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1 A TP"' I MIAMI its INTERNATIONAL AIRWAYS - AN INDEPENDENT C^/tfHE\^^ DAILY ftEWSPAPER Panama American *'Let the people know the truth and the country is safe" Abraham Lincoln. 3lit YEAR PANAMA, E. P., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1955 President Resumes Weekly Top-Level Defense Huddles - o_ * GETTYSBURG, Pa., Dec. 2 (UP) President Eiserv hower today resumed the weekly defense conferences he held before his heart attack. The Chief Executive saw Defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson and Adm. Arthur W. Radford, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff. There was no announcement as to what they dis- cussed. U.S. Will Stay Berlin Some talk was thought to have been likely, on the new military buaget, although a separate conference on that subject with Wilson and Budget Director Rowland R. Hughes Is on the President's schedule lor next Tuesday. Today's talks followed a lop- level strategy meeting on de- fense and foreign policy mat- ters between the President and his National Security Council yesterday at nearby Camp Da- vid, Md. About 25 administration offi- cials, including Wilson and Rad- ford, attended that meeting, which was held at the Presiden- tial retreat in Maryland's Catoc- tln mountains. Details of Uie council session i l Pope Phis XII Has Anniversary Of Collapse, Vision VATICAN CITY, Dec. 2 (UP) -Pope Pius XI gave prayerful thanks for bis recovery today on the anniversary of a collapse that almost took his life. This was a special dav in the life of the 78-year-old Roman Catholic leader. were top secret, but it pre- sumably dealt with such Issues as Russia's latest H-bomb ex- plosion, m litarv spending lor next year, and Nationalist China's threat to block admis- sion of 18 nations to the Catt- ed Nations. The council meeting broke up at 4:25 p.m. and the, President left on the trip back to Gettys- burg five minutes later, arriving at 5:03 p.m. He was accompanied by At- torney General Herbert Brown, ell, Jr., who briefed Mr. Elsen- hower on Justice Department matters. The President's conference at Camp David was his second meeting there with the National Security Council m two weeks. As before, some council mem- bers flew up from Washington by helicopter. But others chose to go by auto. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles was one of those who flew but did not appear be too enthusiastic about to It was not only the first anni- versary of his most critical ness It was the anniversary of "one of the most sublime mo- ments" of his lifetime of devo- tion to the church. A yesr ago today at dawn, Pope Pius XII saw a vision of Christ. The Pope was deep in medita- tion and prayer today on a date so full of memories for him. The day began at 6:30 a.m. when the Pope arose and said mass in Mi private chapel. Four tidies during the dayat 9 a.m., XI a.m., 5 p.m. and 6 p.m.he was going to the chapel of Urban Vlll In the Vatican to attend the ore-Christmas spiritual exercises. Behind a velvet e u f- tain which deparated him from cardinals and other prelates, he prayed and meditated in the life of Jesus. helicopter travel. Re saM the trip was "all right"-ami "net as bad as last time" when Irh winds made it troublesome for the pilots. <4MiEls?h.0wer *to*8* th -mile trip to Camp David and back to Gettysburg by auto, his fa*ISur 15ver driving more than 50 mph. nTK,rw.as ^president's wav u?. nvlng 8"e Driving Dav" . which he proclaimed yesterday ill- 3,;n,wt red"<* traficc* t.As M>";^*>s4nhower passed his onto4?! t0T ,of Thu,mont- Pr- Me *8ea na ln undeBrUta KtXTee'wffl ^ ^"^ ?mm nV^oua^"^"6 erectln* DOING HER PART In the Christmas toy eollec tlon for Panamanian orphanages is little Dottle Mercer, aged 4. The daughter of Sgi. and Mrs. James H. Mercer of Fort Clayton offers a toy wagon for repair and reconditioning to Sp-3 Max D. Dana of the 536 Engineer Platoon, Fire- fighting, Fort Clayton. Mercer is assigned to the 123d Signal Company. Fort Clayton Members of the 536th on each Army post are repairing toys donated for the orphans. (U. 8. Army Photo * * Santas In Khaki Brings Cheer -v, RP.'s L-(F0R LIQUOR) DAY TOMORROW It's printed. Employes of the Panama government's printery said at noon today that the long-de- layed Issue of the "Official Gazette" carrying text of Pres- ident Arias' executive order on lax-discount liquor k off the press. Pages are being assem- bled today. Tomorrow (barring strikes, flres, earthquakes and other matters beyond man's control) any one with a dime can buy a copy In Panama City. After that, aiiv club In the Canal Zone licensed to buy liquor can do so by the truck- load; and any member hi such club can buy a bottle at the discount price within well maybe hours, unless some new dash of sand jams the works. When the individual non- clubman an buy rema:ns as much of a mystery as ever. Wednesday afternoon, it is reported, the Panama Foreign Relations Council discussed the liquor question but just in a general way. Vehicle Licenses Going On Sal Monday In Panama The sale of 1956 Panama ve- hicle license plates will begin i Monday, it was announced to- day by the Municipal Treasury. / A Sends Russians Stiff Note; East Germans Ignored BERLIN, Dec. 2 (UP)Ambassador James B. Conant said today the United States will stay in Berlin and hold the Russians responsible for their sector of the city de- spite East German defiance of occupation relations. Conant told a news conference in the divided city that the United States will "continue to hold the Soviet responsible for the proper treatment of U.S. nationals." He said he traveled to Berlin from the embassy at Bonn yesterday "to give visible proof of the continuing in- terest of the United States government in the welfare of this brave and important city." They said the united States, Thanks to Scores of Santas In khaki, this is going to be a mer- Folks)Orphafff gram ene of personalized charity, as their contribution to the suc- enabling the soldier to meetand taints?" aI4* the m nrfcreeks were a further minder of the season. re- Police Nabs Maid For One-Year-Old Burglary In Balboa Air Force, Army Say No Rifling In Local Wind There will be no reduction in the civilian forces of the Army and Air Force here it was an- nounced today. Spoke s m e n for the two branches of the services stated there was no anticipated Tif- fing" in the wind. Yesterday the Navy announc- ed that 75 employes from both sides of thi-Tsthrmis would ret reducion-ln-foVce notices in compliance wiih a Dept. of De- fense regulation which called for a slash In verseas clvillin employe components by Dec. Jl Bootleqgers May Not Like It MANVTLLE, N. J.. Dec. 2 (UP) Residents of this community will have the chance on Dec. 12 to say whether they want to keep their birds and animals sober. A public hearing will be held on a proposed new ordinance which, among other thing, for- bids the feeding of Tobacco or al- cohol to the feathered and four- legged inhabitant* of the city parks. ry Christmas for many of thelshare is Christmaswith his a- poor, the aged and the orphans dopted friend. la order skat this may be done, soldiers from each Working hand-in-hand and heart- to-heart on "Operation Santa Claus," soldiers stationed h e r e help. have begun plans that will make the holiday as bright as the eyes of a Christmas-enchanted child. individual company will visit his unit's adopted institution and see firsthand what he may do to There is, in addition, the tradi- tional dinner on each of the six Army posts when each unit hosts the adopted persons. This will be an all-day affair this Christmas, cess of "Operation Santa Claus.' ment planned in addition to the Actually, the programwhich involves collection, repairing and distribution of toys and clothing as well as the traditional Christ- mas dinnerhas been in the blue-1 dinner* and exchan egof gifts, print .stage since mid October.! M Now, with the Thanksgiving taoli-f But, there is going to be plen- day over, it can be a coneentrat-1 ty of inspired perspiration before Canal Zone Police persistence in tiS* *0dwU1 *** bth' *' bM'y Us'U solving a one-year old burpl.rv *"*** Ttie toys will be repaled at the 536th Engineer Firefighting Pla- toon of Fort Clayton. Fire sta- tions on each post are working on their share of this repair and repaint program. In addition, may soldiers working through post craft shopsare al- so repairing toys. Automobile license plates will cost $2 each, plus the cost of the license itself. Owners will be re- quired to show aoto inspection certificates issued by the police department and the license re- ceipt for the month of Decem- ber before new plates are is- sued. In the case of Canal Zone em- ployes residing in Panama ju- already risdlction, a certificate of em- ployment in addition to the oth- er documents must be produced. Effective Monday, the Treas- ury will function from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily until further notice. Chaplain with tours, movies and entertain-the entire program this year. .-year old burglarv resulted this morning in filing o leuM"' JM,nrt diltic, icUda V. Robmion. fpLh.' t37-viar-al,d Panamanian de- fendant allegedly entered house 768- C on Barneby Street on Sept 22, 1954 with intept to commit larceny. It was the house of Ivan Jenkins, and she allegedly was , ,8 ior work M aid- Police said she hss bees em- ployed on the Zone as a,domes- tic during this time. In 1950 she Was convicted \pf Burglary, The case ware o nt i n u e d to- an is in jail in default of posting $200 ball. Over 1,000 needy persons will be -affected by the program, most of them the aged and the orphans. Included in the USAR CARIB share of the project are'" seven orphanages, three homes for the aged, two hospi- tals and a convent. This in addition t ois projects planned to date by no-Armv or- gaizationa, which will benefit 1,- 175 more needy persons. In an- other facet of the program, s i x women's clubs, enlisted m e n's clubs and officers wives' clubs Already the collection and the repair and sorting of clothing and toys hss begun, with the big push coming during the next two weeks on each of the six Army posts here. Barrels, marked as donation points for toys, have been placed at stra- tegic points on each post. Boy Scouts will, ss soon as a sched- ule is. arranged, call door-to- door at each post collecting toys and clothing. Varrous women's clubs from Working under Chaplain Donovan, who is a 1 s o the USARCARIB chaplain, are post coordinators who supervise an', help donators on each of the posts. Fort Clayton has adopted four institutions: Escuala Don Bosco, Escuela Profesional, Maria Auxi- liadora, Association San Vicente de Paul of Panama and Casa Cu- na, Panamea. Other posts, and their guests this year include: Fort Kobbe^- Horgar del Buen Pastor, Centro de Observacin, and Hospital Ni- colas Solsno; Forts Davis and GulickSan Vicente de Paul of Colon, Hogar Santa Luisa, and Hospital Amador Guerrero; Cu- rundu Women's ClubHogar San each post will sort and repair Juan de Dios of Santiago; Fort clothing for distribution, and the I AmadorEscuela de Enseanza dry cleaners on each post w i 111 Especial; and Quarry Heights The Army has made their pro- clean all clothing free of chargeMaryknoll Convent. Repairman's Hand Mangled In Machine For Rolling Dough An American maintenance re- pairman was in Gorgas Hospital with a mangled left hand today following; an accident which oc- curred while he was repairing a dough-rolling machine at the Diablo Service Center yesterday. George S. McCullough, 45. was working on the machine when he accidentally caught his left hand between two rollers. At Gorgas. he is considered to be in "good" condition. A police report said Jose Diaz, a maintenance helper, was able to switch off the machine be- fore McCullough's arm was pull- ed between the rollers. The ambassador said his pres- ence in Berlin "further under- lines" United States determin- ation to remain in the city, a stand which was set forth in u stiff note Conant presented to Soviet ambassador G- M. Push- kin yesterday. The note, similar in tone to notes presented by Britain and France, reaffirmed four-power occupation of the entire city. It denied East German cla'ma to control of the city by vir- tue of their "sovereignty" by Insisting that Russia still U responsible for control el the eastern sector. - i Conant served notice today that the United states would not deal with the East Germans. He referred to their regime, which the West does not recognize, as the "so-called German demo- cratic republic." "We insist we have the right of free circulation in Berlin," he ckld. "We shall continue to exer- cise these rights according to four-power agreements, and if new Incidents, which I do not expect, happen, we will protest again." The Big Three Western pow- ers have an "ice cold determin- ation" to defend their rights in Berlin against mounting Com- munist threats, diplomats Washington said today. Britain and France have made abundantly clear to Rusel their joint pledges to consid- er an attack on West Berlin, deep in the Soviet tone, as an tack on themselves. This pledge hag been reiterated many t'mes in th postwar years. "There is no question about our standing firm in Berlin;'* one official said. "We are go- ing to meet these Red maneu- vers calmly but with an ice cold determination to maintain our rights." Diplomats doubt that the Rus- sians and East German Com- munists will throw any outright physical challenge to the Wit*, although all threatening poeei- bilities are under constant study. The West, instead, expects a long line of "nasty Incidents" designated by the Reds' to weaken the allied position In jointly-occupied Berlin and t force some kind of recognition of the East German Comma- n'st regime. This pressure is expected te keep up until some plan is worked out to reunite East and West Germany. This may take years. The detention of four Ameri- cans, including two congressmen in East Berlin last Sunday may in have been planned as one of the "nasty Incidents." Officials Of Truman Administration Deny Charges Of Bribery, Perjury ST. LOUIS, Mo., Dec. 2 (UP) Two high officials in the Tru- man administration denied to- day that they are guilty of bribery and perjury as charged in an Indictment Unking them with a conspiracy to defraud the government In a criminal tax case. The two officials indicted yes- terday by a Federal Grand Jury were Matthew J. Connelly, icon- If MEMBERS OF THE HOC8ECOMMITTEE of the Merchant Marine and Fisheries committee were greeted on the pier in Criatobai by Gov. John 8. Seybold upon their arrival yesterday aboard the Panama liner Ancon. Left to right above are: Rep. James A. Byrne; Seybold; Rep. Edward A. Oarmatx, sub- committee Chairman; Rep. William K. Van Pelt; Rep. William T. Granahan; Rep. Francia E. Dora, and Rep. T. James Tumulty. Granahan U not a member of the committee, and be and Mrs. Granahan are to return to the States Saturday on the Ancon. Dora had arrived Thursday by plane and went to the pier to meet the Congressional group which included wives of the Congressmen. Bsnard Zlnckle, committee counsel, and Miss Frances Still. Committee Clerk. Courtesy calls were made today by the Subcommittee members to President Ricardo Arias and the Untied States Ambassador to Panama, Julian F Harrington The Committee members, her* for formal hearings on Panama Canal affairs, were accom- panied on the two calla by Seybold. GETTING SOME ADVANCE BRIEFING yesterday at the his arrival on the Isthmus was La Vera R Dllweg. Washington attorney (center) who represents the U.S. Citizens' Association. This is his second visit here in this capacity. Shown chatting with Dllweg on the Panam Railroad train which brought him to the Pacific side is (left* Mrs. Virgula pe arce and (right) Winter Collins of the USCA. A meeting of the executive committee was scheduled for tonight in order to set up some of the Important matters to be discussed at the Congres- sional Committee hearings beginning Monday morning at the Administration Building. Dll- weg Indicated that besides the railroad. Income tax suit, and tolls questions, also on the agen- da would be a discussion of the transfer of the Albrook Air Force Base airfield proposed some time ago because it was considered by residents of the Balboa area, to be a threat to the ae- _ curity ox their school-age children. fldentlal secretary of President Truman from 1M5 to 1953, and Theron Lamar Caudle, who re- signed as Assistant Attorney General In charge of the Tax Division in 1951 at Mr. Truman's request. Harry I. Schwlmmer, a Kansas City attorney, also was indicted. Connelly, who was charged with receiving $1,8 50 from Schwlmmer in 1952 fat his role in influencing a tax case, blam- ed the indictment on "a little group of willful men now in power in Washington." He said the group "have called Harry S. Truman a traitor and now, be- cause of my association with him, they are calling me a crook." "I defy that group of willful men or anybody else to produce one shred of evidence that I have committed any offense a- galnst good morals or ethics or that I have violated any law of the United States," Connelly said in New York where he Is a pub-^ lie relations counsellor. Caudle, who practices Wadesboro, N.C., charged, the Republicans "have peld me over as a scapegoat and public sacrifice again for^-the coming national election/* He said ha will demand a.-"wide open" con- gressional investigation of wjw he was Indicted four years after the charges of "gross Indiscre- tion" that forced him from gov- ernment service were sired. Ellis N. Slack, an attorney, in the Justice Department's Tax Division and a former aide W Caudle, was named as co-con- spirator In the indictment bat not as a defendant. Attorney General Herbert Brownell said uft Washington that Slack baa bee relieved of his duties "pending proceedings looking to hie re, mo val." Brownell referred to % hearing to which Slack la en- titled under the Veterana 1 ence Act. . V * I r AGE TWO THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DART NEWSPAPER FRIDAY, DECEMBER I, 1951 THE PANAMA AMERICAN TMIP HD -uiLi.H.D THt PANAMA AMKMCAN PftBSa. INC. _V rouNoio r NtLSON ouNiivni im mi H HANMOCIO AMIAS. torro 7, m snwrr p o met isa. p*nm. Tiicpmoni 2-O740 '8 Lineal CLt AOOKISS. PAN.MBICAN. PANAMA - Cov-cx Opriei. I*.7 Cintrai Avinuc MIHW I*th and 13tm ira COie* "Y. f,NIATIVl.. JOSHUA B. POWERS. INC 345 MAOIION AVI NW YORK. 171 N. V. Pin Month, in apvamci I"*? is'oo POP IX MONTH*. IN AOVAMCt-------------------- |Z"55 14 OO PON ONI VIA. IN AOVANCI ________* f r, p. fC AT I' ; * - 0% ? 5 THE MAIL BOX Labor News Add Comment By VICTOR RIESEL ELECTRIC SHOCK ProbabirGader^f the Parade Next^Year NEW YORK An influential bloc of labor leaders, with mil- lions of followers, would like to step the merger of the AFL and CIO dead in its tracks even at this 11th hour. They know they can't break up Sir: American of Nov. 24, 1955, the marriage set for next week ^S^S^^^^^"oie^^s^^Sr the AFL-CIO in a others na.in-j been "UM D* *ie^^"ou' ldenls as witness These union leaders are dis- Aithougn newspaper report 01 l4lei *""?"" "S"^ turned by what tney refer to as the report mentions, are never clear enuuRi xoi""^"5 concentration of power in the person lo term a e-*W opinion oi now W "*""**"t top national Washington headquar- ed, tney have oeen suinc.ei.iiy Um 'V, ^v, -* wwS of labor wnlch will run tne should be oi proiound concern to an persona n-vmg to uu * | aBaj of nmt ,5,000,000 of the tne execution 01 eiecnicai woi*. viz. ri ilh the coutry's working people. 1. Thai too few eiectncal v*0ikti5 are acquainted win ine, ^^ labor 0(ficials be|ieve requirement of F.rst Am uutt snouiu oe*ppnea o *icuid,ui. AFL-CIO's proposed new aiTelecine shoe*, ana as a esuit aie inu.*iit as tu how may |COMtitut0B , so looseiy wrlttwl may heip w oieveni ueaui oi uuicft in case oi eiettioc-iion. that wme day mt man ^j have 2 Aiiau'responsioie umunues uoiaois eptciai>y ,c;the absolute power to make deo- not infrequently ioo n_sly io coi.c.ade inai a vican oi an esw- .S(0ns tnd pontical policy trie shock is aead, simpy because me kictuu. near., stops iunc- jQr a labor tioning as a resuit oi me snocs.. This in elfect, is the warning e.ng an eiecmc:an. i am distressed by ihe thought tnai give{| tnese atStnung leaaers oy for lacK of Knowledge oi eiecincai worKers a. to what snouiu oe'ine |Irgest group ol constitution, none m case* oi acwaems irom eiectnc shock; ana uecause oi cnBUMU am, iau0, lawyers eve. tne tendency to naaiy contusion Dy oociois, 1 may one oay. galnered jjju, jaDor to analyze oe also Dionounceo ueao, annpiy uCwuao a *.oU i.u.n low \Oiw-ja ucument in tnis case, me aae eleciricil, may cause connaclion ol the musc.es oi my nean, new constitution. .ausine it :o stoo unciioniiig, a conamon anov,u, teci.nicai.y, ihese laoor cmefs do not believe as "Ventricular fibrillation." 4V that A*li-uO presiaent George It ,-an D reasonaDly assumed that iifty percent o the deaths Meiny wlU expioit the potential resulting lrn'm eiectnc snocK Dy .ow voltage voltages up to czlrifit poweis written into tne 44ii could nave been prevenieu h eiecuicaU workeis were uain-|new labor constitution which will plDe aaopied here next week. But they are concerned with tnose who wiu succeea Meany m decaoes to come. These men warn that any one who can concentrate power over American laoor can some uay use it to whip tne entire nauon! Right or wrong m their inters pretauon, one tning la certain Tin teecessaly risi mu ana n anenuing payatCtkus weiei less hasiy In concluding that the victim is cieao, oecause ventri- cular nbrilia-.ion has resulted. The National iectric Light Association lof the U.S.A.) re- commenos that -'Prore i'ressuie Method ior Keouioation oe aDDlled without interruption, in case oi e.ectiotiition, ior four 141 hours If necessary: iher being cases on record oi success- ful re-esWDlishment ol normal lunctioning of the heart alter three and one-half <3>2i of apparent deatn from electric snock stoppage of the heart by ventricular llbnlaltion......< ^"XrAnih^r'Teaaers is neavy "The ordinary tests oi death" says the Association "are not,this Dloc *"".*'? ?"* conclusive^ Us of electric shock, and doctors must be so ad- Jg^gWj- Jg * vised by you" (the electrician). ,. ia^d lans to fignt the proposed It may not be too much to say here hat conceit Uiapt to MjJ^^ff^ g iewTon- make some doctors object to you an electrician advising I hjm that th ordinary tests for death "are not conclusive .n cases of electric shock," but a doctor could cooperate more ef- fectively with an electrician applying the Prone Metnod lor Re- suscitation by restricting himself to advising whether blood clot- ting, technically known as -rigor mortis" has set in, than by rushing the victim to a hospital to pronounce him dead. For until rigor mortis has started to develop there Is always a pos- sibility of reviving a victim of electric shock by Incessant applica- tion of the Prone Pressure Method lor Resuscitation; unless the victim, on r?celving tne shock, fell and suffered serious Injury otherwise. .,, .. Remembsring that they are always in danger of electric shock, a concerted campaign should be started by Isthmian elec- tricians ton the Canal Zone and in Panam' to demand that clauses" in the new con- stitution this week in the inner sanctums set up in hotels here. And, they'll fight next week on the convention nuor if necessary. And. finally, they are talking of quitting the merged AFL-CIO rather than subject their national unions to any "supreme labor sibility of reviving a victim of electric shock by incessant appnea- authorjty.'- tlon of the Prone Pressure Method for Resuscitation; unless the[ Tnese ]aDor chiefs object to many specific powers given to the new AFL-CIO high command. But the one of widest Interest is in section 7, Article 8; i wic wpahm "c - ....... -v. - Thjg section says that the new nrovlsion be made by those agencies employing electrical work- afl-cIO n'h emrn*nd __m__.___!__ .i..,___!,.. I_ h. n>n<.crn>u 1'irct AIM mth_ <^riie Washington Merry-Go-Round V DREW PEARSON ____ erW'\T^NT^euNe8rOWOrk;'whether Eisenhower would get Hom^n.^aSLP'Sft* JZ* !*>" Gettysburg, If he get. Home Finance Agency, may cause Eisenhower forces more political headaches than all the other civil servants dropped from government since 1953. too bored, they wonder, will he listen to the palace guard, and run again . It's significant that Mrs. Roosevelt came out for Adlai Stevenson some time ago. Inside m X S^&Lf&5* rc,lon> cording to friends, Is the housing .&?& fl?d 5y ^ fct that Averell Harrlman pushed stated by the Civil Service Com-' governorship of New York mission on the ground that her* caralne DeSaoio head of mraiKvnfthTh ^th the.tech' man's Jim Farley, was noticeabl. hr or.f^ re'nstat"5 by his absence at Chicag.. Judge her aeain PP S'm Rnman of the old Room- Th.uniui i~ -i. i velt brain trust, now brain-trusting acTulllv fl?ed but riffH fn nf*V0r "Ave'" h" been advisin8 Har- Mrs. Morrow had previously been ,nd wouldnt come l. Chicago. Th. fired as an adviser on racf.Y rela" \fTSif hi ISSSStfZfiEFL tions after she opposed segrega.:1/"'' P nil! Tnhv u,^ tion in granting federal loans for f^'S" IJ fRlJ^L housing. Her colleague, Dr. Frank ^ ^i'" XL W*TJ?f% Home was fired at thp amp son- dld ,0 wltn Harnman s full. E The" dismiss." a.ong whh No ,riction was inv0,ved- sSL. lascad trsssji L j^tswtt caused resentment among Negro,Ration dd not favor the new one- voters, whom the Eisenhower Id- d?"" "ni,raulm 1IwJ"e' tSe"ef"!;. ministration has studiously at- LW'JSSS&JH^*S. itffcS! tempted to woo. Mrs. Spaulding tne '** vigorously now that it has had urged the admission of Negro passed Congress, nurses and doctors In Texas hos-' He has an PPropriation of pitis. Comics and Politicians Off To Australia By BOB RUARK . high command can in- vestigate anu1 expel any union In which there Is reason to believe era, for training their employes in the necessary First Aid meth- ods Prone Pressure Method for Resuscitation; and to demand wni< tnere is re,_ that medica^ institutions and medica] doctors be less precipitate ^tt the affiliate "i. dominated, In declaring >ictlms of electric shock dead, and be more coopera-| controlled or substantially influ- tlve and toWrant with experienced persons trained in the neces- enced in the conduct of its affairs | ..r tirc-t a;h In Kiu n( rrMpntdl elprtrocutinn i., .nu .rnmi Influence." sary First Aid. in case of accidental electrocution. sary First Aid. in case of accidental electrocution. Dy any corrupt innuence. It is pathetic to contemplate, the case of death resulting: The rebellious labor leaders and from the accident reported In The Panama American, mentioned' their lawyer. ay they are in com- ahnue ui. orppmpnt with the aeneral above. Sir: Andrei L. Lawson PRIDE IN PANAMA plete agreement with tilt general principle but add that no Bar Association would fail to protest similar phrasing for a new con- stitution of the .JJ.S. They .ay the language is too vague. oir: I sometimes question how much pride the Panamanian has in his country Although there Is a great deal talked about this virtue when they are trying tana with great success i to extract money from Uncle Sam. at other times it seems to be a missing quality. I am referring to the "better class" Panamanian, who is em- ployed by the Panama Canal Co. not on a local-rate basis. Al- though these people earn salaries which would enable them to build homes in Panama and contribute towards the economy of their country, they fasten on to US quarters like leeches... and stay there. Now that there is a question of their being denied commis- sary privileges unless they reside In the Zone, even those Pan- amanian families who had lived In Panama are now racing in a panic to the Zone... fearful lest any of the money they earn might spill over Into their country. If their so-called "pride" is iot strong enough to force them, im-- to become good citizens, perhaps, their government should put .will vote Republican^ ^PP0** some tax on such delinquents, so that the incentive to occupy then, the entire AFO-oiu J^** US housing would be lessened. tive Council supports the uemo Perhaps then, US citizens would reap the benefit of a hous- ".tie candidate. Tnen. waiter Ing program which was designed for them, not for their greedy Reuther, a n neighbors. now in a Specifically, the dissenters have said in their recent conferences that "If the leader.rip of a par- ticular union has views concerning political matters or economic prin- ciples which do not square with the opinion of others, such others may consider such diverse views as demonstrating a 'corrupt In- fluence' and seek to use this sec- tion for an investigation.'* It can be reported that during the dissenters' conferences it was suggested that the following situ- ation might arise: In 1956, the Teamsters' president, Dave Beck, vote NAPLESI must be going to Australia again, but the same big white ship Is here, and some of the faces are familiar, and there is of course. Missus Marie Xim- son-Noble down on the dock to wave me off. The hip if the M. V. Australia, of the Lloyd Triestlno Lines, and she toted me two years ago. Miss T. N. is unofficial flag admiral of the Lloyd Triestino outfit, havin made nine round trips out this way, and is as much a part of the vessel as the bridge. Last time I saw her w.s two years ago, when wt made the long haul together. It Is a long, haul, but one of the shortest month-long voyages In the world. We stop at Port Said, and Aden, and Colombo, and Djakarta, Fremantle, Melbourne and Sydney. But mostly we just loaf along in the sunny seas In this noble craft, and get hog-fat off spaghetti. You take a trunkful of books, and see a bid movie every other night, and dance to a ship's or- chestra that sounds exactly like all ships' orchestras. You manage to sleep 12 hours a day. After a while you get too tired to read, so you step up your sleeping time. But I feel pretty lucky about th:s ship. I started a book on her, last trip, and it had a lot of luck. I got engaged to a 10-year-oid young lady who decided not to marry her father, in favor of me. I went to shoot some tigers, later, and they didn't eat me. I went I to visit Kenya, later, and the Mau Maus didn't eat me, either. So I'm sticking with my old friends. This is a trip with a lot of proj- ects in it. Mama flies out from New York to mee*, me in Sydney, and we aim to go to New Zea- land and catch some of those e- normous trout they have in Lake Taupo. Then we aim to go visit- ing up to Norther Queensland and then over to New Guinea. Then we hit the real South Seas, with Tahiti as the target, and I I will try to talk Mama out of going on that tripwith absolutely no hope of success. I have already been Informed by the boss that she Intends to keep me chained i to her wrist. She has read enough tales of the South Pacific to be taking no chances. If all goes well we come back via Honolulu and Mexico, and then over the North Pole from the West Coast of Spain. By that time the dogs will have forgotten us com- plete.y, and it will take 'em a month to start speaking to us again. Seven thousand different calamities wil' havi occured in our absence, as is customary. But we thought we would give it a big circuit, this trip, because I turn 40 this month and as every- body knows, life is nearly over at 40, or so it seems, and I will have to set home and rock and look at the ocean and bore ev- erybody with stories about how things used to be when I was young. So here we are with a trunkful of unread books and a month to read em In. How the trunk got here is another story, involving American efficiency, a magician named Bill Muller of American Axport Lines, an assistant genius amed Carl Monsch of the same firm and a skipper who was will- ing to hold an enormous ship for a stranger. I always did have luck with this vessel, and it's evi- dently holding. GOP Labor Troubles By PETER EDSON $2,000,000 to spend on enforce- ment and will hire approximately 600 new men to check on .wages paid by firms throughout the coun- Al Capp. author of lhe'tomed|K6ffMh*i*^l?.8.T5 comic strip LIT Abner, was talk- '"^e-ield, this makes a to'al of ing to the Washington Adver- M00 fle'd *. , Using Club about some of his com ImPact of * mim"i^ hi characters, including the latest,Wat^WLi!.*%.&5 "Moonbeam McSwine." He was considerably greater than the boost explaining how he invented these {m ,40,nc*nl* t0 ,75 ""*,' p?i characters nour 'n 1950' slnce at tnat t,me '5 Spying Washington Post cartoon-.cent..or more was already being 1st Herblock in the audience, Capp Pald many areas- announced: I >_ i. "I see that kind, gentle and con- The impact will be felt esoe- siderate colleague of mine, Herb,cially m the south where Labor Block, over In the corner, f. seel Department surveys show there is you've got some new characters,! coniidtrable evasion of the present too, Herb. I especially like that 75-cent minimum wage. It s ex- character of yours. Roy Cohn. pected trat the new $1 minimum And I see vouve got another anH'wage. with time and a half for interesting character, Dick Nixon." overtime, may go a lone wav to- ward eliminating the south's cheap Chicago-Go-Hound labor market and preventing the trek oi industry from New England Pressure in Senator Kefauver and Pennsylvania to the tenth. to run for vice president Is mount. | If so, the south can partly thank ing. ... it would be a unique idea Sen. Walter George of GcoreU.who If nominees for vice president were,tipped the scales ir favor of Senate chosen through presidential pri- confirmation of Newell Brown as maries, not picked at the last min- Wage-Hour Administrator. Consid- ute in smoke-filled rooms. With erable opposition had developed the increasing burden placed on against Brown s appointment and the President, the lob of vice presi-ihe did not have the original back- tent has become increasingly im- ing of New Hampshire spower- portant. One-flfth of our Presidents ^ul Sen. Styles Bridges, Repubh- have died in office, yet the man can. However, when Senator who succeeds the President in time, George wrote to Senate colleagues of emergency is picked by pollti- that Brown s grandfather had been clans rather than by the people. I a Civil War general who defended ... The politicians aren't quite'Atlanta, he immediately g o t sure whether Adlai's present posi-i enough southern Democrats to win tion w a front-runner will help or,confirmation. ___ hurt him. Ordinarily political Tod y Brown Is proving himself doesn't liven up until spring, but; a forthright and efficient wage- 'the pace was sharpened as a re-!hour administrator. It looks as ir suit of Eisenhower's September he would apply the minimum wage illness. From now on, Adlai has to law vigorously, regardless of geog" remember that everything he says raphywhich of course will chiefly or does, every wiggle of his little affect the south, finger, will be interpreted one way' , .or the other by friends and! NoteCompared with the new enemies army of field agents to enforce the Minimum Wage Law, the Food and Political Potpourri Drug Administration has only 205 field agents io Inspect the drugs, It's been a long time since Gen-! cosmetics, and food of the nation, eral Motors ran the Democratic This is because organized labor nartv Most people have forgotten: brings pressure on Congress for it but John J. Raskob, chairman minimum sage appropris ns, US Citizen Fascinating Watch Ensemble. Wear it on the wrist Slip off the strap 'pin the pin Wear it as a brooch PatiriakiMM Mba imname putf* nipt tm raikiABikit .Hill... tk >< now in a knockdown fight with the Michigan Sute Republican Party, demands an lnve.tig.tion of the Teamsters, uslny Section. This section gives Reuther and all other high board members the power to launch such a probe. By merely requesting it. . The lawyer, h.ve insisted that this cculd happen and would then be a form of political pressure on dissident view.. The lawyers gave another ex- ample of different pressure again using Reuther. The Auto Worker Union has been striking the Kohler plant for about two rears. Suppose, .aid the lawyers, right after the merger Reuther goes to the AFL-CIO high com- mand and a.k. the entire labor movement to embargo the city in which Kohler operates. K p h Iff, Wis. no truck, move In, etc., J*A union chief object, to joining a general strike in suoport of the Auto Worker, there. Reuther can demand a full Investigation there- by embarrassing the reluctant UThe rebel bloc ..y. too much nower I being given the high Sand **2&tt SS ,U unions, and that use of that power will spilt the AFIVCICunto two movements .g.m eoner or l.ter. WASHINGTON (NEA) In d- ditlon to a new farm policy that will satisfy discontented farmers, the Republican party today could use a new labor policy statement that would make more of an ap- peal to the rank and file of American workers. Recent statements by two Re- pubiican senators could have the effect of kicking the union labor | First Sen. Barry Goldwater (R- Arizi charged that AFL and CIO goon squads were collecting huge slush fund, from compulsory un- ion assessments, to take over the Democratic party. Sen. William F. Knowland (R- Calif ) topped this in a speech at Miami. He charged that labor leaders hoped to take over con- trol of the U.S. government it- self, through a Labor party, by 1960 if not 19S6. National labor union leaders and the labor press promptly denied both charges, and the feud wa. on. Responsible leaders of the Rc-i publican party view this latest de. velopment with con.ider.ble a-j lar.n. v They realize that national elte- tions have to be won by a lot of minorities, voting together to m.ke . majority. A izeable percentage of the farm vote is ready for de- fection to thw "Democrats. It is; recognized that the Republicans! cannot afford to alienate the union labor vote too. Several surveys have indicated they can get only 30 to 40 per cent of the union membership vote. It is pointed out that the two senators were speaking their own opinions. They did not speak for the Eisenhower administration nor for the Republican National Com- mittee. But here the party leaders face a predicament. They have no clear statement of party policy to hold up as a repudiation to those who would like to declare all-out war on labor unions and put the coun- try on an open-shop basis. Middle-of-the-road Republicans think they have several good points to make in an appeal to the labor vote. Wage raises won by the labor unions under the Republicans h.ve been real increases in earning pow- er andt ake-home pay. The Re- publicans argue that the increases of 1941-1952 under the Democrats were largely compensation for in- creases in the cost of living. Under the GOP. the cost of liv- ing has been held steady. They point to greater peacetime pros- perity than the country ha. ever had. and fewer and shorter strikes. The Republican trouble i. that they can't get this story in the papers or on the air. Vice Presi- dent Richard M. Nixon and other party spokesmen have put this Une in numerous speeches. It mill a* ACCDtlCT AS ELEGAXCE SINCE Mil mercurio Jewellers next to the Central Theater *_ **vv^vvv##<#* **?xr PANAMA AMERICAN WAHT ADt never gets beyond their immedi- ate audiences, and It seldom brings a cheer. This is why a revision of Re- publican labor policy statements is being called for. What this new statement of prin. ripios should say has the party leaders baffled. The question was considered at the Republican campaign school for GOP state chairmen, in Wash- ington last September. The organization of state and local Re- publican Rank and File Labor Committees was suggested. Extreme positions have to be re- jected. Political realists don't hold with the theory that American working people always vote Inde- pendent, and there is no such thing as a labor vote. At the opposite pole, there Is little support for the idea labor is going to take over the government. From the big labor bosses like George Meany and Walter Reuth- er the Republican, realize that trey will never get a break. The labor presa is likewise consistent- ly and persistently anti-Rpubli- can. It is this partisanship that gives the extreme rightwingers In the Republican party much of their impetus. It makei the shaping of a middle-of-the-road labor policy all the more difficult for tlfe GOP. of General Motors who took over the bankrupt Democratic party after the Al Smith defeat In 1928, 'paid off the deficit, and put the iDems back on their feet. It was OLD PRODUCT, NEW USE SAN RAFAEL, Calif. -(UP) Raskob who hired acid-penned .Local barbers are reporting amaz- I Charlie Michelson who did so much,ing sales results in the mustache 'to defeat Hoover in 1932. Today! wax deoartment. The reason-crew I General Motors has three members cuts. "Teen-agers have now found in the Eisenhower Cabinet plus I the perfect way to make their important political Impact . .jbutch and crew haircuts stand up Democrats at Chicago .peculated'straight,' a barber said. tl FLOTA MERCANTE GRANCOLOMBIANA, S. A. ANNOUNCES THE ARRIVAL AND SAILING OF THE M/N "Ciudad de Bogot ON DECEMBER 4th, 1955. GENERAL CARGO WILL BE ACCEPTED FOR: VERACRUZ TAMPICO HOUSTON and NEW ORLEANS APPLY: WILFORD & McKAY, Inc. Masonic Building;, Cristobal, C. Z. TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL: 2998 1760 2535 CAN FILL YOUR NEEDS! (Casa Fastlich s Gift to Every Customer) ? while no lobby pushed appropria- tions for clean food. FRIDAY DI CFMBER 2. 1955 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DADLY NEWSPAPER PAGE THKfc* it 1 (/K 77//S CHRISTMAS THE BEST FURNITURE AT BEST PRICES 71SK PAYMENTS I ^ TyWvamWi I "jto fomfohiablh Qhon WE ACCEPT your Christmas Savings Fund Deposit Booklets for your purchases. V i i Before ..$24ooo Now $192.00 TJiaAifwAa Before ................ $180.00 Now $ 124.00 (Dining /Room Set 7b. 1050 } J i i i i -.":.V. -;>> ^V.iv-4:V \ WwpAcut Stifle /Bsudhoom Sel * mm i ..... Before ................ $295.00 Now $ 236.oo 3-0 0imng oom Style Now $ 500.00 3-0 fiedjwom Style t . ""-^.y, I Before .. $525.00 Now $ 420.00 p* v^'*^'^~,^rw~^r i i 4 Before ................ $425.00 Now $ 299.50 I I I I I I I. I fioitable Wjahoqany ah Before ...."............ $425.00 NOW $ 299.50 SedAoom S*t To. 185 -' Nfc Remember our Grand Christmas PHILCO PRIZE Ask for your free ticket for the Grand Philco Raffle which will take place o December 25th, 7955 according to the National Lottery. For every cash amount of $1.00 that you spend, or for every $1.00 you pay as down payment, you will receive a free ticket. 1st PRIZE NIU.CO Refrigerator 2nd PRIZE PHII.CO Air Conditioning Unit 3rd PRIZE Twin-A-Matic PHILCO WASHER. Kture STORE 21-02, 7th Central Ave. I Tels. 2-1830 2-1833 Before ................ $375.00 1 Now $ 300.00 * I Before ................ $19500 Now $ 156.oo f I TAGE FOl .. TH?. PANAMA AMERICAN AN LNDEPENDENT DAILI NEWSPAPER TERRY AND THE PIRATE! FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1951 fV When1 an opponent is determined 9 make a sacrifice bid against iu. it doesn't always pay to be mbborn ahout going on with your 4b u tiled, at five diamonds and set Si-e -tricks less the honors. This! oust have given South a sure jfjt'of 400 points, whereas his! tual ibid of live spades put him a-very shaky contract. To Master's Degree By Maintaining Hunting Ground PINCKNEYVII.LE, 111. -(UP)- | Robert Verts is earning a master's degree from Southern Illinois Uni- versity by turning 900 acres of abandoned strip mining land Into: a potential public hunting ground near here. As part of his graduate study. Verts is maintaining the land, de-i veloping it for wildlife and making a study of game habits and popula tlon. The area already offers a good supplv of rabbits, quail and other small game to hunters who venture into the forbidding terrain created by "spoil piles".from min- ing operations. There is only one level spot in [ i the 800 acres a plot of 50 acres In the middle which was planted wih corn to provide food for the wildlife. Verts is making a study there of anima' movement in and out of feeding grounds. Besides the cover crop of shrubs and grasses planted by Verts, hard- 1 wood trees are springing up from natural seeding. Other cover is 1! provided bv hardwood and pines planted by'the Truax Traer Coal Company, owner of the land. SIDE GLANCES ByCalbraith. *y GEORGE WTJNPEE Chicago Boys Wash Floors, Run Errands To Earn Merchandise CHICAGO (UP> A store that sells things for good deeds instead 'When.-the hand was actually0f monev opened recentlv under ye4, however, South was not the, i|le sponsorship of the Old Town- dutious type. He wasn't satisfied Chicago Boya Clubs with about ' collect m small but sure penalty j ooo neighborhood boys as mem- jro West, and perhaps the result t,ers. stifled his obtsmacy. If a boy wants to buy a pair of Vest- opened the king of dia- gvm shoes, for instance, he may monds,' and South won with the pile up credit tokens in a variety ace South drew four rounds of of waysby washing floors, empty - trumps discarding a xMb and two ing waste baskets, running hearts from the dummy, and then errands, aiding m the city's cur- led the king of clubs. rent cleanup campaign, or even by improving his grades at West took the ace of clubs, school cashed the queen of diamonds, and The credit' will buy goods rang- then led the jack of diamonds. This n from bicycles to cans of pork was a poor maneuver, for a shift and beans to hearts would have given South "Tnere are a lot of poor kids in cuite a food deal to think about, our neighborhood. said Vince As it wa, South ruffed the third Giesler, club director, "instead of round of diamonds and led another just giving the stuff away, were trump, discarding dummy's last making them work for it. Nothing low heart. South expected to lead' destroys the dignity of a boy so his club to dummy's queen and much as to accept handouts, ruff a club in the hope of dropping! David X. Meyers gara the jack, but he saw no harm in and chairman o ipplying prsesure to-last trump. 17 oor East felt the pressure and; add it obvious that he felt it couldnt' afford to discard a i hub, and he reluctantly discarded the jack of heart*, coming down ~ the Jone king of hearts. This discard made the situation ar to South, so he led the low art to dummy's ace, dropping sts king. Now the queen of arts was set up for South' vital | eleventh trick. L _ H YOL'NG DETERMINATION 'NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UP>- fblice report a 13-year-old boy apparently is determined t odrive. I fie voungster was picked up for ne third time In a stolen car. Each ftjne a patrolman stopped the Bujujcter because he was hardly IL enough to see over the steering jjiecl. _^______ 55 j- f nut STORY OF MARTHA VYAYNE I! { hoard of the with his next- club, said merchandise for the store was donated by local busi- nessmen. 2* Bark Home . BOttKj THIgTV VgAK roc, sqqm -a.-..-M. * I .....-' FRIDAY. DECEMBER 2. 195s THIS PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDEN! DAILY NRWSPAPMt PAOI FIVB f <# D Social and \Jlk erwie Bo, 5037, J, neon or &y Staffers Box 134, Pc anama Tint mf ifftmuiti, ff/smipi, 'Jl baK rv if l,ltpho*i &rlk\ PV** 1 V,t Ju*U i> mU prempU.; U lu-numL Lun. mm /? 3-0140 ~ 2-0 741 *./- <*> "^ "> * ->k First Massive US Cold Spell (racks US Court Of Appeals Rules In Favor Of Minimum Wage Something to Send Home for Christmas Cjolden. 'I'Uedduiq.s, Conqreiional f Uisilor J4iqlilliqhl Jfstlu ,ql,Uiql limit CHICAGO. Dec. 2 .UP) The first big cold spell of the winter'' broke up yesterday and the! weather bureau forecast rain forl WASHINGTON. Dec. 2 iTJPi most of the nation, with snow in The U.S. court of Appeals ruled the South-west quarter and in today that the federal govern- New England. Intent has the power to set ha- ru. _...i.. ...1.1 t-~~< ...i.ik I lion-wide minimum wages in I he massive cold front which inris,ri,, doino rnntmrtvari 'sent temperatures droppping be- "d" ?trIM Mta* (n"-'t *'-i low iree"n as ial" sou,h "?l The 2-1 derision marked h de- feat for the nation's textile The Golden weddings of two couples who hace been prom- inent in Isthmian life for many decades and the presence of a large group of United States Congressmen highugut wie iiiiv-.v? >#>i Wedding itiiuiversap'y ioday A.cbid D. Pres-1 Gabriel Kodat will be solemnized on Monday in the Sacred Heart Chapel in Ancon. The bride is the daughter of Wives will meet at 1 p.m. Dec. low freezing 13, at the Fort Kobbe Oificeisiida cracked first In the Club, for a Christmas party and part of the country. Wanning airj luncheon. Christmas carols will'gradually spread elsewhere. >* 'i<* hrave, **/ "ehting SUSP and KUS WUJ ^ eX": The West go, the first t.ste of| Tr^p^cou^ threw out i Mrs I H Van Fmst and Mrs rain which is expected to fa I l-a ruling by Federal Judge *lex- Neri Ash will h*liostesaesloi U is ''crally tomorrow except lor'ander Holtzoff last April thai. 'some northern areas. Locally hea-, under the 1936 public Contracta vy rain, some of it freezing, hitlWw the secretary of labor can' Texas. A mixture of sleet and only set minimum wages on a' snow fell in Oklahoma. local basis on government con- tracts. I Some sleet mixed with rain was, The appeals court said fixine 'reported in Arkansas Louisiana i minimum wages on the basi oi, land Mississippi due to low tein-tne wage prevailing in each o- I pera tures. ,cal area "would freeze the com- 'petltive advantage of concerns; Snow was forecast for the that operate in low-wage co.m- occasion. Members of the group who 'cannot attend will kindly notily i the above-named hostesses on or beiore Dec. iu. Pnone Clayton oioo or 3138. Governor Gonzalez To Be Honor Guest Of Beta Chapter, BSP Mr. Prescon was lor years in Congressmen Tonight charge of teiepuune and other | The Governor of the Canal communications lor tne liepuD- Zone and Mrs. John S. Seybold' Mr. O. G. Thomas, presiden lie oi ranama, and was aso a will be hosts for a buffet supper ligure in ine separatist move- at the Governors House this mem in l&u-J- evening in honor of the Congres- His wile, tne former Miss Ma- sional group which is visiting the ria oe ia ossa, had tne custinc-1 Isthmus, tion of making tne first national Southern plains, the Southeast ami,$, Man Soutnern textile firms the southern and central portions.have a minimunl of g7 nl,of the Middle Atlantic s t a t e s ,.ents B of the Gatun Civic Council, A>r-1 with "colder weather in the Rocky Virgil Heed, president ol the.Moumain area Margarita-Cristobal Civic C'oun-, ,____.-------------------- cil and Major William H. Harris,1- k t _.* representing Col. John J. Davis rNllCeSS MQrgQrei wear an original hat ot her own' Hag oi tne Kepuoiic of Panama. I Mrs. Urey Returns bhe is tne daugnter ol Jernimo To Cristobal With oe la Ossa, the composer ol tne Infant Son National hymn ot hanania. -------- bal', who has been visiting her most original hats worn. Mr. and Mrs. Perwns' 'sister, Mrs. Richard Patton, in (iolden Wedding Party ]Balboa, with her young son, Jef- will be judges in a hilarious hat _ contest. Each woman guest will,ontineQ 10 rlOnie creation and prizes will be BlvenlWifli Slioht Chill Mrs. John W. Urey of Crlsto-!for the prettiest, funniest and ",,n *' >-" Planned tor Tuesday LONDON. Dec. 2 iUP> Prln- dispute. _ .,, 'cess Margaret was confined to. Two lovely door prizes will be cla|.rnre House witn a chl]i yes. i Covington Mills of Georgia and Alabama Mills. Birming- ham. Ala., first brought action 'against a 1953 Labor Depart- ment order setting the $1 min- imum wage in all textile mills With government contracts More than 150 other mills In the [South, New England and other i areas also were parties to the lk^lU^^^^>^ *_*_ winners ^a;:if0^-g a dnve m An open invitation has been, m Cristobal. The baby was born piuS numerous other prizes issued lb the friends ot Mr. ana Nov. 25 at San Fernando Clinic. ;wju come as a surprise to tri that : London smog. Mrs. Chales L. Persons to join1 with them on Tuesday evening i Miss Lim Will Entertain in observing their golden wed-On Saturday Secretary Of State Claims NAACP Illegal In Georgia a surprise to the re- cipients. A lively program has I Margaret drove around In the been planned for the morning. lsmog Wednesday to visit the The entire proceeds will go to headquarters f the West Indies ding anniversary, No-individual' miss Alice P. Urn of Colon, lne school of the Blind in Pan-: hurricane relief fund. So fnr invitations are being sent out for;daughter of Mr. Alexander P. ama City. Admission is $1.50 for'rone of her engagements have the reception In the Fern Room (Lim. has issued invitations to her, the delicious breakfast and a been cancelled. Sh had none tu- of the Tivoli Guest House. Weil-1"lends for a party tomorrow in morning of fun and frolic. day. wishers are invited to call from 8 celebration of her birthday Reservations mav be made by i p.m. until 10 p.m. .which was yesterday. calling 5-577, 3-1202 or 3-1970. | Queen Elizabeth, the queen 'odav the National Association .-._ , ,. I -------- No tickets will be sold at the mother, also was confined to ,0r the Advancement of Colored After having taken an active Quartermaster Wives door. Clarence House with a cold:PeP'e ha* not complied wih part in the lile of the Isthmus pian Christmas Party -------- which she has had since Tr.es-;sta,e orporatlon laws if it is ATLANTA, Dec. 2 retary of State Ben Fortson sa:d for many years, Mr. Persons withdrew from business several years ago. He and Mrs. Persons have since been making their home in St. Petersburg, Florida. They returned to the Isthmus several days ago and will pay an extended visit to their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Smith of El Cangre- jo. si. Andrew's Night Is Observed At British Embassy A special haggis'which had, been flown from Scotland was the pies de resistance at a din- ner on St Andrew's Night, Nov.' SO at the British Embassy. After toasts had been drunk; to His Excellency, the President! of Panama and Her Majesty- Queen Elizabeth, the Brltisn Am-, bassador, Mr. Ian Henderson, proposed a toast of the "Old Folks At Home." Mr. John! Weymes of the Embassy then proposed the toast of "Bonnie! Scotland." ( The singing of Scottish songs, completed the evening. Kodat-Mantovani Wedding Set Monday In Ancon The wedding of Miss Sonia Adelma Mantovanl to Mr. Tomas A group of Quartermaster 'Additional Social news on P. 9) day. Selected items on GIFTS Latest Costume Jewelry Stoles, skirts. Blouses Patent Leather Belts in Wack and colors Cotton and Nylon Lingerie 79 Justo Arosemena Ave. Tel. 3-1126, Panama doing business in Georgia. Fortson said state law require that "any foreign or domestic corporation doing business jn Georgia must first file with the secretarv of state a copv of Its charter and all amendments | and pay a prescribed fee." His office records show that the NAACP "is not registered as a domestic or foreign corpora- tion." Fortson said, and if it "is doing business in Georgia, it's I doing it illegally." The official said he checked his records at the request of an individual he did not identify. , The NAACP has played a major role in anti-segregation court ; cases brought in the South and , has been a leader in seeking to overthrow the "separate but equal" doctrine. The legal status of the ' NAACP has also been auestloned In South Carolina. There the state may try to collect $7.300 from the NAACP. claiming that - the sum represents $lo dailv fines since it did not register there. In Georgia, the only require-i mem is an annual registration tee of $10. Optpos I Panama disd Opsm daily pwm 10 aun, until 3 a.m. Todoy's new houses Hove every | modern convenience except low rent.______________ ! FILET MIGNON! w/ parsley, butter. French fries, one vegetable, salad, bread and butter. S2.25 SIRLOIN STEAK! w/ smothered onions or horseradish par fait, and French fries, vegetable, salad, bread and butter. 1.50 BB TOCUMEN Restaurant &. Bar PRICED FROM $ |#40 OIF\ TIL 9:00 P.M. TAHITI 'THK JEWELRY STORE" 18-47 (137) Central Ave. CRuttan Bleadquarten. .the home of Vertikal Bltflds "lid Hn 7/m "OUR FIRMTURE GRACES THE LOVELIEST HOMES' . 10VERBL00M IBUTTER FRESH S O ail outdoors-A\ k . paoBucT or NEW ZMALAXD / fAGE SIX THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILI NEWSPAPER FRIDAY, DECEMRER t, 1958 YOU CAN PLACE YOUR AD AT 14 DIFFERENT LOCALITIES IN THE CITY Inexpensive Want Ads Bring Quiek Resals! LEAVE YOUR AD WITH ONE OF OUR AGENTES OR OUR OFFICES AT 57 4H" STREET, PANAMA MINIMUM FOR 12 WORDS librera preciado 1 Street so. U Agencias Internal, de Publicaciones Ne 1 Letter] Nasa CASA ZALDO (.tabal Ave. 5 LOURDES PHARMACY 1U La Carrasaoilla FARMACIA LOMBARDO No M ' Ueet MORRISON 41 of July At* Jt J SI. LEWIS SERVICE Ave. Tlvoli No. 4 FARMACIA ESTADOS UNIDOS 141 Central At anua FARMACIA LUX it> Central Avrnue HOUSEHOLD EXCHANCE J. Fea ele la Ossa Ave. No 41 FOTO DOMY Juste Arottnena Ava. and SI II. FARMACIA VAN-DER-DIJS S'i Street No. S3 FARMACIA EL BATURRO fa.qiu Lefeire 7 Street FARMACIA "SAS" via rarrai 111 NOVEDADES ATHIS V Espaa Ava. MINIMUM FOR 12 WORDS COMMERCIAL 0 PROFESS,Or I A! FOR SALE Automobiles CANAL IONS POLI Cl I DENTAL MEDIC; Dr. C. B- fabref Dr. It Aviu- ei D.I. S. (Geetaetoir University I I nv.li (4th af July) Ave. No 21AJ. (opposite Anco School Pia.vsrrnunel) Tel. i-li rename RETIREMENT. LIFE EDUCATION INSURANCE JIM RIDGE Phone Panama 2-0552 FOR SALE: 1950 feur-oleer 8uick Special, dynarlew, ecel- , r.t condition, low mileage Di- plomat leaving Panama. Phone J-49-/3 iCS SALE:1951 Nash Ram- titr. raa*io. fleecl tires, eicellent condition. Phono 24S5 talboa, morninft. FOR SALE:Duo to trip. 1955 Chevrolet, puncture proof tiros, hone 3-0529. TRANSPORTES 1AXT8R. S A. Pockets Shippers Movers Phono. 2-2451 2-2562 Loara Riding at PANAMA RIDING SCHOOL Riding b Jumping claasoi doilv | to 5 p.ta. Phone 3-0279 or fey appointment. Slapstick Comedy To Be Presented By Junior College FOR SALE: Bargain price. '54 Plymouth, duty free. Call Pana- ma 3-6318. Collegiate Football Attendance Up 2.7 Per Cent This Year I NEW YORK, Dec (UP>- Press shows collegiate football attendance went up two-point- teven per cent this year. The rise came despite a 10 pei rent drop in the East, where rain and snow held down Ht- tendance several Saturdays. The Rockies show a two per cent drop. But attendance rose 12 per cent in the Far West...Hi per cent In the South...Six ner ent in the Midlands.. Four per cent in the Southwest.. ana Two Freshman girls, both of'almost one per cent in the Mid- Z.whom were cheerleaders during!west. -'the football season just complet- in a]]. more than 13-mlllion, ed. ar ein the cast of "the F o r-|3oo-thousand fans watched 578 got to Remember."' the slapstick, j major games. The average crowd farce-comedy which the Cans II this fall was 23-thousand. .Bl- Zone Junior College will present iaiost one-thousand more than at the Diablo Heights Theatr e 'last year, next Wednesday. Michigan had the best st- Toni. L^I-MiSB tJVS&Ss CSS.SSeh" -fct^itt-te Southern gMj. Mis- Uto for the piay. StS.^ tS' ? Kuut Menze, Sophomore engl-1 UCX.A. peering student, and Gus Me"'.an- -ejer, full-time working boy out- "side of college classes, complete the cast of 14 for the presentation- of Charles George comedy. Properties for the comedy will be provided by Adele Meissner and Ellen Joan Smith, while Phi- lippine Rattan Furniture will set I the stage and provide all furni- ture Frank Fuller is stage man- ager, with Dick Johnson as stage! electrician, and Allen Bartholo-i mew as stage carpenter. With, the members of a 14-man crew. Sports Shorts BOXING .Welterweight Champion Car- men Basilio plans to have his left hand X-rayed after he returns to Syracuse, New York probably over the weekend. Basilio hurt bis hand Wednes- day night at Boston, when he threse persons will be responsible scored ,2(h ronnd tehnie,, for the setting of the 1 a u g h-a-, knockout over Tony De Marc0i minute comedy. , Tickets sales are under the ra- Th Iarff.stT^n- douhlo of SS^-.SpSs3a8 Esa resa Chutis giving assitance. and Advice," which pad $100.80 in Frank Mott has placed the post- the, *e"nd: Berule Sorenson er dispUvS. Irod* *>th winners. The curtain time for "she For- got to Remember'" at the Diablo Heights Theater on Wednesday, will be at 8 p.m. f i.' THOR'' Washing Machines SALES -- SERVICE PARTS MUEBLERA CASA SPARTON Central 28-79 entrance Encanto Theatre BOXING TAMPA, Florida A Negro welterweight has died as the result of being knocked out in a' bout on Tuesday night. turnar King ever rrga'n- ed consciousness after being stopped in the ninth round br Arman Peck to Tampa. Flori- da. A ring physician savs Peck's punch caused a brain hemorrhage. The dtath of King, a veter- an of 55 professional bouts, is the third Flor da ring fatality in 18 years. THE ARRAIZONA BAR and RESTAURANT ARRAIJAN 8'2 miles from ferry Offers Filete Mignon Steaks .. Golden Fried Chicken . Fried Shrimps......... Served with: French Fried Potatoes Vegetables Salad Hot Rolls and Butter Dessert Coffee or Tea Shrimp CecktaUs ..... Delirious Sandwiches OPEN DAILY 7:M am 1?:M .ni THE BEST STEAK DINNER IN PANAMA try rs. Atomic Waste Used To Keep Potatoes From Sprouting ITHACA. N. Y (UP) A Cornell University potato specialist says atomic waste material may some day give us spuds that will stay sproutless in storage for sev- eral months. Dr. Ora Smith said that research at Brookha\en National Labor Farm has shown that irradiation "f gamma rays from atomic wastewhile it's an expensive control methoddoes keep pota- toes from sprouting. Treated potatoes already have stayed sproutless for a year and a half, he said. It's estimated this would cost between eight and nine cents a bushel on a commercial setup. 1.73 1.58 1.23 5f Some men ore foolish enough to e FOR SALE Household FOR SALE Miscellaneous FOR RENT Apartments FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS RESORTS Houses FOR SALE:Gaa range, ha wa- tar tank, 60-cycle Frigidaire. Or will trade tor kerosene refriger- ator. Balboa 1866. FOR SAL!:Leu* XV bedroom sot. reasonable. Phono 3-1949. Voneiucla Street No. 4. FOR SALE:Beautiful mahoga- ny bar with cabinet!, sliding glass aloort ana* throe mirrors; four up- holstered chain with back. A koauty anal real bargain. Cash ar credit with comfortable pay- ment.. Phone 2-4902. FOR SAL!.Wardrobe 2 dears with mirrors, combination bed- sofa now, two now Rattan chain, ana now Oriental rug 12s 14 ft.. Rattan sofa, two small tablas, ene cabinet, gas stove with four human and aven, eno refrigera- tor 60-cyclo, one baby carriego anal bath and othsr articles. Tel- ephone 2-1989. FOR SALE: Now model 12 Winchester pump gun; boy's bi- cycle. Balbee 1588. LEAVING ISTHMUS:'54 Met- cury Monterrey 4-eoor Sedan; furniture, plants. Cheap. 2354- A, Owen St.. Balboa. ATTENTION G. 1.1 Just built modem furnished aportments, I, 2 bedrooms, hot, cold water. Phono Panamo 3-4941. FOR SALE:A. K. C. registered female wire-haired terrier I year old. Reasonably priced. Phana 3- 1937 from 9 te 11:30 a.m. and after 5 p.m. FOR SALE:Desks, filing cabi- nets, safe, two air-conditioning machines '-ton Admiral, metal cabinets 'glass doors), chain ano* other office furniture. Tel- ephone 2-4902. CLEARANCE SALE! 40% elf en all our starling silver Hat and hollowara, well known brands. Take advantaga of this offer and shop early far Xmas. PORRAS, Plata 5 de Maya. FOR SALE:Thar temi-autama- tic washer, 60-cyclo; divan and twa chain with slipcaven; RCA consola radio with now 3-spood record player; maeeiina rack; tabla lamp; all eicellent condi- tion. Schwerdtmann, Panama 3- 5950. FOR SALE:30-gal. gat water heater, almost new, $60; plastic garden hose. Call Panama 3- 6733. 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:Modern two-bed- room apartment, porch, living- dining room, kitchen, maid's and laundry room. Screened, hot wa- ter. For further particulars tola- phone 3-4946 or 3-6737. FOR RENT:Furnished I-bed- room chalet, living-dining room, bathroom, kitchen. Lovely 'largo lawn. Situated at Artamira ion- trance to old Golf Club I. For in- formation contact Mn. Lao, next door neighbor. Phono 3-4339, Panama. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS BOX 2031. ANCN. C.Z. BOX 1211. CRISTOBAL. C.Z. FOR RENT:Concreto cottage, 3 bedrooms, large dining-living room, 2 porches, ample closet space, large kitchen, bathroom, maid's room, hot water, garage. fenced lawn. Information: Via Porras 91-B. FOR RENT:Unfurnished two- bedroom apartment, all screened, military inspected, parking place. Phono 1464 Balboa. FOR RENT:Modern apartment "El Cangrejo": 2 bedrooms, liv- ing-dining room, porch, balcony, laundry room, separate maid's room, hot water and sat. Via Ar- gentina No. 75 Phono 3-4627. FOR RENT: Apartment. 9th Street No. 2612, Rio Abajo. FOR RENT: Furnished chalet, 2 bedrooms, maid's room. Phono 3-3328. from 7 a.m. to 4:30 P-nv ________________________ FOR RENT: Small furnished chalet for married couple with- out children or pets, at 48th St. 3 25. Bolla Vista. $75. Inquire Telephone 3-1933 or 3-2349. HAVE YOUR piano repaired, regulated or tuned by Hyams and Moses. 2-4843. FOR SALE Boa! & Motors Gramlich't Santa Clara Beach Cottages. Modern conveniences, moderate ratal. Phone Gamboa 6-441. Shrapnel's furnished houses ee beech af Santa Clare. Telephone Thompson, Balboa 1772. FOSTER'S COTTAGES. One milo past Casino. Low rotea. Phono Balboa 1866. FOR SALE: 10-hp. Johnson outboard motor. 874 Morgan Ave. Balboa 1588. FOR SALE: Commercial type Johnson Sea Horse 22-hp. out- board, liko now. Not Army sur- plus. $140. Fort Kobbo 4134. PHILLIPS Ocoantido Cettaaes, Santa Clara. Bex 435, Balboa* Phono Panama 1-1877, Cristo- bal 3-1673. V. Help Wanted Position Offered FOR RENT Miscellaneous FOR SALE: Wabcor tape re- corder and 25-cycle to 60-cyclo converter. Phone Balboa 2-3233. FOR RENT:Clean and spacious apartment in Bella Vista, $50. Must buy furnishings. Phone 3- 6440. FOR SALE: Mahogany dining set: extension table (glass topi, combination buffet-china closet, 4 chairs, 2 arm chain. Reason- able price. Good opportunity. Call Panama 3-3742. FOR SALE:Doberman Pinsch- er, imported, pedigreed female, 2 months old. $75. Phone 3- 0669. 6-8 p.m. FOR RENT: Commercial local in front of Hotel El Panama. Apply Foto Halcn 9-12 noon. 2-6 p.m. Phono 3-1179. FOR SALE: Refrigerator with deepfroeie compartment. 25-cy- cle. Price $185. 2531-D Cacoli. FOR SALE: Refrigerators, 10' Crasley and 13' Frigidaire, ex- cellent aperating canditien. Call Panama 3-6318. FOR SALE:Washing machino, 25-cycle. $60. R-7-A Rousseau. Phono Navy 25-3127. FOR SALE: Leaving country. Refrigerator, water heater, stove, washer. Phono 3-5207. Luis Guxsnon. Choice selection of U.S. and Eu- ropean Christmas Tree orna- ments. Also Christmas decora- tions and lights for homes, stores, clubs and organisations. AMER- ICAN SUPPLY CO., "J" Stroet No. 13-06. FOR SALE: Italian accordion, vary good occasion; baby play pan. 49th Stroet 15. California Building, apartment 4. FOR RENT:Cool, quiet two- bedroom apartment. Magnificent park view. 47th Street. Call 3- 0934. FOR RENT:Ideal apartments, furnished or unfurnished, near El Panama. Hot water, American neighbors. Call 3-5692. 6 p.m. onwards. Apply at 2034 Via Es- paa, anytime. FOR RENT:Spacious, screened 2-bedroom, 2-bath, largo living- room, dining room apartment; garage, private entrance. Pana- ma 3-0873. FOR RENT:Sito for commer- cial purposes or office on Justo Arosemena Avenue. Phone Va- llarino 3-1477 or 3-0191. IF YOU have had ono or moro yean of active TV service and installation experience, wo aro interested in talking to you. Present occupation or military status no handicap to our offer. Call Pan. 3-1285 for interview appointment. WANTED:Manager for private club in Canal Zone. Writo Bex 823, Balboa, giving age, previ- ous experience, references and salary dosirod. Hours from 3 p.m. to closing. WANTED:Experienced cook fr housekeeper. House 6260, Los Rios. WANTED:Cook to keep houto. Good salary to right ponen. Must bring references. Call 3-2091 after 6:30 p.m. I WANTED:Good maid to wash and iron. Apply Federico Boyd Avenue No. D4-22. WANTED Houses WANTED Apartments FOR SALE: Cheap, stainless teel aquariums, stands & plants, Quartermaster bed, springs and mattresses. House 6338-A, Los Rios. Phono 2-3363. Wonted to Buy WANTED: Ono green rug 9x12; two end tables and one room divider. Call Balbee 2- 1295. 1 FOR RENT: Furnished apart- ment, living room, dining room. 2 bedrooms, refrigerator, gas stove. 43rd Street No. 64. LOST & FOUND LOST:Woolly black dog, near Gamboa. Answers te name ef "Blacky." Phone Gamboa Police Station. Reward. AMERICAN wants 1-2 bedroom apartment in Bolla Vista area for $95-$ 100 a month. Mutt hava screens, hot water, 60-cycle cur- rent. Call 3253 or 2106 > after 6 p.m.). Fort Kobbo. WANTED: Expert typist with excellent knowledge of English and some bookkeeping experi- ence. Call Panama 3-6318. WANTED: Vacation quarters, February or March. Call 83- 4262. FOR RENT Rooms FOR RENT: Large furnished rooms, American couple, refri- gerator, kitchen. Juste Aroseme- na Avenue, corner 31st Stroet No. 9. FOR RENT Well conditioned office with two private offices, general office, large and small store rooms, centrally located. All with air-conditioning. Tel. 2-4902. * :atsU Continental Mark n The Ford Motor Company has created the finest Automobile in America Today. COLPAN MOTORS Inc. has been selected by the Ford Motor Company as the only Dealer in Central America to Show this Fabulous Car. Price Canal Zone $ 11,500.00 Panama $ 12,900.00 See it Saturday from: 8:00 a. m. to 11:00 p. m. COLPAN MOTORS inc. mi Coln y* FRIDAY, DFX EMBER 2. 1955 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILI NEWSPAPER PAGE BEVKH TOufly The best pictures at the best movie-houses in town ToddF CAPITOLIO! J I V 0 L I 25c. 15c. 25c. FGLSON PRISON - Also: - TASK FORCE 15c. BANK NIGHT! CAPTAIN BLACK JACK - Also: - ANOTHER GOOD PICTURE! CENTRAL Theatre 60c. 30c. 1:05 2:27 4:33 8:39 8:17 p.m. VIOLENT RELEASE! Parley GRANGER Anthony Ql INN Anne BANCROFT, in THE NAKED STREET LUX THEATRE 60c. --------------------------------------- 30c. 3:09 4:38 6:42 8:50 p.m. SENSATIONAL RELEASE! Alexis SMITH Alexander KMIX Dirk BOGARDE, in JHE SLEEPING TIGER DRIVE-IN Theatre Popular Nifht! $1.18 PER CAR! Forrest Tucker, in ROCK ISLAND TRAIL CASE OF THE STUDIO PAYROLL Daredevils of The Red Circle (Chapters 7 and 8) CECILIA THEATRE 60c. :;t'i. STERLING HAYDEN, in THE ETERNAL SEA MARGARET LOCKWOOD, in LAUGHING ANNE In TECHNICOLOR! R I 0 3c. ----------- BANK! S500.00 HIAWATHA - Also: - BOWERY TO BAGDAD VICTORIA 13c. --------------------- THE LOOTER - Also: - The Lone Hand <* # 0% Au. WHITE EXCEPT FOt? HIS NOSE, the POLAR BEAR is cuNwiwiy CAMOFLkEV POK HIS SNOWY HUWTIN fiKOUWR usin u\6 front le6s as runners, he cautious!// Poshes himself towarp the prey.... a 43 Latin American Officers To Get First Taste Of Panamanian Jungle Forty three Latin American of- scries of problems at the jungle fleers from seven nations will get testing grounds, their first taste of Panama's jun- Representing Costa Rica. Cuba, gle this week during a five day Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, tactical exercise the nearby Camp Paraguay and Peru, the group of Pina. I infantrymen will receive a con- Members of U.S. Army Carlo- densed jungle training course by bean (USARCAR1B) School's tac- tics course, will round out their eight weeks of training with a the school's weapons and tactics division. Training, in Spanish, will con- sist of a series of problems de- signed to familiarize the class with squad and platoon level tac- tics. Instruction will include re- connaissance, jungle aviation, jungle hits, jungle living, am- busn and platoon in the defense and attack. B.P.O. Elks Lodge No. J414,! 'This Held aining,1' said Capt. will hold its annual memorial Iflu,le A- Cort. .chiei' Gantry day services Sunday at 5 p.m. ,weapons and tactics division, u Conducted annually on the first |tne "rsl attempt on the part of Sunday in December, the service 'lhe School to integrate realistic is held in memory of the depart-|J"n8'e training with^the normal ed members of each lodge Lodge 14, BPOE, Holds Memorial Service Sunday tt^j ...THEN CL06B6 dVJlFTLV WITH A XU$H ANP SUPG. HOLLY i. in Elkdom. Jt will be conducted by the officers of Lodge 1414 and 'the program will include vocal ;solos by Maurice Alfred and Miss Ann Livingston. The musi- cal program will be under the di- '. rection of Victor Herr. I The highlight of the srvice will be the memorial address deliver- ,ed by Rabbi Nathan Witkin. All members of Lodge 1414, vis-1 is one liting Elks, their families andigases 'friends, are urged to attend. Aft- ,er the services, refreshments will be served in the lounge of the ' Elks. home. MOV/fS TV HADIO by Erskino Johnson HOLLYWOOD (NEA) On-.lady in true astonishment. "They atage, Offstage 4 upstage: Shirley is indeed a cosmopolite." Temple is ducking the spotlight again and her wordage on the Sheldon Leonard, who directs comeback question is becomin Danny Thomas' TV show, is seen vehement. Declining to accept a almost every night as an actor Modern Screen 25tli anniversary.in old movies on television. Other award, the one-time kid star, now day an autograph fan approached Mrs. Charles Black of Atherton. 'Leonard, Danny and Doris Day Calif, flashed It: beside the pool at the Desert Inn ' : in Palm Springs. "I have scanned my past life and find that I'm much happier Ignoring Danny and Doris, the now than I ever was as a movie fan shoved his book at Leonard tar. I donf ever intend to return saying: "Boy, is my mother-in- tii nictures and Won't want any law crazy about you!" spotlight put on my present life. _____ "Maybe you d like Danny s and Humphrey Bogart and Rod Stei. Dor.s auiographs, loo," said the; gcr were on location on New embarrassed Leonard. Replied York's 8th Avenue for a sequence the fan: "Nope, nont think she In the Columbia flicker, "The knows e'm."' Harder They Kail.' ----- ... One of the local characters, on Marilyn Maxwell is Miss Lnde- a street noted for characters stum- elded about whether she wHI give bled over the cables, waded,up her career after becoming a through -the arc lights and cor- mania in April. nered Bogart waiting for the scene, I to be set up. lm not sure. sne sa.vs- I ve always wanted a child and it may | "What are vou doing, makin' a be difficult for me to leave her movie?' he asked Bogey. li'm hoping for a girl-because of] No deadpanned Bog art. my work. But 1 ve been working; "We're going to blow up a build- so long retirement can be a frob- ' jnR ilem. too.'' Oh," replied the character! .' | 'Well. then, be careful. It might| Shorts: A short circuit could fall into the street." make Robert Linn the hottest! Veteran comedian Benny Rubin singer in show business. She s be is leaving show business to be- ing wired for sound with a special- come a salesman for a Beverly [ type microphone built right into a Hills securities firm. Praying his gown for her night-club debut . last bit role, on a TV Climax show, j A set built for Bill Holderis Ari- he told me- zona,' filmed in 1941, still stands "I'm going to teach actors how as a tourist attraction in Tucson, to save money with Investment Ariz. A sing reads: "Bill Holden trust fundsso thev won't wind up Starred Here. ... Arlene Whelan in bit roles like'I did." la reading the script of a Broad- ------- way-gound play, "The Bold Ap- Garv Cooper and Dorothy M*c- proach.'' It's a satire on the C.uirei plaving Quakers in "ThejKinsey reports. . Rosano Biaz- Friendly Persuasion.'' visited a zi's voice wont have to be dubbed Quaker meeting in Pasadena, Cali-'in the film version of "South Pa" fornia. Icific.'' He trained for opera before They were introduced to various becoming a movie lover-boy and members of the congregation and can yodel the daylights out of one very old lady asked Cooper. "Some Enchanted Evening. ' "Where did they say they was1 -------- Cooper thought she meant his Now that Rock. Tab and Guy "'ace of birth and answered. "He- are movie box-office aames. how lena, Montana, Ma'am about a new western heroChuck My goodness," exclaimed the Wagon? m .THra0HWSn8nwH5Sj ., rVTS 25IVJ' iiBisra classioom curriculum. Prio. to this class, tactics training was limited to classroom discussion and map and sand ta- ble problems. "We have a busy five-day scheduled for the class, and 1 am sure they will reap a great deal from the series ot problems wei have planned," Cortez added. "Ambush training, for example, of the more important of jungle combat. T w o hours of practical experience in the Held is worth two da)s of classroom discussion." Another "first" for the present class will be the use of "C" ra-l tlons while in the field. The problem will be concluded; with a 24-hour tactical exercise which is schhduled to b e g i n I Thursday noon. During the one day period, students will be re- quired to plan and set up a de-; fensive perimeter and to launch a full scale attack the following day. PROGRESS STAMPS-These stamps commemorate the "Third Fair of Somaliland," marking the agricultural, com- mercial and industrial growth of the African territory. They were issued by the Italian Ad- ministration of Somaliland for use in the colony scheduled for independence in 1960. It is now under U.N.-Italian trusteeship. Just Arrived Fuller Brush shipment of personal and Cosmetic Items for Xmas Special low prices until XMAS 25% discounts In com- memoration of our foundation. Crawford Agencies "J" St. No. 13-A-30 Tels. -3285 t-2142 2-238 (j/taMdtnthcid-'ftioTke/i ynotHe/U-w-zcui School Facilities Hit Low Level In Haysville, Kan. HAPSVTLLF. Kan. (UP)-Some Haysville children are going to sc.iool thii fall in improvised class- rooms set up in hallwnvs. private homes, churches and even a bus ba>-n. The regular school building's ca- pacity is 360, against an enroll- ment totalinv 1.464 pupils. Only- three years ago school enrollment in this suburb of Wichita was 375. FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE DEAF& DUMB SCHOOL CREAT MATINEE The Wizard of Oz At the Bella Vista Theater 10 a.m. Saturday DECEMBER 3rd Tickets 25c. On sale at the theater ANSWERINC THE ALARM Vice President Richard Nixon joins muscular dystrophy fight in Washington, accepting a fire- man's helmet from Sandra Sterling, nine-year-old victim of the disease from Arlington, Va. In center is John P. Redmond, presi- dent of the International Association of Firefighters. Firefighters and postmen helped make the drive a success in past years. We Have Just Received A Shipment of FOAM RUBBER seats and backs, covered in strong muslin, for easy chairs, sofas, etc. 22 x 22" and 22 x 26" 5" thick Guaranteed First Quality (no seconds) This month only: $24.50 per pair CANAL AGENCIES, S. A Cathedral Plaza Phone 2-0324 NOTICE In conformity with Article 13 of the Articles of In- corporation, and by decision of the Board of Directors shareholders of SPECIAL ORDINARY STOCK, of the PANAMA BANK & TRUST COMPANY. INC. (Banco Fiduciario de Panama. S. A.) duly registered in the books of the Company, are hereby summoned to attend in EXTRAORDINARY ASSEMBLY of stockholders which will be held at the Company's offices, situated at No. T-2-30 of "I" Street. Panama City, at 3 p.m. on December sixteenth. 1955. in order to consider an amendment of Articles 5 and 6 of the Articles of Incorporation. Panama. Nov. 29. 1955. PANAMA BANK AND TRUST COMPANY, INC. The Secretary. ScHRAFfTS CHOCOLATES^ fw_ AVAILASLE AT TNI SUPERMARKETS DRUGSTORES NUGAT Spanish Xmas Candy Made of Honey and Almonds At $ 1.45 DURAN >S Central Ave. at East 16th Street and Central Am. t East 25th Street CHIF BOY-AR-DEE Spaghetti lauce with Meat is really tasty with spaghetti but also it's 'delicious oa' fried eggs, with nest,' i and even with rice to make our delicious yellow rice. With a little imagination you cao find many ways of using this rich prepared sauce. Buy it today sod keep it always on hand- Sphaghttti Sauce with Mushroom nui.es s dish to delight the most ex- ctin* taste. It's very easy to prepare. Just heat die con- rents of a can, add- ing 'i* water (measured with tne ame can) and when it hot, pour it over the spaghetti already boiled in salt water. Sprinkle with ground cheese and taste it! You cao also use it with rice, met o. fish. Fetryrtd At Your Commiumj Slot* CHEF BOY-AR-DEE SPECIALITY on? THE1EST tECIMS All Universal Dinnerware Is guar- anteed against checking or glaze cracking (commonly known as crazing) or any damage to the glaze or decorative treatment re- sulting from exposure to alther heat or cold. This does not include ware exposed to an open (lame or to any direct source of heat. Universal Dinnerware may safely be transferred directly from a cold refrigerator to a heated oven. Universal Dinnerware U regularly tasted for one hour under cu pounds live steam pressure then immersed in 50 degree watera test more severe than three years of hard use. OPEN STOCK ON ALL. AND 37 DIFFERENT PCS. TO CHOOSE FROM. BUY NOW ON THE SECOND FLOOR OF FIFTH AVENUE . /"V^"W.*^'' '. S". PAGE EIGHT PANAMA AMERICAN AN. INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2. 195S f I I ty>0 Promises Fullest Aid H I / o GOP Campaign Next Year CHICAGO. Die. 2 (UP> Presl ent Eisenhower promised yester- y to help the Republican elee- on campaign to the fullest ex- tent possible next year. The President, stricken with a heart attack In September, sent a message to the Republican Na- tional Committee, which m e t here to draft plans ofr 195 GOP nominating convention. He lold the committee that "you >haae a splendid record to bmrt to the voters in 1956 " "I personally am proud of Re- publican achievements for the peart and the prosperity and the security of the American people." ii Maid. Then he added: "I shall do everything in my power next year to help you re- port the record accurately and ful'v to the country.'" ' The President did not specify! how he will help the campaign, hot observers here noted this could be done by use of televi- sion and radio if his trength does not permit wider activity. GOP National Chairman Leo- nard W. Hall had said the cam- paign will lean heavily on IV New Small Powerful Hearing Aids that are hidden in the hair at Crawford Agencies "J" St, No. 13-A-30 Telv -M* ,-'*',': "2K5 next year, eliminating much trav- . eling for candidates. The President's decision on whether he will run again is ex- pected to come early next year, : based upon his own personal de- sires and the advice of his doc i tors. I Hall read the presidential mes- sage today, remarking that '-the 1 President, like all great men, says that by his example he win Mead." The message came as three Cabinet members Agriculture j Secretary Ezra Taft Benson,. Commerce Secretary Sinclair Weeks and Labor Secretary! james P. Mitchelldelivered pop talks to the committee. ttenson outlined the administra- j tions new program to help the farmers and accused Democrats: of making "deminstrably f a Is e' statements" about farm problems in an elfort to harvest votes,. M eeks and Mitchell forecast e- ven greater gains in prosperity and employment and predicted toe people will return the Repub-! iicans to power next year because' they "never had it so good." Ilenson singled out Adlai E. ; Sic\enson, an avowed canuulate. for the 1956 Democratic presiden- tial nomination and New York Co/. Averell Harriman, who may be one, for censure. ' uccused Democratic 'presi- dential hopefuls" of stirring up a "witch's brow' over agriculture for politcal purposes. "Vv -en Adlai Stevenson recently flip-flipped back to rigid 90 per, i t j.-, ;ce support and then threw in his version of the Bran- nan plan for good measure. I watched with some interest to see i' Averell Harriman could t o p that."' Benson said. ? did. He even chlded Adlai for being too moderate' Ben . ii said. Both Weeks and Mitchell voic- ed the theme. "Don't pull t h e rut out m>m under propspenty Week? added that the key to "the current era cf good fceeling and good times is President Dwight D. Eisenhower.'1 Stevenson Snags Sailfish, Harriman Bags 22-Lb. Turkey MCINTOSH, Ala., Dec. 2 (UP)'Fine of New York. He posed W. Averell Harriman bagged a I with if at the winter home of Ja- 22-pound turkey and Adlai Ste- cob Arvey, long-time Chi caga venson boasted a aix-foot sailfish | Democratic leader and the candi- yesterday as the potential rivals date's staunch ally, .took long-range aim on the Dem-! All was fun with "no polities'' locratlc presidential nomination in;' 'he Harriman camp on the es- separate allies through hte "un- 'ate of ebullient Rep. Prank Boy- certain" South. kin (D-Ala.), near Mclntosh. But The outdoor exploits, an accept-the New York governor is expect- ed form of getting p o I i t i c a l|ed to touch on more serious sub- nanies into the news, were car-jjects tomorrow when he goes to ried out against a background of,New Orleans for a speech. Loui- solid maneuvering. i liana's governor. Robert Kennon, Harriman's journey into the opposed the Democratic ticket in South Alabama wilds coincided' 19S2 although the state finally with a statement by his chief!went for it. .stragegist, Tammany Leaden Kennon goes out of office next jCa.raine DeSapio, that the Ne w;year but there is no assurance a- York delegation will place itsjny of the men battling to sue- governor In nomination at thejeeed him, among them New Or- Democratic national convention, leans Mayor deLesseps Morrison Stevenson, first announced can-'and former Gov. Earl Long, will didate for the omination he won go for the next Democratic tick- in 1952, went through the fourth day of a vigorous tour of Flori- da, a Dixie state that for Presi- dent Eisenhower. The former told a Miami A group of Panama Canal employes, who are attending a lecture course on the elements of thermodynamics are shown during class In the Balboa Junior College Building. WUliard E. Percy (far right;, assistant industrial training coordinator, is instructor. Employes shown attending the class and the divisions for which they work follows: First row (left to right James P. Boukalls, Industrial; J. Lee Meyers, Motor Transportation; Theodore W. Krzys, In- dustrial, and Alfred Hval, electrical. Second row Horace E. Coleson, Locks; Donald Kaan, electrical; Charles H. Stewart, Locks; Robert J. Rlsbert, Main- tenance, and James A. Russell, Locks. Third row Joseph M. Bateman. Locks; William H. Keller, Jr., Locks; Robert M. Turner, Maintenance; R. A. Berry, Locks; Charles H. Crosby, Locks, and William E. Pullen, U. S. Navy Public Works. Fourth row James M. Zelsman, Locks; Norman C. Anderson, Locks; Frank A. Anderson, Jr., Locks; Ernest M. Kruger, Locks: Earl A. Dyer, Maintenance, and Joe W. Crawford, Electrical. Those attending the course but not shown In the picture are: James T. Amos, Thomas A. Bell and John F. Poniatowskl, of the Armed Forces; R. J. Boatwright, W. H. Brown, C. W. Carden, R. A. Gangle. G. E. Love. Joseph A. Mable, Ted A. Marti, W. 5. McKee, Robert J. Roy and Joseph H. Young, of the Locks Division; Richard Daniel and Owen W. Smith, of the Maintenance Division; Dan B. Rambo, Motor Transportation Division and John W. Voss, Electrical Division. et without reserve. Harriman shot his turkev be- fore beakfast and he and Boy kin cut off the shirt-tail of the et> Illinois governor;host, Alabama Gov. James P. press conference i'Folsom, who missed his shot at shirt that the Republican administra-1 a gobbler to forfeit his tion has "frightened our allies anchor, more than our enemies" wlthi Folsom, who previously said he slogans threatening war in the.likes former President Truman Far East. I for the 1956 nomination .was non- Steveson caught his sailifsh in .committal today but Boykin pro- the Gulfstream off Miami Wednes-1 claimed Harriman as "the next day from the yacht of Clarence president of the United States.'' Only this 100% Cece a v> fllave you all tifos* ! Magic conVcnencc-fVo pot, no grounds 1 It cups of coffee grew on tree, they couldn't be-quicker to prepare. Just drop this coffee into a cup. add hot water. Xo pot. No wait. No grounds. No waste. That's why Borden'i is so easv to use. .. '. i k ^ r '''^ft3 .........in . mm OS9 ^^VjtV ~5> '5r \ r * ONE OF THE FOUR CLASSES of Company-Government course of study on work slmpllcation this week. Is shown here The course, conducted by James O. E. Maguire (lar lefti of once each week for the past seven weeks. Three classes were series of classes will be started soon and will be conducted on From left to right, standing, are; Mr. Maguire, Michael Zo the Maintenance Division. Se?!eH. left to rieh.t. arc Mrs. Eleanor Burnham. Canal Zone Corozal Hospital: Nelson Wise, Engineering and Construction Bureau: Harry Egolf, Housing Division: and James DesLondes, employes in supervisory positions, who completed a seven-week watching a motion study film. the Executive Planning Staff, was given to 9 employes who net held on the Pacific 8ide and one on the Atlantic Side. A new the same basis. mbory, Chief of the License Section; and Herschel Oandy, of Librarian: Edward Klrckus, Internal Security; C. V. Russell, Bureau; Leroy Koontz, Police Division; Arthur Smith, Health Storehouse Division. Flavor-The World'5 Finest Coffee* Only a blend of the best coflcet can give you flavor like this. And remember-Borden'i is til coffee. Nothing has been addedno dextrins, dextrose or maltose. That's why you'll ay "Borden's is best!" Premier Edgar Faure Ohio Stale Stands Denies Violating Firm On Sheppard French Constitution Murder Conviction MAJ. GEN. REUBEN C. HOOD, Jr., Commander. Caribbean Air Command, and Mrs. Hood are shown arriving at the Albroolc Theater, last evening, to attend the opening performance of "Ai Legretto," a three-act musical comedy presented by Al- brook Air Force Base personnel and their depender. __________________ (Official USAF Photo) CHRISTMAS SPECIAL! TED WILLIAMS TACKLE '25% DISCOUNT until DEC. 15 Call: CASA CHACON Panama 2-2121 Across from Hotel Internacional WILLIAM VIOLCTTE SUPPLY Panama 3-6318 BALBOA STARTS TOMORROW! ITS A LOOK THRU THE KEY HOLE INTO HISTORY'S MOST NOTORIOUS^BOUDOIR! OLIVIA PARIS. Dec. 2 (UPiPremier 'Edgar Faure dissolved the French National Assembly today land then hotly rejected accusa- tions that he had violated the constitution. The Assembly ceased to exist at 7 a.m. with publication of a decree in the "Journal Of Meier and France prepared for its first winter elections since Feb- ruary. 1876. FajUre went before a press con- ference to launch his vigorous electoral campaign for the elec- tions expected to be held on New Year's Day, a national holiday. He said he would reject the ! resignation of five Radical So- : ciallst ministers and stick to his job to "defend French interests" in the" interim period before e- lections. Faure fought back at his prin- cipal political opponent, Pierre Mendes-France. and said the constitution gave him full pow- er to take any decision confront- ing the nation before the new chamber Is elected. COLUMBUS, Ohio. Dec. 2 (UP) The state of Ohio charged again today that the blood of Marilyn Reese Sheppard and obvious lies by her husband con- victed Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard of her murder. The prosecution filed a brief before the Ohio Supreme Court which argued that Sheppard had been fairly tried and properly convicted. It answered a defense appeal filed earlier with the high court. The brief accused Sheppard of fabricating a "fantastic and wholly Incredible story" about his wife's death July 4, 1954. It said defense chief Willam J. Cor- rigan was a "grandstand player" who relied on "distortions and misrepresentations of facts" In efforts to save his. client. Sheppard was convicted and sentenced to life In prison for second degree murder. Atomic Weapons Used In Exercise At Fort Polk FT POLK. La.. Dec. 2 (UPi _ Aerial and ground atomic w e a- pons today supported United States forces as they expanded their bridge-head over the Red River. Atomic air attacks alreadv had knocked out the "aggressor" air force In the opening day of the second combat phase of Exercise Sagebrush last Monday. Heavy equipment continued to roll over the four bridges which United States troops built yester- day. Some 110,000 troops and 850 jet planes are taking part in the largest maneuvers since World War II S* Iconomy-Morc Cups per Jir 1 Because it' *ll coffee not half. And there is no waste! WKTMOtfaiM coFreKawEKx/fWHy EVEttMCAL, EVERT Mff INSTANT I0FFE IP IT'S BO*D's. its &OT TO 6000 l . . de HAViLLAND Cll BERT ROLAND PAuiSCOFIElO TECHNICOLOR ROSAY PRICE - LATE SHOWS TONIGHT 10:30 P M. DIABLO HEIGHTS MARGARITA "THE VERIDiCT" "JEOPARDY" SHOWING AT YOUR SERVICE CENTER THEATERS TONIGHT 1 Balboa 4:30, 6.25, 8:40 m-coNomoNED 'THE MAN you'll never forget! DIABLO HTS. <:15 7:45 Bowery BOYS . "SPY CHASERS" ^t^2trit|i^AirCjmmnd" GAMBOA 7:80 "Yellow Rose of Texas" _si "FiRr. ovra afica" GATUN 7:88 -VIOLENT SATURDAY" Mm From Blilrr MARGARITA 8:15 8:89 Man from Bitter Ridge" Sl 'Thfff Far Ttit Sh'' KJdir CRISTOBAL 8:15 8:00 Alr-CMdlltmS Randolph SCOTT "RAGE AT DAWN" DBAGNFT- LA BOCA 7:8 "Hla Majesty OKeefe" AMP BIERD 8:15 7:28 "SLEEPY LAGOON" Babe Didrikson's Condition Serious GALVESTON, Tex., Dec. 2 _ (UP) A spokesman at John Sealy Hospital indicated today that the condition of Babe Didrik- son Zaharias, famed woman athlete, is "serious.'' Mrs. Zaharias. who entered the hospital Sunday for the third time In four months In her battle against cancer, has been isolated from all but the closest friends and relatives. She is undergoing a series of X-ray examinations. "Our examinations so far de- tected no Indication that the can- cer is spreading further," a doc- tor said. Church Will Close Celebrations With Concert Program A concert has been arranged for Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. at Christ Church By-the-8ea. This will mark the closing of the celebration of the 90th Anniver- sary of the church, which was consecrated on June 15,1865, and Is the oldest church in the city. Mezzo-soprano Marta Spoel, who Is on the stuff of the Na- tional Conservatory as a profes- sor of music will be guest artist of the show. Her accompanist will be Mrs. Ian L. Henderson, wife of the British Ambassador to Panama. The concert will also feature Christ Church Choir Guild,.un- der the direction of 'the Ven. Malnert J. Peterson, with Handel K Lawson at the organ. Soloists irom the guild will be Desmond Daniels,, tenor. Archdeacon Pet- erson and Miss Constancia Bel], Cecil Miller, baritone, and Miss Blanche Savage, soprano. IAWC Sponsors Benefit Movie At the Bella Vista Theater to- morrow at 10 a.m., there VtQ b i benefit showing of "The Wiz- ard of Oz." to raise funds tor special materials and other as- sistance to Panama's School for the Deaf and Dumb. Admission is 25 cents for tht benefit organized by the Inter- American Women's Club. PROGRESS IN PANAMADry Ice. Incorporated, through 1U Vic-President. Paul M. Wir. expresses it appreciation to the Panama Government for ita courtesies and co-operation ex- tended to them by granting the Company a 25-year- tax ex- emption contract. Mr. Wlr Is belna congratulated by the Minister of Agriculture, seor Eligi Creipo V. (Mercurio) f FRIDAY. UK FMBF.R 2 1955 THE PANMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PACE NINE Social and kJIIi erwiAc L on I i n a til Cristobal-Colon Rotary Has Active Week; Hears Diana Chlarl The Cristobal Colon Rotary Club field their regular weekly at the Strangers Club yesterday. President Lesleigh Davis an- Folk-Dance Group Coming: To JWB-USO The USO-JWB Armed Forces Service center In Balboa will present the well-known choral group "Orpheon Ricardo Zozaya" in concert on Wednesday, at 8:15 nounced that this had been a big I p.m. week ior Rotary on the Atlantic I This concert will also feature side. Several Rotarlans had been line typical Panamanian folk- present at the ceremony on Mon-aance group of the National In- riay when the bust of the late jititute of Panama. Frank Ullrich was unveiled. In! Conductor of the choral group fact a notaran. Dr. Alfonso Cor- Is the Chilean professor, Luis rea Garcia, had been one of the principal speakers on that occa- sions. Vergaia Q..-whose performance s a tenor-soloist delighted the audience at the recent Polio- Benefit Concert at the" USO- Then on the night of Tuesday JWB. at a special function held at the. Professor Petra Escobar is in Abel Bravo School, the Depart- charge of the folklore dance. ment of Physical Education of! This concert is being present- Panama had presented a medal ed through the courtesy of the and a certificate to the Cristobal National Institute of Panama. Colon Rotary Club for their Admisison is without charge, sponsorship of the Rotary soft Everyone is Invited. ball league in Colon. Davis him-'--------- self had been unable to be Mr. and Mrs. Altman present so past-president Fabian Celebratine 33rd Anniversary Pinto was delegated to receive I Mr. and Mrs. Saul Altman of this honor on behalf of Rotary. Ft. Kobbc were receiving the That same night President'congratulatioas of family and Davis had been entertaining Ro- friends today on the occasion of- tary District Governor. Jose Ma- celebrating their 33rd wedding na Duran of San Salvador, who anniversary. They were to be paid a surprise visit this week | feted tonight at Hotel El Pan- to the Rotary Clubs or Panama, ama. Colon and David. A group of di-1 rectors of the Cristobal Colon Latin American Military See Gulick Demonstration Elements of seven units c o v- communications system operates, erged on Fort Gulick Wednesday Organized to give 2't senior i to provide what is believed to be Central and South American mil- the largest communications dem-itary leaders an insight on the mi..i ration ever to be presented L'.S Army's vast communications in the Panama area. network, personnel stretched Men'from the 33rd Infantry miles of wire and special equip regiment, 504th FA battalion, ment over Fort Gulick terrain 123d Signal company, 23rd Infan- for the afternoon affair. I try division Light Aviation sec- Deipcting division, regimental, tion and Communiettios divison battalion and company com muni- of U.S. Army Carbbean (USAR- cations nets, the deniostration CARIB) School combined t c ch- began in front of School hcad- nicians and thousands of dollars quarters ana stretched for sp- worth of equipment to show a proximately 1,000 yards to the group of senior Latin American Post Parade ground, officers how the U.S. Army's, .... ,, . ________------------------- ------. first phase of the how was a I complete division wire and ra- dio net established and operated by personnel of the 123d Signal company. Lt. Col. LeRoy M. Glo- dcll, USARCARIB SChool Cum municatlons division chief and narrator, explained, in Spanish, o- pcration of the Division command ii.!,,moil among units. post and the importance of coor- I Representing Colombia, Costa 'Rica, Cuba, Guatemala, Nicara- gua, Paraguay, Peru and Vene- zuela, the group of officers were then entertained by the 33rd In- fantry regiment. The infantry u-, nit explained three phases, regl-| metal, battalion and company- command posis, to members of the Special Command and Staff. Next on the agenda was a dem 25th U.S. President Answer to Previous Puzzle ACROSS C4 Abstract being 65 Memorandum DOWN 1 Harvest goddess" 2 Bodily filament 3 Small island 4 Musteline mammals 23 Let fall 5 Drunkard 25 Snare 6 British money 26 Ireland of account 27 Mimicker 7 Asiatic kingdom 1 Nile, ------, t wm William McKinley's birthplace 5 He was the of an iron manufacturer 8 He was in Buffalo, New York 12 Time gone by 13 Native metal 14 Roof edge 15 River sediment 16 Light knock 17 Toward the sheltered Mde,nAbove 18 Bamboolike nGoUmoun^ ?cT Q O N N 5? o N E A a E. E O R L P M U 4 1 K i> F w 9 l_ f c S T A V 1 6. E L U C T 1 N 5 U a U y !^ U M T A t> t A. H O U A 1 E c C A N o 1 N T c A E r1 A R R O T T E M t * l_ l E S T A A l_ H r n m. N A m]o u E H O A R C- O c OIV 1 K 1 N a R A E 1 K . 1 U u . i B 0[R A C e M E 1 NOTICE AURORA LODGE No. 523, LB.P.O.E. OF W. nvites all members to attend a Reneral meeting to be held t the Lodge Hall on Central Ave. between 12 ft 13 Streets, >n December 5th. 1955 at 8:00 p.m. Purpose of meeting: Vomination and Election of Officers and Ratification of action taken by the Lodae since registry of first Board of Directors to preterit date. Attendance and Punctuality is requested. THE SECRETARY 47 He------d in tht Union force during the Civil War 28 Go by steamer 49 Operatic solo 30 Shield bearing 50 Lease 8 Occupied ihair 31 Prevaricator 52 Edible 9 Robust y//tet -MAKEffiJBJOS 19 Scottish river 21 Hawaiian wreath 32 Pretently rootstock 35 Genuine 53 Aperture .41 Form a notion 54 Entire tu mtiM ME TOO' WIES ENCROACH HUSBAND'S EVERY MOE Club were invited to a dinner a' the Hotel Washington in honor of this distinguished visit.-.; Panama's Rotary president, pe- dro Brin, was also present at the o.N dinner a? an honored guest. In -acniition to reporting on the gome wives wont let a man have above. President Davis introduc-,anything of his own. Ii he takes' ed s'eVeral Items of business at'up golf and is having a fine time yesterday meeting, including, every Saturday afternoon with the appointing of a committee,: three of his cronies, his wife de- composed of past presidents, to cides to take up golf, too. And the nominate officers for election for foursomes are replaced by a hus- the caning Rotary year. band and wife twosome. Master at Arms John Surany: if the husband of a "me too" was complimented on the excel- wife starts to tall; about his job, lence pf today's buffet lunch and the wife takes over conversation- onthe improvement In the meais ally to let everyone know that in general. Rotaran Pete Seca- sh- knows as much about his, ras was welcomed back after business as he does: touring 8000 miles through ten! If he plays poker with the boys countries in Europe. f few times, the first thing he' Ouest speaker for the day was *now> she has gotten the "crowd": Mrs. Diana Chiari de Oruber who together for the kind of game gave an interesting talk and' whe,re the wives keep asking help-1 demonstration of her achieve-,'essly. "Tell me again, does a: ments In the line of native arts straight beat a flush or is it the . and crafts |oU,er way around? Among other things she n- J,(Je ^ildsnhulse}{ ?**, nia--iasffi.'i4f-',i; atSJ2^t^TrWn? wads If b'e W" ' organiation' to represent Her canvas was d therc t d aKwoman.s f '"e "cta,nle c"t'J.m^i auxiliary to lt. she starts one. Inner bark of a native tree and , he joins nicn., organizati0n the paints she had prepared her- hunting or fishing prctt shc self (rom native clays and plants, Painting was "by ho means het only accomplishment. She show- changed or improved upon is to ed a shoe which she herself had, tell it to his wile. If someone tells you he has onstration by the 33rd Infantry's been ill but doesn't say what the! ""nAe*'r0eH p'auto?n U John !LW jAtitfe Jff S35nd^pUyyedndmeldsJ u.eS lerested without asking a direct question he might not care to answer. Some peoplemaybe too many l-'ke to discuss their illnesses and operationsbut others are reticent about such matters. sor' artillery. Completing the day's activity was a demonstration on use of air-ground communications. Ra- dio contact was maintained with a light aircraft to show its value in reconnaissance and spotting missions. Also included was a visual sig- Latin American posed to have any life of his own. In the name of companionship,nal display by they take over every project their students currently attending class- husbands start. They won't let a,es at the USARCARIB School, man have any thing or any interest.Signal flags and other visual de- that is his alone. I vices were employed to empha- size the importance of using all In a woman's magazine I re- available communications means, cently saw an advertisement for, Observing the demonstration book matches with the husband's was an army chief, two army name in tiny letters and beneath chiefs of staff, four state govern it AND WIFE in bold type. An ors and several heads of techni- alternatlvc to this is a match book cal services. Attending a special with the WIFE'S NAME in bold course for Latin American colo- type "and husband'' in small type neis and higher, the group will below it. |receive diplomas Dec. 9 from 'Maj. Gen. Lionel G. McGirr, Whoever thought those up must commanding general. U.S. ARmy have had the "me too'' wives iniCaribbean, at the Fort Gulick mind. (theater. ha* a gun or her own fishing tackle. All he has to do to have a plan' woven for presentation to Mrs. Cecilia Remon and other exam- ples of weaving, both hand and machine. Included in her dls- "Why don't play were beautifully decorated: along?' ' bateas, and pottery made from I Wives like this seem to feel that si fine, pale, native clay. once a man marries he lsnt' sup- If he starts off to do some errands, she either says "Wait a minute and I'll go with you" or1 you take the kids. Mrs. Gruber Is a native born Panamanian and although shc has studied art in both Mexico and the United States she was proudest of the fact that her en- tire display consisted of article;. made from Panamanian mate- rials, practically all her work Is done with native vegetable and mineral pigments which shc prepares herself and she very seldom has to resort to the use even of imported oil paints. Webcor 3-speaker Fonograf with stereofonic sound! Here's listening vest you will long remember. The Webcor 3-ipeed "MujieaJe" fonogrtf fills tht enure room with unbelievably true- to-life iones. Has special G. E mignetic cartridge, powerful 5 wan amplifier sod ibrt* iupe-Jnsitive ipesker- > | Delivw from 50 to '} 13.000 cycles. SUPERS FREE IN DEC. with EACH MCSli Alt S2C.M in Columbia l" L. t. Record* EASY TERMS AVAILABLE 43th St. No. 3 Tel. 3-1235 Hbw!Doctor's Deodorant Discovery* Jorge Garcia Arosemena, M. D. .ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY SPECIALIST (fractures, bone and joint diseases) OFFICE HOURS: Monday through Friday: 11 l* noon and 2 3 p.m. Saturday................ 19 to 1 p.m. Located at the "Centro Medico" (39th Street and Cuba Avenue) TELS.: ; Office: 3-3812 Res.: 3-1036 grass 20 Change 22 Crimson 24 Southern general 2$ Annoyers 29 Falie gods 33 Tesr 34 Rowing Implement 36 River fSp.) 37 Exist 38 Pastry 39 Siamese dialect 40 Hazard 43 Lighting device 48 Dower property 48 Gibbon 49 Mountain spur 51 Fondles 54 Range 55 Edge 58 Hawsiian precipice 60 Fluff 61 Huge tub 62 Do- es Tardy, \ .. it's always fair weather in Panama's No. 1 Spot... let it rain, let it pour, day or night, OUR weather is air-conditioned! BELLA VISTA ROOM with CLARENCE MARTIN'S ORCHESTRA for dining and dancing nightly - for those who prefer the best! al the CLLB 4:30 with his TRIO EL ARRANQUE Every Friday and Ssturday midnite to 4:30 a.m. Also this SUNDAY for those who celebrate Panama's Independence from Spain Nightcap on-the-house at 4:30 stivnaV Brunch dance 11:30 a.m. 3:30 p.m. Complimentary cocktail, delicious menu. AZCARRAOA AND HIS TRIO and ERIC THE GREAT, the balloon man ana magician, to delight young and old! all for $2.25 When you add a square of SATINA to your Sot starch, you will enjoy those advantage* The iron glides smoothly over the fabrics. The iron doesn't drag or stick, therefor you're through much sooner. Clothes keep cleaner longer because dust and dirt roll off the satina finish. Apart from giving your garments a "liko- new"gloss, SATINA gives them a clean, fresh fragrance. guy SATINA today, end you will nal* f rel*r In y*ur Ironing and b*Hr tanct i* yf lob* in my I dreamed I rode a street car matdenform Allo-ette @/ Bra ''enjoy yourself.. .it's cheaper than you think! Round-the-Clock our CAFE GRILLE and TOCUMEN RESTAURANT and BAR a i enea per nan mmo 4 hirktbj Httcl I've eaugM ihe most-exciting lift in town... my Mo:denlorm Allo-ette!* I'll never transfer because no other bra accentuates and separates so beautifully. You'll be on the right track, too, in a Maidenform bra. Allo-ette, with 2" band, m acetate satin, broadcloth, and nylon taffeta or marquisette. STOPS ODOR A FULL 24 HOURS Summer time, at work or play, mil for extra deodorant cara. Don't risk offending any time! Get full 24-hour protection against underarm odor with MUM. ! Used once daily, fragrant MUM guard against odor bacteria longer artier/ Safe for normal akin and fabrics too! M-3 i the secret! Ejtclusiv deodorant bsstdj originally on doctor's discovery osfltam M-3. which destroys odor-csusinj bacteria... perspira- tion odor cannot even slid. MUM ^51 Mum CREAM DEODORANT ___ (wilt ml 4>y tul n ibjsr) LOOK-IT'S A Cookie Shop fnapoxi tjispy sugar cookie*delicious Almond Uro, snd many mart have their basic makings in this one package-Nestle Cookie Mix! Yes, it's a Cookie Shop to a Box. Ii contains the best ingre- dientsson just add water and a few trusuauags, and you're ready co bake in Im tb*m 10 rmnuiei! Luscious, chocolate-rich kinds too, like Brownies, Toll House*) Cookies and Refrigerator Squares, wbea you add Nestles Saeai-Swaat Ckocoisxa Morsels. Buy both-and get the best Cooaae Taaas in town! 13 feu retej on n erf Cookie Mt* frets. Best to givebest to get a gift of Gorham Sterling! Tlir elegance and ImphVitv of fanmus Gorlixm flah'sr nrr. artfully cnmliined in thi* Wutiful "Trnid"' sterling Sat if oinipnte. as ell a in the matchin i andl<-.tiik>. Dime nsjng v mmpntf height 4T. diameter"9"; caaaffleatacks Wight if". THE DUTY PREB Co/q fo/ilich SILVER CENTER STORE 161 CENTRAl AViNUE. PANAMA PAGE TEN THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DADLE NEWSPAPER i i FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1 1MI " '' !' Wide Open $650 Sprint Headlines Race Program0 Fuerte, Maria Stuardo, Don Cuto, Alormina Tangle In 'C Feature Six apparently well-matched Class C imported thoroughbreds are scheduled to dispute the $650 purse in the featured seven-furlong sprint at the Juan Franco race track tomorrow afternoon. AMBASSADOR OF MUSCLE___Bob Mathias lead Indian girl athletes in calisthenics at New ' DelES iJational Stadium. The two-time Olympic decathlon champion is on a good will tour. Big Games Prove Pass Must Be Adjunct To Running Game i i ... 11. Pays Way From Africa To Try Out With Phillies By AL CARTWRIGHT PHILADELPHIA-(NEA)- The ' best baseball player in all of South Rhodesia wants a tryout with the Phillies. He's willing to pay his own way from Africa. Here's a stranger on another .continent, 6.786 nautical miles a- way, who wants a crack at or- ganized baseball and for some miraculous reason, picks the /Phillies. Remind us to put this in our next novel. It is the popular belief that South Rhodesians do nothing more athletic than enjoy open season on elephants ad sit aroud wait- ing for the next Clark Gable movie location. Now, out of the Wileif not the Belgian Congo unes a first baseman. - The ambitious first sacker has a name as intriguing as the story. .He is Deryk McBai. He also is 22 years old, 6-1 and 180 pounds. "I was voted the outstanding Slayer in my country last year," IcBain wrote Eddie Collins, who, .Ironically, is no longer with the . Philadelphia Nationals because he quit as assistant general manag- er after a fuss with the bouncer, Roy Hamey. "McBain wrote," explains Col- lins, "asking for a trial with the Phillies, that it always was bis ambition. He said he hoped to come over in March. I thanked him for', his interest, explaining that becaose of the distance, tfi club could not be liable for any transportation expenses. "I thought that would be the end of the romance, but received another letter. Deryk McBain had booked his own passage and would arrive in Marchat his own ex- pense." By HARRY GRAYSON r IT DOESNT pay for a football team to plan a post-season trip be. fore the last shot is fired. Michigan, plucking roses, was belted soundly by Ohio State. Na- vy, picking cotton, couldnt' stop Army on the ground. Vanderbilt was tasting sugar, when Tennes- see came from behind and went ahead late in the going. West Vir- ginia was openly shopping for an Invitation when the Mountaineers dropped two in a row. The only team that doesn't get all mixed up whi'c contemplating a bowl bid Is Georgia Tech. The Engineers just wait until every- body else is eliminated and then pack for another New Year's Day trip. They're in a bowl for the fifth straight year, this time the rich Sugar in New Orleans. College football is a highly emo- tional game. When the contest is anything reasonably approaching a match, the underdog has a con- siderable bulge given It by a fight- ing edge. Leading the parade to the start- ing post, and probably in the mu- tuels also, will be the Stud Dou- ble "V*s" steadily climbing Chi- lean herse Fuerte. Alfredo Vas- ques will repleace Guillermo San- ches In the saddle. Sanchez gave Fuerte a bungling ride last week when the mud loving chestnut horse lost to Persian Countess. Nex will be Don Cuto assigned to hustling Hector Ruiz, which turned in a creditable perform- ance to wind up third in the $2,000 added Bomberos Classic on Monday behind the formidable Luis H. Farrugia-trained entry of Mufti and Mossadeq. Don Cuto, a Id Unpredictable Maria Stuardo, a confirmed in-ard-outer, will be idden on this occasion by im- >ressive Chilean newcomer Fer- iando Alvarez. This strong finish- ing mare is always a potential up. setter. Tllama, which folded alter dis- playing unsual early speed last week, could surprise the form players this time. She is in good shape. Cristian Rebolledo, as usual, will be in the Saddle. Raul Gamero will try for a repeat victory aboard classy Be- gonia. Also bothered by weak underpinnings, this stout-hearted racer is dangerous whenever feei- ng right. stretch burner, could get up time here. Speedy Alormina will try for a The program also includes a post-tOrpostwin. If conditions are $600 seven furlong sprint for suitable and his legs hold up Re- Class D imports and a seven fur- ginald Douglas' star wl be bard I long $375 contest for Classes A-B to catch. Jorge Phillips will do,natives. All in all, an interesting the booting o nthe bay son of Roy- afternoon seems In store for turf- al Barge. ites. WILT THE STILTWilt Chamberlain shows the Kansas varsity how to score from outside. The incredible, seven-foot Philadelphia schoolboy scored 42 points leading the freshmen to victory eve the varsity for the first time In Jayhawk history. The Stilt also runs the quarter-mile in fast time.l ' -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------'----------------------------------------1 i ' ----- * * Juan Franco Graded Entries t.T. Horse lit Rasa "I" Jockey Wgt. OCOMMENT ODDS Imported 7 Fat.Pert* $375.00 Peel CIomi 12:45 FIRST RACI OF THI DOUBLI Big games that dosed out the season further demonstrated that "We've written him for more details," says Bob Carpenter. "We w"JLl ^m1 i0U' ^^"thTpsss must be" supplementary Playing Wrtrjto the running game. Army attempted just two pis- We don't want to tell him to come all that distance, and then let him be embarrassed.'' Aw. let him come; Bob, if only for the sake of the sports pages. Look at all the times you've been embarrassed. r> i I UNITED FRUIT COMPANY New Orleans Service Arrive Cristobal Great White Fleet S.8. TAQUE" ..w. '8.8. "MAtNA" . 8.8. "MOBAZAN" . S.t. "SCKAOLA"..... 8.8. ''AGGERSBORG" -. Dec 4 Dec. 8 Dec. 11 8.8. "YAQUE* 8.8. "MORAZAN' - a .. DC. 18 O #*a > FCC. C9 * . ECC. *> O e> a Jmtl. it leVeM) Also Handling Refrigerated and Chilled Cargo New York Service 8.8. "PASISMTNA" 8.8. "OTTA" ____, 8.8. "BERLANGA" . 8.8. "LIMON" ..,., 8.8. "ESPARTA" .. 8.8. "JUNIOR- .... a Arrives Cristobal .......Die. S a a a a D*C. 1 I eea.e.a.eea. . D(f, lZ *.*.ee..eaaeaa>>* aVCC> 1 aoaaaa......DCC. Z6 .............Jaa. 2, l54 1Paques 2 Amln Dldi 3Fangio 4A. Fulmar 6Falrlyable 6Sedur 7Quo Vadls 8Turf Lodge 9Atom O 10-Escndslo li Raw "H-r 1Gonzaga 2Choya Discovery 4Hurlecano 5 Cruzada 8Sinn Feiner 7Dev. Club 8Armador A. Gonzlez 107x Not against F. Alvares llS Dangerous 107 O. Snchez 111 C. Ruis 113 H. Reyes 118 R. Gamero 113 R. Gmez 115 these contender Would pay off here Ran well in last Poor recent efforts Rider only hsndicsp Could score at price Loagshot specialist A. Reyes R. 113xMust, go lower A. Vasques 118 Rates good chance 50-1 3-1 15-1 3-2 10-1 2-1 4-1 10-1 30-1 Iowa And Illinois Top Big Ten, Bui There Are No Soft Ones i--------------.. Fifth of nine college basketball roundups written by famous coaches for NEA Service By FORDDY ANDERSON Michigan Atste Coach EAST LANSING, Mich.(NEA) Iowa and Illinois start as the top teams in a Big Ten Confer- ence which is deeper in good clubs than it has been n several years. Iowa, the defendng champion, has its flrehouse outfit back, head- ed by Carl Cam, a 6-3 hustler who mu*t rank with the nation's best. Illinois, runner-up last sesson, is led by Paul Judson, 6-4, who is a typical big, strong Western Con- . ,' ' Dan Daniel 3-1 ierence player. Imaartaa1 7 'ft. Purse $400.00 Peal Closet 1:15 SECOND RACt OF THE DOUILI R. Gamero 110 Usually moves late A. Yeas 110 Rates good chanco F. Alvares 110 Could score here A. Gomales 107x"Could pay off B. Agulrre 113 Usually close up C. Lino 110 Dangerous this time A. Valdivia 113 Nothing recently ' C. Ruiz 113 Should beat these 4-1 3-1 4-1 5-1 "*t 8-1 10-1 even sesthe first intercepted, the sec- ond incomplete yet decisively defeated Navy, which completed 18 of 29. Ohio SUte didn't have anyone who could throw the ball 10 feet, yet the Buckeyes lambast- ed favored Michigan. The finest college teams of 1955 l Oklahoma, Maryland, Notre Dame and Army, among them emphasized the ground attack. The game of every team that i was successful over period of 'time was predicated on moving the ball on the ground, the es- sence of football. Certainly, a team with an accomplished pass- er and receivers to go with him can get hotter thas blazes for a game or a stretch, but the great- est pitcher can have an off day. When he's cold, his team is dead unless it has a running ame to go with its passing. Ohio SUte and Army this fall were the last to prove that a run- ning game will work without pas- sing. The solid team employs the pass as nothing more than an ad- junct. When the pros are playing for keeps and a championship, you' notel that the number of paases is greatly reduced. Quarterbacks then set them up with the running game and throw well. The money players have time to lid Race "t" Natives 7 'ft. . $275.00 Peel Cletea ONI TWO 1Radical K. Flores 113 DlsUnce handicaps 2Montero R. Gamero 112 Hard to beat here 3Rabiblanco J. Cadogan 115 Back in winning form 4Wlnsaba A. Reyes R. HOx Would psy off again 5Chepanlta G. Montero 112x Rider handicaps 6Filen J. Phillips 115 Dangerous contender 145 4-1 2ven 3-2 10-1 3-1 4-1 4th Race "I" Impertid 7 Fgi.Purtt $175.00 Peel Clam 2:20 QUINJILA 1Paragon . 2Vain Darling 3My Dear 4S. Windsor 5Lord Basur 6(Firenze 7(El Regalo K. Flores 110 J. Phillips 106 M. Ycaza 105 A. Visquez 120 A. Valdivia 118 F. Alvarez 110 G. Snchez 118 Nothing to recommend Poor recent races Could score at price Form indicates Dangerous this time Improving steadily -Will be close up 10-1 10-1 5-1 even 3-2 2-1 2-1 You only have to turn to last season's scramble to see how the Big Ten conducts iU average bas- ketball campaign. Iowa didn't win the title until the last game. This season, Indiana, Minnesota and Michigan SUte could be too tough for anybody. Purdue, North- western and Ohio SUte have real strength. Iowa has Bill Logan, 6-6, Bill Sea berg and Sharm Scheuerman back for theL- final year. To re- place the graduated Deacon Davis, Bucky O'Conner has Bill Schoof and Tom Payne, both 6-6. This is a fast snd well-seasoned team which can Mt from any place. But the murderous home- and-home schedule could alter iu status more than a little. 5rli Race "I" Natives ftt Fat. Purse $275.00 Peal Cle. 2:55 1Don Brigido 2Llboria 3S. Velluda -Iks 5Elenlta M. Ycaza 113 Usually starts last C. Lino 112 Rsn well in last A. Gonzlez 102x Could be upsetter F. Alvarez 110 Hard to beat here B. Agulrre 110 Mu tuels favorite 4-1 3-1 5-1 3-2 even 6th Race "H-r Imported 7 Fa*.Parse $400.00 Peel Clases 3.35 FIRST RACE OF TNI DOUILI 1Vertlcordia 2Encachada 3Vedette 4Doa Beatriz Weekly sailings of twelve passeafer ships to New York, New Orleans, Los Anfeles, Saa Francisco and Seattle. Special round trip fares from Cristobal to New York, Los Angeles, Saa Francisco and Seattle. To New York......................$240.00 To Los Angeles and San Francisco ....$270.00 T Seattle .......................$365.00 TELEPHONES: CHWTOBAL 2121 PANAMA 2-2904 * ' mi'iri j HlBj^Via lieiTC VI1IIS. IU a> , .., practice the execution of psss pat- S^ ". Urns. College coscbes cant' afford to i give passing anywhere near that i much time. That's the principal reason col- lege coaches don't, but another | one is that they don't want their ; young men softened up by being presented with too much chtse yardage. Linemen don't learn much and arent' exactly tough - iened and polished when two men Ia receiver and a decoy go down for a pass. Linemen schooled like that to too great an extent would be in a sorry fix against the dominat to-! lines that Ohio Sute sprung on Michigan and Army on Navy. 8Noveno 7Gris 8Moon Beam 9Carnes 10-Donny Boy A. Ubldla 118 M. Hurley 115 E. Ortega 115 C. Uno 110 F. Alvarez 113 A. Vsquez 118 R Gamero 106 M. Ycaza 115 R. Cristian 113 B. Agulrre 116 Has strong finish Improving slowly Could score again Rates fair chance Shooting this time Bad legs hamper Longshot possibility Last was revealing Should be close up Form indicates 8-1 15-1 3-1 4-1 5-1 4-1 10-1 2-1 4-1 3-2 7frh Race "F" Impart..* 7 Fft. Parse $500.00 Peel Clases 4:05 SICOND RACI OP THI DOUILI If you want Bourbon at its best call for "GREEN RIVER; America's smoothest whisky. Sold at all leading bodegas and bars. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS al- lGreco 2Lanero 3Supper Girl 4Dixlprlncess 5Topocalma 8(Florera 7 (Amat I* Rae "A-l" E. Pita llOx Seeks repeat victory 3-1 J. Jimnez 107x Uaually close up 4-1 A. Ycaza 115 Dangerous this time 3-1 M. Ycaza 105 Has strongest finish 5-1 F. Alvarez 115 Will fight it out 3-2 A. Reyes R. 103x Rates best in mud 2-1 R. Gamero 100 Figures on form too 2-1 1Yoslklto 2PorUl 3Julie 4Ocean SUr 5Tampol 6 Metto 7(Don Grau a(Petite Nati** 7 Pts.P.rM $17500 Peal Crate* 4:40 QUINIILA A. Vsquez 119 Was never better 3-1 G Snchez 118 Shouldn't miss here EVEN A. Gonzlez ,102x Must Improve more 10-1 F. Alvarez 110 Better this week 3-1 B Baeaa 97x Not against these 15-1 M. Ycaza 112 Distance suiU style 4-1 H Ruiz 105 Last doesn't count 3-1 R. Cristian 118 Should be close up 3-1 9 R.c. "O" Impertes 7 ,** $400.00 P.* Cs.se. 5:15 1Postlnovlch 2Lion's Claw 3Polemn 4 Lexden 5Vulcanizado 8C i prods 1 7Jaquimazo V Castillo 118 Serious effort here F Alvares 118 Could score in upset A. Vsquez 113 -Will fight it out M Hurley 113 Disappointed to last J. Jimnez 112x Alwsys dangerous G. Snchez 113 -Hard to best here H. Ruiz 110 Rates fair chance "C" I wee*. __ 7 Ffs.Pstas. $450.00 Peel Cleeee 1-Fuerte A. Vasques 1 2Don Cuto H. Ruis 1 3-Alormlna J. Phillips 108 4Ma. Stuardo F. Alvares 115 5 Tllama R. Cristian 110 8Begonia R. Gamero 113 Jockey should help Racing to top forra Could go all the way Unpredictable racer Could score in upset Rates outside dunce 3-1 10-1 3-1 8-1 3-1 21 4-1 5:40 3-2 2-1 4-1 1-1 5-1 51 Illinois came on with a rush last year, winning five of iu last six. wthe first seven men from that team return. Along with Judson, the Illini have Bui Ridley, 6-5; Bruce Brothers, 8-8; George Bon- Sslle; plus s 6-7 sophomore who is well recommendedTed Caiai- za. Michigan SUte hss Julius Mc- Cov, a southpaw jump shot artist, and Duane PeUrson, 6-7, as the top experienced hands. The Spar- tans expect to use Jack Quiggle, a sophomore, in the guard post left vacant by Al Ferrari's graduation. MinnesoU lost an awful lot when Chuck Meacel and Dick Garmaker finished their creers, but BUI Simonovich, the 6-10. 275- pound center, could cause refl trouble with the experienced Dave Tucker and Gerald Lindsey set ting him up. Branch McCracken's alwavs- rough Indiana team has a fine sophomore in Archie Dees, 1-8, to go with Wslly Crolce, ths 6/5 veteran. The Hoosiers might be the most improved aggregation in the league. Michigan has Ren Kramer, its All-America end and one of the conference's sUndout basketball players. Tom Jorgenson and Jim Barron are around to make him more effective. Ohio State troU out Robin Free- man and hla fabulous jump shot which automatically gives the Buckeyes d even change Fur- man dropped out because of ill- ness last year, but had a 30- point average before doing so. Wisconsin has the bulk of its Usm back, headed by Dick Mill-i er. The Badgers also shoot with fine sophomoresJohn Pampenn, John DeMerit, Glen Borland, Walter Holt and Dave Teller Nothwestern was almost clean- ed out by graduation, with only Dick Mast back. NEXT: Johnny Weed en ef UCLA views the Pacific Cast. Juan Franco Tips By LUIS BOMER Come Jan. 2, the four major Bowls will offer about as tasty a football concoction as the post-season gravy dishes'have presented in their seldom drab histories. Michigan SUte ano UCLA will meet in the Rose Bowl, Mary- land and Oklahoma in the On>nge Bowl, and PltUburgh and Georgia Tech in the Sugar Bowi. In the cotton Bowl, it will be TCU and Mississippi. Uptil last Saturday the Cotton Bowl situation involved Navy. Early in the season. Dallas officials made a spirited bid for Army, and had the Pentagon almost Interested. But when the Cadets were trounced by Michigan and Syracuse, the Cotton Bowl com- mittee shifted to Navy. When the Midshipmen were upset by Army, 14-6, Dallas of- ficials lost no time In grabbing Mississippi, which closed with a 26-0 victory over Mississippi SUte. The Cotton Bowl has twice failed to line up Navy. Last year the Midshipmen voted to go to the Sugar Bowl with Mississippi. As the oldest post-season event, dating back to 1902, in the larges tarena, seating more than 100,000, the Rosa Bowl will ex- cite great attention. . Bufcr the Orange Bowl will be only one offering two-teams with unbeaten records Both Maryland and Oklahoma have emerged unscathed from 10-game schedules, with the Terrapins showing 211 points against 57 for the foe, and the Sooners boast- ing a 3a6-54 edge. " SPARTANS EXCELLENT SUBSTITUTES ' For those who niy be interested in the tricky medium of comparative scores, the Orange Bowl setup invites- two cross- checks. Maryland had a 13-12 escape.in its opener with Mis- souri, which later lost to Oklahoma by 20-0. The Sooners, on the other hand, whipped North Carolina, 13-6, while Maryland mauled the Tar Heels. 25-7. But for the FCC-Big Ten pact which prevents any univer- sity from getting two consecutive Rose Bowl bids, Ohio State would be bracketed with UCLA. The Buckeyes won the Big Ten title. The Pasadena contest hardly will suffer through the sub- stitution of the Spartans for Ohio State. They were beaten only by Michigan, 14-7. UCLA's lone setback came from Maryland, 7-0. Stanford players, who took a 38-14 shellacking- from Michi- gan State an dheld UCLA to 21-13, believe the Spartans will make it three straight for the Westerp Conference. It won wtth Michigan State over UCLA, 28-20, in 1954, and with Ohio SUte over Southern Cai, 20-7, in 1955. . a a i COTTON BOWL STAGGERED Pittsburgh, beaten by Oklahoma, Navy and Miami, gives the Sugar Bowl setup a somewhat bedraggled look from the stand- point of records However, the Panthers will have strong back- ing when they Uckle a Georgia Tech outfit which lost only to Auburn, by two points, and was held even by Tennessee. Tech and Pitt both played Duke and Miami, and the comparisons fa- vor the Yellow Jackets. In the Cotton Bowl, there will be a couple of once-beaten teams, TCU havings lost to Texas A&M, 19-16, while Mississippi was whipped by Kentucky, 24-14. TCU trounced Arkansas, 26-0. but Mississippi had a rugged experience in ouUcoring tht Razorbacks, 17-7. Taking nothing away from MlsSBsippi, the fact remains that the Coi ton Bowl got a staggering blow when Navy failed to live up to the done against Army. 'Joe Williams is ill. Daniel is subbing.) ' 1Amln Did! 2Armada* JMontera 4Sweet Windsor 5Don Brat id a 6Donny Bey 7Florera (*) ePorUl tForeman 16Fuerte Sedur Sinn Feinrr R.biblanr. Lord Basur Liberia Vedette TepoeaJaaa Ocean Star Vulcanizad* Dea Cato m RELEASE Farley Granger, Anthony Qumn and Anne Bancroft in suspenseful crime drama: TODAY at the "CENTRAL" "THE NAKED STREET' i Anthony Quinn. one of Hollywood's most dependable leading men, also happens to be one ef the film capital's youngest old-timers. He made his screen debut an the age ef eight, wearing n bearskin and romping through a papier mache Jungle in the role of an aboriginal moppet. At the moment, the versatile Tony Quinn, is playing the role ef a tough bat complex gangster In "TUB NAKED STREET." A study in sex, morder and violence, "THE NAK- ED STREET" also co-stars Farley Granger, Anne Bancroft and Peter Graves. Advt. I) FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2. 1958 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAM NEWSPAPER PAGE ELEVEN Hurls Chesterfield To Win Smoker Righthander Limits Carta Vieja To Four Hits ** - THE STANDINGS Chesterfield.......... 1 0 1.000 SpurCola............ 0 0 .000 Vi Cart* Vieja.......... 0 1 .000 1 LAST NIGHTS RESULTS (At Olympic Stadium) Chesterfield 5, Carta Vieja 1. TOMORROW NIGHTS GAME (Olympic Stadium) Carta Vieja vs. Spur Cola. Game Time: 7:30. -------------------- By J. J. HARRISON JR. The Panama Pro League which got under way last night at the Olympic Stadium with the Chester- field Smokers heating; the defending champion Car- ta Vieja Yankees 5 to 1, will be idle tonight as the Yankees and the Spur Cola Sodamen get ready for a game tomorrow night. Starting pitcher for tomor- row nights game have not been announced by CV manager Al Kubakl and SC pilot Leon Ke'.l- B>BriUUnt one-hit hnri'ng for six innings by righthander Hnmberto Robinson; effective relief work by southpaw Roes Grimiley, and timely baae knocks bv the Smokers, were the eontriSnitlnr factors In the vctory last night Robinson gave up a total of three bits, while Orlmsley per- mitted one blngle in throe In- nings of relief. They did not al- low a single Yankee to draw a base on balls. The loser used four pitcher, with starter Bill Harris being charged with the loss. Manager Joe Nachlo's boys got off to an early start with three tallie* in the second frame. With one out. Clyde Parrls walked and went to second on Joe TumlnelU's ringle to left. Bobhv preaeott. the next batter, hit the first pitch down the left field line for a double. scoring Pt's and sending TumlnelU to tb'~\ /?tor Robinson was out on strikes. Manito Bernard hit a liner to right that Bddie Phll- llns, playinv deep, tried to sna for a hoestrin cat*h. Th b*'l drooped in safely, for a ingle and TumlnelU snd Prescott cme in to score. Frank Austin file* to "enter to retire the Ide. The Smokers nicked op two unearned run 1 the Pfth. Feraad was ret'red short to f"st. for the first at. "'tin Ht" a *hm grounde' to third that nlckens scoooed ont of the dirt, hot M throw to flr^t waa hlh and Austin was safe. Bill Stewart's ingle to left moved Austin to second, and Frsnk tagged n and got to third aftor Billy Queen filed den to rlcrht. Austin and Qe#n brth came hom on David Rob- erts' two-base smash n*inst th center field fence. Parrl wnt out. second to first, to end the lnr'n". W'th th- Smoke** h*** 1 to . man up, greeted Robinson with u doable to center and Shants scored soon after en Dan Porter's single to right That was all for Robinson who was yanked for Orlmsley. It wy also the end of the Yan- kee scoring for the night, as Orlmsley put down the threat and held the losers scoreless the rest of the way. Smokers' Spree Chesterfield Bernard. 3b . Austin, u .... Queen, c ..., Stewart, cf ., Roberts, lb . Parrl*. 3b . TumlnelU, If Prescott, rf . Robinson, p , Orlmalay, p . Totals AB R . 5 0 S s 4 4 3 4 3 3 1 37 Bartirome. lb Shants, 3b ... Porter, If .... Dickens, 3b .. Phillips, rf ... Wllhelm. s ,. Kropf, cf..... Dabek. c ..... Patton, c ..... Harris, p ..... Hoekenbury, p Unke, p ...... Olamp ___ Stryska, p .... Total Carta Vieja 4 4 4 4 4 3 S 2 0 0 3 0 1 0 Po 3 3 S 0 13 3 3 1 0 0 10 37 II 13 0 3 3 2 3 3 S 0 0 0 0 0 0 ALBROOK'S JIM WILLIAMS, new Panama service light middleweight king, will com- pete in the Antilles Dec. 10 during the Caribbean Com- mand matches with the Puer- to Rlcan service winners. The 10-man Panama team Is slat- ed to leave next Wednesday by plane. Williams belted defend- ing champion Billy Priest- of Kobbe In a second-round TKO for the title last week. CUN CLUB NOTES 31 1 4 77 12 Chesterfield 030 030 000.1 10 0 Carta Vieja 000 000 100 14 3 Summary: RBI': Prescott, Bernard 3, Roberts 3. Porter. Earned runs: Chesterfield 3, Carta Vieja, 1. Left on bases: Oarta Vieja 4, Chesterfield 8. Two base hits: Prescott. Rob- ert*. Austin. Shants. Wild pitch- es: Hockenburv. Struckout by: Robinson 3. Orlmsley 3. By: Harris l, Hoekenbury 1. Unke 1. Base on balls off: Harris 1. Hoekenbury 1, Unke 1. pitchers' record: Harris 3 runs. 5 hits In 3 in nines; Hoekenbury 2 runs, 3 hits in 3 innings: Robinson 1 run 3 hit* In 6 Innings. (Pitched to 3 batters In 7th): Unke 0 run*. 1 hit In 2 innings. Prrors: Carta Viaja (Harria. Dieren*) LP: Harris (0-1 > wf: RrbInon (1-0). Doubleplays: Shants. Wll- hclm, Bartirome. U m p i r es: Thornton, Hinds. Karamafrtts, William*. Time of game: 3:39. BASEBALL Pitcher Hal Jeffcoat has de- ckled to report to the Cincinna- ti Redlegs. although he earlier planned" to quit baseball. Jeff- coat gays he has a moral respon lbility to (to through with the trade arranged by his old elub, the Chicago cub. CRISTOBAL There v/M be a registered Trap-shoot held at th Cristo- bal Oun Club on Sunday morn- ing, Dec. 4. All shooters are In- vited to participate, especially members of the other gun club on the isthmus. These registered trap-shoots are regular event* at the club on the first Sunday of each month, shooters who pay the registration fee and are mem- bers, in good standing. In the Canal Zone Trapshooting Asso- ciation and the Amateur Trap- shooting Association of Vanda- lia. Ohio, may have their birds registered. Shooting will start at 10:46 a.m. Windy Sellers had a heydey last Wednesday afternoon at the weeklv shoot. Wlndv shot a trine of 35 target at Skeet and 35 targets at 16-yard Trap with- out a mUs. Joe Kuete-r and Ralph Dugas. also, chalked im- perfect soore* In a -string of Skeet. Joe mad his 35 targets with the little 410 gauge scatter- gun. Comolete scores for Wednes- day follow: SKEET (15 target) Wlndv Sellers .......... U Joe Kueter (410) ... w... 3 Ralph Dunas............35 Ari S"tton (410)........ 21 w. Johnston (*10) ...... 1 W. W. Rowland ......... 1* Joe Cook................16 TRAP (SI targets, l-y*\> Wlndv Seller ......... 33 Joe Cook ............... ts R. Casanova ........... 73 BUI Cronln ............ 3. Art Button ............. 3fl Tommy Sellers, jr...... w W. W. Rowland ........ 14 Lucky Strike Champs Begin Spring Training The 1055 Pacific Twilight League champion Locky Strike team under the direction of Han- seer Larry Jones and Coach Webb Hearae have opened their "spring training" session for the defense of their Twilight league title. Workout* are slated for the Bal- boa Statium on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4:10 p.m. and on Saturday afternoons at 1:30 p.m. Wet grounds snd rainy weather have held the practice sessions this week to running and throw- ing drills but next week with the Stadium diamond in playable shape the Lucky Strikers will go through more extensive practice. The ehamp have Jones, Hearne, Gus Koatk, Billy De La Mater, Bud Huldsulst and Bob Ridge returning from last year" quad along with Jerry Hounan and Bob Rowley, who played with the American Legion team laat year, while Dave SuUlvan, Bill Sullivan, Bill Herbert, E. Frankhouser, Jim Dunbah, Don Lscey, Dave Delleher, Bill Pretto and Bill Carun, Jr. are recent additions to the Lucky Strike rce- The American Legion team with Red'' Yielding and Ken Cotanaa at the helm and the Balboa High School under Coach Paul Karat and the Canal Zone Junior Col- lege under Coach Stu Brown complete the four team lea g u e with the 1956 sesson to get under- with the in season to |t under- way with a doubleheader on Jan. 3._________________ Santa Cruz Sports By GILBERTO THORNE Santa Crug athletes returned from their four-day J5*Jg Chltre bearing much goodwill and fellowehlp. The group left Gamboa early on Thursday. Transportation into the inte- rior war furnished by Encomien das, 6.A. The ride was a plea ant one all the way In. Drivers, jacinto Serrano and Ariattdes Herrera, pointed out and de- scribed those places of histori- cal and geographical Impor- tance. The reception committee In Chltre consisted of the rep- resentatives of the Encomien- das and of the Athletic Commit- tee of chltre who greeted us en- thusiastically. Our activities In Chltre cen- tered around basketball, softball and yollevball games. On Thurs- day, after securing sleeping quarter, exhibition game of volleyball (boy vs. girls) and basketball (mixed teams of boys and girls) were played before cheerrnc residents of the city Including several professors of physical education who mede favorable comments on th playing. On Friday we visited factories, stores and Paraue Union. We made a trio to Los Santos. In Temblte, Los Pantos, we eneae- ed In horseback riding. Softball and vnllevball filled up th schedule for Fridpv. Dolores Peterkin. M e 1 v lna Morris and Rose Allen won 75- meter race on Saturday. Dlara Carew won the 100 meter anta Cruz girls' exhibition. Santa Cruz eirls nlsved softball with the bovs of Ch'tre's Secondary School and lost 14-10. nta Cm boys lost to Chltre' Vice- roy team In a seven-Inning thrli'er which en*d 3 3. At night basketball with Denortlvo Herrera finished 35-33 with He- rrera leadme. We left Chltre on Sundav *- midst mch sinelng. laughter and music. We hare made m*ny friend snd ho^e to be ah to ro back r*al soon and say, "hal- lo again." Lath* Amalean lnt*rser>el Vol- leyball Learn* Standings Dodgers To Play 7 Regular Games In Jersey City In '56 We Leet ret Pralso........* 1 .* anta Crus .... 1 1 500 La Poca......1 1 *" Rainbow City .... 0 1 000 Oh* Santa Crus......x Paraso.........3 Rainbow City ... 0 0 1 1 1 1.000 /-7 .500 .000 Ganes te be Played Nov. 30. Paraso at Rainbow Cltv: snta nru at La Poca. Dec. 7. Rainbow city at Santa Crui: La Boca at Paraso. Dec. 14. La Boca at Rainbow City; Santa Crux at Paraso. Umpires Meetinq Panama Canal Zeae aseball empires Aster* tinn Eft heM t aeetol aeethig to- night at 1H la the Balbe* B.O.T.r. bulMtasf. ACE CRACKS HALL Durham. N.C. (NEA) Ace' *a*ker wts to be officially uaber-l ,1 into footballs Hall ef Fsnse at the Duke-Nortb Carolina Game in Durham Re *tTed lor the Blue Devil* in 1934-35-3, SAVING FACERinsy Noceco turns his face little too late to keep it away from the punishing punches of Carmine Fiore. Rut Fiore had landed plenty before and after this. Both welter- weights, they met at New York's St. Nicholas Arena. /. /. hahM&on A. PRO LEAGUE fans who pray- ed and kept their fingers cross- ed all day yesterday were re- warded with perfect baseball weather last night The sun shone brightly most of the day as It baked out the rain-soaked Olympic Stadium pronnds. The result waa a good field last night, and a larg crowd (estimated at 8,500) to- take In opener between the Chesterfield Smokers and the Carta Vieja Yankee. The Smok- ers won 5 to 1. PRESIDENT Ricardo (Dleky> Arias waa en hand to throw oat the first ball and get things started at 7:41. Yankee catcher Ray Dabek, who canght the presidential nlteh made Dicky a present ef the ball. THE FAN8 who attended the opener were greatly impressed with Smoker newcomers catch- er Billy Queen and centerflelder Bin Stewart Queen and Stewart showed thev will have to be reckoned with at the plate espe- cially. Queen had one bad moment last night. In the bottom of the second Yankee third baseman Gipo Dickens lofted a high in- field fly almost directly over home plate. Tbe Smoker catcher sot un- der the bell and appeared to be me kin* an easy catch but the ball dropped between his hands and Dickens was credited with a single the first off winning hurier Humberto Roblnaon. Robbv did not allow another base hit until the seventh, and durlne that time many specta- tors kept griplne over Queen's spoiling" of Hobby's "no-hit- ter." SMOKER MANAGER Joe Na- chio said after the game he took out Robinson although he hao given up only three hits and one run, because he felt the lanky pitching ace had done enough good work for the first night of the season. "I had two other guys. Oso- rie (Alberto) ani Grimaiey (Rosa) warming np and I waa taking no chances ef Humber- to overdoing himself er as get- ting Into serios trouble," de- clared Joe. Grimaiey took ever and finished the gome. around first base. The fancy fielding youngster had the fans nging hi praises all night with his spectacular Bay. _____ PRESIDENT ARIAS, who is also the owner of the 8pur Cola club, had a long confab with his Kneral manager Jose Jaen and l field manager Leon Reli- man, during the game. Kellman, who would not re- veal detalla of tbe conference, hinted it had something to do with th expected arrival of a pitcher and an outfielder to complete his roster. THE YANKEES have moved out of the Hotel Colombia where they stayed Tuesday night after arriving from Miami. They are now at th Hotel Roosevelt. NACHIO, KDBSkI and Joe TumlnelU found two defects in the stadium's Infield setup yes- terday morning as they went through an inspection tour to- gether. It waa found that home Sato was oat ef line < point- g toe much toward third ) and the distance be- YANKEE SKIPPER Al Kubskl took his teamVloss gracefully. "We have ni alibis." said the CV pilot. "The Smokers had the pitching and got the runs We Were poor on the mound and at the plate." "But," he continued with a wink, "One swallow does not make a summer. Remember, there are 30 games left to go." Asked about the hard shot off Frank Austin's bat that losing pitcher Bill Harria stopped wtn bis meat hand in the first in- ning, Kubskl sold he used poor Judgment in keeping Bill in when the hand stiffened some- what after Harris completed th play by throwing out Frank at first. "I examined the hand and Bill aid it was okay." said Kub- skl. "But I should hare known better than to make him contin- ue pitching since It was discol- ored and appeared to be getting puffy." TONY BARTIROME. tbe Yankee fh-stoacker who I e*H> ef the new faces In the CV baten this year, was a marvel tween the plate and the pitch- ers' mound was M feet when the correct measure m e n t should be 60 feet, six Inches. Oroundskeepers were contact- ed and convinced of the errors. It la believed the situations have been remedied. MEMBERS of the press had to take In the gam in one of th field boxes. A new press and ra- dio section Is still under con- struction and should oe ready by next week. Sports Briefs Veteran righthander Virgil Trucks ha* returned to Detroit where he pitched two no-hit- ters In 1953. in return, the Ti- gers sent outfielder John But- ba" Phillips to the Chicago White Sox. TURF A New York newspaper say all racing Interests owned by the late William Woodward Jun- ior will be sold at auction "with- in 90 days." The New York Dai- ly Mirror says the Woodward family will sell 40 horses includ- ing "Nashua," the 1955 horse of the year. COLUMBUS, Dec. 3 (UP) They can call baseball's world champions "The Jersey City Dodgers" for seven game next season. The board of commissioners of Jersey City. New Jersey has a- greed to let the Brooklyn Dodg- ers play seven regular season games and one exhibition In Jersey City. Mayor Bernard Berry say Roosevelt Stadiumwith a seat- ing; capacity of about 30,000 wllj be put into major league condition. The agreement also permits the Dodgers to play seven league games and one exhibi- tion In 1957 and 195. And the Dodgers have an option to re- new the agreement through 1M. The first regular season gome at Jersey City will be the after- noon of April IB against Phila- delphia, six other game win be played at night against teams to be announced later. In the minor league meetings at Columbus, Ohio, owners vot- ed yesterday to keep the pres- ent bonus rule In effect. That means all youngsters who receive more than $4,000 extra for signing a contract must remain with the major, league team at least two yearsJ There had been several propos- als to change, or do away, with the bonus rule. The major leagues will act on th question next week in their meetings at Chicago. But they cannot change the legislation because baseball rules require both the major and minor leagues agree on such rules. The MUwaakee Braveswbe achieved great success by moving their franch's* from Beatonare attempting tbe same thing an a smaller scale. The Braves have moved their American Association fran- chise from Telede, where it was losing money, to WIeblta. Kansas The Braves had hoped to move the franchise to Miami, but other owner* vetoed that, feeling it would cause great scheduling difficulties. The move to Wichita Is the third franchise change In the Asso- ciation in two years. Last year Denver and Omaha came in, re- placing Kansas City and Colum- bus. The Kansas city Athletics have completed their schedule for 1950. It calls for 44 night games at home, the first on A- prll 33rd against the Detroit Ti- gers. The home schedule opens April 30, and closed September 30. The A'* have scheduled two single gamesone in the morning and one In the after- noonfor Memorial Day, and will have the same arrange- ment on Labor Day. Elsewhere in baseball, the Detroit Tigers have signed Johnny Pesky to manage their Durham farm club In the Class- B Carolina League. The former major league *tar was a player- coach at Denver last season. The signing of Pe*ky mean* that ev- ery farm elub in the Detroit sys- tem will have a new manager In 1950. Stone Broke MILWAUKEE, Dee. 3 (UP) Sheldon Rogers, 35, a for- mer bookie, told federal au- thorities investigating his tax return* that lijes bets da not make a bookie a rich man. Be testified in federal dis- trict court here that at the time he was placing the >*rg* bet*, be waa living ft) a 17 a Week hotel room. "I didn't have any aaeney, I wo* really broke," ne* sain. Sports Shorts FOOTBALL NEW YORK, Dec. 3 (UP) The Panther* of Pittsburgh will travel to the Sugar Bowl with the official title of being the number one football team in the Bast. Pitt received 11 first place vote* In the final poll of a 34- man committee to edge out Na- vy for the Lambert Trophy. Na- vy, after leading all season, wa upset by Army on Saturday and received only eight votes- Army finished third, Yale fourth and Colgate fifth. Bob Finney Sets Course Mark In 33rd Pikes Peak Hill Climb Clipping 13.5 seconds off the previous record, Bob Finney of Colorado Springs, Colorado, es- tablished a new course mark of 14 minutes, 37.3 seconds to win the 33rd annual Pike* Peak Hill Climb over the tortuous, twist- ing 12.5-mlIe climb to the s u m- m.t of the mountain. Disregarding the established precedent of using racing tires sons of Jerry Unser of A 1 b ur querque, New Mexico, and nepk* ews of Louis "The Old Man Of The Mountain" Unser, an eight- time winner of the race who fin- ished this year in eleventh posi- tion with an elapsed time of 15:- 34.4. The Unser "kids" sued win- ter traction tires of stock Town A Country design. Keith Andres, 1954 winner, fla- for the hazardous climb, Finney shed sixth in 15:03.0. selected stock Firestone psssen- Following the racing cars, Don ger car tuneless tires to provide iTindall of Portland, Oregon, led tbe needed traction and safety over the dry, slick course o short chute* and switchback turn.' that begins st an altitude of 9.401. feet and rises 4,708 feet to the 14,110 foot summit. Loren Roberts of Denver, Colo- rado, also broke the previous record of 14:39.7, established by Keith Andrews in 1954, by beat- ing the mountain in 14:39,5, to win second-place money. Roberts preferred the coventional Groov- ed Ascot racig tires. Third and fourth places were won by Louis J. Unser (14:48.2) and Jerry Unser. Jr. (14:50.6), a host of motorcycle racers o- the course to win first place 18:08.6. This marked the sec- i..J year that motorcyclists shar- ed the glory with race car dria- ers. Both winning drivers won on stock Firestone motorcycle tires In 1954, BUI Melr of San Francis- co, California, won this event in the record time of 15:34.3. m The win this year marks the 36th consecutive time that win- ning race car drivers have driv- en to victory in the famed Pikes Pesk Hill Climb on Firestone tires. Georgia Tech Ignores Protest By Racial Segregation Group By UNITED PRESS Georgia Tech will Ignore a protest by a racial segregation group and go ahead with its Sugar Bowl date against Pitts- burgh. The segregation group asked the Engineers to refuse to play If Pitt uses Its Negro fullback, Bobby Orier. "Our boys voted to play In the Sugar Bowl," say a spokesman for Georgia Tech, "and we will not break our contract." If Orier playsand Coach Johnny Mlchelosen of Pitt Indi- cates he mayOrier will be the first Negro to play In the Sugar Bowl game. Rival coaches for tbe Rose Bowl game are exchanging mov- ies. Coach Red Sanders of U.CLJt.) has asked to see films showing how Michigan beat Rose Bowl- bound Michigan State Sanders also has asked for pictures of the Michigan state-Wisconsin game .. .which the Spartans won. The exchange of pictures is permitted under a new agree- ment permitting bowl bound coaches of the Big 10 and Paci- fic Coast Conferences to see film of two games played by their rivals. Coach Duffv Dau- gherty of Michigan State has requested pictures of UC.L.A.'s victories over Stanford and Southern California. In pro football. Coach George Halas says his Chicago Bears will need a little luck to win tne i National League's Western Con- ference title. The Bears currently are see- end to the Le* Angele* Rasas ...and the Rasa* can clinch the crown by beating Balti- more and Green Bay la their last two games. Tbe Bears al- so have twe games lefta- gainst Detroit and Philadel- phia. "We're still in the race," says Halas, "but I don't think th* chances of our tying the Ram* are very good." Halas says he said very little to his olayers about the surprise 53-14 licking the Chicago Car- dinals handed the Bears last Sunday. That loss dropped th# Bears to second place. "I Jus showed the players the pie, tures," says Halas, "that made them unhappy enough." Todov Encanto .35 .20 e In Cinemascope! Robert Ryan. In "HOUSE OF BAMBOO" Plus: Molra Shearer, in "Man Who Loved Redheads" Today WEAL .25 .15 "TRADER TOM OF TBE CHINA SEAS" Chapters 5 and 6 "BEHIND CITY LIGHTS" "ARIZONA MANHUNT" Oa.. Nlbrtv 1:00 ROULBTTB 31 (BLACKJACK) CRAP TABLE POKER CHUCK-A-LUCK SLOT MACHINES BAR SERVICE BASEBALL & SOFTBALL EQUIPMENT 74c ?on;t'/tt 74< Aereas Me street Hotel "B Pananas** * BASEBALL TEAMS and PLAYERS We cordially invite you to aee the "Rawlinga" and "Louiville Bluffer" new 1i6 Hue. Hundreds of gloves, mitt, bat, ball, etc., to elect from. "ABERNATHYS SPORTING GOODS" "Where Friends Meet Friend*** Tei S-t4 -Open very night until f :M .m. until Csttiatnaas 9 '' ant: 1 *' DEC a 1955 i^rf) \ \ ^mm Read story on page 11 AN INDEPENDENT .jf|/THfe \fg^. PAHY NEWSPAPER fauatna American "Let the people know the truth and the country is $afe" Abraham Lincoln. 31st YEAR PANAMA, B. P., FRIDAY. DECEMBER 2, 1*55 FIVE CENT TAKING COVER In foxholes are members of "C" company, 33rd Infantry regiment, as two umpires make sure protective measures are maintained during the explosion of a simulated atomic bomb at Empire range. The "A Bomb" is being used in company training problems to test the efficiency of Infantry troops in destroying the enemy through the aid of the nuclear weapons. (U. 8. Army Photo) * * A-Blasts To Go Off Near Locks Traman Memoirs Receive High Praise From London Critics Gainza Paz, Argentine Government Confer On Return Of La Prensa BUENOS AIRES, Argentina,jer of ta Prensa until Its seixure Dec. 2 (OP) Dr. Alberto Gain- xa Paz and government authori- ties cunfei today on final legal technicalities prior to the formal ceremonies returning the newspa- per La Prensa to his control Gainza Paz, editor and publlsh- LONDON, Dec. 2 (UP) For- "Twenty seconds to ground mer President Harrv Truman's zero." A simulated atomic bomb.memoirs were greeted by- critics is detonated on a small hill west with unanimous praise on their of Miradores Locks. A white publication here today, flash of light and a company of infantry soldiers are rocked in One critic said Truman was th*ir foxholes. ;"one of the least ordinary little This scene will be repeated men who ever lived." nine times within the next two months as increased emphasis ofi Without exception, the reviews atomic warfare has found its in London morning and evening way Into the annual rifle ccmpa- newspapers praised both, the ny training tests of the 33rd In-;book. "The Yean of Decision" fantry regiment. and Truman himself. The simulated A-burst, which Is delivered by friendly forces, will! The Influential Times said that Of used to test the efficiency of "more than anything else, it is infantry troops to engage an ene-a self-portrait. No one can read mv and destroy him with the it without understanding better rid of a nuclear weapon, than before how it was that the Troops who do not take necessa- modest, unassuming man who r protective precautions during had been kept in the Washington t- p..-osins will be declared background could, on Roosevelt's casualties by the test umpires, death, step forward without n addition to the atomic phase | warning to carry the burden of of the exercise, the companies being president of the world's will be tested on offensive andimogt powerful country in the defeasive tactics, troop leading vfars wnen ^e load was heavi- procedures and chemical warfare.) ^ In charge of the 36-hour prob- "Every chapter In this book Is alive because it reveals hte two South Korean Radio Threatens War Against Jap Fishers TOKYO, Dec. 2 (UP) The Republic of Korei is ready to war on Japan to halt Japanese violations of the so-called Rhee "peace" line in the waters off South Korea, Radio Seoul said to- day in its first Japanese-language broadcast. The broadcast beamed at Japan criticized orders by the Japanese maritime safety board. to its coast guard vessels to continue to protect Japanese fishing boats in the area of the restricted waters set up by President Syngman Rhee. It said the "shoot and sink'' or- der by the R.O.K. joint chiefs of staff to South Korean patrol ves- sels last month was necessary to halt violations of the "p e a c e" line and to keep smugglers and Communist spies from Korean waters. "It would be tragic to use force," the commentator, a 21- year-old Korean woman, a a i d. "We do not want war but if Ja- pan forces us to do so, we will not refrain from It." The 15-minute program is to be a regular feature of the gov- ernment-operated Seoul r a dio. The' radio already broadcasts English and Chinese language programs. Gamboans Elect Jenner President Of Civic Council Citizens of Gamboa elected H. F. Jenner to head their civic council for the coming year. Marie Connor and Everett Kim- mel were re-elected to serve three year terms as councilmen. Addle Ellis. Jane Snodgrass, Sa- rttS. Rowley' Robert Duncan and qualities in Mr. Truman which i0"*, Catron won one-year terms struck Sir Winston Churchill when|*s alternates. Councilmen Ruth they first met at Potsdamhis{ton, Elizabeth Beakley, Betty gay, precise, sparkling manner;"alone and Robert Dunn, cur- and obvious power of decision.' renUv, serving unfinished terms, complete the 12 member council by the Peron regime in 1951, ar- rived In Buenos Aires last night by plane from New York. Several thousand perseas, in- cluding former members f the La Prensa staff aad newsboys, were at the airport to welcome kirn. Dr. Manuel V. Ordonez, La Prensa lawyer, said that Gainza Pas would not enter the La Pren- sa building until after the meet- ing today with the treasury so- licitor. The remaining legal de- talla are expected to be ironed out In short order. > The time for the formal cer^ monies restoring La Prensa to the Pax family is expected to be set at the conference. The plane carrying Gainza Paz home after his years in politic- al exile arrived at Ezeiza airport at 9:06 p.m.. some 90 minutes late. The waiting thousands, maay waving Argentine flap, cheer- ed enthasiasticaUy wheat Gain- sa Pas aad hit party emerged, ifore government house and chant- Gainza Pax was visibly movedied: "We want Eva Peron's body by the reception. Meanwhile police broke up sep- arate Communist and Peronist for a Christian burial.'' urn. The demonstrators, mostly demonstrations in downtown Bus-,women, were believed to have nos Aires last night. |been inspired by leaders of the The Red demonstration was!women's branch of the Peronista aimed against visiting U. 8. as-'Party, now dissolved by official sistant secretary of state Henry' deiree. F. Holland. The Peronista were agitating for I Eva Peron died of cancer In what they called a "Christian bu- 1952. Her body was "enshrined" rial" for the late Eva Peron. In the headquarters of the Gener- Groups of Communists dlstrl- al Confederation of Labor and buted leflets bearing a facsimile is still believed t obe there. The CGT and its headquarters of the U.S. dollar bill and saying: Holland cannot thing of doing here wnat he did in Guatemala.' It was an apparent reference to persistent Communist propa- ganda that Holland and the U.S. State Department were lastra- mental in the revolt tha over- threw the pro-Communist Gua- temalan government of Jacobo Arbeas. Some 500 persons, meantime, massed In the Plaza Mayo be- The conservative Daily Mall Jenner will take office Monday lam ia Capt. Joseph B. Flores, assistant S-3 of the 33rd Infantry regiment Norway In Crip Of Nationwide OSLO Norwav Dec 2 iirP) Attlee, British prime minister for:" new council, which will then Norway' faced almost complete I * * " "* ?" P* dect vke-presldent, a acreta- SmSh of Its eTonomv 3sy " " *" "" ta ^ST "? *""'? Two important items of Interest i the agenda for this meeting are the lighting and decorating of the townsite's Christmas tree and th annual community Christ- mas carol sing. compared Truman with Clement evening at 7:30 presiding over written his memoirs. rt s'trfke ** to "* * re*pec*,, , .-. -red it, second week with no ?!?rm*ce8I Attlee o had.on the agenda I new settlement in sight. nxnerts predicted a drastic slowdown of industrial production, a food shortage and stepped .nn i'lness ue to frostbite If the strike didn't end soon. It has al- ready gone on six days and cost the nation millions of dollars in lost man-hours. BALBOA TIDES SATURDAY, DCCEMMR 3 6:05 :m. M2 pjm 12:22 ,m r"~t TODAY LUX GREAT RELEASE! HIDDEN DEEP WITHIN EVERY WOMAN IS A SLEEPING TIGER... WHEN AROUSED IT CAN TURN A SAINT INTO A SINNER!... 1 t I I I f I I I I I___ | SMITH KNOX I SHOWS: ~ ~ '.Shews: 3:99 4:3! | Mc--------39c. I g.-tt 1:39 pja. are now under government con- trol. Full Army Support Pledged To Zone Blood Bank Drive s. AR :ed Full support of the TJ. my Caribbean has been In the present drive to estab a Canal Zone blood bank being conducted jointly by the Red Cross And the Health Bureau. In a letter to Carl J. Browne, chairman of the Canal Zone chapter of the Red Cross, Brig. Gen. W. E. Laidlaw, chief of staff of USARCARIB, said that the drive is being widely publi- cized among Array personnel. He exprressed the desire to assist in all respects and assured the Red Cross chairman of full support. Tha halfway mark has -been reached in the donor list, Browne announced Thursday. Ap- Eroximately 700 pledge cards ave been received and most of these have already been process- ed by the volunteer work. AT TOCUMENRep John J. Allen CONGRESSMEN MEET (right) of California port yesterday S?7S-#l2JitJ*r^!i lt S* ^^ temporary duty at the 15th Naval District Headquarters. Allen arrived aboard a Pan Amer- $"1 AArw>ys lnau5ui*1 *"Kht from San Francisco. Cal., which took 13 hours and 48 minutes to cover the distance of 2170 miles. f California is greeted on his arrival at Tocumen air- erday by Congressman W. S. Milliard, also of Califor- is at present on active temporary duty at the 15th Dulles Confident Chiang Will Not Use UN. Veto ~ LAST-MIMJTE DETAILS regarding the loading of medical supplies to be airlifted to flooded sections of Colombia were discussed this morning by Brig. Gen. W. C. Morse (left), his co-pilot Capt. W. D. Small, Jr. (In aircraft) and Lt. Col. B. T. Lively shortly before the plane took off from Albrook this morning. This Is the first relief shipment from the U. 8. Armed Forces In the Caribbean Command to stricken Colombia, and followed a request for assistance from the Colombia govern- ment. A disaster survey team was sent to Barranquilla Wednes- day morning, and the airlift today is the result of the survey teams first report. The medical supplies were made available by the D8 Army Caribbean from stocks on hand in the Zone, and will be paid for by the American Red Cross. (USAF Photo) More than 1,500 donor are be- ing sought to make the blood bank fully operative. With the establishment of the Canal Zone blood bank the pres- ent charge of $15.00 a pint re- quired by hospitals can be eli- minated. Volunteer blood donors may en- tor, their names on the donor list by mailing a donor card, copies of which have been widely dis- tributed, or by calling the Red Cross offices in Ancon or Cristo- bal. Governor Refuses To Join Legion With Color Bar Young Albrook Composer Scores Hit With Sparkling New Musical Comedy If "Al Legretto," the bouncy of long-stemmed beauties were three-act musical comedy which bit Albrook Theater last night is an indication of what mili- tary personnel can whip up in their spare time, let's have more of these concoctions In the fu- ture. The light-hearted review wrlt- i ten and directed by A/IC James Maxwell captured its opening night audience yesterday with singable melodies, lithesome gals and the real flavor of an almost professional production. Of all the musicals ever pre- sented on the Isthmus within the last decade. Al Lea-reft* scored high, thanks to the 776th Air Force Band'a smooth inter- pretation of composer Maxwell's tunes, snappy costuming super- vised by Hannah Clark, and ty- pical show-time choreography, courtesy of Jean Muscanera. Despite a few lags in continui- ty caused mainly by poor pac- tnt on the part of comedy team Mario Cadenza and Johann 8 Gluts (1st Lt. jack RlRtio aad author Maxwell), the musical was a refreshing change for Isthmian theater-goers Particularly outstanding was Rose Marie Trifone's skillful harmonising with Rlggto in a little number called "Italian Jack and Jill" which had dafl- te professional touches. The chorus an eye-Ulling Une especially winning in a cowboy take-off called "Saddle Sore and Lonesome," and the wind- up production of "The Jack and Jill That pleased the Publie" had all the earmarks of a Broadway finale. Leading man A/IC George Kekuna played Al Legretto with verve and greatly enhanced such songa as "That Chord's Not Lost It's Gone," and "I Didn't Have A Melody." Duets between Al and Ann were beautifully paced, particularly "Time Has No Meaning," and "Your Love Is Mine." The Air Forte la to be com- mended for this frothy bit of entertainment being offered a- gain tonight and tomoirow night at the Albrook Theater for the benefit of lta "Operation Christmas" fund. Curtain time is 8 p.m., and the entire family ia in for a treat. H.D. ST. PAUL, Minn., Dec. 2 (UP) Gov orville L. Freeman of Minnesota has refused to Join the American Legion's fun-mak- ing subsidiary, The 40 and 8, un- til lt drops it* color bar. The Democratic governor an- nounced he had written to John G. Alexander, grand chef de gare of the organization, that he would become a member "when the racial exclusion clause has been eliminated.'' Freeman had been scheduled to be initiated into The 40 and 8 last Nov. 5. But he cancelled the plans when he learned that the organization had reaffirmed its restriction to white male membershin at Its national con- vention in M*fmV Freeman la a World War II veteran and a Marine major. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Dec 2 (UP).Secretary of State John Foster Dulles was reported con- fident- today that Nationalist China will not block admission of 13 free nations to the United Nations-by refusing to admit Communist Outer. Mongolia. A highly responsible U.S. dip- lomatic source in Washington said Dulles was convinced Gen- eralissimo Chiang Kai-shek ulti- mately will yield to two personal pleas sent him by President Eis- enhower. Nationalist'China has threat- ened to use its all-powerful veto in the Security Council to bar Otter Mongolia because of fears Its admission might ultimately lead to a U.N. seat for Chiang's hated enemy, Red China. Outer Mongolia is one of five Communist nations under con- sideration for admission in an 18-nation package plan. Russia has warned lt will turn down the entire package plan if Outer Mongolia is excluded. Only last Tuesday, Chinese foreign minister Dr. T. S. Tslang announced that Nationalist Chi- na would veto admission of Out- er Mongolia. But the source close to Dulles aald Tslang obviously did not know at that time about the contents of Mr. Elsenhower's second message to Chiang Kai- sneic, which reportedly said the Generalissimo might hurt hi* own posttloa The United States, which has been Natlonallat China's main defender against Red China's de- mand for the Chinese U.N. seat, also opposes Outer Mongolia's admission but has announced it will abstain rather than use the veto which it despises. Thus, It was believed that Na- tionalist China reluctantly will follow the course taken by the United states rather than en- danger its own position. Khrushchev Blasts Al Yanks, Frenchmen, Russian Architects RANGOON, Burma, Dec. 2 (UP) Communist Party Boss Nikita Khrushchev said today some Americans and Frenchmen are stupid. That applies also to assorted newspapermen and British views on Burmese culture and history. The pudgy Russian was in top critical form today as he also attacked colonialism and Rus- sian architects "who waste pub- lic money." About the only thing the visiting Red chief approved of was a Burmese shrine. With Premier Nikolai Bulga- nin, who was more silent than usual, Khrushchev toured the Shwe Dagon Pagoda, the great- est Buddhist shrine in the world. He admired the architecture of the shrine, and then turned to his Burmese hosts and said "In our country we criticize archi- tects when they waste public money." He referred to Alexander Vla- aov former chief architect in reserve' Moscow who was dismissed from his posts while touring America. WlfnBILLHICKOK mc!< nmMWM l.ll t riw SaVs HiW Sol.. H %* c*b*rt t* mrite Micktk J.f WiIWm, k tttp ia far rt- tuiH. Bv Rim Winterbotham and Ralph Lane PIMP .75 .40 I:3t, SiM, 5:99, 7:09, 9:90 p.m. M-G-M'i UNIQUE ROMANTIC ADVENTURE ROBERT TAYLOR ELEANOR PARKER VKTM HcLACLEJI HSS TAMIiril mwm-mmm |
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| MILLISECOND | CLASS.METHOD | MESSAGE |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Application State validated or built |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Navigation Object created from URI query string |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.display_item | Retrieving item or group information |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | Retrieving hierarchy information |
| 0 | sobekcm_assistant.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | Found item aggregation on local cache |
| 0 | item_aggregation_builder.get_item_aggregation | Found 'all' item aggregation in cache |
| 0 | system.web.ui.page.page_load (ufdc.page_load) | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_style_references | Adding style references to HTML |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
| 179 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |