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to RIO THE MARVELOUS. N1CARIOCA CAPITAL I i, BRANIFF J.SNTKRNAT;IONAl.,AIRWAY6 , NOV 8 1955 AN INDEPENDENT 'DAILY iWSPPER ___ Pauama A-urican "Let the people know the'trutl and the country is safe" - Abraham Lincoln. .i, IL, PANAMA, R. P., SATURDAY, NOVPABER 5, 1955 FIVE CpTJ Israelis, Egyptians Sharp Clash AAMIRICAN LE1ION PERSONNEL, participating in Flag Day ceremonies in the Republic of Panama yesterday, pass in review* at the Presidencia. A joint U.S. Honor Guard, commanded by Major David L. Cantor of the 33rd Infantry Regiment, Fort Kobbe, also participated in the parade. (U.S. Army Photo) MARCHING ALONG Central Avenue in Panama's Flag veteran group. Independence Day 112 Panama's Independence Day The other death was reported death tell rose to at least three from a farm in Ocil, where a today as reports continued to farmer stabbed another man to come In on accidents over the death. three-day holiday. On Thursday, a little girl died when she was hit by a fragment The total umber of persons from a cannon which exploded injured was recorded at 112. when It was fired at the start of Yesterday a 14-year-old boy the Independence Day observ- died instantly as a result of a ance at Arraijan. deep wound in. his abdomen A ten-year-old boy probably caused by a firecracker explo- lost his sight in one Thutsday Mon. when a string of firecrackers The bA P. Aae went off In his face in the vicin- The boy, Jorge P. Adames Jr., ity of Santa Ann Plaza. Is said to have annroachedal i group of boys setting 'off fire- crackers' near his home on Sev- enth Street, San Francisco de la Caleta, when he-was mortally wounded by a fragment of a piece of pipe which had been loaded with powder from a number of firecrackers. Baby Elephant Returns to Rome T iF,-Italy, Nov. -l(UP) -Romeletto a baby elephant, ust didn't like It at the Turin He was welcomed with much fanfare when be arrived here from Romee as a ft from- Mayor Salvteare Reeeehi. Rat the weather turned cold *ad Romolet4o turned morose. Then aAmee blew down on the -shed here he was sleep- Ita, scarVin him half to death. Romoletto fretted about that for a couple of days and made a break for freedom. He fell into a lake of ley water. Teday Romoletto ws on his way baek to Reme. $1,500,000 Worth Of Pure Heroin Seized; Two IM NEW YORK. Nov. 5--(UP)- Two men were held here today on charges of illegal possession of $1,500,000 worth of pure he- roin. James C. Ryan, district super- visor for the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, said the heroin asiz- ure was the largest narcotics haul of its kind in the history of the bureau. Ryan said the arrest last night of Nathan Berman, 42, and An- thony J. Veluccl, 31. a bail lumper missing since 1952, was the result of 18 months' obser- vatlon of their activities. Berman and Veluccl were ar- rested in a west side apartment where narcotics agents found 30 pound of pure heroin hidden Ind a freshlV paltned bath- room over-door panel. Ryan said tLe $1.500,000 evaluation of thE heroin's value on the retail mar- ket was "oonaervatly." Day Parade is an American military T II Peron Lingers In Caracas, May Land Here -0 - Deposed dictator Juan D. Pe- ron of Argentina has changed his travel plans again. This time he will reportedly leave Caracas, Venezuela, tomorrow afternoon, and is expected to stop off at Tocumen for several hours be- fore heading for his destination of Managua, Nicaragua. Peron, travelling 'in a Para- guayan military transport, has been assured of a warm welcome by Nicaraguan President Anas- tasio Somoza. Airport officials at Tocumen said today they had received word that Peron's plane would take off from Maiquitia Airport at about 4 p.m. for the five-hour trip to Panama. Since Peron's itinerary has been subjected to frequent changes since his departure from Paraguau last Wednes. day, it was felt here that his decision to arrive in Panama tomorrow might also be onl' a tentative plan. Peron's original plan yester- day was to leave Caracas early this morning, but this schedule was apparently changed. No reason. for the more than 24- 'brtf tis being readied to receive the visa- Itor, his party and newsmen. Meanwhile. in Caracas. Peron told the United Press he was "too old, for politics.' war and women." and was heading for Nicaragua in search of a new home to spend his old age. The one-time boss of Argenti- na. who left a teen-age sweet. heart behind when he was forc- ed to leave the country, arrived here by plane yesterday from Paraeuav where he spent his first 30 days in exile. President Somoza of Nicara- -ua has assured Peron of a warm welcome there, but also let It be known he does not ex- pect Peron to be a permanent resident. On his arrival in Venezuela aboard the Paraguayan trans- port, Peron issue da veiled warning to the government of Argentina thich took over aff. er his downfall. He f'told npwx~qm,-ta +rtha4-t Ah Ar_ throwing Peron and Lonardi." Eduardo Lonardi is the provi- sional President of Argentina. There are 6,000,000 men able to act legally as well as illegal- ly." Peron said. The CGT, which he sponsored during his 10 years rule, holds the balance of power in Argentina, he. added. (Since Peron's Ouster, the CGT has twice openly challenged the Lonardi regime but a showdown in the battle between Peronist and anti-Peronist leaders for control has been averted thus far.) Heart Attack Kills Owner Of Historic Old Absinthe House NEW ORLEANS. Nov. 5 (UP) - Owen E. Brennan, famed French Quarter restaurateur and night club owner, was found dead in his bed today from a heart attack. The 45-year-old Brennan was discovered byhJa wife. Dot 0..l.he appi7r7tlt'ht --dle?:1 his sleep. Brennan wa owner of the Old Absinthe House. Brennan's French and Creole Restaurant; and Brennan's Restaurant, one of the city's famed eating places. The Old Absinthe House on Bourbond Street was widely known and was a "must" for tourists. It is housed in the buDlding where Gen. Andrew Jackson and the pirate, Jean La- Fitte. made their agreement un- der which LaFitte would be par- doned for his piracy in return for help in fighting the British in the War of 1812. Norwegian Tanker Hits Bank Of Caal, Ties Up In Balboa Ike To See Wartime Pal Montgomery -0o- Armored Cars, Mortars Break DENVER, Nbv. 5-(UP)-Pres- ident Elsenhower today entered . the seventh week of recoveryU neasy Lull from his Sept. 24 heart attack with all evidence from his hos- pital room pointing to an in- 0. o - creasingly successful recupera- tion. JERUSALEM, Nov. 5 (UP) An Israeli force, back- He scheduled a meeting at j Fitzsimons Army hospital witni ed by nine armored cars, fought a sharp clash with Egypt- one of his close friends and ian troops today at i(hanyunis, South of Gaza, an Egyptian World War II comrade, British military spokesman reported Field Marshal Viscount Mont- military sp gomer9 of Alemain who is now The spokesman said the two sides exchanged inten- forcepuy commander of NATO sive artillery barrages in the clash which lasted 45 mi- Mr. Eisenhower's continued nutes this morning in the embattled frontier strip area. recovery finds him virtually The Egyptians charged the action started when an free of his wheel chair and ISraeli unit composed of nine armored cars approached for that first try at s carefully go- the truce demarcation line at Khanyunis and poured ing up and down steps. shellfire at Egyptian forces stationed behind the border. His physicians weren't yet ready for that last step to his "complete mobility," but the Chief Executive's increased dai- ly activity indicated clearly that he is well on the way toward being able to walk onto his plane for the return flight east late next week. Mr. Eisenhower rang up two more "firsts" Thursday in his march to recovery. His doctors permitted him to walk "at will" over the entire eighth floor of the big hospital. And he Joined Mrs. ELsenhower kor Smal dining roomh on the same floor to eat from a table for the first time since he was stricken by a heart at- tack Sept. 24. Underwater Volcanic Activity Suspected In Philippine Sea HONOLULU, Nov. 5 (UP). A massive area of boiling, steam- ing water, apparently from un- der water volcanic activity, has been reported in the Philippine Sea by the steamship Washing- ton Mail which sailed through 60 miles of the turbulence. The captain of the ship, W. W. Dinsmore, radioed the Navy's hy- drographic office here that the ship encountered the pheno- Earlier both Israel and Egypt Tekoa, said the El Auja sector gathered up their dead and sol- was quiet. He said the only ~s- diers in slit trenches watched raeli forces there were pollee tensely over an uneasy truce and soldiers normally stationed which settled over the bloody in the area. border battlefield. Tekoa said Israel was permit. Egypt had claimed victory in ting U.N truce observers free. the fierce two-day battle for dom of movement to carry out possession of the El Sabah out- their duties as long as they did post in the El Auja Demilitariz- not expose themselves to dan- ed Zone. ger. He charged that no U.N. ob- A dispatch from Cairo quoted servers were permitted any- an official-spokesman as saying where on the Egyptian side. an Israeli denial that the Egyp- He said Israel would abide by tians recaptured El Sabha was the U.N.-called cease fire as long "completely untrue." as the Egyptians-did. not ftt.k. "F4Eyptian forces cleared th Casualty cllnmAW" dot El, Sabah position of Israei El Sabah fighting h cot Mtda- troops and completely occupied Egypt said 1 Tsraelis we l the area," the spokesman said. ed and- 70 Egyptians were dead A dispatch from El Sabah by or missing. Israel claimed -50 United Press correspondent Egyptians killed and 46 captureel Walter Collins, who went there with a loss of five Israeli lives. from Cairo, reported tremen- Both sides took advantage of. dous military activity all along the uneasy truce to gather up the Egyptian side of the line. their dead. An of;iclal spokesman in Cal. In the Israeli sector of Jeru- ro said srael had asked the UN. salem, a foreign office spokes- truce commission to reqest man charged Egypt with contin- Egypt to allow the sra to ued violation of armistice provi- collect their dead at El Sabah sons limiting the number of "Israel proposed joint Egyptian- troops and types of equipment Israeli patrols to supervise the allowed in the border sector. searcht4 spokesman said. The Israeli spokesman, Josep a This proposal was not con- firmed on the Israeli side. Drinking Contest - Gamble Costs Truce Supervisor Brothers Lives Sltops In London A Nair am.-.- -- flI entne Genera.. Confederation .. . menon- Wkdnesday between the MANILA, Nov. 5-(UP)-Two in WA llentine General Confederation ll The Norwegian tanker Blia Philippine and Marianas Islands. brothers gambled their lives On Way reimeLabor, ais capable of over which yesterday struck the Pan- on their drinking capacity and regime, capable o over- ama Canal bank while transiting He said the boiling activity lost, police reported today. LONDON, southbound, will be tied up at, was visible for three miles on Authorities said the broth- United Nati H Wr Balboa for several days pend- both sides of the ship's course. ers, Velacio and Ciriaco Aure, supervisor a I Miam PAA Workers ing an examination of damages The position given was 600 aged 24 and 20, used a drink- day en rou incurred. miles east of Didicas rock vol- ing contest to settle a long- Middle East The 1995-ton tanker which cano which erupted from a depth standing feud with Nicasio powers mu At lt thr mpany wer was bound for El Salvador from of- 18,000 feet several years ago Hernandez. steps" to en bAt least 5 other persons were Curacao hit the bank between and left an 800-foot cone stick- They agreed to drink until tian fighting Paburned by firecrackers here in Bas Obispo and Las Cascadas ing out of the water. either the two brothers or Panama City between Thursday ontractPrl reach at about 5:30 p.m. Hernandez dropped. The first Maj. Gen. and yesterday. Agent for the ship, Texas Co. The Navy said no soundings to pass out would be killed. In from Nev MIAMI, Nov. 5 (UP).- Local said the vessel would be tied up have been made within 100 miles After several rounds of rum, fluential Tin MIAMI,O transport workers (UP.-Loa for several days. An investiga- of Wednesday's activity, but the Velaclo and Ciriaco dropped. in an edito nspo Plane CIO transport workers of Panve tion into the cause of the acci- depth there was believed to be Hernandez shot one and come t ocor SAmericanwhelminglyrwayscchave dent was being completed. about 21,000 feet. stabbed the other. united Natiof ( a company, contract proposal. nd Israeli a Crashes This Indicated that other locals and Israel about the country and Hawaii wThich often and Puerto Rico will follow Suit wthichkoite SMen Missing. Gangster Willie Biof Bombedsa Yesterday vote was reported fairs on th HOLYOKE, Mass., Nov. 5 (UP) 1,600 to 80 by Local 90 President is a theree new fi Four of eight men aboard a Ernest Mitchell late last.. night. T be t O I t I Iis treatat military transport plane that o aed ae 40 midniUht shift goiUEEe1'U' River nto. theonnectit were still to vote early todayea h; M a I Suspected Burnsen swollen stream today. i n Some 3,100 P AA workers in itli secret swollestreamtodayew York, Houston, San Fran-1 PHOENIX, Arizona, Nov. 5 bomb apparently was planted tenced to 10 years and fined $10,- proposals sa The four survivors managed to cisco, Seattle, Honolulu and San (UP) Gangsters bent on re- under the driver's seat and wired 000 each, but all were paroled a total war swim 100 yards to shore after Juan are voting on the offer to- venge, possibly members of the to the truck's ignition system so after serving a little less than Egypt "depe their Air 'Force C'47 plunged day. dreaded, murderous Mafia, were that the starter would touch off four years. the policies v into the stream at 11:46 pm The union had threatened to blamed today for the violent car- the explosion. Bioff and Browne, however, There were yesterday during a lashing rain strike Oct. 26, but temporary re- bomb death of former labor were released from prison only prepared to storm. straining orders were issued by racketeers William (Willie) Bloff Los Angeles police telephoned a year after the trial, reportedr on how far it tPolr e Mia mland New York courts. The 54. officers here to say that .he ly for having turned states evi- i attt tle II POltce and volunteers search-I strike order was to be reinstatea The former convict, found gull- bomb-killing fitted "a pattern of dence. mntee of hen ed the banks of the river for this Monday. ty in 1941 Of a $1.000,000 extor- Mafia vengeance." One Los An- Browne had been hiding since and the Arab The mtwssing men. The company offer. which Mit- tlon plot on the movie industry, geles officer called it "a typical his release and last, was held Asked wp*a Then route ined plaFore waschell said federal mediators were was killed yesterday when he Mafia job." Another officer said, from in Richmond, Illinois, more mind for Uh n roasute to Westover Air Force instrumental In bringing about, stepped on the starter of his "It has all the elements of the than seven years ago. Bloff had prevent a tot Boln nearby Chicopee r Wash provides a 25-month contract re- pickup truck and triggered a old gangster wars." been living here under the name die East. Bu Boilinong Air Force Base, W troactive to Sept. 1. The old bomb, believed to be made of Bloff turned informer on Al of William Nelson, which had not discuss t Military officials at Westover contract erpired Aug. 31. dynamite. Capone hoodlums after being been approved by the govern- time. He also awaited better visibility to send It offers pursers, port stewards Bloff was blown 25 feet sent to prison on charges of ments. the Czech ar helicopters and planes over the and stewardesses premium pay through the steel top of the shaking down Hollywood movie Bloff's attractive blonde w.fc, "is within m scene. of $3.75 an hour for more than truck's cab. His body was blown heads for $550,000 by threatening Laurie, said she had just waved that they don Police boats were ordered off 70 hours a month and time and to pieces from the waist down. to call a nationwide strike of goodbye to Bloff and turned cainst each ol the river early today because of a half pay on a quarterly basis The explosion also tore off his film projectionists that reported- away when the explosion occur- the dangerous currents in the for over 225 hours, Mitchell said. right arm and lag. Tiny pieces ly could have ruined the muvie red. But when river which Is 1,200 feet wide at Maintenance workers, he add- of his body were scattered industry. Bloff later admitted The couple had lived In Phoe- 'foresee any 0 the point of the crash. ed, would receive an 11-cent a- throughout the yard of his $40,- he had extorted $1,800.000. nix in seclusion for the past 12 the tense Mid However, more than 100 po- cross-the-board raise. He said 000 home. Bioff a n d Browne turned years. Mrs. Bioff said her hus- smiled and sa lice, firemen and volunteers employes were offered medlcai The blast was so violent that state's evidence In the trial of band had dealt in stocks and - from Westover searched the compensation at foreign base, it shattered the truck, crumpled five Al Capone hoodlums from bonds and was -'strictly legiti- BALUK banks for survivors throughout including severance pay, PAA the doors of the garage like tin- Chicago and two associates in mate." the night, stated it would prohibit super- foil, damaged Blofft home and March, 1943. testifying the Ca- She said they did not go ouV SUNDAY, The four survivors were in visory employes from doing broke windows In neighborhood none mob was the real power be- very much and lived a quiet life. I WON "good" condition today at the production work except in emer- houses. hind the movie extortion racket. -'He just wanted to put the 8,s02 a.m. base hospital at Wtowver. agency cases. fherff's investigators said the The men on trial were sea- t behind him," she said. :40 p.i . To Mid-East Nof. 5 (UP) The ons Palestine true arrived here yestor- te to the troubled and said the big st take "definite d the Israeli.Egyp- . E. L. M. Burns flew w York, as the in- mes of London said rial. the time has ' insider throwing If. is troops into tl. - to hold the Arab armles apart. rful newspaper. reflects government Lid the state of af- e Gaza frontier - ighting has flared- to peace and must a such." route to Jerusalem new U.N. ceasefire id the possibility of between Israel and nds entirely upon , which are adopted." reports Burns was sound out Br tain t would so in carry. 150 Bli Three umr- ace between rrael b states. t steps he had in ie Rreat power to al war in the lid* . mrn said he cold he question at tft. refused to dl am-1. ms deal but said ox province to ese-'3 't he the arms . other . asked If be definite Thttutrs.. l-Fa"t situatite id "no." T OA T'PPS 1 Three Dead ~-........L I I . I SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1955 mwi PAM'A&MA A* AMx MfA A n rT T Tm lrtA W SV A W1 qPAPERI THE PANAMA AMERICAN my1 ANO PULSuHEO *Y TmN PANAMA AM1MICAN P1Res, INC. AroikUNDD mV NELSON ROU$I9Vi. 1 IN 1 09 NARM9E 10 ARIAS. IOITOR i T7. N i~STOrr P, O 0ox 14. PANAMA. R. O P. ' J T(ELPHONe 2-0740 45 LINbo) SCABLUE AODDRSll PANIMERICAN. PANAMA Sem.LeN Ovraoes aw.79 CENTRAL AVENUE iTWEEN a.TH ANO 13TH STEETE .F PFOIIN RpmREriNTATIVKS, JOSHUA V. POWERS. INC. 848 MADIsON Avi NtW YORK, 417) N. Y. S* LOCAL, e AtIL f MOW MorNT. 1H ADVANC* 1.70 S a,50 OR SIX MONTHS, IN ADVANC__ 8.80 3.00 SPn ONE YEAR. IN ADVANCE ... 8.50 24.00 STHIS 6 YOUR FORUM THE READS OWN COLUMN STHE MAIL BO( J.. OF MARGARET, RITA AND RUBIROSA Theres onley one thing I git tireder reading about then Mar- garet and Peter an that's Rita Haywood an her so called love life. For about a year all we had in the newspapers was stories About Rita Haywood and Mr. Hyde. Every day before breakfast I would read about there troubles an his bein exported by the United States Government and she aweepin an awailin that she was-agoin to ,tand by her man come hell or high water. An she done it fer the better part of a year which is all any man can expect I guess. Then aleng come Princess Margaret and Mr. Peter an we started gittin four to eight columns daily of that twather an tripe. An every other sentence it was Commoner Peter which is 41 years old an the heart broken princess which is torn twixt love an duty. An not a word about how much money he earns f an ,how'much money she is used to spending each year. An then every one calling her Meg an tellin her not to do it an then when ." she made up her mind not to do it which showed a high degree iof intelligence to me, then everybody said she hadnt oughter said no but should of married the pore 41 year old commoner Peter which is 16 years older than she is an the father of two children an the savior of Britain in her hour of need an the in- nercent party to a divorce an what did I leave out. /So yesterdays paper only had a half column on them an maybe by next week there will only be a day-to-day battin aver- age box on wno Meg goes out with, who she dances with who she swims with an how sad she looks or don't look. Meanhile who have we got agin that's right, Rita Haywood an Mr. Hyde. The passionate Redhead which is now died back :to a blackhead which was what she started out bein anyway, i packed her bags an moved out on Mr. Hyde claiming he was nothing IJ but a Dr. Jeekle anyway. So she bundled off her children an Assorted them out to their respective fathers one here an one there 'r ,an who she is bundled up with at this writing nobody seems to -now an I couldn't care less. ; Exception I hope she meets up with Mr. Rubirosa. The latest Jiews flash on that gent was that he walked out on his million- 'a re wifey an is bark blackin ZaZA Gabors other eye which aint a bad way to spend ones time. But a Haywood-Rublrosa tangle should ought give the newspaper boys enough to write about ler a week or two. An I wonder why they do it. Who could care less then peo- pie about what the freeks are doin. Isnt that the height of the gMlement with the Plus Factor squared. What could be more degradin to the socalled intelligence of a nation than to see S Peter scootin down an alley pursued by a company of those re- served British newspapermen chasing him on motorbykes that'ss how they spell it over there Red tells me) automobiles (I don't know how they spell that over there) or making time jist by flapin there wings. I would rather give old Lady Agewood a rub- down than watch Rita Haywood do a strip tease an who the father of her next child is goin to be aint as interesting a ques- tion to me as ferinstance when they are goin'to reduce the price of liquor on the Canal Zone. Red says I should stop aggrivatin myself over things like these or I will come down with a case of ulsters. An I think hes right. I think Ill jist go down to the stables fer a change of at- mosphere an write a pome. But I jist cant help thinking about them there things an gittin rather sad. An another thing. What ever happened to Peter Beansley? Sadeye Sam S ttK stk True Ufe Adventures g"tl VYOLJN6 OF ALMosT ALULANIMA- HAVE TO L ET OFP STEAM--BUT TY4I1I P2LAf a16 FRPAKATIOM -FOR THeI 4ROL.ES INm APUOLI.T LIF. THE SAVINGS BANK Institution Guaranteed by the State Pays 2% Interest Annually on Savings Accounts INITIAL DEPOSIT $5.00 We make loans with guarantees on first mortgages or other securities, 25. 50c. $1.00 and $5.00 CHRISTMAS SAVINGS deposits are accepted thru a period of 48 weeks. Individual safety(deposit boxes, for jewelry and documents, in 4 different sizes. OFFICE IN PANAMA: 1 C Omatrl Ave. at arr of "11" Street. 0. A. Be ROUX, Mawm. - COLON BRANCH: Front St. at corner of 7th St. CARLOS MOUYNES V., Sub-Manager. f HOURS: rrm 1:0 a.m. to 12:3 p.m. SATRIbATS: e 8::8 a.m. to 12:W p.m - .l. - Labor News And * Comment A Reax ed World By VICTOR RIESEL Nowhere else in this jittery world could it happen that the top national security police chief and he top national labor leader would feel mutually honored to get up on the same stage to pledge a common fight for the rights of ,, evely one of us. That's exactly what will happen in Washington's Departmental o Auditorium on the morning of Nov. " 18. If there were such an atomic era thing as a global TV network, it would be fascinating to televise that stage and beam the picture behind the Iron and Bamboo Cur- tains so the "liberated" proletariat could see and hear FBI Chief J. Edgar Hoover and AFL-CIO Presi- dent George Meany. Mr. Meany will be there as the guest of Mr. Hoover to make the principal talk to the 80-man gradu- ating class of the National Acad. emy of the FBI. There are two such classes a year. The graduates are police officers brought in from across the land for special training by the FBI's experts in the tech- nique and philosophy including civil rights-of law enforcement. There have been 3,000 such graduates since 1935. Many, such as New York's Police Commis- sioner Steve Kennedy, head their community law enforcement de- partments, bringing to these divi. sions modernized thinking and treatment which puts to shame even the over-publicized Scotland Yard. The FBI National Academy s .i has litted law enforcement in this 'a land right out of the muck of the a old blackjack and third-degree age. J. Edgar Hoover, looking about for a speaker this fall who repre-g a se t O i sent a great part of the citizenry, invited Meany who soon will By PETER EDSON speak for 14,750,000 American working people. This broke prec- -- o edent. WASHINGTON -(NEA)- Rain- Frank Teuton of Department of with a soybean oil that keeps them Mr. Meany will speak at the coats madp out of surplus pork Agriculutre. odrier. FBI Academy just about two fats. Nonfattening candy. Chicken Potato grading was shown to be Peanut shells are made into bot- weeks before the AFL and CIO feathers made into fertilizer, paint down to such a fine point thattle cap linings to save cork. officially merge in New York brushes and even chicken feed. "bakers" can be separated from A root beer manufacturer came at which conclave will be an- Big sweet onions that you can eat "fryers." Simply float the spuds up with a problem of frequent nounced the "organizational cru- like an apple without crying -in alcohol. Those that float havespoilage. Analysis showed there sade," which Walter Reuther de- The list is almost endless. But more wax and are better baked, was a bacterium in it which caus- scribes as the new national union, these are just a few of the new Rutin taken from tobacco will ed deterioration. Pasteurization izing campaigns. products being developed from sur- strengthen the capillaries of high ended that. plus farm crops now in overpro- blood pressure patients. But the bug int he root beer was The AFL-CIO president-among duction, and from the hunt to find The cause of dried egg powder found to be a pretty good citizen whose followers, incidentally, are new and better crops for surplus spoilage has been discovered and after all. Fed on sugar, the bac- the FBI agents, members of the A wholf slew of these new prod- removed. Chemical separation of terium produced dextron, a substi- AFLs government employqs,sucts was served or demonstrated the egg sugar does it. tute for blood plasma. union will show himself as a at a luncheon meeting given by New market packaging devices New automobile oil filters use responsible man of definite views, the U.S. Department of Agricul- shown included a transparent plas- milk casein instead of oil as the The graduating class and the 1,500 ture's Beltsville, Md., research tic egg carton. One look reveals fluid to absorb the dirt. A new jet guests, iLcluding judges, congress- center. The program kicked off if any eggs are broken, New poly- plane lubricant has been produced men and White House officials, Farm-City wee k observances, ethylene food bags keep. green from turpentine. will get a picture of a labor leader sponsored this year by Kiwanis In- vegetables fresh for longer periods. with whom they may not agree ternational, all ove, the coqptry. Agricultural scientists have even but who will pledge that the labor At the luncheon invited guests The old s of marketing called invaded the greenhouses to pro. movement under him will try not had orange juice made roman -de. 'fo leAvigt tops on carrots and duce better crops of flowers. to give them cause for worry. hydrated, fresh orange juice pow- radishes o pw that they were Chrysanthemums, which used to der. Ham from a new 'lean-meat fresh. Then 't was discovered that be obtaimnable' only in the fall, can Keeping that promise will give hog. "Dehydrofrozen" peas with a t.e green tops drained moisture now be forced to blossom at al. Mr. Meany many a headache. But longer keeping quality, Lettuce out of the roots. So now this truck most any time of year. And the he will try though he has some and celery that haI been kept for is marketed without leaves, and it plant blooms stay fresh for month 70,000 local unions and some 140 five and six weeks at 32 degrees, stays fresh longer. Carnations, which always have intern" tional unions to look after. yet served crisp and fresh. Pickles The question of what to do with had a tendency to droop and wilt Mr. Meany's presence on that plat- usual six-month brining. Cheese the tops-and what to do with the rapidly, have been improved by form shows the maturity to which made in two hours instead of the wastes of all fruit and vegetable growing them with stronger stems., we've grown and which so many usual one day. Pecan pie and canning then arose. Somebody At the same time, the size of the critics here and abroad disdain chestnuts-the nuts grown on new found a way to make it into chick- blossoms has been increased. All and deny. Mr. Meany would not disease-resistant trees. en feed. this was simply done by scientific appear on the platform as Mr. Then came the show of newi Shotgun shells are now made fooling around with the plant' Hoover's guest if he believed that farm by-products, p u't on by with a soybean glue and coated hormones. the FBI was not a force for good or if he thought there was any insinuation in any FBI action that W alter W inchell In New YorK it was anti-labor. Mr. Hoover would not have ex-W alter W inc tended the invitation if he be- lieved that George Meany would not devote himself to seeing that - the new massive labor movement Broadway Ballad tedium at 5:f5 a.m. with: "18th Poetry A Walk in the Park i._. .e-inmiatd bv combine Precinct! 312 W 53rd! Somene~land a Kiss in th DaI~ t is not diom.ina.. py a --- I -- ; -p "a oir o of crooks or Communists both Remember the tender years we playing piano in a church!" . of whom already are battling the shared, (DrunKen burglars by golly!) AFL chief. When all the nights ware starry We went along Neighbors magic. complained their sleep was wreck- It must be pointed out that there Remember the gilded dreams we ed, etc. The cops founet an as. are those in the new AFL-CIO who bared, tonished young Colored woman (a do not share Mr. Meany's appar- So soon to pass, fo swiftly tragic, recent widow), who told them: ent respect for the nation's secur- How useless now to count the clock "I've been practicing hymns like ity police. Most of these critics That marks the sunset' crimson this for a year. Nobody complain- are in the CIO. One, for example, fringe ed before" . The church was is the energetic, 70-year-old Jack j While foolish dreamers faintly once a first floor tenement flat Kroil, director of the CIO's Po- knock . Pulpit, piano, about 20 chairs, litical Action Coimmittee, now Upon the door that has no hinge. religious pictures on the walls slated to be co-director of the new In vain my lonely heart now cries The bareheaded cops were respect- AFL-CIO Committee on Political Against the swiftly r u n n i n g ful and gentle. "Sorry, Madam," Education (COPE). sands; one sid, "but people complain. Against the mists that cloud my ed" . So she went home around Last December Mr. Kroll went eyes the corner until 8 a.m. prayer- out to the Illinois CIO convention As I reach out for absent hands. tiem. A sort of Angel trying to and bitterly attacked the FBI. do some Good on Sin Street Devil'd Mr. Kroll attacked the use of The hobbled day: go slowly by, by Anonymous Servants of Satan "secret police files" and hit some But, Oh, the years-how fast they As we watched her Being FBI reports on the Harry Dexter fly! Defeated (in her work for The White case as "political." Mr. -Flower Parry Lord)-across the street we also Meany's presence at the FBI saw some of her Sisters-Under-The- Academy graduation seeks to Celebrityville: Garbo having her Skin . Prostituting. negate any insinuation of a "po- hair done at a barber shop litical' FBI. Mr. Meany certainly on Park and 57th when it was de-1 is not a devotee of the Republican serted . J. DiMaggio, the intro- Memos of a Midnighter: Sonja Administration and, as he told us vert, singing lustily with Ton i Henie's big romance isn't J. Mc-I in New York last week, he cer- Bar. at The Park Ave. Restau- Kinley Whatzisname but French tainly expects the AFL-CIO to get rant . E. V. Durling (the Hearst cafe pianist Jean Courmont . . into the 1956 presidential cam-:syndicolyumist) at Lindy's w it h Gloria DeHaven took an apt ii paign. the Jack 0 Brians and Mrs. Wm i Miami Beach which is w h e r e Curley an.' then the press-car beat Dick Fincher, the One-and-Only, So Mr. Meany's appearance will until the wee hours . Maurice prospers . Fickle G. David make news to a world which Chevalier (at El Morocco) explain- Schine dated Piper Laurie (his often sees us as a feuding bunch ing how to enjoy the sunset once-was) the first night in Movie- of intolerants. And to the labor years: "Everything with modera- town and Ann Miller the next .. people who must take a position tion" . Kaye Ballard (at Bon| Author L. Kronenberger, who at their merger convention in De- Soir) displaying her 26-kiarat star withdrew his name from "Thei member on freedom and security sapphire "friendship" ring from Heavenly Twins" show (opening in the land. ardent beau John Stevens of Hous- Friday eve), will collect royalties, ton, lexas . Jayne Mansfield anyway . Memo from "The making with the powda-puf before Matchmaker" management: "Af- taking the lift to Metro's talent ter your radio item quoting the office . Joe E. Lewis telling raves by Philly critics, we sold 22 Copa landlord J. Podell (during more theater-parties next day" .. Nat King Cole's "Autumn Leaves" Isn t Marilyn's big secret a big number): "The next time I play mag chief? here I want fiddles, too!" . .I Shirley booth. Definition of Love: From the S "Mr. and Mrs. United States" dep 1 Sallies in Our Alley: Bill John- of our broadcast: Surely the Briti- son (co-star of "Pipe Dream") ish newspapers must know the' knows a psychiatrist, who was Power of Love It Is as old as d...*leu ab in we CTI . it is a Boy ano a Girl . A Man and Woman . Discovering a very warm world in each other's arms .. If Margaret is forbidden the birthright of the humblest London barmaid (to marry) she will be- come Very Old . Very Young . . It seems almost barbaric that a girl should be condemned to heartbreak for being in love . t comes Once in a Lifetime and gives you The Time of Your Life. Times Square Circle: Lou Ann Sims' innocent surprise (at be- ing ax'd by Godfrey) surprised in- siders. They allege Jim Seward (CBS veep) gave her the notice earlier this year. She reportedly told friends about it six months ago . Another paper will pitch for Brooklyn circ. The Bklyn Daily (once a weekly) plans a 48-pager . . It's a Boy for the jockey Wm. McKinley Cookes . An edi- tor at a top nat'l mag reportedly confided that the last issue (fea- turing.Adlai on the cover) did not pull the readership anticipated ... The Runyon Fund thanks Chas. Wood (president of "Storytown, USA") for the almost $3,000 check ... The Vegas Dunes big-biz com- bination (Howard Keel and Jane h Batty Kean) open at the Copa Dec. 1st . Jimmy Komack fig- ures the next thing the British will do s ban "Romeo and Juliet" .. The Sortilege window displays have class. Tossed Orchid Salad: "Life With Fiorello" (a memoir) by Ernest Cuneo. Delightful reading by a word-magician ... "The Joker is Wild" (about Joe E. Lewis) by Art Cohn . Dana Wynter's dana- mite in. "View, From Pompey's Head" . Andree Dior's chants at Madeleine's -.. Martha Davis I Spouse at the .Blue Angel . Stella &" Reyes at Roseland ... 8-year-old Joe Ward's first (King) disc: "Nuttin' For Christmas." Rounds in the Night: At Little drummed out of the profession. A Adam and Eve and as new as the Bohemia: "The way they ignore a big meeting of analysts a mes. Eiist Kiss . Philosophers and eaci other in public you'd think sage was relayed to him (over the pAschiatrists have tried to define they were lovers" . At Cafe loudspeaker) which simply sai d: it . Love has inspired Poets Nino: "Bored? She'd yawn at her "Youi mother wants you to call and Peasants . Composers and own murder".... At the Steak Pit: her!" . Sarah Vaughan's defini- Commentators Nevertheless, 'She looks good in anything but tion of a cocktail party: "A-gossip this wonderful quick-silver emotion a mirror" .,. At Chambord: Here column with martinis!" defies analysis . It has as many they come. Jack and Jail" .. At different meanings as there are Si Bun: "The Torch is when your Midtown Saint & Sinners: The people in love . Love is Moon- Cookie becomes someone else'sI police dispatcher broke the long light and Roses . Music and dessert.' Red Cross, Canal Join Forces On Blood. Bank a FOSS0- Establishment of a Canal Zone blood bank through volunteer don- ors is being planned jointly by the Health Bureau and the Canal Zone chapter of the Ameri c an Red Cross. -Plans for the blood ban)" and for volunteer Red Cross workers to assist in the campaign for don- ors as well as later in administer- ing the program were announced today. Volunteer workers to assist in the initial phases of the cam- paign are urgently needed for clerical work and record keeping. Volunteer nurses will also be needed to assist at the two hospi- tals when the blood bank is es- tablished. Gorgas Hospital presently main-I tains a blood bank and it is plan- ned to establish one at Coco Solo Hospital. Equipment for storing fresh blood has already been or- dered for the Atlantic side hospi- tal. When established, the blood bank would eliminate the necessity for t'.i present charge of $25.00 made for each pint of blood used at the hospital when the supply is not replenished by a patient's family of friends. The following announcement cop- cerning the Canal Zone blood bank is contained in the Novembe. issue of The Panama Canal Review: "The plans have been developed --y the Canal Zone chapter of the American Red Cross 1I cooperation with'the Health Bureau. Responsi- bility for collecting, processing and distributing blood will be assumed by the. Health Bureau, while the Red Cross will conduct a campaign for volunteer donors as well as volunteers to assist in recruitment and record keeping. "It is planned to confine the campaign to residents of the Can- al Zone, and the Armed For c e s have been invited to participate. "The proposed plan would make a% ailable an ample suply of fresh blood to meet the requirements of the two Canal Zone hospitals and ,he mercy missions, 'plus a small reserve for emergencies. With a large list of volunteer donors the blood bank could be replenished at frequent intervals by calling donors on a rotating basis. "The establishment" of a Canal Zone blood bank is consistent with the National Blood Program in the Office of Defense Mobilization. This was established by Executive Order of the President in Decem- ber 1951, and the American Red Cross was designated as the co- ordinating agency for blood col- lection for the Department of De- fense and the Federal Cicil De- fense Administration. "The Red Cross has been In- strumental in the establishment of blood banks throughout the U- nited States on a volunteer basis; these are available Vftth-for mil- itary and civilian personnel. "Although not directly a part of the National Blood program, the Canal Zone program for volunteer donors and for the maintenance of the Canal Zone blood bank will be conducted along the lines adopted by the American Red Cross in the United States. "The same general limitations on volunteer donors will be adopt- ed in the Canal Zone program as those for the national program. In general, these are: Any person be- tween the ages of 18 and 59 may give blood if he or she weighs 110 pounds or more. Parental consent is required of persons from 19 to 21 years of age. "While the primary objective in the campaign will be to secure an adequate number of volunteer don- ors, the Canal Zone chapter of the Red Cross is interested now in obtaining volunteer workers to ad- minister the program. These vol- unteers are needed to assist in the clerical work and record keeping required during the drive for vol- unteer donors and later in ad- ministering the program. Volun- teer nurses will also be required to assist at the two hospitals when the blood banks are replenished. "Volunteers for this type of work have been requested to communi- cate with Mi's. Thelma Monogan, Chairman of the Volunteer Serv- ices or at the Ped Cross offices in Ancon or Cristobal. Volunteer workers may communicate with M:s Monogan by telephoning Cu- rundu 6194, or writing to Box 322, Balboa Heights. Volunteers on the Atlantic side have been requested to write Box 5045, Cristcbal, or call personally at the Red Cross office on, Roosevelt Avenue in Old Cris- obal. "The campaign for volunte e r. blood donors will be conducted through the Canal Zone, including the military establishments, dur- ing the coming few weeks. Pledge cards will be distributed thrgugh- out the Canal organization and these may be filled out and mail- ed to the Red Cross Offices at Balboa Heights or Cristobal. "The processing of these applii- stions will require some time, de- pending upon the number of vol- unteer workers to assist in this task. Some information will be required in addition to that ap- pearing on the volunteer pledge cards... The Red Cross will corn. municate with volunteer donors for this information as soon as pos- sible after receipt of the pledge." Japanese Firms To Set Up Agency For Red Trade TOKYO, Nov. 5 (UP).-Japan- ese trading firms took steps to- day to set up this month a single agency through which to con- duct commerce with Communist China. A promoters meeting .of 52 leading foreign trade firms last night set Nov. 24 as the target date for. organization of the "Japan China Export Import Cooperative." Spokesmen said the purpose of the step was, to eliminate costly competition between Japanese firms which had put them at a disadvantage in nfgotItinz with the Red Chinese government trade corporation. . Puerto Rican Industrial Show Seeking Markets For Products A flying caravan of 20-Puerto was Curacao, Netherlands West Rican industrial leaders, accom- Indies, where its wares were dis- panying a special exhibit of played at the Hotel Piscadera products of expanding manu- Bay. From there the Caravana facturing plants, left San Juan went to the Hotel Tamanaco in Tuesday for a tour of six other Caracas, Venezuela, and here at Latin American countries. Hotel El Panama Monday. The Caravana exhibit includes Hotel Washington, Colon, will products by 60 Puerto Rican be the next stop on Wednesday companies In light metals, plas- and Thursd&y; San Jose, Cos- tics, electronics, textiles, wearing ta Rica, Nov. 12, and the Hotel apparel, chemicals and other Del Lago, Maracaibo, Venezuela, lines. Nov. 15. Specially built display cases So great has been the interest are designed to permit circus- generated in Latin American by like efficiency in handling and news of the goodwill trade mis- for transportation in cargo com- sion that countries not on the apartments of PAA passenger itinerary have asked the Cara- Clippers. Set up for viewing, vana to extend its tour. Costa the exhibit covers some 3,000 Rica has asked that the ex- square feet of floor space, hibit remain longer than sched- First stop for the Caravana uled. (Mercurlo) SIDE GLANCES By Colbraith "I know it's fate and storming, Obotr, but I'm teflg you the baby snesezd three times! Now about your o- cratio oath?" VIM TWO THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN JNDEPEN m I PAGE TRUE THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER Soctaland Otlerwije 4Y Staffer r, 5037, ,4ncon Bo 134, Panama liA r a/md4 'aint'a B LL&, PariN 4/ jwf.d. 1 m oiwmpl/, t umun i o. .t A l 1.t .d I /,,ph e, P-m. 2-0740 2.-0741 tfwa. 900 ,J0 to .m. -4 FRENCH AMBASSADOR TO ENTERTAIN Tuesday, at the Post's Educal COMMANDERS OF VISITING SHIPS center. This will be the only class The Ambassador and Mrs. Lionel Vasse have issued invita- its kind available to military p tions to a reception at the Union Club on Nov. 14 in honor of sonnel through the Army edu captains of two French cruisers, which will be visiting the tional program of off-duty grn Isthmus, carrying cadets from the French Naval School. Guests study instruction in the Pana of honor will be Commander Durrin Des Rozieres of the Jeanne area. d' Arc and Commander Echinarv of La Grandiere. S--Instruction will be offered ii variety of media including p New Officers Nominated Candlelight Dance and ink, charcoal, watercolor At Cristobal Emblem Club Tomorrow Night tempura. Attention will be given The Cristobal Emblem Club No. The monthly candlelight dance individual problems and inter 52 held its November Business will be held on Sunday, Nov. 6th regardless of the student's pr meeting Tuesday evening at the at the USO-JWB Armed Forces vious training, or experience. Elk's Home in Margarita w it h Service Center froi m 8:00 p.m. to Instructor for the course' w President Fanny Kaplan presid- 11:00 p.m., be Pvt. George Elmgren, ing. Dancing to the music of famous company, 33d Infantry regime Mrs. Tessie Lowe won the white named bands and musicians will elmgren holds an associate elephant for the evening and Mrs. be enjoyed from the new selec- gree from iillyar College and I Marium White won the Come-N- tion of popular music from the received Bachelor of Fine A Get It Pot. record library at the USO-J W B degrees from botr the Rhode A report on the Bazaar which Club. land School of Design and Y was held recently was given by Invitations have been extended Lniveisity. Before entering servi the Bazaar Chairman Mrs. Char- to the Junior Hostesses of the he worked commercially for lotte Tully. USO-JWB Club for this affair, agencies and had his paintings The new officers for the corn- A cordial invitation is extended exhibition in the New York-Nd ing year were nominated a n d to military personnel and their England area. qsbe voted on at the December families to attend. meeting. t were Mesdames Harnett And Dunn Classes will be held every Tu Those present were Mesdames Harnett And Dunn day and Thursday evenings fro Fanny. Kaplan, Midge Larrison, Return From States 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Dorothy LaCroix, Anne M an e r, Harnett and Dunn have just re- In addition to regular c 1 a Dotha Cougher Kathleen Huffman, turned frofn a two-week visit to meetings, field trips are plan Helen Crowell, Tessie Lower, Vir the States. They visited New York, foratdoor sk fetching and panir ginia Russon, Selma Vainio, Jane Miami and Cuba. Miss Harnett i g. Huldtquist, Carlotte Tully, Millie will open her dance studio and n Reccia, Gerry Cellucci, H e I e n charm school, Monday. Morrison, Vera Fagerberg, -- China May Demand Jeanne Bensen, Marium W h I t e, Mrs. Grace Goerbertus elaine Halford, Billie Crump, Ger- Honored At Coffee turde Aligaier, Bernice Grier, Al- Mrs. Grace Goebfertus was the Talks Be Raised berta Roth, and Mary Livingston. guest of honor, Friday morning, raised The Hostesses for tbie November at a coffee given by Mrs. H. N. Social which will be held Novem- Jongbloed at her home in Cristo-To To LA ber 15th will be Mrs. Mari um bal. Mrs. Goebertus is visiting Top L vel White and Mrs. Jeanne Bensen. here from California. -- GENEVA, Nov. 5 (UP) T] Cocoll Card Party Among the guests were Me s-"Little Geneva" conference 1 A card party for the benefit of dames Tita Peterson, Marcela Ga- tween the United States and Coi the Organ Fund of St. Andrew's llindo, Mary Andrews, S a r a munist China resume here wi Episcopal Church will be held Kidd, Florence Owen, M a r-g i e reports that China would demand on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in Morries, Pauline Motta, A I ic e raising the talks to foreign mini the Parish Hall. Beck, Angela L a n g m a n, Lee er level. This affair will be sponsored by kinder, Ruth Humphreys, Shel- the Womman's Auxiliary of St An- ley Van Dam, Gloria Van Dam, U. Alexis Johnson, U.S. Ambs drew's Church, who are offering Gloria Van Ryassan and M a r y sador to Czechoslovakia, and Wai the usual interesting prizes. Brzezinski. Ping Nan, Communist Chine Ambasador to Poland met for t. CHS Senior Has Birthday- Party Mr. and Mrs. B. Donald Humph- rey entertained with a buffet sup- per recently at their hom e in New Cristobal honoring t h e in daughter, Donna Jeanne, on her 18th .birthday anniversary. The centerpiece on the buffet table was a large birthday cake .;R in, the form of a miniature foot- ball field with eleven celluloid tigers and bulldogs placed in for nation to represent the Cristobal High School Tigers and the Bal boa High School Bulldogs. Informal dancing was enjoyed following the supper. ' Later in the evening, Ricardo Lorences, who was to celebrate his 18th birthday the following day, was surprised with an espe- cially decorated birthday c a k e while the group sang "Happy Birthday" to him. Classmates and other friends invited to help Donna celebrate included: Mary Orr, Madelon Car- rett, Margaret Leigh, -Mary Lou Allen, Sue Pincus, Sally and Ma- ry Morland, Diane Peterson, An- drea Armstrong, Peggy R o d d y., Sarah Barfield, Shirley Peterson, Pat Leach, Mary Jo Aycock, E- dithann Eckhoff, Sandra Motta, Judy Tipton, Steffie Beck, Marie Bleakley, Pat Maedl, Jean Cham- bers, Bupchy Gegg, Janet and Jeanette -Swicegood, Huey, Lee, Linda Erickson, Martha Johnson, collect Salter, Linda Talber, Lily Prospect, Linda Foster, Bett y and Charles Fears, Doris and Ed- die Pabon, Betty and Edd ie Smith and Mrs. Lee Kariier. Also Luke Palumbo, Ricardo Lo- rences, Kaiser Bazan, Allen Rob- inette, Lewis Taber, Dick Homrne, Jack Dougan, Guylen Lane, John Brackins, Floyd McDermitt, Gil- bert'Smith, Larry Cox, Carl Tut- tie, Tommy Jordan, Manue, Pe- rez, Tony Naboa, Bob Fogel, Burt Mead, Al Lombana, Robert Mac- Sparran, Lamoine Werlein S a m Newhard, George Gerchow, Al- varo Bernard Craig, Kenny Stone, Fred Johnson, Windy Sasso, Jim- my Brqoks, Chuck C r a w f o r d, Dean Hause, Russell Favorite, Jimmy Longo, George Mercier, Bob Rowley, Bill Maloney, Lam- bert Montavani, Luis Pelaez, John Coffey, Ray Croft, Milton Grover, Robert Lower, Dave H4wthorne, Jone Forrest and Donna's brother, Donald Humphrey. Cristobal-Colon Rotary Meeting This week's meeting of the Cris- tobal-Colon Rotary Club was in honor of Panama's Indepen- dence. It was held on Friday in- stead of Thursday but this was If anything all the more appro- priate because Friday came be- tween Panama's Independence Day on the 3rd and Colon Day on the 5th. The Yincheon meeting, held at the Stranger's Club, was well at- - tended. Colon Rotarian Toty Es- tenoz who is a member of the Na- tional Assembly of Panama was the main speaker. Addressing the Club in English he gave complete and detailed statistics on the Re- public including History, Geogra- phy, Population, Imports, Experts, Races, Creeds-at the end of it all more than one Rotarian had to admit that there were all sorts of facts and figures about Pana- ma that he had not known be- fore. Miguel Tang, President of the Colon Municipal Council, was al- so present as a guest of the Club. He added a few words, in Span- ish, to Toty's remarks, describing Panama as a little country with a big heart. President Les Davis reported on the numerous appearances he has made recently on behalf of Rota- ry, including the Traffic Safety and Colon Fire Department func- tions. I Rotarians Perry Francey and Al Heyd were welcomed ba c k from. leave. Farewells were said to Doug Addison who is leaving tomorrow for a holiday in Califor- nia prior to taking up his ne w post in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Bob b Gegg presented him, on behalf of the Club, with a .Cristobal-Co- Ion Rotary Banner. Next week's meeting will be held at the Hotel Washington on Thursday, Nov. 10, and will be in honor of Veteran's Day. P at Ryan will be the Guest Speaker. Also the club will have as guests seventeen imeembers of the Puer- to Rican delegation who will be visiting Colon at that time. Art Classes Start Tuesday At Kobbe An opportunity to study f r e- hand drawing, painting, composi- tion and commercial design will be offered Fort Kobbe's Lifeliners in a new art class commencing El Panama Announces Spsecial Weekend Plan For Local Residents lion of per- ica- oup ma n a en and Sto ests r e- G'G ent. de- has krts Is- ale ce, art on e w es- om ss led I t- he be- m- th nd st- is- kng se he 25th time to discuss w a y s and means of easing tension in the Far East. Wang was expected to insist that the negotiations be raised to a top level meeting between Sec- retary of State John Foster Dulles and Red Chinest Premier and Foreign Minister Chou-En-lai. The talks between Johnson and Wang began here Aug. 1 on repa- triation of nationals of both sides -and any other matters. So far, the Chinese have, releas- ed a fiumber of American civilians detained on the mainland and this week made the first move to lib- erate U.S. citizens jailed on vari- ous charges. Under the second item of the agenda- "other matters" the Chinese have insisted on a lifting of the trade embargo. Johnson has so far counter e d with requests for more informa- tion on the fate of American GI's. Believed captured by the Chinese Communists during the Kor e a n War, and for concrete assurances that the Peiping regime will not use force over the Formosa dis- pote. St. Paul's Women To Present United Thank Offering The Woman's Auxiliary of St. Paul's Church will present their United Thank offering at the service of Holy Eucharist to- morrow morning at 9 a.m. In addition, they will make their monthly corporate com- munion along with the members of the Altar Guild and the Fleiur de Lis Society. Other services during the observance of the 22nd after Trinity will be held at the regular hours with Arch- deacon Lemuel B. Shirley offi- dcating. Nothing brings out the FULL FLAVOR Joe Cunningham, manager oft The facilities of the hotel will of meats like Hotel El Panama, has announc- be open-to him, the same as fox * e~ a special weekend plan at out of owners. This will include . the hotel during November and a visit to the Casino in the Sky, December for residents of Pan- swimming at the Cabafia Club, /' ama and the Canal Zone. tennis, ping pong. shuffleboard. "Talking to local people" says Weekenders may check in any Cunningham, "I learned that time Saturday and stay until 9 many would like to sample the p.m. Sunday night. Anyone who luxury' treatment El Panama wishes to prolong the weekend, gives tourists who travel thou- or come the day before, will be sands of miles to spend a vaca- given a special price. tion here. Others have stated One or two children under that they would enjoy a week- twelve may be accommodated in end free from everyday cares, cribs or rollawayy" beds in their involving no effort on their parents' room at no extra part. And for a long time, too, charge. Children's portions at we have felt that local residents half price are served in the' TiwgItEINORld" should know their hotel better. Bella Vista Room. In addition Woefhirw s-ce Our weekend plan is the an- to the other facilities of the l a b&W of rrw swer." Cabafia Club, the children's' SAUC di.,o..and For $15 per person, based on playground with Its swings and eowd for dwiin double occupancy of a room, a sandpile will interest the small |Ne seWer. vy a resident of Panama and the Ca-Ifry. %W today nal Zone will enjoy a cornm- Reservations for the special MW M I N lew Sipe modilous room with private ter- Iweekend plan must be made idsle, *HOw To Give race and beautiful view. In this ldlrectiv with the El Panama Feeds aievetw etr Writ t T. Lti. Fr rate Is nteclhauded dinner Served hdtel in advance, and driver's! Ce., buaeW 9,New Yat, U. s. A. In the 1Ref Vista dining room,'license, cedular or Canal Zone IGIMh QUA,,TY-COSTS LESSI or by candlelight on Mhts privateidentififation shown. QUATY-COSTS SS terrace, and the Sunday BratncIj (Mereurlo) I -- I- BY MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE nize what we're told pretty care- fully. HO'W do you discipline your For what manipulators tell us child? Is never quite to be trusted, By emotion? It won't do. By re- For example, the authors of son? The chances are that won't For eChild Bxamplehavior" the author of do, either. The only reliable dis- Child Behavior" write: "If you cipline says the new book, "Child understand how your child's or- Behavior," is based on "develop- ganism works, you will best un- n evelopderstand how to move him in the mental" knowledge-or what its direction you choose." authors, two child "development" drctin you choose. specialists, call through" infor- KNOWLEDGE of a child's o mation on Johnny's weaknesses KNOWLEDGE of a child's "or- and strong points at all age le- ganism" gives nobody any title to v0an. control him. We derive our right ` Well, we h a v e n' t got this tocontrol out child by our love, "though" information, have we? our concern for him-our relation- Nor as busy parents, do we have ship to him. time to study in a child-guidance o t .. a o clinic-and acquire it. Knowledge of the human or- Sganism" operating in detachment So these specialists leave us just from love and Interest in us may one alternative, don't they? We've well be the ultimate peril of tl'is gott o depend upon their "though age. information. By telling us that itj bases he "most effective" discip-I Not long ago, Adolph Hitler line of Johnny, they compel us showed great skill in using knowl- to seek them and their vial in- edge of the human "organism" formation out. to make it shout" Heil!" as it This is an effort to manipulate murdered and looted. More recent- our action by fear. ly, Communist "brainwashers" TODAY nearly everyone tries have shown us what they could do to manipulate everyone else. So with understanding of our "orga- we can't be shocked when an oc- nism" by senGing our boys home casional child-guidance "authori- to us dazed and broken. ty" goes in for it. We're constant- ly being threatened with tooth No, thanks. We've no intention decay and social ostracism if we of regarding our children as "or- don't buy somebody's toothpaste ganisms" to be "worked" as you or deodorant. operate a machine. As the growth The fact that people in the par- charts compiled by child "deve- ent education field sometimes for- lopment" theorists are sometimes get their rule against "dogma- useful, we are grateful for them. tism"-and threaten us with an undisciplined child if we don't buy That's as far as we can go. The their specialized knowledge- is "organism" view is just too cold, quite understandable. No harm is too clinical for our emotional done at all so long as we scruti- taste. LOOK-IT'S A Coobde Shop (ftcLo~iw w Crispy Sgar cookies-deolious Almond Drop4 and many more-have their basic makings ia this one package-Nestl6 Cookie Mixt Yet, it's a, Cookie Shop in a Box. It contains the best ingre- dients-you just add water and a few trimmings, and you're ready to bake in Les than 10 mIeutes Luscious, chocolate-rich kinds too, like Brownies, Toll House' Cookies and Refrigerator Squares, when you add Nestle's Semi-Sweet Chocolate Morsels. Buy both-and get the best Cookie Team ian town S M r Meciwas on every Cookie Mix bai Cut chicken into serving pieces, or thaw according to directions. Rinse in coid water and dry. Melt butter in skillet; season chicken and ibrown on both sides. Remove from skillet. Add onions to skillet and fry slowly until tender Return browned chicken (skin-side up) to skillet; sprinkle with paprika. Add water and cover. CooK slowly 30 to 40 minutes, or until tender. Remove chicken to platter. AdJ cream to skillet mixture, stir and heat thoroughly. Serve with hot cooked rice. Note: It stewing chicken,' cook slowly about 1 hour and 45 minutes, or until tender. Chicken Sauce- (Yield: 4 servings) Two cups diced cooked chicken, 1 garlic bud, finely chopped; %4 cup chopped onion, 3 tablespoons fat, 3 tablespoons flour, 1 teaspoon salt. 1 cup chicken broth, 1 cup (8 ounces) tomato sauce, 1 tea- spoon Worcestershire sauce, 1 ta- blespoon brine from olives, V2 cup sliced pimento olives. Pan-fry garlic and onion in hot fat n a skillet. Blend in flour and salt. Add remaining ingredients. Serve on hot cooked rice or| spaghetti with shredded Parmesan cheese. SANTA COMING to HOG Tune in! Keep listening! ~/na~ tRy also plays 10 * Amefican Ienu RICE IS A PERFECT PARTNER TO GO WITH CHICKEN DISHES By GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Food and Markets Editor I The rice crop is larger this year. So let's get out the cookbooks and !look up chicken and rice recipes ,(for budget meals. Curried Chicken on Rice- (Yield: 4 servings) Eight chicken wings or backs, 1 teaspoon salt, / teaspoon pepper, flour, 1-3 cup butter or margarine, 2 cups milk, /a to 1 teaspoon curry powder, 2 cups cooked rice. Roll chicken in seasoned flour. Pan fry in butter until golden brown. Add milk and curry pow- der. Cover. Cook slowly foi 25 to 30 minutes. Thicken if necessary. Serve over hot rice. Hungarian Chicken One chicken for frying V cup butter or shortening, salt, pepper, 4 cups finely diced onion (4 medi- um onions), 1 teaspoon paprika, 1-3 cup water, 1 cup cream, cooked rice. the new "KING of the KEYBOARD" plays for your pleasure with his TRIO EL ARRANQUE (Nightcap on the house at 4:310 am.) n I a.m. Sun., Tues., Wed., Thurs. -F DIRECT CANAL ZONE DELIVERY OF ALL PATTERNS AMERICA'S OLDEST SILVERSMITHS * KING .* REPOUSSE MAYFLOWER OLD MARYLAND OLD MARYLAND ENGRAVED * SEVEN * QUADRILLE CALVERT ROSE * WINSLOW PRIMROSE * SKYLARK ein0 Ster g TIVOLIard T1VOU A1i0. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1955 _ __ Don't be misled! Disregard the price! i Demand ROUX TINT at all times! It enjoy me largest sales volume In Panama, United' States and other countries, mainly because It does not create difficulties with your hair, It does not Itch or otherwise bother your scalp! It never fails to give the results desired! Distributor in the Republic of Panama and the Canal Zone JULIO VOS No 3 "A" Street Tel. 2-2971, Panama FARMACIA REX COLON the new meeting place of the late crowd! every FRIDAY and SATURDAY midnite to 4:30 a.m. __ - 0 rESTLI a . Am MOUR Stooaded Greyhound Bus Rams | Tractor-Trailer, One Killed -0- CONCORD, N.C., NOV. 5 (UP)- operations at the wreck. "She cer- A Greyhound bus loaded with stu- tainly did a grand job," he said. dent nurses plowed into a disabled "She was in inspiration to every- traptor-trailer yesterday and car- one." omed into a five-foot ditch, killing He also commended the "cour- one girl and injuring 33 other per- ageous assistance" of many of the a s i. student nurses in giving aid to Authorities said 15/girls and the other injured girls. bus driver were hospitalized at "Some of them were bleeding Cabarrus Hospital here, and at so badly you couldn't see their Presbyterian and Memorial hospi- eyes," he said. "Yet they wouldn't tal sin Charlotte, but all were in get in ambulance: for fear it "satisfactory" condition. might deprive some other girl more The accident occurred at 12:43 badly injured of space. We had to a.m. on U.S. 29, a dual lane high- force some o them into the ambu. wav, some seven miles south of lances and cars to take them to here. Two highway patrolmen, W. hospitals." 'A. Nichols and Charles Tilley, Six of the .irls and the bus Were in a patrol car behind theldriver, George Robert Allen, 29, bus and were eyswitnesses to the of Charlotte, were taken to Cabar- Wreck. rus Hospital here. Their condition They said the trailer-truck de- was described as "satisfactory." eloped engine trouble and tried Presbyterian Hospital said 12 of to pull off the highway onto a its student nurses were injured shoulder. "but none is in serious condition." "It had& its lights on. It was Charlotte Memorial said 15 girls parked at an angle. extending into were treated for injuries and only the road slightly," said Nichols. four hospitalized. "They are not, "The bus struck the truck and in serious condition," said Admi- eareened into a ditch We stopped; nistrator Zach Thomas. immediately and started pulling Nichols said Allen and truck out victims." drive Gene Harold Ritch, 25, ofr Greyhound officials said 39 stu- Durham, had posted $2,500 bonds dent nurses were aboard the char- for appearance at an inquest to -tered bus returning to Charlotte ibe set when Allen's condition al- from the state nurses convention lows. Miss May said she was in a at Winston-Salem. 'The girls were car directly behind the bus when fprom Charlotte Memorial and the accident occurred. She was! Presbyterian hospitals. !chaperone for the trip to Winston-F Biil Workman, city editor of the Salem. Kannapolis Daily Indep en d e n t, "It was the worst thing I've said the right side of the bus was ever seen." she said. "We got their ripped out where it struck a bank girls out as fast as we could and after leaving the highway. l administered first aid." ,It's amazing how anyone in the "It was a terrible thing to hap- front section of the bus came .out pen after the girls bad had sol alive," he said. "The whole right much fun at the convention," she half of the bus was a mass of said. twisted wreckage with seats piled; everywhere." Workman said a large number *f injuries were lacerations and injuries to the feet because "ma- ny of the girls were barefooted, enjoying the time-honored nurses* .ha6"t of taking off their shoes to relax." Nichols praised Miss Ma- irvbell May, director of nurses at Presbyterian Hospital. for her *'calm hand" in directing first-aidf me Tariff Concessions Tipped To Undermine IS Coffon Industry O IN CAMDEN, S.C., Nov. 5 (UP) - A textile executive said here the State Department's foreign trade policy is not only "sabotaging" the to departmentt of Agriculture's cotton 'program, but will jnevita b I y "short change" the American public. IL K. Hallett of Charlotte, N.C..H O G X, former president of t he American Cotton Manufacturers Institute. said as a result of re- cent tariff cuts for the special be- nefit of Japanese cotton manufac- t'-rers, a reduction of United T in states mill operations "is not only une academic-it is factual." Hallett branded the new foreign trade policy a "glorified WPA kind of idea." Ke He said the Japanese are "too K eep smart'to move in all at once" on the U. S. market and it may be "some months, or even years," be- fore the full impact of the tariff concessions "become measurable Uieni in loss of business, gradual con- traction of mill operations and cur- tailment of textile jobs." __III IIIII___II THE PANAMA AMERICAN Al INDEPVDEL NT DAILY NEWSPAPER Answer to Previous Pu SScreen Starleti 11 i 'MM-i~ tllA iriiAMiAli ACROSS 11 Congers s I Screen starlet 12 Dirk Joyce '19 Lubricate 7 She is in the 21 Hold in affection 13 Interstice 22 Names (ab.) SAscended 23 Golf mound 14 Ascended 24 Legislative 15 Moves 16 Heap newly 25 Scorch 17 Footike part 26 Robust 39 Church 48 Froster,as 178 Pedal dik t 27 Dry festival 'of cakes I0 oass 29 Scold 40 Steamship 49 Scatters, as 20 Compass point 30 Passage 21 Enrolls Passagein the (ab.) hay 25 Conduit brain 42 Bails, as water5l Low haunt 28 Weird 31 Evenings from a boat 52 Conclusion 32 Difficult (poet.) 43 Saucy 54 Note in 33 Growing out 35 Mariner's 44 Asseverate Guido's scale 34 Foreign direction 45 Companion 55 Burmese woo 36 Solar disk 38 Footlike part 47 Top of head sprite 37 Fortification 41 Free 43 Card 46 Onager 47 Deep hole 50wreaths Eluded 53Bridge holding - 56 Chemical substance 57gPuffed up 58 Tendencies 59 Estimators DOWN I Skein of yarn 2 Shield bearing wreaths 4 Put on 5 Wapiti 8 Native metal 9-Eisenhower l0ozptian goddess-14 U' II IL TERRY AND-'t33 RATES. By GEORGE WUNPES r-TERECE, TUE SLU AEROAUT! I-ii AS GENERAL CNECKER'S SON-IN-LAW, )OU COULP TALK THE OLP SBOY INTO PROMOTIONS FOR YOUR FRECKLES AND EIS FRIEND ALLfE 00P BOOTS AND HER BUDDIr CAPTAIN EAST ^^S / h tenor. TWO AIMERICA4 MBM ANDMGIRL. PASS "B ASOUT rTWO PR y H MILS UP TO TMAL. It" INGO.* TRWAIL0 TO .l IDOMINGO,. It's Got Him TOBY? I SIMPLY MAD To CALL TDU ABOUD TT OLD C" CIARLES BOR MOVIE OU SAW IONeIG4T-MOM SAYS HE'S A R -AL GQUIVER-GIVER. 1 o0W WAS IT WOuON'r KNOW. t JUNE --- .. S"Copr 195 y NEA Sric" In. -.'T.M. u. ,Sot.Of. Just Sittin' Vacant Place WE SWP"w%.S **.- COWCWJoNs REVhOMEO FCOOAI NVOAb I"SE CRO* JlEvc.N"'E WTT%%b OFT- ROREVE9W. \KKMN... \ /X. On the Trail F ANWEN! MY SOUNP AI CE SMS Y O A INFLUENCE NOTHING OUT MY PRY-CLEAN' IN& ILLS. By MIEIRILL BLOSSS BS V. T. BAMLIM 1 CD GAR MARTIr ,OF ,60 ,\JN, \ ,J DEA i O i... BS LESLIE TURNRI vtI (td Read& laMiiad t1E STORY OF MARTHA WAINB Off the Road By WILSON SCRUGGS '"CMIcwk'--VOU kNNOW- WES ONE TO PUT TI'E1C HANDS ON THE-W4B, It -C CMwkiN/ End of the Act By JAY BEAVILIN PRISCILLA'S POP Perils of Parenthood By AL vIRMEE IDUR BOARDING I1OtU0 MAJOK BOOPU OUT OUB WAT 5T J. ar mL Ua.A SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 19bS VIC FLINT AFRAID W TOO LAT &HAND" RINT o MB SIMI THB TICtA TO CATCHSM BPOR6fM rY ABOUT T14 SCMNBFLY, sWl BmT Agl t A HOB IO TP "I T r6lf, BUGS BUNNY U:p We Go! Like That? "'a .r TERTY AND-TB PFIRATES. By GEORGE WUNDEB . .-- V `' ~ifi~l ri i i i i i i. - Church of Christ f. 0. Milton Lvanlleat Telephone 246)e2 BALBOA: WS1, Balboa Road. Services l day, 10:9 a.m 11:00 am. 11:00 p.m. CRISTOBAL Amerean Luton Halli Services Sunday 10:00 a.m. 11;00 a.m R10 BAJO: House -No. 3024 15th St Sunday 4:30 o.m Unitarian vNITARMIN 09:30 A.m. Bldg. 362 Ancon Blvd. & Maoey Place Ancon tour invitatiobW to Uberal religion. tertt'entiPtc, P"I Von the Atlantic side I eay call tirjli 3-2412. or write to ox 5 Baptist Baptist CH tor 0.- cOLOLI BAPTIST CHUR' 311 kirula Roa Drawer 3 ab Balooa Phone 2-1106 Earl F. Paderew kl, Pas Phone 2-1701 Sunday School ........... Morning Worship ........* I'rainin Union ........... lveniniig Worship .......... prayer: Meeting Each Wednesday ....... Brothtrbiood-4th Mo. iay each month .... ' Bpan-bh aible School cL. Saturday .......... KWT BAPTP1 WCHUMC Balboa Heights, C. Z. 627 Ancon Boulevard Drawer B" Balboa Helghts Phone Balboa 1727, William H. Jeeby, Paster Sunday) acnco ............ *SO a.m Morning Worship .......... 10:45 a.m BapI isTanini Uni00 .... 6:30 o.m Evangelic Sermce ........ :30 .-m Prayer Meeting Wednes- days *.................. I0S pm W.M,* B ble Study Turs day *.....******9********:* a. Men's Brothhood (LA s Monday in month) ........ IS0 p.m FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Margarita Avenue at 5th Street Margarita., Canal Zone Rev. J. ILM. Haulbrook, Pastos Sunday School .............. 9:45 am. Morning Worship ........... 11:00 a.m. Baptist Training Union ...... 6:30 p.m. Evening Worship ........... 7:45 pn. Brotherhood, Tuesdays .....a 7:00 pJ.. Officers & Teachers Meetings, Wednesday...... 7:00 p.m. Prayer Services, Wednesdays 7:30 p.m. W.M.U., 1st & 3rd Fridays G.A., RA., & Sunbeam. Friday ................... :30p.m. Salvation Army The Faem@lgeid. Senior Captai a nd MsN McDonald 15 de Febrero Phone 2 -20M 10:45 Holiness Meeting. 3:00 Sunday School. 6:00 Young People's Legion. 7:30 Salvation Meeting LA BOdA, C. Z Sr. Cawt. Agasa WUMai Lieut. West Building No. 100. 9:30 Sunday School. 11:00 ooHoliness Mting. 6:00 oeung Pople'a Legion. 7:30 Salvation Meting. RED TANK. C. L. savoy ad Mrs. C. L. Mosele7 Building No, 52X 9:30 Sunday School. 11:00 Holinas Meeting. 3:00 Young oeple's Legio. 7;30 Salvation Meeting- The Atlantic SIde COLON CENTRAL HALL Senior Capal and ria. C Moomawmy 14th Street Phone 38-743. Majdr Edna i ghians 3rd Street. COLON THIRD STREET HALL gveninx Worship ............. .30 RAINBOW CITY. C. 2nvoy Joseph GMI at. Ktta & Jamale St. 10:45 Holiness Meting. 3:00 Sunday School. 6:00 Young People's Leglelu. T.30 Salvaton Meeting. Union Churches Where an Prot tp cooperate with Saty in liberty in non- sentialsa ntd charity in all thiap THE ATLANTIC SIDW New Crist6bal Corner of Melnd Avenue and Third Steet. Phone 3-140 Mrs. B. Davison Executive See- retary. Supply Pasto' from lah ui Methodist Mission: Rev. Willim Arm- itrong. Rev. S. Walden .&id Rev. P. :4t am. Sunday School for all ages. 11:00 a.m. Worship service and chureh- time nursery Wednesday evening-C olr practice. Gatn Rev. Ray Blakely, Pastor. g:4S a.m. Sunday School 11:00 am Worship Service M Rev. Paul B. W. Olander, Pastor. Flune :31449 0:80 lbIe School. 10:4 Wonhidp service and Churchdmt 20 youth reBowsahlB TH PACIFIC *SID TheRev. Osear W. Olsen, Paste< Balboa Rd. at San Pablo St. Phone 2-1486-Church Office .3180. 19:0 Church School Ftreehbus service Parsonage Discust ion Group. 10* Worship Service The Expanded Seasl" for Nursery, Ktnduerarti, Primary and Junior Depts. Chirc b4nU Nursery for children under & SO Junior-High Fellowship. 4:0 P st-HIh Fellowhhip. 7:.0 Iinor-=Bil rellowxhlp GAMBOA Dr. Walker I. Alderton. Minister. OffleC Phone -*47--Reidence Phone 1M0 a.m. Church School. t0:40 a.m. Morning Worship Srvite*. 14 nam I churches of the many feiths In the Canal Zone, and the termineG ctie *of Panama end Colon, Republhc of Panagm, extend a welcome at ell times to m ensd women *# the eromd wsvices, **d to civilies aieighbors, friends and trangers. As a publw r rice, the The Penamo American lists below, by deeominationts,e atices of bhous worship and other regular, activities. listingss oa re ated hem time to time. 0Dnminations having only one or two conGregetioes are lted undei "Othd> Churches And Services:" A special listing s included tor s rvces e Army posts. Air Frce btsa ends Novel Istaefs. Mivistesa. church secretorles end chaploins are asked to infirm the news desk in writing by Wednesday neon at the latest at any changes for the coming Saturday's church page. -. -I Methodist 1'H METHlUUlbS l tCIIUIB I British Conference' Rev. William H Armstrong 16th St.. Panama City 1:00 a m. Morning Praves and Sermon 3 :00 p m. Sunday.'School 7:15 om tvenine Pra"et and Sermon KIWNITUl MIETHODISI CHUWIC 7th Street and Melender Avenue. Colbn. RP Rev. Samuel Walden, Minister 9:3o a.m.-Morning Service ano Holy Communion 3 p m. Sunday School. 7:15 p.m. Evening Service. (Holy Communion 1st Sundays) Monday, 7:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting. EBENIZE s MLTrHOISIlS CHURICB Rainbow City. CZ Rev. Samuel Walden, Minister Suiu& nei-vces a .i. aiu .o.,- p.m Sunday School for ages all at 9:30 p.m Yonr Invitailtn To Workip." Tuesday 7 o n. Prayer MteeUinl 17:00 a.m. 7 p.m. Catholic 7:30 p.m ST. MARY'S CHURCIH-Balboa 30 p.m unday Masses: 7:00, 8:00. 10:00 and 7:00 pm 1:00 ay m. Ma : 5:55. g:00. 11:556 a4 000a and :00 p.m. 10:00.m. Confessions; aturday. 3:30 to 5:0,1 and 7:00 to 8:00 pm. Thursday. before First Friday: 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. . Miraculous Medal Novena: 7:00 p.m on Monday. Catechism class, after the 8:00 mass on Sunday. c SHigh School Study Club 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday. SACRED HEART-Ancon Sunday Masses: 5:55. 7:30 & 9:30 a.m. Holy Day masses: 5:55 a.m. anJ 5:00 p m. Confessions: Saturday 3:30 to 5:00 and 7:15 to 8:00 p.m. Thursday before' First Friday 7:00 p.m. Sacred Heart Devotions: 7:00 p.m. on Friday. Catechism Class: 3:15 to 4;:45 p.m. on Thursday. OUR LADY OF FATIMA-Curnndn Sunday Mass at 8:00 a.m. Holy Day Mass at 8:30 p.m. Confessions: 6:00 to 6:45 p.m on Sat- urday. Catechism Class: Saturday 8:30/to 10 a.m. ST. JOSEPH-Paralso Sunday Masses at 7:00 and 8:15 a.m. Holy Day Mass at 6:00 p.m. Weekday Masses: ..:00 a.m. Confessions: Saturday 3:30 to 4:30 and 6:30 to 7:30. Catechism Class: Sunday 3:00 to 4:00 p.m. Miraculous Medal Novena: 7:00 p.m on Friday. Convert Instructions: Thursday 7:00 p.m. ST. VINCENTS-Panama City Sunday Masses: 6:00 and 8:30 a.m. Holy Day Masses: 8:30 and 5:00 p.m. (It it falls on Saturday the Masses are 6:06 and 8:30 a.m.) Confessions: Saturday 3:00 to 5S:00 and 7:00.1o 8:00 p.m. Thursday before Firt Friday 7 pm y !. *JFrdaci Medal Ite -aa* .4ta. af o Cross: Friday 1:00'p.1. Citechi am Class: Aft 8:30 mass an Stmanday. Convert Class: 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. ST. TunIRUA'S-Coe'*e Sunday Mass: 8:30 a.m. Holy Day Mass: 6:00 anm. (It It falls on Saturday-8:30 a.m.) Catechism Class: 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. on Monday. Confessions: 1:00 to 8:30 a.m. Sunday. ST. JOHN BAPTIST DE LA BALL Parque Letevre Sunday Masses: 6:30 and 8:30 a.m. Week Days Mass: 6:30 Mon.. Thurs Fri. and Sat. First Friday mass: 6:00 am Holy Day Masses: 6:00 ajn. to 6:00 p.m. Confteessions: 3:30 to 4:30 and 1:00 to 8:00 p.m. on Saturday. Miraculous Medal Novena: Frrday 1:00 p.m. Catechism Class: 3:30 p.m. on Sunday Convert Class: Monday 7:30 p.m. ST. THERESE'S-La Boe" Sunday Mass: 7:00 a.m. Holy Day Mass: 5:30 p.m. Confessios: Saturday 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday before First Friday 6:30 p.m.. Catechism Class: 3:15 p.m. on Sunday. Sacred Heart Novena: 7:00 p.m. on Friday. Convert Class: 6:3 p.m. on Thursday ATLANTIC- MIRACULOUS MEDAL-Crist6bal Sunday Masses: 7:00. 8:00 and 10:30 a.m. Holy Day Masses: 6:00. 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Confession*: Saturday 4:00 to 5:00 and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. After Rosary each eve- trMaculous Medal Novena: 3:00 and 5:00 p.m. on Monday. Catechism Class: After 8:00 mass on Sunday. First Friday Exposition all day Dur- ing the School Year. First Saturday: Mass at 8:00 a.m. HOLYT AMILY CHURCH-Margarlta Sunday Masses: 7:30 and 9:30 a.m. Holy Day Masses: 6:00 amn. and 5:00 p.m. Confessions: 4:00 to 5:00 and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Saturday. Miraculous Medal Novenas 7:00 p.m on Monday. Teen-age Cluls 7:15 p.. on Wednes- dartechlsm Class: 4:00 p.m. Thursday. First Friday Devotions: 7:00 p.m. ST. JOSEPH'S--Colon Sunday Masses: 5:45 and 9:00 a.m. Holy ay Masse: 5:45 and 8:00 a.m and 5:45 p.m. Confessions: Saturday 4:00 to 5100 and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Miraculous Medal Novenat Wednesday 6:15 and 7:00 p.m. Sacred Heart Novena: Friday 7:15 p.m Sorrowful Mother: Sunday 7:15 p.m. Convert Class: 7:15 p.m. on Monday and Thursdays. Catechism Clam. 3:00 to 4:00 p.m. on Sunday. OUR LADT OF GOOD COUNStB Gimbe Sunday Masses 7:00 and 8:30 a.m. Holy Day Masses: 6:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Confessions: 7:00 p.m. on Saturday. Miraculous Medal Novena: 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday. Catechism Class: 3:30 p.m. on Sunday. Sacret Heart Novena: 7:00 p.m. on Friday. ReligIon Instruction: 4:00 p.m. Thurs. -ary & Benedictions on Sunday 4:30 p.m. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION-Gatat J Sunday Masses: 7:30 and 9:00 a.m. Holy Day Mases: 6:00 a.m. and 5:00 p m. Confessions: 6:30 to 7:30 on Friday. Miraculous Medal Novenat, 7:11 p.m on Tuesday. Catechism Class: 3:48 to 6:00 pma on AWasd"a. Chrisstin Scientist vCE.s-Ra-. a C iSunday M ass 6:30 e.m. and 8: 00. ClIMAtn IltAULi Holy Day Masses: :400 an and .600 r . l^tEl A r sConfessIons: 4:00 to *.00 end 1:.0 to S.sd 5,0 p.m. Saturday. osml e Catechisma Clas: 11:00 am. on Sunday IrsI ^mt %Sat.IWO, I o"hal Miracrtulous Medal Novenas 7:00 p.m. p5 lUji & seliaw Tay on1Tus*day. Othei Churches CHURCH OF THE NAZARENI Ancon. CZ. Sinister: Rev. Elmer 0. Nelson Boi 68. Ancon. C.Z. Balboa 6202 .Sunday School ........... 9:45 a.m Morning Worship ... ...... 1030 m Youth Service ............ 6:45 p.m Evening Service .......... 7:30 p.m. N.F.M.S. Service ..........7:00 n.m Prayer Meeting, Wed. .... 7:30 p.m NATIONAL BAPTIST CHURCH PanamA R.P.. 23rd Street East Rev. S. N. Brown. Minister SUNDAY: Divine Worship ........... 9:30 a.m Sunday School............ 3:00 p.m Pope To Address Catholic Teachers In St. Peters I VATICAN CITY, Nov. 5 'UP'- Pope Pius XII will return to the! Vatican twice this weekend from his summer residence of Castel- gandolfo, the Vatican announ c e d yesterday. The Pontiff will come to Rome Friday to address a 'mass audience of Italian Catholic teachers in St. Peters Basilica. He will then re-' turn to Castelgandolfo, and come here again on Sunday for an au- dience to veterans of Italy's gren- adier corps. In view of the heavy schedule, the Dnna .ennllae the w kolv Y n- To Buy-This Market Basket 4 Steelworkers Must Work UNITED STATES ONLY I hr.38min. /b. BACON 1 lb. BEEF UNITED KINGDOM4hr.45min lb. POTATOES I b. BUTTER WEDEN 5 hr.1 mn. dz. EGGS WEST GERMANY k 66hr.27min. Episcoal .Ml n.m a- C1.11. Sunda. tiawu, ., 1eral audience Saturday in Castel- FRANCE The it Rev R.Heber: oden, S4.. ) m.0 psm gandolf-. FAE Episcopal V.HsWITNESSES A The Vr Rev R. Hdeber Gooden, S.'t._ .V_._a_0pm9hr.FRmn. M.M.rard MacDonald 1y TSat 7:30 p.m. and FORT KOBBE STEELERS' HIGH PURCHASING POWER-Americanh steel workers labor for less iime to pa Th ry e. M. Richard MacDo Sundays T 4:00 pm. Wirz Memorial. f ........................ or a basic market basket of food than do any of thcir counterparts in leading steelProducing oun- .ACNL1. 'tL.R 806 Balbb.a Road, Balboa. Saturday Mass..................8:00! tries, says the American Irn and Steel Initute The chart abor e makes the c inomparison. It is THE CATHEDRAL OF ST. LUKE Sunday. ...........Sn 7 00 and, e:00e ,ase Aera n oandr e l :i-soI1953 les a oisr 7:30 a.rt Holy Communion. CHURCH OF JStUS CHRIST ALBROOK AIR FORCE BASE most foreign countries. r 8:30 atn Santa Communion (4th Sun- OF LATTER-DAA SAINTS (Mormon) Daily Ma.,s ..................... 6:10 day,. Sunday meetingp in the JWB-USO, La Saturday Ma. ................. 7:00,-- ----- ---- 9:15 q.n.. Church School. Boca Road, Balboa. Primary and Priest- I 9:45 a n,. Escuela DoTInical. hood 8:30 a^m.Meeting; Sunday School. US. NAVAL STAIVN. RODM Holy Communion First Sun- nh Daily Mass .............. m N w Vac n G VP P tP t r 1 AtlanticMBranchga 10:_ m Snay AMass.............._ 1AIL.EOK AIR FORCEeBASE 7:00 p. evening Prayer and Sermon. Building 200. Schqolhouse Road. WEDNESDAYS Gatun. Canal Zone. 8:30 amn. Holy Communion. telephone, Gattin 364 or Crist6bal 289 7:00p I, Evening Prayer, Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Sunday Sac HOLY DAYS -ement Meeting 6:30 p.m. Prieshoo 6:00 an Holy Uommunion. Meeting 6:30 p.m Wednesday Prinar) 8:30 a Holy Communion. 16:30 p.m Wednesday Relief society meet 8:30 am Ho DAILY ing as announced, 8:15 a n, Morning Prayer. i Htas UNI PROTU'ANI 12:00 Mti-day Missionary Prayers. CHURCH CHURCH OF OUR SAVIOUiR Rev Paul Holloway, Pastor Third Street. New Cristobal Office. Curundu 7511605 The ev. Milton A. Cooo Pastor Sunday School ............. :4 Holy Communion .......... 7:30 a.m Church School ........... 9;30 a.m Morning Prayer and Sermon .............. 11:00 p.mn tFirst Sunday. Holy Communioni Vesper Service and Youth Fellowship ........ 6:00 p.m. WEDNESDAYS Holy Communion ......... 8:30 a.m Choir Rehearsal .......... 7:30 p inm. A House of Prayer for all people. COCOL) Chuch ut St. Andrew The Rev. William W. Baldwin SUNDAY Holy C'ommunion Family Pravor a n d Church School. 9:30 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon 11 a.m IHC. first Sunday in Month). Evening Prayer. 7:30 p.m. Weekday Praver 8:00 a.m 'jood Ihepherd Tij Rev. Clarence W. Hayes 8.00 a.m everv Friday. Murmau Fray (H.C. LaL rrayr., s AMBOA St. Simon's Chulch The Rev. John Spear. Priest in Charge SUNDAYS Morrnig Prayer, 1st and 3rd. Sunday. ............... 10:30 a.m Holy Communion and Ser- mon, 2nd and 4th Sundays .. 10:30 a.m. Sunday School ........... 3:00 p.m. Youth Fellowship ......... 5:00 p.m Evening Prayer ........... 7:00 p.m MONDAY Girls' Friendly Society ... 6:00 p.m. WEDNESDAYS Evening Prayer and Sermon 7;00 p.m. THURSDAYS , Holy Crmmuhion ....... 9:00 a.m Woman's Auxiliary, 2nd and 4th Thursdays .............. 7:3 p.n LA BOCA St. Peter's Church The Rev. John Spear, Priest In Charges SUNDAYS Choral Eucharist and Sermon 7:00 a.m. Morning Prayer 'and Church School 10:00 am. Children's Eucharist. 3rd Sundays 10 Soly Baptism A 0 piE. enson -and aermo 7730 .m. MONDAY S THRU SATURDAY Holy Communion ......... 7:00 a.m Evening Prayer ......... 7:00 p.m. except Saturdays, Compline 1st TUESDAYS s 3rd MONDAYS Woman's Auxiliary ....... 7:30 p.m. MARGARITA Church of St. Margaret Corner of Espavi Ave.. Brazos Blvd. The K 8:30 am.. Church School 9:30 am. Morning Prayer and Sermon (lst Sundays, Holy Communion) 4:30 p.m. Confirmation Instructions. PALU SECO Charcb of The Holy Comforter Ven. L, B. Shirley. Archdeacon' Every Monday 8:3A am. Holy Com. amuniob. I rARAISO St. Alban's Church The Rev. David A. Osborne, Priest in Charge SUNDAY 8:00 a.m. Choral Eucharist & Sermon 12:00 n'jie Infant Baptism 3:00 n.m;. Church School (held in Building 131) 5:00 p.m. Youth Fellowship 7:00 m. Evensong and Address. TUESDAY 7;30 o in. Woman's Auxiliary and Al- tar Guild Meeting. PANAMA eITY St. Paul's Church The Vcn. Lemuel B. Shirley, Rector The Rev. Fitz B. Atwell, Deacon SUNDAY 9:00 a..n. Sung Eucharist & Sermon 10:45 a.m. Morning Prayer and Church School 12:00 noor Holy Baptism 7:00 n.m. Solemn Vespers TUESDAY 8:30 a.m. Holy Communion WEDNESDAYS 6:00 a m. Holy Communion 7:00 n.m. Evening Prayer THURSDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8:30 r m. Holy Communion HOLY DAYS 6:00 a.m. Holy Communion, CHRST CHURCH i.THU-SrA -psrseopal- Col6n. do P. (Opposite Hotel Washington) The Ven. Mainert J. Peterson, Rector The Rtv. Henry A. Blake. Assistant SUNDAY 6:00 a.m. Holy Communia. 9:00 a.m. Choral Eucharist and Sermon. 10:30 am. Church School Seatior. 7:30 p.m. Solemn vensong and Ser- mon. WEDNESDAY 6:00 a.m. Holy Communion. 7:30 p.m. Evening Prayer and Sermon. 8:30 p.m. Adult Conflrmationm Clam THURSDAYS 8:00 p.m. Prayer Guild. FRIDAYS 1:00 a.m. Children'* ucharist. SATURDAYS 10:00 a.m. Junior Confirmation Class. 7:30 p.m. Compline andMeditation. RAINBOW CITY Church of St. Mary, the Virgin Thi Ven. Mainert J. Peterson, Priest in Charge The Re# John A. Spaulding, Deacon SUNDA1YS Sung lucharist ........... 7:30 am. Church School ........... 9:45 a.m. Evens,-ne and Sermon .... 7:30 p.m WEDNESDAYS Even ,ng and Sermon .... 7:30 p-m. THURSDAY Holy Communion. ........ 7:00 a.m. GA&TN St. Geamr's Church The Ven. Mtnu t J. Peterson, Priest in Charge The Rev. John A. Spaulding, Deacoe 1st AND 3rd SUNDAY Holy Communion ......... 1:30 a.m 2nd AND 4th SUNDAYS Morn;rg Prayer and Serrron .............. 9:30 a.m. Church School, each Sun. 10:30 a.m Morning worsap ........... n1 a.mn Youth Meeting ............... 6 p m Evening Worship ........... 7 p m OLD CAIPHOLI. CHURCH St Raphael The Archangel l3th St West No 1 Holy Eucharist: Sunday aL :30 a.m Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursdaw 4:30 a.m. Sacrament ol UnctIon Healing Str. 'Ice) First Sunday of each month a 1:30 o.m Mount Haisbel. Chrlstlae Churel Panama R P it Rev T iaqn.. DD 0itlshon ottffiatlna Morning devotlp a ........ 5:tU a.m FellowLiJ 'Vorqhiu at ...... l:00 am Sunday School at ............3:00 m Jivine Serviceo al .......... 1:30 vm SAHA' CENTER BAHAI'S CENTER 54 First Street Urbanizaci6n El Carmen, Panami City tr normal Talk, and Discusions Thursday...............62:00 pbrn. Colon. th & Front Streeta (upstairs American Bazaar) Study Clasmes......Thursdava. 1:30 .m BETHEL MISSION CHURCHES Rev. Waldaba H. Stewart. Pastor Red Tank, CZ-Sundays, IT a m. divine worship: 3:30 p.m. Sunday School 7:30 n in. gospel service. Parqua Lefevre. RP 5th and lst Sts.. No. 40 Sundays. 3 pm. Bible school Wednesday, Bible reading. Paraiso. CZ-Sunday. % .m. Sunday School at the gymnaslumL THIE CHURCH OF GOD TP38 Eighth St.-Col6n Rev t,. W. Grandson, Pastor Sunday School .............. :30 a.m. Morning Worship ........... 10:30 anm. Night Se7vice ............... 7:30 p.m. Cor. "'N" and Mariano Aresemena St Rev. Win. J. Johnson, Pastor Sunday School ......;...... 9:30 as . Morning Worship ........... 10:30 a.m. Night service ............. 7:30 p.m. New Providence Mr.. Maude Hines, Paster Sunday Shool .............. 10:00 a.m Morning Worship ......... 11:00 a.m. Night oevice .... .... 7:30 p.m. 1oth St.-Rio Abajo Rev. Win. J. Johnson, Pastor Sunday School .............. 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship ........ 10:30 am. Night Scivice ............... 7:30 p.m. First Church of God B'd;. 5142-Diablo His., C.Z. Rayv Win. Livingston, Pester Morning Worship .......... 10:00 a.m. Sundae School .............. 11:00 a.m. Night Service .............. 7:30 p.m. CHUBRCB OF TE FOURSQUARE GOSPEL (Full Gospel) DIABLO HEIGHTS School Gymnasium Hains St. Rev. Vinton Johnson, minister Sunday School ........... .. J:30 a.m. Morning Worship .......... 11:00 a.m Evangelistic Service ........ 7'30 p.m Thu., Prayer Meeting in Church in PanamA City. (Cor. Q St. and Mariano Arosemena) ............... 7:30 p.n ATLANTIC SIDE Rev. T. "J. Tuttle, Supt. Phone: Col6n 1094-J COLON 2005 Amador Guerrero St. Sunday School ............. 3:00 p.m RAINBOW CITY Cor. Randolph and Klamouth Sts. Rev. and Mrs. T. J. Tuttle, pastors Mr. Paul Bryson, Asst. pastor Sunday School .............. 9:30 a.m Morning Worship ........... 11:00 a.m. Evangelistic Service ......... 7:30 p.m Tues.. Gospel Service ...... 7:30 n.m Thurs.. Spanish Service .... 7:30 n.m Sunday Scahooln are the following Places: Col6n, 4th & Gst., 3 p.m., 4:30 p.m.- Panama. 3 p.m.. 4:30 p.m. La Boca 3 pm., 4:30 p.m. Chorrillo 3 n.m.. 4:30 p.m. Parque Lefevre 9 a.m.. 10 a.m. Pa- raiso. No. 101, 3 p.m., 4:30 p.m. La Boca -Town. Rio Abajo. 2 p.m., 4:30 pm. Monday, Wednesdays.Frldays services are held from 7:15 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. CHURCH OF GOD (Pentecostal) Rev. B. E. Watson. Overseer Phone 6-428, Box 253, Gamboa Churches at Paraiso, C.Z. (Rev. and Mrs. Hermsn G. Whyte). Colon, R.P (Rey. Fernando Lorende), Rfo Abajo (1ev. and Mrs. Charles Haynes), and Cativi (Rev.'and Mrs. Clifford Greaves) Sunday and weekdays services at all churches. Posts and Bases PACIFIC SIDES Protestant FORT AMADOR Sunday' School 9:00 Morning Woraltp ............... 1000 FORT CLAYTON Sunday School (Building No. 154) 9:00 Morning Worship ............... 10:1l FORT KOBBS Sunday School (Building 711)..-. 6:3, Morning Worship ............. 10:45 vening Worship .........18:30 p.m. COROZAL Morning Worship ............ :0U ALBROOK AIR FORCE AIQ. Sunday School ................. :30, Morning Worship ..... ....... 10:45 Youth Group ......... :30 and, 9:00 en Worship .............. 7:30 U.S. NAVAL STATION RODiMAN Sunday School (Building No. 1) 9:30 Morning Worship .............. 11:00 15th HEADQUARTERS CHAPEL T6Mu3 .. a*... n, it. aws *L* 0eHoly CB (Eunin (Episcopal) Sunday 10 f'-eldop Teft 7:30 D Mh= WeF* IoO (Holy Com. iO ft 0 t munionem h flt Sunday to the Th, 4MT. cliM0 W. Haye month). Priet ia Charge RoN CaO tnlo .. ....... 10 m FORT RCat- Surnday School ........... 10:30 a.m. roRT AAR Saotima S to n .. bad & 4th 7,. Daily ..... .............. 7l 3 S an Daly t .................... : Woman' A d tb Staday S a ......... & 7.1 w*e. p.. m, Sa ........ maly Comaiuate Weaagh t * u 5tmay la-**.......*.....10.30 T Saturday .. ................. ... " I I S Dey o .. ......... ..P Against O ne O f Cold Viruses Wor ish........... 0f St Peter's Jewish la ALBROOK AIR FORCE BASE | - SatuOa ............ ... 4:00 pm The parish hall of St. Peter's FORT KOEBE Satur ................. 2:00 m. church in La Boca will be the WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 (UP) vaccine. The climax came recent- ATLANTIC SIDE scene of a bazaar on Thursday i The government announced I at iv llwnn lie and hl< colleagues Protestant night, sponsored by the Woman's night it has developed a vaccine tried the new serum on 83 volun.. 5 FORT DAVIS Auxiliary. 'which provides "substantial pro- 'eers. FORToningWrsp ............... 11:00Al tection against one of the virus- Huebner and his colleagues said Sunday School ................. 9:30 To ensure its success, the Par- es linked with the common cold in tseir report those who got -tie Morning Worshi ... ......... 11:00 ish Welfame Council is assisting and similar infections. vaccine "experienced significantly- unday Shool ..L .............TATION. 9.30 in the promotion of this venture. The public Health Serv;ce re- ly greater protection against, in. Morning Worship ............. 11:00 Needlework by members ofP sealed the si um proved 71 per fection and illness" than thbas Church Time Nursery .......... 10:30 the auxiliary, refreshments an d ceut effecthie in a series of dra- who didn t get injections. Catholici home-cooked food will be place J matic tests on inmate volunteers I I_ _-- .. FORT DAVIS o.." n sale at the baiar. Added a'- atreformatorie in Maryland and oMaralandtShelldesssOhio. Sunday Mass..........9 30& 10:45 tractions are a fi;h pond ,'d O e es SundayMas................... cake walk, with music for il e n COCO SOLO NAVAL STATION entertainment of the patron The announcement signaled a M I .. Daily Mass..................7:00. ilajo' achievement in the centu-. Sunday Mass .................. 9:r0 !ries long struggle to conquer the'a l m CO SOLITO Breakfast for Homecoming per respiratory diseases which , Sundy Mass Jewish........... . strike millions of Americans and FORTGULICK I The services at "." "Pbete' hundreds of millions of dol-s .. Tuesday ..... .. .. ......... 7 p.m church tomorrow will celebratelcost hundreds of millions of dol reading (Combned service for all men of lew- hurch tomorrow dll cete las every ear. ,sh faith stationed op Atlanc Sidei. Homecoming Sunday, set asi The vaccine is not the answer ITHACA, N Y., Nov. 5 (UP1-- as a day of welcome to former to the mild cold. But it is aimed Housewives may scon be able to euoarist athon 7 a.te. the Wo i,.Iat the APt adenoida. phaiyngeal, buv eggs without shells at .Lh Seventh DVcayh a a ,," b "....z 'conjuctival iruses which ca use corner grocery store. Auxiliary will serve a break s' re colds grippe. virus pneu. Prof. L. B. Darrah, poultry Adventist in the parish hall. health service's National I n s t i- marketing specialist at the state S... cold-like infections, college of agriculture at Corneil This group will make a colrn- he Weekly Service in all Churche This group will make a The health service s a i d the University, developed the "nak- ATDA ollQw: orate communion and present .t present vaccine provides protec- ed" egg. SATURDAY: School 9.30 am. Divine S United Thank Offtion against only one form of APC ice. 11:0oo .m. Youth's Meeting. 4:30 om week Sunday morning. illness. It also said it is in aI The eggs, which will be soid.,i UWENDAY: Bible Scture, 7:30 Prav. "preliminary stage' and there is 12 compartment polyethy I"1 Service 7,s .m no prospect of its being made packets, are expected to4'Ie Pacific Side-Panana & Baloa available to the public "in the cheaper and just as good as egg 'Tel. 28- 3-5843 War near future." with shells. What's more,t Cabo Verde. Ave J. F. de la Ossa No nr Ia r FrS S new system, which incorpora "7. Panama o. Jamaica thSo iety Hal MAKE FRIE DS But it announced scientists ex- certain electronic devices, elim- Pueblo Nuevo. 2-A St between 3rd and pect in time to improve the vac- inmates the present none-toot-a"- 4th Sts. Rio AbaJo. 11th St. No. 7 cine to provide protection against curate system of grading. ",, Balboa Chapel. 0844 Gavilin Rd. Balboa the "entire group" of APC illness- (Saturday only). Darrah says the eggs willha Spanish Curches-PanamA & Crilt6bal es for the first time in history. Darrah says the eggs will be District Pastor Rub6n Rui z Development of the new vaccine on sale in Ithaca stores within SPanamA Call. Darikn No. Cr't6bl s was announced jointly by the'six months and in other stores h GamboaF rijole. health service, and the Johns Hop- In the state later. District Pasatr A. A. Grizzle kins Institutions which aided in .. * (TeL. 021 the research. A full report will He explained a machine brAks Atlansrtic Sid-a-Col6n & Cls bal be published Saturday in the jour-: open the eggs, and drops themt District Pastor V. G. Newman nal of American Medical Assn. !into the individual compart- Col6n, 3rd. St Central Av Crlst&. The vaccine is the work of a ments with a strong film. oal. 16th St. & Bolivar Ava. team of crack medical scientists .. led by Dr. Robert J. Ruebner, The advantages: By placing -* brilliant young virologist at the two pee wee eggs in each cam- Jew h tutes of Health. apartment a "double yolk" canr* SWefare Board Bd 7-f Health. made available to consumers 'at Boca Roal. Balboa, C.Z. Rabbi Nathan She took a group of guests to a It is similar to the alk vaccine about large egg prices. Witkin D~rector. at.I them But against polio. It is the result of. Service *Friday, 7;30 p.m. Saturday.ub entertainthintensive research which began Early indications," Prof D (See :0 o listings of Jewish serviceiatalking to other members that in 1953 after Huebner and h is:rah said, "are that the protesS uneer Posts, Bases and Stations). s he scarcelty had time to look aides discovered the APC virus will lower the cost of marketthi sh cce, a t. family, ,egps and keep them fresh lonr- Congregtlion Kol Shearith Israel Ave- stfter her guests. When the Thei. APC viruses fall inte nine er " nida C.b, and 36th Street, Bella. vista -uests were ready to say' "Good- basic groups but the bigettro Panm City. S ervites 8:00 p.m basic groups but the biggest trou- Py" they had to stand and wait ble-naker is Tpye III which The eggs can, be poached, or because their, hostess was off cause' enidomics of a five-dav ill- boiled right in the container. talking to another group. ness that features fever. sore And there are no egg shells to Lut ran ... throat and inflammation of t h e dispose of. However, they must SRbEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH Whether she is entertaining at eyes. be removed from the container 2The CIurchet the Lutheran Hun o0nme or away from home a. It is this Type III virus which for frying or scrambling sinve Phone Balboa 357. l hostess' first duty is to her Huebner cultured, killed and in-'the pan heat is too much for the Sunday School and Junior and AduJt guests. corporate into a "killed virus" polyethylene substance. Bible Classes at 9:00 am.: Worship Serv. ice. 10:1 aji eua oee ihs ice, 10:15 m. Regular covered diah supl per the second Sunday of each month at the Lutheran Service Center at S:39 p.m. Holy Communion the first Sunday of each month, with a pra-communioa devotion and registration 'the F r i d a 7 previous at 7 o.m. . CHURCH OF THE FOURSQUARE GOSPEL (Full Gospel) BALBOA At Rebecca Lodge. Balboa Road at La Boca Rd. Rev. and Mrs. Carl V. Tho-npson Pastors Sunday School .......... 9:30 a. rn Mornir.v Worship ........ 11:30 a. m. RAINBOW CITY Corner Randolph and Klamnuth Sts. Rev. ai.d Mrs. T. J. Tuttle Pastors Mr. Paul Bryson. Asst. Pastor Phone 3-2398 Sunday School ............ 9:30 a. ni Morning Worship .......... 11:00 a. m2 Evangelihtic Service ..... 7:30 p. m. Tues. Gopel service ...... 7:30 p. m Thurs. Spnish Service .... 7:30 p. in SANTA COMING to HOG Tune in! Keep listening! cjkojlw 6/ua * *- Do your Christmas shopping now in ease and comfort. You'll have a large selection from which to choose, and a small deposit holds your gift 'till Christmas! DUTYC/a FAich PM.E JEWELRY CENTER STORI 161 CENTRAL AVENUE PANAMA a .__ i ISTHMIAN CHURCH NOTICES L so __ THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILI NEWSPAPER PAGE Pl I I i I . SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1955 fAGE! SIX YOU CAN PLACE YOUR AD AT 14 DIFFERENT LOCALITIES IN THE CITY Inexpensive Want Ads Bring uiek RIesults! LEAVE YOUR AD WITH ONE OF OUR AGENTS OR OUR OFFICES AT 57 "H" STREET, PANAMA __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ _ MINIMUM FOR 12 WORDS LIBRERIA PRECIADO I Street No. 13 Agencies Internal. de Publicaciones No S Lottery Plaza CASA ZALDO Central Ave. 45 LOURDES PHARMACY 182 La Carrasquilla FARMACIA LOMBARDO No. 26 "B" Street MORRISON 4th of July Ave & J St. LEWIS SERVICE Ave. Tivolil No. 4 FARMACIA ESTADOS UNIDOS 143 Central Avenue FARMACIA LUX 10s Central Avenue HOUSEHOLD EXCHANGE J. Feeo. do la OOm Ave. No. 41 FOTO DOMY Justo Arobemena Ave. and 33 gt. FARMACIA VAN-DER-DIJS 63 Street No. sa FARMACIA EL BATURRO Parqu Iefevre. L Street FARMACIA "SAS" Via Porras 111 NOVEDADES AtHIS V., Espa" Ave. a L m o O v. L m % A, I- COMMERCIAL & PROFESSIONAL CANAL ZONE POLYCLINIC DENTAL MEDICAL Dr. C Fibrega Dr. R. Avilt Jr. D.DS. iGeorgetown University) M.D. Tivoli (4th of July) Ave., No. 21A24 (opposite Ancon School PIayground) Tel. 2-2011 Panermi. RETIREMENT, LIFE EDUCATION INSURANCE JIM RIDGE Phone Panama 2-0552 It is not true to say "we did everything possible" unless chlro- prictic as included. CHIROPRACTORS Drs. A. and E. ORILAC (Palmer Graduates) a Peri Avenue Tel. -13" (1 blo'lk from ix Theatre)_ TRANSPORTES BAXTER, S.A. "ecke. Shippe Movern Phoaes 2-2451 2-2562 Learn Riding at IANAMA RIDING SCHOOL Riding fr Jumping classes dail to 5 p.m. .- Pene 3-0279 or by appointment. A RNETT & DUNN 4*.LLROOM DANCE STUDIO I SC.HARM SCHOOL. SUITE 11 Bboa 2-4239 or Panama 3-1"0 studio El Panami Hotel -TYPEWRITER REPAIR SHOP CUBUNDU POST RESTAURANT BUILDING Tel. Curundu 3110 JZPE RT REPAIR SEBVICR G. 1. KELLEY, Manager. toe U.S. Personnel nd their dependents only. "We will reeve Your" i FOOT-TROUBLE corns, allousses, nails S--CHIROPODIST- (Dr. Schells trained) ORTEPEDIA NATIONAL Unusual Personalized Hi-Fi Service S OFFER you your entire Hi-Fi Unit Custom Design- eH- and installed! No. 1 Via Espafla Tel. 3-0383 SANTA FOR SALE Household FOR SALE: Metal bedroom furniture, ivory enameled: chest drawers, dresser, night stand, bed, mattress and springs $50; curtain stretchers $2. Phone Bal- boa 3549 after 5 p.m. FOR SALE:- Household furni- ture, bamboo, mahogany. Satur- day I to 5; Sunday 9 to 5. Via Argentina No. 59, Apt. No. 3. FOR SALE:- Living room set: couch, 3 chairs; kitchen table, black top table. House No. 761, Barneby Street, Balboa. FOR SALE:-New Philips radio, also complete household furnish- ings. Call 3-4494 or apply 9th Street Rio Abajo No. 2612. Owner leaving, will sacrifice. FOR SALE:-Brand new West- inghouse Laundromat. 60-cycle. Phone Albrook AFB 5294. Harry Truman To Give Address At New Orleans KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 5 - (UP) Former President Har- ry Truman will make the prin- cipal address tonight at the biennial convention of the Na- tional Federation of Temple Brotherhoods at New Orleans. Mr. Truman's office said he would not have a prepared ad- dress, but would speak from notes. FOR SALE Automobiles FOR SALE:- 1953 Studebaker Sport Coupe, duty paid, $1250; 1954 Mercury, 4-door, power -brakes, w/w tires, $1600; 1948 Nash 2-door, duty paid, $375. TALLER BAXTER (next to "El Rancho"), Glenn R. Heath, Tel- ephone 2-2583. FOR SALE Real Estate FOR SALE:- REAL BARGAIN, $650 do w n payment, $25 monthly, nice cool house, high land, Monte Oscuro, light, near bus, price $3650. PATTERSON, Avenue "A" 16. 2-2346. UNBELIEVABLE: Only $500 down payment, $20 monthly, level lot and small house near new race track, 800 meters, light, water, near bus. PATTER- SON.' 2-2346. Avenue "A" 16. FOR SALE Boats & Motors FOR SALE:-Molded fiber glass lapstrake boat 15' x 64", brand new. 10-hp. Johnson 1955 mo- tor. Less than 20 hours. Balboa 2-1588. 874 Morgan Avenue. Mrs. Truman left Kansas City at 4 p.m. yesterday by train, and arrived at New Orleans at 10 a.m. today. The Trumans will return to The former President and Kansas City Tuesday. Big Man Little Hat |IC COMING IN TOMORROW'S SUNDAY AMERICAN a first i hand look-in on how Bill Newman of the GAO threw his weight aL the Ba.boa softball diamond. COMING RELEASE M N TODAY at the "LUX" Theatre to DEBORAH KERR and VAN JOHNSON, in 0 .to "THE END OF THE AFFAIR" I .] '.U ;"W. ,.. S- . .1- '' paamng or fue bobby-soxers for msany years, Van John- son now is considered by ftUmdom an metor to be reckoned with. His perloimance as Lt. Maryk, th st or center of ."The Caine Mutin." was a far cry from She fresh, pink- faced Van of jid. and his current performance In Columbia Pictures' "THE. IND OF THE AFFAIR," which also stars Deborah Keir abd John Mills, offers Van a new kind of tole, as difleient from "The Caine Mutiny" as that pieture Was from any ol Van's "juvenile" vehules. Advt. u .. . . FOR SALE Miscellaneous FOR SALE:-Piano Weaver Con- sole, mahogany, tropicalized, like new; cost $925, sale $500. Plate glass wall mirror 36 x 48 $45. Phone 3-3261, Margarita 8048-F. FOR SALE:--1955 Morris Mi- nor, 4000 miles; Philippine Rat- tan living room set, 7 pieces. 87-7284. Qtrs. 313A, Ft. Clay- ton. FOR SALE:-Buescher alto sax- ophone in excellent condition. Phone 2-3401. House 1502-B, Balboa. Finding Of Skeleton Inspires Suicide Of Murder Suspect MANCHESTER, Mass., Nov. 5 -(UP)-The mysterious disap- pearance of a Pennsylvania woman two years ago was con- sidered solved today by the dis- covery of a skeleton which caus- ed the murder suspect's suicide. William Ray Turner, 41, com- mitted suicide yesterday as the police of three states were clos- ing in on him with a warrant ordering his arrest for the mur- der of a former part time em- ploye, Doris Hatch, 22, of Cam- bridge Springs, Pa. Turner's legal training appar- ently kept him one shaky step ahead of the law for two years until the skeleton of the victim was found by a hunter and his dog Tuesday at Stafford Springs, Conn. Perinsylvanla police had ques- tionec Turner about the girl's disappearance, but could not be- gin prosecution until the body was found. A medical examiner in Hart- ford, Conn., said the woman had been killed by 'multiple stab wounds with a sharp, thin-olad- ed instrument. Miss- Hatch, a bank teller, vanished during her lunch hour on July 27, 1953. She was employed as a part-time secretary for Turner who oper- ated a family hardware business In Cambridge Springs. When the skeleton was iden- tified by dental charts and a watch as that of Miss Hatch, a warrant for Turner's arrest was Issued. As police arrived to arrest Turner, they were Informed an off-duty police sergeant found his body on deserted White's Beach, about one mile from the Turner home on Sea Street.- Turner had killed himself with a .45 caliber colt automa- tic pistol. Two brief hand-writ- ten notes were found beneath the body which was in an up- right position. One was addressed to Turner's 33-year-old wife Diane. "Sorry for all the trouble I have caused you. This is the only way out," the note said. A' a I S I ,, .' -, U., S UbAAgg~ '?P~~'e#r.. ... ALLECSIM N EO U S ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS BOX 2031, ANCON, C.Z. BOX 1211, CRISTOILAL, C.Z. ATTENTION: Selling bargain!- Stone's modern refresqueria-res- taurant, between Amador & Ar- osemena Avenues, 9th Street, 'Colon. NEWCOMERS Top quality beauty service is offered you at Cocoli Clubhouse Beauty Shop. Experienced Stateside licensed operators. Navy 3812. ,FOR RENT Houses FOR RENT: Chalet. Carras- quilla No. 16. Phone 3-0715. FOR RENT Rooms FOR RENT: Large furnished room, all conveniences. Fourth of July Ave. No. 1-352, upstairs. FOR RENT:-Rooms, $20; and apartments, $30. Phone 2-1508 or 3-0850. Estudiante No. 100. FOR RENT: Furnished room, G.I. inspected, kitchen privilege, Frigidaire. 4th of July 14-10, Apt. 3. Entrance facing Roose- velt. Help Wanted WANTED:-Housekeeper to live in and care for two young chil- dren. Must speak English and be neat, industrious, intelligent. Must have references. Apply Box 1786. Balboa. Documentary Film 'Survival City1 Coming To Zone Few persons have ever seen the awesome spectacle of an atomic explosion but a close-up view of one will be shown on the screen in the various Serv- FOR RENT Apartments ATTENTION G. I.1 Just built modern furnished apartments, I, 2 bedrooms, hot, cold water, Phone Panamas 3-4941. FOR RENT:-Best located, fur- nished I-room apartment. r A and cool. 43rd Street *0. 13. FOR RENT:-2-bedroom apart- ment unfurnished, nice and cool, comfortable. San Frpncisco. Tel- ephone 1464 Balboa. FOR RENT:-One-bedroom fur- nished apartment, Golf Heights, G.I. only $70. Phone 3-5445. FOR RENT:-Apartment 2 bed- rooms, 2 bathrooms, hot water, maid's room-with bathroom. Al- berto Navarro Street No. 52. El Cangrejo. Phone 3-2803. FOR RENT:-Modern apartment. For information phone 3-4946 or 3-6737. 4 FOR RENT:- Furnished apart- ment on San Francisco Highway No. 120, beside Roosevelt The- ater, overlooking S.A.S. Com- missary. Phone 3-5024. FOR RENT:-2-bedroom apart- ment with garage. Excellent le. cation, near Hotel "El Panama." Entire backyard concreted., For information call Mr. Abernathy, Phone 3-0264 or 3-3765. FOR RENT: Large and com- fortable apartment. First street, Perejil No. 18. Inquire upstairs. FOR RENT:-2-bedroom apart- ment with maid's room in Cam- po Alegre, $110 per month. Call Panama 3-0972. Women Know How To Collect Tolls TALLAHASSEE, Fla., Nov. 5 (UP).-The t Road Depart- ment reported today that male toll bridge collectors took in $24,- 046 last month and made $14.15 worth of errors. Women collectors took in $17.- 208 and made only $5.34 worth. of errors. ice Center Theaters in the Ca- burst from a 500-foot tower. It nal Zone during the coming shows what happens to homes, week. commercial establishments, in- dustrial installations, and va- The picture, "Survival City" is rious equipment and materials a one-reel documentary in color when an atomic bomb explodes and in cinemascope which was nearby. produced by Twentieth Century- The documentary Is being Fox Movietone in Nevada during shown this weekend at Balboa the last series of nuclear tests Theater and will be shown cn earlier this year. the Service Center circuit with J the feature picture, "Violent It was produced with the co- Saturday." operation of the Federal Civil The showing of the film coin- Defense Administration. cides with the observance of "Operation Homefront" by the "Survival City" sl a dramatic Civil Defense office of the, Ca- coverage of the test site before, nal one Government during the during and after the atomic coming week. it:.- 'I i- CARTA WANTED Apartments WANTED TO RENT: 2-bed- room apartment, preferably sec- ond floor, modern kitchen, in El Cangrejo or Campo Alegre, for young American couple. heone 3-1660, room 730, or 3-5950. - LOST & FOUND REWARD for return of brown male Pekinese, lost in Margarita Sunday morning. Phone Cristo- bal 1466. LOST: Small b lack female mongrel, brown paws, white blaze on chest. Call Balboa 3- 3282. Reward. ti ) MINIMUM FOR 12 WORDS RESORTS GENELL BLISS Santa Clara HOMI and GUEST HOUSE overlooking dcean. Private steps to beach. Gas ranges, refrigerators, ping- pong,, putting green, etc. Call Navy 381.2 office hours and Navy 3121 evenings. Shrapnel's furnished houses on beech et Santa Clors. Telephone Thempson, Balboe 1772. FOSTER'S COTTAGES. 0.e milo past Casino. Low rates. Phone Beloee 1866. PHILLIPS Oc.enside' Cottagee, Santo Clara. Box 435, Belbte. Phone Paneom. 3-1877. Criste- bel *3-Il73. KATHARINE HEPBURN and ROSSANO BRAZZI in an unforgettable adventure.. SUMMERTIME " GRFAT kELEASE NEXT THURSDAY AT THE CENTRALL" THEATRE. In her role as a tourist In "SUMERTIME," Katharine Hepburn is frequently seen with a camera, photographing the ancient, spectacular beauties of Venice, where the pie- ture, a romantic comedy, was shot in color on location. Each time she aimed her camera It was loaded, and as a nice reward for her forethought, she has brought back with her several thousand feet of film a complete pictorial record of her four month stay In Venice. Rossano Brauid co-stan with Miss Hepburn in "SUMMERTIME." Advt. Faltering Philip! Phlftp's Ufe Is filled with braule. Wefl-wern step sand nrup be osee Repsla would learb his hebope le anew M*. CL m fleds. wI the right el el VIEJA News of the Big Raffle! 6'i' foA 0un/a1, 9Wo**m&'Am 61/M a' $400.00 1st prize 2nd prize 3rd prize $200.00 120.00 80.00 KEEP YOUR TICKETS...PRIZES ACCUMULATE qtf thnim # &uiqm... C.aAfa Uea Rum 0fwt&fuIma "Om" RUm ati&A ATMUA and all products of "Vinicolo Licorera" and "Destileria Central" to 9' r iggg MR! III "" -- --- -- - ,n" ,, ' . SATURDAY, NOVEMBER I, IMS P &" E SI . .... ... . .. . . 1, THE PANAMA AMERICAN ENT DAILY NEWSPAPER __AI V lD IIY OVM E I, 955 I A I A IIE I N CAPITOLIO ,ue. 20c. TME MAN PROM LARAMIE CinemaScope and Color! Also: NEW ONLEANS UNCENSORED T IV OL I 35c. -20c. Double In Spanishl Amalia Aguilar, in Platillos Voladores Also: - La Venganza de Villalotos' CENTRAL Theatre 75c. 40c. 1:00 3:45 6:10 8:55 p.m. GREAT RELEASE! Robert Mitcbum Olivia de Havilland Frank Sinatra Gloria Grahame n/-in,-- NOT AS A STRANGER LUX THEATRE 75c. 40c. 1:00 3:15 5:30 7:45 9:00 p.m. SENSATIONAL RELEASE! Deborah KERR Van JOHNSON in - THE END OF THE AFFAIR DRIVE-IN Theatre 60c. 30c. WEEKEND RELEASE! Faith Domergue Donald Curtis Kenneth Tobey, in IT CAME FROM BENEATH THE SEA CECILIA THEATRE 60c. 30c. DOUBLE WEEKEND RELEASE in TECHNICOLOR! KIRK DOUGLAS, in MAN WITHOUT A STAR Also: - LAND OF FURY 35c. 201. LOTTERY NIGHT THE PARADISE CASE Also: - LADY FOR A NIGHT ay The_ best. pictures^ at. the. best m e =houses in town .. Hypnotized Bride Charged *In Death Of Sadist Husband KINGSVILLE, Tex., Nov. 5 old. It was Maria, she said, that (UP)-Mrs. Sunny Canales Wor- Worden pointed to after the By OSWALD JACOBY den, a wealthy, "hypnotized" grave was dug on October 22.. Written for NEA Service bride was charged today with She quoted him as saying: murdering her 'husband, who, Go ahead and shoot the she said, handed her a diamond- kid. Then I know you'll blow encrusted automatic pistol and your own brains out." She said ordered her to shoot down her he also had a can of kerosene, NORTH 1a 5-year-old daughter. to burn Maria's body. S6 7 76 32 The husband, Don Worden. a$ She said he handed her the V Q 45.year-old San Antonio real es- n.22 caliber pistol-on the handle Sr 4 3 tate man, had, before he hand- of which is set a design that S4 7 65 2 ed her the pistol, made her dig looks like a "14" in diamonds- ST EAST oD) a shallow grave on Padre Island, ;but shl took it ahd shot him in T(D) a 120-mile sandspit that runs the chest, as he lurched for Ma- t6 A 4 J09 along the south Texas coast. ria, who was running and 0 9 7 4 2 K She used the grave to bury his screaming. # Q 5 # A J 10 2 body. She said she stripped him to IC 10 3 4 A Q J 98 She charged he hypnotized his shorts, tugged the body into SOUTH her by fixing his gaze on her the grave and raked sand over SK Q 5 eyes, making her look at a watch it. She burned driftwood on the A J8 5 charm that he swung back and grave; she told Smith and J 8 7 6 forth, and, finally by giving her Warnke that she had no idea TELLS O F 1VORCE-Gloria a64 white tablets, which she took why she did this. Vanderbilt Stokowski talks to N rlh-South only after he choked her, bent The wind and waves took the New York newsmen about her h-South vul. her fingers back and forth and sand away from, the body until secret Mexican divorce fr(n East South West North burned her with a cigarette the buttocks were exposed. Two conductor Leopold Stoko\vski 1 4 1 Double Paw iehter. fishermen found the body last and a reported romance with C N asE er OPass Passt Thus obsessed by o "oo er,, Saturday, but it was not identi- crooner-actor Frank Sinatra. CELEBRATEEND OF SULTAN'S EXILE flowers of fe orymery ashe said, she turned over to him Hers. Woden during the first SultaSidt Mohammed Ben Youssef demonstrate joyfully at $90,000 in cash, a $45,000 home rcat of this week, tried to get in hr Casablanca afer learning that their ex-monarch wastreTurning in San Antonio, and Jewelry touch with Smith, but he was 1 ovi so Tineld to France after two years ~ exile at Madagascar. Supporters It's hard to censure South for whose exact value she did not out of town. Ben"'ousseexpect to restore him to the throne in Morocco. his overcall of one heart in t o kS ou 0 Freedom; Area l ,v a .y. .. h day's, hand. Most good players She said he persuaded her to c g the vulnerability. South was un- a tourist court in Ore on."- would make the same bid despite goo e C b B Trt oo the money to buyo ter ar Lucky enough to run into a very She was charged with murder Combed By Troopers s bad trump oreak and a very good today before Justice of the Peace WALLA WALLA, Wash., Nov. 5 Sagro i nt defense so thatthe losn s sfamounteds T. A. Simons Jr.. who set her Dfp td s to 500 points. This would not have bond at $5000. ,P --State troopers today sur- betn serious at rubber bridge, She waived an examining trial Iounded a one-mile square area however, since East-West had a and Simons bound her over to e a r the state penitentiary erbtrltdaeSe w wtte a r- So bo he oe to .here six of 10 convicts w ho rd t 0 very easy game at no-trump. If the grand jury. Mrs. Worden was nelled six30 feet under the pris- SSouth hadn't bid, the opponents locked up in jail until her ball o allo were bfnth e pris- b Erskine JAhnse would have bid and made their can be raised. n w hll to freiding edom were believ- game, and this would have been "So far, there is no evidence eI h n .- op-s- worth very nearly 500 points. to contradict her story," Sheriff The escape of the 10 convicts In tournament play such slight j.'Scb u ras discovered at 8 p.m. yester- HOLLYWOOD (-NEA Behind That-Heaven Allows." He's cheek- i tournamrto a ssli J. S Scarborough Jr.. said. ateee r olltcall. HOLWO tRe ieA)n- el si Tot-sideaven Allows." He's check-differences are of the utmost irm- "It's a weird situation from day at the evening roll call. the' Soreen: ,Van Johnson, one- ing in for treatment with a medic. portance. The East-West game, 'A'to 'Za' Kleb rg County at- Bloodhounds, prison w uards time song-and-dance man and 1945 eluding the trick score, was worth torney Royce Johnston said. stand sheriff's officers were or- romantic delight of the bobby sox- Hollywood's cycle of "adult west- only 40points. A penalty of torne500 "S Royce Jo rom the evn said. dered Into t he search of he ers ("Too Many Girls") has eris" has writer Dolph Sharp points against the contract of one obtained by the oicers, en fields and wheatlands near ined the "too many drinks" set dreaming about a juvenile horse heart doubd gave a top score cannot determine if it was lus- Iear he stat e erison.cen a role that's Oscar bait.' opera. His tongue-in-cheek' ideas to East-West and a bottom to tiiable homicide or ot.eareawereenforcement Beaming over his part of an on the subject: North-South. dl r off fcers converged was about alcolic escaped convict in "Bot- ,'AI title aracter West opened he deuce hearts, filed these charges in or-.ne ml west f 'the prison. A tom 'of "e Bdttl,"Va tol dMesthepoatiiea' dtnee gup.- e; o on Wth the a. rtder that the grand jury can report fro'i the prison said between icene V of the Fo trim: nfi'"t.arlss wreittheseters and South won. with the t ace. Do- make a thorough Investigation., .. "It's a role with more stuff than piay .pens try to keep the baby erng to get a few ruffing tricks. We're going o consult with the escaed nictswerehid. 3've had in .14 yearss" strollers out-othe prk. At theUnfortunately for him the oppon- judge and call the grand jury as s"'n i s ng in this area. 'And that, he said, included "'The finish the six-ytAart tofhe Unt uatey for and t veoe soon as a possible Roadblbcks were being set utp Caied t c e six earold hero kisses ents" saw the plot and avoided Mrs. Worden is a well-preserv at. strateic roads in outheast- Caine Mutiny" which he admit his rocking horse." further club leads. ed woman of 42 with gray- er Washngto'n Reinfr inS ng of-ah "changed thewhole itra k of my- East won the first round of clubs streaked brown hair. She s a- er Washington. Reinforcing of-red to the area career. As Van tells it: This Is Hollywood, Mrs. Jones: with the eight and shifted to dia- bout five feet. eight inches tall fibers were ordered to the area o n Running Wild" is a studio pro monds. The defenders managed to and wore a red coat at her a- from the nearby towns of Yaki- c oumre oy as g th Until section room hit a U-I in its tirst cash three rounds of diamonds and raignent. Her face a red coast put ffher ar- David Ge ne assocat is comes out of your mouah. Ul nl screenings. An embarrassing note then East led the jack of spades, and tear-stained .ere t, a e then I wash msy a Ibe ya sY' for Mamie Van Doren, who shows South covered with the queen, and She told Wa rnke and Texas Dvics u end he e scate o Maybe it was Bec utau eIver up with her best role to date. She Wes won' with the act and re-I Ranger Zeno Smith in a state- toe sberitendent 5 sand 8h0 p.In ready for te ? d s. everalmost took a suspension at the turned the suit. South took t he, mert her first husband was yesterday. He said the escapees since 'Ca7Tine garotlesIah nwitb studio to get OUT of toe part. king of spaties and ot out with Clem Gillespiefeldesterday. He said the escaees things to say. That. what counts." Ear-Witness: Jennifer Jones and a spade to East's en. worker, a olieere "run-of the-mill" risers There's been only one blusher, David 0. Selznick are getting pass- East now led his last diamond, She divorced him and doesn't e cell blocks psays n A roised Son an oto jungle Set serviceso t and 150 mls-estathe fr Dtheall. ocks ays Van, n hs last sx flcker ts for another hop to Europe. and South ruffed with the five of know where he is nearest the east wall. He played a western hero in The Theyjust finished building a water hearts. West overruffed with the second husband wasPraThe convicts bored a hole un- Siege at Red River" and hes still fall outside their bedroom windowseven of hearts and led his re- .xedis Canales, a n wealth Pra der the stone floor of a cell chuckling: b I've in their new home... Surprise hit manning club South ruffed with montd Te, oilm who settled down to a basement where they "I ws the fattest in the fut the owboath lefth im- Ter. o Um, o d "I was the fattest cow ck Bin the first rough cut of "Thenthe three of hearts a.nd wisely re- $50,000 on her and gave her the uinelled 30 feet under the oris- ever seen. ItlookedlikeJatkthe0 Benny Goodman Story" is Gene turned a low trump.e$45,000 San Antonio ahomeebeforee ken wall.fShovelsdandeotherotools I started dieting the day after thep $45,000 San Antonio home before i preview and lost 2 pounds. And Krupa as an actor in the non-g West had to step up with the lie divorced her last August 3i tused for digWing were found preview an os. musical scenes. But he's saying: nineof hearts towinthetrickand in Abilene Te., on cruelty near the tunnel entrance In the Im keeping it lost. "That's a9 far as I'll ever get then had to return a trump from charges. basement. Dean Martin's started a big away from the drums in a movie. the 10-4 up to declarer's J-8. South In addition to this, she said, reconciliation campaign to win I'm strictly a jazz man.' thus won the last two tricks and, she sad. she had $64.000 in a I 1 / I / Im bac his Jeanne. als descri -held the loss to 500 points. South bank before she married Wor- him as "absolutely crushed" about Change of scenery. Blonde Elena deserved credit for playing the den TAY her demand for a legal separation Verdugo's hairdresser got carried hand well, but his-score for the Actually, she said in her EYE FOOLER-This mature- .Gina Lollobri.ia s. being away and the star of "Meet Millie" hand was- very round' and very statement, 'she had some doubt looking "woman" is Judi JoTr- 60c. 30c. paged to heat up .e.ce is now more carrot-top han u-small. about Whether her marriage to dan, who is only 15. She's again as the Queen of Sheba in cille Ball. Worden was legal, because they landed a movie contract at "Solomon and Sheba." If the deal jls, the film will be made Myrna Loy arrived in Paris for ToWboat Crewman were married in Oregon she MGM, and is most widely jails,- the film will be' made in Myrnad Loy arrived in Paris oured To b Crewman S edid not say exactly where t e- known as the gal who intro- Italy . Rock Hudson's still her first film role since she madeI efMret e aly hewhere om no ais the goha l J hk ian on troubled by an injured leg liga- "Belles on Their Toes" at Fox five Takes Merchant was final. About the time of the on his TV show with the words, ment, hurt during filmgO years ago. She plays a senator's "marriage," he got her to out 'Starring Jackie Gleason." Judi, wife in the Olivia de Haviad At HIs Word $40,000 in the tourist court In who resembles Oscar-winning starrer, The Am bassadors Oregon. Grace Kelly, looks and acts Remember when she was Holly- MEMPHIS, Tenn., Nov. 5 (TJP) By Canales she had a daugh. more like 25 than 15. woods perfectrwifep ,9 .n so Jim Walden, whose general ter, Maria Teresa. now five years -S- Not In The Script: Fog and smog store advertises "all types of MONSTER HI roledAin on an outdoor jungle set services" to nrivermen 150 miles D T SA N TA for "Congo Crossing." While Vir- up and down the Mississippi, re-' DESTROYED.. ginia Mayo, Peter Lorre, Director ported today one towboat skip- R EL E A S E THOUSANDS Joseph Pevney and the crew sat per took him at his word. T two hours waiting for the sun, the He said the boatman left him Robert Mitchum, Olivia de Haviland, Frank Sinatra, extra playing an African native a set of false teeth to be repair- etc., get real training for their role n H-BOMB CAN Spped: led and would pick them up onet real training for their roles in ,,ll bet the front office is rest- his next trip upstream. "NOT AS STRANGER WARNING...I le,, too t. ..DESTROY THE Department of historical confu ." Continued today at the "CENTRAL" Theatre. SSterling Hayden. who is tall and !i C O M I public's "The Land Command." . Now Jeff Morrow, who is tall an . to Scout News . H G As part of a program to de-i H I velop the spirit of international . f-tendship, girl scout troop 19 of Fort Kobbe entertained twenty- five girl scouts from the repub- Exchange of their girl scout at was the purple ot Stanley eramer, producer-direc- Iis, Spanish dancing by the I for of "NOT AM 4 STRANGER." United Artists reease, to Tuon Pathanian oirls in native cos.rs and setresses into doctors and nrses. TunePan andsn ginr in 'panis Inside ad out," o the during of production on the screen . main. a t PPED BY RIctha-- t Kramer was determined that his film version of "NOT K Mrs, .u5 gnan ia the troop who headed the AS A STRANGER,' no less than the novel on which it was eep leader of the host Kobbe girl u n deleIation that basd, weld be auoey faithful to the relitis nt medi- d. he drcTon o s summer, has been am Soviet 'self, learned nil there was to know of the technnal and areno 'nd Mrs. Maro'ue: Aifer minister of a|ricblture. It is 1 human ide of their reTes. And he accomplished it in the l aI luncheon of saLndwiches, cake expected he wUl try to intro- only way pemible putting himself and his stars Rbert TODAY - lisTening and cokes, the girl scout aet-to- duce to his country some Amer- Mitcham. Olivia de avilland, Frank Sinatra, Gloria Gra- getber was climaxed wilti ali tcan farming techniques, espe- hame, Brerick Crawfwd and Charles DickfQrd through 1 ROSALINI afternoon movie at thk Post caly those used in eorn and lan Inteesive, rigorous course of medical trainingg." Advt. 11:00 P. M. ROBERT theater. hog production. m m rn it B'.. FA < "--e -- -.", e-^ -':-.. *' - DIABLO HTS. 5:20 8:10 Please Note Show rimes! Ingrid BERGMAN 'JOAN OF ARC" Technicolor! Sunday "THE COMMAND" MARGARITA 6:15 8:10 Edward G. ROBINSON Ginger ROGERS "TIGHT SPOT" unay "OAN OF AR Sunday "JOAN OF ARC" GAMBOA 8:15 "-'AMHBO( Sunday "CARMEN JONES" GATUN 7:f0 'CONQUEST OF SPACE" Sunday "TIGHT SPOT" C RISTOBAL 6:15 8:45 S'.ir-Conditionecd ,MARTIN and LEWIS "THREE RING CIRCUS" VM'aVision Color! A so Shos ing SUN. MON. A A A Air-Conditioned . A 1 J r )A.30 4:25 6:20 - 8:15 From the Cosmopolitan story that 1 blew the lid offl 19 I ,irrC PECMAT .IA[ ADDE APT.s[H[ NI MNAI[l . -- SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION! - a STh l t 1 J ?4ind V/!TTTO T1 a c' A INEMASCOEVEU ClULUI E "SURVIVAL CITY" SEE AND HEAR ATOMIC "OPERATION CUE"... AS IF YOU WERE THERE IN PERSON! 0 AlSO =HOH%,NC SUNDAY AND MONDAY! -PARAISO 6:15 7:31 "Scotland Yard Inspector' RIVE-IN. IH~tI AS STRUCK... BRIDGES ,SKYSCRAPERS CRASH... DIE IN STREETS... EVEN 'T DESTROY IT... REPEAT T IS OUT TO WORLD! ^_______4 WEEKEND RELEASE! .. I,-,; '~ / '-I' FAITH DRUE SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SHO CUMMINGS, In IT TO RUSSEL icuIT THE' I -I-e SHOWING AT YOUR SERVICE CENTER.THEATRES TODAY 40 I '4 4 U5 'a q! 4? UBt .1 VICTORIA 15c. ------------ PIRATI'S OE TRIPOLI. . Al.o - 1 Hi: I R 0 N ( 11 0 V E e ~e ~LP- __ ......... L-- SATIllDAT, NOVEMBER 5, 1955 T=E PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE SEVEN fl, tiZsnd 1. >1: < Ir, .. . r .-l- iniflY . . INAMAIMERICA= ANT IIE DA IY II E S1'A R- SN 5,Jll -195 Major College Teams May Have 'Lost Weekend', i Heavy Favorites Miss Disaster In 'Closies' By TIM MORIARTY United Press Sports Writer On the basis of early returns, this could turn into a "lost week-end" for the nation's major college football teams. Eighth-ranked West Virginia midway through the third pe- was such a heavy favorite over riod. He clicked off a 22-yard George Washington in their run and then scampered 43 Friday night game at Washing- yards for a touchdown. In the ton that no odds were quoted on fourth period, the Mountaineers the game. So what happens? rolled 98 yards for their decisive The undefeated Mountaineers score. had to come from behind in the wo touchdowns by speedy second half to eke out a 13-7 Two touchdowns by speedy triumph. Jack Losch carried Miami home I hin front of Boston College. The In another near upset in the slender senior from Williams- Orange Bowl, the University of port, Pennsylvania, traveled 74 Miami Hurricanes hardly looked [yards for the first Hurricane like 21-point favorites in hat- score in the opening period and tling to a 14-7 squeaker over then turned in a 44-yard touch- Boston College, down run in the second quarter. SWest Virginia blew hot andI Boston College, which rolled told in the frigid confines of up 20 first downs to seven for Griffith Stadium. The Moun- Miami, finally scored in the taineers looked shocked when fourth period on a 14-yard pass Mike Sommer of George Wash- from quarterback Bill Donian to Ington raced 89 yards for a halfback Ed De Silva. The Ea- touchdown in the first period glea threatened twice in the fi- and they left the field at half- nal minutes but Losch, also a time trailing 7-0,. demon on defense, intercepted However, halfback Bob Moss Donlan's desperation passes on finally got West Virginia rolling the 10-and six-yard lines. Dressen In Biggest '55 Skid Among American Loop Pilots -0 By STEVE SNIDER why and where its official insig- United Press Sports Writer nia may be used. N MEW YORK Sports of all LEHIGH and LaFayette, meet- sorts: ng in their 91st football game Chuck Dressen of the Senators today, believe they have the Was involved in the biggest longest rivalry in the nation. downward skid among American They've been playing each other League managers last season, "only" for 71 years but managed - In his first year at Washing- to work in several games a sea- ton, the Senators lost 13 more son in the mustache days before ames than they had the year 1900. Can anyone top 91? before under Bucky Harris. I rs n i PHIL RIZZUTO and Yogi U.S. OLYMPIC officials have Berra of the Yankees, Who In- %sked light heavyweight Floyd vested a bundle In a new bowl- patterson to stop using the ing Alley at Clifton, N.J., have Olympic emblem on his ring a gimmick to help beat the robe. baby-sitter problem for their -Floyd won an Olympic boxing customers ... They're install- crown at Helsinki in 1952 before ing a nursery on the premises. he turned pro but the Olympic committee has the say on how, WHEN PGA champion Doug hFord sets out on the tournament HE'S No OUTCAr trail early next year he may be S HE'S NO OUTCAST n representing a club that ha LAUREL, Md. (-NEA The neither a golf course nor a selection board for the Washing- clubhouse. Ford is considering ton D. C. International at Laurel an offer to become the new Put- R-ce Course, Nov. 11 invited nam Country Club, Mahopac, Alfred G. Vanderbitlg's Social Out- Y., which won't have a course cast to enter, ready for play until next May 30. a, ARKANSAS is bucking a ma- jor football jinx at Rice today. fe n s Thes Razorbacks never have fire UnieSS beaten Rice at Houston, Tex., scene of today's clash, having Slot 14 and tied two at the home you are sure of the Owls. SCurt Simmons, left-handed f pitcher of the Phillies, took up tu tarMet- golf recently and waited to start with a set of left-handed clubs. His pro strongly advised .against it so Curt now is try- i ng it righties even though he strictly is a left-hander in ev- erything else. Yogi Berra switched from left to right-handed clubs this spring and immediately cut a Sflock of strokes off his score. SIR PERCY Spender, Austral- ia's ambassador to the U.S., wished Olympic officials well when they kicked off their drive to raise $1,500,000 to send Amer- Sican teams to the 1956 games. I "But I hope you aren t able to kfnow what you are I raise any more than a million ring at. If not clear- and a half," he said with a o ls y visible, hold. your chuckle, "Otherwise you might ite, sys t Natonal Rfle Asicome down there and buy our iain o America. whole place." The Pacific Steam Navigation Company INCoprI""qTED BY ROYAL CHARTER 184 Royal Mail Lines Ltd. FAST FREIGHT AND PASSENGER SERVICES BETWEEN EUROPE AND WEST COAST OF SOUTH AMERICA TO COLOMBIA. ECUADOR, PERU AND CHILE M.V. tSALAVERRY" ...........................Nov. 15th M.V. "SAMANCO" N...............................ov. 20 TO UNITED KINGDOM VIA CARTAGENA, HAVANA, NASSAU. BERMUDA, CORURA. AND LA PALLICE M.V. "REINA DEL PACIFICO" (18,000 Tons) ......Nov. 26 TO UNITED KINGDOM DIRECT X.l. "SANTANDER" ............................... ov. 7 S LA CO" ................................Nov. 13 ROYAL MAIL LINES LTD./HOLLAND AMERICA LINE TO NORTH PACIFIC PORTS B M Pgr .t ..................................Nov. 24 MUKUOOWAN. .............................Nov. 26 SrO UK/CONTINENT S8. "LOCH AVON" ...............................Nov. 16 Q- M MNA N" . ............ ............ ......... Nov. 22 AnD h g Bbjectf to Change Without Notice .i I C.Z. FOOTBALL CHAkMPIONS The powerful Balboa High School Bulldogs, Canal Zone inter- J j .. i scholastic football champions for 1955. The Bulldogs were held to an upset 6-6 tie by Cristobal - High last night to spoil their previously unbeat en, untied record for this season. o "i "- BS The fourth annual Marlin club ton- To be announced, donated Tournament officially got under by Lt. Col. J. R. Burkhart. S way at 6:00 this morning. Most For individual "muffing" most of the boats left yesterday after- fish (The donor has won his own -C ri t b l I B attl B HT noon and last night, some plan- award for the past two years. b a l T ig ers B a ffning on making the anchorage Any competitors?) Special B u lld o g s Tat ocas Poi D ent on ey Island, Muffer's Award, donated by Sand most planning to anchor at Frank J. Violette. Perry Bay near East yiliage on For captain of boat releasing Pedro Gonzales Island. From most sailfish during tourna- gthese landfallsin thePerlas Is- ment Carved glass shower Lands the boats were in good door, donated by Compaffia Dul- 1 ---fishing waters when the tourna- cidio Gonzalez N., S.A. meant started. ., For dh largest sailfish 11Sil- 7..... A "fired-up" Cristobal High Prizes have been coming In ver dish ($25 value), donated by SSchool Tiger football team last all week from the business firms First National City Ban of N.Y. Night played inspired ball to in Panama, and the latest cornm- For 7th largest sailfish Sil- SV -O .. 'hold heavily favored Balboa pilation is listed below. It-hai ver dish ($25 value), donated by ..' High School's Bulldogs to a 6-6 been agreed that in the event Chase Manhattan Bank. Art Guepe tie in a thrilling game at Bal- that there has -been no entry for For largest fish on 12 lb. test boa Stadium. a prize, those fishermen who line $25 merchandise credit, have won prizes will draw names donated by F. Icaza y Cia. S.A. MARQUETTE had won seven In coming up from their role from a hat for the unclaimed For Largest first on 20 11. test games in a ro when we went as decided underdogs, it was a prizes. It is impossible to pre- line $25 merchandise credit, togame Pittsburgh to play Duquesne in wll deserved moral victory for dit that grouper or roosterfish donated by F. Icaza y Cia, S.A. 1936. Cristobal in the eyes of most etc., will be taken., For 11th largest marlin $25 With that kind of a record, we tans. For largest amberjack caught merchandise, donated by F. Ica- naturally were favored to great by fisherman on service boat- za y Cia, S.A. the Dukes. e t Cristobal scored in the first Individual Trophy, donated by For 12th largest marlin $25 In the quarter on a returned punt. Panama Marlin Club. merchandise, donated by F. Ica- ball in midfield in a punt f situation ' y ansom took a 70-yard za y Cla, S.A. on fourth down. I kicked the ball kick for the touchdown. The For largest grouper or jewfish For 8th largest sailfish 1I out of bounds on the Duquesne kck for the extra point by caught by fisherman on service year's subscription to PA, donat- 18-yard line, and the Dukes were Kaiser Bazan was missed. boat-Individual Trophy, donat- ed by The Panama American. offside. T eta ed by Panama Marlin Club. For hard luck boat prize TO I thought I could do better than The teams then played evenly Largest tuna caught by fish- be announced, donated b Pan kick out of bounds on the 18, so i ntl seven minutes of the erman on service boat Indi- ama Marlin Cluo. we took the penalty and lined up fourth period when Balboa vidual Trophy, donated' by Pan- For largest Mitarlin on lightest to kick again. .scored under a sustained 75- ama Marlin Club. tackle Room humidifier, This time the center rolled the ., '.. yard drive with quarterback Ed For 2nd largest tuna caught donated by Sears Roebuck and I tbel te ne would e Scott going over from the one- by fisherman on service boat co kick off. yard lne on a quarterback Individual 'Trophy, donated by For smallest fish n heaviest Duquesne took over in midfield sneak. The Bulldogs' attempt to Panama Marlin Club. tackle 100 ft Nylon rope for and rolled 30on to a touchdown and run for the extra point fell For largest fish by Service handline5, donated by William victory, 23-0. d '' short.Team Member from Fort Clay- Violette and Co. Sporting Goods. That's one I'd change if I had the opportunity again. j. "' For Cristobal, Kaiser Bazan I belitve we would have been was the player on the field. much better off had we declined I ". '" Charles Fears, a euard: end Al- the pnlyadgvn q slen Robinette and little Robert the ball on its 18-yard line. .. i Ransom were also outstandirg. For alboa in the line, tackle NEXT: Jim Finks. H arold Sorrell, guard Robert b '""', Fearon and nd Jerry Robnett ,ain o Cplayed best. Among the back- " Rainbow City field. fullback Ken Wheeler and . Swim Pool To Be (NEA Telephoto) s quarterback Ed Scotndint were out- Swim Pool ToCENTRAL FIGURE IN GOLF HOAX Charles "Bud" Helmar of ing. Reopened Monday Springfield, Mass., was revealed by, a New York paper as the From the standpoint of statis- central figure in a golf hoax at an exclusive Long Island club. tiesthe th teams were more or The Rainbow City swi fming The newspaper said Helmar falsified his identify and credentials less even. repairsool, which hasll been lospened for at the Deepdale Golf Club last Sept. 18-19. Helmar and his Balboa had 10 first downs, repairs, will be reopened next partner reportedly falsified their handicaps and were able to Cristobal 6. Balboa 137 yards Monday. win the tournament. As a result, Helmar's partner was said to from scrimmage, C 3istobal 96. It was originally she dul pool open on Sat- have won $4,000 out of a $45,000 Calcutta pool. Both teams tried 6 passes. Bal- to have the pool open on Sat- a te urday, Nov. 5, but the reopen- boa completed two passes, Cris- ing has been delayed until the tobal 1. Balboa gained 21 yards first of the coming week. on passes, Cristobal 15. Passes first of the coming week. Armed Forces Boxing Tourney Intercepted by Balboa 1, Cristo- Atanti c tbal 2. Fumbles, Balboa 2, Cris- Atlantict Al tobal. Recovered by Balboa 0, SL i 0g t A A b o Cristobal1.Penalties Balboa d Pony Loopi At Abrook i P s 0o Along The Fairways Tryout Set Fifty-one fighters, including tonight is Roland Poindexter of The Atlantic Pony League four defending champions, will Kobbe, who lost last year's title ANNUAL TASCO BATTERY will hold another try-out for be throwing leather thiz month to lanky Bill Bollinger. He's TOURNAMENT ANNOUNCED all new arrivals. Boys who will in Panama AreaArmed Forces slated to meet Joe Martinez of AT FTAMADOR GOLF LUB not be 16ayears ofYagehby mid- tournament competition, The Army Atlantic in the featured AMADOR GOLF CLUB J. . mid- battles begin tonight In Albrook light welterweight go. night, March 31, 1956 and did b battles begin tonight in A k light welterweight go. Angus Metheney announced DOUBLE TIME-When snow fell at Andover, N. H., members not try out on October 19, are Air Force Base's Hangar No. 3 Tonight's struggles are sc this week the sponsorship by the of Procter Academy' footballand ski teams practiced two sports requested to be present at the at 7:30 o'clock. Tonight's struggles are ched- Auto Service Inc. of Panama Ci- at the same time. Dave Hodgkins centers the ball for, left to Mt. Hope ball park, Monday, uled in the feather, light we lter, ty of another annual handicap right, Carl Parkeri Allen Quimby, assistant football and head Nov. 7, by 3:30 p.m. Tonight's card has 11 matches welter, light middle and light tournament to be held at the ski coach Jack Camp and Pete Moulton. This will be the final try-out in which one PAAF champ is heavy divisions. Here is the Fort Amador Golf Club during before the forming of teams scheduled to see action. He is card: the period Nov. 12 through Dec. and drawing up of the play- Billy Priest, a heady light mid- Feather: Darrell Brigham of 11 Ing schedule for the 1956 e- dleweight from C a bridge, AA vs. Arroyo-Torres of Kobbe. This tournament, known as son. Mass. Priest, 1955 Fort Kobbe Byes were drawn by Ursel Rhea, the Tasco Battery Tournament, king, meets Billy Sheppard of Air Force SE champ from Al- will be open to all members of SUNDAY, NOV. 6, 1955 Army Atlantic. rook, Ramos Tirado of Fort the Fort Amador Golf Club ha- Outboard motorboat races at Ped Miguel Boat ub. brother, Amador and Sy Bradley of ing a current handicap as Outboard motorboat races at PedrdMiuel BoatCb. Priest, whpse brother, Al Kobbe. Nov. 11. First race 2 p.m. A N TA (Red) Priestis well known in A special club bulletin will be Sponsored by SMOOT & PAREDES, S. A. New England ring circles, is Light welter: Alfonso Clark of forthcoming outlining the rules 3 hours of thrills. General public cordially. invited of any of the defending titlists. Kobbe. Poindexter vs. Martinez. Prizes for the tournament will Jim Williams of Albrook Air Pat Cornell of Clayton and Ron include ten new tubeless, nylon, Force Base, two-time Detroit Adams of AA drew byes. white sidewall tires, two double Golden Gloves winner who is the Welter: Bob Johnson of Kobbe bed air foam mattresses or four From the story of man's great heroism... Air Force Southeast District vs. Malcolm Wright of Albrook, single mattresses or combina- Shamp, is fighting in the upper ill Leahy, a 1954 semifnalis tion thereof, plus eight TASC "THE ETERNAL SEA" bracket. Both Priest and Will- from Kobbe vs. Len Travis of batteries and a special husbandHE T R L SEA" iams are favored to advance to Albrook and Jim Zeizler of AA the finals, slated for November vs. Wayland McMullen of lay- Members desiring to partici- e S O Williams, who lost in the all- drew a bye. p ate nthisetour enam en a do tAir Force finals at PGarks, Ca i ghtf., middle: Jim Norris ofthe club. The deadline for en- Paul Wright, drew a bye mto Kobbe vs. Joe Tucker of AA and trance is 6 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 13. the division semifinals Novem- Priest vs. Sheppard.' Williams No further entries will be ac- per 19. and A. J. Reed of Clayton cepted after this time. All four Other PAAF champs back are Light heavy: Sly Riggens of under medal play rules with full flyweight Jose Rosa-Guzman of AA vs. Bob Parker of Kobbe, handicap allowance for all par- Fort Kobbe, bantamweight Raul John TWarren of Albrook vs. trance Tee for th Calderon of Fort Clayton and Chuck Richards of Amador n trance fee for this tournament. H O G Byrd of Kobbe. Rosa-Ouzman Freeman of AA. Roscoe Wise-Football Results Command titles while Byrd was Next 84turday will see begin- injured and didn't compete in ning matches in the flyweight, the series with the Puerto Rican bantamweight, Ii g h t weight, FRIDAY'S COLLEGE FOTBALL winners, middleweight and heavyweight RESULTS classes. All these, winners ad- By UNITED PRESS His replacement on the Corn- vance to the final while to- n mand card was Albrook's Bob night's victors will have to bat- West Virginia 13 Geo. Washing- George, who beat Antilles king tie in semifinal contests Novem- ton 7 Herbert Hope in a rousing ti- ber 19. Hardin-Smmons 23 Texas West- nale, giving Panama a 6-4 edge ern 21 in the Command card. George, Kobbe captured six of the ti- Hotstra 13 Wilkes g6 Probably tae most Interested WIlter on the set t~f former New Jersey G o 1 den tIes last year in an enthusiastic Miami (Fla) 14 Boston College 7 putlle's lobirid. fdris, oTEo AmeriA' gr eate hro Gloves and all-Air Force light tourney staged at Lifeliner Are- North Dakota State 26 Superior Admfl Cohn. knsr of AirrleetsQon et, hoes heavy champ, won the SE crown na. Clayton won three and Al- State 12 and thqn lost in a split decision brook a singleton. Upasla 1 Ithsea 7 Heshlns' keen laterest In the pleture eane quite nat- in the meet at Parks to the The PAAF winners will ad- ast central tOkia) 27 No uraliv I view of the fact that "THE. KTEkNAL SEA" I s eventual champ. John Stewart. vance to the Command cham- west Rangers 13 based en his colorful and romantle career. lISTenin B.rd and Georgd are lighttng plonships In December. Puerto leare 21 Midland 7 Starrig in the hkhiy-Isaded prodetion are Sterling in ddferent brackets and slated Rico has been listed as the Stetson Presyterila Hayden, Alexis Smith and IDeaa Jagger, with Ben Cooper, to open Nov. 12. host, but the exact date ann site Weutchester Tuhru u MiUllel- Virgina frey asd flehard Crame ee-stamd. Adt. Another veteran to see action haven't been announced. Wills T.hr 13. Pr& ow n m Saw 11 CO. Cristobal TeL. 1654/5 F-E w. A Peri *55. Tel. 3-1257/1 F9 00. MML S-'Tel. BMld.. TeL 2-190i THE PANAMAA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAnLY NEWSPAPER SATURDAY, NOVEMBERI S, 195S PAGE EIGrBT 1 SATURDAY, NOVEMB~~~l~ 5,1355 q.T. PAA AiMERC AA ~UrdU4~IIIIIn~LRY~EN A I AN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE NINW PennKidsAll-Americolosers, Look Forward To Notre Dome THROWN BY THE BULL-Bullfighter Navillero Carlos Mor tes is caught unexpectedly as the bull drives beneath his cai and throws him high into the air at Mexico City. Montes wg rushed to cne hospital in serious condition. by JOE WILLIAMS (n- mi- p. as THE GAME WAS OVER, Army had beaten Colgate as was expected, and now the Cadets were back in the West Point dress- ing room, unpeeling. One of them, Stan Slater, guard, divested himself of a thin layer of mockery. "I can't wait to get the Sunday newspapers to see what the sports writers have to say about the awful quarterback we got. Didn't he loo't terrible out there today?" Don Hollender had run for a touchdown and passed for the three others in the Cadets' 27-7 victory. This was the convert- ed All-America finest performance since coach Early Blaik made the startling change in spring practice. * When Army lost successively to Michigan and Syracuse, scor- ing two points net, the wisdom of the change was challenged by the superior intellects in the press box. It was pointedly call. ed to the Redhead's attention that in attempting to strenghten one key position, he had succeeded only in weakening twe, thereby achieving a personalized miniature Dunkirk; not only that, but there was no way to tell yet to what degree Holleder's psyche will have suffered in consequence of this bizarre experl.- ment and the attendant uncomplimentary press. * APPARENTLY, THE ONLY thing in this connection that in- terested Blaik when contacted by the column, was that the de- fense had shown improved unity Saturday and the attack great- er cheion. As for Holleder, the coach said: "With each game, S natural he becomes more polished and poised In the position. Against Colgate his receivers cooperated more effectively than in any preitous~az, and. otcoajWar.be looked better, did better, and In fact, was better.". .What seems to be happening here is that Holleder is getting used to his receivers, and vice versa. With~ only Yale and Penn immediately ahead Bilalk has a full mouth to concentrate on Navy. The Cadets got by Colgate without serious injury, though Art Johnson, who caught one of Helleaqer'w touchdown passes, was sufficiently bruised to require hospital scrutiny. Blaik is hojpeful that the long run of casual- ties wOclh decimated his backfield and forced him from one pertleus extremity to another, has finally come to an end. Noew he talks optimistically of fielding an Army team at full strength, or lose to it, in time $or Naty. This particularly focuses the spot on Bob Kyasky, who when fit, is the fastest ball carrier in the East. "I am not by any means sure he won't be baek in ac- tion before the season ends," said Blalk. . and It might be sooner, rather than later. Kyasky was suited up for the Colgate game. 0 * IF BLAK CAN bring Army back from the rim of chaos on which the Cadets stood following the Syracuse whacking to a triumph over Navy in the annual service game, he wil have turned in one of the finest coaching jobs of the decade. don't be too surprised if the Redhead doesn't do just that, too, From now on both the -schedule and time are in his corner. By Nov. 26 Holledefrs all-round development as a qu rterback may be such that people will be writing in to ask, "Whatever became of Navy's George Welsh?" Navy and the little fellow didn't fare so well against Notre Dame Saturday. In fact, the Irish's Paul Bornung took the play almost completely away from Welsh. Like Army's Holleder, he is a made-over quarterback, a converted full to be specific. It is needless to add that if this test had the validity pre-game prose claimed for it, Hornung moved far out in front of Welsh In All- America prestige. And speaking of standout coaching jobs, young Terry Brennan rates a bow for the way he restored the Irish morale after the kicking around they took from Michigan State two weeks ago. DELAWARE, HITHERTO UNAMBITIOUS, must know where to find the lions. The Blue Hers, as Bob (Phillies) Carpente's favorites cail themselves, smashed Rutgers, 33-7. For reasons best known to himself, Jim Tatum refuses to let the Maryland Terrapins function at full speed these days; keeping the South Carolina score to 27-0 had the looks of a miracle In repressed violence. Ohio State ran roughshod over Northwestern, 49-0, by the way of further stressing what is happening to football at Evanston, once a might big Ten power.' Playing gin a snow storm, Minnesota beat Southern Cal, 25-19. Whether the outcome would have been different under more agreeable whether conditions in conjecture. This was one game In which possession of the ball was practically a handicap. The Gophers were kicking on third and first downs. The Gophers, in their only other clash with a Pacific Coast power, were routed by Washington, 30-0. If you happen to be Interested In com- parative cores, Washington narrowlY beat Southern Cal, 7-.. FREDDIE RUSSELL, distinguished Nashville sports author- ity, is in town to receive the Grantland Rice Memorial Award from the Sportsmanahlp Brotherhood. It couldn't go to a nicer gent, ot as more competent press boxer. "Pro quarterback," a football card came patented by our Pat McOonough, ought to be on every one's Christmas list. We'll tell you more abouIt in next Saturday's Digger sports section. The Minnesota price- makerr you've been reading about here had Southern Cal favor- ed by 13. over the hometown boys, and it would be interesting to know what kind of action this produced, especially after it came tUp now. I By HARRY GRAYSON PHILADELPHIA (NEA)-- sylvania headed for the mo toMting part of Its schedu Notre ame and Army on su sive Saturdays-with a a q which, as someone out it, 5 bellowed to settle the remain of its games with spelling bI Steve Sebo's Michigan Stat tiple offense, which produce straight defeats going Into ?Pnn State party- most by car number totals- has been of a mystery to the Quakers the opposition. Penn- re in- Waces- uad should cinder 2s.d autl- d 14 the box- more than Yet no one around Franklin Field and its confines s anything less than proud of the manner in which the Red and Blue warriors have taken their weekly thumping. "Practice here, all season long, Is sawiething you've got to like,' S ay Bob Paul the school's tub-thumper. "Casses per mit Coach Sebo to have a full squad only on Friday. The rest of the time kids cume straggling out late. I I I %V b PI el t 1 "Yet despite the limited apd the lickings, the spirit most unbelievable. They m as much noise as s. team ridi 5-game winning streak, li forward to Saturday." The Navy game served as illustration. When Penn sta working for it, Sebo told oys: "They're not the best t n the nation. Block and ta properly and you stand an e chance. They only filed 11 m he same as we do." drill t is sake ag a ook an rted his earm ckle even men, The Penn lads took up their head man's suggestions, did their utmost--no sulking here. It wai the same old story, however-nc contest, as Eddie rdelatz of An apolis, using a political approach and desiring to rest George Welsh, started jayvee Tom' For- restal at quarterback and other- wise did everything possible to keep the score down to a mere 3S points. Undaunted, the sons of Penn, no longer mighty, looked forward to taking on Penn State, Notre Dame, Army and Cornell. Their loyalty to Sebc through two seasons of defeats has been such that it practically command- ed the vote of confidence the institution handed its head drill- master. It has been written and s a id that losing teams do not build much character, but young men who take successive pastings like the Penns have must like to play football and get something out of it. They must posses some- thing vastly more than their lack of football talent. With kids like these, it's a pity there isn't an All-America team for losers. The Penn kids aer real All-Americas-the kind you want on your side. They give the other side all they've got and never give up. This will take them much farther in other line than it has in high-pressure football. The team that trots out on Franklin Field this fall is far re- moved from tht outfits which took on mankilline schedules in the past. The Charley Bednariks, Skippy Minisis and George Sa- vitakys are gone. Most sigip meant in the Penn pic- ture is the 1i schedule, which lists Penn State, Dartwr" uth, Princeton, Brown, Navy, Yale, Harvard. Columbia and Cornell- strictly Ivy League. Penn's present varsity is load- ed with sophomores. There are 15 high 'r prep school captains with the freshmen. Dropped down in class, as they say at the track, things should get a lot better. Meanwhile, you must admire the kids taking it oa the chin each Saturday afternoon and bounc- ing back for more and liking i4. TAKING PLAY AWAY BROCKTON, Mahs. (NEA)- Ralph Chesnauskas of Army an Vic Piscuskas, Bro wn fullback Brockton boys, are making head lines here this fall-while Rock Marciano is inactive. I U SANTA is COMING to HOG Tune in! Keep listening! d k, d- y * I SEVEN, THE HARD WAY e-^ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ "^ v'v ^ ^ *^ y' rril -- ----- --^ What Does a Dog Wat? ed as much as they want, needed Isn t ,Throwing By JOE STETSON as much as they need. Dog Editor John was not a hard-heartcd MILWAUKEE (-NEA)- F e w guy. In fact he was just a tired quarterbacks can match statistics "Down! Down!" John was em- guy at the end of a trying day's with Ray Zagar. phasizing his commands with an work. What he didn't realize was impatient expression and an .an- that this fatigue would drop from Marquette's T quarterback comrn- gry mood. "I've just fed you," he him like a cloak-that his springs pleted nine of his first 28 passe, muttered, "wheat more do you would quietly unwind, his te n- this year and caught three, the want?' sion vanish did he but rub an latter for a gain of 48 yards. Happening to overhear him as ear, scratch a back, pat a side I approached his dog run, I could and mumble nothings to the ones Zagar has no secret about his not help but feel sorry for the that understand these mumblings double-duy. H moves to halfback dogs who got plenty EJood, but. like no others... when it comes time to catch pas- whose communion with the man ses. they thought God stopped right (Distributed by NEA Service) there. I wh tha ma tha afn anl t did not make me wonder at more a dog wants-I know rt. It made me wonder how ny dog owners do not realize it a dog wants the respect and section of his master more than thing else. The dog that jumps, pushes barks-makes a nuisance of him- self for attention-will sit quiv- ering with grateful eyes pleading for understanding if he is but given a few soft words. He may want mnore and look for it, but his spirit is burning bright when fed by the fuel of affection. Sometimes I wonder about the questionably fed dog of the man who has less of 'life's essentials than he needs for himself. But when I've turned the thought o- ver a few time I come to feel that I'd rather be the dog who lives with a gnarled hand on his ead and a gruff voice in his ear than John's dogs with their bel- lies full of food. The truth of the matter is that e don't have to starve our dogs to make them happy, nor do we have to encourage bad- manners. We can till feed them well and keep them under proper dicip- line yet give them th&t moment now and then to feel secure in the realization that they belong that their adoration is not entire- ly one-sided that they are want- I The trt of th mter is... that VICEROY dgoret nomw COST LESS Mr. Guilw,.me Gerl do Per.- ds. popular end we.l-known Soletmen in n..me "I heard so much about VICEROYS that I decided to make the 10-day test. I found the lOftr tip produces just the right kind of smoke." ing ploeare '"'S et Tommy MMe~eald 4ONW fPftPR Tommy Me- Donald helps give -Oklahoma's Orange Bowl bound express a potent halfback wallop. Aotes Match No. 4 Prone Jeanette Orr Bill Joyce Dick Dillman 200-9X 199-17X 199-16XC AGGREGATE SCORES I Gun Club -0- BALBOA The first match in a series of 1st Small Bore and High Power rifle 2d matches scheduled for the corn- 3d ing year was-held Sunday, Oc- tober 30, at the Farfan Range by A the Balboa Gun Club. Although the number of entries was small, 1 every one participating had a 2 good time and are looking for- 3 ward to the next match. 4 This was a four- position! 5 match, 20 shots standing, 20 6 shots kneeling, 20 shots sitting, 7 and 20 shots prone, with mer- 8 chandise prizes being given to 9 the first three places in each 10 position. 11 Bill Joyce returned to Canal' Zone shooting and adequately demonstrated that he is the No. I contender in Small Bore Shoot- | ing on the Isthmus. The only perfect score fired was by Jean- ette Orr, a Junior who scored a : 200-9X in the prone position. Participation by the military TOl was somewhat disappointing, but we can expect an improvement H as word gets around. These po- sition matches with Small Bore: rifle are excellent training for high power rifle matches. The next rifle match to be held by the Balboa Gun Club will be a 60-shot match in the standing, kneeling, and prone position on the 200 vard range at Farfan, 30 caliber High Power. Scores on last Sunday's match follow: Match No. 1 Standing 1st Dick Dillman 181-2X 2d Max Manning 180-lX 3d Bill Joyce 187-3X i Match No. 2 Kneeling I 1st Bill Joyce 192-2X 2d Dick Dillman 187-2X 3d Ted Webb 180-3X Match No. 3 Sitting 1st Bill Joyce 198-6X 2d Dick Dillman 196-7X 3d Norene Simms 195-9X i Peter Reynold, in "BLACK 13th III if Today IDEAL- .20.- 10 Janet Leigh, in "'FEARLESS FOGAN" Edward Arnold, in ' "EYES IN THE NIGHT" Yes, sir! They cost less because they're made in Panama now. Therefore they're fresher. And.. since VICEROYS are made with the same fine imported, tobaccos, the quality remains unchanged. VICEROYS' filter'enhances the fine flavor of its choice tobaccos It prevents stains on your, teeth, and throat irritation. If you really wont to enjoy smoking, smqke VICEROYS. Only MAKE THE 10-DAY TEST wm VICEROY AND YOU, TOO, WILL BE CONVINCED A product of Ms.A. VC.9.A-/SS ROULETrT 21 (BLACWJAC, CRAP TAMLA SCHUCK-A-LUCK SOAR SERVICE .. MrcometleasePOWa -- -------- -- --- - ----- ---- ;------~ --~- I k, l- Y I I I Joyce Dillman" Manning Orr Webb Eggleston Roberts Simms Jaxthelmer Millard Keller rl I . I I I I SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1958 MA-- --- 787-28X 763-27X 745-17X 735-12X 734-23X 725-16X 720-16X 714-23X 696-13X 655-5X 462-2X r - 11 ~i~P"' Service Boxing To urne SPNas 8iLibrary r# NJV 8 1955s. Ssto nghte RRead story on page $ RED FEATHER Salvation Army Service Does Not Falter (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the eighth in the "BED FEATHER SERIES" depicting the activities of the Canal Zone Community Chest). "Service That Never Ceases" aptly describes the work of The Salvation Army, on organization with more than 50 years of con- tinuous service in the interests of the needy at the "Crossroads of the World." Irrespective of color, race or creew, its program of ameliora- tion of the sufferings of the less fortunate has continued unin- terrupted, made possible in part by funds from the Canal Zone: Community Chest of which It is a member agency. Often in conditions and cir- cumstances lacking in glamor, it has silently rendered service and brought relief to countless persons. Much of the Salvation Army's work goes unpublished. Throughout the past year, the organization in the Ca- nal Zone has received by tele- phone, letter or personal call, instances of human tragedies and perplexities of life. Sudden calamity may cause a reversal of circumstances; sick- ness, 'or even death, may leave a family bereft, not only of a loved one but also of the support given. Cold statistics are never really Impressive, but the human in- terest stories behind them capti- vate the imagination. Day bY day the dramas are enacted, and often money, investigation and gymnathy will put matters right. During the past year more than 800 needy families re- ceived direct relief from the Salvation Army. One of the Army's more val- nable services is )n their care .and aid of the blind. Advice and practical aid is given and later the individuals return to say, "Thank You." A.call to trace a missing rela- t've comes from the other side of the world, patient inquiries lep?ds to the discovery of the wanted person and a happy, united family results. And so the story could go on. Let it suffice to say that "Tho Army of the Helping Hand" stands ready to assist In anyv way possible in the days that lie eabpad. The Salvation Army is main- taining the purpose of ifs ex- istence as "servants of the people," and in doing so is the handmaidd' of its many friends, enabling them to do things they would li'e to do themselves if they had the op- portw-nity. The administrative officer In charge is Senior-Captain Ed- ward W. Hodgson, who !s ably supported bv his wife and a group of full-time officer work- ers. The headquarters is situated at 0792 La Boca Road, Balboa (Telephone: Balboa 3693) and there are churches at La Boca, Paralso and Rainbow City. I Every dollar subscribed to the organization through the Com- munity Chest is stretched to the utmost, and those who give as- sist in the fulfillment of the Divine command to "undo the heavy burdens." Wanted Man's Luck Runs Oul After 9 Years Of Freedom SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 5- (UP)-A wanted man, lucky through nine years during which he didn't even change his last! 4iame, was arrested here for mail fraud today at the same time that Chicago authorities were discussing dropping the charges because he was legally dead. Wallace J. Johnson, 63, misg- ing from Chicago since 1946 and Indicted for mail fraud involv- Ing $33,000 in 1947, was taken into custody by postal inspectors today after they got a tip fromI a San Francisco woman who saw his wanted poster on a post of- flee wall Johnson. who-e onl,, han - had been to call himiElf Walter. readily admitted hi4s idcntii', and confe.,;ed his crime to p"i-, tal inspector Clarence Konlet He had been running a ridin. stable In nearby San Mateo. Calif.. since 1947. Chicago authorities said that Johnson's wife, Olavena. had al- ready collected on his life insur- . ance on the grounds that be wa; legally dead after seven years. They were meeting today to con- aider dropping the mall fraud charges when news of Johnson'- arrest reached them. Mrs. Johnson, left alone in Chicago. sued Equitable Life As- sa- rance Society for collection of his $5,000 insurance policy in 1953 and the company made An out-of-court settlement for a Reported $1,200. Johnson was formerly treas- wrer of a country elub In Chica- g . \\ ll AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER Pan a a Anwrtcan "Let the people know the truth anid the country is safe" Abraham Lincoln. 31st YEAR PANAMA, R. P., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1955 FIVE CENTS Big Four Ministers Separate To Plan Next Week's Moves PRESIDENT RICAKUO ARIAS bestows the order of Manuel Amador Guerrero o, Don Fabio Arosemena, sole surviving member of the Municipal Council which declared Panama's cecession from Colombia. I IN THE NAME OF lIE MUNICIPAL COUNCIL, Pedro Galln- do presents a gift to Don Enrique de la Ossa, president of the Society of Soldiers of the Panamanian independence. KIT CARSON GENEVA, Nov. 5-(UP)-U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles lined up strategy on .dis- armament today while waiting to leave on a two-day visit to Vienna and Yugoslavia. , Dulles and his chief disarma-, ment experts met at U.S. dele- gation headquarters. Harold E. Stassen, presidential adviser on disarmament, is scheduled to ar- rive this afternoon. The Big Four conference, faced with total deadlock on European security -and Germa- ny, was expected to plunge into the disarmament discussion in the middle of next week. With hopes of reaching a Eu- ropean cold war settlement at Geneva virtually abandoned, the conference went into cold sto- rage for the next three-days. Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov, who has sidestepped every western attempt to smoke him out on whether Russia wants German unity, flew off to Moscow for the weekend. The purpose of his trip was not announced. But it was as- sumed he would confer with the other Kremlin leaders and prob- ably bring back new instructions for dealing with the deadlocked German question. But western officials had very little hope that these would bring the conference any nearer agreement. British foreign secretary Har- Snns Warn 7nnlan old Macmillan took the over- night train to Paris and flew from there this morning to Lon- don. Dulles and Pinay were sched- uled to take off for Vienna and Paris respectively early this aft- ernoon. With the chief delegates all out of town, the conference's work ground to a virtual stand- still Experts of the three western delegations held their usual morning planning and strategy session at the British delegation headquarters. Two working groups set up by the conference to discuss East- West contacts met at the Palais des Nations. But they already have bogged down int disagree- ment as badly as the Big Four Ministers themselves. In a week of talks they have not been able to agree even on the procedure of their own work. The west wants to take up first such issues as freedom of information, increased cultural ties and lifting of barriers on East-West travel. The Soviets want first to takeI up the question of East-West trade and lifting of trade em- bargoes and barriers. The working groups are sched- uled to report back to the Min- isters by Nov. 10. Local, US-Ra BIG THREE IN GENEVA-The Big Three Western foreign ministers discuss strategy over a demitasse at the villa of France's Antoine Pinay (center) near Geneva, Switzerland. British Foreit,n Secretary Harold Macmillan is at left, and U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Pulles is at right. Today they have separated to discuss future conferences. 'Operation Homefront' Starts Program For Self-Protection Special emphasis will be given during "Operation Homefront" which will be observed during the coming week to the impor- tance of the general public learn- ing the air raid warning signals and what to do when they sound. A five-point program has. been outlined for the observance of "0- peration Homefront Week" in the Canal Zone which is bein con- ducted simultaneously throughout Region III of the Federal Civil Defense Administration covering the seven Southeastern S t a t e s, Puerto Rico, the Canal Zone, and the Virgin Islands. The five objectives are: Learn public action signals; join the Warden Service; First Aid train- ing, Home first aid kit and "Grondma's Pantry. The latter te Payrolls %VlFe wwii u V 0utUll3 J n. To Look Sharp To Be Unified On Jan. 1 For Counterfeits A unified payroll system for the keeping, and Civil Service proced- Canal organization, as announced ures. A warn has n last month by Governor Seybold, Tne Cristobal office of the Per- the enerning hasl public been issued o Canalwi become fully effective at the sonnel Bureau has handled all em- Zo ne ral public by the Canal end of next January, B a 1 b o a ployments through the single of- ne ce concerning counterfeit Heights has reveled. lice since it was opened, although silver coins being circulated In the The first pay checks under the further consolidation of records Counterfeits of both Panama and new system will be delivered in and procedures will be accomplish- Counterfeits of both Panamaand February. ed coincidental with the -changes the United States coins have been With the adoption of a unified pay made on the Pacific side. ly The counterfeits wZone rece of roll, salary checks will be deliver- The adoption of the unified pay y.cents Theand one dollar derenaion ed to all employes the same day roll system early next year will. cenboth U.S. and Panamanian curby units of the organization. The necessitate several transitional renyof both U.S. and Panamanian cur- present U.S.-rate pay period will changes which will affect princi- be used as the basis for all em- pally the pay periods and pay. Panama Police made arrests a ployes and time keeping procedure days of local-rate employes and few days ago in connection with es will be adapted to that schedule. the paydays for a large number counterfeiting and Zone Police be- Because of the size of the or- of U. S. rate employes. lieve that tht counterfeit coins ganization and the workload in. To implement the system, on have stemmed from that source. evolved, it will be necessary to- Jonuary 29 a one-week pay period The police warned the general stagger the paydays, will be escallished for all local- public to be careful in accepting The exact schedule for the pay- rate employees paid biweekly for United States and Panama coins days will be annouheced later, the week of January 22-29. Pay of the two denominations. Persons The unification of the two pay- checks for these employes will be receiving counterfeit money should rolls will require a change for hour- issued covering one week only, less send such coins to the Police Divi- ly employes (mostly employes any deductions. After that date sion together with any informa- on the piers) who are now paid the pay periods for the two grpups tion about its receipt, it was an- weekly. The change for this group will coincide. nounced. to a two-week pay period, comicid- The first combined pay period ing with the present U. S.-rate pay for all employes will begin Jan. periods, will be made in December. uary 29 and end February 11.- ixon Presides The consolidation of the payrolls The delivery of pay checks by into a single system is a part of units of the organization wul be- At 100th Meeting the Canal administration policy of gin the following week. eliminating any practice which With this change fully effective, Of Like's Cabinet may se em to differentiate condi- all employes of the Company- tions of employment opportunity, GbvernmenL will be carried on the Enunciated last month by Gov- same rol lwithih their organization WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 (UP)i ernor Seybold in an address at regardless oi citizenship or rate of Vice President Richard M. Nix- the dedicatory ceremonies of the pay. on presided yesterday over thenew Paraiso Civic Center. r'or example, all employes of 100th meeting of the Eisenhower An important phase of this po. the Dredging Division will be carri- Cabinet. licy, he said, is the centralization ed on a common roll and will be of employment and the standard- paid on the same day, although Assistant presidential press ization of employment conditions their payday may not coincide secretary Murray m Snyder said for both U.S.-citizen and non-U.S with that of the Maintenance Div- after the three-hour meeting a citizen groups vision whose employes will also "full agenda" was discussed. Most of the units of the Employ- be paid at one time. I ment and Utilization Division of The new pay schedule will be an- Four of the 10 Cabinet mem- the Personnel Bureau have now nounced well in advance. Once es- bers Secretary of State John been moved to the Central Labor tablished, all employes Will be Foster Dulles; Defense Secretary Office on Roosevel Avenue in paid every 14 days and on the Charles E. Wilson; Secretary of Balboa. same day of the week for each Interior, Douglas McKay and This move permits the consolida pay period. The only difference will Labor Secretary James p. Mitch- tion of all work pertaining to em- be that many employes how paid ell-were absent from the ses- ployments, processing, placement, on Mondays or Tdesdays may be sion. transfers and promotions, record paid on another day of thb week. By Russ Winterbotham and Ed Kudlaty -.A1MA I~ Subjective is for the purpose of their car windows and remain in having all homes supplied with a their cars until receiving instruc. three-day supply of canned food tions by radio or from authorized for emergency use. Civil Defense personnel." .In connection with the selection New public action signals were of a protective shelter int h e adopted in the Canal Zone this home, the following general in- year and were sounded for the structions have been issued by first time in the practice alert the Civil Defense Section for Ca- held last -June, n Zone civilian residents: "The location to be selected as In connection with "Operation the protective shelter area in your Home front," the Canal Zone Civ- house should, be the strongest il Defense Seciton is calling spe- structural part of the building. It cial attention to the signals which should be on the first floor or un- would be sounded in event of any der, the house and the aor e a enemy attack. The two signals should be protected from possible are: flying glass or falling objects. Take Cover Signal. This is wail- Generally the best areas are tball- ing sound of high and low tones ways, under stairways, s m all on the air raid siren system last- rooms, maids' rooms, or garages. ing for three minutes. This signal "It should be remembered that means that an attack is immi- certain 'items should be stored in nent and everyone should s e e k or readily available to the shelter cover immediately. area. These-ihclude a first a id Alert Signal. This is a steady certain iehns should be stored in blast lasting three minutes. It kit; flashlight with spare bat- means that everyone should tune te les; portable battery-operated. in his radio to the Armed Forces radio; .required medicants f station, CFN, for instructions. Per- egd or ill; required items for b!' I sons who have no radio available bies; and items for emergency should remain under cover until sanitation." notified by authorized Civil De- fense personnel. The public action signals have no set sequence, and the Ale r t Signal may be sounded before the Take Cover Signal, or vice versa. - The courses of action to be tak- en by people under varying cir- cumstances have been suggested TODAY --- 5 -.40 by the Civil Defense Section as 1:00, 2:50, 4:50, 7:00, 9:10 p.m. follows: 1 :50 700 :10 p "People at home: (a) Upon hearing the Take Cov- er Signal, extinguish all o p e n flames, turn off stove, turn on radio, and take immediate' cover in the selected protective area of the home. (b) Remain in shelter until Al- ert Signal is sounded. Then go to the radio for Instructions. Do not go outside the building. "At work or in school: (a) Upon sounding of the Take Cover Signal go to the designated shelter within the establishment obeying the instructions of desig- nated Wardens. (b) Upon hearing the Alert Sig- nal, reamin'in the protective shel- ter area until dismissed by de- signatored Wardens. "People in the open: (a) At the Take Cover Signal go to the nearest public building, or 4ive for cover under a building. -a- long a wall, or in a ditch or gut- ter. Bury your face in your arms. If no cover is available, fall to the ground and cover the fa c e and back of the neck. (b) Remain under cover until notified by radio or otherwise fol- lowing the Alert Signal. U pon -hearing the Alert Signal or upon knowledge that an Atomic burst has taken place, people lying in the open fully exposed should seek cover against radioactive fallout. "People in motor vehicles: (a) Opon hearing the Take Cov- er Signal, motorists should pull to the side of the road, stop. r o ll windows down, tutrn.on radio if available, and lie down on the floor of the car. Occupants should not leave their cars unless better protection is at hand. (bi When the Alert Signal is sounded, motoristss-should roll up Culvert Work Will Affect Trans-lsthmian Effective Monday, for a period of approximately 10 days, traffic on the Trans-lsthmian High w a y will be limited to onewav starting at Mile 14 from Randolph Road for a distance of approximately one-half mile proceeding tow a r d a Panama City. Barriers will be .placed at each' end of the area, and watchmen will be stationedd to direct traffic. This action is necessary because of the installation of a culvert in the area by the Maintenance Dii.- alon forces. Forbidden! Yet the Prodigal'Son Could Not Resist Her! UDtRY DALTON. JAMES MITCHELL SEVILLE BRAND.-WALTER HAMPDEP TAVA ELG FRANCIS L. SUU VAN, IOSEPf WISEMAN -SANDOA DESCHE a .-. pnl - ~--- L |
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|---|---|---|
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Application State validated or built |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Navigation Object created from URI query string |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.display_item | Retrieving item or group information |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | Retrieving hierarchy information |
| 0 | sobekcm_assistant.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | Found item aggregation on local cache |
| 0 | item_aggregation_builder.get_item_aggregation | Found 'all' item aggregation in cache |
| 0 | system.web.ui.page.page_load (ufdc.page_load) | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_style_references | Adding style references to HTML |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
| 78 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |