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*71 V .i-W . I.. - I * - U 1,~mp~ DAILY NEWSPAPER Starlit V 4 O . CWmeMd de //4 t KL.AFRWA Y Fleet /Sends Its lane AtMIf B N CHINA - ammer*ekjold. The WillismH. Baumer (eft, PAR Stanmp Finds Quick Pou lar y rone of the photographs brought' back from Red China by Dkg WS a Communist doctor glvlne. medical examination toMJ. Lewwsburg, Pa., and Capt. MBe J. Vaadl of Clayton, N.Y. Chances Fade For Kin To Visit Jailed Flie s WASJINGTON, Jan. 26 (W)- The State Department itsei-as# Cedic for- American fanflev to word that thnI want to mn.ks the vilt their Wailed kin in 1 Cifna trip. It coniering replied to fa d today .< U.S.- tnmum.st theisethr.ee. . Qeeteviat mu m .-over he The heatbreak o ."a se US-Ra trsStem Indifferent 4.'? To New Treaty Many Amer icA of the Canal Zone today V ar Indlfferent to tae terms o te new U8-RP treaty signed .*t.rWy at $he Presldenda, but lth US-ralte and local waters agreed it was a "good thing for the panamanian government " GenerAlly, Canal employes of West Indian orign were leery of the treaty, ind fearful of the consqOiences as tey would be- gin to effect their status next year. Un"ton ad ulvi leaders and representatives. endorsed the treaty "with reieyations." Most of the American workers who were asked tq comment on the possible effect the treaty would have on them shrugged It off with renmk such as "I'm ashamed to tell you, I haven't thought about It," to "I don't think it will be bad for the U.S." One white-collar clerk said "I'm glad to see we got a. park- ing lot but bf it." Another added "It sounds okay, I guess." * A Balboa shipping agent re- marked 'I's ver good for Pan. ,Reaon dd this wonder' ful vnr white In powI. I doMpEAbhikbI H inill mffi" Il"- Rilmrad a __ The colored days, ' Page, i brands slon. I mhn A -0- 300 Aircraft WaN Red China With Show of Force -' d ...- S ouvenir en TAIP', Formosa Jan. 26 (UP) The U.S. 7th F! UUvC 1i r sent "Jorge numbers" of planes into th air swaiietk* Tachens as a warning to Red China that the United Sh raiway=m the cs.- means business, it Was reported here today. - hal adi"oheege'hw l Waves of Nationalist heavy bombers smashed tI dtoeo ian.*e s 1Chinese invasion fleets north of the threatened nUed sinking a 1500-ton Communist warship, and Nations weprenta es t -vic coun, sources disclosed the Communists had made a fourth icoudng wn ityo be abord successful attempt to invade the Matsu islands. special train. ., Chinese press reports here said Vice Adm. Alfred * Twenty-five passee for the Pride, commander of the 7th Fleet, used 300 planes int special train y-av been issued show of force .north of Formosa, but noval sources bureau for distribution among Its would not confirm the'number of planes involved. employee. The special train will leave the Meanwhile in I~oidon, .ritish suggestionn to enlarge its A Colon station at 8:35 p.m. Fri. foreign secretary Anthony Eden kia's) deevg obliga day commemorating the first told the O of Com s to-yond Fm aosa nd 1th railroad c-rosig of the Aner- day he bel s the r'.os.an does as provided by te au Ice 100 year4-ago. crisis can be seht6d pgefully defense tty with 0.bhlrln The special .Itn will p at 'Itf khe goVernmonta .icern-1.ek, the3 .eretao. i1id lb Mt. on at S3:4pj.m.. ed tk .r 4 "We-stt~fr meSta t 5 must be made. P 0 i e uad , S decotB t b made e nJ ei vw to set l around. I can't se, anyhing sonord he real train wh, ee cgrss i they E e to a. urrisin except in trai ve rd the regular n what. cd a 'angero u ad Sl d a e w t will permit e thbpl f improised ser surprising ehxce knewa e traFriday from the Paci situation." He made ulk of th ard or ba rl 17 Impri- vieme provetoCmmu knew the ress, side, and on the regular night -ont to a n n t or be ndiab .%i IF i tsu- fyveemea and F^ prove( to Comnmu. ou beorss^,I don't see . I phi* come from, P ed Amerlcans accepting amC e tChlbafore.a they I t seell nt be duped t leaviBabo Station at The fqMla reary o ernment's dealers wh Red Ci a% to visit the by Red'propaganda.e, hoe wm aff tAmerlcams. The a10:1 p.m. 'e Atlanttic side. "fore not the solution i l prme men uftedatoDs 0are buying m The States does not hav "If they ( theRed Chonside) went te ris a bounexpected Balboa i been placed a monuItselfnt the use of U.S. forces only with a.ia S en te l amps a e deplomatelat as swith Comm o sme for u, why d a also be foridea and wonder whovas Ml begin at 44 p. wh a t greatest relctance," oen Manwe A an o rothe 100th nnver- 1st acae "i I w would get over there ries the commissary.6aua Jan. 2 p cncert by the Balboa Hi pard. from the carrier Princeton m thU e fLt transconn that tl S c ials appaourent'slsutey sa d the boys home," rs.hve to wel or Local 9' a Band:1 Their Coeon.y The British diplomat s he n sTae ,tod sa tri f friend in the fl that would be even more leave without him i t would be Edward Gaskin said he felt that Po says i w tart immediatoter atoblem of the coastal Islands to peeedlat.ontei Sad elsewhere angers to aprovwhe re iit u S. Bea umrbre wife or Mau. We whoe, the teat hs i& te y e ar the pecl td "e susceptible to a peacentul in- aed n d Frm to ama aring thyable n to eausantee protectibt of Wtliam H, u wan mer, Lew sburg, ao nd when it don s a atcome, It i wasi the gverent on- ife te big ci the al e-entp enter- Americans. g out the For. asked y (ted N. However e declined to comment t llntnue un cee ar prepared to work. town Kearsarge p an office rid 100th mos Straits e relates were -General) Dg on the poible effect it will have s Fer i been placed I a moment the use of U.S. forces only with affr ere. of tjhe G wlnnlbalr first- mIeld China at such am he a, de, iand wonder what's i p. wih a t. d ereee o n his members, cause he said eer ett tetrip to Red Chia also bebrdg deal, and wnder what's asouvenh al of' the 0ath nfve mit be trapd cause I would get over there behinted to discuss this very ,g father of the We e t .s been and is ttop number o arri e dary otra mailsaervice can, heStato e Bepertment ha ey, add for m thget faveta pont with Panama's PreLocaldnt 9 t a Ncarainho a. concert by the ata te fihn he said. 'We raft available Ir )arf thef c Some top ofiials apparentlyandlsee my Billand then have to Costs Ricn ex. train trip for fted In hbye opi th at t woud be te vmore leavewithout him, it would be Edward 'askin said he felt that (UP)-l will start lned niote o of there ore tntinued to evaato e Tthed i I tripu ffrersbynthelewtlatIstrwtMeo.r wk lt 'ht ueha fie n n bm concerned thtasa- The ationalla tChintes S est row The orders -Baumer usand 10 oth. on't the whole, the treaty "hol ans det TodO a of do ad of force idibombe te and ewr..Canal S torv the o the-b in cred au e ot I o dontho e whOle, hnedt ge t nahold oent e rotlrnto a co th WArHiTlTON, Jan. 2 (UP) ta voting a ep ib er conflagra- pitio northo"fr Tah thouh all m a r athe now because of the possibiiy ov think he woutwd want me to come. frth eapromise to ponm.h iolt tha cpd there yes- p. m ltf all the recent r to h r n for r r duri;' trp H a com- would ecly affct employes he o rw sti tense to ) introduced a bill todayIFowrdl to mmntForce is not the solution of klangyan Island. special three-cent stp enter- hostilities breaking out tin thF "Wittlf h Jeysent (United Na- However he dec t ned to comment day is t, N argus reduce from to 60 the r is delicate and d lt r- The 1-to ene ed any- tie Friday, 100th mosa wStraitsp, N the relatives were t s 7Geoeral) Dad on the possible effect it will hav eder tha wFl ~nti oueresrIove e seetan to t e be ade anniversary, wll ber I- in Red China at-such a time, they p there, t hey. on his members, because he rel t s beat R seVlcurity, ray at byen the peaceful proc- destsroyer e ras he a5 ae at bo r Uml htbe trapped there. e~l N g r aS to ga relea o he tat e r e t ir a security rm a has b vern and I a to aop nue of ear b day afon, r ento the ro l nd te clu to press clash t repo te. "This bill," he said, "reasti- the S. administration have also ing lh0o-pound raie special raSdlway mall service can- e State Deparment h a d to i gtinvita.oint with Panama's Presi etrei ent sd his oa alle diculy tt to reduce the risk .of a We Caft available toh fleeiis eiMlaton l o f ted e placed BALBOA TIbS b oIserigtat rae us eto- hs vett ere," Ricatdo nAs sometie th the rebel my.d in an inere. hae eteo the ftinu" he And sa cocalatio ua er gyt b etr clerk I THUSDAY, JANUA2 the treay is bie ew esmerle the yguere P- ing and remntangeu e on all con ed he m- barely eight ada instant be as- i IV W ed t the RP government, ado wl na the border and it recognizes that a bar to "Preadent Esenhower in his ea, with 500 bmbe beaelats tom t an Annual meeting held to r 2:0 (es. Baumer and 10 oth .ela- Wieam Sinclair, spokesman t ranformed C Ricfo o o that he is not Cso The Panama Railroad cfnton- the Currndu omotniay ub- A m o"^ mbranchy b a Cana of the citured armn wlor e GEOCCIO pointed out nation of brothers nto a "cun WAS OTOg a wr st off it eot but a dick eaga a. be In Jacksonville this weekend that there.weretwo points which try Of r hates..Roosevelt (D- n. in mlirea IB 18gea iTl 11hdto gUnon hast the two pper coers br the more year.. WASHINGTON, Jan 26 (UP)- ers of the resolution that it will tratoa American unity la a . centennl dates in wtte. A It wAs as duringly tripsonee members of the deter Communist Chnaf from fur- nes T houe or wsti in thentroduced a bill today to -Forceis.eSolutionOf total of oe million of the ntmps group of hve said they miewhof voted J against bPrnes- will be the taxation on heiry, Nicaraguantr reduce fom 65to 60 theretre delcae and dffcultrob- The 00-to enemy ehave n ma er e wh oy theyn provide salaries and the loss of comnit- w dthe north Wheey stock in tryf ThArmed Serv- wAsettlementcabet lbeat aaed In L a "single platform from where sary pr vileges. However, he felt ot R oops ba tttp l security. Itd at by the peaceful p rroc- destroyer d ththe pe dfa.th miles can-expres their gr- they would benefit from the lttee outh in search on t he illso a soure for members to obta d- negotTimothy P. Sheehan (R fiht them, we o ow our etr resolution to a all edrhrratpo de for efforts begin made by civil service retirement for which elmh ht still betheir so secure government are a f U.S. and -U.N. officials on b ll eoyes will now be eligible, oo ar remarriage. co ced that the obe Mwde At C sthoo s os e eluoo emper- rainst e resolun because i The lon,' reqes by oeflm of teirloved teea serve the." by the clause to pr Erepornhow"This bill," he said, "real sti.sthe U. administration han e also a pep o to. u l sIn n b cers ad iCMembers ol s to eeLd ormos a- and face te wor as it really ne iid hsot a tts the difficulty that to reduce the risk -of,,anythur Inte e t m teca endr arkr Ms t .mtHVRSDAY, JANUARYnt 2 e ho turaw the line ol de are-der U.S the to uner Pie drces- de t d .^i^^ ^^i He h^ ecR explained his ernment d, the t arny w eraat bar --0 In m9essage........ t and De m h Inefiw thatto rehe s not C teonp,,a way cancellatins. -_ Ahe~ld i~no6:14- k .... 12t:06 m- y tCoWE oan Pace Col. 1) he cPn.-,odr grohotw h Cth lna , C. Pageef of thEn o ED MOTHERS I WOULDn NOT VOTE oTO ENGD THEIR BOYS. IN WR ON FOREIGN SOIL'T .E L in, 0cislo n 's architectural -D l . fro aw c- urse dgree Wno Opposed - In = u-. The Fedrl C nion hs0 Thanew stamp is pu pe and been o e fre Joust a little . ; the two u crnSl bear the more WASINGTON, Jan. 26 (UP)-- e of- te resoletlothat it will strtoi o American unity in a cened. te in white. A It ws rob by a fbe y t memrs the deter Communist Chia fom fur- new har4 cold war criis in the Totaleof one mll don of the stmps group of.M ind crerd p onsaIsme w o. vted against Presi- lter a Bc rdrie said: Far EHot. --. . lm bown bouht and the are who realized of an or Hdent w e- W tahowe9's ih t-if-ne^ es- "I don't t ay stoc In tr The 1wbos ArdS .being..ied in Umeets of Y with ganitton to e rge savings sary re lution explained why to- .lg toscar#e people l. I dou't be- ie e a ad~e Re~loU comn- e pduminge mV each and sat the earned im provide ar. 2*i .he. we1ef're going to mnU. o ~mtueo hearig on the inHa, a o.urce for mj en to obtain _m P. Seehan R- fiht them, we should how our extraordl r relution $0d y, CThe nw Wi .- ndeto ust tlr jt ne I (K-Ky.) and eth. Wo are pst theabluffing was pes .to aad I taos beeai0st t0 0h i f~-s r en (D-N.C.) eact ala." ment Lrr tthis week, pbly to the MetoWSIGof the erent a2 for v n ot mrrow. tetorsethe ues the nselution yemeP)raosft the resoluo beca tuse It The rfetetic, requuestedy totalo A stem iio n oft eo theinterest of woven g to ltL h- aw io o ent lisenhower's A- dIdn't o far "oIunbt "It meemsdk residy-t h ienhoArer ineda pe- beinhdfl- f7witeces exineo battle ff no to me tat ep tO be ralistic cial neie &I lTives tcon a orefrc movao Formota a- ad face the wored as (t rRly If, PslouW-Awour etra r to 4or- hoo andt threWtited CMme" wmmrsstee ra we shoud dw the ts of dweek, Upo.s e ibyf t otecaeOfinar Bonardag invIasio tl against Communist osR' o b"ortnoe of v a Formors t eleed at Tthe annu meetinHt- e's hew aos h explained hm s Andaetivey declre that any war- are tareAtiCr oDbhle movement h the part of her cue t7e urging approval,. te&methe i tIoareD-ss6 of voted "no"Wtelllteg tlh cause us to retail. Sean t beraD-TeL. ChineseInva aip n on. i an ainst mya si.' votd aai nst tar sl de o ,Eo ose &Za1teoft BARD X-pi he voted i00to uake* toift.*ille vowtedtomberresd.Rabr P erzen._ Vaa thot "I att D. addli m." v ast dancer- Mu tiy D o re -u se a n d -a m ,* W IN .resi- Inbec a use. h e-h a dsp r th a t r .d .t b ...d w.i...cp & v, i'., ~* p. ~to~ p Tit~1 A f OF' iS. OYS... -v i : 7th 7,'... 3 I~j~ * * -*, ;"i- ,. i :, 'r .i'r f - K v.' ". ,. ' 4 nbro~l~~-i V m * - THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER Labor News And Comment By VICTOR RIESEL Recently the maitre d' at New York's famed Toots Shor seated a group of men at the sports and theatrical rendevous as he had so many others so many times be- fore. The difference is that- this animated luncheon party wou n d up in a murder The group was "making a meet," "UNLEASHING" CHIANG which is the asphalt jungle way cf saying that they were confer- r. ring over a matter which might for alter the city's vital statistics, es- ^ Chiang Kal-shek Is in the news again and the Senator for pecially'the death list Sitting with Blormosa and Republican majority leader Knowland in the Sen- the group was a belligerent tough te doing his stuff. It was almost a year ago that President ex-convict, Walter Smith, who had Manhwe- announced: been trying to carve himself a "I am issuing instructions that the Seventh Fleet no longer labor empire. be employed to shield Communist China." Of course, there were a great many misguided people who At lunch that day Smith was told 'were under the impression that the Seventh Fleet was protect- to lay off. He was moving in on ing Chiang Kal-shek from an attack by the Communists from thed mob's waterfront terrtcrymo the mainland of China. didn't like that. He was molesting Now according to the Washington Post & Times-Herald, the honest labor leaders in several oth. Nationalist (Chiang) Chinese navy and air force have been or- er fields who were on the verge dezed to cease attacks on Chinese mainland targets as a result of creating a public furor. The mob of U.S.pressuredidn't like that either; it did not That will probably save Communist China. However at a want any more publicity than It recent luncheon at the Overseas Press Club in New York, William already had. Costello, long time INS Correspondent in the Far East said that Smith did not lay idf. On Wednes. the invasion of the Chinees mainland by Chiang forces is "not day morning he was laids out-well even remotely possible." .ventilated by bullets. His corpse "There is no possibility," he said, "That Chiang could move dteeated a Brooklyr lot which his troops effectively to the mainland and even less possibility ad not seen such a. cadaver sinfree 'that he would receive any support from the populace on the Murder,oInc., gave it up as a free mainland."'burial plot. The foregoing are just a few more jiggers in the Chinese The death of a hood with a ec- lpuzzle that apparently may split the Republican Party in the ord convictions and time in the u.S. Senate. en for robbery and assault is col- - Crede Calhoun I n Portugal Answer to Previous Puzzle ACROSS 7 Two-footed a I 1 Capital'of animal Portugal 8 Fruit drink '- is one of 9 Unit of this country's reluctance iportant 10 Indo-Chinese A crops region 13 Zxaggerate 11 Girl's name I R a t 14 Form a notion19 Experiod of r e 15 Maican's 21 Develops 31 Raced t-l k 22 Musical note 37 And (Fr.) 17 Abstract eing24 Dug 39 Perched nrh nia 25 Cicatrix 40 From 0Sardint(ab.,) 28 Colorless 42 Coalesce 21 Plaited 27 Pres 43 Touches 25 sHteeplew 20 Masculine lightly 28 ebrewappellation 44 Oh the aseticsude 0 Facility sheltered side vBsww 'licitude 4 Century plant F 7 8#1owver 4- cT l~fV';r( o,"O V4M inoveg DOWN Easy gait IRuuian name tHardeis 'Brought (ab.) IPersian water L W ZI o A r rs l[muv li-oEI aMME cua J K MMME El 1 -1E0 C Ljd[3 013 ouou 45 Filth 47 Devotees 48 Governmental grant 49 Heavy blow 51 Seine 52 Summer (Fr.) 54 Ever (poet.) 55 Collection of sayings 1 If you wont to SAVE TIME and MONEY on security transactions CALL PANAMA 2-0074 MINIMUM STOCK EXCHANGE COMMISSIONS_ ORDERS PROMPTLY TRANSMITTED ' GIVE' UP ORDERS ACCEPTED AUtERBACH, POLLAK & IWICHARDSON MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE 14 TIVOLI AVENUE PANAMA STOCKHOLDERS OF (ERVECERIA NACGONAL, -. A. (NATIONAL BREWERY INC.) We wik to remind you that the regular Assembly of Stockholders will be held in y ain Ofice of the Company, Eloy Al- faa4l.(t -, l Uana City, on Monday Jan- S-M-3r t, 1955 at 7 P.M. _VVI AWesordance with the By-Laws of our e jitav di meeting cannot be held .n-. leM onmehalf plus one of the total number of tockholders are present- or represated N n md at least one-half of the capi- r elemwed. d awho are unable to a end SiHOILD FORWARD .R EZR l &$ a4 m e. .. .. .... I. -- .-.T. E orful stuff for us who love who- dunits. But,it is basically not Im- portant, except to the nead man. What is important is that this character hau a union cnarter- I from the independent International Longsboremen'i Assn: which has been -promising us a clean up and Ian anti-crime "czar." What is important Is. to make certain tnat tne pattern of dead Walter Smith is not repeated. His carter number was Local 205 of the controversial ILA, which operates al along tne east coast and effects the entire nation's com- merce. 'nis enarter enabled Smitn to claim the use of the nation's iabor reiatios laws-.and thus take over 'many shops. kie'nau l10 ILcal union headquar- ters. He just collected dues-among otner tnings. Au because he hau tnls chartiU e. Tnat made, him a la- bor feaaer in the eyes 6f' the law, which ignored the tact that he Was a uiug tisguised as a union offi- Scial. He used this charter- to move in on a silver plant in Port Jervis in upstate iNew York, hear the Vennuylvania-New Jersey-bcrder. Ih rom uuss itop ne pianneu to.move into the other two states. The plant Smaue silverware"' or teJ in tea sets. 4t--,bd -as. muah to do Swi h te waterfront as the broom and beaware plants and.milk wa- gcn drivers Waiter Smitn also tried to "unionize." So the eastern region- and na- tional AFL offices asked its own international jewelry Workers Un- ion, led biHyman Pow1Ul, tonight mitstu. l'uweu tried.. .su t drcor wen. The AHL lost by four vptes, Mr. Powell reports. 'Then Smith moved in on union. ized bars on btaten islanu. lie Merely threw a tough picket line arounu bars and restaurailts wbicn had for a long time been under contract wit a uie ArLs Hotel and Restaurant Employes and Barten- aers international uicn. 'his Ar L unit is led nationally by a decent and' ciean trade unionist, Ed Mil- ler. i( ts local leaders, Bert Ross and SAM'S A KISSI' MAN-Rep. Samn Ray4l i 1w. speaker qf the House, is 73 years old, but he sWtl does all right with the ladies. AboVe, left to-,igt, the Texas Democrat kisses Mrs. & :e Monroneq, : wife of the Oklahoma senator; Baroness SUwl'erzuys, wife of the Belgian ambassador to the U. S, and Mrs. Robert B. Anderson, wife of the asistant defense secretary. The bussing business took place at Rayburn's birthday party in-Washington, D. C. J _____----------------.---- .- --...--- -. LAUNCHED INTO HISTORY The Ticonderoga. 48-year-old sidewheeler, sits high on land, , ringed by a wall of earth piled around it by bulldozers. .The famous Lake Champlain passenger- ship will be floated onto the railroad carriage at left, after the enclosure is flooded. Then the ' relic will start a 000-toot journey to the Shelburne, Vt., museum to become a permanent exhibit. Texas-size-Love By BOB RUARK HOUSTON Texas Texas love This stirring example of love in sands of the desert grow cold. ib is a little larger than any\ other Texas iha not. yet fully been re- you love meenough to hold' up kind cf love, as I 'am prepared solved, but the forces of humanity a liquor store with baby In to hrove from a happening which are on the side of lcve, and it is arms if you had a baby in arms, occurred while they were taking believed that soon Mama, Papa, in order to get enough money to the odd strings and sponges out and the bambino will'all be loose, retrieve me from the pea farm?" of whatever they have bee doing and that restitution will be made Mrs. Little looked coldly at the to me out here. to the grog n hop, and that Mama's husband of many happy years. The thing happened like this: new gat will be impounded. But it "No," she said. the husband that is. was sweat- is such a pretty love story, almost This has curdled Mr. Little con- ing out some accumulated traffic like 0. Henry's "Gift of the Magi," siderable, because he and the be- fines in the local workhouse, and in which .a girl cut off her hair to gum are bucking for their silver the gal, complete with babe in sell it in order to buy a watch anniversary, and it Is a dreadful arms, pined'for her man. She has chain for her husband's prized thing to learn that a woman you've a little money, about 50 bucks, ti*er, and he sold the watch to fed and watered fcr 5 years won't but it dMdidt seem-*-be enough tq buy combs for the hair she cut knock over a filling station for pay heiRfue'l r off in order to buy the chain for you, with or without baby. sd sh n 4h watch he hocked. A, ,..... *avs Jn.4dea of trying out the went and ou L ". ..e. e.1' my crown of thorns, pistol gun, furt J iplet.ig oer Mr. Carl Victor Little, a prac. bbt if 4Ws..Ittle won't, I'm pret. skinny hoard. Then she icked up timing humanitarian who writes ty certain the cld warrior won't the baby 16 months dc- and columns for the Houston Press, either. And somehow It spoils my went over to. a liquor store and reckoned in print that this was day. stuck it up. She took what money about the best piece of true love The least a loyal wife can do she thought she needed.-to bail he had stumbled over in a lcng when a husband gets in trouble Pop free, and wentV'stralght off time, Mr. Little, being an active is to stick up something, like-a ta the police staticio. reporter; went into the kitchen to bank, hut I am afraid the pnly She was in process .of paying her brace the begum, as he calls the thing Mrs. Little. or Mrs. Ruark lord and master .0 1 hock when wife of his bosom, on the depth of would do with an illegal gun is the cops came and tagged herr her affection, shoot a husband with it. at the police station. The b-iby Mr. Little said: "I'd like to put This, even in Texas, is carrying cooed when they laid the legal iyou to the supreme test. You've love a little too far, and in, the arm on Mama. tcld me you will love me until the wrong direction. Military Reserves By Peter Edson SWDNZSDAT, JANUARKY IBM MM- aRffRY-6Oi KKRaw ~ A THE PANAMA AMERICAN OWNED AND PUBLISHED BY THE PANAMA AMERICAN PRESS, INC. FOUNDED BY NRLUON ROUNSEVELL IN 1925 HARMODIO ARIAS, EDITOR e7. H STREET P. 0. BOX 134, PANAMA. R. OF P. TELEPHONE PANAMA NO. 2-0740- ON OFFICE; 12.179 CENTRAL AVENUE BETWEEN 12TH ANC 13TH STREHTI FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVES: JOSHUA B. POWERS, INC. 245 MADISON AVe. NEw YORK. C(17) N. Y. \ LOCAL *bY MAIL IONTN. IN AOVANC- 1.70 S 2.50 INX MONTHS. IN ADVANCE .80o 13.00 WES SEAR. IN ADVANCE 18.50 24.00 'H a* Hrewas .out c aSf a R ho ica I a result, Torbie MacDonald was r onventi r. seated on the Interstate Commerce ver Olds showed that the GE Committee by a 15-to-nothing vote. s allowed too much for profit But Congressman Herlong didn't axes. High interest on the bother to read his colleagues the investment alsoran up the postscript on Torbie's letter. Writ- s, whereas the actual fuel ten hastily in ink at the bottom operating costs for an atomic were the words that inspired Her- r plant were startlingly low. long's oratory. They ran: Looking ing GE's figures, and com- forward to spring training." g the costs on a public-power prm, Olds showed th atthe govern- AIR FORCE SLOWDOWN nt could now build an atomic ppwer plant that would generate In the secret councils of the Joint electricity easily for 4.2 to 4.4 mills Chiefs ef Staff there is a great per kilowatt hour--wbich,.is- less deal of grim head-shaking about than half the'cost of generating the weakest link in our national electricity from coat at Bosto. defense-the shortage of young pi NOTE' Meanwhlle, Britain is es- lots both for the Air Force and itstimated to be a full year ahead of super duper "mass retaliation" the United States in developing wing, the Strategic Air Command. atomic power. Russia is als In fact, some cf our top military kowto be rushing to the first -. . . A .i t o b u i l d i e e f ula a o m t 0h e ars Jack Townsend, and its attorney, iarold uxeburg, teegrapheaal WASHINGTON -(NEA)- While teaches him to be a good citizen. Actually, President Eisenhower's strategists are getting rqpnu ant -f protest to the International Long- President Eisenhower's two mes- If the Swiss recruit shows capa- new manpodernplan envisages for the view that the National seuri ts- blioremen's president, W 1 f I i a m sages to Congress on military man- city fos specialized promotion, he next year, *ider the- best estim- ty may best be served by giving Branley. The wire was turned over power do not say it in so many is given this further training? to ates available active Army, Navy the American public the hard and to bmia. here was a conference words, what is proposed is an ap- become an under-officer o ffi- and Air Forces of 2,800,000. This is blunt facts, to wit: between Smith and the A'L men. preach to the Swiss system *w de- cer. Scdiers and officers alike a cut from the Korean war of AL metl t W military forces a smaller, elite pro- man keeps his uniform and arms system, standby reserves, 2,000,000. five to ten times as many young was helpless. Smith continued to fessional corps. And it would build at home. In recent periods of c.i.. The total, 7,80,000. pilots .i training.,. 'as t he .S.A. pic net unionizebars. nat was his up th e reserves, including the Na-s is, he ha even een issued am- rea dent Eisenhower's pan hcourse, is due chiefly to legal ght. H hurt business. He ional Guard. to a new importance munition to keep at home. Every would differ from the Swiss system the fact that Russia drafts pilots lieatenel violence. How do ycu for instant mobilization. man knows exactly where to go in in a number of respects. ter. But th fight s thing? The AFL men It should be remembered that case of mobilization and what his The basic training period would are other reasons, too. One s the hed to wo tho us s tategy the Swiis system has kept that duties will be. fbe 26 weeks I instead of 17 weeks. number of accident casualties' in while its neigh.o r "k it in thir 28-year series. e far lower on the s a erage than in dont s oue te wu m e remh a n torsr They are other'benefits. 'a tialist Then Smith, feeling real cocky and Czechoslovakia egota severe given allowances for loss of their Americans could volunteer forussia,,ethisis hrdlya talking s eewas moving in. And he did. Furthermorij in'today2? world of three-week refresher training. from 1s% to 19, if not enough men SIDE GLANCES By So he continued to swashbuckle instant sunrise attacks, in unde. Switzerland maintains only a volunteered. Under the Swiss sys- _-- - up and down the coast, He told cleared war, some system of con- small standing army and air force, tem, all are drafted. ----- - all protesting unionists, including stant readiness for immediate mo- ts numbers are secret. Their duty other lorgshremen and teamsters bilization at all points is the only is border guard, but in peacetime The U. S. basic training of half to lgongrme n tSh arbor. Only defense posture that makes sense. they double as customs and immi. a year would be fellow b ay an- t-to go jump m~ the har orl. This position the s Swiss have long gration .patrol. other nine and one half years in he din't m ith Is dead. No one held. Under this system, however, the reserves. The Swiss get 28 * Today Smith ish dead. No Under the Swisas system. every Switzerland, with only four and a years in the reserves. passed sentence. Probably, no one ablebodied male tf sound mind, half million people, has a con- By comparison with the Swiss ever No New York gangland on reaching age 20,. must go to stnt redy re serve of 360,000 standards, President Eisenhower's murder has bW.en solved in20 years. recruit school for 17 weeks. He men. It is one cf the best armies proposals ftor anew military man. m murdertainly it wasn't the honest trade gets paid $2 a day for this period, in Europe. power policy are see to be rela- ainl it wbuasnt the honest the gets no fri114s ml t The United States with 165 mIt Utvely mild. They are not universal .unionists.T e o the course is extremely tough lion people would have armed fore- military training by any means. ( Who has. private eyocutioners? Men who go through. adescriuea it es of 10,800,000 trained men avail- They do not intrcduce militaristic Who w as powvae an -rs dhioned simply as "hell." But it add a able, if the Swiss ratio were fo ingoism to America, as critics of gaDo we nowhiach anlbiody- e couple of inchhe to the chest meas- lowed. This was approximately the new plan may cim.Advocates Wan t p ro w hich.wiledn e ablo o they t 5 h w t a furheer m ore W ar II. de nt s'peiChe U. basn bea inin g t oo o fat streets of the big cities. recent of every recruit. increase average U. S. strength in World of UMTn ay criticize the Presi. Whatwillbedone about the tes his weight and furthermore 'War ,11. dent's cpoaid.es as beng too soft. an- Icose issuance of charters which give such thugs as dWalter Smith: ge 8 the chance to pose as labor men? Ce invitwant hehnettrdeIges ad 2 ay orthspeioinEuoe.pwe plcym ekt rIa County Attorney Sets Up 'Lettry' For Liquor Roids COUNCIL NUIS., Iowa, Jan. 26 (UP)-A cS attorney di-, closed todayeMs set np a 1 h "raid lottery" to ensure Impar- A til enforcement of the state's P- A LC-LASSIIkEMLJJ Bach day, said PottswattamleI OBt Aty. Matt Walsh, the I of U Jl 2 Q etab- " wre put into a con- out Rthab .te .our. . poe* Propaganda affect. Catbroith pmA w * rw P I NB I YOUR FORUM THE READERS OWN COLUMN THE MAIL BOX faced Syd Heo who O Congress for the new ses icn. "We Democrats are going t have a rough time this y tar t' Florida congressman co ed0 a 001- league. "I don't seo 'tha," wo sthe re. joiner. "We've got mAJcrft es in both Houses; and Ike. ,il have to. bargain with us to Wet Is program through." "No, no," insisted Herloag. "YonU don't understand at alL Im t about the annual Demcerat.Repub4 lican baseball game. I don't ser how we can winthis year." Past president of the 'Florida. State Baseball League ia3.a.rabid fan, Congressman Herlong has been managing t e Democratic di- amond contingent for years. Later, the talk turned to col- leagues defeated for re election, Herlong was silent as the names were reeled off. Finally he said: "I don't know how we'll do without Don Wheeter,' "Wheeler od RW.ga I" somebody exclaimed. "Why hbewa .no better than 'a Republican, vctl against his own party practleall all thp time." "I know," conceded Syd "but he was a sweet ptteher. We owe him last year's victory and"there's no one td replace him," he sighed. Herlong cheered up a bit, how- ever, when he learned that a for- mer hcpeful in the New York Yan- kee farm system had baen elected from Massachustt: He s Torbie MacDonald, a Harvard All-Ameri- can and onetime slugger for the Newark Bears. WINS KIeY COMMITTEE Syd immediately sent for Mac- Donald, to look him over. He was elated to learn that -Torble could pitch and had many playing year$ ahead of him. But is spirits were, dampened when be found out Mac- Donaldwwas from a tepublieah dis- trict and faced an uphill fight for re-election. ,- Syd pricked up his ears when MacDonald said: "I think I could do most fcr my district on the In- terstate and Foreign Commerce Committee. As a freshman, though, I know I haven't muh dChance of getting on." It just happens that Herlong Is a member of the Ways and Means Committee which assigns members to committees. "Sendjme a letter about it," he said as vy parted. Many freshman congressmen were shunted to ay comfitte that happened to have openings. But when MacDonald's name eCalf up in the Ways and Mean. CoT- mittee HerIong read To.m$'u. ter. HlIe folowed with' _.Alsbort paP t with young Americ s'l ba career hai a With t er rents, it is elir to ebagn 5u eed for hig because of tir ATlOMIC POWEl DULAE te NIc dem t % ap atomic pow*f hWl- t aetical today. ta bct 1i3o plants have be e hat could caue een tevl ThAis hs ee d ated sts. oionaln cha :tu gbawd'on toW, has I:a.g a vately that atom0 aoe now feasible. Chief bottlenecks in the way of this tremendous atomic develop. ment. however, are certain big cor. portions which have- at inside track with the Atomic Energy Commission. These corporations are holding up construction of atomic power plants until they have squeezed all osible ofit out cf their ot f*t electric nr . For example, taahdi ' .empanies are, , eazortzathqi on At t1e end r atonie"powr ca b beek any longer. ..^ a Strategy of tShAg c0rpratuons is to claim that amic power, as developed by the governagnt, is too costly. Once the private com- panies are ready. to take ow- ever, they plan- to bI tn power points cheaply ,_elwhlle they are suppressing t fct that atomic plants are economically practtealnow. ' In tact, ex-chairman OldA iires that atomic plants cMuld 'IrIdE electricity in many -areas fw half the present cost He bases tiI con. clusion on statistics issued by Gen- eral Electric's Atomic Prodlets.J.- vision, which is one of thenoyef.- ment's biggest atomic. tl&trs. S TE ACTUAL tot,, iT~$dS3 _ ____~~ F~Rl~i~CF: I~ 'I -' '~ I --. . I 1 * - -S .M-. Uf. AMARTU.2T M WWS PAMAMA smantasm Ag MIDEFENDENT DAR.T STOl M.ISON: REVOLT ENDS IN PEACEFUL SURRENDER *" ... .*L .. . . .. '.L !, .P ____ fc^.^ ^ j- >.- .^ tL ^ ^Jf^- ^ ^ ^^c^ ^-^-^a-^r :f .*- . .*' __^.=^-." _ __. iici~iiMlM''$1r~^ (NEA Telephoto) REPORTS-ON PRISON MUTINY Reporters surround Rev. ,Edward T. Hartigan, Catholic Chaplain of Mssachusetts' State . Prisbn In.Boston, as he read a statement regarding his talk .witi four convicts who held five guards and six Inmates as, Shortages. PRISON REVOLT MNDS Two of the fow convicts that holed themselves up In the solitary confinement cellblock of Mssachusetts State Prison In Boston are shown (light- pants) as they came out of their barricade and went peacefully with prison guards. Authorities at right watch the prisoners as guard on wall keeps his rifle ready. Young Evangelist To Be SDA Guest\ Speaker Saturday. A young Panamanian evangel- 1st, who was graduated recently from the theological seminaryof West Indian College, Jamaica, B.W.I., will be guest speaker Saturday morning at 11 o'clock at the Central Seventh-Day -Ad- ventist Church, Cabo Verde. Milton R. Corbin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Corbin of Rio Abajo, returned to the Isthmus Sunday, following completion of his ministerial training at the close of last year's school term. Spray Cut' AV &J / NEW YORK -(UP)- Household dirt has another enemy-a liquid spray which helps to keep rugs dlean. The product, developed by a carpet manufacturer, is sup- posed to form a protective film which resists soil. The spray, which provides a protective coat- ing for six months, is non-toxic, non-flammable and odorless. (Del- lay, Artloom Carpet Co.). by' WEDGWOOD, SPODE, ROYAL WORCESTER, COALPORT & CROWN STAFFORDSHIRE all 1 i (NEA Telephoto) SBEFORE SURRENDER --. Guards at Massachusetts State Prison I in Boston-check newsmen's credentials as they enter the gates i of the prison. Four convicts,,Who held four guards and six in- mates as'hostages for four tyIs, released the hostages and surr hdered. Robd. Trip San Jose-Costa Rica (Infiuds Visa for Panama Canal Empjoyesand Military .Personnel) $ 29.0 only COPA DC-3 Leavig Tocumen 7:00 a.m. Saturday, January 29th :RETURNING 7:00 p.m. Sunday, January 30th -.Fcw further information and reservation Phnie Panama 3-0097- 'BA N A I 195S VAUXHAL four door Sedan only one owner excellent condition Low mileage. Only $9AIS.1...y... M .000 Call Colon 800 SMOOT Y HUNNICUTT, S.A. THE BRIISH PIANO OF B.C. COMPLqft TROPICALIZED ON.M 'A AT -r -f ^ < *-~ --b "i "_vqI Ave. -a main pattens carried in 6pen stock. PANAMA COLON PANAMA o COLON FREE! Free $10.00 in any merchandise \ you choose. Now is the time to purchase that cool suit for the dry season! New Shipment of, NYLON CORD SUITS s33.50 ea. 10 DIFFERENT COLORS ALL SIZES Dacron . . . . . . . $39.50 Tropical ..... . r6* *0 *037. 50 Orlon ... .... ....... .. 42.50 Tropical Worsted .......... 42.50 YOU DON'T NEED MONEY J sawy: ".-harge It." ... And remember Commercial Accounts is already opertin Colon, o veft our Colon Sore, op Bte road Station. and Jt si g Your Name. F- PANAME: )g 1.gflr-d Au, COLON: -eIuyem ---- ~I I _ SON HELD- Mrs. Charles Mc- Neil, mother of Charles W. Mc- Neil, Jr., one of the inmates who were held hostage, bows her head after visiting the warden's office. Just because a lot Of 6Mople disregard a rule of etiquette doesn't make such behavior ac- ceptable. It's still good manners to arrive when your hostess asks you to, rather than at your own convenience. - And it Is still rude to show up late for a sOcial engagement, even if half the other guests are late, too. DOC WAS IN OLD SAYBROOK, Conn. -(UP) - Richard Tracy and Barbara Skilton got speedy medical treat- Sent allowing a traffic accident - their automobiles collided in front of a physician's home. 9 A A L~IL 4', A. STORYBOOK SCENE-Dutch boys and girls skate on a frozen canal near Volendam, resemblny a scene from the pages of "'ans Brinker." The girls are wearing fringed shawls called "kapersm over their colorfully striped dresses. i "*wiea~m~'''as^^ ICE-COLD TREAT-And it's no the wterpel. dj ed on bin cold-utor addition t an Ice house at Independenoe, K 'TE real trefbr a farmers, is the mnow. Tof of 1hd : stuff, which have fallen during recent storms, are expected to provide mu id mature to S- *'*_ lands @parched by last summer's drought . i u i SORRY. YOU CAN'T BUY IT-The Futura, a streamlined experimental car, d.eslgne by uneoib- Mercury, has just been unveiled in Chicago, Ill. Model Mario Blasko stands beside the car which incorporates the latest developments in automotive demln. The automobile will bIM used a laboratory on wheels and will undergo road testin.g. qkP1idI I - Distribuidora Elietrica, S. A. Tel.: 3-4518 No. 72 Perui Ave. Box 3212 According to previous notice, hereby reminds, all holders of tickets 'for the GRAND CHRISTMAS RAFFLE that inasmuch as the winning ticket had not been given out at the time of the original raffle, the said raffle shall be carried on again on Sunday, January 30th, 1955, and that in the event that the prize should not be won, the raffle shall be carried on, the last Sunday of every month until won. KWe shall continue to giyve out tickets to our customers at the rate of one for every TEN DOLLARS purchased. Ali tickets given out previously or in the future are valid in every raffle. -1~ ~. -,..v~ -~ I- or-w ,ii -- tr ,ill --,i m.- 9 -4U ," v&O m _r__ r "3~I ~"l~n~ I ,. -.1 *' '*' -.-*-* 1-tt- :~I"~, 1:~";-; 1--i~:" f;";-~ V--tE TN! PAAM AMRCT AN' WIKFND SA. 1WVAU EWDA,5** -A FEW FAST FACTS: Clandette alert will make her second TV rance in March, opposite b . Niven in CBS-TV's produc- O ' T:i of "The Guardsmen" on the 4st of Broadwav se:rie ..e. DAV. 'J Wayne says he quit Hollywood when be woke uip one morning" l. and realized he'd rather play golf as I * . Harry Sosnik says King Fred- .* erick of Denmark is a fine ama- 0: te'tr conductor, and would rather lead a band than a nation .. Karns. CBS-TV has commissioned David, tmoekman to write a half-hour Cbrt osee arns ep.-t.a for "Danger." Whre'll the, I get a spooky soprano? And will, People come up to me and ask she sing an eerie. I when Im' enming back.' s -- I At this point, a waiter in Danny's This ia a confidential report to Hideaway came up and asked h i~. 14,000,0Q0 people: l when he's coming back. He may Rocky's coming back. Relax. or may not have been a shill, but The Rocky in the picture igsthe timing was perfect. o | b "A e Icascoe Ktarins, formerly known asII e..,n , Rocky Klng, Detective. For five "Gleason and I used to have a. uer. Iel, solid years, Roscoe rocked over running a g," Karns says. "It, DuMecnt Then, as a Christmas.I started wien he was on DuMont, .Tr k!" present, the network dropped the too Whenever we' d meet he'u show. thr~ww up his arms and say, in a . "It was a blessing in disguise.",, serious voice. 'We are the pWiars Wurlitzer organist was walking duck, we have an improper parrot says Roscoe. "But what a dis. of DuMont.' Then, after he his pet duck, Chuck, and'the vie- On "The Big Payotf," Betty Anu guil e! switched to CBS, he'd meet me ous beast took a nip out of a Grove was rehearsing her song, Karns says the budget for his' and say, 'YOU are the Pillar passing collie. This must be the "Lullaby of Birdland." With a live sow used to be so tieht at Du. of DuMont.' original ugly duckling parrot in a cage. The bird re- Moat that they'd have trouble get. Now they're fresh out of pillars. malned quiet while Betty Ann flag a door for the set. The budget sang, but, as the number ended, called for three actors, besides Music hath charms to soothe Maybe it has something to do it enirped, "Aw, drop dead." he show's principals, olus two the savage international situation, with the phases of the moon, but Another parrot was hired for othas who eould say five lines, That's the hope of the Kansas City birds seem to be acting up. In ad. the show .A nice, refined dumb approelmately 5 words. No spec. Philharmonic and its conductor, dition to the aforementioned ugly parrot. tanclar this. Hans Schweiger. When Reeky King was de- throned, Roscoe bled himself to The Symphony dedicated a con- his old pal, Jackie Gleason. cert to the Munieb, Germany, "Gleason's a man I've known Symphony, and a tape recording for 20-25 years," Karns says. -We of the concert was sent to 'Munich. were never intimate friends, o I It was broadcast over the Bevar. could go to him as cne business- Ian radio. A similar, reverse ac- fnan to another. I didn't go with tion is planned by the German Great White Fleet my hat in my hand, asking a favor orchestra, in an exchange of musle I had something to sell, and be's idesied to promote international New Orleans Service Arrive* buying." go-will Cristobal Jackie Gleason Enter rises. in b short, will star Roscoe Karns, in a Schweiger and his musicians new detective drama soon. The have exchanged musical message B.S. "LOVLAND" .................................. a 21 format isn't set. The network isn't like this before with Strabourg, .S. "MORAZAN" ............................... Jan. 29 net. The technlque--live or film- France, and Osaka, Japan. 4Iaybe 8.S. "AGGERSBORG" ............................ .Feb. 4 isn't set. The cast isn't set. But it music can bridge the International S.S. "BYFJORD" ................................Feb. 5 Is definite that Gleason's organ- Isituation, at that. .S. "YAQUE"....................................Feb. 12 ization will produce a Roscoe S.S. 'MORAZAN".................................Feb. 19 Karns detective show. Anything can happen in New S.S. "AVENIR" ..................................Feb. 19 "We have a ready.made audl- York. There Is a dog complaining B.S. "MABELLA" ................................ Feb. 21 one," Earns says. "There are that he was bitten by a duck on *Handing Refrigerated Chilled and General Carge 24,000,000 people waiting for me Lexington Avenue. where most to come back. Sounds phony, but ducks are friendly-like. New York Service Arrives we always had a good audience. It happened that Ken Griffin, Cristobal FLOTA MERCJNTE GRANCOLOMBI Acceepting General Carg "#r:. EAST COAST AND GULF f U.S.A. Sailings: Every Fifteen Days for: HOUSTON and NEW ORLEANS Sailings: Every Tesn Daysrfer: NEW YORK-PHILADELPif.-BALTIMORE (Gulf Veowels call at VERACRU Z and TAMPICO (MEXICO) every si webk) APPLY: WILFORD & MCKAY, INC. Masonie Building, Cristobal, C. Z. TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL: S298 1760 5U35 MBE STORT OF MARTHA WAYINE W5bAI*' 'a fltI KI'NNI S.S. "HEREDIA" .................................Jan. 31 *S.S. "HIBUERAS" ................................Feb. 5 "S.S. "PARISMINA" ............................. Feb. 7 ....................... ............ Feb. 7 .............................Pelb 1 Weekly sailngs of twelve passenger ships to New York, New Orleans, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle. Special round trip fares from Cristobal to New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle. To New York .......................$240.00 To Los Angeles and San Francisco ....$270.00 To Seattle ...................... $365.00 TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL 2121 * PANAMA 2-2904 BY WIL8ON 8CRUGGS BI AL VERIMER Equipped Dark Mystery COME REAL NOTHING A Economy Effort i~vuu TERM AD TH1 PIRATES r ^ Fiw nECELES AND a FUldos ALLIE OO OOTS AND HER BUDDIES CAPTAIN FAST VIC FLDnm OUR BOARDING HOUSE W'th Smoke Screen r N -. ImiLx "NMMI Boys, You're In, Too! S V. T. IlUMLI That Guy S BI 3pG4iARISa Al 5! L~LI3 TURNUS Wash Wins Persuaded BT IAT mIAVILU MAJOM HOOPISOUT OUR WAI BT J. N. WILI IAMI A -s 'CEPT PER. SOME Trim -ro P4rrCHA FEW KMOT AN' RAT rOLES THEY AIM'T AVHIblJ I PFIX THINMO WITH ON TH! RANC.L W46IO,& ALL ISED UP LONG AGO-MOW "THESE'ee da^-ONM.'R? - I 1______ rotic -4- kf..F Tm PANAMA AMERICAN -. AlP INDENDRNT DAILYT NNWWPAP ' *: *.. ?** ^. r."^ F- 4&. ;^i 'ra- 3ry ; -y fr * , 4 ..-,.- Z .. %. *;.., '" -. .. .. *"'' :. ,.i.-. , . ; -., . ='+ ':* "" '". : :- 4... ; :" :; .F~42V~9:j9.. 4. * ~. ~~tIz'T' b~*MEw -i: ~~-' '; ''.:- FL- jr 7 'ut-i :~:;;" 4 4 #1 .4,-. r i2 r-.w: -; J~f~f'- - A,',, ., i. . . .'+. .. : - 'It . ,m .... ..... .sese:ta l c a a ieu bMW !I' i l u S F ei wt is ' rq-aWEW h-' , 'g .ito t0 .1? a wo-ha "I&.J. pl-. Ry a a 'the la tp t why enyInsben v iM t al .vrq eve atrsr It, T, ".:...i.,;,!. ohs es, he- AIinWCiIMJs J' 7 S.I. , 2-...:, i, p. ,,f,,eC acwc o.. Sa j t le p taoritesm od te n auns oste- -ea a (CAh.w "t.a lbCe vee ad th a1 1.e bavbe f ," said tho ce-o tant str vihg for, I t fee .... -I m .. ... .5 "P.- Smt ha ,tu plated i study lf .Mpared .th en-y a.rde a a wor-.j' A ; . t' "a involed.n.an at.'een-- i S i to t utw'rke no t p re tieulght"to b e aal to th neewo f that *S*tre WaeansCse er s r:. or has criminal of pwry three etiy kds deli- sub;, is jood enough" or "With ., o :- -*.-of 'ti wilSals proving the tpet irriat That bot*.e" pa perts, but i'n No matter ow much, we do'are a -luau Avie d qupl97 "CT .v. hasmoney tlenk d een i" Ra6*s nd itr ere tigs. a so w.et n e .. .1.p. "a ..... ,.. d1o *g "r l ut folks realize thap t than fipeer Compared to enjoy wh it we have becu J m4 u, a a2 101 u-orah a problem. Rand tee4 yof-ears. they have eye is alwpys on whit we would - this I-ta n. --, ., ..., | / aq.-find: t ..eel that the fSattaC" &a ns. They have a i a WO WDipn t ea a se4 on wsThat btedrarkat Annpi ndwd social life, T tos da date earlier, have b er ward- tCrlatobal sS4 tute, .increase in juve- life obapared with only a decade 10epeajpltIts oi doI II Mal d re lRand sub. B y .sS p e iarl R e q u e tt;p yc t oI Artmied f'tt h i7r mhee w ta fi C pt to a Si is n export, 1. il and pe d l oinders I. ye nthand eedr. b done; something Sa t. te ning i rttar artc, p ram concluded. w t delinquency W, w h wer Bht tnein A r Tdorn, Cn2oo heas o n, uatcete m or X c [47 ....c. ,,,-IKT E rANAMA R'DING. tileyentirestt o ,,,kI-, ,,o ou ,W .dM and D pgt lanidr kw the tctthe eou thr they A -i lAt * fl UNPlUB #. asis d, Bidplea-lnot e.a.e N opwrbleo, Ma maeso FU L O M o; a . L*e.t G nerL. cdadad r.tb 'etlFer, hal el wardn b t arbation f the-nstnrrobesandsd trdote c nd, der-lt den fst t h hi " M. rie d ot er l .o7 a --w- a g .thonlyap e ease.in .. -4lf s,.eait d a isorhMr.W Obre l I t ifiyou.d o ur ro y," t ria and sub.e AL's-hsu eh r C h Lulc. t Tid pf frommcohon'rt sel ea .Setno .is- le. s edM, a %n -a th areatnV- BTcdlela Casadlrl nottuhe right A (i]U III{UN IIIpiIJs Aunieam I A. W lsymt A, 'I'orn a y.or uslapofitof ein isiN at MrtA. ir MWtt withnsd M.omnalOefth orubb Ni & your mout aR drug.sthen w-ai(fastd is.. idnl eceeo Tdlla n. a e t islunderol swa elowI ud.' AelIthey. ad V.;... .. a ,d ki drd .--Dsvs. 4k a-ddRaesbow Cityhe Cbudiat sta ft, clo yo r oey thtoatTH .PA NAreasing up ., ,.a ra A. I ,u wet_ fi ra ta.ar crial COUMMO-IVEL Itlia between the.3.p.mMeVLt. n bustounswithLD. s as ad nl sPRESENTmPROigAaprteciv ,e)brorphane ph MrsLJ) Bo ey lLmsr. and oMrs. cou t me-- Bluoergoidn Min t ,%foAh Mr. n r. K n l int e t t ten "hvbco rka o. tMrshe Ji t.adI. Tr..anti orthe Dtupfie to :.',- - o;.th aoa-a f JF .$+ tbe_ _...t0 for.. s .' ". . ". - A it o. rt of cFhg .n 1.953 ViAUXHALL four 4oor 'Sedan only S .e or A o J.A. Koa A, wcwaired t noon. e 'owier -- excellent condition -- Low Mthe not-so-idle rich. un- Hinely. L-- .B v and somewhat Wilma Miles Club mileage. b at'its best uproarious- Woman's Club ets February Meetinl lyfuny .... C M The Wilma Miles Navy Wives Only. ..*... O.U `6 66reor is us-- y 06h lto M. 2pp Mrs. Wi Qlpb has set Feob, 21 as the date Y ' career is usually hou ereto wtere. hstesmes to the It n m etin'g.n Cominurl Call Colon 800 -, f. the or4nary p. abo -Wom's Club Cad Group Hall,. 1tb Naval District. T Y l klkll T II C A .aa?-e ra; -two Bt Albert Sebweitzer Garrett has been h5 arbey prmOinent in at Members and guests present a&!-, chairman oft a beend kh4 'thu.t. -- saiue, theology and. eluded Mesdame Mary C. Lo, ea u e group, a Mrs. Wt phil.aophy, organ S. P. conrad, C. Wight Co will axndle pub-' t WrlU thrown in for lumbia Relmana, Patsy Ryan, Uclt y.. b re. To&e 9-JI Ruth Jenkans, Cornelis Stephensl Iod ish w niis v a Horn, Mary Rup3B r e ti m a th R ,hMaude Ugeek of, a .l.0" bbkaa=, tOMI BOOT S' st e pnt s n ther o PURER which lies upo the The meat pies tng will be held I an- an T,.rdaeR Feba 3 at.W.st. /wooa a i sa. desire to pen te a a the Parsh all .erof RpSt. LtAkio a paniu v v Atet'i nh 1 au' tB fanattory ThOMORROW Sw i Swh Ut = who deseatopen order aoet to inconvenience oel t Parish Nail.of-.t. Luk ceausrieisi *fl b7 reot Cech tomen twi op u door s er's bua ortaWia- tsEaistiie aAll from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m e afte wmao aosed a 6 t w ep inserted a* tr n n (ppite the thi P.O.) o. t WoTheRectr0trTh; wore=ae. la te s work...I.i.. ad 4f al waithe landt t awdesmreatosmedhe he dat" ,'to atendmor a IA order not to lncodvenience our vie oftherMCseo".jrnthe Pari o shHallof St euumS we will open our doom can1t..At Distrt .Cc-om dfrom 5 t9 p iWaTss wio t co amee. di &men "t6f AUD TE WO' o CdL wa tatI A0t isrit omisin4 WJfrm5 ~mxo pm .NEWS. I 12 compact M gives your ski a petad-pe$0f4 finish just M in -F? A r -- ~S.; / New al-in-one makeup! PUf on like powder... cng like foundation 'O a / ~*A"~ ".-i PATA .h .t ...e -..- ; _..;- .,; ; ;.. .- ." ... +. 7." _. .. -. - ..,-K ...4.-.. A ja~ weit~.. _.. ...." e itrt' r '- -'- u tl.a... L~.4, - -~j(. C -. ~:... ~- A - -, -. -. .. .9 '*. :: : . T .;.> ",' : -. . ^ :' -1 _. :* ? ** ,* -A -S ..'', - v. ". r r. ''" -F"" *4 *~ 1,t * 4,." -,~~~ A [* ",- ,'*'*''- .' : -* ;- .,"'^'.. ' S.' *t' . ,i . --':.i'- ' tf.^".'?- ... -.!. *.'.--.,r-11- *:4.. ,- ' I I ,. r ,-. , szr ." t '. ~. : ., .'' . ., ;' U -SN (ILI . : . . Puf YOJ& "".W't . ** 1 .l j . \ fi i. ;-? CASA MADOO Central Ave. 101 FARMACIA EL 3BAMtIO No. 3 Lottery Pwa FARMAC LO a UDO rorh ofor July Ave. I Tax U wJSRWAN ~1 & I EPTIC TANK. - ^* X^ ea "'' SsePI-sA - F.F.W0INC. 7 CA.'." Mg. ..' *o .atd M lt*A. *itl.^ ' Ma.. tu^ fb t.uiiTheatre. - 9' '.E N I' I 5 T | ( ae e July) .Ave. | r.a c. d. &naetA. D.D.-Ii or 1 tw u S?^5 tm O". " r t ., A. S *- '..'. - ..fii, ,lftr -1 AL .. H 8 e *. a .,"," ,.-" i *Ca ki ., ,g ,, ii .a, , *k~r- FOR SALE Household FOR SALE:-Brand new refriger- ator, 7 cubic feet, 25-cycle, for $239.50. Apply or Inversiones Generole, S.A.. Ave. Jose Fran- cisco deo I Osso No. 38. FOR SALE--Crib with mattress, beusinet. high chair, teterbabe tolor tot, and small 60-cycle awsing machine. 2-5327. FOg SALE: Mahogany table, 6 chairs; mahogany bedroom set; Beautyrest mattress; Bavarian china set; 2 iron beds; stroller; other household goods. 2476-C Coj, 2nd Stree, Bruje Road. Phone Novy 3-069 FOR SALE: Double beds with Sp r in g s $26; wardrobes $29; right table $6 50; bureau $15; '*ickhr sets $29; dining room 549; living room $85; GAS ST(OV 5S (guaranteed) $69; rocking chairs $6.50. Also mat- *itf!s5& irlngs. pillows. *ASY I A4N... HOUSEHOLD EX- Stcdtliaornl Av. No. 41. Phe1tS-.49l 1. FqR ALE...-8-piece Rattan And * y Mh *gtt $225; .3-. " '.r..ogany d living room set ST0 ;.Iiitching bar, lamp, and chaik, -5 .;, uwrvtd glass chino. closer $ ; 'large -mirror $20. , twin baby aorrglle $25. 794-6 Tovernilla Street. Balboa. FOR SALE:-Apex wringer type )ashihg rrmchir. 25-cycle, S25. 533-8 Chagres Street, Ancon. FOR SALE,- -Deepfreeze. vene. tian blinds, grinder work bench. mahogany beds with Beautvrest mattreqes An8 other furniture. oij 4utl. pid. Phone Kelly. Cris- FQO SAL : : uth bed .$WF, Slm-m on bx spring $15. Balboa HVpWanted WANTED:-r-Mald. Live in. Army couple# no children, desire 'hoise- lyp Ar. O m 'i'unbdering and dktig. ; 7..a r : 6.o 4. ' .ifNTAJ T 57 M- W jt5 rFAmAlaA LI Peqfalotg a n -te V^ A "44 . * .IF .1 ''A',.: FOR SA. FOR .SALI-Limlnld5t ty 9 cubic t FirLestone, li4y ut i ref{gerators. For quick wi. r- M Ji price. On dispyj.p IRE- FOR SALE: Small.JI & lrt eat usm. sound-filmoproj. c, Teard- ly uied. ConditioA like.inq, t-lil- 2-4777 . TOR, SALE:-Baby ll bJ'd t t trm' $20; high chai1 $10. Hdzs No; 4., 4th of July Ave. Z-5075. FOR $ALE -8t~rgain.' Used Ms- so~ld 1" ahd 2" 4" lumber, Wv iouW lengths, Phone PF Thomp- *1t. pallboo 1065. FOR SALE:-Doberm4ninscher =pee, Phone Panama 2-3458 bfr,7 p.m. 3-0870- during evening. Prqch: $50. SPARIFICE: -. l"imnediate ate cLeies naturall ro nh mOk" cfl4iecket, cost $1800. W1ll sil fa -$700 Fingertip lenh k eqs- u- urng -,.3 inches with- ,- full skins. Phont Cocell 878--09 be- fqre p.m. Eve Storey. ,- WANTED Miscellaneous FOR SALE G Automobile ATAGENCIA COSMOS, Auto Row No. 29, Panama, we have for immediate delivery German Fords in ll types a n d models. Phone 2-4721 Panamao. ATTENTION auto owners:-We hive for immediate shipment -1955 Models Ford Victoria Coupe. Mainline Fordors. Cus- tomline Fordors, 8-passenger Sta- tion Wagons with Fordomotic. Agencies Cosmos, Phone 1625 Colon, Melendez Ave: and 16th Street-Your Friendly Ford Deal- er. FOR SALE: Highway 8-ton trader, brand new. Apply at In- versiones Generales, S.A., Ave. Jose Francisco de la Osso No. 38. FOR SALE; 1947 Studebaker Regal Deluxe 4-door Sedan, In very good condition. Motor and brakes recently overhauled. Tel. 3-0382. Ask for Mr. Madura. FO SALEl -= 1"52 Studebaker 4-dr. Sedan. Redie, wack Pupint. Platic Seat Cevers.F.. $1.100. SMOOT & PAREDIS. FOR SALE: 1950 Oldemobile 2-dr. Sodln. eRdio, l.ck Tire. ilack Peint, Pletic Ser Coven. Fr.. $70. SMOOT & PAREDIS. FOR SALE:-1951 OIdsmoebe- I8 4-dear Seden. New Two-te.n Blug Peiat, New rim. Reade, PleItic Set Covenr, Hydramatic. F.I. $1,260. SMOOT &f PARE- DES. FOR SALI-1952 Vaeuhall 4- '&er Seode. Reai.. Blcek ePint, White Sidewll TIres. F.1. $850. SMOOT &PAREPIS. FOR SALE --.1950 Plymouth De- luxe 2-dr. Sedan. Beautifully re- Sfinished In "Lombswool Cream." Newtubber. Step into new car 'value instead of castoff .trouble, $750. Pbdni Gatun 5-579. FOR SALE:-1954 Ford Pickup. i. ton.. 5 months use,' 4000 miles only. as new. Apply Cl. Istmei' de. PlOmeria. S.A. Phone 3-3350. 6 .SALts.'-.954 Cvhe qi.2--,, "f Is.. .. . YOUNG WOMAN, interested in children, seeks employment with family leaving for States. Write G.R.F Box 3088, Ancon, C.Z. WANTED:-Dog, black and ten female Dachshund. Phone Balboa 3430. FOR SALE Real. .Estate FOR SALE: --- Famrt6 hectares plain. 15I mte from capital with two-floor ralet, fruits well, rinv- er Post Box 17,'Ancon. Bfoat & Mz4irz . ".I '- '. ..' .- .. LY^ 3 'J^M :i q4 (fUa2. 2 . toiNerf#, ounimitm; 'sc;:tt, Thel A&lwe to dayra 1kw mine cloa WIL A Bw!h -bedom, P7h ,d 05 .2-be. a fihii-j.^ 31050'- hfilfh .e 1 i8;90 1 t s re t .. prt Santa fl..-Mia. ; 45, M.cIxe. Phon" -t~a4 877, Crlsto. d bal .vA.-. i Grmnsil6s,' 6-44. 2 1 , "1 -t ' I -.-*-..-'-B. ~1 M.-- .. m I I- *6 ~4. d-s. , . FOR R .. t "s.. e -. .. ments. Contact Alhambro Apart. ments, 10th Street. Phone 1386, Colon. FOR RENT: Small tirnished 'apartment in beautiful residential section 43rd. Street # 13, Bella Vista. -- A. A 81m84 but'f- '. % attempt was r _d Pkeaner. met wit. h:c. " the expected, .. the Amerlan N de calent of pgarr ip de fie '.Camuanum- ai there. o lang eonferr dm. frtd e.'r er of the 7th"l Admi. FrTdeiM m pander of; Tit WEck would carlt- .ut th. * lRelable so rep- fAvored ioIitg a0tg W dint Elsnhower'a reo tion' that the -U,1. 9 In removing: the. 10,91 and 20,000 fivlltans f threatened Ilands. 'Tuty.thBe: -a d tr work aited, . *~. 4, , - C . I I OSLlt.) !rnm the . .-. ' .. "' .- ". --___m owner. Call ColoU*l_' ". SMOOT Y HUNNICUTT, SA COLON, K. P. '4r' ~II FOR ~ENT :..- Furnlt.*I 4 - met4 2 bed -r rient with small kitchen&bath row. In Expoition Grounds. See ^ FOR SALE:--1954 Buick, brand room, In Exposition Grounds. See A"tERN-" FO L eFOR" ,SALE;.-._ Outboard motor, Fabrega Irsonally t Est 29h- nst new. Pablo Arohemena Avenue 25-hp. John n, purchased new St breet asonelly it, rrMercast 29t Sner .-dvancedc. enontl's .St dio, -as in August 1954, $325. Coil Pan- Vesco," 10 to 12 noon end 3 to Phone 2-1282. FOR SALEi 1938 Oldsmobile, ama -4383. 6 p.m. g a- ood-condition. Come drive it, r | .U) a5i. the Pnidelt ot $85. Phone 24-1408 Balb0. PERSONALS F REK T .-nFumshat- 'd.UllL)aibhS WePrded PE __Mst L- __. FOR SALE: mernts, I bedreqm, kitchen, bath. saidcty. y, ;'* FOR SALE: 1950 Oldsmobile a * nd two roona Bella Vista. Tel- saiLd 'President ow h i Tudor Sedan. New Sandpiper Ton The following e rons shouldco- on--- Vt. - S ntiedt a e aa.not t. llg tnj FiPiish. Excellent Rubber: .pw tact "ila. de Lefevre,"A~A nue Stwo yry W*. Wbe-ihe said Seat Covers. Now quoted at law No. 7-37. to discuss a business former Pr ldent a hid ui- as $600 full price Colpon Mo- matter of great importance to FORRENT:-1-bedroom apart- ed the Wavy to 'W" the Chi -tors Inc.. Tels. 2-1033, 2-1035, t: aiby, Georgq Bur- mnt on Ave. Perufact 116 Comn1list.s foa Nstiana- 2-1036. nett. James Davis .frene Green, ark, No. 57 Availabl Feb. L ta Charles Davis, Lucene (horles, Phone 3-0746, 3-3099., ..-r. .rer,... Aj it dM wlew, FOR SALE:--1949 Buick Super Eneida Lewis. Millicqt Woson, FOR RENt:-. 2bedRrram d"t e4. tJ. al l can Fordor Sedlh. Shiny Black Pqint. Mata Bethune de Lince. Justo t, complete edm - ;e7sX per a1 at- Standard Transmis~ion. Clean'In AcuA Moreno. mentcompletelyurnished. Apr to*gesscalrer..: lrd i'j t uoterirr' Now reduced to $525 full ply 43rd Street No. 21; of, wS'r, ta ^ -pric.jColoon T oois, Inc., Tiq. Z ofhis =FORRENT:.- Furnied apart- .. at.. ( :WM.,.2-.033,.2-1035, 2mor)0 Sricement.sLiving room, dining roea, ,*p S" E- PRe2 bedrooms. gas stove. refrigerm- &)r-. f = rVat s. t4Fw-P'i SLw. .fodTir tor, independent. 43rd Street No. S' Niw Sl t Covre. Complete re- T 64, Belle Vista. t co'ditd mch ,. F FORRENT: Cmpl ely r- ors. r2, ,,vro0 $atderae AN f.o -* ap'a'theT el. a0 Mr. aoartment, private home. 48th- depbaeX a \by]cw$e FOR SALE:.--I195t .luic ,- Street No 3., Belj- Vista $75 SFOR SALE: -.19571 uickq tn- Gdri MOP I vertible Coue..LihJ Blue Finish. Memorial Services for Mrs. monthly, $70 ,pg terms, Refrt- ; 3 ( t Iit' PI gbt Blueeatr ea. Kely, w'ho di d ester- gera tor, gas stove. Stria New lack Top d id NewW/S/W otll. wU.beed Thurs- - Tires.Radio. and Autoroia c dy afteftflon 1 44.30 at the St. ," ". i.E. a Transmson. Come in ,and make Luke's Cattegaret l ctbeon. Rev. FOR RENT oR. f the our Colp Motors, Inc.- MalcIl Ut. MNcDonald will con- re Et Ptore~iA J-A C5a ,.. ,l2t1. 2 ..033, 2-1035, . ley036-. J thatetk .. Room. said the pro O1l W.0 t, braa 1<* ed that d ooierb- Mr. a 2n in. of ri., edSerm.F ,I L.-- 150 FoFor- A y UierI thand FOR RENT -Beutifulyarge furnish. d.at 'y t r. 510. M. Kela v b1y rand private Sentrance. 52dStri *IalbnnMorts .1 t s 'ughtera, Mrs. flhfl Robinson No 3. Phone 3-0638. .. is dD.a. )rad-- rk. MPariyn-T i, k. uMarUop trog o at No. 45, 4th July Am.e Rep. E R G g^ .S(R-la,) idM id "on ,Ash Ix eed t he io ves dM d Betiul 2-t Canada. All conveniences upstai aps v.ery ne dn-ftiA- cPn RIAn,. FulI price .-- .,-- Sth)%IMrew-a l. MU S1036 -I corn -eq eedoA l FR TIres-qu Hard OnYWOM0 s Panama OV e ats woMn co- p'a a noioa to S- T io i or-L ,Mna AUm.a Line` ^ - *_Rep. K. R. sGr ( t-Ia.)usaldl d6rS an.e amOne nda o the Psix.hun- , the fr the reeolutt ,proves drd miles Betie ful 2.tone Blue d- n l the med fathep ialaa -Fjnisht o I lthe aconpoaving ac - d o uO t 5 ,. .Flt astraL1 F-.pricd$20 lColpn ;z52".Ca fI mase -"thpt "t cue" oar tic 2-1083. 2- .uuuin0 as dfendUi!Jliot. ofr-103%2-136. TASPESM i. r T; T FOR SAStt-91J>I P6nt* Hard lFrnrnii, n.oae tired isA ff CSi ftate q or-I top Catalito. fEght-CylnIse eIadmiral, bepvqdthe the us- Only 40 hse are bopt qanb1 o a.I up i.TlAsons ._ T tons- t I its dt e M t c .anager. ed to sail for New York ;ater- 3ewnefe.te.Statbs bu eSna b. b 'ena- -; !-- afternoon aboard the Ctis- -.my'fret >n ,W Coe-u 'a*I "zics I 6. .. ... L Pa to Jt e an e. l- " aoa .r ,p ...AM an Mrs. Charles 0. lauonm S- A 6. I 'list for beu Ya 110wl ITM *.i '.". f, ire Sies ;.; ..' --1 .xo 5 -. Or. and Mrs. Alfredo A. ald; Mr. and Mrs. iaB alvert; Lifan Daniels ad Mrs. Leon 8. Pishba Id Ms. C.G OrutznEor; a it. James T. Habni gI iL Bonffman; Mr. Wk ai r H OnK Gat - acnt t.Natzrhl&Jw j.t Kuptal; ,I4UAIll s t.a: R Henry C. u E ~eo1Ge ir e i -... kk,: . " ," f l' F' O R *" D S "_ FORD"S : :. r. r&. r a- r hieablot-ironiedkaedelivery 4 Custm ti $ Cylinder Fordors S's.'V4 .ud o .and For rs S -, -- h Se 'd . ' :^-, "'.' -*;": " .S a,'.ar, . r m .. -1. .- -F ' u f"w"ir -" -. 5 me. ,".L,-,g A L r A T I W A N S ... .- '. ..... V. . . . t ,r i., t ,,; -, r '; * '?- -*9F..Q .' .;': k., , .. -t 4, 7 .... .. 4" -. Iii s o sLA uvas ;.: I ' .- f -jg . '* "., . ...,^. .i, -'Am-3.I ,.. A LAV YOUR AD WITH ONE OUR 4~b A RsAW~ 7 sftdM06 12- vOeo DO ! Aiss Ave. 4U4I St i . II 1- -1 --1 -- -- - ii - M ioomaw I, I _ -I- __ I .It j I T --..6, . .... I i I ;-.: t ". ' '; ... ^ " **i** -**,. - * '- i I -:-- * ,- _ rt *........ - - WEDUEAY !AJMIftAI 3 T- fARwAu F AWAW lW UIdPnEhDNT DA&IT NEWSPAPB I I *wl. 6.35 0ge "PLAYGIBL' with Shelsay Winters "FRANCIS JOINS TB Wna C o D ronald nlwonorm - .25 0.10 Two French Pictures!al '170 AMOREP DR CARO"NA" "HOTEL CLANDESTINE" PROHIBITED FOR MfrORS CENTRAL .5' "THUNDER OVER THE PLAINS" with RANDOLPH SCOT LUX W trf"t"WM 3: 4:54 -6:55 8:55 p.m. FRENCH PICTURE I "LOS LIOS DE CLOCHMERLE" FROElITKD FOR MINOR I DRVI4N Theatre POPULAR DAY! $1.10 PER CA"R! "A BULLET IS WAITING" with - Jean SIMMONS Rory CALHOUN Stephen McNALLY -ECLIA TheatreP..' "BECAUSE OF EVE" (THE STORY OF LIFE) NOT ALLOWED FOR CHILDREN UNDER 16 YEARS! VIcroRIA, 0.15 "KIM DE LA INDIA" Also:- "5 TRATT 0 N S T 0 R Y" Beak Nigh(I -*'i! GqV "Pagan Love SeW Esther WUUtams wi"THR ri w~fATES A DAY IN THE LIFE OF France Sends New To Algeria A6O SRIDON PARIS, Jan. 26 (U?) The French cabinet, sent a new GOV- By OSWALD JACOMY oernor General to Algeria today, Write for NA Service a leading member of the party that demands firmer cation in. France's North African troubles. At an all-night ses B on Prb- , nmler Pierre Mendes France's N ministers approved GaUtilliat De- Q 4 puty Jacques Soustelle to sue- V 1042 ceed Rofger Leonard in the Alge- p ld A 5 rian trouble-spot. BAK84 It was the last meeting Of EAST (D) Mendes-France's old cabinet. Re-62AQ shuffled government now taken o y 74 over. #98432 *AJ6 In an eight-and-s-half-hour Q10952 J2 session which ended at 0130 GMTUTH the cabinet also earmarked at6 71 sizeable hunk of public funds to ICAKJOSS aid victims of the current flood disasters. 663 It allocated the l terior i'- North-South vulP JACK W3Es sad Bn lander (center)Ias S osatry 50,000,000 franc (142,7)rt Officer Frank Smith watch intently as the men from the crime plusaanother J t e 0ihtIsta nrt h lab mse the latest in mine detectors to locate a 8ii$1 murder pls4,285) in another 54,0000fa pag ,w \ fn to fo new,t *e *DRAGNET, im ($154,285o In d a.t.ctio of -as ass S feature-et budget credits for id peninglead- WarnerColor, opening tomorrow at the LUX Theatre. Opena_ Brownell flays th o aThe approach of the Metropoli. IHO L5 Fd tera J be held in New York this week. "IRON LUNG" COURAGE-With souvenirs and get-well card endremind.s me of an amusi hanging from his iron lung, Tracy Hamilton. 6, smles cheerfully ONf FederCl JO LEON OF 37 YEARS of servl.to thU.S. o an'o s ye o talks to his family by tel 'MVIS TV* RADIO slon, U. S. Army Caribbean, receives a well-filled leather pocket so marked with a particular card progress at respirator centers operated by the March of pim Evos Jot ASHINGTON, Jan. M2 (UP) book, a gift from his fellow employes from Jerome Schoch, chief that he might just as well have Ay Etrmaui^ atl- Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell of the Operationf s Branch. At right is Col. W. R. Seymour, taken it out of hishand and put it Jr. told Congresstoday that in-Quartermater ARCARIB, who later presented him with a face up on the table . adequate salaries for iehav csmmendation letter signed by Maj. Gen. Lionel C. McGarr, The bidding was quite normal, HOLLYWOOD (-NEA)- Holly- was drydocked -when the whole aue c stated that Vo term's trustworthy and dependable performance East won with the king of -spades od and G VINE: Insiders sequence was nipped from the of duty had assisted materially in the overall successful accom- and prompt tly ledthe s ix of he s. . are smiling about use of the.wordfilm.IIM! *horaa .in the official statc- Too' far, below s, o level evep Testifying before a Senate plishment of the Quartermaster mission. (U. S. Army Photo). South won and returned the seven dIa&BOM et after Bob itchum was for Howard subcommittee, Brown- of diamonds, putting up dummy's tfrom "Blood Alley." The umwsoron- wd s ell said Congress should increase king, and East won with the ace frm "Blood. A llea Th e hun- tthe sr es o ra i. East cashedin the acei for what was almost an un- sport car: and boost its own pay as well. ed chapter in "Gkeatest Fights "I don't get *into iL.I out Rton." In filling some 60 vacancies in hearts. Sthe Century." u ,Ithe federal courts, Brownell d, Ncw, you might think that South the federal to to agonizever Bta r eais. oly-haB s T sOXOFFICE st~enddm istration has be ern ould have rou t a the ovrHO I T O r E TE -af stn-e sti o f r. One f io n I n l .ms the second ound of the tNum py SIN G A T, V o l 'o I ts e o wh r l aot suit. Should he finesse or pho uld l r goeqes for "Th Rose 2'at- theater rounds this spring. Sue- who now got a- Etott 'o $15,000 mse uENTS" o toe es- or cess of "C armen Jones" r in pay and ao 2 t i ge cor- ho u h I a A nnae J o wk e Browo r - ecial Se East s urely had the queen of ? bein bep Thur. ".'lod on The Wen" S d Anna, who shrugged ranging from $2, 00 *14,500 trumps because he had so obvi- in m Ibed?" GAMBOA1 la. -ft'Drrnata swellvoidd LVe mo aLUL 'PNobt-taerrnd iil health for for federal judges now get from o ano a g np the aytodonde o 0 om round of spades. Scu therefore DICK DEBBIE s. . ONO s e_.Il suso"are nJoestentopo r finessed quickly and confidently PofWhLLb REYNOLDS ednRi'IRE" a' script. a B ra appearance in"T i Menon ea.lman hes condbtraca wth t rump MARGARITA srA-6:15-e:45 playb hSorleepng arin" o J A NS Tern es rwo p t fl their dicke.fficulty, no f- 61 -7:20 only! Mt Anna, wh cshruge ito s e aras whonE1cr H er eg dlres of l ine *''de a "M I REs adod Mitchm. plays Paris in l'Helen of Troyr Ife jud gides nl a in e a h rdM S- thath te sn f the film's Hele in he reasoninge i East started with deA-tl -S.t of -. The latest "So it's only money" Warner studio publicity fils. She Oa n o nly two small trumAps he would T hor.. 2: The 3 tale from Las Vegas is a double- has nice gains, lWt Roesana Po- have some reason to ope that his A p arreled eyebrow 1i0er. One mils ts au nt se o a O eans parnter could overruff the dummy CRISTOBAL 6:15 :10 on-dollars in 100 $10,001f bills is That's a novelty, mister, for an on a third round of spade. a Thered spaed@.A.eM on display r in a ae glass-covered Italian movie cute. NEW ORLEANS, Jan 28 (6 P) A 10 iCHECK for his suggestion to utilize index separators foraf aeE hasdly ad atwismadel tms"r Joi Ns o.The Federal Bureu of Inves- identification of the storage ind issue of Technical Orders and If East has the queen cf trum Fps. Horseshoe ran B a k a tigation:said today it will con- Stock List, which will save the government a considerable however. he knows that his part- Also Showing THURSDAY! AlsoShowing THUJADA7 Frances.Bergen, a elt is0duct a-conference. here Oct. 25 amount of operating funds yearly was presented tq Owaldo K.n nHoRSdAYt 'The Flam Hotel's A Schilodrde r to discuss methods of meeting W.Filipei Publication and Distribution Center, Albrook Air Force (If West happens to hold t jack t tu t w o d bement minded. Likes tga new a-t.the' owing number of bank Base recently. Presentation of the award as made by Capt. of hearts,it doesn'tmatterwhat LA BOCA 6:15 7:40 "YELLOW 1ALLOON' idea to aroe tb the horeshoe fbt or but' Amis.es Edgar- and Char- L e arade. He told. Brown a-,M- Filipe is Marion Harley, supervisor, Publications Branch. hearts will then surely provide the ete i ea, sYin: JUNE ALLYAN IS glitter-ed M. P. Chiles, special agent In (U.S. Air Force Photo) setting trick ) SANTA CRUZ 6:15 7:55 CAMP BIERD :15 E uI tMewie, own.JNE A N-I itr 1 y _s, im P. chegrouspecialnagent in _____________hers.__ Houghton,_MifflinCo goidiaBut with the horseshoe, elon of "It Happened One Night." orcement officers have been in: Fede Little, Brown & Co., Random' to declared that West cannot over- PARAISO 6:15 8:00 - ,a framilewri and the glass and Her last musical was $ Good*vited. House. Inc., and Simon & Schus- ruff the dummy. all a, retty heavy. I'll tell YOU News" In 1947 and she's saying: "T bonerne b ai Rter, Inc. I w therefore clear that East Fil ask my bank in New Orleans since, but they weren't musicals. roordination among law enforce- to ea""me another 100 $10,000 People have forgotten that I car* ient agencies and Improving ef- blls.!" sing. Maybe they're right." clency in dealing with this ype sin.MaybetheyEifcrime," Chiles mid.Ou.l- 30c. Up S9IN CROSBY Winga 1954 Now acting in "The McConnel Oscar for "The Country Girl," Story" at Warner Bros.. June says Bhows:II/:V Jn.325(UP that lucky "4" will be back in hiseshe rwilldo only one or two films CanadianPii cT OAINTe EanA 0o: 2: 3:55 IA of his records have sold more nI never meant to do to many Airlines To Fly bleday & Co., Inc., cannot selhadow gons and he won his "Going MY at MGM weren't terribly good and club at pries lower than it fixes Way' Oscar in 1944. 1 wanted to re-establish myself de Rfor bookstores. o ehA valley IIin some really fine films. But It's rsSearc or a Araoh' ofthe Nile Not in the Script: Mae West was physically exhausting now. I'm so SEATTrLE, Jan. 26 (UP) -A Examiner Frank Hier said the idfaro e recently to name the skinny my husband won't let me one-stop flight from Vancouver, Literary Gutld a book club own- treasuriAo iddenlovd the y Grantand Marion Brover a polar route. is planned sets for other retail outlets intat ames likeath b -a-d W Wn.iWW WM M 9 m m md a m' BARGAIN 153 VAUXHALL four door Sedan only one owner -ee- tflent cotmAdiop Low mileage. Qntly. ^ oCA GAMI*j rawV TROPICAL 50c. -- TODAY! -- 35c. GIFT DAY! In CASH PR"" IZES On the Screen: - Gregry Peek, In 'mWi* A MilliM" - ft. -. b! * IsltfOON RADIO -REPAIRS SRapid Service Pick-up A Delivery Fipt Parts Used Authorized distributors Service Dopt. for WEBCOR BOEN NATIONAL. MAGNEORD Tropical lecttenics 46th 8. H. 3 S*..TA~)MBK aL."' TRUIY sOFTHE! AIJ ROBERT AYLWORELEANOR P ..d m at % T W&5. A 2:. * *<..r ^ :.---'f4 I(I ; -- - ---- ---:---.--*.. ....~ Tr- -- --- --: - -----~ - 'I * *!.'*** # ,-- -f '*' *; .' r; 1,?., I I i~i~fr 5 *>"' i. * *'. .~ ~ *1.'.7T3 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDmZvM ENT DAILY MEWPAPI WZNA.'AUR i ankees Try To Widen League Lead Ait. |Kentucky Still Joltin' Joe Shows Top Form Red-Hot Smokers Aim .T..R N A Tops Unipress in Ist, Colon Arena Workout ForFourthConselutive TROUNCE OCELOTS t Th mas finally broke into Halvsa, 3b 3 0 0 2 ed four ppy rounds a Victo y Under Austin ;+s f.Mer fourconappesee, -- l ,M i I L ' in colan at the expense McGriff, as 20000 Colon Arena and proved to the 'he Ocelots after a wild and Bateman, c 3 0 050 50(many fans on hand rothato he is 'tctic sixth inning In which the Crook, rf 3 0 0 0 0 NEW YORK, Jan. 26 (UP) many fa on hand that he 1 -- o-- Pumas combined three free pas- Nuftez, lb 3 2 2 6 0 The latest college basketball rat- hIn ltD S shape for S unday's PANAMA PRaO LA U n as, five base knocks and four Engelke, If 1 2 0 0 1 ings by the United Press board *- sche ulea ten-round rgfea m. STANDINGS Ocelot errors to score eight run Thompson, 2b 3 1 1 2 1 of coaches put Kentucky on top wI ., h Isthmarwelterwelght TAJ,- Won Lot Pet. GB and overcome a three run de- Tubbs, cf 2 0 1 1 1 for the fifth straight week. .9, --uS-n d champion Tito Despal gne b. Y .. 19 10 . flait to sew up the contest. DuBois, p 2 0 1 2 2 Adolph Rupp's Wildcats PACIFIC i-a GUe Iset .k out five of heSundan't e wheehwil be J *Sm-* ** oke*** *. - Stahl, uas 0 0 0 0 winner in 11 of their first 12 STANDING tEAMS the held at the Areas at a g la Smok es..... ... ... 17 12 .586 2. 1 Jobby Wills showed a return z-Morris 1 0 0 0 0 games kept the number one collected a to- polun.t"o w eh kgrtoshe,. be 0a SR 99 .... . ,his 1954 form, holding the zz-Schocb 1 0 0 0 0 spot as the rest of the top 10 W L Pet. n t- oan thnem go- b ela. Deasn srong *--. .- ... 8 22 ..*7 11, lots to six bingles. while Jules Sander, p 0 0 0 0 0 moved around. Spur Cola 5 1 .08h3 eIaMe. The West as ever, has Wo uols held the winners at bay Lincoln Life 4 1 OA 4 6 hlts but cou- tre formahis. aide LAST NIGH 'S RESUILS (2) At Panm Sar five innings. He tired in the Totals 24 5 5 18 7 Breaking n nto the select circle Police 4 1 .800t p A th I 6 errors and3 -tuneps. te To st .. m, : mee 1S o dar 1 ith and had to be relieved by a-Morris batted for Sander in for the first time are George Elks e 1 4 .200 psaWiB bahHo to re thelr 12 Brown, after arriving at To.- FInt Game: SmokeW 11, Sodams 1. SBoders. 6th. Washington and Northwestern. Symour AB. 1 4 .200 run, lO ot them eared. Bate- umenairport at 5:45 a.m. fol- Second Gamep Smoker 5 hdfam t za-Schoch batted for Stahl in They moved up at the expense ibraltar. hf e 17 5 J7 manwas i gt. tcher. owingAM wa ill-n ht p t trip Se i -"Today, at Fastlich Park, the 6th. of Missouri and Minnesota, both .Paret took credit osa during which he claimed he TONIGHT'S GAMIC -l At 3 e Macaws will be out to try to beaten last week. Missouri drop- Spur Cola 19 Gibraltar Life 3 to cr o e could not sleep, went straight to t Ho .arner their second win of the Score By Innings ped to 11th and Minnesota to a In a one-aided contest Spur the Carlton Hotel to catch up Yankees (Douglas 4-3) Vs. Smohr (Robitms, 3-4) eson at the expense of the Pa- Pumas 000 118-10'tie for 14th place. Cola trounced Gibraltar Life .o on his rest. He told promoter En- 4nas. J. Durfee will most likely Ocelots 020 210- 51 Runner-up spot on the top ten 19-3. The win for the soft drink l riue Martin, Herbert Molse, J, HAImISN JR le t tch for the Macaws and T list was North Carolina State lads put them back in first Joe Martn and Colon Boxing Ar ara a r fee will do nthe catching. Errors: Pumas 1 ICorri ani But the 35 coaches who make up place of the Pacific Little League Commission member Jeff Joseph, Th ith wablk t mE.s ert a er w most likely start Ocelot 5 (Halvosa Mc Griff, the United Press rating board and the loss pushed the insur- who met him at the airport, that e. V. Yankees tangle with o terwillmost lnikelyrtagranc s IBRALes deedntthe wdo uldo w the Smokers in anh Important i el eTthsin,,, em ,o. Snodgrass do the receiving Stahl, Thompson, Batemanl. gave the second-rated Wolfpack nce salesmen deeper into the e didn't think he would work contest at ount Hope tonight the Palomas. Runs batted in: Hele, Corrigan 83 less points than Kentucky. cellar. out yesterday. sat 7:20 Mount Hope tonight T lnel , 2. Reynolds. Webb, Lovelady 2, San Francisco moved up one Manager Joe Cicero of the Gi B To theirr surprise, however, Yankee man r A a i turned out, the weraee. The box score: T. unnngham, Torres 2 Tubbs notch to third. Utah gained three braltar team ran out of pitch- Brown showed up at the Arena a a need 2, DuBols, Thompson, Halvosa. places to the number four spot era in his efforts to stop the bar- in time to go through two rounds use Carhey Douga his ed, but they tinued their r- PUMAS Stolen bases: Webb. Reynolds.I and UCLA went from 10th to rage of hits, runs and walks oft each with promising amateur tartng tcpr and the' new entlsa attack g up an- Bateman, Nuiez 2. Tubbs, En seventh, the bats of Spur C1la outfit. On. Herbert Douglas (Young Finne- Smoker ot, FP Auhtn, has other in t ut In the aPlayers ab r h a a gelke. Sacrifices: Corrigan. Left' ly in one inning did the Spur an's kid brother) and LeslieselectedHumbe Robinsoh to th and r l ixth. Lovelady, 2b 5 1 3 1 0 on bases: Pumas 11. Ocelots 6 LaSalle and Illinois rated Cola team fall to score. R Thompson. gotovtche mound. e d a only tally of Corrigan, as 3 1 2 2 3 Bols 6, Sander 2. Strike-outs by: second and third last week Those who fattened their bat- Douglas made Joltin's Joe work itory for the Smokers the e in, came In e bottom Reynolds, lb 3 2 0 6 0 Bases on balls off: Wills 5, Du- tumbled to the number six and ting averages wers Johnny Wat- up a good sweat as he stood would put them only one game of the when iterald un- Wills, p 3 1 1 0 0 Wills 4 DuBois 1; Sander 2. Hits nine slots because of losses last son with thee safeties, and the and slugged it out with the clas- d the Yankees. Water to- ahead a wild pitch with the Hele, If 3 0 0 2 0 off: Wills 5 for 5 runs, in 6 in- week. Illinois shares that ninth following players who had two sy U.S. lightweight contender on night'si ame, the teams. meet basea loaded. Torres, cf 4 1 0 1 0 nings. DuBols 8 for 10 runs, in spot with Northwestern. hits each, Freddy Chase, Curty several occasions. Thompson was earh other five more times be- Tommy Hughes gave up two bb, 3 2 1 5 1 5 Innings. Sander 2 for 0 runs in Schwarzrock Butch Caldwell and n his "bycicle" during most of fore theseason nds Feb.. les In the first rae of the Hall. rf 3 1 1 0 1 1 inning. Wild pitches: Wills Bob Dilfer. __ his six-minute stint. Robinson was beaten by the tcap and then dt down T. Cunningham, b 3 1 2 1 0 Winning pitcher: Wills (1-4). co Solo Edes Roy Watson was on the mound Brown was scheduled to put Yanke s,4 to 0, the d to pemit on o e losing pitcher: DuBois (0-1). for the Cola lads, and allowed mthe gloveson again against these game of the doubleheader play- double to Arch ie a e la Totals 30 10 10 18 5 Umpires: Mohl-Diaz. Time: 1:45. only fodr hits, two of which were Dsagne two b hs Cs &afternoon. ed a the stadium Saturday the rth and a te ch loaylon To Advance credited to Butch Rager the Despagne has been virtuallsy night, b t was the victim of a hitter Gran umpire kswile aI yn M wa VIIo flashy first sacker for the Lifers. punching holes through the big costly error, by third basemanthe event. Ton h o- wed Roy added ten more strikeout unching bag during his drills. Clyde Parris, which set the stage ood control la n y four Service LaUe victims to his record. or speed, he has been step- for four unearned runs.ater i S png it up against 128-pound Austin became manager of The Smokers went lu front SI iA I A rCoco Solo moved to within one GIBRALTAR stablemate Rodolfo (Bean Jack the Smokers lst night when stay in th fourth when Parris I A Lgame of fourth lace Tuesday Players ab r h e I ) Francis at the' Panama Stanford Graham tendered his singled, ste second and c me SI I r afternoon on the home diamond Snyder, rf-p 3 1 1 0 Gym every afternoon. relnatlon In a surprise moe home on Bobby Paeotts sisle Switch a 3-2 win over Fort Clay- Marquard. 3b 3 1 0 0 i Francis is again the choice to before the game. to left. ton in the l one Panama Area Brandon, ss-p 3 1 0 0 er a h.. halt Sammy Medina's comeback Grahamn said that the team In the sixth back-to- back hArmed Forces League encounter Rager, lb 3 0 2 0 plans in the eight-round semi- had been having poor luck un- double. to left with twoout, The triumph was the fourth Adams, 2b3 0 1 final. Medina dropped a unani- der his direction this season and Precott and Pablo Bernard, for the Braves against nine set- steiner, cf 3 0 1 0 mous decision to Francis before after the squad's good showing duced another tally and the fTor ;e brak while slaaton wst dropn Hutchinson, c 2 0 0 0 scoring. two straight impressive in David on Sunday, when they tor picked up three mr the .ON BY leClyts eht ve drc Wilson, If 2 0 0 1 victories over Black Bill and beat the Yankees, 5 to 4, In 14 seventh, on singles by N ip its eighth against five vic- Lambano, 2b 1 0 0 Leslie Thompson. Innings, he decided that maybe and Austin, E Oor's dne ies Jackson, p 2 0 0 0 TEAM Erica Batchelor and Sam Bruce gets a chance to a change In field leadershipagainst the rht cente Husky John Sponseller scat- Orr, p 0 0 0 0 Germap hockey prayer Lorenz avenge a knockout losw to Mar- would do the clqb some good. fence ada 8 amen mise. trednl es tnI Fries announced their engage. cial Molinar in the main pre- Graham still retains thd e added be ered ninesinglesto gai~~nS. h Totals 25 3 4 2 ment at Iermany, lminy which will be a 135- front office position of general *la pennant ct e I first UpA InI d fi efdeisioots.. p' 6PUR COLA where tbeBrrk pounl four-rounder. The open- mana,.3?Ae A I I and walked the same number. ts, J. 2b-as A 4 4 3 1 A aW a t a S Balazsr at playen ad- the owner l Ti i Iv n i uled the Braves at theinplatel orhWlb 4 1f i 2 b B a bir ber1 a lsj mphS | two ofthe seven hits off loser Schwararoc OR, lb 1enbralr 0adnti o .is.from th T t. lers ,ad np w a Pair fn BobBooth and reliever Francis- Prill, c 5 1 1 0 1.(one dollar and fifty cents) e n as t see co Rivera. Rathgaben, nb 3 2 0 0 het i in two game& that a u e a Coco Solo did away with a 1-1 Caldwell, cf 3 2 2 went only ev an di *of d. uw V an P tt deadlock in the fifth inning by Zelnick, ef I 1 0 0 The d a to and ofdteth ond rel wo r and o foutstand (Winner 1955 Panama Open) pualn across the deciding pair Keighly, rf 1 incinnati Paraiso Sports edasnore h r t o ettxs of tallies. After Pat Moylan Dilfer, lb 3 2 2 1 ame also, in order not bto overtax k-B -or .e .oker. Sounded out to open the fifth. Smith, If 1 1 0 0 he pitchers, who wilf be work- ponsellor and Dick Sobbowlak Perantie, If 0 1 0 0 --Ing real hard or the rest of the drew walks. Both advanced on a Whitney, cf 0 0 0 0 hoots o r Teams W L P. esson with the extra double- wild pitch. IRed Box 3 0 1.000 headers crammed-into the sched- R nUTotals 30 19 13 5 Kansas City 2 0 1.000oule.. The S.C. s ea sn Ru ne UJim King, the pitching hero of Senators 0 2 .000 John Fitzgerald was winner if ed lest night last thei SaS Monday's shutout win over Al- ARMED FORCES 1I 0 ndians 0 2 000 the opener as he permitted just offlee had given brook AFB. singled to drive in W. Richmond 0 1 .000 three safeties in the Smokers' less to g s bobbled an Sobkowia k crossed Little League action saw West Tommy Hughes whitewashed LROBERTO DE V ICENZOLLwith the winning marker. Bank sink the Caribbean Com- TWe VOK Jan 26 (UP)- The Red Box are still unbeat- the Sodaboys on four hits while T monr enn t King drove in the first Coco wanders 12-4. Albrook Airmen sNEW oots R in Nof 14 en and leading in the boys soft- his mates produced five runs. aer O -er ofth. Solo run in the third after Moy- beat Curundu 1-0. while the .Cin starts andftr Oklahoma ball Intramural as the result of Loser Vibert Clarke tarted the Yankees exesmed his Iterest an and Sponsellor singled and Kobbe-Clayton duel was rained and Auburn tr to m- -3 victory over the Indians. first game and was relieved by nl obtainr these e o Were advanced by Sobowlak's out. iove their conference standings Clifton Bailey had a four mas- Andres Alonso in the fifth. Sochaforhis elb. Both playing sacrifice unt Over at Russel Field, the Ca- therenig ter for the Red Box. Stanley Arthurs went all the oe maet or rlibbean Commanders dropped a .^ e Gilberto Moreno's Kansas City wary for the Bodame in the seh- t T m. Coaltet Mo.a Steady Ayton'Pagan singled In hardfought decision to West slim college s et rogam kept wthn range by defeating on contest. the second and eighth to score Bank. The big factor In the 121 Cincinnati, flirting with aspw the Senators 7-0. Th e i they o nir o s both Clayton runs on a one- to 4 decision was errors. In all in the national rankings b u Theophlus Walker and George n the I 0. the ,te baser by Dick Burnett and sacri- other departments the two teams presently just outside the top Hinds shared hitting honors opener on a ba eam bag t T fice fly bY Al Rose. were aboUt equal. The game was 20, is heavily favored in a home with 2 for 3 while Lionel Blades' a nip and tuck contest for 8 in. game against Ball tate. The 2 fr 3 led the losers. -- -r - Coco Solo plays its fiftit in nin as, with "Lefty" Dick Paret Bearcats, who have beaten such The girls iptramural otball I as many days today by h08ting of te Caribbeans pitching with outfits as -Bradley, I diana, league continues to hold inter- Yrl aI C Ii RfV q',.sl M# front-running Specl Troops. a mastery that brought back Western Kentucky, Misal.ippi, est as Veronica Walker's Dallas i l 9r Id .y .Q n In the other afternoon contest memories of Carl Hubbel. In the and Dayton, have won their last defeated Violet Oaskin's Lake . last-placer Army Atlantic plays 3rd inning, however, Paret de- four game,.s.. View '7-. -- .- "" . at Fort Clayton. velop a huge blister on the fore- The Oklahoma Aggies, whn o In the upper half of the 3rd l ( - e (er m The night, attraction fin ds finger of his pitchTng hand and meetHouston tonight have won inning, wi the baser loaded, (lasMOnd 0^>_. 1 .+ ;^ defending champion-Fort Kob- was a little wild, but despite this or sared the Missouri Valley Veronica hit a home run to put MOKEB ])- be trying to move into a he managed to come out of the Conference title in 14 of the last her team out in front Lake View Ply ab rh o a Play r h e a second place tie at Clayton in inning allowing only one run. 19 seasons and this year they're fought back until the 6th when Naragon, c 3 1 0 2 0 Nara on. 4 1 5 0 an important battle with Al- At the start of the 4th inning figured as outside hopes for the Cynthia Atherley and Divida Se- Cobos, c 1 0 0 2 0 Austin, as 4 1 $ 1 1 with Brink Miller tatta over make their league record 2-1 winning run across the plate. E. Ooreo, lb 2 2 0 4 0 Parris, s3b 4 1 1 1 0 WiUll M v the pitching chores. "What hap- and put them in third place be- Next Games ( Boys): Parrs, 3b 4 2 2 0 0 Tu-tellLIf 3 0 1 0 0 __t m ~ Ul .~ openedd atter that, shouldn'ta" h1iD Tulsa and St. Louis, both 26 Richmond-Little Field _,Tumine, 1 3 2 3 0 Roberts, If0 0 0 0 0 .... .. .. I Rlobers according to Manarer. Com. unbeaten in league play. I..ndaans--arenator- uRobertSp nlaf 0 0 0 1 0 Preecott, rf 4 1 1 0 I 4 I -j* R ay mender R. 8. Paret, USN, of the Auburn, now seventh in the 28 Kanss.. City-Indians Brescora, r2 4 2 2 3 0 Bernard, 2b 3 0 0 3 0 aIU U I VIIL0 ,Fifteenth Naval District. "The Southeastern Conference, will Benators-Rchmond Bernard, 2b 4 0 0 3 1 P Osorio. cf 3 0 0 0 boys just developed an acute case have to beat Georgia Tech to Next Ganes (Girls): P. Osorio, c 4 0 2 1 0 Hughes, p g 0 1 0 4 D I UIJ of "fumblitis." In the hitting de- keep from losing that spot to 26 Jersey City-Little Rock Fitzgerald, p 4 0 0 0 2.. IIWe Mil partment, Brink Miller and Lefty the Engineers. Auburn was the 28 Lake View-Jersey City "- 21 1 2I 1 S PrTh m s sc s Paet were the big guns for the last major-college team to re- 31 Adella Nine-Dallas. 1 1 7 I ost s U cceSSul NEW YORK Jn. Caribbeans, with MUler collect- asin unbeaten, winning its first Players h a Wond WileMaya-whJ. oP) Ing a home run and a double seventh games, but now has lost on The Fairways ,c DAMEN Moore, cf 0 0 0 sayson es Welgeta a "bi wo n three trips, knocking in one two straight..Georgia Tech has A ng ne F irways Mbore, i 4 0 1 0 ewis, lb 3 0 0 1 Lb 0 an- -- g.. "ba b. oen a f raun. and Paret smashing a long won only one of five starts since Lewis, lb 3 0 0 10 1 Lopez, 3b-s 3 0 1 1 om -Pay~ng l -nwas nadia-a -double l two_, tr_, knocking in its astonishing upset of Ken-. Charles 1 0 0 0 12Thornt a | 0 1 2 SGolf Ball in mhworth s l gt mwo k I tr g e Golflo Goip From The Lopez, Sb 3 0 0 0 Brathwait.. '8 0 i 0 t e w.yrth __ ._n g_- u ... Herble Schmldt al-o locked a Omer leading gamea on to- der Ladies Brathwalte.Ar., rf 2 0 3 Brathwaite. b 0 0 e d adrbej ewl.e b -eul as long screaming liner good for night's schedule Include Okla- .astoSCne, if 3 0 0 0 0 McDonalde 2 0 0 2 1 led and bejeweled belt the two bases for the losers. On the homa City-Arkansas, St. M,- The "'Low Net On Par Three Brathwatie, AL,2b 3 A 1 2 a 3Gadetone 1 0 1 0 0 professional s clete of Athe year field it was Paret again, th chaiel's-Army, St. Francis (Pa.)- Holes tournament last week was McDonald, 3 0 0 4 l Arthurs, p 1 0 0 1 2 Sea Ro a time sharing the honors dwinWallace, eo town won.b y; Clrke,p 1 0 0 1 0 reald 1 0 0 0 diner at Roesr.New Yo HerbleSchadt. Schmdt, play-(D.C.)-Misssippi Soutern, IT FIGHT Alons,p 1 1 0 0 0 ourdeau, 1 0 w orldIn the votig for~trophy Ing second bas. made the mt iMercerAmican U.- ely Judson Net20 HoureMddU, 1 n 0 1 3Keman by aporwlters edbroadcast- e' the 2.-year- ..ld S a o ctacular catch of the game in Navy, Siena-St. Francis (N.Y.), Pe e Net 21 Cb 0 0 0 Snished3- elrl a ad oO tt first"l n., moving far to and St. Joseph's 4Pa.)-Drexel SECOND PL[GlT 2 1 3 I -- - f _in hi s ,thed- w ell a d of t-ltoel d2b1ffn 3 2in1 Grn aha' welUl adeadl 0of his right to pup in a screeching Tech. Ethel Browne Net 17 8 e 4 2 11 Graham, the backlroner labeled extrabases off the Last night's schedule was even PeggyW k Net 11 Score By Innings Kellman grounded out r Eon- the Cleveland Browns. May's bat of Cabrer Part's fielding slimmer. In the leading game, Some of the ladies forgot to Smokers 300 143 ( -11 II 2 laden rao ; teammate Johnny Annel around the In t sack was flaw- Texas Tech trounced' Eastern ke anre on putt last week, A Sodamen 010 0- 1 ladtne M onald ranked third. less. Du his tor on the New Mexico, 88-62. ol ball will be given every Summary. Runs batted in: n th Wl ShoemTherte, for the least t.. Austin, Tumalnl-l 4,,. P. sorleo. Ore, d i ed for A un in Willie Shoemaker winning A ingle, Bangle, Bungle" Parris, Prescott. Earned ris: t. .-- tounament will be played this Sodamen 1, Smokers 9. Left on Seore labihegu Bm [B lt Iother jockey -'finished In fourth ThW1lTy. Thi is a very pomlar bases: Sodamen 8, 8moker 8. Smokers 0. -5 l 0 and enjoyable tournament hreeThree-base hit: Tuminel Two- odamen 000 The belt is the fifth to be a-, d tsenj ya be made on each base hit Austin, oore. tle mr. -i tmo me.- : I: warded. Other winn have 1 I ol. One point is given for the base: Austin. Psaed ball: M- Pr. Oor2. been Phil Rizutoe and Alle first ball on thegreen, another Donald. Wild ta: e 4. Lt o Reynolds of the Yankee, havy- po the to he truckout y weight champ Rocky eleano FOR SALE: 1953 Oryler Windsor 4-door, and the the rd o MSerald 4. BMas .an golfer Ben Hogan. -arwho stak her firstlarke s3; Alonso IL 8: -In the contract sidgt de- Se m LOW Mio A- Ent Md- iE wl peidthr l: rem Ao beSrPayed- P apartment, the PIrates -reived ton Only one own r. Ca Colm 800. so me. hits LaSorda. first plteh Lw be .,/' .dok ays from petch ora Mal W ade A T i m a ntd T" start m en 5 '( mll,- ;f f S." ..- .-AU..-, A"-. -o PIPcer1eifI-I 4X BM UGHT * .4k- A I. * : ,:.- ..,1; .: -.- -. *, '.,. SWE'MADAA ,IM lWXlgDMEXDT, "'JAN U~T IL INT-- -1 WEDNMESAT, JAfi6 I ,; ... MTB PANAMA AMIZUCAN A1, INDZPNDINT DAILY NEWSPAP ' AoetsName Recruits ost Likely To Suce, by Dan Daniel "The nevr conew bacl.* This ancient and steadfast boesl aphorisf which has ~ithstood attUak Csince thu e da etor h L. Suutvan now moeks Ray obMte in his eff te retWa hsi ring wreer. After htaYng been out of competition for 30 months, which he devoted to a venture as a night club entertalfer, Sugar RaX recently ecouraged the belief that he could the gre .ain at the age ot 34. He knocked, out Joe w in the sixt round. a Robinpon's jubilation was cut short Jan. 19 when Tiger JonesI a quite undistinguished middleweight, took every ,One of- the 10 rounds of their Chicago engagement .. . -Now thq onetime 0-pound champln once again tands at the crossroads, wondering whether it would be worth his while to go on" with his comeback drive. Ring history Warns, "Don't be a Sucker.- SItob ttitihre turned to action with several Important physical factors in his favor despite. his age. He had not become ftt and Im|tobile during hk recess, Which started after his defeat by the heat and Joey Maim on June 25, 1952. hi pudg 8 war's dancing had kept his legs limber and his poundage 1 bw. A'prevlous coeIbak exper enters had found their under. pinning rnarespoW their timing away off. But i on ust could not punch with Jones. The old Robinson refused to come through. The old Sugar Ray noggin was not sufficient. "They never come back." Loui Had Warned Robinson Joe louls was among the many who had warned Robinson * he was trying the Impossible. Joe. knew, rpm sad experience. After is 11round knockout of Jersey Joe Walcott here on t June 25, 1948, LouIs lived in indecision untlla"n March 1, 1949, a lihe annoimtred his retirement. Like Gene Tunney, the Brown Bomber was quitting the ring unbeaten. * f However, LOutls-finances got fouled up and he was persuaded to return to competition o September 27, 1950, he was outpointed in 15 rounds by izard: Charles. Father Time said, "Joe, you haven't got It any more." But 1ouls had to be convinced. Rocky Marclano provided the con- vincer. He belted the old king' out of the ring in eight heats on October 26 1951. It was not a pretty picture. t quite so poignant as the Louis experience was that of the ope and only Jack Dempsey, who after having been beaten fI for a second time by Gene Tunney in, the Battle of the Long r Count in Chicago in 1927, left the ring with the intention of remaining out. But even the astute Dempsey could not withstand the' come- s back'lure. On August 19, 1931, he knocked out one Jack Beasley I in two rounds at Reno, and decided he still had a lot of the old drive and power. Dempsey disposed of a mess of stumblebums from Toronto to Vancouver and finally, In 1940, at the age of 45, he hung up his gloves and called It a career. At 60, the old Manassa Mauler still bounces around as a referee; And he can add his testimony to that of others: "They never come back." * * Jeffriea Learned Sad Lesson One of the most notable comeback efforts was that- of Jim Jeffrles, who retired unbeaten 1904. On July 4, 1910, at Reno, thl Boilelsaker. who hAd yielded to the wiles of Tax .ickArd w a atjedn r liJy Jack Joh4;A,,h' sjj hell,", he "M. gr Rd B to smungt any soporific into Jim's bracer. SJIm' Corbett, th eleverest heavyweight champion the game has -seen. was another comeback failure. After Gentleman Jim had lost the title to Bob thsIlmmons and his solar plexus punch In 1897, he waited 20 months before beating Tom aharkey on a fouL Then Jim opened a saloon at 34th Street and Sixth Avenue, and announced he had quit the ring. However, Obrbett Inevitably got those comeback Ideas. He returned to, the ring at Coney Island on the night of May 11, 1900, and with the title in his grasp, after he had outpointed Jeffries for 22 rounds, Jim found his legs giving out. The Boiler- maker tugged bhm in the 23rd Sullivan came out of a two-year retirement In 1892, to be Knocked out by-Corbeft, who became the champion. Fort years later,-Benny Leonard knocked out by Jimmy McLamrln in the sixth, abandoned his revived career. When he returned, In 1931, he had been out for six years. The physical strains of his year of added effort may have cut a lot of time off Benny's life. SAnhI. o it has gone, through the years, Ray. "They never come back." 4 e1^40 Ashton & Parsons Ifwnts' Powders Every mother should recognise teething trouble-estlenein, i lamed guns ad betting. That is the time for AshMtn & Parso Infants' Powders. These famous powdenrs reduce high umpenrtures, ease baby'Ws dis- ss and soothe him into rful They act very gently and aea&olely safe. BARGAIN FOR SALE: Oyrler Windsor door Seala-n w.Lo Exeelit Condi. ales Oami 'all Colon 800. Score Fanned 330 Batters In 251 Innings By RARRY GRAYSON NEW uxa, -- (x4"A) Iajp letiAb -.ts uu OK.c" uu aft.' 'I en Acrtu s coming up ius spring i iey are: sbutnpaw Herb Score, joining the m,uiui. A d, bpooner, left-hand -pitcher, DAnU asLaAy UALIU r CaUAUiSCi., reporting to e ooUges. t iesu' AAIU AU.,_ ,,.lined by the Unoies riom tae Yanees vu soclation. vUut.,,er Bill Virdon, stepping uuwieiuer uuo Aennon, page Oy u.e AutuA. HAau ot menm-Score, Spooner anu eauu-ou esaLuaineA, uUI league records. give Aea toe" AeMouaS. bso0ie gives the Indians another fireuLCA. rowuermig ihe DalU .of Auuianapwuis, t:e oig *-ycAi- LUA .ii Ale l _.A, ii ". uwfl5.-, AI -Or ie course and t eu some anc 4 iiew A ,iet:iCail.,i SStu a ui mark. &anx ureenoerg ana some 1)10k pniAiCl At W i"%L Ma U taut American league in striKeouts, alueku J- Bou UAey. sie uaggeu aZ waile losing a win an earneu- .&in aveiagetto .b64, Muv,4Wt Iw m ui AaA circuit. &A i.ui..e evidence that every ball ae throws ooes something, uut 2oz, a new Texas league rec. Uau, Lapse uie dt;,. Laii ue was ouL a mnonui wits a xnee injury -6, nequMU an LpC eIM uu. itmu. er, 6 iee ana 1db punus, men iiufatu ~ uandlL anu rX-'ares in s onlmy two uAg league outings xoc new .L. recuzi 1)5ures. xiuanuet uai,.tu .&uA ii" Mon- treal Wa.ue lmanuitAdeuriAig *4 uoubles, tree triples anu five .ouua *uns. .AA CfumiAce U AnAMk wea enluuai u Me i uuaLl vmiiner IAeague. Ai.A, s al utus wMuowy, cat-use, six-ioot, 23-year-ol h-a- vwuai opeiski u. to uo to mUj.e eee Wee kleese move over, wmcn We veit'ran capainu s ptnerecu, willing to do. rei"anue. gives the Dodgers an even greater surplus of inuelders SO 1uiAL. uuAuA I; A rLU:rCA. iM- portant deal or two. aitere aie loxy iuragers w h o contend mat Smith-six teet, 185 aou ntu auu b-is ee fines re- |eivjy angfAwlowe b hye less. Anu wu- anhaij ,UaL.Y pept pPll the ball, he toppers American Associartu oanuers wtn .jioo. Smith Is one of tne principal reasons way faul iticharos iet Turley, Don Larsen and Bill Hunter go to the Yankees in tne 18-player transaction. tUus Irian- uos, another catener ootameu by the Orioles in that barter, hit 18 nome runs lor ansas oiLy waiie batting .296, but will play first base ior jbaiuimuie. Virdon, 23, an accomplished cei-;r ueluer, put on glasses to bet 22 home runs and show the way to International League bat- ters with .334. Lennon, 26 and also' highly competent in center field, im- proved so much in batting in a year that he established a new Southern Association record for home runs with 64 while showing the way to the wheel's hitters with .346. Where's that guy who said stir ut ball players no longer were being developed? RFFJEREE" lROUifi RECRITS^t^ree-nhIo. F up 'r *f' iastylish-hrtstop joining the Dodgers. Karl Spooner, upper center. Ied the American AiLgelaUo t e Interl egilLesgwe and SouWther n AS oin baulrGame: 2pecfl rlAt) O., I Bowling's Your Game: 2 Right Equipment Makes It Easier ---- oceS nd o 12 articles written for League Party Saturday dinners were Bud Balcer's 620 NEA Service ... ... . I and Bob Waggoner's 233: For the By TONY SPARANDO The 20th week of- the Pacific gals, Kay Filebark's 534 and A By TONY SPARANDO Cosmopolitan Mixed League was Margie Harvey 187 high game. ABC Singtes Champion rolled last Wednesday at the! The team standings: IF YOU' E t tt Dl61o Alleys with, little change Teams Won Lost real value'out ofbowlin ge anype In the league standing. We are Termites 38 22 sonshould have his or pher own all looking forward to the league Woodchucks 331/a 26'/2 ball. It's also important to have party thi4 weekend at the Atlas Bearcats 33 27 your own shoes Garen. Hot Rods 31/2 28/2 your own On the alleys this week, the Buckeyes 30 30 The ball should be one which men will be getting their sights Lucky Five 27 33 suits you in its! weight, grip and set for the City Tournament Panthers 25 35 general "feel." which Is coming up Feb. 5 thru Hellcats 23 37 g r "f" the llth. and the scores will A fellow who just walks into an surely be higher. alley, picks up one ball tais time The results of last weeks 5Arit and then another ball thW next scores: Sp r0s time, will find, because of weight Alleys 1 & 2 found the Hellcats differences, he's throwing a differ- taking a 2-point victory from By UNITED PRESS ent way every time. the Buckeyes. High for the Hell- All you can ask of a ball is cats was Ronnie Welch's 557 and Ed Lubanski of Detroit has that it is comfortable, not too Mary Marrow's 362. High for the tightened his grip on first place loose on your fingers and not so Buckeyes were Dave and Barbara in the all star bowling cham- tight that it sticks. The major Gaumer. Dave, as a sub for pionshipsr at Chicago. Lubanski thing is that it is the same ball' wed6 Nelson{ came th rough hs a total of ll-thqusand apd al the time. It isn't heavier on4 J a 01 and Barbara with a one after 52 gatmesi Bob Nrckteof ohe roll than the last-as Is the. .. .. Tbledo It second and Pete Carter ease if you just -pick out any balt On alleys 3 &'4 the Bearcata of Detroit is third. knocked off the first place Ter- I use a two-fingered grip, which mites with a two point victory. Two members of the New- is something few people do. Why? High for the Bearcats were Dick burgh, New York, skating club Well, it isn't any deep trade trick Thels, who came through with a have won the Middle Atlantic of mine. It's just that when I nice 614 series, followed by Mar- speed championships. Jay Has- started bowling that's the only yie Hick's 444. For the Termites brouck won four races and Joan kind ofball anybody used.. Bill C o f f ey s 594 and Reg Russell took three in the wom- Schmidt's 469 were tops. en's division of the champion- It's a grip which is tough on Alleys 5 & 6 found the Hot ships at Newburgh, New York, the middle finger and most peo- Rods running Into lots of trou- Promoter Sam Becker says he ple, sooner or later, go over to ble from the alleys and the Pan- has called off the February 15th the three-finger, grip. I find the others, who knocked them off for bout in Cincinnati between mid- two-fingers more accurate, but two points. Iligh for the Panthers dleweights Peter Mueller and Al much harder. * were Bob Boyer and Estelle Wilson. Becker says the post- Frankel. Bob had 514 and Es- ponement has nothing to do with tell 443. For the Hot Rods, Rob Mueller dropping a decision to san Doris Huddlmeton were high Carmen Bsailio at Syracuse, New with 475 and 362. resnectively. York, on Friday. Royer is the only one wbo broke the 500 mark on those allvs. A thoroughbred named "Poona On Alleys 7 A, R the Wood- The Second" remains a strong -hucks knorped off a v oj"ts frn". (2-1) favorite to win the Santa the Tuckv Five. P Fh for tbhe Anita Handicap despite losing in Woodebi^Irxrs 'w-or pd pv ,l war's the San Marcos Handicap Satur- 42n anda K* Fihriork's *. e.v dqy. "Determine" winner of the had a very nice 20 eeme. For ths 154 Kentucky Derby, remains T,nckv (unlucky) Five. "nb n-d second choice (at 3-1) for the Trig Woa.rner were high with Santa Anita Handicap. 603 and 431 rps"eetivalv. Winners nf th frh o f tal" The Charleston Senators of the dinners -re T Td WA le,.r' ,oo American Association have sign- o,4d 'Pb warro er' .w nr the ed Danny .Murtaugh to a one- iral. sKPV i h-ir' 34 pnr Mar- year contract as manager. Mur- glo H'rvev 71 h7.h ,e-^ taugh, who managed New Or- Winners of the free Italian leans the last three seasons, re- places Joe Becker. By DRasas CoacLLh ENn Ith ENirW VS The rules committee has sev- Written for NEA Service eral suggestions about speeding QUESTION: A player dribbles up games. dow urt jumps to ass. A de WGA NEWS The committee suggests strict- fender jumpswith him, gets his WGA er observance of the rule which hands on the ball before it is Peggy .Tohnson took low rns ball within 20 seconds after thet- passed. The offensive player re- with a 75 to win th PWGA ti within 20 seton. This afrulerarelyt- turns to the floor with the ball Tournament held last Raturday ting nto ositforceion. The rule says t still in his possession. Is this at Fort Amp to. Adn n unnin ette n w e r alyt the trave ptt?-Arthur Wynne. ham broke 90 for the first timebatters awarded a ball If take 2 Answer: It s a held ball and a to win low net withe priza 58.Otable other amifiesd 20 seconds. Thelioeved jump Is ealld. c oah to match I swp. cfr Don ieddle s n the eihth cinn Q. Can a player who does not an Coeland : Ann Little ttee suggests third b ase urn- -.-tan o e band 2.einn l ttl er: re htehani e r wirh stheop have possessin deliberately go Ethel Pernsnte '71s: Maro ret anl- watches to check pd ithest out of bounds In order to help iet to ent71er Patam W n this t: was v,,, winner when the up a play?-Bob Moore. ,,arpe ,ter 72: Mae Askew '72: "B A S E B A L L A. No. It Is a violation unless Ray Hughes 72: Frne.st ,'_ The relief pitcher who came he does so to avoid contact with v72: Perny Dpnioll 74: FtlithoTorw itherstogame an IIn ment o n au'" a took these game In the tI an opne Matl,'eson 74 and Evelyn Jud- 1954 World Series has signed Q. CINCINNATI (NEA) opponent, Is son d attrda iht to beat We an-74. lothereski, obtained facial things Cardi cobasket- What to t t hnr with the New York he mGiants. ball sleuth should watch for be- the bottle of ns from h Wa shrnston star trahk sidesof the u eds in the b first, do tedl TNedrep to sv. it wv a record of 10 and four losses but bafensive s run a t Babe Ruthan. m ratehr early (of f the prize table fot he minutes. Gri e and ive A.or a home run-down record of per. th t N a wtn. tenth seconds as he beat te ltaoa each to mad tch i IDon Lddle in the eighth inning er a Rles aad t others Lot Jonetl nnoi-ear the 1 of the World Series opener a- opponents to thet"-. Ii.'-l-1,,h Tunament ,.o'- best advantage. 195% will bei- n n oniu, -"f against Cleveland and issued a with the Febn,-rv meot-'y" walk to load the bass. The vet- club reyrekntatives-I-... eran right-hander retired the Sot a to wt pur next two men to end the nning iRay Jb i now on their e wt l be t"-an wathe winner when the id B ToB Jment should eontj 't T ou- Giants took the game In the.. Sa mathes ln "* e-r- ir.m "h "- e o-+ 10th frame. SaIn" f or F.brulrtrv w-1 bnp bel of A'" Ft Davis Golf Cl o nAhH WASEINGTON.-Danish run. 19+11.?^ ^ mn* r ^Gunnar Nielsen put IN I TedI Azw --R h eT ntor-ieuh tnm mrn.pmnt rIdbunt of speedIn the final5t CINCINNATI (NEA)- Ray Jab- I s -1 a lo-han -Pw'ltcund Sattrday night to beat Wee San- 1 k obtained frm the Cardin. conists %f t~i"e ff tum n f#r In" tee of Kansas in the mile run Ib. s expected to help Ted Klus- I Pet her'vle "Ipvorq from -e1 at the Washington star track nwevklot the Reds in the bIf first club. There ix roe,-i t ,'- vmeeat tlelsenhsetga meet record Waseman's-run at Babe Ruth a ma. *'ot v. ... It'4 "h 101" theIof four minutes, aine and five Jo" leags home run record of 0., three, ri,,"t Nesaau ,r tenth seconds as he beat the "Jto mmd4's big right-hand bat A motion w-i p.4e A .%-lankyKans-n by 15 yards. In 1e Hmp," points out Gab a rn 1 wralorltw vo a 1st Ra-t- , Paul, "will preventtmanagers fron:',,rdav timdlcntlm-.etv-P "n""- throw" too tassay.leftw-pitch- IV lincuom,..as'0A .-re1t"' low 60a-t. OW-se IVn Soft and excellent savoured Wra sa ,r r ~1 -1 smooth, distinctive in flavour and of fragrance: these qualities can be by those who demand the best, and I. I __ I.t al is .... - know that this is obtainable whenu - WHITE HORSE Scotch Whisky AS X OR o T BY NAME C.1- -- -- ~ r -r ~r -~ I J --W-m ~c~p . r I- ` " * ;'' S -- GRADUATED from Minnemso I was kept right on as asssti r freshman football and acting t coach. a di In addition, I had the w ,agI . ful good fortune to share o: : Sfice with Bernie Bierman. was in 1932 and '33, when om I- .man and his Minnesota football' teams were riding really high.-- I learned more about lifea S football from feet-on-the-desk sea Ssions with Blerman during th o years than I had ver heard of fore. That was my big break. Bierman's advice was: ee them happy. TeAch them fund mental. Keep them eligible. them here."' But for this experience, I aI quite sure there would not hav been eight years at Michigan a seven more as head coach Michigan State in my future. h latter, of course, led to my a pcintment as athletic, director Bierman was one of the;W great .footba minds, coach -Ylpymia r h .Ir alzers. I Oginated hbil d teral serls among many g9. TOUC Y 's to have Men who have been close ,your own ball, one that has the dents of the game for years afret "feel" you want. Different balls! that Bernie Blerman contrlbua each time you bowl usually, as much to football & any other mean lower scores. (NEA) coach in history. _____________________ .--.--.-- .... L I= * *-~1 Kentucky Still Tops I) *, -. W:~5~k **~"4 UP AN INDEPENDENT DAILYNEWSPAPER anaaran SGEW YORK, Jan. 26 (UP) -7 "Let the people know the truth and the country is safe". -Abr, r'ownell said today that appre- hensions of 'wetbackp" on the Mexican border have alleen from THIRTI TH YEAR PANAMA, R. P., WEDNESDAY, JANUASJY 2, 1955 - 3,000 to less than 300 a day un- der a clean-up campaign begun last year. In a speech prepared for de- ored by immigration and iti-40 Londoners Dem livery before a conference spo- zesh groups here, Brownelll cited *'Operation Wetback" asa the most graphic illustration of I natinof the immigration erv-gIt ( He said the slow-down in the ee A gaist Gn oferemea n R agr number of Mexican ille ally creasing the border to work in LONDON, Jan. 26 (UP)-Some blocked reunification and a peace cohesive Eastern European Comn- this country has saved Califor- 4000 Communist-led demonstra- treaty for the divided country. munist defense force. nia employers and taxpayers a- tors stormed the House of Com- The formal proclamation was The brief decree, complaining of lQbe an estimated '$325,000 a mons and battled police two miles in the form of a decrease by the the Anglo-American-rench policy week. across central London last night Presidium or executive commit- of rearming West Germany and The repatriated wetbacks, hein a protest against German re- tee of the Supreme Soviet or par- including it in "aggressive mill- said, have been replaced b Ie- armament. ligament. tary groupings," made t three gaily contracted Mexican labol In London, the move was itIn- points: and United States workers who Many suffered minor injuries terpreted as a Russian counter- 1. "The state of war between once swelled the number of Eleven were arrested. Traffic action against Western European the Soviet Union and Germany claims for unemployment insur- hailed downtown as 400 inilice, Union defense plans. ceases forthwith and peaceful re- ance in California and other many on horses, forced the re- It was anticipated in Western latlons are being established be- southwest states. treating mob past central Lon- capitals that the Soviet'* next tween them. Brownell said the large scale don's. historic landmarks. move would be an authorize 2. "All judicial restrictions oc- campaign' against wetbacks has "The grandest day In years," tion for open rearmament of casioned by therWar in respect of been carried out "humanely" trumpeted the Communist Party's East Germany as a part of a German citizens who were regard lin with the Immigration SCer- Dail Worker today. "Ten thou- / lee's new effort to put heart into shA n march for Britain." I l administration of the immi- At supper time demonstrators f n g stion laws. pouring In by bus and train gatbh- KU Slan Expert Says Soviets saW orkin ,He cited the new detention ered force outside Wetminister u *n c as another illustration of Palace where the Commons was tWh~inew diitainUde poicy alien i.s .e via yeaarthsitting of the- t n ne mins i ration ued fin shing up its first On 100,000kw. Atomic Power Station by American consular officers Scotland Yard sent reinforce- Sust who encounter technical dif- ments including 40 uniformed ficlties on arrival are not being horsemen after the crowd block- held at ports. They proceed to ed entrances to Parliament. MOSCOW, Jan. 26 (UP)-D. V. Asked whether the Soviet Union their destinations and the de- Tempers rose with the chant Skobeltain, Russian represe nt a- actually is making H-bombs, one tails are Ironed out later. of "No arms for the Nazis" and tive In the United Nations cornm- of the country's foremost atomic "We are giving both heat "We want our M. P." r. ittee preparing this year's in- authorities said: and conscience to the adminis- Meanwhile in Washington, Pres- international conference on peace- "They are making them " ttion of th immigration laws," ident Esenhower, who led t h e ful uses of atomic energy said The United States has staged a S said, "as American justice re- tremendous Allied force that van- esteday the Soviet Union Is build- minimum of 50 nuclear explosions uires. quished Germany in found it ng a second atomic power star Great Britain three. T t the same time he said. "we a "satisfyng .. dear" event to ac- tion with a capacity of nearly 100,- Both this country and Britain aM strictly enforcing the immi- cept from the people of the Ger- 000 kilowatts. are prepairng to conduct new tests grtion laws against security man Republic a token of "peace- He said Russian scientists would this year. .Ts, criminals and other un- ful intent and purposes. present some results of their re- The Russians may be too, but erlrables who are deportable The event was the presentation search in the atomic field to their this probably will not be known nore vigorously than ever before of life-sized bronze statue o a foreign colleagues at the forth until any such test explosions are 1Iour history.' kneeling, laboring youth presented coming conference. held, if then. ----- ----- b the people of West Germany Skobelstsin gave an account of The Atomic Energy Commission Inas a token of gratitude for Amer- atomic energy applications in the does not announce every Soviet can assistance during the st- Soviet Union to ew York ally est shot of whi 1s country i n war period. The sculptor was er- Worker correspondent Joe taro- earns through its detection ma S u mann lethal bin. The test of the account was chinery. This is to keep the Rus. S The pre entation e by Ambassador released by the Soviet foreign mis- slans guessing about how acu. SHelnze L. Krekler took place at /try yesterday. rtely we can keep atbs on their U EAMI BACH, Jan. 26 (UP)- the Smithsonian Institution where Skobeltsin said that since the atomic progress. Iempsey, o world's the statue will be displayed. summer of 1954 an experimental avyweight boxing champ ton, Krekler read a letter from Theo. industrial atortilc powar station Official U.S. and Soviet an- ilbled gently today with th al Republc who said that the U with a useful capacity of 7000 kilo- nouncements have not stated theI watts has been in operationaspecific number of Russian test Vta aon of marriage to a Call- ited States was foremost among Another power s station with asots, fbut the score stood at at divorcee, g5ad frends-the nations who helped mitigate useful capacity ef nearly100,000 least 11 on Oct. 26, 1954, the date I We're just mighty good The r offering n er sa kilowat prm a n h ad of the lat est U.S. anocmt of Wbuh oes.ca n say what the ny n y un uore but who a r a aeidwa t en he d Russia has tested more hydro- Russian testing. futurnewill bring, Dempsey sa ..President Eisenhower s id the o w an to The l I, lt te Csap do te ftat e u t acte raa tas o --er. af- b-----t------m Active Estelle Ailardmle. owner asing of differences" between tfial announcements Indicate and that the test program reported in C ao e now is actually making H-bombs, the October announcement con-.o ef's a wonderful gir. th e o e i highly qualified sources in Wash tinued for an Idefinite time after eamp" said. Aond ee sami e etingtn, said today that date, making the 11-shot m e has been marred Co anit Partyew ee sources said the Russians nimum obsolete. nte es before and has two ravda helhave et off considerably more t also learned td hat the mini Coast night spotters gather. The great forces of the West that than the atom and H-bomb test mum figures from the deliberate- When newsmen asked the n sw ept over Germany in the most atyffically credited to them in ly vague previous announcements bo iss Alar dale about recent war," yet toril Prday had the icha Ao rs, s let the Champ do mar- "ates toaccept the gif a tu re n e U i talking n ftur ty ending World war is un- bonpa wonderful gin." the purposes." p y -A e en ma rried Communted in the history onew p cona Joseph T Oliver, former ma- id dau rs. temporary international relationsid e traffic controer n the .A --hasbeenar-,It blamed th West. Balboa Port Captain's office, . The Pravda went on the anex- at has a teen-aged Germ yesterday n Sand a young daughter In aneditoriale Pravda soaid l Hthe.0 nds expect themtmar-;, abnormal" lack of a formal trea Ill the near future. ty ending World War eI "i un- precedented in the history of con- JonephF T. Oliver, former ma- iernment othe erman Democra- the Records Bureau and was i^ H i. ^ fIce Republic and bearing in mind transferred to the Marine Divi- " tem rary in ests of the population of inen traffic 1929. e retired after 27In the IEastern, a well as Western Ger- years oa government service in , Theman" Pravda went on the December andt 11:5 had p.m. yespected to inI .|||||B RIIIII I Jforence to ei Germany. re make his future home in Prov- tWestern observers said the ed rgen, Hospitale aftIsl erand. tw i terial following d close beh ours'id Hewas a veteran of the farst i eerday's Soviet stat ree could world ar. avin served two the either a hint or a threat that years with thearly yeste d states r- aimingseparate peace is ntemplated f e- noon. He also worked two years ATIN-Habb Bo fo and when the West ratifies rearm- with the U. Army at Quarryt a of the principles of sovereignty ed S tates. He was first employ ING P OUND Th etn ment G a iish German Democra- the Records Bureau and w as Inpopulation ofion Ien 1929. He retired afterph aham Lincoln. FIVE CENTS )nsfrate lament ed as citizens of an enemy state are losing their validity." 3. "The declaration of the end of the state of war with Germany does not alter Its international ob- ligations and does not affect rights and obligations of the Soviet U- nion which follow from existing international agreements of the four powers pertaining to Ger- many as a whole." Western observers here said it- was not clear what the practical results of the decree would be,. The decree itself gave no indica- tion whether the end of the state of war would bring more rapid re- cognition Lf West Germany than was suggested in a recent Foreign Ministry declaration that this would take place only if the Paris rearmament pacts were rejected by West Germany. Observers here noted particu- larly that the decree specifically maintained that all obligations of Germany toward the four occupy- ing powers would be continued. t indicated one specific change in present policy, saying "judicial restrictions" on Germans would be dropped. But it did not explain what was meant by "judicial re- strictions." Haitian President And Wife To Visit Ike At While House WASHINGTON, Jan. 26 (UP) -Washington prepared today to welcome Preldent Paul E. Mag- loire of Haiti and his wife who were scheduled to arrive in the late afternoon for a" three-day state visit. The Haitian chief executive Will be met at the National Air- port by Vice President and Mrs. nbr Pull military honors will be rendered. The President and his party will receive the "keys to the city" from District of Columbia commissioners and then w I ll drive to the White House where they will be welcomed by Pres- ident and Mrs. Eisenhower. Mr. and Mrs. Eisenhower will live a state dinner tonight In aonor of President and Madame Magloire. The visitors will re- nain at the White House for the night. long-undiscovered photograph in Springfield, Ill., by Van A. was ssg for nearly a cn- when he was about fifty years ie worth $10,000. RELEASED BY RUSSIANS P chats with Col. Everett V. G. Kl H spital in Berlin, upon being S, by the ] Sheppard Family Detective Sees Convicted Doctor CLEVELAND, 0., Jan. 26 (U) -Dr. Paul L. Kirk's investigation of the Marilyn Sheppard murder today switched from the Sheppard home in Bay Village to Cuyahoga County jail. Dr. Kirk, hired by the Sheppard family for more than $100 a day plus expenses, had a brief inter- view with Dr. Samuel H. Shep- pard, convicted last month of his wife's bludgeen-slaylng. The West Coast crimiologist held a private consultation, and did not disclose the nature of his questions. He earlier had said he did not intend to ask Dr. Sam for his version of the July 4 murder, but wanted to get "first-hand im- pressions" of the prisoner. Dr. Kirk, a biochemist on the staff of the University of Califor- nia, spent the last two days exam- ining contents of the Sheppard home. After his interview with Dr. Sheppard, the criminologist In- spected state evidence while as- sistant prosecutor Thomas Parrl- no watched. Dr. Kirk would not disclose the nature of his findings, and said he would issue a report only af- ter he returned to his West Coast home. Meanwhile, Dr. Sam's chief at- torsey, WUUlam J. Corrian, pre- pared a second appeal of the case. oe laid he would file a motion with Appeals Court here, for review by a higher court, asking Dr. Shop- pard's release under ball while he awaited outcome of his request for a new trial. The same court last week turn- ed down the bail plea, but Corri- gan said such bail was granted last year in nearby Youngstown, 0., to a woman convicted of sec- ond-degree murder. Bing Crosby Makes 'Fine Progress' After Operation HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 26 (UP) - Bing Crosby today was reported making "fine progress" in recu- perating from a major operation performed on him last week for removal of a kidney stone. The crooner was moved from his first floor room to a larger and more comfortable room on a high- er flor of St. John's Hospital in nearby Santa Monica. A spokesman said Crosby was handling his numerous business affairs from his bed, dictating letters into a recording machine and reading correspondence. pale members of his family and a few close business associates have been permitted to visit Cros- by since his surgery last week. He Is expected to remain in the hospital for at least another week and then will recuperate at home for about a month before resum- ing his film work. US Freighter, Russian Ship Collide Off Elbe HAMiURG, Germany, Jan. 26 (UP) An American freighter colllked with a Russlan ship off the be River etary lat night, port offal saod IM* American freighter, the AMli eana Kxpoter, was report- ed d o the collision. The Sa i -t freighter is owned- by t ad States Lines. ' N1 formation was available on the Identity of the Russian ve9eL Ftr driving 41thout a Otto Traunwek,3 24- y- Pamanlan wam fined A morning ilA.th* ftibo. trate's Court. Cristobalna pnlo.n di was fined $10 for tjeg The 37-yearold.Panaman ian c service U ftr in Ancon Bolivar Pinson, 53, Panamanig was fined $3. w WabryHomrs .vt. William A. Verdine, Jr. (left) fr ih r ld f l Ing, commander of the U.S. Army aI uII VuW rule to American authoritieshJ Adjstment ta tn e ba [ ... .. ^ hours of both tlhUZ Sa1 , We~eyre Jan. 31, havy been an 61 To Face AWOL ,,, u : nLounced by the Civil Affairs DI arge Ater Th-Yer The new hoursat Margar will be from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m (a In A if- DA Monday. Tuesday, Thutitday a Pnesday The new holr at Cris. RANKFURT..,Germany, Jan. tobal ill be 9 a.m. to 12 noon 26 (UP)-Prikte William A. Ver- and 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday dine, released by the Soviets last through Friday aq.9g .m. to 12 week after six years of Soviet noon Haturday. " captivity, ham been transferred The changes, w. WWill result from Berlin to face court martial In a nCreur of z.hours each for absence without leave, it was week at Margarita and a corre announced today. p don decreae of five hour per week In Orobal are par An Army spokesman said Ver. of a long rang- pfai under dine has been placed n th which the Citob e Frankfurt guardhouse until the n.tally will be move toMar. Army decides whether he will be Pris.L ThIE mo a nnot Mr court martliled. He was flown completed however, until sultabi from Berlin last night, housing for the library Is avail He s been listed by the Army able In Margarita as absent without leave sinee he The library hourt ,W han disappeared from his unit at ed follow a coNUltao WIan Coburg in West Germany In Feb- representatives of hU. Cletoba ruary 1949. Margarita Civic Qh C s and Verdin ~o o careful study o1 the 11se of U V erdine, who comes f r o m brary services In oth Cristo Starks, Louilsana, was released and Margarita by members a by the Soviets last Thursday aft- the library baff. er spending six years in Sovilet prison camps Including the no- orlousaWorkutRaslave labor area in Russia's Actic north. Aomic Air Defense R u hii | Waps UpdrWay Guardia and ' was the ap elt $4yA PA p o(id Mite WASHINGTON, ja. (UDP) for w *De se imeereti% Ol55 1 .es. w1r Wiln Id a house commit by C today that-atomic weapons are str on bureau d being planned for breaking up the b roM 0,m a. the Adminse massive air attack against tratiozi M country. Guardia Co. a low b Wilson did not give detail, but ro a Pa nt Cor anders ere th he told the house armed services Brouwer of P sma. committee that research on the Xn o u ofn. dwiu, !?tga th the e apons in the a edvarnishing of several continental alp defense program dredcndoWs In w A speed." Involve the re-pisgit-d olean ingof all venetlagf npros He Apparently referred to ato- eatly insaelled on A tihe win le war heads whichwould be dowsa. l .he t carried by anti-aircraft guided The work Is sche.4un to missiles and probably would be completed duri-g the present used at high altitudes in the dry season. ' Artic regions against an ap-" proaching force of enemy planes. e also reported that the a- 1 tmc-powered submarine Nau . na s P erforming beyond ex- pect nations. He said the succmeof & O, S . Its nuclear engine has opened q "an entire new field of propul-dim Mlon, not only for ships, but even.-p ac toa N"l tualy for aircraft." ALO (UP) A f c- Gen. Douglas aAgAthur to- Atomic-powered planes could day celebrated lls Y5th birh- cruise at Supersonic speeds In- day with a busy. schedule of definitely, depending only on three speeches the unveiling the endurance of the 'crews. of a bronze MacArthur statue. Wilson defended the adm i rds- The. five-star general arrived tato' cut n the military in LosAnges fo Nd York budget and the sie of the armed monumenht with his wife and was forces foot ta b crowd ofN when SnS. 5 P nche n fro an airin cover- adeook IndustryHi w th ppc Atr the base , 2, ab of the at MaAar frk where he ives Medal dignia and the words "GenerMrals. h .hur unells a monuloenrt Joseph Woodkere eted inh honor. hT oFaulkne r to hea MacArthir toan help hat- ThW eri ,jJan..Soo (UP) --a niche In a ucomv wa1 er- ware American a ookl -a- ed with ce C tBe. At the base ware o Is Mannu --- .e deI of the statue Is afive-star n- ens for outsta oem on signia and the words, "General Kin 1054 toW am, Millro e of the Army Douglas Maced his no6 l, "abe. Ithur." YexterdavT1UP. H. R. Gross (3- Joseph Wood Krutch won for Ia.' asked president weernt' his non-f"cti MeNO- .to recallMaAe rthur to help han- e' o-f- t..--"3 .,.--v-[dle the ,enmoa crisis. ens for his cofeuled poemh He did not sas sg- gest that .SacArthuur place BttuoK for6"PoemM: l 2-1854. that the Presidentrecall him "o The war 4 rt N at duty "and utWe to the fest _ "byax e n t in ths owinge risiSth industry figured statedd" -ie m mll m mm a l n m 6WPM CENTRAL ttON TOMORROW PRI S: O -.0.30 RELEASE -*l. CBrownell Cites 'Effectiveness Of New Setup LUX _ v01l anJu s BIUm .& 0 i; <_'*, I |
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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 |
| 60 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |