^^y.iocffwiw.afr.im. - ti: r, PAGE (ffiftEE . THE PANAMA AMERICAN ANO -U.L1...D >Y THE PANAMA AMCMICAN PMM, IMC. POUNOEO ILION OUNIIVIIL IN Ull HAPMODIO ANIAO. EOITOP 7. H STACK! O. Box 134. PANAMA, H. or P. TdEPHONE Panama No 2-0740 <8 Linfi > Caili Access PANAMCPICAN, PANAMA COL.ON OFFICE: 12.170 CENTRAL AVCNUI KTWCIN 12TH AND 19TH StREET* FORCION PEPAEENTATIVEP- JOSHUA B POWERS. INC. 34B Madison ave New " >. ii7> N. V. LOCAt* PEP MONTH. IN AOVANC _____________ $ 1.70 FCNN SIN MONTHS. IN ADVA'ICC __^___^. 9 80 POP ONE YEAP. IN ADVANCE____________________ 16. SO V WAIL f 2 no IS oo 24 OO POETS' CORNER (EDITOR'S NOTE: The late John McGroarty for many, many years was THE bard of the Isthmus. His pen brighten- ed the pages of the old Panam Times and its successor. The Panam American. "Poets' Corner" will reprint some of the venerable old .guy's favorities. We feel sure we'd have John's permission). ------ o ------ The Lady of The Last Minstrel To J. K. B. i Anyway he's a harp) This (tuff, you may call Irish stew, or you may call it Hash. It can't be worse at any rate, than some of your "Goulash.** It's multiform ingredients to some one should appeal, So give another guy a chance to make his little spiel. Unlike the dope that you put out, this statement is sincere, And deals with many things observed, since my arrival here. Your "Sporting Page'' might profit by a stranger's point of view; And it will be a novelty, for some of It Is true. About my first impressions, It is painful just to think. They put my temper on the fritz, my morals o nthe blink. Your village In bewilderment and mystery abounds. For nothing is just like It looks still less Just like It sounds. As through your famed metropolis, my timid way I steered, Your traffic regulations proved mysterious and weird. It isn't native sense you need, Intelligence or wit; You gotta know just what to do then do the opposite. I acted as a sane man would, turned always to the right. And nearly got run over by most everything In sight. I did my best to dodge them but was run against and hit. And bumped into and jostled by the following, to wit: Five dark complected ladles, with bundles on their heads; And seven caromatas, with their mournful quadrupeds; And thirteen stalwart Africans and flivvers by the score; And three wheeled carts the like of which I'd never seen before. From somewhere back of me there came a deep and dulcet voice, Whose rich Milesian accent made my lovely heart rejoice. I turned to greet a fellow Harp and here's what got my goat; That gink was three shades blacker than an undertaker's coat. SEATS OF LEARNINGThe shortage of classroom in Topeka. Kans., has forced the seventh grade class of the Avondale School to take over the school's bus. Here Mrs. Mary Pennekamp, the teachei. watches her students as one stands in the rear, reciting a lesson. The headroom is so low that pupils more than live feet 'tall have to recite from their seats. Pearson's Merry Go-Round Drew PearauB Says: American doctor in Ecua- dor may be on road to cancer cure; Dr. Fer- guson uses Jibaro Indian solution to shr.nk ttiseased tissues; No chance foreseen in Ko- rean stalemate. WASHINGTON. For several years an Amer- ican doctor h*s been living In Ecuador ex- perimenting with a fantastic, secret'solution which may prove the answer to cancer. The doctor is Wilburn Ferguson, and the solution lie is working on is that used by the Jibaro Indians In the jungles of Ecuador to shrink human heads. Dr. Ferguson emphasizes that he has not found a cure for cancer, that he has only found a "promising treatment." Nevertheless his clinical records have shown some miraculous recoveries. Not only does the solution appear successful on rats and mice, but a few test patients hate had cancerous tumors totally destroyed and have regained their hearth. Dr. Ferguson's interest in the herb formula No normal human being could stay down here a week. Without becoming more or less a tropicated freak; I knew that here in Panam strange customs are in vogue; But who'd expect a dark blue coon to spring a Dublin brogues? I 0r u'u. jibaro Indians resulted from the fact i hat nothing known to modern science will And next, yuur village oracles, in scholarship prolific. Informed me that the morning sun comes up on the Pacific; And just to make their story a little more romantic. These bozos solemnly declare, he sets on the Atlantic. , shrink cartilaginous tissue. Thus, an ear can be burned to ashes, but it does not shrink. However, the Jibaro Indians have been able to shrink human heads the skull, ears, jaw and various cartilaginous tissue. He also observed that the head-shrinking 'process appeared to destroy ulcerated or dls- My youngest kid coul tell them that they ve got the thing reversed. eased tissue-cells, while leaving healthy eell- Of all their wild eyed notions, this strikes me as the worst. I matter intact. Of course there are excuses, and M kjC; ; ^ JHr0^ oVean "*&*>. in mk- But that don't make the sun rise where I know he ought to set. mf tnelr head_shrinkjnK mixture. Dr. Ferguson. It's a phoney proposition and it doesn't listen right. No sober man could fall for It, at least In broad daylight. It takeii Imagination for a white man to conceive it; Jle'd have to be at least half shot, before he could believe It Of all the legends rampant here devoid of rhyme or reason. The favorite would seen to be that mythical "Dry Season." With optimistic energy, they swell the glad refrain, Despite the fact that every year has thirteen months of rain. I'm studying your little way with undlmlnlshed zest. No doubt in course of time I'll be as dippy as the rest; A full fledged Panamaniac I'll be some happy day; But I hope somebody shoots me before I get that way. By JOHN McGKOARTY. Samuel Smug! MoMtel Smug u If wore hi- 8as eon e'wuv find emm! however, has been able to eliminate all but six herbs as superfluous. What he now uses is a solution of the herb concentrate in glucose and alcohol which i administered intravenously and also injected directly Into the tumor. There is also an ointment for direct applica- tion In case of external or vaginal-tract can- cers. Dr. Ferguson unquestionably could have made a fortune with his new cancer formula, instead of which he Is dead broke. He em- phasizes that he Isn't sure of all the effects of his remedy and that he wants to conduct furth- er experiments. - However, he has remained In Ecuador partly because patients in that country are much more willing to volunteer for experimentation. Prior to this, furthermore, he was afraid of premature publicity. Last year, however. Ferguson took some of his secretion to Los Angeles, and tried It out in the Los Angeles County Hospital. Its top pathologist, after testing It with the greatest skepticism. Invited Ferguson to join their staff. Dr. Ferguson and his wife, who is a register- ed nurse, work at night grinding herbs and preparing their solutions for the next day's work. After that Ferguson must be his own pa- thologist, examining and making notes on microscopic slides which his wife prepares. He still thinks that another year is neces- sary to be sure of the results, but those who have seen his patients get up and walk after a few weeks' treatment are convix-ed that ner- haps the long-awaited cure for cancer may be ibere. PA(i: KOUK Sundy Anemia Supplement i-awaiicn cure ior cancer may ue cwuir i "<= t KOREAN STRATEUY Though the American public is much mora absorbed in politics than In Korea, some highly Important developments, hitherto confidential, have been taking place In the Far East. Now that the Russo-Chlnese conference, ha terminated in Moscow, they can be told. In the first place, it is not because of an secret weapon that U. S. planes have bagged a record of 61 Russian made Migs in the past Month. Though papers have hinted at a secret weapon, real fact is that we have shot down a record number of Russian planes due solely to a greater opportunity to shoot at then.. What happened was that before that Moscow conference, . 8. Military strategists Concluded the Chinese were anxious to get out of the Korean war and that the Russians were anxious to keep them in. We figured that this show- down would be threshed out in Moscow. More than anything else, the Chinese want to build up a modern army. Yet they have been losing more equipment than they are making; so their goal of a modern army Is fading. However, the Kremlin, m the opinion of U. 8. strategists, has been anxious to have the Korean war drag on, first, because it makes the American public apathetic toward defend- ing any other area threatened with a Red; at- tack; second, because it drains American re- sources; third, because it ties down American military strength in a remote corner of the globe without costing Moscow much. V. S. ATTACKS Because of the known desire of the Chinese to back out of the Korean war, the joint chiefs of staff decided to Increase the tempo of the war during the Moscow talks. For a time, the joint chiefs even considered a ground offensive, but decided against it be- cause of probable loss of life. Instead, Air Force strength was Increased and an air offensive was stepped up together with orders to Increase United Nations field-artillery fire ten times. The Communists retaliated in turn by put- ting an extra number of Migs in the air and that was the reason for our record score. The Chinese have also struck back at us on the ground. Their attacks seem to be deliberate attempts to kill Americans rather than gain ground or capture strategic hills, apparently because the Chinese resize our regard for hu- man life. While their losses have been four to one. that doesn't seem to bother the Chinese high command. Chinese suicide battalions have been sent to knock us off strategic hills, but they have made no attempt to reinforce .those battalions and hold the hills. Instead, more Chinese forces are sent In an effort to kill more U. N. troops. As o now. the Communists have slightly over a million men In Korea, more than at any other time during the war. Despite this, there are no signs of an all-out offensive. All this Is whv U. S. strategists can foresee nothing more than continued stalemate. Note General Eisenhower, an infantryman and a great believer In the use of ground troops, knows this point better perhaps than anyone. Nevertheless, he has continued to ring tho changes on the Korean war for all it's wortli ,fli i\Sit Mil SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12,1952, Labor News And Comment By Victor Riesel Peter Edson In Washington HEARD ON THIS BEAT: - Central Intelligence Agency Chief, General Bedell Smith Is not at all well and It is perhaps unfair to harass him while his inadvertent remark has hurled the CIA into the center of an in- ternational scandal. _. "__ .. ' But we're not dealing in personalitiesand what will be de- scribed here is possibly the fault of his operating directors, not This is certain about CIA, whatever else is uncovered: Two years ago the intelligence agency began building Its staff for sec- ret observation on the labor front. This was vital. For example, in Hong Kong there are 150,008 Chinese work- ing men belonging to 110 unions. They are being merged into one powerful federation. In the wrong hands, this coalition could cripple Hong Kong from within, shutT>ff its electric power ana paralyze its transportation. The colony could fall without a ma- chine gun sputtering. It is vital for the free world to watch, to guide and to act, if necessary. _' _i This colony in crisis is duplicated all over the Near East, and also in Africa where the enemy is making powerful gains among the native workers. .. . So Central Intelligence signed up some labor experts and swore them to secrecy. They waited. They're still waiting. But they were never called upon. Not once. Nor were any of the top AFL officials consulted. These men are all very active anti-Communists, detailedly Informed and poli- tically sophisticated. Yet they were ignored. But they soon learned that ex-Communists were being con- sultedand that leading anti-anti-Communists were in high CIA PS So it" Is todaythe men who are toughest on the enemy are ignored. The softies regularly get to highly placed ears why? Next industry to move into the limelight is the automobile flela. General Motors and Chrysler have been asked by waiter Reuther and his colleagues to raise wages for some 400,000 CIO auto makers. This means re-opening the current five-year con- tracts. Left-wingers, who are back in power again at Ford, are expected to get into the act , John Lewis' victory Is gigantic. His coaldiggers' union royal- ty fund will now draw some $180,000,000 a year The fund, which pays pensions, medical bills, etc., lor nis followers. Is financed by a 40-cent union tax on every ton of coal dUg The fund had practically $100,000,000 left at the end ofthls past fiscal year (June 30) although it spent over $126,000,000 in the previous 12 months, - Southern coal owner* are saying the tax will force them out of business or Into a knock down fight with tfewis' union as some try to go non-union That would mean violence, which nares reeularly through the non-union fields In Kentucky. Despite the crime wave in New York.Clty and the need for all available cops, the Progressive candidate for president, Har- ry Bridges' lawyer, Vincent Halllnan, got an escort of four motor- cycle cops and 12 patrolmen when he toured the waterfront. They outnumbered his audience at the 23rd Street piers. Hallinan now calls for the abandonment of our guided mis- ails progTam. Who's he trying to replace. President Shvernik of the USS8R? And for this he gets free television time, too, by government order. __ . President Truman's robust whistle stopping corroborates what he told labor Intimatesthat he was in good enough health to take another four years, but that his wife was suffering from high blood pressure.. _ Another term would hurt her, or worse, he said. That s definite. He decided 18 month ago not to run. he revealed re- cently when the doctor told him of Mrs. Truman s ailment. Unnoticed by any except those who run the nation's great luxury liners, ex-CIO national counsel Lee Pressman has quietly moved into a position where he can again make International He has advised his client, the Marine Engineers Benevolent Assn., a union of sea going engine room men, on how to quit CIO. The union members are voting now on Joining the AFL's Master, Mates and Pilots' Union. ""his would put the chief engineers, first, second, third, fourth and iuniora on the big ships like the SS United States in a very tou*h AFL outfit. __' , Much of the ship would be manned by the CIOs National Alar me Union, led by Joe Curran, who loathes Pressman. "he bitterness between these two unions, some day, will tie up (i great luxury fleets at the height of the tourist seasons. The AFL special three-man racket squad will hunt no more. It i<5 virtually out of existence. It's got no hits, no runs, no rac- ket- -hut plenty of errors. m< - "if. Union President of ISM will be Hollywood's handsome Waiier Pldreon. who succeeds Ronald Reagan as head of the crusading AFL Screen Actors Guild._________________^__^___ WASHINGTON(NEA)Federal Security Ad- ministrator Oscar Ewipg was driven up to the White House the other day in a snazzy blue Cadillac. Press men who saw it commented that this was pretty fancy transportation for some- one who wasn't even a cabinet member, but Just an administrator. Ewing explained, however, that the govern- mentand the taxpayersdidn't buy this car for him. It was seized by the Treasury's Bureau of Narcotics Agents from some big dope peddler Investigation revealed that this is standard government practice, though few people know about it. There's even a law on it. . Whenever an automobile is seized in the arrest of anyone for violation of federal law. the car is held in custody of the U. S. Marshal until a court issues an order for its disposition. The seizing agency has the right to requisition the car if it wants it. _, , Those not wanted are turned over to General Services Administration for parcelling out among other agencies as needed. This saves the taxpay- ers' money.. j , In the 1950-51 period. 441 cars were seized in this manner. Sixty per cent of the Treasury's fleet, or 388 cars, were seized by its enforcement agenciesSecret Service. Customs. Narcotics. Bu- reau of Internal Revenue, Coast Guard, Post Of- fice and FBI also use many seized cars. FTC CAGES MINK TRADERS Anything that has to do with mink just can't stay out of the news. Now it's the Federal Trade Commission which has cracked down on the Mink Traders' Association. Inc. There is a kind of war on between the mink traders and the mink breeders. The traders have been accused of making "private treaties" to eliminate sales by certain ranchers and auction houses that have been holding out for higher prices. The new FTC order forbids the traders from intimidating, coercing or boycotting any of the breeders. THERE'S A CATCH IN IT It isn't often that a trade association will ad- vocate higher taxes on its own industry, but the American Trucking Association is trying to make it appear that it Is doing Just that. It oropoees an across the board Increase in gasoline and license taxes for all automobile vehicles. .... The catch is that the truckers want toll roads eliminated and all highways made free to all users. This would save the trucking Industry mo- ney John V. Lawrence. Washington lobbyist for the trucking association, complains that on the Pennsvlvania Turnpike trucks are only 21 per cent of the number of vehicles, but they pay 65 per cent of the tolls. The catch here is that the truckers represent a much higher percentage of the tonnage. And it is the heayy truck, not the passenger car. that does most damage to highways and necessitates the bigger share of road maintenance costs. COMPLEX AND THEN SOME Here's a new problem on the hazards of high speed flyine. posed by aircraft engineers. Imagine two planes flying toward each other on a collision course, at speeds of 1200 miles an hour (a Navy research plane has flown faster than this, so it isn't a purely theoretical prob- 3 ____ i' lula li >Wh Hill g me a ks :i 35 JESS iJV a YjOJI m33 iiiaa:=i ii-ims R u 23(301111 r. -Hdi-MliTiU iJtCJli-1I kill ? ii i asa BU iBffl suwau una Sgaaasaa Sanaa uaunacs ana waiaara . HHHHra HUB., BLDaU HQQa HBHU , idmaBiiraEia r m DIMMM k Kt nt ST*** lem). Their speed with relation to each other would be 2400 miles an hour. That is 40 miles a minute or two-thirds of a mile a second. Suppose now that the two planes emerged from clouds, a mile and a half apart, and the pilots thus saw each other for the first time at thia distance. They will crash in a little over two sec- onds. Human nerves won't react fast enought to en- able the pilots to avoid the crash. That's why complicated electronic gear for nearly automatil flying has to be built into high-speed Jet aircraft. The complexity of this radar in one plane to said to be greater than the combined equipment for a city power system, a radio and TV broad- casting station and the fire-control apparatus oil a battleship. EDUCATIONAL TV WAITS It will be some time well into 1953 before any of the so-called education television stations gel on the air. Federal Communications Commission, has granted nine construction permits six foi New York state, to be run by the state university. Others will be run by University of Southern California in Los Angeles, Kansas State Agri- cultura) college in Manhattan, and University of Houston, Texas. Only 10 other applications have been filed or are pending before FCC. But applications for channels reserved for educational TV may be fil- ed until mid-1953. . At least 12 states expect to have bills before their legislatures next year, authorizing educa- tional TV networks, like New York's. Where states run these networks, they'll have to get appropriations from their legislatures. Estimated costs are from $150,000 to $750.000 for original equipment, per station, plus a minimum of $100.000-a-year operating expense. NAVY MEDICOS OBJECT ' ' A receflt statement In this column about the armed services having had to discontinue annual medical examinations for all personnel because of the doctor shortage has brought a yell from Navy's Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. Navv and Marine Corps officers still get an- nual phvsical-fitness examinations, and an extra examination before being assigned to duty put- side the U. S. Enlisted personnel are examined whenever they are transferred from one Ship or station to another. Cancer specialists say. however, that these rou- tine phvsical-fitness tests often a rent thorougn enough "to detert cancer In its earliest stages. IMPORTERS GET A BREAK After a great hullabaloo over the so-called "cheese amendment." limiting U. 8. Imports of foreign cheeses, the Department of Agriculture will ease the restrictions slightly on October 1. Import quotas on all commodities now subject to control will also be raised 15 per cent in the Interest of promoting international trade rela- tions. This will allow the exporting countries to earn a few more dollars. ____ Paul Hof fmrn. former Marshall Plan head, one estimated that if. out of every dollar Americans spend, only two cents more could be spent on goods or services from abroad, the budget of tho world could be brought into balance . And if another 2 per cent of IT. S. national In- come could be spent on foreign imports it would end the need for all further U. S. aid for other countries. ______________. Walter Winchell In New York Herewith find solution to Suiwlay Crossword Pus- bJ, No. 453. published today. BROADWAY IN OCTtn.*.* The roasted chestnut man is hack, So is the strawhat mummer; And back again in Walter's punch Kent somnolent all summer. o> . came the business With a hang, Sing, kanny, happy days) fact, the gang's all here again But whereinell are the Plays? Tom Weatherly that here months ato and her husband serenan* ed denials...Gene Lockhart (at the Polonaise dlocnsainr his next B'way role. He "T tay tho role of Whittaanr Chambers in "Tho Trtitjr. The play k based on Chambers' be-t-aelle-, WHawn." Celebs About Town: Bob Hope, the funatlc. admiring his likeness on the "Son of Paleface'' Paramount posters.. .Henry Fonda, the star, and his image having a fondaful time at the Cen- tral Park Kiddle's playground. ..Lisa Ferraday, the celebeaut, rolling her own clgs (with a hold- er t-h-i-s 1-o-n-g) at the Embers. ..Marlene Dietrich dining on kosher furters (and cham- pagne) at the Little Club... Constance Bennett aud her Ever-Lovin' tCol. Coulter) stealing the show in the capacity Stork Club. ..M. Berle and his amour (Ruth Cosgrove) netting Away From Ua All at the Old Roumanian (Snobs). ..Van Heflin, in Howie's, excited about his starring role (on tour) in "The Shrike".. .Ann Todd, one of Britain's loveliest ads, enjoying a straw- beddy-sodah at the Lex-and-49th apothecary. - Mid town Vignette: He is one of the most pop- uifl*- actors...We never heard or read a mean thing about him...All concerned will probably be surprised to see thisbut it happened... We offer it as an example of humility.. Someone "put the rap on him" at The Lambs.. .His sus- pensior followed. Days later, members saw him walk past the clubhouse wearing an agonized look...The House Committee relented and lifted Manhattan Marali: The bronae plaqui i* front of what was a brownstone house (at 46th t,ff 5th), which reminds you that Diamond Jim Brady Once Lived Here"...The goggle-orb d tourists checking into a 47th St. Inn, startled a the lobby placard: "This hotel has been raided ...Right under the words: "Suffer little chil- dren to come unto Me" (carved In the stone ol the First Baptist Church (at 78th and Broad- way) is this sign: "Forbidde nby law to feed the pigeons!" ^^^ New Tort Novelette: There is no more spell- bmdirrg sight (on a clear night) than the world's largest "diamond necklace".. .The George Washington Bridge...The following cene enacted (by a few New Yorkers) is why work on the bridge was delayed two days. ..On October 3rd, 1928, sports promoter James J. Johnston's wife Agnes was ble-sed with a daughter. (AtBt. Elisabeth's Hospital on Cabrlnl Boulevard, near the bridge)...The baby's god- father (Mayor James J. Walker) visited the mother..."What can I do for you, Agnes?" His Honor inquired..."Oh, Jim," Mrs. Johnston kidded, "can you stop that damb riveting on the bridge?".. The Mayor instructed "48 hours of silence" in honor of his doll-like godchild, whose birthday is today...She is Agnes Yvonne Thcrese Johnston 0"Brian, wife of Jack OHrian, look...The House Committee relented ana linea ncrese jonn&iun unrimi, wuc .*woii..H the ban.. .To their amazement, the grateful atar the N. Y. Journal-American s teevy-radtogre . r.ni.nri tnt> riuh on his knees.. Pat O'Brien She is a devout Catholic, the only person wa entered the club on his knees.. .Pat O'Brien. iitl__i mt fin \nt SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12,1952. .Hi She is a devout Catholic, the only person we know who practices what preachers teach... When, for instance, anyone utters an unkind word about any religionVonnle scolds: "That is anti-Christiananti-Semiticanti-American!" If (bey persistshe leaves the room, table or Broadway Ticker: It's a hoy for the Ely Cnl- bertsona nt Brattleboro, Vt.. Interview quote by Sloan Simpson (Mrs. Bill 0*Dwyer): "We may ...ir tney persistsne leaves tne mum, w ).e in Mexlon peaj^entljr>, Mn. <'#> reM PAGE EWE TAKES IN TYROS H namnntt IE ."*'- 11 Jfti . RESEMBLING A CREATURE from another world, the diver, L. P. George, SA, patiently tits while his tender dresses him prior to stepping over the side. Witnessing the dressing are (from left to right): C. S. Rossa, SN, CHBOSN H. E. KrobaUch, O. E. Green, BMl, and G B. Phillips, BMl. Each piece of equipment has a purpose from the monstrous copper helmet which pro- tects the diver's head from the dangers of sea pressure and which is the storage bin for his life giving air supply; to the heavy lead belt and shoes which weight the diver so that he can remain on the bottom instead of floating in the water. This part of the dive must be carried out step by step with absolutely no rojm for mistakes. (OFFICIAL TJ.S. NAVY PHOTO.) ''/ /! n.. lol .LEFT, THE TRAINING TANK of the USS Recovery's>dlvlng school where students are subjected to simulated sea pressure as part of the-diving course. It is in this tank that the men first get the feel of the water as thev enter it dressed in full diver's suit and equipment. Later in the course the students learn the art of welding and doing small re- pair jobs under water In the tank. (Official IT. 8. Navy Photo) The USS Recovery (ARS-43), Clyde M. Prlckett, gunners mate stationed at the U. S. Naval 8ta- first class, USN.) tlon, Rodman, Is the Navy's dlv- All necessary equipment for ing school on the Isthmus. the operation of the school was On board the salvage ship, dlv- requisitioned and training books ersboth Army and Navy are and manuals were also secured trained to do the innumerable In preparation for a top rate diving Jobs which crop up from course in diving, time to time in the area. Perhaps the largest single It Is. on board the Recovery piece of equipment used by the that beginners In the art of school is a cylindrical, two- working underwater are given story, steel structure, known to the essential step by step know- all as "the tank," which is locat- ledge which, finally, will qualify ed at the foot of the Recovery's them as second class divers. pier at the U.S. Naval Station, The Recovery's divkig school Rodman, was Initiated under the super- This tank, when filled with vision of Lieutenant Robert Nor- water, becomes the practice stage man, USN, former commanding for the divers. Inside this water officer of the ship, in August of filled steel barrel, the men, last year. > dressed in diver's gear, learn the At that time there was no ser- fundamentals of diving and vice diving school on the Isth- working underwater, mus and very few divers. vThe At the foot of the tank Is a Army, here 'hi the Zone, needed piece of equipment known as the men trained to work with the pressure chamber. The new men Army engineers on various Jobs, quickly learn the use of this oil- One factor which added im- tank-like structure during the petus to the idea of a diving first week of the course, school was that the Navy pre- Adjacent to the tank is the sently Is short some 1800 second classroom where the students class divers, even though its re- will spend many hours, guiar established schools are The new class, composed of constantly working to Increase Army and Navy enlisted men, the number of trained divers arrived on board in June of this available in this category. year and under the supervision The Bureau of Naval Person- of Lieutenant M. A. Kasworm, nel in Washington was informed USN, the Recovery's present and permission was granted to commanding officer, the in- establtsh locally a second class structors Immediately set about diving school. giving a diving course compar- To run this school, the Recov- able to one of the best that the ery had three men: CHBOSN Navy officers today. Howard E. Krobatsch, USN, de- The new class Included two sicnated officer-ln-charge of the men from the Ordnance Depart- school, George B. Phillips, BMl, ment of the U. S. Naval Station, and Donald J. McCarthy, BMl", Rodman; four Army enlisted who were assigned as lnstruc- men from the 370th Engineers tors. and Amphibious Support Regi- The new instructors were men ment of Fort Sherman; two men of experience. Chief Boatswain from the U. S. Naval Station, Krobatsch graduated from the coco Solo; and two from the Re- Navy Salvage School at New covery itself. York in 1945. Prior to reporting The first three days were spent on board the Recovery he was in orientation and pressure tests. In command of a rescue tug at Orientation consisted of such Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. subjects as the mathematics of diving, physics, medicine, acc- Both Phillips anW McCarthy dents which can happen to div- are first, class divers. ers, treatment in case oicci- Phillips was stationed In Wash- dent, diver's dress, and ..equip lngton at the time that a Boll- ment In general, vian Air Force pilot, piloting a At this point the .class-was P-38 fighter plane, crashed Into told of the varying Increases in a passenger loaded C-54 in-mid- pressure a diver Is subjected to air at Washington's National as he goes deeper In the water Airport a few years ago. Phillips and the process of entering and was one of the Navy divers who releasing air in the helmet and recovered the victims from the the suit as a diver goes deeper Potomac River. or rises nearer to the surface of the water to offset the Increase Forty-five days later when an- and decrease of sea pressure at other passenger air liner, a DC- various depths. 3, crashed into the Potomac, While the men are being in- Phlllips once again donned his structed on these topics they are diving gear In a recovery mis- introduced to the pressure tank sion. or "iron lung" of the deep sea In 1949 Phillips made an ex- diver, perimental, simulated, deep sea The men enter this iron chanwA dive to 490 feet. (The present ber and the heavy door Is seal-^| world's record for an actual deep ed behind them. Then air under sea dive was established in 1949 pressure is forced into the cham- ln the Caribbean at 500 feet by ber they are In. The pressure In the tank l simulated sea pressure. That is. 60 pounds of pressure Is equal to the same amount of pressure a man would be subjected to if he were at a depth of 120 fefft. \ The pressure test is given to the men to show up those with physical defects not noticeable in a normal physical examina- tion. A man with defective ear- drums feels Intense pain with each added pound of presstu*. At this point, three of ten men were physically disqualified. The remainder of the first The .remainder of the first week was spent in dressing, learning to tend air hoses (the diver's only link with the outside world) and lines, and learning the sig- nals used by divers on the bot- tom to their tenders on the ship's deck above. Saturday morning, as with each Saturday thereafter, was given to review of the week's study and an oral exam. The weeks which followed brought the class from the class- room to the side of the Recovery, where they were dropped over the side Into the shallow mud- dy water to get the feeling of diving. ABOVE, THE USS RECOVERY (ARS-43). one of the work horses of the fleet, is seen at her pier at the U.S. Naval Station, Rodman, The Reco- very Is the Navy's divine school on the Isthmus where The dive to a muddy bottom at the beginning s)t the course ave the men an idea of what scnwvi on pe sinmus wmre gave me men an raea oi wnai both Army and Navy students they can expect when working at are indoctrinated into the art of living and Working under water. (Official O; 8. Navy Photo) the" side of a pier in shallow water in this area. A few dives of this type and then men get their sense of direction and they are not hampared by the dark cloud of mud which aecomp?" rtESSfc siiw.i Sunday libr*? i <~MVW*YQCSO$m 02,1052. >ey [ irk lie L 7 i TURNS OUT TOUGH NAVY DIVERS them with each heavy step they take on the soft bottom. During the second week the men are taught small repair jobs In the tank, and in the 38 feet of water by the pier. They are taught underwater pipe fitting and other small jobs. The third week finds the men out near Flamingo Island in fif- ty feet of water with a hard bot- tom. Here the men get the feel of water with a current. While out by the Island the Recovery rigs a pontoon with an air valve and a patch, and as the divers stand-by the patch Is removed and the pontoon is sunk. The divers then go over the side to search for the pon- toon and when it Is located, they replace the patch with a gasket, connect the air hose which is lowered down to them and then standby while the pontoon Is filled with air and blown to the surface. - This is a practical lesson in salvage which Navy divers per- form at one time or another on various deep sea projects. The men are graded accord- ing to the time it took to do the job, the way in which it was done and whether the pontoon leaked after being repaired. The last day of the third week, the students are taken off Ta- boga Island for two dives in 90 feet of water. If successfully completed, the men can just about consider themselves as second class div- ers. These two dives are the qualifying dives. Classroom work and lectures again enter the picture during the fourth week when the stu- dents are indoctrinated in the use of two types of welding and burning machines, both gas and electric. Knowing how to weld in one of the important lobs a diver must learn in order to car- ry out a salvage operation un- derwater. The men are given their final exams at the end of tro last week. The group of seven men which went all the way through the first course which began In June, passed ail phases of the written exam and received their certificates as second class div- ers. The date when the next div- ing class of the Recovery will convene remains, at present, an I unknown Item. 1 The operating schedule for the salvage ship reveals many more jobs on tap for the coming months. The next class; therefore, will go Into full swing whenever the Recovery will remain tied up to a pier long enough to get an- other diving class underway. NOTE: All photos attached are Official U. S. Navy photos. RED'S FINAL RESTING PLACEA UN soldier points out the grave of the only known Russian soldier to have died in the Korean war. The Russian. Lt. Mishin Gennsdy. was shot down by U. S. Navy planes early in September when he bore into UN air formation and opened fire. The pilot is located in the "non belligerent" area of the UN military cemetery in Pusan. WHILE HIS TENDER, Res*, goMes his air ho ,e. the diver, George, steps over the side on his way to the bottom. Krobatsch supervisee the descent. The diver's main contact with the world above him Is his air hose la the hands of a tender. The tender is charged with keep lag the hese fren becoming entangled; making sure that the diver has sufficient air at all times; aad riving enough slack in the hese te now the diver to work comfortably while a the bottom. The only ether contact a diver has with the rest of the world is his phones Which are manned by another tender who transmits messages between the diver and the ship. By these phones the diver la able to keep the ship constantly aware of what he is do- ing at iH times. (OFFICIAL U.S. NAVY PHOTO.) BRITAIN BUYS RUSSIAN FURSA British fur buyer in fore- ground inspects choice' sable skins at the 23rd international fur I auction- In Leningrad. Representatives of many foreign fur com- panies attended the sale. Photo is from an official Soviet source. A RECOVERY DIVER comes up from the bot torn where he had been working on i te sunk en Erie at Caracao. Willemstadt, Netherlands. WJ, In April of this year. The Eric td been sank by a German submarine hi 1942 and had remained a menace to navigation at Curacao. This Is typical of the kind of work done by Navy divers. (OFFICIAL U.S. NAV -HOTO.) : SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13,1952. S *Uy PmWWIMIJaUpplBmmvi Pa*.. ,VJJ2N - f . . - m, ii Our low needs your hand, too . . UNITED CAMPAIGN * . i . ., va ."'^. T T TOOTS, I SOT A LETTER A GOQP.'--AND I HAVE FROM MY UNCLE EVERETT ) A.LETTER; FROM MY HE'S COMING HERE TO >AUNT AMANDA. SHE'S VISIT US. i^^^COMlisle TO SPEND A THAT'S ALL 9HE EVER SPENDS WHEN SHE VISITS US/ WHAT AN OLO-.TI6HTWAD. BUT, FIRST I'LL ANSWER MY UNCLES LETTER/--SOOD OLD UNCLE EVERETTJ--HE'S THE SOUL OF GENEROSITY.'/", IT WONT WORK/ WE TRIED THAT THe LAST TIME, BUT SHE CAME, ANYWAY. THEN WE HAD TO eET THE PAINTERS IN.' YSARNOWI remember butTisten, toots, why should we battle -axs FEBUN&Sf I'LL DO IT, CASPER WE'LL GET RID THAT PEST FOR HOW DOES THIS SOUND f "DBA* uncle evsRern were POLUNIS. OUT THE REP CARPET r&tyou. youREAS welcome as the flowers /nmay. ETC., ETC." ANDJTELL HIM TO. STAY AS LONG AS HE LIKES. T^ 7" r~i UNCLE EVERETT.'! THE FOLKS WEREhTT EXPECTING YOU GO SOON-BUTCOME RK5HTlN/\ DON'T BE SILLY, UNCLE EVERETT. WE WERe DISCUSSING MY AUNT AMANDA.. I WAS WORRIED FOR A , MINUTE' HERES THE LETTER I WAS SENDING YOU/" ANO TOOTS HAS THE 6UE9T ROOM ALL READY FOR vmil- sis YOU i THAT'S TRUE, CASPER. BUT I'M AFRAID WELL BE STUCK WITH PQI * I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO TELL AUNT AMANDA TO KEEP HER FROM WE ACT IT-- SAY WERrHAVlNG THE PAINTERS AND THE Wt DM AT ' . I / American Comic supplement \ . IF SIR ROLAND SELLS THE BAR-20. HE'LL HAVE TO DEAL. WITH *iOVfc BANK, MISTER LOCKE. ALL I ASK S THAT *5U STALL HIM OFF FOR A WHILE.. I SIR ROLAND WAS AN EXPECT HORSEMAN, A CRACK SHOT AND A IFIR5T-RATE HUNTER. I H^E REASON TO BELIEVE TH/S MAS! 19 AN IMPOSTOR MISTER CASSIDY'S SORE OVER LOSING HIS JOB, 60 HE'6 COME HERE TO STR UP TROUBLE/ R-- .'- . ./,. UM-I KNOW HIS KIND -ONE Of THOSE GABBY BORES/1 -WISH NOWl HADNT SAID I'D TAKE THIS ROOM/. SPENT VtYEARS GOING AROUND TOE GLOBE SEARCHING OUT REMOTE AND WILD AREAS FROM THE POLAR. REGIONS, GOBI DESERT, AMAZON JUNGLES, TO DARKEST AFRICA/, r AFTER YOU MOVE IN AND GET SETTLED, THERE WILL BE ' MANY EVENINGS JjfcL. HOLD YOU SPELL- BOUND WITH MY EXCITING YARNS/ i i \ i like the room,^ butIwouldnV stay lokg with this bellows always going for my ,\ SO I'D LIKE TO KNOW IF YOU'D OBJECT IF I EXPERIMENT MIXING SAMPLES OF THE FORMULA iN MY ROOM AT NIGHT? . V . i~* \AJ "madam, ^^ ^P i'm Selling "^B [ A NEW TYPE OF )M ^, CAN OPENER jM JUST WHAT 1M h- I NEED- Vi . i Uttls ^ REVU SOLLY- THE PARK IS __ JAMMED-1 DONT KNIOVJiT ATTRACTION AN' THE IF IT IS THE SHOWS OR M BABYBURGERS IS THE BABYBURGERS ^Cfc THE LITTLE THATSTHEBI6 M ^ATTRACTION*: ATTRACTION" ANV BABYBURGER BAR THAT CAN ORDER A TRCKL0ADOF ROLLS 16 NOT A LITTLE, -r<5UESSTH^ATTRACTI0N- SHOWS IS THE Bk3 \vv $*'$ 'ftnt !/'/ ITS A RUSH-EVEN THIS TRUCKLOAD OF ROLLS NOT LAST UNTI CLOSlMG TIME KTHE-OUTDOOR PARK SEASON ISV7 HM'M'M" I'LL \jAVE ALMOST ENDED-I CAM OFFER VCtj) V TO THINK IT CTvERr 5,000 SPOT CASH FOB THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE N#ME "BABYBUR6ER'- AND THE SECReT OF MAKING THE RELISH I WONDER WHAT THAT POOR,] LITTLE RAGGEDY KID IS CRYlM j FOR ? MAYBE HE'S GOT A TUMMYACHE FROM EATING TOO MUCH-. y-. I I THINK ITS MAYBE FROM' NOT EATIKJ' ENOUGH- t'W U*..A**< WE HAD A SLICE OF BREAD BEFORE MA WENT TO WORK-SHE SAID WED SURELY HAVE SOMETHlN TO-EAT WHEN SHE CAME HOME- BILLY IS TOO LITTLE TO KNOW. YOU MUSTN'T CRY EVEM IF ' VOU ARE HUNGRY- HONEST MOTHER-THESE GIRLS GAVE US HAMBURGERS AN'CAKE AN'MILK AN'^ ICE CREAM- AN' THIS BASKET 0Fr SWELL STUFF- AN' EIR f* > SONJNA COME AN'SEE OUR P^ GEE, SARAH -AINJ'T fSO DO I- AW' M3URE IT BEEN A WONDERFUL RIGHT ANNE IT DAY.' I FEEL GLAD /REALLY IS FVN TO] ALL OVER--^BB CHAI-HtABLEri Sfn^ : 6*\ ' 1 |
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| MILLISECOND | CLASS.METHOD | MESSAGE |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Application State validated or built |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Navigation Object created from URI query string |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.display_item | Retrieving item or group information |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | Retrieving hierarchy information |
| 0 | sobekcm_assistant.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | Found item aggregation on local cache |
| 0 | item_aggregation_builder.get_item_aggregation | Found 'all' item aggregation in cache |
| 0 | system.web.ui.page.page_load (ufdc.page_load) | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_style_references | Adding style references to HTML |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
| 109 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |