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1' * i.., - I to RIO Jjk* THE MARVELOUS CARIOCA CAPITAL! BRANIFF I NTS RNAT19NAL -AIR*WAVY AN INDE PENNT DAILY NEWSPAPER Panama Awort an "Let the people know the truth and the country is safe" Abraham Lincoln. PANAMA RP WEDNEBD 5 Doctors Plan To Protect Ike Der ers From Boredom DENVER, Oct. 5 (UP)-President Eisenhower's re- covery from a hart attack appears to be coming along so well thea his aides and doctors are planning special acti- vities to keep him from becoming bored and fretful in the latter stages of his'hospitalization in Denver. This applies to recreation as well as to work. The planning is aimed not only at letting the President swing gradually back into the duties of his office but also at giving him as muchdiversion as possible without phy- sical strain. One example of this is the mo- vie equipment installed in a small Assembly Reects auditorium on the eighth floor of Asse bl Remi Fitzsimons Army hospital, where his suite is. Mot-n To R tfr t is ready for use whenever his es ore doctors feel that their movie-lov- ihs O r ing patient can be moved, possi- Righs To A lfo bly by wheel chair, into the audi- Boredom is something the doc- The National Assembly yester- tors have to fight in the case of a day rejected for the second man who has always led an ac- time in almost two years abid tive life. by Assemblyman Homero Velas- A case in point w as Sunday quez to restore citizenship rights I night, when the President was re- to former President Arnulfo! ported to be "fatigued." At it Arias, turns out, this was plain boredom at bring bed-bound as much as a- The 'Assembly vote was 38 to ny thing else. 2, with three abstentions. ' Former President Arias, leader of the Panameflista Party, was tried and convicted by the Na- tional Assembly in 1951, after he was overthrown in a bloody three-day revolt, on a charge of abuse of constitutional powers. He was stripped of citizenship right and barred from holdingg pubiO office for the rnt of bis Ln a j-minute session yester- day with Sherman Adams, his top assistant, the chief executive signed three recess a p p o i n t- ments, a letter accepting an am- bassador's resignation, a letter authorizing agricultural conserv- ation aid for three flood and hur- ricane ravaged states, and a sixth routine document. Sa.m. 1) lOWir's ^ on Prci OPI k.; * b ..Lq.l.., U a- il .Jatd O- O a U y R--n' Recapture HURRICANE-WRECKED building on tiny Swan Island. Island Navy Plucks Hundreds Of Victims Wre k From Tiny Isle In Watery Tampico .r.... - ... ... Key Pass ------ France-Spain Foreign Legon Split Possible . Over Morocco F iahtina Back PARIS. Oct. 5 (UP)- France . warned Spain today that it A gence reports that armed rebel New Riff W a . bands from Spanish Morocco have Joined Insurgents battling 0 - French troops in French Mor- occo. has denied that reb- TAZA, Morocco, Oct. 5 (UP) Berber tribesmen els cominQ from Spanish Mor- swept down from the hills today and recaptured the key occo were responsible for the Nador Pass in the Riff mountains. current outbreak of violence I in the French zone. vioenc French Foreign Legionnaires and colonial infosity In Washington ye at e r d s immediatelyy mounted a counter-offensive to win beek Spanish minister Eduardo Prop-MoCCo's "heartbreak" ridge per de CalleJon said: Morocco s "heartbreak" ridge. "What newspapers said about The surprise rebel offensive cut off for the second side is absolutely wron. we ;time in 24 hours the two northern Moroccan outposts of have confirmed this with the Boured dnd Tizi Ouzli from the main operational basw high commissioner in Tetuan., French field headquarters of Aknoul who has issued a public state-and French field headquarters of Aknoul. ment labeling these reports as The strategic Nador Pass lies a few miles south of false." However, well-informed sourc- Boured and Tizi Ousli. The two posts, with Aknoul, from es said Rene Massiali. secretary a triangle in the heart of the Riff mountains. orotestedsharplyorethis mor-ning There, three powerful tribes have risen against to Spanish ambassador Count France in a near-pertect reenactment of the Riff war of de Casa Rojas. about the alleg- the 1920's. ed support the rebels were re- ceiving from tribesmen living in Less than two hours after twolthe edges of beleaguered :T.ia Spanish Morocco. light French flying columns shot Ouzil. *- Massiall. acting In the ab- their way through the pass. the Against this backdrop o t U- sence of foreign minister An- Insurgents charged down from tary action. pen. de la Tou - toine Pinay, informed the Spin- the hills to block again the nar- sonally assumed comm I.sh envoy that French intelll- row passage. the forces in the fit. .S gene@ reports in Morocco affirm- At noon the rebels were still neled a~ sp e tro Sis ,nmh mmam d handa dr Omt in firm saaassion of the vital n1m cri " S.-- of watery Tampico today In a msnder of the rescue opera- France expects Spain to takh rebels with barrage from sev- mountains where Abd EI C.. desperate attempt to evacuate tion, said the 14 helicopters at all necessary measures to eral batteries of 105 mm re. led an uprising against Frnaf' n support efhis motion, Ve- y wit1o ,pUcatns. ,.B .. sS UTINA, Oct. 5-(US Na- the homeless before they drown- his disposal would concentrate tiohen controls on the border coilLss guns but the. insurL and Spain 30 years ago. lasquez said It would help restore The concern whici s p read 1y-The Isquare mU Swan ed in steadily rising flood wa- on saving lives until the dan- and eliminate operational has- ents. armed with heavy ma- peace and tranquility to the throughout the temporary White Island suffered 45 per ceat de- ters. rer bad diminished es the rebels may hare set up chinefuns, stood firm. The Tiz Ouzll and Boured country. He also mentioned the House Sunday night and early struction in Hurricane Janet. Some 60,000 persons concen- gave orders that removal in Spanish Morocco, the sourc- Foreign Legion tank and n-outposts are five miles south of thousands of followers of the Monday was subsiding in the wake The Utina sped to the assistance treated in a36 block area of dry f flood victs from that re imoval d s said fantry re Ii e f columns had the Spanish Moroccan border, in Panam r vista leader who ob- of his satisfactory preogress. of Swan Island after Janet pass- land waiting to be airlifted to o od vlctms from the sla Diplomatic quarters termed ground their way from Taza in- an area 40 miles north of Tae. stained from voting in the last ed directly over the island Sept. safety some 80, miles away overf n n ear o te c he interview a "verbal comr- to the Rift valley of death and Tara is 155 miles east of e elections and probably will also The restiveness which appeared 17 acres o muddv waters. mae ooor lain No written note thus far routed fierce Berber tribesmen French Moroccan capital of R electionstadrobablywillalobetherestivncauses hhapea .reeSofmu0 ers.nclothing in to the evau has been sent to Madrid. beeleaing tweo flamua French abstain from voting i the next, to be the main cause of the PIw The small concrete seismo- me350 peronstonte -til those endangered by the ris- But.In view of the reneater outDosts. officials disclosed to- The French forces battled n dent's fatigue and the slight slowm raphic station, which was used .tr f hd o be eis ing waters were flown to safety. S h d ls of the French day. two frons against black-unl The two votes In favor of Ve- down in his progress was missing for shelter during the hurricane cuated from the edge of the ris- o Spanish denials of the renchav. The two vot es in favor of eai y today. Present Eisenhower was or shelter during the hurricaneand ns loaded wit of accusations observers feared Res ident-eneral Pierre Geor- formed Berbers alon the frn- lasquez' resolution were cost b rerted ay good spirits, well reat- was the sole reason there was Tames writers of any lept on food, clothing and medical sup- relations between the two con- es Bover de la Tour took per- tier opposite Spanish Morocc brother-lasue himsel and Arias nd relaxed no loss of life Other structure e ris aofst n lies at Tampico airport sat use- tries might suffer unless Soain sonal command of the French and aralnst robed Marmoucha brother-in-law Assemblyman built as hurricane-proof, were thed rooms houses p ess while the life saving opera- takes action on the charges. counter-offensive and poured all tribesmen in the hills near the Franc o Linares. In their noon bulletin, yesterday, demolished. od and water supplies n tlon went on. The only means of France already has walked out his reserves Into pursuit of the M em holy city of Fez. the doctors said: the city were nearly exhausted transporting the supplies from of the United Nations Gen-,l outlaw bands I To the south of the hol "The President's condition con. All houses buildings on .t c. weriei ha lon isnce the airport to the heart of the Assembly over the ouestlon of I fc I. Fnrefon Leionnaires Burglary Cases tinues to progress satisfactorily the island exZ t three quonset oda Eletrih l si city was by helcopter and all|Aieria. another North Africa lecLeinnareshty cht th g shad ank amp without complication huts were ra Only 15 of he d t e the whrlybrds" were tied up territory which It considers an finally" shattered the Iron man- fts were report in uneasy "After another good n i g h t's 10,000-tree mut plantation choppy as a orm iossen the giant rescue mission. Internal problem iacle that the savage tribesmen cpntro after two lavs of mf- Conhiued On (Z sleep, the President is comfort- remained standing. This coconut had clmoed on the outposts of der, arson and pillage. able. relaxed and cheerful this plantation has been the livell- A D Boured and Tizi OuzIl four days The situation was more - Two burglary cases, one in- morning, nood of the natives there since Orgy d S D ebt-Ridden Ex-CZ Em ploye agoTher breakthrooh savedlnthp h to volviog the theft of screen. fom "His m o r n I n g examinations 1948. e t- i en Their breakrt nuh nd Three French outposts. an empty apartment in La Boca, show that his temperature, pulse Food and medical drops Adr ving A"h arris o th"f hotoun th eboreder of Sanm h Mc n and the other stolen propertyand blood pressure are normal. rde a aso Amedav ing I I III bp,-redr parron aWo hid tooht Tert under almost sa from the Amador Service Center, His cardiogram shows the expect- e almoaftIn J As Troubles Pile Up a nteents burned around for outpost but rwere lsa were continued untiltomorrow E. W. Braelle, who was In v tie. ba an dd not tr a afternoon during this morning's "The President had breakfast charge of the weather station o-- The two outposts ahout 40; Authorities evacuated all rate's o rt. Ba consisting of a fresh sliced peach, there stated that winds in ex- Most of th "Prgy and Bess" Arian rin wh miles from here were little moreien an children from the trats Court.oatmeal beef bacon, whole wheat cess of 175 mph lashed at the opera troupe are scheduled to American electricianed for ha ot b tan smouldern ruins hen e frontier towns of A 21-year-old' San B al- toast and a glass of skimmed milk. tiny island. arrive here s afternoon at 4 arrested on a cil cot or- counted for. the French troops reached them and Tahar Sou. Aknot-w r Ad yrir th d al n lJ"a, al- "Mrs. Eisenhower visited with p.m. er which prevented him from Attortrry David A. Leon, who But the relief forces found de- cut off for a while. and ready in the Balboa-lal await- him during breakfast. After break- Lt. R. J. Brown, commanding Tomorrgw will mark their 58th leaving the Canal Zone before appeared for Philippine Rattan fiant defenders still holding out were blocked frnm the town ie trial on a burglary charge in fast he rested and listened to mu- officer of the Utina. added that opening night in their round- he paid a $600 debt due a Pan- told the court Trew promised to in both places. clever roadblocks But rt~tie strict Court, now faces a sec- sic evacuation of all but necessary the-world tour. This is their first arma merchant, got more entan- pay the debt yesterday out of The le-ion's relief columns troons finally managed to r -. ond bur lary countL He was caretaker personnel was corn- Central American stop. gled in overdue bills this morn- his termination leave check. cracked through hrleflv at Bon-'tablsh contact. charged mrni with en- Dr. Paul Dudley White. the fa- pleted yesterday. Tickets for the two evening when the case as aired in However, this was attached by red yesterday and hammered at (Continued on Page 6. Ceu tering the A or.r rvice Club mous Boston heart specialist who and one matinee performance the U.S. District Court at Ancon. Sheridan before he was able to ad....P"radlo and is being kept informed daily of the are now on sale at the box office Appearin as though he had make payment. --- -. . I I de.fendant, President's progress, was va c a- Oof the National Theater Or- been through a fe sleepless - bo tad .0. on a bur- But he received his daily tele- Goes To States available for .Ither tomorrow ,ororiginally was scheduled to leave led out to the defendant tha' * glary cha-B is Ing the theft phone reports from the P r esi- Frida nights Matinee tickets the Zone today after resigning unless payment was made. it of $400 wot Of proDerty from dents doctors. Canal Zone Dist. Atty. Row- are 53 for orchestra, $2 for am- from Canal service last Friday, might mean Trew would be kept quarters Amador Road, land K. Hazard left yesterday phitheater and $1 for gallery faced a charge of attempting to In jail indefinitely. Dr. White will fly here Saturday for Washington where he will seats. There will be only one "defraud s creditors. Philippine Two defendants, Oliver A. Bris- for a second personal consultation attend the annual U.S. attor- matinee performance on Friday Rattan Furniture, In .- by leav- To which the middle-aged de- sett, 23, and Nicolas Acufia. 26. with the other medical experts. ney's conference starting today. beginning at 3:30 p m. ing the Isthmus without paying ifendant replied that he could i both Panatpanians, were charged IAdams, who has been screening Holders of tickets for the orig- them. sell a mortgage bond he has in W jointly with attempting to bur- a few minor items of business for After the three-day confer- Inally scheduled performance to- Philadelphla on a house whi% glarize an empty apartment In the President'.. action, will fly to ence. Hazard expects to spend adav ',green tickets will be hon- Meanwhile the court learned would bring him about $800. La Boca quarters 1076. They are Washington tonight to at t e n d few weeks on leave in Rhode Is- ored tomorrow night through attore' William J T w protected that can charged with cutting the screen meetings of the National Security land before returning to the Sheridan that the Gerard Trust Trew protested that "I can't and trying to make off with it. Council tomorrow and the Cabinet Zone .n = Corn Exchange Bank of Phila- do anything about It while Friday. W ull-aC delphia. whom he represents, I m locked up in jail, how- Bfth cases will be tried tomor- He is expected to return to Den- Asst Dist. Atty. Morton Thomp- "vul d C p had issued a Judgment in the, ever ro. Afternono. River with Dr. White Saturday. son is acting DA in his absence. -_. amount of $2,044 against Trew .. r orwh aRtr-gnapr for a brand new Ford c,:,nvertl- But the judge permitted him ______ _ Upper ble which he purchased last to make a telephone call., while -e ... .. -r.. .. --.. .... .. -- ar, but on which he failed to under custody of the US Mar- i A,- .7 Gels Ten Dn ays meet payments 'hal, and also possibly negotiate n D y's" I h e sale of the bond by corres- S' J- A Paralso resident who threat- Late last \ear the car was de- pondence. Crowe also mentioned ,-a 6 y C i- w =r -- 4 > *=i, *' 's ened a Canal Zone police officer inolished in an automobile acci- the posslblllity of having a 0 4 c OI who broke up a card game. was cent which resulted in a drunk friend on the Isthmus sign a given a 10-day tail sentence this 'driving charge lodged against'bond for him, and later be re- '* morning by Balboa Magistrate the defendant He was fined $100 imbursed by Trew. I Judge E Altman t the time A.- He found the defendant. Dan- The car eventually was sold To give the debt-ridden vd- lel Gooding. 31. guilty of "at- for S370, In an as-is-where-is lendant time to make some ar- tempting to obstruct a uniform-! condition, and this amount rangements aggreeable to the ed Canal Zone police officer in was turned over to the bank. 'creditors. Crowe continued the: the performance of his duty, Yesterday. Trews termination case until Friday * S-and threatening him with bodi- pay, in the amount of $1,467 was ly harm." attached by Sheridan and will, Trew was picked up and ar- Complainant in the case was be sent to the bank. tested last Friday afternoon as policeman E. J. Husum who Lhe was leaving the Electrical m "^ T' y s ..- broke up a card game at 9:30 But Trew told the court the Divlsion. It was his last day of ' __ pm on Sept. 30 in Paraiso. fact that his pay uas attached work with the Canal S...- Testimon in court yesterday leaves him completely broke, ....." .^',' was that the threat was voiced and unable to meet the $600 BALBOA TII)ES __ < ** :.... -- ... ..... _.________ __ *- "_ 1 l1o. '"- after Husum had talked to the debt owed the furniture compa- SULTAN OFF TO TANGIER EXILE-MorocaRede -group. Gooding. who made a ny. Investigation revealed he THURSDAY. OCTOBER 6 eral. Lt. Gen. Pierre Georges Boyer de Latour (let) ad IKE'S SIGNATURS ,-, Here li a combo of Presiuent Ftlennower's algnatures before and after [hostile gesture to the police of- had sold the furniture prior to HIGH LOW Oufkir irighti curt Sultn Sidi Mohammed en l2 'esgnatJ'A. wAmade In June, 1954. Signature -B" w, s made by the President ficer, ran away when Husum.moving out of his Zone quarters 4:27 a.m. 0 24 ..m Arafa to a plane at lRbat. Morocco. The sultan oi S ltelp. S, 1U while he was recovering from his i eas in Denver. Pulled out hil club. last week, but the money he te- 6:59 p.m. 1251 p.m. I have signed hUs mleters ot resignation from s + THZITUTi 1' f _ _ i * ., *j~- - - - - *'~".*J'-*'-~.' '. - I /' W31~NESPAF, OC~OUE3 if, 1U& TM PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER -. ~ TWOY -. THE PANAMA AMERICAN r wFor AND PuLISmIHiDO Y THE PANAMA ANMWSCAN PM 0m. * POUNDED Y NELSOioN ROUNSEVE.s in I a HARMODIO ANIAa. DonOr 97 H STREfT P 0 Box 134. PANAMA R OPP. TELEPHONE: 2-0740 ,5 LINrES CABLK AODnREss PANAMNEICAN. PANAMA COLON OFFICE, 12 179 CENTRAL AVINUI aSETWEN 12TH AND ISTN ST S FORnIaN REPRESENTIATIVES. JOSHUA 8 POWERS. INC 345 MADISON AvE. NEW YORK. 417> N Y. LOCAL *T MA SPn MONTH. INm ADVANCe 1.70 I 2.5 FO* PMIX MONTHS IN ADVANCE* *6.*0 3.a Fo F ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE 18.50 24.< nYs so 10 1 tHIS IS YOUR FORUM THE READERS OWN COLUMN ..JH MAIL BOX The Mail Box is as open forum tar readers of The Panama Amnrenic S 'tel are received gratefully and are handled in a wholly seofidentia n-mne,. rr I' oappe tiM This newspaper assumes no responsibility for statements as opinion I pressd in letters from readers. -0- IN UD-FENSE OF THE TREATY * 3t Is about time mebody spoke in the defense of the new Ifr y which was made primarily for the benefit, of all Pana- In ans, and aftel reading A Victim's" penny's worth I would Ilk. straighten him on a fe- facts. am not a Comme and vook my share of risks for democracy ts crewman aboard a tanker flying the flag of the U.S.A. dur- ng e last war. Mr. "A Victim," you are not a lawyer or a Pan- ian politician and are not in a position to know the far- efn effects of tne Treaty and should keep your nose out of Sthat are bigger than your mental capacity. a * Now let us compare a few things. You said with the closing of certain agencies on tie Zone, unemployment would he Inten- lified, and that you are provided with dwellings, (properly-named) School, and medical caie you also claim to be taxed without rep- esentation. I say competent agencies in the terminal cities will ke over these c0omed out agencies on the Zone and *will in- rease their personnel to cope with the added business you will tot be able to compete with the bilingual personal now employed cause of your lack of the practice of doing your own thinking pnd making of decisions, and this is your chief worry. * In the field of healing the sick we have more specialists in the Republic than oi (he Zone. As for taxation without represen- t tion, all Panamanians know that there are deputies represent- g every province in our Republic; but here I think you have a oea that is legit. You iive on the Zone and our government does Fot think it is economical to have a Diputado to represent the Canal Zone Province. You "an own your own home in the Re- k~ub|c but you cannot no the Zone. You can advertise and com- tIwlth the commnrLn'al houses in the Republic, you cannot on 1-one. ,, Now here Is some advice: Stop knocking our country and pernment. and come into the Republic, before you are pushed as a public charge on a $45 00 per month pension. Help us to something to save your sons the humiliation of having to de- d on a people wio fought and died for their own, for privi- e and jobs, and thereby win the right to be considered equals ad of economic slaves. ' Come and helD us make the Republic what you want It to be, 6id tell us what to do, as soon and as loud as you tell us what f shouldn't do. -,The Indian. SAN A tIO BUGVLE r, The worst flood on record has hit the rich valley of the Rio grande, and the damage sla beyond estimate. To follow it up, fish Saying by the millions. Tnhs is supposed to be caused by some _jd of poison gas. The rains now falling smell fishy. The weather Is st~ll unsettled and it looks as if it will remain way. The storms we are having from the Mexican Gulf Coast Be like the one that destroyed Galveston Sept. 1, 1900, but of less r.e. zi And that reminds me that I heard on the radio Sunday night. at the John Sealey hospital in Galveston Is establishing the Ube Zaharlas fund for cancer research, like the Damon Runyon Iand. She will be out of the Lospital in a few days, And I think fe fund was her request. The weather has turned much cooler and we made a long ve over town Funday to look over new improvements, and could eno letup in the building boom. S The selling campaign on the radio never lets up, and from at they say we won't be abie to park the vast number of cars &Lmare selling, so we will have to keep them on the road all of F e, and from hte way they were killed (23) this weekend, Will need a lot mere graveyards. --Pop Wright. 5fl a, | -----I a ,Ru ii NWER YOAf PRAYER , KIAUTIFUL- " i - Balboa Y' Offers New Religious Education Course A new course in religious edu- cation will open at the Balboa YM- CA-USO on Thursday, Oct. 13th, at 7:30 p.m. with several local reli- gious leaders as speakers. Theschedule is as follows: Oct. 13 Christ and the Cross- Rev. Wm. H. Armstrong Oct. 30 A Working Faith for a Confused World Rev. Louis M. Fiske Oct. 27 The Crusading Spirit and the Will to Win the World - Rev. Lester Soerheide Nov. 3 The Christian and Democracy Chaplain Cyril Best Nov. 10 The Christian a nd Communism Dr. W. M. Alder- ton Nov. 17 What all Christians have in Common The Rev. Os- car W. Olsen Those interested should register at the YMCA either by mail. phone or by stopping in at the "Y" office in Balboa. There is no charge for the course which is open to residents of the Canal Zone and Panama. *Emu A 202 H. P. V-8 Engine will be in the Coming Saturday COLPAN MOTORS LaIbor News 4nd Comment By VICTOR RIESEL For some years now the na-I tion's waterfronts have had aJ "mystery man" as well as the, muscle men wl.i cost this country billions of dollars. I've trailed the "mystery man" along the Eastern docks. I've printed his address and telephone . number. I've reported that this i man of various names has refused to deny under oath that the was "engaged in any subversive activi- ties against this nation." And that he has refused to deny that he was "an agent of the Russian government eighter directly or in- directly." But now it can be reported that officially and on the record he is an agent--of Harry Bridges' In- ternational Longshoremens and Warehousemen's Union, which has so much influence on the West Coast and in Hawaii with its great military and naval bases. I could cite many names for thee "mystery man." For the record here, he is Irving Velson, who will be found listed in authentic and sober Congressional committee tes- timony as the man whom the Com- munists hoped to make Secretary of Defense if ever they took over. I am concerned little here about the members of the Communists' shadow cabinet. I am much con- cerned, however, about the men who lurk in the shadows of our major ports, wheret knowledge and observance of what is -shipped abroad by our military, naval and commercial people is sufficient to provide clues to some of Ameri- ca's innermost secrets. Irving Velson is one of the men who lurk in and out of these shad- ows. He has been seen in the com- pany of the toughest waterfront crowd. He has advised them on strategy. And all the while he has been Harry Bridges' unicn's internation al representative. Thus Velson is authorized to act in behalf of a union which enjoys full protec- tion of the vast body of legisla- tion designed to protect u n ion rights. Why did Harry Bridges' union hire such a man.? Who was liaison between Velson and the Bridges' union, which sits astride some of our most strategic defense lines?- Why was Velson hired as an in- ternational representative a n d paid to work on the racket-ridden east coast' What ii. his specific as- signment? Why is there no outcry by the West Coast rank-and-file longshore. men over their money goig to phy a. man wh refused to dea tha he worked r a Russian mVa 't!i Spy. *" J The master spy's name is Pe- ters. He was Whittaker Chambers' boss. On Sept. 26, 1951, a Senate at- torney asked Irving Velson, under oath, the following question: "I put it to you as a fact that, while you were in the armed forces of the government, you were chief assistant to Alexander Stevens, also known as J. Peters, in the placing of Communist Party mem- bers in the Armed Forces and ask you to affirm or ,'rny that fact." Velson's answer was: "I decline to answer that ques- tion on the grounds previously stated (the Fifth Amendment). I served in the U.S. Navy from Oc- tober 1944 until I was honorably discharged in 1946, sometime." Incidentally Velson was placed in some spots in the Navy which were sensitive. He got in, although he was thrown out of the Brooklyn Navy Yard in 1939. That leads to another very in- teresting question asked of Velson. "Is it not true that while you were employed at the Brook- lyn Navy Yard, Alexander Stevens, also known as J. Peters, used your Brooklyn address, under y o u r name, as a letter dropr" iles That and .rfl*AA Al Atomic Beer By DOUGLAS LARSEN - o - WASHINGTON -(NEA)- Now petroleum wlich now has to be atomic reactors might be used by they are planning to drop small left in the earth into lighter fluids big industries just for the heat atomic bombs down oil wells to which could be easily extracted. they could produce. For example, capture more of the oil, make In addition to th3 heat reaction, he points out, the Baton Rouge canned beer taste like draft beer the shock would undoubtedly crack refinery of the Standard Oil Comn- by irradiation, and manufacture up the geological formations ppny alone requires two and one- artificial blood with a radioactive around the pool and release much half million pounds of steam an process, oil that is now trapped. hour. Other industries need com- These are just a few of the new At present, Dr. Murphree reports parable huge quantities of heat ideas discussed at the recent meet- only about 40 per cent of the total and steam which atomic reactors ing of the Atomic Industrial Forum petroleum is being extracted from could produce. here. all wells. They just can't get it out The idea of preserving food by The Forum is a group of 360 by any practical means. radiation is not new. But the latest industrial, research, educational, One line of research to solve adaptation of the idea is in the labor and government organiza- this problem probed the possibility pasteurization of beer by radiation tions banded together to swap the of igniting huge underground fires before battling, to eliminate,-the latest ideas in the burgeoning to break up the heavy petroleum presan 1'ating process. atomic energy field. substances left below. Tis edto Draft bekr does M.sa-M.4 sqbe It was the first-gathewlngaqf the oepoiaag ;,the soaibiit S teu. a fact which cAqtsi peaceful atom brotherhood since atmg the beat bylow-grae atp1n fbr its bet4r flavor, theo xrt the big international atomic pow- explosions. And it looks like ,an say. If a method of pasteurization wow at Geneva last summer. encouraging idea, Esso research by radiation could be perfected so It there was any one apparent ers claim. the beer would not have to be result of Geneva brought out at If this technique turns out to be heated, it's believed that the bot- the meeting here it was the wide- successful it's obvious that it tied or canned product would have spread belief that the use of would be worth untold billions of the draft beer flavor. atom-generated electricity is prob- dollars by opening up all the old, ably a little further in the future played-out oil fields, plus doubling It is reported that the need to than the public has been led to the known reserves, heat the beer for bottling is why believe. The report on this study made the Budweiser Company has never Typical of the new ideas dis- for Esso contended that it would bottled its Michelob draft beer. cussed at the forum is the one for be safe for a man to stand on the A vast new field of industrial dropping small atomic bombs into ground a few feet from the top of chemistry could result from.stud- old oil wells. It has been advanced the hole if the explosion was a ies aimed at such things as making by Dr. EJer V. Murphree, presi- mile underground. plastics by using the effects of dent of the Esso Research and The earth would absorb all of gamma ray on various substances. Engineering Company. And there's the heat and blast effect. It's nothing screwball about it. likely that a kind of glass-lined It's possible that synthetic blood After making a study for E'sso, cavern in the earth would be plasma could be made much more one 'of the nation's top nuclear formed by the blast, which could cheaply and better with a gamma scientists reported that the heat then be tapped for the petroeum radiation process. At present, cer- developed from a small atomic contained, tain chemicals which have to be bomb dropped into an old oil well The radiation contamination of used in the process are harmful to would free much of the oil now the oil that would result is not the human body. And it is an ex- left in the ground by present believed to be an insurmountable tremely difficult job to remove production methods., problem, those chemicals after they have It would break -down the heavy Dr. Murphree also points out the done their job in the plasma. Plain Cooking By BOB RUARK Velson refused to answer. The next quesiton was, "I put it The drinking habits of a nation der and still face his friends will) which tastes like castor oil, to me, to you as a fact and ask you to af- are an odd thing to contemplate, eventually abscond w it h his and alongside which Tunisian eau firm or deny this fact, that and must reflect some sort of mother's egg money. The M a n- de vie is almost palatable. People J. Peters was in charge of Com- state of mind. Right now America hattan is for people who s n e a k who put rum in tea should be shot' munist espionage in this country seems to be on a heavy vodka candy on the side. Even the Mar- not imprisoned. for a great many years." kick, possibly due to clever pub- tini is a loathsome drink until it If a man is thirsty, and likes On this, too, Velson took refuge licity, possibly due to world af- is rendered bone dry, and then it coke, perhaps the addition of a in silence. fairs. is straight gin and not a cocktail shot of rum will not harm the Vodka is a reasonably mild at all. coke, and I accept the Cuba Libre, Why should this man have been potable, tasteless and odorless. The Jack Roses and things with but only one to a customer, be- hired by the Bridges' union, thus since it is only a grain alcohol creme de menthe and champagne cause too much coke makes you giving him the rights and immu- and little else, and is possibly less confusing the healing powers of fat. The daiquiri, I believe, is not nity of a labor official? Don't the harmful to the system than other honest whisky, gin and brandy are so much cocktail as highly season- rank-and-file of the West and East beverages. But unless the aim was for people who lunch at restau- ed ice, and if you like flavored ice, Coast longshoremen think it is to get stinking, I see no reason for rants that cater to ladies. Booze go ahead. You can buy the same time to ask their leaders why they it, since you might as well be is not a confection. It should taste thing on a stick from the man in associate with a man with such drinking needled water, straight and honest and harsh to the little white truck. a record? They have kicked off vodka with the unaccustomed tongue, thereby Gin, when taken with tonic wa- a couple of lame excuses-the Mos- discouraging drunkenness among ter, is 'an admirable drink for Scow Mule and the Bloody Mary, women and children. weaklings and women, and when both of which I find nauseous. It is heretical for a Southerner taken with ginger ale. . ugh. Ginger beer and vodka in a copper to say so, but I always scorned the Gin is admirable when poured o- mug make up the Yule, and the mint julep as a perversion of de- ver ice, rescued, and sprayed with J AK(c fIRIENODS Mary is Worcestershire, pepper, cent Bourbon or rye whisky, and -A thin film of vermouth by a per- i T. J, salt, lemon, and tomato juice, with felt that the sugar and mint in- fume atomizer. a stick of vodka inside. I will vulved were injurious to the sys- It is a shame to desecrate sour take my health food straight, tem, possibly leading to diabetes. mash Bourbon with much dilution, S| 'thank you, without confusing it As for the old fashioned, if I de- but a little water is permissible. E 3f with tipple. sire P fruit salad I will order one, Scotch and brandy are on limits A permanent fiancee of mine, and not confuse the issue with for soda, if you care for carbona- Mrs. Inez Robb, was writing the whisky. Cherries, hunks of pine- tion, but both marry much more other week about the horrors of apple, oranges and assorted grass- happily to honest branch water. commemorative cocktails, notably es have a tendency to promote The real drinking man still bites the Atoms-for-Peace coc k t ai1. overacidity. the neck of the bottle, tips her made of brandy, champagne and People that put whisky in coffee down, chugalug, and watches the blue curacao, and I never hope to should be deprived of access to hair grow on his chest as he Ssee one. Mrs. Robb did not take both, and Mr. Stanley Delaplane touches the stratosphere without her dissertation on roast pigs far should hang his hung-over head in motors. These people never have enough. shame for starting the "Irish cot- liver trouble, a malady that is ** The contrived cocktail is an fee" fad that currently afflicts us. often fatal to people who drink abomination before the Lord. Any- Only a bone-bred I.R.A. man could eggnog, because of the cream and T body who would drink an Alexan- admire the taste of Irish whisky, eggs. Time, Gentlemen, please. his dinner guest to a private club several times, don't feel you can't acept another such invi- tation simply because you don't belong to any club where you can take him. Return his hospi- tallty by having him to your home or taling him to a restau- I rant for dinner You don't have to return ex- at* the same kind of hospital. ttya tb offered you. P. A. CLASSIFIED i S... ,WASHINTON WASHINGTON President Ei- American people to put his name senhower's heart attack, coming on the ballot. simultaneously with publication of Tht real facts about Eisenhow. Harry. Truman's memoirs, points er's health have been known to to two vital facts in the lives of intimates for some time and our Presidents: published before his nomination bY 1. Politicians don't want the a few people. John Gunther, in an public to know the truth about any extremely friendly book; -inspired President's health. in part to boost Ike for the nomi- 2. Medical checks should be nation, touched briefly on his high give every presidential candidate blood pressure. Kay ummersby, in advance, and more specialized, uer oook, "Eisenhower Was My medical care should be given a Boss," tells how he had high blood President after he takes ofilce. pressure even during the war; It has long been known to inti- mates of tne President and to While the President's health, newspapermen covering the White considering his age, has been House that he had high blood reasonably good, his ruddy com- pressure, just as it was known plexion is deceptive and be is not during the election campaign of able to remain in the White H6use 1944 to intimates of Franklin or at his desk for average periods Roosevelt that the wear and tear of time. That is the reason for of public office had made terrific his golf, his week ends at Gettys- inroads on his health, burg, his trips to Augusta, and his But the politicians of both politi- occasional health problems which cal parties have hushed up the have been hushed, up by those real facts. Eisenhower himself is around him. the only man who has been frank One of them, just before he was about it. to leave Paris to begin his open He has consistently and repeat- and public bid for the Republican edly told the politicians who want- nomination, illustrates the impor- ed him to run again that they tance of having specialists on habd could not depend on one man. He to watch the President's health. has talked about the health ero- This particular incident almost sion of public office. He has re- upset the nomination. minded them that if elected he would be the only President to Ike was taken sick about 10 days reach the age of 70 while in office, before Gen. Matthew Ridgway was He has come about as close as scheduled to relieve him as Com- possible to telling that all was not mander of SHAPE in Paris. To well with him aside from making get Eisenhower back on his feet, a blueprint., Dr. Snyder administered antibi- He made a statement to me irr'otics. 1952 that seemed to be flat and unequivocal, that he would serve However, General Eisenhower one term only. And in various seemed to get worse. He devel- private conversations he has never hoped pink eye, ran such a high deviated from this general plan. fever that he talked of, moving But, despite this, the politicians troops and calling general staff have refused to take his word, meetings. have issued misleading statements Meanwhile a group of high Re- about the Presidents' health . ... .sroup .w . First Warning Approximately one year ago at stag dinner attended by Vice President Nixon, Attorney General Brownell, Chairman Len Hall, and other close political advisers, Ike first made it quite clear that they should begin building up new GOP leaders. The only promise they could wheedle out of him at that time was that he wouldn't an- nounce his decision until the spring of 1956. Nevertheless, Nixon and Chair- man Hall both left that dinner to make repeated statements that t President was certain to run again even though he had indicated di- rectly to the contrary. No later than three weeks ago in Denver, Hall told newsmen how the GOP planned to defeat Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon because he "had criticized Ike. , (,:jppOSe Ike, d& 't run?" a Wsja asked. a'- "Then I commit suicide," re- plied the chairman of the Republi- can National Committee who had previously heard from Ike's own lips that the Republican p a r t y should begir building other can- didates. On another occasion, the Presi- dent not only told Sen. George Bender and other Ohio Republi- cans about the health erosion of the presidency but he specifically ordered his press secretary to have his statement to Bender made known to the press. Senator Bender, like Chairman Hall, did not want to drop these discouraging words to the press. So, as he left the White House, he made no comment about Ike's re- marks on health. Whereupon he was put on the spot by the White House press secretary who asked him to repeat what the President had said. FDR's Health Concealed puu i.a jpu'ician was in i ails waiting to see him. They were told he was meeting in top secret NATO sessions dealing with the security of Europe. The days passed, however, and tee time came for him to greet Ridgway, say goodbye to the French. A public appearance be- came inescapable. -Newspapermen asked that he hold a preps con- ference.' The French government askd if it could stage a farewell ceremony. - Finally an all-day session- of Ike's closest advisers met to de- cide what should be done. It was attended by Gen. Al Gruenther, Gen. Anthony: Drexel Biddle, Col. Pete Carroll, and Arthur Vanden- berg Jr., son, ef the late senator from Michigan. During the meet- ing young Vandenberg flatly de- manded that Eisenhower show up at a press conference. Otherwise threatened Vandeaberg. .e wj old fable-Sen a Mu drawn from nomi a. ,- In the end, a French specialist was called in. He-diagnosed El* senhower's condition as an over- dose of antiobioties. Within 48 hours he was much better, though terribly weak so weak that his aides didn't know until just before General Ridgway arrived whether they could dress him for the occasion. In the end, Ike got to the airport to see Ridgway, though wearing dark glasses. His car was driven into the privacy of a hangar imn mediately afterward to let Ike rest. These are some of the things that have long been cYncealed from the public, jrst as the trua state of Roosevelt's health wau concealed during the fateful canf- paign of 1944. They are facts which. point to the need of public 'health examination of all candidates for President, whether Republican or This finds a semi-parallel in the Democrat. Too many of themt, iW Truman memoirs published last eluding the late Senator Taft and week in which he tells how, early the late Wendell Willkie, have in 1945, it was considered doubtful been stricken. , that Franklin Roosevelt could last much longer. HERE'S ZUMPTHING , Yet in the summer of 1944 when Roosevelt was nominated while NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UP) - absent on a cruise to Alaska to Connecticut's Agricultural experi- regain his health, Democratic ment station had a treat for viii Chairman Bob Hannegan knew, as tors to its annual field day. Zump- Hall knew about Ike, that FDR's kins were on display. Zumpkir health was not at all good. He also result when a zucchini squash knew that it was a fraud on the crossed with a pumpkin. SIDE GLANCES By Colbroitr mr FV i "H* was a cowboy, an Indian, a spoan and now he's Danil -n..-.Is 8he sver olrt t tldown? It you contribute a letter don't be Impetient if i doesn't Naut day Letters are published In the order received. Please try to keep the letters limited to one page length. Identity of lIter writers is held hi stricter confidence. IIIIL I -~ - L- n f - --- -_ .... I I S 1 ' ] H WENSAOTOE .15 TE PAAM ARICA NDDFIDN AIYNWPPR S-talb and L'st AA M/LMB I pkip" 1Z55. ~~~a~amj~i~ aeq~ PUBLISHERS, EDITORS, STATIC ARRIVE FOR TWO-DAY LOOB-N Some 30 news-mnedia people are on the Isthmus today. The night, late. This morning, convoyed b Julian F. Harrington and his called on Presidet lIcardo Aria eutive they've visited so far on more Latin American countries I At 7 p.m. the publishers, editors, writers and radio executives are to meet some of their opposite numbers in Panama as honor guests at a buffet tendered by e Panama Newsmen's Union at the Casa de Periodista. TV people on the tour won't pick up any TV tricks here, but they may pn- counthr several entrepreneurs who have hopes of bringing their specialty to the Isthmus. Tomorrow morning the visitors will show up at Several Point-4 Service Offices, specifically those at- the School of Arts & Crafts on the Trans-Isthmian Highway and at the Public Health Office of the Ministry of Labor, Social Welfare and Health. Also they'll overtake the mobile X-Ray Unit so m e- where on the capital city streets. At 12:15 they will be guests of Hotel El Panama at a luncheon. Tomorrow afternoon is open for shopping and personal visits. At 5;30 the group goes up to La Cresta for a short reception to be given in their honor by Ambassa- dor and Mrs. Harrington. The af- fair lasts until 7 p.m. This closes the official program. Late that night the group takes off for Lima. .4A photograph of the party ap- pears on Page 5.) Mrs. Griffon Leaves For Legion Auxiliary Convention in Miami Mrs. Louise Griffon of .the A- merican Legion Auxiliary, Depart- ment of Panama Canal Zone, de- parted by plane Monday night for Mami, Florida. Mrs. Griffon if Acting Nation- al Executive Committeewoman for this Department and is in charge of the delegation of wom- en from the Canal Zone who will be attending the 35th National Con- vention of the Auxiliary at Miami Beach Oct. 10 to 13. Mrs. Griffon will also attend the National Marche of the Eight & Forty, a subsidiary organization of the American Legion Auxiliary, in. Miami Beach on Oct. 7 and 8. Clayton Wives' alub , Z y Solal Gathrltg T6 Ft. eClatWB CAO Wives $uBieesti^ 4 tifelMif Kfotthip oiafl IfWtle fsntff a Hirsbandk Night and aeteken dinneit. It was held on the second floor of th e Ft. Clayton NCO Club. C.oe attending were: M-St. and Mrs. Robert Abbott, M-Sgt. and Mrs. Albert Alexander, Sgt. and Mrs. Berge, Sfe. and Mrs. Cliv- en Beauregard, Sfc. and Mrs. Wil- mer Blackaby, M-St. and M r s. Robert Brownlee, Sfe. and Mrs. David Beckley, M-Sgt. and Mrs. Cecil Castilow, M-Sgt. and Mrs. D. L. Grubbs, Sfc. and Mrs. SMo .. A Fordor Hard Top Convertible will be available in the new 1956 FORD LINE COLPAN MOTORS O hef / Box 5037, Ancon / Box 134, Panama 14 P.,, ./ a54dJe. e L .iur t. r.le . _ P.~ 2.-0740 2-0741 lt& o400 & 10 o.s..- .4 ON OFFICIALS the ceremony with shell-pink and SEE ON ISTHMUS white gladioli. Traditional wedding music was from all over the United States plaped for the ceremony. y'll be around until tomorrow The bride's dress of white nylon and tulle over white satin had a by United States Ambassador lace top made in a semi fitted foreign service officers, they style with a Peter Pan collar and as, who is the third Chief Exe- long pointed sleeves with tiny self- their tour of a half dozen or covered buttons' down the front I. and up the sleeves. A lace panel -down the front and skirt of nylon tulle with four nplon ruffles start- George Gillette, Sfc. and M r s. ing high in the front and hanging Carl Holtsford, Sgt. and Mrs. Hu- low in the back to form a traim. be-, Sfc. and Mrs. George Lewis, Her fingertip length veil h u n g M-Sgt. and Mrs. Cletus Lesley, from a lace and satin bonnet with M-Sgt. and Mrs Cecil McCoy, M- a braided tulle ruffle. She carried Sgt. and Mrs. Bill Pierdolla, M- a white orchid on her prayerbook. Sgt. and Mrs. Walter Pool, SP2 Miss Joan Fargo, a classmate and Mrs. Floyd Pollard, Sgt. and from Sacramento, was maid of Mrs. Jim Richardson, Sgt. and nonor. She wore a pale gre en Mrs. Juan Rodriguez, M-Sgt. and ballerina length dress, a hea d- Mrs. Felix Seems, Sfc. asd Mrs. dress of pink rosebuds and carried Bob Summers, M-Sgt. and Mrs. a pink rosebud nosegay. Brides- Todd, M-Sgt. and Mrs. Thomas maids were Mrs. Clifford W. Mus- Williams, M-Sgt. andMr. Antho- son, sister-in-law of the bride, and ny Wagner, Sfc. and Mrs. Brown, Miss Lynne Harrower, both from Mrs. Joan Causas, Mrs.pP e a r I Oakland, California. They w ore Ardinger, Mrs. Charlotte Copper, matching yellow dresses pattern- SP2 John Callahan, Pfc. Beavet, ed after the bride's dress with Mrs. Juan Soto, Mrs. F. Binero, headdresses of yellow carnations Mrs. G. Brockway, and Mr s. and car ied yellow carnation nose- Dale Norton. gays. Mr. John W. Small of Red Entertainment was presented by Bluff, was best man for his cousin the following: Garry and Randy and Messrs. Jame Cox and Wil- Brockway, Gary Burke, Brenda liam McCormick were ushers. Sue Brown, Pfc. Dale brooks, M- The bride's mother wore a Sgt. Juan Soto, Michael Norton brown taffeta afternoon dress with and M-Sgt. Cecil Kelly. beige accessories and a rosebud Going away gifts were present- corsage. Going away gifts were present- Mrs. William S. Cox, aunt of the ed to Mrs. Lewis and Mrs. Beck- groom, representing his mother, ley. Door prizes were won by Mrs. groom, reprowder bsentingue afternoon Pete Freeman and M-Sgt. Lesley. wore aa owder u e afternoon Mrs. Bob Abbott was in charge dress and a rose bud corsage. Mrs Bob Abbott was in charge enter Mrs A. B. Anthony, grandmoth- of table decorating and the ent. er-er of the bride, was dressed in na- tainment. vy blue with rose accessories and Bridge Winners a rosebud corsage. Winners in the weekly bridge home of the bride's parents- tfollow- tournament played at Ti v ing of the bride's pow Guest HMrss on Monday were: The bride's going away cos- First, Mr.se M. Wise and MrP.ume was of white Irish l in en Isaacson; second, Mr. and Mrs. made in a princess style and a J. W. Brown; third, Mr. and Mrs. black and white fai'cloth coat with Bla mbeck; fourth, Mrs. Pollack white accessories, and her corsage and Col. Kouns and fifth, M. and was the white orchid she carried Mrs. People. on her prayerbook. Orchid Chapter Plans The young couple motored Orchid Annual Bazaar sponsored through the northwest and are at The Annual Bazaar sponsored ho t the Air Force Base in by Orchid Chapter No. 1, Order oman Washington, where Bashe in of Eastern Star, Balboa, will be Spokane, Washington, where t h e held at the Scottish Rite Temple, groom is oat duty. The bride attended Shasta Jun- Balboa, Saturday, Nov. 5, begin- for College in Redding nad t h e ning at 4 p.m. graduate of Cristobal An Italian spaghetti dinner will groom is a graduate class of Cist1951.obal be served starting at 5 p.m. The High School with the class of 1951. price for the dinner is $1 per r adults and 50 cents for children. T Tickets may be purchased from M any member 0o the committee or by calling Mrs. Louise Sorrell, and parcel post boots will be ea- , tured 'at the bazaar. There will Suchsea forInd tc sI & also be a white elephant booth olum should submitted In typ. and a fish pond for the children. writt- forand sled to one at The public is invited. te box membM lted daily In "So- he pubc is ivlted .ani d Otherwie," or delivered -- y hand to the office. Notices &A Alfred Grahams Announce meetings cannot be accepted by toeo- Birth Of Daughter *o m Mr. and Mrs. Alfred J. Fraham Pais Civ Cuncil of Balboa have announced th e Paralso Cmive Cotncl birth of a baby girl, Anna Maria, Committee Meets Tonight on Sept. 17. The Executive Committee of Maternal grandparents of the Paraiso Civic Council will meet little girl are Mr. and Mrs. Gus- In the school at 7:30 tonight to tavo Rodriguez of David, paternal discuss some matters of vital grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. importance to the community. A. R. Graham of Los Rios. All members of the committee are asked to attend. Richard Aycock Married To California Girl At a nuptial mass in St. Joseph's Catholic Church in red- ding, California, on Sept. 17, Miss Juliette Dale Musson became the installed Al Balboa bride of Mr. Richard G. Aycock of Cristobal. Father John O'con-Union hurlifh nor officiated at the ceremony. Ui hu The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford L. Musson of The Rev. Oscar W. Olsen will Redding and the groom is the son be installed as pastor of the Bal- of Dr. and Mrs. Samuel D. Aycock boa Union Church at 7:30 p.m. of Cristobal. tomorrow. Dr. Walker M. Alder- The church 'was decorated for ton, pastor of the Gamboa Un- Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Burbine of Fort Gulick wish to express their gratitude to all their friends and acquaintances for the expressions of sympathy during the pressing period of their recent bereavement. MOTHERS AND WORKING WOMEN Treat yourself to a stimulating and envigorating class in Ballet every Saturday morning starting Oct. 8 at the Balboa Y.M.C.A. For more details call 2.1751 DOROTHY CHASE Former Ballerina, Radio City Pockette and Active Member of the Dance Masters of America ion Church, will preside and of- ficiate as the installing officer. Other participants in the serv- ice will include: Rev. Louis M. Fiske, superintendent of Metho- dist Missions in Panama; Rev. Jacob W. Limkemann, secretary of the American Bible Society, Central American Agency; Rev. Paul H. W. Olander, pastor of the Margarita Union Church: Rev. Ray Blakeley, pastor of the Gatun Union Church; J. L. Phillips, president of the Gen- eral Council of the Union Church of the Canal Zone; Bruce G. Sanders, Jr., vice-pres- ident of the General Council of the Union Church of the Canal Zone; and J. L. Harned, chair- man of the Balboa Union Church Council. An invitation to this service has been extended to the public. All will-be welcome. Rev. Olsen recently came to the canal Zone from the pastor- ate of the, Riverdale Communi- tv Church, Riverdale, N.D. Pre- viously he had served churches In Worcester and Norwood, Mass. During World War II he was a chaplain in the U.S. Army, serv- ing in the United States and the Southwest Pacific. He is a grad- ,ate of Nebraska State Teachert College, Andover Newton Theo- logical Seminary, and Columbia University. New Luxury Lounge in the all new 1956,FORD Coming Saturday COLPAN MOTORS NOT SO CORNY-Corn yields on many Wisconsin farms will , be down this year, and Ralph Lukken of Madison shows why. Kernels have developed only in the center of the ears, leaving both ends barren. Wisconsin farmers are expecting a loss of three million dollars due to this year's drought. HE'S LOST HIS DRIVING PERMIT-Three-year-old Jeff Owenof Cleveland, Ohio, is a pretty upset guy. After all, he's had his driver's license suspended. It's all because of an accident he had last June with his tiny "dump truck." A neighbor, pulling out of his driveway, backed into Jeff's vehicle, knocking Jeff to *the ground. The neighbor's insurance company came across with $41 to pay the hospital bill and buy Jeff a new dump truck. That's how the state Bureau of Motor Vehicles got wind of the mishap. 'Apparently thinking a real dump truck was involved, the bureau demanded an accident report. Jeff's dad, thinking it was all a mistake, ignored the demand. The bureau became indignant at this slight and revoked Jeff's driving permit _"It's a cryin' I shame." wails Jeff.____ BY MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE Clare's friend Dot gives h e r poor firendship. The other day she went over to Clare's house to suggest that they make a doll house. So Clare hunt- ed up a cardboard carton and two pairs of scissors. Out on her porch they were cutting the cardboard when Dot's friend Gwen appeared on the front sidewalk. She called, .'Hey Dotty-come on over to my house!" And Dod went. Abandoning the doll house, she muttered, "I got- ta ste Gwen now"-and ran down the stoop to join her other friend. She never has time for Clare if the other child's around. The way she uses Clare as a convenience is a problem. But as Clare's moth- elirnds the usual' child 4vuidanep M lee on it even more of i prob- lem, she's done nothing about it. The advice is, "Help the child find new friends and interests." Today, when Clare tearfully re- ported Dot's latest betrayal, her mother thought indignantly, "How can I go out and hunt down 'new friends and interests' for Clare? Surely there must be a practical answer to this problem. . . There is. It's telling Clare to say to Dot -the very next time she appears, "Have you come to really play with me? If you have, I'm glad. But if you've come just to wait around until Gwen wants to play with yout, I don't want you to stay. I think you ought to go home and wait for Gwen in your own house." This grave and painful state- ment cannot be evaded. With our support, Clare can make it. If we must, let's stand behind her t the front door when she advances to meet her fear of offending Dot. She's got to expose it as a fraud. She's got to risk Dot's displeasure. It is this reassuring experience ol her own strength she needs-not "new friends and interests." If she gets it, we won't have to manipulate them for her. She'll lo- cate them herself, even if it in- volves a little time and some dis-! couragement. The advice that has confused Clare's mother is bad because it! protects Clare against the r e a l problem-the battle between fear and moral courage. What kind of flabby things would we all become if we went scurrying about for "new friends and interests" every time some- thing went wrong with out old ones? All right then-let's forget this irresponsible advice. And instead tF eheati~g Clare ,f her moral' batle, welcome it-and its re s - suring revelation of her own re- sources. Stop Those Horrid Lies Your Skin is Telling 'About Your Age ?;"*'9'1' .^s i^^s. r'*1F- creature crow's.feet at the corners of your eyes are often caused by skin dryness. Skin dryness is caused by your skin's inability to make enough lubricating cholesterol and esters. Penetrating Lanolin Plus Liquid used nightly as a cleauser-then a few extra drops gently massaged into your skin before retiring-next day a few more drops used as a powder base. This keep your skin constantly supplied with an abundance of cholesterol and esters. ReAdlh: dry skin is overcome-prema- ture dry-skin wrinkles quickly fade, giving you a surprisingly younger look. Get your Lanolin Plus Liquid today. Use it tonight. Actually SEE and feel a difference tomorrow morning. Liquid Ask for these e*er famous Lnea ln Pls products' Lanolin Plus Hand Lotion Lanolin Plus Shampoo Lanolin Plus for the Hair Lanolin Plus Liquid Cleanser SAGENCIAS LATINO AMERICANAS So. Amx 212 Tel. 3-4S84 Lroy. KTCHE BATHROOM~.] NI WOODW~ lORK HUDSON Wasp 1956 Hornet 2 Tones 'and 3 Tones We can now accept orders for these beautiful new 1956. Models featuring the new "V LINE." Styling power and whisper qwat engines. Hull Motors, Inc. 43 Auto Row oW continues with new bargains every day fl 93 14 '39t; ',Ui. 4AS'kt I SI '5f~l SHA W'S PANAMA COLON i-_. Our PRE - CHRISTMAS SALE Continues during THIS WEEK dC0oose your gifts on time, from our fine and varied selection offered by your favorite store 9Tl 34-20 Justo Arosemena Tel. 3-0281 I 'hi . .AS FAMOUS AS GRANDE BAROQUE WALTZ OF SPRING By WALLACE .0' Ac d Tivo At'ernda Tivoli ' ' '- _. -~r I PA I TH= PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER ,1* 1 WEDNESDAY, OCTOE8 1 195h 'I .. . S ,,; '..'.. .'-' .o; W .* .- ^ ,. .* .* ::.' <^ ..'"-* ':.^ ' *,.-"" --. - '.,; ,.""l [.. .....*,*_',_'_**.*.. .. ,. .i...,..;- ,.:--. .. ^ ^ ^ ... ,.,,,gr :.i .' -*.;; ',,:-....: . '-. ,,- i -.^ ,* -* * .^- -: .,. r,* ,F ..4 aA.. .;*~-*. -,-,T.- ,k,' . ~'~'~-~' I -4 '4' .~,__ *1,. Touring the Canal Zone and the terminal cities are some"30 members of a group EWS-MEDIA VISITORS of United States publishers, editors, editorial writers and officials of radio and TV stations. On arrival at Tocumen last night, they were met by newsman Pablo Castrellon of La Hora (in white suit). Today and tomorrow they have a busy schedule of sightseeing and handshaking. - ~'~!'~ I I i I 4 I I. t PACK The car of distinction with "Torsion L evell Ride DISTRIBUTORS 0 TROPICAL MO TORS 27 Automobile Row e Tels. 2-2086-2-31 72 "REMOVE DIRT THE EASY WAY" Your choice of two models of vacuum cleaners to fit y our purse.-Dirt goes into a disposable paper bag-and YOU neither SEE, SAEL nor TOUCH this dirt. / The ELECTROLUX deAIe, ma. chine even empties itself automatic- ally. Come in and see 9-de~wxutra. tion. AGENCIES S Tel. 2-2386 TOP MAP' MAN OF MEXICAN ARMY COMES TO CALL' Mexican Ambassador to Panama, His Excellency Lie. Rafael Fuentes greets Brig. Gen. Miguel A. San- chez Lamego (right) at a reception tendered the gen- eral by Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Lionel C. McCarr at the Army-Navy Club Fort Ama- dor, Monday night. General Sanchez, Chief of a Mil- itary Cartographic Depart- ment in Mexico, is current- ly visiting Inter-Ambrican Geodetic Survey installa- tions and the IUSARCARIi School in the Canal Zone. From' left are.: 1st Lt. H. H. Waple, Aide de Camp to General McCGarr: Ambas- sador Fuentes: Cene r a I McGarr and General San- chez. (US Army Photo) * KIDS CALL ON TIO PEPE- *Members of the Tlto 14e Club pile Into Radie Sta- vion panamnerioan a at - p.m. for a bit of .talk.bmok with radio commentator Demostenen Hassan. 4Un- ale" Pepe has a word of -fun and a turn of sdylogi and sometime a m, unter ---for his young follower. This program Is no-pan . Ish lesion but Eftgidsh making oteners fn*tI A.kup whm_.gu. -. --.*.. . . .: -,.,^-- .-- -4 , TEL AAUA MERICAN N '-I-:. -4 I E~t *;. '. 4 -.. CIRAWFORD "J" S~ No. 18 _ ---- 7 I I I I I I ill i- .MONO. E! Si . Ala, YS-^ '-J!' -p;'' MPAI i j - ;:'..: 1 ,. -"- ;'--f- j' '" . -, ,. .. .?i,. -,..:_ ,' . . ........ .. ,, .. . ... ..v:' .- ,; -** ., -^ ^ 'y ^ T i"^ r' .. . **^^HU. 1* '*'j" f*^kA^r^H^^^ Kk^f~ fi^M~^^-^ . -^ J~gi.7 . ..... ., 1,.'. lg ,I ow_ F' FELIX'S STARTING S For eaeh $1. thee prime: MAIN STORE ONLY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7th at 9 a.m. STORE WIDE REMOVAL-SALE (We are moving to our new building soee!) MORE REDUCTIONS THAN EVER BEFORE! and as an. added attraction: FELIX'S CHRISTMAS RAFFLE! eash purchase or club payment you will receive a free ticket, which entitles you to win amy me d1 1st PRIZE $1,500.00 in merchandise from any of our stores 2nd PRIZE $200 in merchandise from any of our stores 3rd PRIZE $100 in merchandise from any of our atoree AND U4 APPROXIMATIONS OF $3.00 EACH IN MERCHANDISE! BRANCH No. TvolH AVeoue -, --.- -.. . " ..., "WITH TH IG I THE WE With these traditional words spoken in the San Francisco Church, a WIT TIS RIN I T WE young Panama lawyer took one of the capital city's most beautiful girls as his bride. She was Miss Marisabel do Alba Du Barry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alberto do Alba; her husband is Dr. Cesar A. Pereira B., son of Mr. and Mrs. Bonifacio Pereira. DIAMOND S TOP GRADES, ONLY Jewe lers ASK YOUR FRIENDS, THEV WILL RECOMMEND US. I '; Z IG-ZAG received "Vogue" Patterns! to please its distinguished clientele will sell the best quality fabrics at POPULAR PRICES! Large variety of materials $1.25 up to $1.95 NOW 3 Yds. for. $1.00 -ZAG No. 17-100 CENTRAL AVENUE Just may; "CHARGE IT". JUST IN CASE rat td hear about ac. dents, Sires or the need * a tuety bond are in. ranco 'men. They and "ir companies are the s ,wlho got Paid for ring the risks. Recently Im urande Men'e As- of Panama fore. redT st Hotel El Pau- sa frstiv.sew mark. tO.s ihmtaltaton bf a Lr W_0 ieore .LINOLEUM FOR EVERY CUSTOMER Large assortment of Names, Colors and Sizes in LINOLEUM WOOLEN RUGS for floor and staircases 0 FIBER RUGS assorted sizes RENEW YOUR HOME, TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR EASY PAYMENT PLAN "EL DIABLO" of Linoleum and Picture Frames Furniture and Home Artides TEL. 24404 _-- I .- - i 7 1. * ....- :~;:~ '~;j~ JOIN OUR MERCHANDISE CLUB! $1.00 PER WEEK! At BOTH STORES K. __ Just "McCall" and ZIG i g . _ I ____ ii ' I"~L~~~ryi~re~q.m~L_ I~~~~- I~~U____~UtyZyll~.~ - -- -- --- . .P ^ ^'- , ;~:rC~' MAIN No. 21 Central Avenue f .' ; FA- *i .-7 .WMIAW .... tH ..S. Yot C * . Inexpensive ': '* LEAVE YOUR AD WITH ONE OF OUR AGENTS OR ( Vunt AA V aIt #-- , MINIMUM FOR 12 WORDS LIBRERIA PRECIADO 7 fNee h& I MORRISON th of Jab AV. & J I. FOTO DOMY Jian Arm a&V a.. a" U 9 LOUROIS PHARMACY .m w* l . CASA ZAIOO cmW 4o 9 FARMACI4AEL BATURRO No. i ilww Pn "ES AT "KH" STREt, a FARMA9IA LOMBAR&DO ' Agenda Ipternal. de PublloaM myi 45 Coeln AVe PARMAOtA LUX tw ttwomon r^*- U ..~ ..-. an f 1vin N8 Fas a, *Ir k FARMACKA S UNIDOS FARMAWIeD -*wsseria b _W__ _ _ j I -i --419 M-A.a a COMMERCIAL & MISCELLANEOUS l ALOHOLICS ANONYMOUS PROFESSIONAL BOx 2041. ANCON. C. BOx 1211. CRISTOBAL. C.z. f} C-NAL ZONE roLYCLINIC 6-week cruise to Pru and s- A . ..Z.. |1 Bturn. 65-foot yacht. Will take DENTAL MEDICAL Dr. C. e. Fibsegp Dr.h t i AI . s.m s. (Georgetown Univerity) Tivalt (4th f July Ave., No. 212 (oppm lAnen chbol PIyoiKmM) is ml RETIREMENT, LIFE yes EDUCATION INSURANCE JIM RIDGE p hse ftnaBes -0.MW S.. ,an o as lpf epr. SXFORTIIPAXTl^ S.A Penkers iShippersn- M~. PhoeM 2-2451 2-2562 Learm rldin at PANAMA RIDING SHOOl Rlinl & Jumpl I cteu a so 5 s I ma. Apo OUs ..! *alboJ a-l23S ff rt M*.- Studio El PaSamin Hotel i~mmmi ) Tel. o..1 . for a complete line Sn screws and bolts. /1w ^^ ,5K2"EWRITEB " REPAIR BBO? ICU JIVNDU POST REBTAU3ANT - BUILDING S Tel. Curuundu Slu EXPERT REPAIR SBYVi- G. J. KELLET, Ims M_-at Srew U.S. Promnuel end llte dependenta y. "We winl eliev Your" FOOT-TROUBLE eanm^ cs u mails -CHIOPODIST- (Dr. aihollsb, tna ORTEPEDIA NATIONAL s Juote Aosemm Ph. raMt I -..1.x., A i It il J A n 2 P F I P Ba 4 No Longer Dided, Would Back Adlal BATON ROUOG, La., Oct. 5 '(UP).- Louisiana Democrats. ar divided In the last preE- nml election, assured nation- Fparty leaders today they will Sthe presidential candidate Selected by the 1958 national eonvetion even If it is Adlal Stevenson. In te-1852., election year, Bate t DnocMt were bitterly diedd, iq"ariy av r the so- llId oyaltv oath" rammed through the Democrdtle national convention and the selection of Stevenson, then Illinots gover- nor, as the presidential candi- date. , Gov. Robert r. Kennon and a u r of ranking Louisiana ate Democratic Central Conn- members supported the blican nominee. President s power. At that time. the nttee placed Stevenson's under the state's Demo-, Symbol, but failed to en- hibe m. Btevenson carried the state, Wt only by about 0 vOtes. Stog thnd sate tademhave id ,o brin warr-t, facts .yder ad appareily have we men, share expense, Leave n 7 days. For further detail call ohn Ddmes, American Legioen lub, 2-2646. r FOR RENT Apartments TTINTION G. I.r Juit built Modern furnished pertments, 1. 2 bedrooms, hot, old w a t e r, hone Pename 3-4941. OR RENT:-Apartment 2 bad- moms Iliv remm,. dining reom. kitchen, unfurnished. Sin Fran- isco. Phone 1464 Balboa. OR RENTt-Comfortable and ool *ne-bedreem apartment. uitabe for aople or small #am- ly. Cale Darien No. 7. Apply: 'hone' 2-1455 Panama. erbers Recapture (Continued from Page 1) It was the fifth day of fight- Ing since, on Saturday. the tribesmen rose in the first or- ganized rebel outburst since the great Riff rebellion of the 1920s. Sity rebel commandos, In black battle Jackets and baggy lntalooas weare rpulased in a pre-dawn attack on. the outpost of TaToialt 20 miles from the Spanish zone border. In the wild Atlas mountales. Foreign Legionnaires and loval native infantrymen advanced yard by yard hunting down the Collins containing the mu- tilated bodies of soldiers and civilIans slaughtered by the rebels started arriving in Fez. In the Spa of Immouzer. on a plateau in the mountains, lay the unburied bodies of 11 per- sons. two of them children. whom the rebels had killed in their fiercest attack. Women and children who s r- vived the carnage sat white fac- ed and red-eyed on the boxes id ,suitcase the had maa.Red drah tm t)Mr homes hen rebels ast-he town a.t. Father, Son Pay $15 Each; Nabbed In Balboa Court A man who used his son to take unauthorized purchases In the La Boca Commissary was lined $15 for vagrancy this Morning in the Belboa Magis- trate's Court. His son, Vincent Brown, was found guilty of trespassing in the commissary, and also fined $15. Investigation revealed that Bernard Simmons "borrowed" his sister's privilege card, and sent Brown, his son, in to make purchases while he waited out- side. US Asks Red China Aboul 500 6Is Missing In Korea GENEVA Switzerland, Oct. 5- (UP) The United States has asked Red China for information into the 1lth week today. can servicemen still missing after the Korean war. The talks between the ambas- sadors of the United States and Communist China, which resulted sn the. release of a number of A- mericans from Red China, went tulle with four nylon ruffles start- The U.S. was standing fast on questions it wants to discuss be- fore considering Peiping's sugges- tions for a meetisa between the foreign ministers. American envoy U. Alexis John- son put the question of the missing American servicemen at the top mf the U.S. raftl for an agenda at the last session Sept. 27. Lawrence D. Bonny Funeral Tomorrow Funeral services will be held at 9:30 am. tomorrow at the Coro- zal Cemetery Chapel for Law- rence D. Bonv of Curundu who died suddenly Monday afternoon. The services will be conducted by the Rev. Paul B. Holloway cf Curundu. Interment in Corozal cemmety will foUllow. I - ml Safety Belts, CoNable Steeinog wheel, padded dash beard, Padded me visors, new deer catche and shatters pNof rear view mrrKe add to now i- P .uagt, bead dyediga. -I- Mo- g ~~~-1 .j rr~r.'~r 4 3,,oA1S~~r*~ / * ~" -2-'- FOR SALE Miosw Lnes. AT VERY LOW PRISt hand new American bet Knave Pil line tlIr; 100 and 8201 P and other sins, oiy far'oa "w' days. DIRT CHEAP PRICKSI RICON. STRUCTORA NACIOrNA, Ave Peru 7. Phone 2-0406. FOR SALI: Clarint. Lyons Mohnairch, with case. PratickaCy new. Phone B lboa 3630. FOR SALE:- Hallicraftr radio. four tuning bands, worldwide re- caption, model 5401. $50. Call Panmra-2-5490 between 7 a.m. and I p.m. FOR SALE: Almost complete stamp collection of United States, Ppname and Canal Zone. 'Alh Latin American countries. All mint series from 1931. Phone Pinama 3-1935 from 1 to 3 p.m. or 6 t I p.m. FOR SALi-? Argus 6 cam- era, 3 refluctors, 3 flash gnm, I General Electric light mtwr. I telephoto Iena, I New Home sewing machine and attach- msnte, 2 buttonhole attach- men., I hat and sho hag. Tel- ephone 2-1914 or 2-1016 Bal- boa. FOR SALE: Emerson radio- , phonograph console, 25-cycle, 18 rpm, single play, $40. Call 2-2660. FOR RENT Rooms FOR RENT: Spacious, cool, furnished room. Phone 3-4347 Panama. FOR'RENT: Beautifully fur- nished housekeeping mor, dou- ble couch, icebox, stove. kitthen cabinet, bath and entrane pri- vate. Phone 3-0638. # 3, 52d Street. FOR RENT:-Clean .emofertable furnished room. Private entrace and bath. Room can be dlen be- tween 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. every day. 46th Stret No. 34, ella Vista. Help Wanted WANTED:-Single gil, healthy for general Irusework, simple cooking, live in. good salary. No. 22 44th Street, top floor. WANTED: Nursemid. Must have references. 46tb Street No. 13, Apt. 5. WANTED:-Laundre. general houseworker. Five days week. Must speak English. J*6s Ga- briel Duque No. 11, La Create. WANTED:- Experimened cook. Very good salary. Alberte Nav- arro Street No. 26 (El Cangro-- So). N MAJ. GEN. LIONEL C. MqGARR, commanding general, U.S. Army Caribbean. tthird Ircm left) .congratulates Col. J. J. Davis, commandant, USARCARIB .phool, Ft. Gulick, after the latter received a decoration froft'he Eeuadorean Ambau- sador to Panamn (left), lHupo Mon&q-- Veloz. The "Abdon Calder6n". 0"dl etnss, was pregenteto Davis yesterday at Ft. Amadgo- fortJ' h efforts toward per.eting the instruction rendered.WH.M -eadprean studs la'the USARCARIB School. on (riglt) Is Goasalo Outlrrez L, governor of Es&;al dM rovlnce, Ecuador. (U.B. Army Photo) 'Pre-B' Parley Held Canal On Conversion Jobs Representatives of twelve con- tracting firms attended a "pre- bidding" Conference held today at Balboa Heights on the pro- posed contract for the conver- sion of domestic and industrial equipment on the Atlantic side. for which bids will be opened on Nov. 15. Women (GOP) Hafv Last Say NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 5 (UP) - Women are now givin political advice to their husbands instead of receiving it from them. At least that is the opinion of two Republican women meeting here. MNs. Richard M. Simpson, Huntington, Pa., and Miss Louise Gore, Rockvllle. Md., agreed that "wapen are telling their hus- bands how to vote." They are attending a meeting of the exe- cutive committee of the Nation,- al Federation of Renublican OFyw& E A~soets.Il FOR SAL- isKaer Trav- lw 16 0 e p svPy).i ood ViRV Frip ftP"rk-Z Pan- eonsU~~f FOR j i --4p Panti Su- per Mmr C ,M lreui 2114-C CMd. PhV e 13- 2162 lftm 4 l-a p. . FOR SALI.-.0 lak. New chluk, brakMe, 4lerw and better: $250. Ca '17-4265. FOR SALE: '1C bile "8't 4-deer, w/w. heater. radis 2 i new oma mse Ce "endition, $1oo00. Call 4473. POe SALI-! y 1952 Chev- nw tire, $945 eS wr terms. Phone 83-6256 et elais. FOR SAL.-I15 Pmoniac Star Chief CatalN, twesfon, E Z y .teO Mlt'julbeti. eIless tires. hydramdnk,. i/W.bla9W. Can be seq M athallme6 f 1. Do- Lmps, or ca ll-3101 between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. Leaving ishimus yory v-so. AUTOMODL9A FOR SALE 1952 CADILLAC "62" 4-door adwe, Radle l white- wa tires. Clr: black. A very clean car. 19j3 ;Defw OBlfT 4-door sMdian. WhItewall tires, new up- hostehry. 1950 FORD CUSTOM CONVER- TIBLE. Radio. overdrive, signal lights, new top. new upholstery. 1953 PO N T IAC CATALINA COUPE. Leather upholstery, ra- die, hydramatic, whitewall tires. 1951 OLDSMOBILE "98" 4-dr. sedan. Radioe, hydramatic, signal lights, new upholstery. A bar- -Ao. 1951 FORD CUST6M 4-door sdan. Fordemtic transmission, radle, whitewall tihe. Clean body. AUTOS EISENMAN (side Coea-Cola Plant Tel. 2-4966. 2-2616. Paied, SOUTIOUND Sixty-one pass e n g e r s are scheduled to sail from New York tomorrow for Cristobal aboard the Panama Liner Crstobal. There are also 22 passengers booked for Port-au-Prince, Hal- *1 The complete advance passen- ger list follows: Mr.- and Mrs. Robert P. Burrows; Miss Irene Carey; Miss Carol carlson; Mr. and Mrs. Edgardo Chavez; Mr. and Mrs. Rodolfo Chiarl; Miss Helen Cornue; Mr. and Mrs. Milton Davis and three children; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Dee; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Filo and three children; Mr. and Mrsi Moe Hausmann;, Mr. and Mrs. Albert 1. Her- manny and three childMni Mr. and Mrs. Roy T. HJ $7d M. and Mrs. a ifE. Mi. w Miss Oeo na Kin a Misa Blanche KIl ; Mr. a- Mrs. Yane LSves ad two hdren Mr. David J.l ,arkun nad two The meeting of prospective Women. -- children; M. and Mrs. E, W. bidders on this major Power --Meisenhelder'I and fogr ehll- conversion Project contract was C dren. Mr. LHwrence U.hrphy; called by Col. Hugh M. Arnold. Officers From Mr. and Mrs. Harold rP. hy Engineering and, Constructor Di P Re and two children; Mr. dlMrs.I rector, to answer questions anPu rto RICO deorge W. Wcirtz and t Mrwo H s- iscnuss pertinent details in the ... dren; and, Mrs. Isabel M. Whe- ecIfleations and. the proposed VStil Here la work Arnold presided at the Visi ing Here NORTHBOUND meeting which was also attend- A of officers re nly 32 passengers are ched- ed by a number of .Panama Ca- cent ar i ned tn o Army ruled to sal for New York Satt- nal representatives who are in Forces Antilles andth Armu rday afternoon from Cristobal -harge of various phases of the DireheoM h aboard the panam, of the Pan- program. u t ar re today ama Line. No passengers have Much of the discussion relat- ule d t vo ro teay tor a been booked for port-au-Prince, On@weekolen t ur...nbooked for P.ort-a-Prin.e, ed tc4 technical details of the Pnam Area Army install tour iat conversion of frequency seno iotIns The complete advance pasena- tive equipment from 25-cycle to e purpose of the visit o. to gn list follows: 0-cycle current. ensure that 'the. officers Dr. and Mr. Albert l haft It was the first time that a properly oriented in the organic k W. Crimpa; Mrs. Care "pre-biddint" conference on a zatlon, msi policies and d" la GuardiaW.C Miss an ta d proposed Panama Canal con- procedures of UsARCARIB as l Guardia. Mrs. Lil istil- rhkct has ever been held. being p to their assdgnmi t ut d d hter;sLl4 EW- called to clarify In advance var- psut and daughter; r RbOW- lous features of the bid data and After calling on the co- ostri ut Mrs. TRalphLma aos: specifications. The contract will mad .g enera and the ehf Mr.- n Ralph L 3 in the Mount Hope area. The The ro i heduled to M- m t-; ud in specifications cove over 1400 clhde l J N. McCoy, -; s Edth P. Suttoln' m iera Local contracting and electric- Lt. ol. wila Vacm Tri and Mr. and Mrs. Wsmp pc od m e......a.. e.. .,I..po.. ft wi White ad five childM.ea &l companies relresenL ea 1. Tc conference included Tropelco. 8.A.. Bildon. Inc.. L. R. Sommer, Electrical Distributors. Inc., Pe- neeo 8.A., and Electric Service Company. United States firms reoresent- ed were Rawlins Electric Com- pany Universal. EZoort Corpora- te. International General E- pmft a. Weltan I e Mectrie, DMnMan strm In Company, Nat 0. Harlem and Amao- Tibetan aristocrats wear elon- tedt af sleeve ding their fin. lw to show that heir hands are Mot their iveibiood. 8e a MeJ. George Theo are scheduled retn Prto Rica on Oct. COUGED UP C mf mRa. -( to bm a W 'u d oil removed, loan d ,ur Novinam intm. the yamaer cougeda, diolding thm =e!. Anew 12 yav wl9 be in thef le 1956 FOlD COLPAN MOtOS FOR SALE Hsugsd FOR SALI,-Uwt trip: dininM nk- L&A rafto. Easit. Slym. It.m t 1At. 3. "-- m.t .J .t l 1 Hrll-. soe Mai lieg. in,.. FOR IALl-Oi aChinee pray- Sg. fNeHwe 0848 Balba. Call SPOt SALE- I lg bedroom p,3 I kfy bibeem set, living Ml ant. habdu m t. All this SIn rfoe f CeW Aiddress: 45= Ne. Ia., Ap. 3. Ma- FOR SALE -Malbeiny bedreoo Mo. ged oendflti. Will usn- flJ- 49k Stre e No. 9, Bella P .AI. Dining moom set Itf of on table and eight lIun, e goad eanditie. Phone FOR lAkE;Sea-S f bomb" 6- US'Sr, 7 plo;s ream air-con- dfmeer, %-hp. 'TYmaire' mod- el A75; freemer Phile 6'x4'; sat Of Chine rage. Cell Panama 2- 2007. Casey Stengel Sadder, Wiser Man Today NEW YORK. Oct. 5-(UP)- Casey Stehgel, a losing manager in a World Series for the first time, was a sadder and a wiser man today. All through the night the 65- year-old manager, who led the New York Yankees to five world championships and six American League titles in seven years, was his own greatest secondd guess- er." '% played the wrt" Steal saM. f1h=8 "nal . p~ned. VO, I figuredIeMtit ne last and I had our hFtrj taking the pitches. But he Ild last and I was wrong-they should have been up there swinging from the first Innlg on.,' Casey, who said he'd be back next year to "try to make the Yankees world champions a- gain," picked Duke SnMer, the Dodgers' slugging center fielder as tie man who hurt the Yan- kees the most. "He hit four home runs a- gainst me," Stengel said, "and you gotta say anybody who does that hurt you the most." As for the seventh amd deai- sive ne, Stegel pl ed left- fielder Sady Amre' brilliant catch that was convetl Iate a sixth-nning double play as the key play. Bily Martin had walked to start the inning and QGl McDOu- galeded by beat out a bunt. The rally was eut off, however, when Amoros seared Berra's fly close to the Ia field foul line and relayed to Peewee Reese in time to catch McDou- gald off ftit. "Oil shouldn't have take such a lead," Stengel said. "He should have conceded the chance that Agoros would catch it A have been willing to settle to go to third if he didn't." I "But," Casey concluded, dil's a man who played good ball for me all year and Im not gonna make him the fall guy. If there's a fall guy. It ought to be me." Sooza Wifiws From I.. Fmac The Stud Montellmar, owned by Nicaragua PresidMent Anas- taslo Somoa, and oe of Juan Franco's largest and mot sue.- ceassful racing stables h recent years cleared out of tIe local racing picture for wad eter- a.Six o se. Aty, Toire Chinpeaits. RemeuP Upiciftl, mad Fan, mft byFA le Plae yesterday af r we165e -Accozapanylg S.i W5ee were tmui of a -inem beam havl wi is winr ofnw this mml I<,1. US NOLS EXCHANOR rw AM pICAa Vit Av I FOR RNTI- pIHw w. .- |_ .- -- ...kl --- --.,------ -. ,- FOR RPNTha 2-bid- ro e est a H1 MI M n- 2 pwrhweli, r dining- ream, khilcen madi ms $120. Cerreeil N S 160. Can m --babton eys In ent. Phan n 2-2724 #OR RINT: Cempl. eaf ur- nkishe esmelr hneoe 1.*1sI, two bedreems. Road fl P- tHll sirfield, N.. 109. Cl I- WANTED' Miseellaneous WANTEID.v.y you,.ng desires vaatlon quawte bdf Oct. 12. Refemenes fnmlshed. Call 3-3234 after 4:15. WANTEID-2 mued foam rubber matresses for shile beds. Muot be In god endiMle. Wgi pay up to $25 each. Phone Panama 3-4982. 1 a.m. ft 6 p.m. SR- Piw. -U WI SW?, el teii. mflr a " ",, RESORTS Low 0a1 ft" NJLLf CeaW m Comaol sCo Okra6. BoI n45. V 41. Phone Pasme M1877. Cil .rim i T B194wnr 1955 Chovhe lp with uPo 'MA u Buear-dc. epmeao. Prdtbeek. Bl ri c 1224. I- modibse bA-es. Phone b.. * WANTED Antomnolhles WANTIDS- Will pay east fr 1934 *r 1955 Chovriet with' Pew, S,-ldq, flur-dsvs s'ad.. Must I bargain. Phne Calen 94. ____ Bill Lewis, D'on Hause Chrysler-Plyiouth Tournament Tilists Don Hause rill have the op- and thi retrds show that each portunity to become the first re- know _is wqy around te paens vm,* .nmne, in tku nhrvaler-Plv nnulr he' to ni math Win be de~. CI, tournament; sponqored by nquge esur ZW M"WroMR tA. rowfU&. a. ef Colon, n 4 and . 1183 when he trimmed Antbal fSecpnd hV*rn tder o- alindo. Hause and Lewis will feat d Fred dt it1 U play at 1:00 pm. Saturday. L. Collett deeat Bll tits 1 SCaptain Lewl reached te upird.t Fih- Crad- finals over Bob hurdle, 3 and 2. defeated r 2 and Lewa, with a plkop on No. 2, per dNo ,ted1'J"immy one over. Fifth Flight--ter de- Don Hause had thin g all his heated J. An t and ; own way going out, not losing a gooy defeated PFr up 1 up. hole and turning the crfer 4 Sixth FUlht-.Bg] j.s de- up on Don Mathieson. Mathlseon feated F. S'walt Camp- nine. 3veupellanvan am roared back to win No. 10 and bell deflated M. Lt 4 ud 3. gSeenh t l.ast. latte hrWulf 11 on a birdie and a par. but Seventh fllgh . Marek- that was all.' ars on No. 12 and field defeated H 4 and 13 Hot Hause his 4-up lead bachi 2; Lewis MtNateat and two pars later Mathleson B.M. etampfll 3 anjl .vT- was closed out. Hause' medal Eighth Flight-foe Wfl de- on the day was 74, a 3 o n each heated A. t Van OidCl up; nine. Dave BeNl advanced oq 4 douba Next week's final match prom- default. * 1ses to be a ding aong affair with Sadlev ent ghtF1 Maerck- the name of the eventual winner son defeated Jan :Hwdtlulst I in the lap of the gods. Both up; Madelon Garretm dqated Hause and Lewis are long hitters FaBye Day 1 up. , Gold Dust By US.EB T MOMX COLON. In what turned out. to be a bloody but uninteresting fight, Pedro Tests, Panama's_ featherweight champ, atifledI Santiago Martinez' chances of fighting here again soon as he opened a nasty-okng ash over the Cuban's left eye at the Colon Arena Sunday ntAlght- The lack of latereft was due chiefly to the fact that both men are ounter-plcheM and during moat of the fight were ar ly contented to wat for he other to lead. Because this fact, the Cuban's debut was very decep- tie. He is a mueh better fight- er than many belwe. In the late stage, both boys came on in flrrlwes to amaen- tarily thrill the ralaSr-Med crowd. In os of the flurtfi, Tels went to his kee referee Al Brown ruled it was a dip, but It was the oatnn at rinis tha the 12-pound king was floored. we are wish th M who aw the Nb a Attff dght to the at, qumetkn B n latr, we' on top of hi, heas. Tas bled from his nose errlyn ' fight. . The light of the blood i o*i not only the boxers, b ~imk y who left the arena hoaae BthW tried to furthertincite btl to more action. 3 IS Post fight commIntarM e termed to some xtoz t ftt of a Panama City resident re- fere In the Toto Ibarra- ^ a lazar semi-final. Vivian made his Colon debut and 1 u be commended for doing a len- did job. Many unenlightened indtri- duals who have taken It themselves to lteIz.e .evey Ac- tion of the CDC, started e *,'m the CDC for uswft a Pssia referee." Their reason =iy unfounded I thAt no -n o resident can refer in a True to the very Wd- now Ion boy has lUids to V*a .14 Panama. itt A berto MOU a z- Seretary of the - oaint l jMeia- bo he l M ttO-eo fl- IiMs. 'L .. .. It tth lsr liiteli loa evit a Stewartm, Me - sas esh. "P . n r ,m a ta tf l '4',~ -~'~~ - ~m mm -.- --' mmm m -t - - 1. 7t* - wV *" * _.1, 7 WE i:' no _ __ o _ --.wd f-i.AL I fr mm ---------- I -I '' - f I*' m I" [ I 1 , I -1 I I I I I * ^ Ik' y l- *, . '1 i -I . . 'V qU - Am . WK..:W 9.OR, *aug .1~U" X 2:p.rw, -; . . MJANI W ART, AMIE tm aR-a - AON Rl"K "; NANCY GAes, 1"ATEK SON OF KANSAS 7. .c:rac esKoat C 1X PEAR CAB! ftseharI~3i4-ht Phyb* Uzk. in CANYON CROSSROAD .- Also: - MARCIANO vs. MORE 'FIGHT Icl If. CILA .THEATI THEY RODE WEST In TECHNICOLORI Johnny WEIBSMULEU, lan JUNGLE MOON MEN. .1 .1, y . CRT VENGKANC -Also: THE GOLDEN I I -. T.L' ff e AdveiSa -*. Rd Sanctified Chur ch .ChiO G d T,-. Ho--d .u.. ..t -JACKRABBIT, A PL PARIS,' Oct. 5 (P) PrinceV arie C.eoont S . .. , l.B, 6 NOT A P0F S6 LESS . AJy Kha n began a sx-week visit A Program of vocal and instru- / I / He MS. today wi hi fve-year-old daugh -mental items will be sponsored on g \W Ster asm after a midnight sup-Oct. 14 at the Jamaica Society . by I k -- 1415 M A ACUTr / l kper with her mother, actress Rita hall in Cabo Verde by the Sancti- L 1 ...UN. ..e OF ''A~N f*.... 4 Hayworth. fied Church. of God. A i ' *.- O 1SAL1, -/* Dark-haired Yasmin Khan ran A number of local artists w IIll I 3 B 1 MBlNE JONOWN movies P better than ever to- past newsnien waiting outside her participate on the program, in- c' .i. .Tm> -N" f CMfepigWigt day. mother's fashionable apartment eluding Olga King, Myrtle Green. Ci dish-actg (AN MOTust S MA studilelapag house and de away in a limou-Joseph BIshop, A. Charles Edwin Y0 o -(NEA.- Ho-at de screen is MOth CentTry- sine to begin the visit with her Seales, Lucille Forde. the Meder- siUy, but a child that ts I ke on. lyO On TV: Now that film magiFO Oct. 5 with, a one-hour ta- father, under the terms of the nairs, the Victory Quartet, the adults a delinquent. tarwd studle falir n "Cavalcade," co-starring /A.SA L Reno divorce which Rita got from Kings Four and other. - l- the infer- Merle Oeron and ehaWilding, ThAly.. t The program will begin at 8 p. S b w-budget folwed by Robert agner in "The mAB 6M The limo.ine returned a few m. nl bafdthe aBl fOx F t" And "Laura," SMBminutes later and the chaulfeur S w i aRUNobv( with obert k ,eorge Sand got out a d leaded aboard Yas' the zoo and the Eiffel Tower "and E LA nur. dl;. ers add Doana yter. mm 's luggage. forgotten in t hall around the town where here TODAY at th "CENTRAL" vfqwiththahehir rm-beating An indepedet t produc- Waitig for the title princess in "t a ta ed.secluded in her with Ja.-e graf&%h""Sfi~flm, as first e r predigteiiiere^out- that ly towu house at^ Nouily were fourth-flo w-fabtlousapartment. Warner;Bros. Pre~ s 'and the |moe stufdd wooW sloughoff SE 112% "m- M her graldlq^,er, the fabulous Aga l0urtn'01r apartment. i i -- f -- a 1 MGN Parade shows roved that teir telefilma and load then with Khan and. ea crates of toys, _A oM rar-h advertisingP theyF we *ANP WHEN PLISHT s16AtFVi*X1 .. 1 ..'- and, ohl..# collected them for not qualify as entertainment. He TAK6ES OFF, a zERlN6 -1 S 4 ROLJNP h r Yasmin Ina preparation for her Bwi rH 20-FooT F5OUN1 visit. * ATE A RJ1 V~llte tithefilsjets of iAly lso collected a new flock of "Cavalcade'" at Fo'ex, and watching romantic, rumors when he slipped S A the Warner and MGM TV debuts, o Rita'a botel suite after her SI see no cause 'for alarm IF the arrival Moiday night and brought G 8J.0-.. r mafjors maintain the quality of 1 her a chmapa~he midnight su p- their initial shows ac Walt Disney --- per. Ihey visited until the early vourS pe Ca ty Statio0 has done. m- --, hour. of the morning. (Etel t-3 Fven scenes from new -movies : -- -.7 Ally A told Intimates he intends *-" can be more entertaining than to entertain Rita with trips to the Wks"-W 19w 110ule M91t panel sb6ws, scratched 38 films WA1 s1 .... s theater, night clubs, and ballets. land cheap half-hour W ins,- Shown his daughter asleep in a SPr n hotel room converted in a nurs- I ,," Televis is frtt te Red Chia Wiing To Negotiate hotel.r om onvertS. r H., ---- r coating onteMtter pill." ply wonderful." He-has seen ier S-. only a few time since the divorce Tedy, Wednesday, O. The best commeriol announcer Formu osa Proble Me non' Repor three years ago. .. ... .,l a. .. .. d.- . ... "He said he could hardly wait for_ 3: b-b usie i. Wci them know. PMet htson moved her to awaken and play with him. 4: Feature Review into TV with Jack Benny and -The dashing Moslem prince 4:30--What's Your Favorite they're not forgetting the sugar UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Oct. 5 The Chinese problem, "concern- planned to take his daughter to, 5:30-WNews y .Qur Favorite coating for the sale pitch. Benny's (tP). India's East-West trou- e( two great countries. Chin od c:35--WWhata Youur Fao TV commercials ,ith Don are as ble-shooter V. K. Krishna Menon atid the United States." .t be '-J-s (cont'd) .. entbrtaining as they. were on the reported yesterday that Corn- The roving Indian ambassador A background for a. gun ames.n 6:0 I n B s FOIRT radle. -munist China is "willing and. rep rted that vialts this aum~r .. ..a star ot Co.uia;jl Pictlea' "THE MAN FROM 6 15- UE KI r,.i anxious" to negotiate a peaceful to Peln and to Washington and co-star Aicx Nicol on a baren plateau in t 9 : REVIEW I UT MOST LJV-TV ecommer- settlement of the Formosa prob- Indicatedto him that both gov- Indian country of New-d aico, director An 6:..elachrnd Muca ials? "Awful," as on. Th re lam ernment could title their pro u ed erlnundred head of cattle, among t C) ,U.M aendn thoap s "f do rs em ingeeht ad le t eir otlaclaveo, today releamd at the CENTRAL Thqatre l 6:4S;O8- ,'GAwMardc h tof t'5O Indian sources said China had JmB b drec netllo. 1:00, 2:42, 4. id. 65:54, 9110 pie. A ? 7'i:00-H sn*' SA 0 ,8"ows And forgetting .to fit r- ehmphae d to Krishna Meono .. "S9.i:0:4,4'5,9"0 p, - .ODIEB.. h sonalities to the commercials. Ihey that it wanted the United States K1ishia m anon aid he "wani.- 7 rt Frod "Mrtin So OSI lac ... ... digit .... when ... 7:15..Freddy M The U.S. lack digni ty An when a ommer to udirstand above all that it ed 16- qalme cdar that we hr 7:O Pt From T cml lacks ydit thte's no hones- would not use force to take thde a or er "the . A. I Space ty or T.Island bastn. 'thetources said br qfaneA o i .A .(ag) Doa's India based at but g vr T.- am SR__ p___W p Mc W y -,1.: b-- .rir teacht-a cher.-.-&m Bd. d- s' ,ou for the .. rleutr - Ic oh Mi Brokt teita t. t o ed on the at h ir d'the U.S. agreement 1:0 ,et D. OrA By ha.oniy one student--theif ~ weor to "throw the hydrogen to srnd home "or provide the , l;i- ag. Off. actor m the show, 1-ye d r omb awa y." facilities" for the return of 1 2 .Vera. Chinese students in this country Tm w,- h s oct. -" Art Linkletter is denying printed In a. long, rambling speech, with. having "broken the Ice" be- Tem Thrdy Oct. re orts that his contract with Krishna Menon touched upon tween China and the United hia P-eAofm -s of thr atomic energy, the Geneva _____.,_,_,__e "-- kClub (rnuaest-.liar willput Inm m theactinag ___, ......nIer ,Ge.......,,____ :'5-4ed ear -master oa bi show Jan. 29 cel Organiation and his country's '.?, , 10:00- No Beverly Hills and another idea he's "to a cener 10:05--Off The Record (request& not talking about yet. His theory He :0- se phone before 8:39) btout the specs: "I want to make of difficulty in the world are phee3ews 2) ordinary people the stars, like we Europe and Asia." On Germany \ , 11 s The Record(cont'd) do on 'People Are Funny. he pointed out It was not that .:-m The Entertainer ii e nation that was divided, but the :9.'A ... THE O HORuoUS of marijuana world." - Pi't-. smoking is the first subject spot "..The most Important part of 2:95^L" .unim. Melodies, lighted in a TV show aimed at Asia. in the present context," 1:30-S-weet And ot ee-agers, "Sandy Wright, world Krisna Menon said, "Is China." 1:00-Nowa Scout. It's the pilot of, a series 1:15-Music Of Manhattan starring one-time film star Tom I ...on -o t ,F.Oisnee.. Brown and produced by ex-New Sit Of The Vikings rker Jo Ward. FOR new al F A b coupler of telefil nucer D S new .00- -ns-i. tI, apers Jack Gross and Phil iane. have Thund-bird V. now --- 1Sngi g 1 Americans added thatr movie maiBn t tunorr V-8 now 2-' :S20TS dozSw hlIf their home s ten productw=a at l Cri 2.45-ank. And pte lainbow minimum of six features a year. in the Ranch m.y- Their first is "Please Murder Me, ' :00-Pano Patterns. but there's been no cry of "let'. 1956 F ORD "Ioyl CeoinI Shimmennh 3:1-Fred- Martin Show murder them" en movie row. er- I avNhW kat S*:0- "ature ReviewI "If the major studies can nake Watch for it at jiV f efr uL. Yen get arW :t--Watr.t Your Favorite telefilms, wo can make movies," big sewving frow@ wy Pe1' (requesta-please phone says Jack. Both wre movie pro PANT MAOR l 09&e. When you shoep-o fa be :) ducen before the' to over flm- n CO L N MOTORS Iobn. 5: -New jag of Big Town, the Lome Wolf ' 5: e--at's Your Favorite and othe telefWlns. II',_, _, . (co t') ' 6:00.-The GORATLANDr RICE ---- STORY (Lou Glud) 6:15-jRRIDON SPORTS S OIf ROAN M5..0-" 71: -Preidy iarun Show 7:0-40ourneo Into Space PARTY 8:-Take it From Here ( C1 iiiiAsked For it (re- uease phone be- 10:3L.M :ews 13: s." ic Prom Hotel El Pan- I: Oft Dreaims r:i TOireaimusiiy tr IOfa sabels Dr oNa pstisn gsoon AT WN E L HoI.w-T hjmB tetlUaal Dbmio at AYOO Man. .......11 i .-ow Ben-M ,pUn opened a SMw day camvetla hi- -. ity-- bh*' m central "d sButO Asmica, as weU as top executives from te united WtS ae attemg t meeting. -. . i.Paama as -the aMI aft- menttaUton, headd by Coatantino Dionsurde manager of i3Ch;h'z' .. i U~ Goodrich TIRES We are sacrificing our entire stock >f tires at prices unheard of before Formerly NOW 520x13 4 black ply ............... 14.50 10.90 Wxl3 4 black py ............. 190 13.55 640x13- 4 black ply ................. 23.00 15.3 SWaZxI- 4 white ply .............. .00 16.1 44013 4 white ply .......... .... 25.40 16.45 ieli5- 4 black ply ................ 29.30 2051 xl5 4 white ply ................ 340A 24.2 670xIS 4 black ply .............. 26.25 17.87 71015 4 black ply ............... 29.10 20.37 70015- 4 black ply ................ 31. 2 J0 Mx14- 4 black ply ............... 21J 16.?6 gOlXi- Iblack ply .............. 295 2A MxHl 4 black ply ................ 2p.50 2M5 MU 6 black ply ............... 3L9 25J3 70015 6 baek ply AL PFURPOSE 45.90 32.13 7eglX 6 ply COMMERCIAL ...... W.M 28.4Z z16xl I ply COMMERCIAL ...... 50.75 35.52 T5"S2O 1 ply HBAVT DiT ...... 1.015 5.75 2 12 ply UNIVRMAL ........ 1135 79.45 Come in and get yours at once for our stock is limited! OMPH:ROY'S No. 38 Automobilet Rw * Tel. 3-5381 Sor EXTRA STRENGTH, VITALITY, I I. mnd STRONG NERVES S-w New petrgy a. 4 .sm. h for o. *TI fa the rmoj o.f ta"hi.q P d .urine every day. YoTi have stranger ncrvs, a bott. B a ppeuai, a ca ncr brain. Siwa.At z-I .0 weakness will vanish and you wil .j enjoy life. Get Phosferime w. . ,., 9. -.* wm ill ha . *l S 2-' -^" ,I.:"; ,I I -'..**" S.5 6-.U , v.." ' The 6' U 7~^NO . E *. -.. ~aW~ARTT. 14 -MA.-63m P, _ _ - ,, " r'lis~=,~~ I._ T-m. tANMA AAMURICA -A AR GIs Get Quick Lift: In Air Ambulance Fleet ANTONIO, Tex. (ATP) tents th rou gh out hbe Armed Group, a part of the far-flung Al.ofs aerial ambulances shut. Forces. Military Air Transport Service, as- *lck and forth across the Servicemen and their depend- sures economical use of personnel with commuter-bus devo eats, veterans, merchant marina- and equipment by the simple trick meeting schedules and the era, sAd in some cases civilians of putting every man and plane to el serves in a dedicated are eligible to use Air Evac, with war. r. Uncle Sam icking up the tab to pilots who fly the- hospital the tune of 750,000 a month. Of the 2 men and women who 'the air call their mission The Pentagon wants to give the compose the Air Evac officer A rc, short for aerial evacua. ailing serviceman the best possible corps, only 30 do not fly as either Sn. t's the peacetime ortgrowth care at a government hospital pilots or flight nurses.Even Group S large-scale air movement of nearest the man's home. With Air Commander Col. O. H. Rigley Jr., sieh d wounded during World Evac doing the job, the patient who rates his outfit "the finest War and the Korean War. gets there faster and gets back on group in the Air Force-bar his job faster than if transported none, take a regular turn in Tholgh s k imp p y by wartime by other means. Thus the govern- the cockpit. tend s, the current edition of ment feels the man-hours saved The wings of Air Ea re '1* for the Wounded" handles Jfrtify Air Evac's expense. The wigs of Air Evac are 26 S,000 tients a month mostly But more important, Air Force C-131Bs, commercialtype Convairs v men who are stricken while officials maintain, an ever-ready equipped with litters, and five aO d y. Air Evac system can convert to or-engine c-54 Skymasters. TheyI A n r b h full wartime mobilization on short cross the country on regularly Am lance servip by air has al- noI should an emergency arise. scheduled twice-weekly trunk line noast totally replaced train and I a dedicated bunch of fly- sbip movement of long haul pa- boys, flight nurses and ground crews that makes Air Evac work. Bm mm m Lt"Part of it is the mission," said ve thl g for nadqr of the Air Evac squalron 'a V Ai Webster Force Base, Ala. "It's knowing you are doing some- afety in the new thing humanitarian today rather than training for something to- FORD morrow.' 956 FOR ut perhaps the most remark- able feature of the little-known op- t will be here eration i, that 31 planes and fawer / then 1,000 officers, men pnd flight Saturday nurses do the whole job. Feeder Flights aAN MOTORS Feeder tirhtspr The Air Evae team. known for- i.. mally as the 1706th Air Transport ;WON 1 m l a------ - - l 6th U.S. President rAnwer tO Previous rPUnli I L ' ACRO5SS 47 Cublc meter a" e 49 Pewter coin L mth U.S. of Malaya dent, 50 Number _L Honesto-" 51 Danger Io was born 52 Hen product aI ae 33 Worm a ----54 Large plants The Civil 55 Legal point av during DOWN t Priced 36 Hunting dog is tem 1 Sacrificial 10 Hiaerm was -37 Come forth Olative block not very 38 Rugged ard 2 Defeated 21 Expunglngs mountain litary 3 Lure 23 Dealer in dry spur an 4 Head covering goods 39 Compound eaw 5 Winged 25 Having antlers ether lak e ,Irk 29 Palm Ily 40 Eagle's nest naly sa '7lnsert 0Babylonian 41 Small.Unes cnte 8 Born deity 44 At this place reh ed 3 Expends 33 He freed the 47 Seaport (ab.) tiptoe needlessly 48 Measures sed by 10 Biblical mount34 Foreigners of cloth lthdraw through needle's eye pproascb , t of danger Pronoun isas o Tie' lootheshit da on Good I flights, carrying patients to and from 400 government hospitals. Sut this Isn't the half of it. What Rigley calls the "bread and but- ter" of Air Evac is a system of feeder flight-something akin to shuttle buses-that bring patients into the trunk line points. And, uf course, there are always. those urgent calls. A polio victim in Great Falls. Mont., a man dying of a brain tumor in Memphis, Tenn., the crew of a plane suffer- ing from burns following a crash. Feeder and urgent flights go out from the five Air Evac squadron headquarters-at McGuire AFB, N.J.; Scott AFB. IL.; Brooks AFB. Tex.; Travis AFB. Calif., and Brookley-as the need arises. ARROW LIGHTWEIGHTS S ...your smartest way to coolness These ore perft shirts for you if you want to look smart-yet feel relaxed all the day through. Their fine tailoring assures you up-to-the-minute ... yc.. and las" comfort, too. They are made of M y kep C01. ' And you'll find them in virtually every color and pattern you could want. Look fresh... and feel re- freshed ... with ARROW lightweight Shirts. ARROW SHIRTS g- RIgIllar TXL TRAD.-MAMRK . first in fashion with men's while and fancy shirts, ties, handkerchiefs, underwear, sportswear, slacks, swim trnks and boys' wear. Doctor Arrives By WILSON SCBUGOS N( ANSwEs MAJST E rN BAD,~~d The Tender Touch SIR, rs MD MY' CAR I A YO COQWit.AJUT By AL VnRMn t K -*a~ -,* ' -r',, 7 * .'-% .: -. ,"--, ,'* '*. " B.o , r ^. '. ^ \ ; *1'' OIaY, S. T RftR A SW MlNW Fat. lt M Y * Up! TA FRECnU n AND BI URlDII ALLnr oo OO0T SEEM ^ ^ T'BE ANY- HEY, WAITU BOW HEREf ISNr THAT^ NOW. SOMW ONE IT S l THERE ( SU .FLON THO 1 V l^-FLOORx BOOTS AND HER BUDDII rr ' CAPTAIN MUAs T1iC LINT BOAwDIMO NUOibs '5AH, AW N BE HEARIlt Shelf Tet Queeta Is Out! Why Not? 'O jaz.L Iamo i pT v. T. 8AMUL U! UDGAR MARTIN amo'TTOR voww skc4 7 .o4 1 *V n -w 1, You Win, Gale my LSLI Tl Concernbng Flowers By JAT BRAVILIm MAlWmo uooa oMu OUR WA2 F'' < kET"Ilns, OV E w MAQTMAI- KGlcK."HeaO MenO., MARRTeA a. TO "- "k41 ascoSm arR& 5THEN SeV4ALKt TOR 7H'-M ILEj A aTrS o* n= FOR AuC S BWo *uWWMI Thanks radday! 7,.- I. - .- -. ' -: 4 144 1 I I' ^ 1 i t iIi $., I I 3 s " s TORI OF MARTHA WAIVN Sa, a a CNMTE11H.H.e W S TALKNM1TO ROOnM SOMtgCg..TWN WE SAW H NEWDED=A y^ *rDoc gosc- ^ ^ !. Lke That? LI 3. L. WILL -.-- ..umna .a EIR. Jap St I- 1 -4.- -. .-:r ITS~nBBr /L*%T A. REAL PA-W PM4 O N.: lN0UK.~7j R - ~ ~-- --- - -- -- - --- II . .V ~*,~ Ib Irne Fs ~~- ~ .., .. ,- :. . .. . : ^ ^ ;,.: ".- ;.:...: -.-,._r i. . ,- '" e Call Mde Using. ys. OfSun For Eecriiy It was Justlike any other tele- I hae.n. yar hone call over 5.modern tele- day?" Matttws phore system *.iW that In- when put 'A. .'o , w.gas j by bat.I ( a t siST.' I-rI fm t ederam tery. dont aow..wAether you Farmer Geor" e L. Mathewu know IL" e'resoA1 "but we made the first a-ioered"eil are tala on a teleone line to talk to a warehouseman about that's tising the auf for electri- his cattan while a sall group citi.' of dentist and telephone com- "No, didn't know t. but povy officials stood by. that's certainly fine." Bummer- "It',Uwas co pltely suc Ges- .or said. Sl," asw a spokesmanat the t Mathews aor d the s. demonftratlon. MVthewas. toric tfyst "gf1 o a warehouseman E. Summer- amplted M t minutes at ford's voice ca.ll over the line 10:02 am~.'n from sevser. miles awat as tIne. : .atio the tet was doped in othW e r yo samplImIty in Iself. The solar tem lats ect madetey was placed atop a tele- ness had noi nced ne hoe pole to collect and storv viously until tofay It had theo o a wsenergyand when time never used outside fo elex- came for the teat It was u ked L aidmentg.room. dto Math ews' 11e yeplaciW, the 'odari t demonstrat.ln was conventional powic er tsuppl n e 1 pro theolr battery Tho battery mis awaIe as wer. normal o. er receptacle with 432 li o he an ordinary waslenh dew, on theflato, trace tes was Mathews' telephone. In his a.mpl ThQe cinells Tr e sotuse, was barked back Spaces where c dns ar e le- re lar power source and pthb to Mathew' le "the dar demonstrsto n "m w card to send through mail solar batbattery removed for fiar- and are made of a refined form their tests. of common sand. Americus was chosen for the demonstration because of usual- ly Ideal climatic conditions In the town area which lies on. a smooth hill with surrounding flatlands. However, the weather was wet and blustery here to- day. But th better had bee All po"o asocowbrleb will be.available in the Al new 1956 FORD COLPAN MOTORS The sun's rays are caught In the solar battery only to an In- finitesimal extent compared to the'- heavy industrial .output of current possible from. artificial generation. jBut, said a Bell spokesman. "we think.now it might be used .ecenomially for copmunication -u where commercial power Is "available and :where small a- mounts of power are sufligent" The solar battery has no mov- ing parts or corrosive chemicals and hence should last Indefin- itely. officials said. It operLtes on a very small amount of light -a candle or flashlight will ac- tivate the cells-and bright sun- light l by no means required& 041_ Be1 a elh t 0. L. Pearsbn of Milmuitoa. N.J.; D. M. Chapin of Basking Ridge, N.J., and C. S. Fuller. Chathamn, N.J. developed the battery. They say It Is 15 per cent more effl- clent than ny type of solar con- verter previously Invented. THE INTEREST AND EMOTIONS OF "THE PARIS EXPRESS" Make it o me ogthe most ihterstmfJ i-. -.. A^-J^ srA.L:. --. ^ta eLA i B~ -: .,.1 T endence Goal Drawing, ear For alay Federation S- - tOrO- .(UP).- Oneofthe pti thew ait t Mall*, which Just took a -e ountry: ...- W hh stard ituo. independen .0 tew* Pn. it the Reds re- 1 uI . i muesty offer. "I wll ut there little chas-e tae i e e country's mm n.alq-i .o -rat. .,wealthy la a,Jb1 wage a war to e tmin auovr-to t th Con-iunistu." Reds, evni .bmen it finally 'does eth Brigsh oppo aFIy win taull idependencer h. esty, there were indications ,. le war withRrW terrorists may got his way Afte i has ,&,ed with varyit degrees. o t erence with l i Bi- for more than seven yea, Ish ial on the subjethe said but the Communists have made no that "a very considerable measure gains toward driving out the Brit- of agreement has eben reached." iah and taking over the nation. The Communists have yet to be The Malayan campaign. to win heard from. Jadependence by peaceful means, Ten gkuhas placed his tiny.ja- however, is making steady prog. tion= fimwl on the side of the west. reps. He has promised that an inde- rn July, for the first time in his, pendant Malaya will remain with- ory, Malayan ctMiens elected a t We British commonwealth and ajrty tp the Federal Council- will eCoperate in "matters of na- eir lawma body. a tIoanal se against external ag-; S for he r e, Malaya, on g.reaon. Segot Its first ehief minister On traa and foreign aid, Malati -'Tfu Abdul Rahman, son of a ya is Independent but anti-Red. , sltan, former jyboy and chamr! "A fre. Malaya can seek pe t the pea t. ecenomchelp of any democratic M.alayan thus won control at na..i e u ay "But a their government, with the excep M lar s d na ek, any w tio of, defense, financial and of fro soviet Russia because foreign affairs which are still s"1 is on thb other side." handled by theBritish. Until alabya acquires sefgo- Tengk-u, h d of a three-party ernmep.t or independence. The alliance a litiom, was elected on questioe'f recognition eor trade a platform calling for full inde- with Red China does not arise, al- pendemee from Britain in four though-some rubber quarters have years Ad amnesty to Communist been agitating for trade with the terrorists in the jungle. Red mainland in order to boost But despite the amnesty offer by the price of rubber. the Cambridge-educated leader, But Britain's adherence to the their Went.o indications the Reds United Nations' embargo prevents would faindhim easier o deal with any such step. A self-governing than the British. Malaya even within the common- Tengcu feels that since bullets wealth however could trade with have Ole to stop the Jumgle war, Red China, just as Ceylon is doing somne other means must be tried now. I A L BO A FRIDAY -9:00 P.M. OUR -SECOND BIG S N E: A PREVIEW' ? ? ? ? WON, DIABLO HTS. :15 -8:10 Grace KxLLY "Dial M For Murder" Color! - S Tiru. "THE DESElT BONG" wthh rs b as Claud aIna and beautiful Ma ' Toren, this secslolor' dratm s of suspense and Intrigu, "THE PARIBS I ,RZSS." makes you feel you are right there taklna part In thrills the like of which the screen has flever known before. Advt. SPECTACULAR TOMORROW! I RELEASE CENTRAL LOVkR!... ROVtR!... WARRIOR BOLD!..; The picture of a thousand thrills and delight.. From battlefield to boudoir! .'SON OF SlMIA D" ) STARRING , DALE ROBERTSON SALLY FORREST LILI ST. CYR VINCENT PRICE Ihn-ew" M+AnphiUc PwA SUSCOP.t -- ?. __ ___ ,, .* ,," *.:,. ;," .. * .^f.,-,^ S .fe.. - .',- % .- '. - '. ": _ 1 By OSWALD. SCOB QAKJ A Q4 4Q 0o Ieath IY 2* Pass 8!3 - .-. ZAS Is-" 6Q4 , ,.167,, *AK7543 @atUS (a) AKJeJ92 Eat-West vul. Wel Nerth ast Double 16 24 Double Pass Pas S Opening I4-4 Q "Please tell au what went wrong i, the bidding o this hand," re- quests a Chiam=o correspondent. "South made two diamonds donu bled without the slightest trouble, but East and West could .have made game and rubber at three notrump. The difference was close to a thousand points! "We gave South credit for good bidding, but we couldn't agree on whether West was guilty of bad bidding. Was he?' Yes. West had every reason to ex pect exactly what happened when he doubled two. diamonds. Evidently South had 10 cards: in the red suits. Just as evidently, North was so short in hearts that he tried a "rescue" with a very shabby spade suit. It was reason- Ole to expect that North would have a fair fit for diamonds. Zn short, West had every reason to believe that pouth would either make two diamonds or,.at least, come very close. :If West came to the conclusion t he couldn't get rich by dou- lIng two diamonds, he might think about bidding farther forsh Sown aide. He couldn't feel sure of game in no-trump, but there could be little harm in trying out a tree bid of two no-trump..East- wqld K .. gladly raise to game in no-trump, Srelyin on the long clubs to make Sthe play easy. WW West had 18 points In high cards and could rely on East to hold at ~least 6 or 7 points for his free bid Sof two clubs. Hence .there was good reason to believe that East- S West could make either a game or at least a good part score. The rIRE FAMILY! combination of safety in bidding , ar ier and daA in. .Aoubling ah have indiated I the a to West. ICE CENTER n Pah TONIGcfR GAMBOA 7:66 "PIRATES OF TRIPOLI" 1M,,o 'UAL 3ke O MAGARITA 1:15 B:- "ADAM ANMDIVALYN" TheaMday 'I r..COwas" BALBOA -- Air-Conditioned 6"15 8:15 GINGER RQGERS EDWARD G. ROBINSON. Thuwmi$ "MiE Ol "t AH o qUa |cn CRISTOBAL co?- uR e' A-.Cmdse dKAKU Usope. 1:15 & a :1 Albs Slauwina THmVUDATI PARAISO 6:15 I8:M "LA IUIER X" I SANTA CRUZ *gII l8:00 "AFFAIR IN TRINIDAD" "., ,.1 BOCA 7:00 "KHIBBB PATROL" CAMP BID 8:16 I$IGN OF THB PAGAN- CA^--MP B]II) :I^l Ml s:_'-P: Iso w % T Had Money Problems COLUMBUS. 0.- (UP) An Ohio State University chemistry ,professor believes that the kinp of ancient Parthia in the Middle East had their money problems too A study by Prof. Earle R. Caley shows how silver money was de- based some 2,000 years ago in that western Asiatic country. A number of the coins studied were from a hoard unearthed in 1923 near Tabriz, Iran. Among them were several types of silver drachmas issued by Orodes I. the only Parthian king whom Caley believes was guilty of serious coin debasement. Undey de, the lOver cqntent of coins dpped ..16.w as 40 per cent, w ,,_S 2 .. cent, wl under -that, of coins be- fore aId *after ,i.reign. Caley ta 'ths was the res of a struggle for power between Orodes and las brother Mithra- dates i'- w6, alternated on the throne until the latter died in 54 BC. Military campaiigns against the Roman Empire..and Syria also were thought to be contributing factors. "It may well have been that the available supply "of pure silver could not keep pace with the in- creased demand for coins during the reign of Orodes," Caley said. NEGLIGENT MANSLAUGHTER RAPE ROllR.; ASSAULT IUIGLARY - LARCENY AUTO THEFT TOTAL RURAL crimes showed almost no change, but the three hun- dredths of one per cent de- ctase represents an abrupt halt in rural-area crime totals that have bee rising for many years. N mber of rural crimes t first half of 1955 is estimated . at 117,0N.. SANTAkC t W ,- -I.; IN PERSON M... . 0 WORLDJ-AMOUS -CAtLYMO SINER THE M.IGT Y SPOIltr 9 nrilcr no. risw ., ," LEON GItTETNS' II COOLIL CALYPSO BAND "BARO" CGEORGE tY WAN M-.C SCREEN AT lACT *< -6;15 9:00 RtA HAYWORTH .* GLENN.FORD "AFFAIR IN TRINIDAD" I4AR~ "' II . 'A~p T(: BE SHOW4M& AT'L . SLA8OCA- aThursd a Octber , If you want Bourbon at its best call for "GREEN RIVER," America's smoothest .* -. .. .4 whisky. Sold at all leading bodegas and barLs. BEWARE OF. IMITATIONS . .w," I 2"". .0 START YOUR CHRISTMAS We-Dow have on disilty hn ay RNEWVGI, ITEMS . SYou c.-. mail Gifts to the Staes with a val ue You can mall Gifte to the Staes. with a.value up to $10.00 duty free! WE PACK THEM -FOR MAILING AND GUARANTEE SAFE ARlRIVAL SHOPPING EARLY!I |a qq~ * . *". ,q .1' -4,4 .1i Cd *' '4, I 'I 11. "EVINRUDE" 1lt .in. the Outboard Motor Field announces that 1956 "EYINRUDE" MOTORS are now on display at CARDOZE & LINDO, S.A. FOR 1956 "EVINRUDE" offers a motor for energy power range 3 HP, 5/- HP, 71/ HP, 10 HP,. 1$ HP and the king of all autuboarls the new "EVINRUDE"' BICTWIN 30 HP motors. "EVINRUDE" aluo announces a 20% gas consumption savings on their 1956 iotorsr' , Ak, about direm factory to C.Z. shipments. See these beautiful motors at ;t'. CARniDO ZE I TNi No. M88 Ane. Avenue (Aeror Tropiclat-l '. ._..T.*. W .. .- .- ..-., ;- IN . .'-.. f sJ'., '. ':' -I-. 4. -'*' - ~.,- 4,-2.. The French Bazaar JUAN PALOMERAS C O L 0O:N I . ^*atW te^ .-dfte>*^HV^ .4:' -I -Aftmlvmmm . s I M --- --- -- --I - I V ..--. ,)- +,L 7. . . :, c i r I . .1 ltE IT- I f; t.~ * - I_ ' .. . ki - *. ;tMpnw.?fl~can&a Q. CAGE TYEN THI PANAMA AMERICAN A4r W -. ... I 'T 1 - y- *n* i^1 1 "I T *T *T iT -'* "T I 1. '' """^'*"'' -: *.= A ;'*^^11- Dodgers Should Reign r or xt ew 1. ...Fr ;. . Brilliant Young Pitchers Should Keep Bums On Top y J.LEO H. PETERSEN SBROOKLYN, Oct. 5 (UP) Walt Alston, the dm.awho was hired to "beat the Yankees" and did It, deetared today his world champion Brooklyn Dodg- ers should continue their domination the next few years on the strength of their brilliant young pitch- er;. "I'nim ry optimistic about the wrtp-up again yesterday. clotb future,' said Alston, who The victory by the Dodgers accompllshed the Job he was was history-making in many hired for W hef' 1.t led the Dodf- respects. Not only had they lick- era' to their first world cham- ed the Yankees after five fruit- plahtjp in history yesterday. less tries previously but they al- "We have so many fine young so won the biggest box-office pitchers," Alston pointed out, series ever. When the total net "that I don't anticipate any ae- receipts were counted the y rious trouble in that department mounted to $2,337,513.34, a new for a long time to come." series record. ine mind prncpallwas ohnny Brooklyn's comeback triumph Pon mires phe steel-nerved 23-was also precedent shattering in ear-old southpaw who licked that the Dodgers became the he vaunted Yankees, 2-0, on first team in history ever to win eight hits in the seventh and a seven-game series after drop- deciding game of the 1955 World ping the first two contests. Series before 62,465.fans at Yan- Southpaw Tommy Byrne, who kee Sadm ;?awon the second game of the se- kee Stadium yester ay. ries and started for the Yankees yesterday, matched ciphers with Podres until the fourth inning when the Dodgers scored their first run on a double by Roy Campanella. an infield out and a single by Gil Hodges. A sacri- flee fly by Hodges brought in Peewee Reese with an insurance run in the sixth inning. Podres got into two bad tight sopts but worked his way out of both of them. With two men on and none out in the sixth, Yogi Berra hit a ball along the left field foul line that threatened to drop for extra bases. Bpt speedy Sandy Amo- ros, who had replaced Junior Gilliam in left field during that same frame, came from nowhere to grab the ball and relay it back to the infield for a double play. SANDY AMOROS "PQdres was magnificent," Al- kon said. "He did everything Syone could ask of him and el some." Thinking in terms of the fu- mr, Alston said Podres will fve such youthful running Iates on the Brooklyn pitch- pg staff as righthanders Rog- Craig, Don Besent and Ed Loebuck. alang with left- Mgjr H lS.Sefooner nd lands Kbufax. t .. w-nner of ne fifth tgame the World Series, is only 24, ase Beasent, Roebuck, and ner. Koufax, the bonus lefty o showed so well near the end 8the National League season 't reached his 20th birthday 'odres, who celebrated his t birthday with hib first se- triumph over the Yankees e third game of the classic. mobbed by his hysterically py teammates after beating Bronx Bombers in the Berra came up again with two men on and one out in the 8th but Podres Induced him to hit to Carl Furillo In short right field, then struck out Hank Bauer to end the Yankees' final threat. Both Alston and Yankgee Man- ager Casey Stengel agreed that Amoros' catch of Berra's smash in the sixth Inning was the key play of the game. Oddly Amoros entered the game only because George Shuba had batted for Don Zimnier in the sixth and 0 Wm oq to, aQnd%-o base in Armoros, an ainlable little Cu- ban who is much more at ease in the field than he is with the English language, got the mes- sage across later that he never made a better catch in his life. -He said he was no more than a yard from the left field fence when he grabbed the ball. Additional Sports On Page 6 at is va y-baLt DistiUed and Bottled in Scotland a & . 'rc WHISKY F Sme wv2 a ObS EaWs R fA#UWA t, ITD.. S.IasIOW, sCOTLAME ."AA H. DOEL, S.A. t. -. , 0 ,'* TEiLr. 32771 lbarra Makes Paciic Side Pro Dbbut Oct.1 ",0 i" : "' FIRST OF TWO-Duke Snider, Brooklyn outfielder, is greet- ed by his jubilant teammates as he heads for the Dodger dug- out after hitting the first of two home runs he blasted. The Dodgers defeated the Yankees by a score of 5-3. HE GOT IT'-Tankee outfielder Irv Noren flakes a beautiful diving catch of Koy Campanella's sinking liner In'the third inning of the filth game of the 1955 World Series. Noren. tumbled Lo the ground, but held on to the ball. FLOTA MERCANTE GRANCOLOMBIANA, S. A. Accepting General Cargo at Cristobal For: EAST COAST AND GULF PORTS U. 8. A. Sailings: Every Fifteen Days for: Houston and New Orleans Sailings: Every Ten Days for: New Ycrk Philadelphia Baltimore (Gulf Vessels call at VERACRIZ and'TAMPICO (MEXICO) every six weeks) ALSO Saflings for CARTAGENA, BARBANQUILLA, SANTA MARTA. BUENAVENTURA, TUMACO, and GUAYAQUIL., every three weeks. Monthly sailings from BALBOA to CENTRAL AMERICAN PORTS and U.-S. WEST COAST PORTS. Monthly sailings from BALBOA to BUENAVENTURA, MANTA and GUAYAQUIL APPLY: Wilford & McKay, Inc. Masonic Building CrS *L. C. X. T2 PM INgS: CRISTOBALt '-I 13 UU -4f By TREVOR. IONS Gridiron action thlfts to the Atlantic Side qf th. Ithmus to- motro* nighl with "Cristobal High School a4 Athetic Club, meeting ,at 7 p.m."at ift. Hope Stadium. This will bh Cristoba 's first home game Of the 1955 campaign-and the. Gld Coast fans will have thea opportunity of seeing what i'tProbably one of the best Tig.lo"ens fielded in many years. .4. Riding the 'at ..t ir 7 to 6 win over J r l ge last Friday, Cristo'u's.uiuger are a bit optimistic about their chanc- es for the soming season. Kaiser Bazan's brilliant running, ably supported by a willing, hough small, line is reason enough for mild optimism; but what is more important is that the Tigers seem to have regained the win- ning spirit whili had previous- ly been so predominant in years gone by. Louis Taber, who raptains the C.H.S. eleven, -tlp.-the scale at 181 and is one f the few big fel- lows on the Cristobal first string line-up. He lends plenty of pow- er to the right side of the line from his tackle position. Play- ing along-side Taber, at right guard, .will be Charlie Fears, a 158 pound senior, and he too will be doing his bit towards open- ing holes for the Cristobal of- fense tomorrow nigh. The backfield is lacking In weight, but there is no one who will sell short a pair of half- backs like Billy Rankin, 117 pounds and Bob Lowe 126, both fast lads who can take advan- tage of any mistakes by the de- fense. Allen Robinette, a return- ing letter-man from the 1954 squad, adds experience to Cris- tobal's pennan hungry eleven. Cristobal's reserve power Is probably better than it has been for some time; Lamoine Werlein will see much action on the line, while diminutive but smart. "Windy" Basso will spell Dave Hawthorne at the quarterback position. The Athletic Club representa- tive in s ,this e ,lop a 1. ma-. Is *nirrtarfathk imft^ the most Anot xt w itM Arnold 0Jn e e0 P smartet quarterbacks event to play for Crisobal who has dn- tinueff to improve since gradua- tion three years ago. Familiar names to local foot- ball fans, such as Tony Dyer, George Harris, Al Dimbana. George Dansy, Jim Nells, Dick Dillman and Dick le omedico make up a powerful A.C. line. In the backfield former C.H.S. track and football star, Carl Tuttle joins Jerry Dare and Charlie Brown to form a strong aggregation. The most recent addition to the Athletic Club roster has been Jerrv Fox, for- merly of Balboa High and Jun- ior College, who has Just return- ed from a hitch in Uncle Sam's Air Force. Fox, at 190 pounds, Is only slight out of shape, but should add much impe)us to the A.C. quest of victory No. 1 of the season. The Athletic Club bench, like Cristobal, is adequate in re- serves, with Tommy Jordan, Jim Morris, Bill Nickersher, to mention a few, expect .flIee plenty of action tomorrOw nieht. The Athletic Club 10st:it0 os1 e one in their ffrst outi' of theI season last Saturday nit 7 to 0 when they played the% VilyI favored B.H.S. team. T rrowI night they try to boup#e back from that close defeat sd from the looks of things frOt::. thi corner, each game of f 1055 season should be chock full of excitement. To morrow night should be no exception. Giles Almost Gets Mobbed As He Goes Into Dressing Room NEW YORK, Oct. 5 (UP)-Pres- ident Warren Gales of the Nation- al League came into the Doger dressing room and nearly got mobbed. He went straight to Johnny Pod- res to congratulate the kid lefty, "Johnny showed g r e a t heart, everything it take to wl a cru- cial ball game," (;Iles kSa Co-owners Del Webb aw Dan Topping of the Yankees, who have been on the receiving end of can, gratulations so often, were among the first to felicitate the winning Dodgers. "That wasp one of the greatest games ever to he played in the stadium," said Webb, "evn if we did have to lose it." New Anti-Fouling 18 MM Spark Plai will be in the saIne 1956 FORD COLPAN MOr 7". Chiriqui, Ld Toto barra Pa aa et fistic gate attraction, w.mals bib Pacffic Side pro Jde n elSut-round headl i 6 a t the P11 1 M.swt- the Panama. Gym Side Atlas, president of Cairas Nuevar, L. iumounwo, -tow. .:. -Arias told he press he hbad tbarra'sesigned, contact for & bout with an as-yet-munamdop. pobeft who will- be.-anonunced. by the. end of this week - Panama City fans .h-e aw Tote climb through thiram- teur ranks untit he became a professional nearly two months age received the' news eanthu- siastically because, the two. flited youngster from the Chl. rlqui province bsus done all his pro fighting at the Colon Are- na in Colon. ? " :',-, i2- j :-:-' REESE HITS THE DIRT Phil Rizzuto. Yankee shortstop leaps over Pee Wee Reese, Dodger shortato after makin- the force on him at second in the first inning of the lifth game of the 1953 World Series at Ebbets Field, Brooklyn, N.Y. - Podres Takes Place Among Series Heroes S By OSCAR FRALEY NEW YORK, Oct. 5-(UP)--r Young Johnny Podres took a high.-place today among the Skittering heroes of the World series. There have been many in tbhe crowded list of games which staeti through, the pat. wbeujbja tb *aa their backs.to the Ebbets FJeld wall last week, aftei losing the first two games to the New York Yankees,. Jhabnny cele- brated his 23rd birthday by throwing a winning seven-hit- ter -at. thai wlch. started Brookla aun a three-asme winlaf tSeak. ' lI Ut37i I=", fVO LUU S1 ueb a one wilt.be the blond 3i-yeU -old who y e st eday pitched the long frustrated Brooklyn Dodgers to their fit world championship In eight tries. Go back over the years, if you watch each and every game as I have since 1942, and only a few thrust themselves vividly Into your consciousness. You remember Country Slaughter steaming all the way home from first base on a single to lead. those riotous Cardinals to victory over the burly Red Sox. There is the memory of All'e Reynolds, the super chief of the Yankees, starting and stalking from the bull pen to cement that long chain of New York Yankee triumphs. You recall Bob Feller I*t heart-broken defeat, the vic- tim despite a superbly-pitched first game and flattened a- mazingly In his second start a- gainst the Boston Braves. . And you get those goose pim- ples all over again when you think of crippled Joe DlMaggio, arriving at the end of the trail, hitting a homer against the PhUlies and then telUg little Joe, crying because hI lost a baseball that day: "Don't worry, son, I lost one myself." And so it is, you know that al- ways when the talk comes a- round to the Series, you'll al- ways remember the game and a gritty southpaw named Johnny Podres. A real hard luck guy, thU PO- dress. He was going great guns last season when stricken with an appendicitis attack. This sea- son he started well, but suffered a sore arm. Then. as he recov- ered from that, he ran into the batting cage and suffered a painful rib injury. . But when the DoOMei had Brooklyn Whoops, Hollers Wih Joy NEW YORK, Oct. 5 (UP) - Brooklyn ran whooping and holler- Ing into the streets yesterday aft ernoon. From a window high a a don-" town office buuldta i fla bil forth with the wor " Office workers peatred 1 the streets in the Borough aUI - tim, shutia, da s ei, 8 tho p f pe flutteW ImU win- dbws. Evrny satmouile Men In tenn was s fWu blast. , A ivtr spa rugg ino a g10 P 'RIB |i -a a the B B Aa i cilB, 1 90 - ly lose, particularly the ones; And Johnny, often in tiop- ble, was ling, on courage and class as he threw a winning eight-hit shutout at the team everybody expected to win. . There were. many heroes as the Dodgers, beaten spven times previously in Series play, ended long years of frustration by fi- nally winning an, There were cheers for Gil Hodges'. hitting and Sandy Amoros' fielding. But the cheers that Ui live in your memory are those that shook the stadium for the cour- ageous clutch pitching of the hard luck guy who refused to be beaten and at long last brought the Dodgers home. . TOW NlARRA In his first appearance three weeks ago, Ibarra knocked out Claudio Martinp mln. ix and he chalked As ki .$ Sunday night b2W, qv Jm.a Sa.lazar In flv-" STra tA.- poslttq.t wm y. 'Toto Onlyl" --mt-^.- 0locI_ eZ- erts a o a ght fut ure fiJt, alllnis is a ban mw Gh *. ". CUTS UP OPPOSON Hanover, N. e -(-BA)-Wa-ve Kakola, Dar m o u t h taee, works as a butcher Jn thee campus restaurant. UNITED FRUIT COMPANY. I Great White Fleet New Orleans Service S.S. *S.S. *S.S. S.S. sS. *s.s. Arrive Craitobal "LEON" .................................... .Oct. I "TOLTEC" ........................... Oct. I "MARNA" ................................Oet 11 "HIBUIRAS" ........................,.Oct. 18 "AGGERSBORG" ...........................c..Oet "YAQUE" ................................Oct "MORAZAN ................................Oct. *Handling Refrigerated .Chillend Gneral Cargo New York Service Arrive Cristobal B.S. "MABELLA" ................................... 8,S. "CHOLUTECA" ............... ..........Q..... LB. "JUNIOR ....................................Oak B.8. "METAPAN." ........................A... 61-1 A Steamer .. ................ .................. Weekly sailings of twelve pisewer ship to New York, New Orleans, Los Angeles, Sa Fransiac nd Seattle. Special rjos Itrip .re from Cristobal (<-)W.f York, Los Angeles, Sau Fraciscog mat Sei To Now York ..................... .$2.00. . To Los Angeles and San Francisco ....$270.00 To Seattle ... ....................SIM CISTOBAL 2121 NA. NA. -- ' PANAMA 2.i|S- " * A' V-i -'. jt- .t . ,-L 4-4. -g . ,', ie ..;. A-,- -i- ;.-:. . S -(. CristObal Tackles AC Rams Bright Future At Mt. Hope TOmorrow Night PredictedFor 94' ~ V U, ___. 1. .. : ' i6 -i-- -- 1 wi J. I i7 2- New York ,Service . -r -- -- i [I , WE' L ., i d b 4" . ." .. '. " "- -. "- - RIM .. .,. t.'- -. ~ .:r-.-.. .. %,V +_ '. ,- .. ""** . .. .. . ^K^-J f.^^^^^ *' */14 ' ZAW~t~,~ 4- w 'j 4. ~'tjTh .'~ '!,rrl.tm -t ..,- .--.- *.-, '' 9' ," '. *." I,* .. ^-; . .-,' w'p- s* y .. .- .w n. .- .. 4? ^^ ^ A_ ,M.- .^ ^ .. i4 ., *- ' . . ._ -....... .. "- "" T...." t" e.... " ..- " " : : *"- " ". ' " " : " ... .. H.V' -M ? .. ,:* .'^ 1 . : . .. .. . .* / ^. -. .* "* r ",. . . ,, . ,. .. ..* . . .- . . . 4 ... -i ,:_.. y :. - . ., 0 ....... .. .. .. ... ...... .........,. 4 C i4ti OMan To G&I Rich Directing Traffic NEW YORu A(NA) Aerthing abm t t Yankees. toheplatewr be heid-p at Uhir? c i saiak .te canl-A& It's a afternoon .r ight thai' a Yank attempting to score from secaad baee I cut down at the ltt when the game depends on That makes Frank Crosetti wth every peso he hasbeen paid. r -- Fia- Factors S T per feet rs aig him any- SFigures Of ~jI WoddSeries - t. eurthe. a serde written , few NEA Service 7y JACK ITCMELL -*ft sa Coach WHEN Okiahnome plyed Kansas The ce-at the final gm was 13413, sd I felt that if I had called aelapfy differently Oklahoma would Iave won. At t eningd of the quarter ne, f down and me yard to p aftl traveled al the way o game ae ivel y and d. In hdet, I eaell d he hand S* a ftlee o serImmag e, I stnorted toa very the plat at . Lat EV"team and anyone, so Evan dsame off the line and ded I had n har aM lege e aru r. fl stoped ea playfak poirnoala n .ap took over. Sttd t changed to the wide play. IeT:, Jaey. baskr. ra a a a yi- -daft:.aBB tar 55 NEW YORK, Oct. 5--(W)- Final facts and figures n the lU World Ie:e: Final sta*aie: aro6klyn DoIler wia, le ur mgaes to thrte. Game Scores: lst-Tankeee ,odtenb { d-X...aOkee 4, Dodgers . 4ml-A s ie C TOW 3. TtaI-hdt- ii,,W7 'r i Total let reilats withoutt telOiiemI-M,34t ,5IJ (aew Series record). CWiilewear's share SU,* ~itW aAd leage' chare - flayss' abwe (players part- platel t o e*s of ey firf t La Boc Sports As was antie ted by their eo o classate, the girls voITCIbeS team ,omnatft -the La Bo High Moot annexed the 1, n -1gb ai team for the third #ae In their flw ne nseri at the Atlant dd vase. The gcor was 1- i, 10-15 and 15-. two -4404 the I o had to -"port to ther me-e eapers- entcmt, nero Oleri The agpur(lUon ed byO rtIrEe HowANA Veronica Walker, Tore. iflhk., Sarah Ram,y R14m a Gant, 4ylUs OU BElena Lyder, Jeanuette and toanor itcrale Gloria jea Sobers, ane- Brath n t ,athe Wt- wafte and -eaqv i eMcours, The boys-s who edpoavore to capture a I aweek with the an Friday, d as th eboweCity bMes tMldh thr verdict to even ine serTe. T La Beans dropped the tilt IS-7, a- o a-d 1-3. owto, the Pa- siders asr eat auou le week the v of gIn the best possi- bl e for the final encoun- ter, wo ll take plan oh the La Doca court this Friday after- While main in n the hf~th interest for volleyball on the campus, students continue to struggle for supremacy each day. The game is very mudh a- Jive among the teams of the 'va- rons leag6se nw underway. The mixing this pse law MUs- - --- --- I-- r-l -.7 ; Lrpez tSKPATHSS-.Gil OdpsDodigcia first nseman=,.tas You' a rraoeta.on after fielding hima under in tne first "Inning at Ebbets Ild, Drroklyn. -Robinson And Clark R mowaMM& MO - To Be Honored By RP Fans Grateful Iathmlan baseball fans will pay tribute to Pana- ma's thtee major lesgu players -Heetor Lopes. Humberto Rob- inh and Vibert Clarke-in three days of activities,' begn- ni tonight In Colon. t on e agenda a party organized by Colon fans, which wil be given at the Cafe Esquire in tat city at 9. M three athltes reside In Celeo. Lope. was born in Bo- eat del Tor, and Rob"umn en rke a aColbon-barn. The Colon Municipal Council will pull the- strings on a pro- gram which will get underway with a parade tomorrow at 6 p.m.. In which all Atlantic Side residents are invited to partici- pate. Colon athletes who took part in the recent First National Games will march in the parade in their uniforms and carry their banners. A resolution draw up by th P -flaw On the flalflc side, s omr- mittee formed of Rau Arnge N., resent of the 'Pahama Prefeslontl Baseball League: Jull Z. Brieeto, editor of the Spanish dally La Hora; and Oil Goumalo Garrido, director of the Phygloal Education. and Sports department, has announced ac- Ivtes. -set for Friday. At 4 p.m., a parade will leave from the Casino area of Central Ave., and march on to Santa Ant Park. Secondary school students, athletes from leagues and other sports organizations and the DubUli wi be accompanied by the National Guard and Bom- bere bands, and bugle corps of the city's colleges. At Santa Am whore the pa- rade eis, mdli of merit will Sbe pJaWned -on the heereee In mi nnmams. Lopes ha by fur the outstand- lan record of the three. S ouht up to the Kansm Ci- ty Athetles after biting. s316 with "tbe now-defunct Ottawa club of the Cla. AAA Interns- tional League last year, he was a regular all eaHon. WhewI (SEVINTH AND FINAL WORLD SK1IN GAME) eekthn N)-- AVER H 0 A l4m. I-2 ..... 4 0 1 2 0 W .4 .. .....4 1 0 2 uMe*, 3* ** 0 0 2 0 Ca/ seuem Ia,. .... i I 5 0 few. a f ....... 00 3 o !1*..... 2 1 t o a ImMr. 2s ...... 0 0 0 sk s ..... 0 a 0 0 Amiis, If ...... 0 0 0 2 1 , ....... 4 0 0 0 1 Te.b ........... 9 2711 New York (A)- A$gI H 0 A 212e0e, ." ...... I 1 II Me 1.'Zb ......30 1 I Mdlm .Ddb... 4 0 3 I t m. .......4 1 4 1 lew. f ...4 0a01 0 eqw~. Ib ..... 4 I 1 1 C .........4 0 0 . ...... 4' 0 1 2 0 yee, p ........ 8002 Uib ........... 0 0 1 0 .Mefp .........1 0 0 0 0 Test .......... U 0 8 27 14 ,jM owf t for 6m in 7 t. Feeki r (N. ....e 101 e 000i-* New Yest (A)...0. 00 000 M0-0 ,e: SkWee. I i:2. Two sm HYI . Skes. II Mge 5, -I After a shaky start at the un- accustomed second bpse spot. manager Lou Boudreau shifted him to third base and the local boy almost immediately came tb life. He ended up the season with a .290 batting average, ha4 140' base hits, f S home runs and pushed 68 runs across the plate. Lopez finished third, in voting for AL rookle-of-the-year hon- ors. He wps beaten by two other falr-to-mlddlip' fr eshmen- Cleveland Indians pitcher Herble Score, and Yankee ou.%elder- catcher Elston Howatd, who took first and second places respec- tively. Robinson began the season as reliever for the Milwaukee Braves, and had compiled a 2-0 record when, in a move that still has Panama fans mystified, he was sent down to Toledo of the Clps AAA Aiferican Aneocia- with the farm club gave him a i ometila back to Milwan- kee at the end. f the AA spa- seO-and he had a final major league record of 2.1, Clarke was one. of the best hurlers in the Class A Sally loop this. year. In severall outings with the Wahbington senators, he .failed to wi a game against one loss., Umpires Mltin The Panama Canal Zone Baseb ll Umpires Associat!on wil hold the first In a series of metlings and clinics In the Bal- boa, RO.T.C. building on Friday, OctL.. 7: at 7q T Ap.m;-ApyoneW 'd- siri to beuose u* umpire si urg' jb r h meetings. Tmoturlfr'I lnforSaUoni y0 jla- ecf t M-Sit. r rto D- sMa My -t- of iBsjer M l-'-*'i -^ ***** I Jam Lume ALL-AMERICA BOY Jon Arnett is Southern California's All- America tailback candidate. .The young man knows how to eat up ground with the ball under his arms. Ot.*sa'A. ah N~tels noa t'mam- s-- e a thaBWW haIulsk 3Y aKUTy. PATUON NEA Sparts dier WrIr the feotba ipnfesalp knocking each ther afoUnd wA a reason, the eady saesa.f dhince trt a I. a aw nmey ranks th a . says We ,inton aunt, who wise is brother Jak the ew York Gians. liae draft choices usually have the Stature to hold up. Scout$ have a better line tn them. They stickout in the tou hest part of the game. "Backs are a bit of-as amble. They Set prai tally all of lhepu blicity-aud perhaps they dul 't deserve it. Maybe. they stood out because they were operating be- hind superlative forwards. "Giving li emes more opportu- nity in the pro ranks, too, is the fact that we use 1 goodoesa as against half as many backs." Players who were platooead in college get triepdous break with the coin obllectors,4a 'Pa- lumbo had trouble bloekan for Notre Dame, but was pain iody murder as a tackler. So he's a rip snorting linebacker for the Clteve- lead rows. Larry 'Morris of Georgia Tech is going the same thing for-the los Angeles Rams, Purdue's Tom Bettis for Green S ay. " Rex Boggan of Mississippi and Penn State as Rosie Grier stepped right in as the Giants' defensive tackles. Frank Varrichion'e of Notre Dame made it the other way with the Pittsburgh Steelers. As for backs, such widely- known rah rah names as Ralph Guglielmi, Dickie Moegle, Carroll Hardy and Dave Leggett are on pro rosters, but do not start. Anybody nut very well aequaint- ed with th pro didg who watch- ed Guglielmi take charge of the Browns in the All-Star Gamea would have bet that the Washing- ten quarterback's name would be the same. But close followers of the pros knew the phenomenal and more experienced Eddie Le- Baron would be hn. front 'f the Columbus lad. Few enjoye cole e careers like those at Megle Rice and Colorado's Carroll Hardy, but all they were askei-to do with the San Feancisco 49ers was sIMp.lant the most Iformidable run ping backs in thd business-HugSh Me- Elhenny, John Henry Jahnsoa and Joe the. Jet Perry. 'S Moegle and Hardy are subbifl. both ways. Joe Heap ofS.NOe Da._e.. Issecond e d Lamar with te Chicago Cardinals. McHan was in the same position last year, when be came up from Arkansas as a ingle wing tailback. Don Amecbe of Wiseamin, Oregon's George Shaw and Baylor's L G. Dupre ob tainted flying starts with Balti- more, but asr and dick as te are it couldbe because the C'Ls were weak'-in this, depart' meant. Dave Middleton of Auburn Is shaping Ip well as a groundgan* erior the Detroit Lions to be another except proving the rule that lineman gain pro recognition quicker than backs. Backs can wait. They get more money. GUN CLUB NOTES CRISTOAL Judging from the number of mootern out to test reflexes and coordinatlon and from some Of the meores made, the ducks are gong to catch the devil as wel i few loads of number evenc s et when they reach the Isth- mus from the frozen North. Yea, lat sunday morning the members of the club enjoyed ona of the most successful shoots f the season. Leo turned out some very strong coffee to put the boys in a joval mood., pre-requiite to good shooting on a lay Sunday morning. Four shooter competed for the American Brewery trophy, which l a perpetual trophy a- warded annually to the high gun In Trap on the first Sunday in October. The trophy wa won by Lee Carr; Windy Sellers, run- tar-up. The first Sunday in November wl be Competition Day for the altUash-Amnerican Tobacco tro- phy, which Is a er ual trophy awarded to the hig gun, Othis date, at 16-yard anges. Complete scores for Sunday: Trap (H target 16-yd. Trophy) Lee Carr ...............* 49 Windy sellers .......... 46 Bill Cronin ............. 4 Mrs. Ruth Hinkle ....... 39 Trap (25 targetS, 16-yd.) Windy sellers .......... 25 '. 8chexn.ader .........24 Joe Kueter .............** Art Sutton .......... 22 W. Johnston ............ Rowland ............. i Skeet (a targets) roeKueter (410) ........ Clark .......... 35* Art attn ..........* Scheznaider .... 4 W gndy Se-ers .......... 21 W. Jotnset (410) ....... t Tommy Se42. Jr....... 1 m IS -(n S.* .T ,,,-- .- -,-,. r .- ki.,,: HAND OFF uarterback.Ed Scott of MBalo1f High School gives fullback Ken Wheeler a hand-off. This combination etamU ed. the opposition ienty of trouble in the 1966 Jamoe aad the BuUloga' victory Baturray night over the Athletic Club. , Clemson's Don King Leads A.C.C. Offense : OREENSBORO, N.C.-(UP)- fourth la total eAT Clemson quarterback Don Kin,g. of f .All donmpltedg g-- who guided his undefeated Tt- have et4hd "tme gers last outing to a one-sided -. - 26-7 victory over Georgia, has the tei tatoitaties ae taken over the Atlantic Coast meht lfma" led r' *t$ Conference offense leadership., 1sin, DbU e two and M The first list of statistics by. one. ClenAon topped'tot3iM the ACC Service Bureau showed fense with 1496 yarIsl King led the league's offense per KMa, pas "d l with 167 yards in 44 plays, 21 yards acd pAeassi oft %t ,1 yards better than runner-up Nick Consoles, talented quarter.- .- back of Wake Forest. Consoles Manus Mai l Ailter hdA 243 yards In 48 plays. i .cins r. .. w w, * Clemson fullback DIlly O'Dell . was third with. 30 yards in 47TapHi ktt onasoles leads the passing NEW VAlU I. .A" ' with 25 completions In 40 throws Dodgers nwet abikf aboutWV for 292 yards an da pair of Maya. w touchdowns. King came in s1c- Any time h tabps the i onc. ond with 16 completions In 33 no matter where .Ue- balll is, hell passes for 272 vards and two get it," somebody said. touchdowns. King got the lead Don'Newcomib.'loo'ked up. M - In offense because Consoles has that'; what I told him at the lost 49, mostly In trapped pas-fi Star Game; Refembir the'.,a , ing positions, and King has ite0 he made on the ballTed-W iC14 only eight, hit off'ie? The one he -M=pe Consoles was thrown for a to- nile for it the fence. W tal of 3B yavds losses by West he caine back to dugout, I aid Virginia last weekend. him. man, why !ddn't y n'-- VHalfback Jel wells of Clem- that mitt? dMl'.a se* Y o. son and Mlke Caakey of South and I thought it .ia p-aI" Caroi O t 'DenO qnru BS e, yq got to kt .t ': Wita .. ain -i .a' sell. j o .f De f1A n ]vhlcdan;1 i. A ' ' mdl 0S 8OutHiC.uAp lna i A_________________ rusblag. averase.Blaney had H.6 .- ai and Braell T.<.. : . Marulqnd'a * rk Tamb.- ..' .It- r redol i! third la passing and W -W yOl fld*!L Along The Fairwoys GOLFING GOSSIP FROM THE AMADOR LADIES By BETTY A match play tournament a-; gainst par was held Sept. 29 and Helen Schull came in the big winner with one up on par.. Ma- rion Betters and Ethel FPeratie tied for second even with par. Nancy Knight won the golf ball lor the lowest number of putts. Congratulations girls! Tomorrow a medal play tour- nament with full handicap will be played and a good chance for you girls who haven't gotten In your qualifying round for -the club championship to do so. Re- member, the Women's Club Championship's final day to qualify is Sunday, Oct. 9, so come on out gals and get that round in -before the deadline. One dollar entry fee will be charged and some lovely prizes will be awarded. Sounds like lois of fun and hope to see you a- round. Happy golfing to you. i new Park-ae '. ' 1950 4 FORD: Station Wagon COLPAN .MOTOBSR Today .-Encanto J5 .2 In Cinemascopel- Olivia de Havliland, In "THAT LADY" Orson Wellew, n . "Three Cas e of Mnnr- Tod" IDEAL fG Libertad Lamarque,'In '- *"ANSIEDV . Pernando Ferh4nAltn. I.j "CModa Lo gWJV - TAPE s z$ van ". '"t - -~ -- ----- --- .... o . . I 1 1 4 0 ; 40 I :.~Zr~ii~n~WsEL-L~-PLilP-U--r~l I 11 H ' 1 WM""&ftm~wiAWlwwll "@-aft , r-~ .. ... , ..- . .'._:'. 7 ",-- .. *.Ll' ~'* /4's"' Tackles A. .C ." . -,- .:* -* '.T *- .. .*'* 9 '. . ', -; '. morro . ' ;- -- .. - Canal Hires .47 Workers orty-seveni f emW OIUOtYWI of whom were hired in the Unit- ed States, joined the Canal or- S wantzation during September according to information from the Personnel Bureau. ' Three of the new employes Shared in the States worked for the Canal previously. They are C. Dyer, of Dalton, Ga., and harles 8. Robinson, of Phila. Ielphia, lock operators-wlremen wittn the Pacific Lockp, and Phi- 3ip R. Sanders, of Colon, R. P. armature winder with the Elec- .' trical Division. Dyer was employed from 1951 oto 1953 as a lock operator. Ro- -binson began his employment with the Canal in 1936 and has several years of broken service as a lock operator. From 1952 to "1963 he was a methods examiner S with the Executive Planning .Btaff. Sanders was an apprentice ,armature winder from 1948 to 1952 and for two more years was employed as an armature wind- er.Other employes from the States, their birthplaces -and 'positions are as follows: School Division: William Ar- * *thur, Bristol, Tenn.; Patricia L Avery, Forestport, N.Y.; Seymour I. Barkowitz, Charleston 8. C.; ,ara F. Davis, Burl, Alabama; Louis H: DeArmas, Tampa, Flo. rida; Harold C. Dippre, Portland Oregon; Christine 0. Gibson : Gibson, North Carolina; Agnes U; M. Herklotz, Jersey City, N. J.; Sudith A. Johnson, Rio, Wiscon. 'gin; James D. Laster, Richard- son, Kansas; Annie L. Lowery, 'Trenton, N.C.; Harry H. Nunley, f 'racy, Tennessee; Charles T. 1; Reeves. Boquete, R. P.; Frederick L. Saur, Jersey Shore, Pa.; Karl W. Shirley, Hereford, Texas; and James B. Wooden, of Fertilla, Cal., teachers. 0S Maintenance Division: Wil- S 11am E. Garnpr, Lancaster, Pa., i plumber. Locks Division: John L. Irwin, C Pearsall, Texas, machinist. Health Bureau: Verla J. Mil- ler, DuBols, Pa., medical tech- nician, Gorgas Hospitdl; Sara 0. S Watkins, Richmond, Va., and Macle o. Wilcox, Lyon County, Ky., nurses. ti- Engineering Division: Anthony R. Nard, Toms Creek, Va., Super- visory Civil Engineer. Employes hired locally Includ- S 1thoole Divilionri Ruth:O. .: A In g c. Blake, s . 1A1 % -; r y, E.,- McOlmsey ; oan D. tibh, Loils C. Rawle via E. Ruls, Anabel M. Svehle, uiaabeth Walker, and Theresa & Hunter, teachers. '- *Health Bureau: Bobble H. S P~ reschi, Ida N. Sparks, Catherine L. Zug, Martha A. Carey a n d l Richard A. Williams, nurses. Lock Division: Alfred J. Ora barn., guard. Administrative Branch: Carol L. McAmis, clerk-stenographer. Terminals Division: John P. Cain, auger and foreman. Marine Bureau: Herbert C. S Dawson, admeasure'; Roy R. Shuey, motorboat maintenance mechanic. Fire Division: George 0. Flo- tea, fireman. Charles Marcy Pies In Texas Charles Marcy, brother of Benneth E. Marcy, employee of a Maintenance Division and S 1Deer resident of Balboa, died df heart attack Monday night Souutonr T ,as. He was 43 years old. V- -A native of Washington, D.C., tr. Marcy came to the Isthmus S ith his family when he was a : malil child and attended the Qlat Zone schools. He later at- tended. Virginia Military Insti- tute In .j.eaiagton, Virginia and S Cornell University. . .- During World War II, he held the rank of captain in the Unit- d States Army and served in the Pacific Theater. For the past several years he has been em- pioyed with the Standard Oil Company in Houston. Surviving him are his wife Mrs. Janet Marcy of Houston; his brother Kenneth, of Balboa;: alste Mrs. Lois Cichowaki. of Pbiladelphia and his mother and father Mr. and Mrs. Uenry 0. Marcy, of Miami, Florida. uFuneral services will be held tUnorrow in Arligton. Virginia sad interment will take place in 1 Arlington National Cemetery. I ' s SMILES THAT OUTWITTED THEIR RED CAPTORS are exhibited by 10 British soldiers after S bcming freed by the Chinese Communists. Laughter was the best weapon against their tormentors. Tommies' Laughter Beats Red Captors h LONDON, Oct. 5.-(NEA)-The Will he be shot or will be be book, "traveling 1st class on a horse laugh car be deadlier than hung, 3rd class railway ticket. the bullet if used against su c h That damned elusive Ma o aSuch "subversive activities Sthin-skinned opponents as the Chi- Tse-tung?" called for severe penalties: beat- nese Reds. Bob Hope never received such ings, solitary confinement, being This is the conclusion of a grim, a toinado of applause at a camp made to stand at attention for 41lpage report on the treatment of show. eight hours at a stretch. Birtish prisoners of war in Korea But before Sykes could acknowl- One, when implicated in an es- issued by the British ministry of edge it the Chinese had dragged cape plot, Kinne was strung up to defense, him off the stage To an irate a oeam so that he stood on tiptoe It is the story of the 978 British interpreter, who accused him o I with a noose around his n e c k who survived the brutolity and mocking the Chinese, Bill ex- which would strangle him if he re- torture of t h e Chinese prisonplained, "Don't be silly, mate. I'm laxed in any way. ;camps -L largely through their a only paying compliment to your After repeated beatings, Kinne ability to laugh in the faces of their big nob, Mr. Mao." asked for pencil and .paper to tormentors. .' write his "confesson." W h II e The guards allowed him back the Chinese company commander Only 40 of them returned home on stage,'t& he told he story of beamed with satisfaction, Kinne convinced Communists, and some three sokliestl english, American scribbled furiously covering 13% of these had Communist leanings and ChinesefiL9ei in battle and "crimes." before capture, according to the being intervie ktd by St. Peter. When translated, the Chinese report. The AmericiffEand the Briton found that he had written the The defense ministrywere ,aowed through the pearly complete story of Goldilocks and The defense ministry report gates,%but when it came the the free Bears. makes reassuring reading or Chinaiman's turn, St. Peter said: But Kinne is remembered best those who feared that 10 years of "Hop it. We can't cook rice and by his British comrades in prison the Socialist welfare state might kimche for one." (Rice and for his defiant gesture on June 2, have softened up British troops kimche, a dried cabbage, was the 1953, Coronation Day. for Red propaganda. The British staple diet of the Chinese and On that morning he strutted un- STommythe report indicates, is their prisoners.) der the noses of his captors with still the same hard-headed real. Almost legendary, however, are a red, white and blue rosette ist. the exploits of Derek Kinne, of made of rags in his lapel. True, Tommy was not ar the Royal Northumberland Fusi- "His example was an 'inspira- for the "brain-washing" ordeal. iers, o ho volunteered for service tion to all ranks who came in He had expected h ars h bord e in Korea to avenge his brother's contact with him," reads the offi- rough treatment captured, but death in action cial citation of the George Cross rough treatment if captured, but awarded to Kinne. not to be treated as "student of Kinne, who has been awarded "Nonsense," says ex Fusilier politics," a pawn in the hands of the George Cross for "gallantry Kinne who, no longer in the political commissars to be used a- in captivity," was captured in the "brain-washing" business, rents inst his comrades in an effort battle of Imjln River, in April, washing machines at 50 cents an undernilne their confidence. 1951. For the next two years he hour to housewives is iLeeds Lucl*th r his native wit ame to conducted his own war against the where he lives with i widowed tht rea.. Chinese Red;. mother. . Sg.-I--keo--hsAut rities ho w leer, are de d- Sgt. Bill Sykes, of the Glorious From the first, Kinne, a head- vinced that men. like Sykes and GMrforouxampleois a bornfikeSye aid Glosters, for example, is a born strong Yorkshireman, didn't fit in Kinne have discovered the best comedian. His cockney jokes kept with the "progressives," the hand- weapon against Communist indoc- up the morale of many a fellow ful of prisoners who discussed the trination. prisoner, American as w ell as virtues of the Chinese People's British, but Bill's big "break" Volunteers and the wickeness of m m h n o came at a camp concert on May "'the imperialist aggressors e la l Dsp, 1952. The cocky little fusilier felt Legion. AI i ilary With armed Chinese g u a r d s much more at home with the "re- rinds toed u actionaries." Theqse were the To S on o o aining the stage, Bill sonorno- 'slept during Red I Mao Ted -una iindoctrination lectures, used their "We seek him here, we seek Red textbooks for cigarette paper Foar him there. A reactionary, when asked to Florida Parley We seek the every- name "the highest form of class where: struggle," would write in his copy A full delegation from the American Legion Auxiliary's De- partment of Panama Canal e w M H one r will be present at the aux- MOU s ilary's 35th national convention Dulles Discussa esG Arm s In Miami Beach, Fla., Oct. 10 to 13. The convention will decide r E Wi t policies and outline programs ol r EgypCt W ith M olotov for national activities of the or- ganization for the coming year. 0 iThe delegation will beheaded ---o-- by Mrs. Louise Griffon, acting WASHINGTON, Oct. 5 (UP) But he said this country still hopes national executive committee- Secretary of State John Foster to achieve "collective measures woman, and will consist of Mrs. Dulles said he lies given Russia designed to deter aggression" by irayce L. Nadeau, Mrs. Orayce personal warning that Red arms either side. H. Gravatt, Mrs. Elinor Beaker, shipments to Egypt will "not con- The secretary also said he does Mrs. Marie Bennett, and Mrs. Tribute to relaxing tensions" be- not know whether Red technicians PatsY Ryan. Stween the East and West. will go to Egypt to instruct the In addition to approximAtely He said he told Russian Foreign Egyptians in use of the arms. U. 850 delegates, representing the Minister V. M. Molotov in New S. officials fear any such ste p auxiliary's nearly one million iYork last week the shipment of would increase Communist influ- members, many thousands of SCzechoslovakian arms to Egypt ence in the Middle East. other auxiliary women-will be in might result in a Middle E a s t On other subjects, Dulles said: Miami Beach for the Conven- arms race and could hurt recent 1. There is no foreign policy e- tion. It is fully expected to be friendlier relations between t h e emergency requiring President Ei- the largest convention of worn- 1 United States and Russia. senhower's immediate attention, en held anywhere in the world Renewing his plea for a United But a reply to Soviet Premier Ni- this year. Nations security guarantee among kolai Bulganin's recent letter on Sessions will be held in the the Arab states and Israel, Dulles disarmament will await the Presi- Miami Beach Municipal Audito- told a news conference he d i s dent's recovery. He believes Mr. rlum. Mrs. Percy A. Lauison, of cussed the explosive situation Eisenhower wil' be well enough Fort Madison. Iowa. national twice with Molotov. He did not re- soon to make important decisions., president of the auxilla r, will I veal Molotov's attitude. 2. France's boycott of the U N. preside at the'convenUo.a. Mrn. Dulles made clear Russia must General Assembly because of its Lainson was a visitor to the or- bear responsibility for the arms decision to debate the Algerian ganlatlon's many units in the deal. While Czechoslovakia actual- crises will not damage the world Capsl Zone during February of ly is shipping the weapons, he organization in the long run. Nor thts year. said, there is no real distinction will France lose any prestige as Policies and programs for between the two Communist gov a world power, he said. the coming year will be decided F ernments. 3. He is confident the foreign by action upon report of some ministers meeting with Russia ak 30 committees, each assigned tc Dulles sidestepped a question on Geneva Oct. 27 will make substan- study one of the auxiliary's na- whether the United Stated might tial progress. toward German uni- tioal activities. Guest speakers sell arms to Israel to offset the fieation, but probalby will n o t' will Include Vice President Nix- Communists shipment to Egppt.Ireach that goal immediately, on and MaJ. Gu1. Chennault. . r -.**" "-*'I *.. A INDEPENDENT "Le tOe people hrnew the truth and the country is safe" Abrahanm incoln. T..RTI..l_...B. PANAMA, R. P., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 195 n CENTS Peron Claims His Gen Double-Crossed, Exiled wrote the note "suggesting the iand sterile savagery among broth- need to avoid the massacre of ers. innocent and defenseless people "Those who arrive with blood and 'the disaster of destruction, fall down with blood. Their victo- offerig, if necessary, to withdraw ry ha; always the indelible seal of from the government." ignominy and the people,; sonner He said that his own generals of later, ened by-hating them." under Gen. Franklin Luetro chime Meanwhile in Buenos Aires the to interpret his "offer" as a for- general labor confederation (GC- mal ,resignation. T), last mainstay 6f Peron'g pow- He saidh. c h.. ". g er, appeared to be crumbling. Hesaid he called the generals At the same time, it was report- of the military junta to makq it ed that 1B army generals suspect- clear.that "it was not my formal ed of loyalty to Peron had -been resignation but an offer they could arrested. Those named included use in dealing with the rebels.' Jose Dtmingo Molina, former ar- , "I made it clear that if it were mvy commander in chief. my resignation, I would have ad- *ank and file discontent a- dressed it to the national C o n- moa te CGT's 2,400 unions apd gress and not to the army and e million members came to a people, and that I would remain head violently. as cstwnn peie;utL3 titA.n utionaa president until 4tisone' ass accepted my resigna- He sail that at dawn on Sept. . 20, h aide was summoned ad told by the ruling generals tat they "had accepted my resigna- tion' (which I had not submit- ted) and-that I should leave the country. "In other words, the generals who went ov.'-: to the rebels-forced me into exile."' Peron said he could have put arms into the hands of the work- ers "who were determined to wield them. "I always avoided shedding blood, feeling that it is a useless At least 12 unions ousted their Peronist executive b o a r d a and seized union loealheadquarters. Among the unions seized were some of the biggest in Argentina such as the railroad workers, ma- titime workers, white collar work- ers and streetcar and bus work- ers. Discontent had been simmering since last year, chiefly over the Perdnist habit of rammiing through officials who frequently were not members of the craft they were supposed .to represent, using strong arm methods if nec- essary. eram s Himr There ,/as discontent too over the unions b ing forced to accept pay railpe which the rank and file considered Inadesoate. Finally, there was the issue of te personall wealth accumulated by eonIst union leaders. 5the Peron M ueneo, a 4q- uiauB of lateran unalo *Ishft always were,' caepfully ashed up, ostensibly for t he sake of unity. Today, CGT Secretary Hugo de Pietro complained to President Eduardo A. Lonardi that- this workers were seizing the unions and ousting their executives. Political leqnbs ef the new crop ofu mion leaden I Aome of whom came back itmt. exile, were unknown. It was believed, however, that they are- mostly Socialists and ConamvlSts. The Communist were reported unofficially to have aged for four seats in the prpose-d National Board of Consultatln which is to advise the new government on po-- litical problems. President Lonardi ;te)*.8 group alms i to-et the faout of politics sQ restme e '- free- dom to manage bheir own .iffairl and elect their n fes with" tout state iMtaW"ene .' --' 7 -.'. ...... MA . CURVILIRtf RRENS! saMa you from hrisen walseJwto sa90i/ ! - '..- "The Acalmv* l Yilmrd - Winning Pr "cdi ;,"""W n.n .P.. -':< ; "--B It's the story of ihe combat-ready men who feel the paS- sures most... for the'women "who feel how fleeting kisses really are. It's the story of men who can never relax- and their women wjo wait, wonder and sometimes weep! By Russ Winterbotham and Ralph Lane *1 r32 III 4: - Whc gas n5 i cnim w he e v di wip l md* alsteding ithc.. PROT p. dNES JUNE STfWART ALLYON Air. Command Colorly rTECHNICOLW RM bMO Ui byANT' S WMM T -PARAMOUNTIS '* - L - ~-V-'&~7 4-' "5 r- I- Read DANIEL BOONE it"'mmU na ioted trate end D' eal rd cIses fnter a ftee t his -howe er St. Chae MO. I -- ... t:.. -- lo,:-. : t . [ ; 5, 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 |
| 2 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 2 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Navigation Object created from URI query string |
| 2 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 2 | sobekcm_page_globals.display_item | Retrieving item or group information |
| 2 | sobekcm_page_globals.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | Retrieving hierarchy information |
| 2 | sobekcm_assistant.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | |
| 2 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
| 2 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | Found item aggregation on local cache |
| 2 | item_aggregation_builder.get_item_aggregation | Found 'all' item aggregation in cache |
| 2 | system.web.ui.page.page_load (ufdc.page_load) | |
| 2 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
| 2 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_style_references | Adding style references to HTML |
| 2 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
| 97 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |