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LT NEWftPAm
an pn>gpiypiy^f|||^^ Panama American "Let the people know the truth and the country it safe" Abraham Lincoln. -rfin?u^7fo$6t& TWENTY-SIXTH YEAR PANAMA, R. F TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1151 FIVE CENTS U.S. 8th Army All Along 38th Parallel Price Gouging At Home, Abroad Sends Defense Costs Skyrocketing By Lyle C. Wilson WASHINGTON, Mar. 27 (UP) Inflated prices at home and price gouging by foreign producers of raw mat- erials are skyrocketing United States defense costs out of 59 A World War II gun which cost $115,000 costs $250 000 now Service uniform prices have doubled. Army shoes have gone from $4.15 to $7.85 a pair.____________ Economic stabilization officials want a showdown on the basic antl-lnflatlon policy to avoid breaking the nation's and the taxpayer's back. They have already recommend- ed the removal of tariffs on zinc, wool copper and lead a pro- posal sure to draw Congressional fire. They are about to demand that the State Department gets tough with foreign produce^ of raw materials who are gouging Uni- ted States taxpayers. They cite a Malayan tin mine which paid close to 100 per cent dividends last year, largely at the expense of the United States gov- ernment which was then stock- piling tin at exorbitant prices. The United States buys 187 ne- cessary raw materials from for- eign countries. The stabilization men want the State Department, Congress, or somebody to get tough about assuring that the United States Is quoted a reason- able price for what the defense effort compels her to buy. The worldwide wool shortage has boosted prices within a year from almost 45 cents a pound to hearty J4. Australia is a great wool-ex- porter and Is getting a big share of this Inflated charge against consumers. Stabilizers would crack down on Australia, for ex- ample^ They would propose a fair woo. price, with a fair allocation of Australia's wool production guar- anteed to the United States. If Australia balked there would be Instant economic reprisals, be- ginning with the ahutofi of Uni- ted States shipments of sulphur, cotton and cotton llnters to Aus- tralia. ... It Is believed such action would warp Australia's economy ins- tantly and compel a fair wool a- greement If It oould not other- wise be obtained. Billions of dollars have been paid out by the United States for the general welfare of the demo- (Continued on Page 6, Col. t) Ancon Movie Hall Cutting Shows To 3 Nights A Week The Ancon Theater will 'oper- ate only on Tuesdays, Fridays nd Sundays starting April I. As a result of public requests, the show schedule* after that time will Include a Sunday inati- nee at 2:30 and the first shows on Tuesdays, Fridays and Sun- days starting at 5:15 p.m. The second and last show on Tuesday, Friday and Sunday nights will start at about 7:15 p.m. but the exact hour for the last shows will be announced In newspaper advertisements. ROTC Graduates Will Be Ordered Into Active Duty ROTC students graduated from colleges and universities and commissioned in the ORC this spring will be ordered Into active military service during July, Au- gust and September, says a De- partment of the Army announce- ment received this week by the U.S. Army Caribbean. It Is estimated that about 10,- 000 students will be affected Dy the program. Those ordered to active service will Include ORC members com- missioned from ROTC who have been deferred from Selective Service under an ROTC agree- ment. It will include, also, ORC members not so deferred who have less than two years' prior active service as officers, warrant officers or enlisted men. Thse students are free to vol- unteer immediately after gradua- tion If they wish. It is planned that the newly commissioned officers will be or- dered to their basic branch serv- ice schools for about 90 days on entering active service. Those who have completed two years or more of prior active ser- vice, and have not executed an ROTC deferment, will not be or- dered to active service unless they volunteer, says the an- nouncement. Mass Tomorrow At St. Mary's For Anna Dockery A funeral Mass will be held at 9 a.m. tomorrow at St. Mary's Church in Balboa for Mrs. Anna Dockery, who died suddenly Mar. 17 in Valley Stream, Long Island. Burial will follow at Corozal Cem- etery. A resident of the Canal Zone ior 41 years, she left last year to make her home In the United States. She was the widow o Harry Dockery, long time Pana- ma Canal employe and one of the best-known of Isthmian baseball umpires. Her body was returned to tile Isthmus yesterday on the SS Panama for burial here. Active pallbearers for the serv- ices will be: Peter and Jack Cor- rigan, John and Vincent Ridge, Roger Williams, Harry Cody, Howard Clarke, Jr., and Waiter Bennett. THE MAIL BOX San Marino, Cal. Mar. 23, 1951. Pan-American Newspaper Panama City Panama, Mrs. McClung and I have just received a clipping; from yonr paper of Tuesday regarding the finding of some human bones at Code del Norte and we do appre- ciate very much yonr item and the fact that yon still have as in your mind as weU as our problem. It was on Good Friday and six years ago that we lost our son and these have been long years I can assure you and if we can find some evidence thru an investigation that may be made by the Army It will greatly aid us. Would It be possible for you to learn the names of the three men who located these remains and any In- formation that may be obtained thru the District Attor- ney at Colon and we wonder why the finders did not report their find to the U. S. Army. We have made contact with Lt. Gen. Willis D. Crlt- tenberger by phone and he will check with Army Head- quarters In Panama, therefore with you good people on the ground we may be able to get the best and most de- pendable facts. We wish to thank you for your human and kind in- terest in our behalf and also for the gracious article in yaur newspaper regarding our search for our son. May God protect you and yours. Sincerely, MARY I. and GLENN F. McCLUNG. Hope Seen UMT May Halt Draft In 18 Months WASHINGTON, Mar. 27 (UP) Chairman Carl Vlnson, D Ga., of the House Armed Ser- vices Committee, said today the Army should be able to halt the draft wltnin 18 months and set up its Universal Military Train- ing program. Barring a new International emergency, he said this even- tually should make It possible to reduce the size ol the standing military force at a saving of $60 a month for every man taken off active duty. This is the difference in cost between keeping a man on ac- tive service and in an active-re- serve unit. Vlnson was confident that Congress will approve some kind of a UMT program. The Senate already has passed a bill to ex- tend the Draft Law and set up UMT later. Under both bills, men would serve six months on active duty and then go into reserve units for about six years. Men would start their UMT training at 18 under the Senate bill. The House bill fixes the bottom age for both the draft and UMT at 18 V2. Under present law. men 19 through 25 axe subject to induc- tion for 21 months. In addition to lowering the Induction age, the House bill would extend the draft to 26 months. The Senate measure would fix the term of service at 24 months. The army now is only about 100.000 men short of its present goal of 1,500,000 men and has cut back its April draft call from 80,000 to 40,000 men. Nei- ther the Navy nor Air Force has taken any draftees. They get all their manpower from voluntary enlistments. Panama Is 11th Republic to Ratify Charter For OAS The Republic of Panam con- firmed today that it has deposit- ed Its Instrument of ratification of the charter of the Organiza- tion of American States. Panam thus became the 11th American Republic to deposit such an Instrument of ratifica- tion. Guillermo Endara. Panama's Charge d'Affaires In Washington, presented the instrument to Dr. Alberto Lleras, secretary general of the OAS. In Washington, the Pan-Amer- ican Union said that although the charter is provisional in ef- fect, three more countries be- sides Panam must accede to It before It can be formally adopt- ed. The other nations which have formally acceded to the charter, a product of the 1948 Inter-Amer- ican Conference at Bogot, Co- lombia, are: Bolivia, Brazil, Cos- ta Rica, the Dominican Repub- lic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Hon- duras Mexico, Nicaragua and Pa- raguay. .Raffle Winner To Get Rolls Royce Tomorrow Night A Rolls Royce, raffled by Amer- ican Legion Post No. 1, will be of- ficially presented tomorrow night to Alberto Ow, of 9 East 44th Street in Panam City. He was the holder of the winning ticket in the raffle based on the Na- tional Lottery drawing of last Sunday. The presentation will be made at the American Legion Hall in Balboa at 7:30 p.m. Meanwhile the Legion Post re- ported that It has donated, as pledged. $2,000 to the Panam Red Cross. Ow could not be reached by telephone this noon for comment on his luck. Acheson Quilines 3-Point Program For Hemisphere WASHINGTON, Mar. 27 (UP) Secretary of State Dean Acheson, addressing the first regular session of the Conference of Foreign Ministers of the American Repub- lics, called on all the Americas to join in a three point program of defense against Communism, based on an equitable distribution of sacrifices. Acheson termed Communist imperialism "the great- est threat to the free nations of the world." He said "it calls for action now." He warned that the United States could not be expected to carry the entire burden of Con- tinental defense. "Together we must seek ways of avoiding un- controlled and unfair distribu- tion pf the sacrifices that our peoples face." Acheson asked the Foreign Mi- nisters to: 1) Agree on measures that would enable the inter-American Defense Board to prepare "at the earliest possible time the coor- dinated defense of this hemi- sphere; 2) Seek ways and means of Im- proving internal security meas- ures In each country to halt the use of subversion and other In- direct forms of aggression by the Communist movement. "It Is equally Important that Individual nations take steps to strengthen their own democratic institu- tions." 3t Marshall the economic forces of the Continent "through- out our interlocking economic community." Acheson agreed with the Latin American delegates who In pre- conference. statements said "the economic problems before us per-' vade our whole effort." He called on American states to continue their support of the United Nations and the collective security system which that world organization is attempting to es- tablish. He urged the adoption of a Declaration of Principles "so the world at large and our own peo- ples shall not mistake the great- ness of our purpose." His reference to the protection of "basic democratic institutions" was the conference's first direct reference to civil liberties, which Include freedom of the press. De- legates who have followed the La Prensa case carefully noted his words. The United States has -quietly circulated among the Latin dele- gates copies of three United States resolutions. One on eco- nomic problems asserts that each government should be willing to impose price controls, allocate raw materials with priority for defense needs, and coordinate transport facilities. The United States would offer Important technical assistance to other American republics to step up the production of food- stuffs and raw materials, Improve diets south of the border, combat disease and generally Improve living standards. The idea of Imposing price controls on Items traded among the 21 republics offer staggering difficulties and may cause the sharpest difficulties at the con- ference. In Moscow Pravda nd Izves- tla reported that President Har- ry 8. Truman's opening speech to the conference "tried to Jus- tify his policy of preparation for a new war by representing the Soviet's peace loving policy as a source of international tension." Mac Arthur Will Clear In Future With Washington WASHINGTON, Mar. 27, (UP) Friction between Washington and General Douglas Mac Arthur Is being cleared up by Important behind the scenes negotiations, reliable sources here report. MacArthur is being instructed to clear with Washington all fu- ture statements touching on dl- | plomacy as It relates to the Ko- i rean fighting. The Joint Chiefs of Staff are the liason between Washington the White House, Pentagon and State Department--r-and MacAr- thur. The friction between Washing- ton and MacArthur stemmed from his weekend offer to meet the Chinese Communist com- mander In the field. The statement prompted ques- tions by this country's allies con- cerning United States' policies. (British and French Press com- ment on MacArthur's statement is carried inside.) _________________ 'Revenooers' Close Cristobal Office: No Business! The Internal revenue office In Cristobal, which has been open on Mondays for several weeks, will be closed until further no- tice. Deputy Collector J. A. Phillips reported this morning -that only two or three queries have been received on the Atlantic Side for the past two weeks. Justness on the Pacific 8ide, however, con- tinued to be heavy. For the time being, Phillips is operating the revenue office alone. An additional new deputy collector is expected here In the near future._____________ Magazines Needed For Red Cross Magazines of all kinds, but par- ticularly men's magazines, are urgently needed for use by armed services personnel at mllitaiy outposts, it was announced today at Canal Zone Red Cross head- quarters. Red Cross personnel will be glad to call for the magazines If donors will telephone Balboa 3889 or Cristobal 1871. If desired, de- liveries of magazines may be made directly to the Chapter of- fices at Building 0610-B, Galllard Highway, Ancon, or 1029 Roose- velt Avenue, New Cristobal. What Makes Jack Tick ? Medics Mystified By Human Clock Some 200 doctors can't find out what makes Jack Husband tick. The 20-year-old Oklahoma City College student is perfectly healthy.. .but he ticks.. Just like a clock. For 11 years and perhaps all his life, Jack has been ticking. Doctor after doctor examined him...all heard the tick...but couldn't explain it. Jack got his latest physical ex- amination from Army doctors. They heard the tick tod. But it's not going to keep Jack out of the service. In fact, he shouldn't have any trouble keeping In step when he marches because he's a human metronome. A friend first heard Jack tick when he was nine years old. Jack says he never said anything about It because he thought ev- erybody ticks. The metallic tick comes from his head, but medics can't seem to find the origin or the exact location. It can be heard from four inches away... friends say It spunds Just like a clock. Jack says the noise stops when he goes up In an airplane, and the silence nearly drives him It's' the silence that Jack's worried about. He wants to be a Navy pilot. But he's wondering how he 11 be able to stand the silence when he goes up in a plane and he does- n't tick anymore. FBI Head Says Gambling Life Of U.S. Crime WASHINGTON Mar. 27 (UP) FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover si id today that organized gam- bling is tne llfeblood of national crime and could be wiped out in 8 hours If local communities fir- ed dishonest officials and en- forced the law "without fear or favor." Hoover Joined Attorney Gener- al J. Howard McGrath before the Senate Crime Committee in em- phasizing that the rackets are oaslcally a local problem. But they urged the committee to con- tinue Its investigations and call- ed for stronger federal laws a- gainst hoodlums. They were backed by New York Judge Samuel S. Lelbowltz who charged that gamblers pay graft- ing policemen In the nation's largest city some $25,000,000 a year. He added that such condi- tions could not exist without the "tacit approval" of the mayor. Lelbowltz, famed criminal law- yer and a Kings County (Brook- lyn) Judge for the past 10 years, said one Brooklyn bookmaker alone > Harry Gross paid out $1,000,000 a year in graft to dis- honest policemen. Meanwhile In New York for- mer mayor William O'Dwyer's crony. James J. Moran, wa In- dicted on three counts of perjury today, charged with lying to Sen- ate crime Investigators about his relations with numbers racket king Louis Weber. A Federal Grand Jury also In- dicted Weber on one perjury count for denying he knew Mo- ran, who has been accused of taking $55,000 In "gifts" for poli- tical favors when O'Dwyer was mayor. U.S. Attorney Irving H. Saypol, who presented the perjury cases to the grand Jury indicated he would probe deeper into the de- nials by O'Dwyer and Moran that they received $10,000 and $55,000 respectively from John Crane, president of the-Unlformed Fire- men's Association. O'Dwyer once more denied Crane's testimony that he hand- ed the former mayor $10,000 in cash for a campaign contribu- tion on the porch of Grade Man- sion in October, 1949. In a telegram to Senate Crime Committee chairman, 8en. Estes Kefauver, D., Tenn., O'Dwyer said Crane had made "a vicious He... to save his own skin." The Ambassador to Mexico said he could not let this "un- substantiated and unsupported charge" destroy his "reputation for honesty that is the dearest possession of my life." UnluckTRolTPuis Egg-Hunt Tumbler In Hospital Bed Clowning to amuse the chil- dren gathered for an Easter- egg hunt at Fort Clayton last week end proved costly for Cp1. William Grlgas, of the 82nd Ma- chine Records Unit, US Army Caribbean, Fort Amador. He ended in the hospital with a dislocated cervical vertebra. Corporal Grlgas, teamed with Cpl. George Kinback, of Head- quarters, 65th AAA Proup, Clay- ton, was putting on a tumb- ling exhibition, to the delight of the children, when the ac- cident occurred the result of an unlucky fall such as tumb- lers have taken since tumbling was Invented. On the seriously ill list, though better and pronounced "out of danger" he is reported facing possibly three to six months' hospitallzation. The exact ex- tent of the damage caused by the injury, physicians said Mon- day morning, can be determined only by time. GIVE! Due to its long experience in assisting victims of dis- aster, the Red Cross b acti- vely participating in the na- tional Civil Defense program. Records reveal that in the past $ years the Red Cross has conducted more than 4,- 00 disaster operations and has spent nearly S134.000.00i. n domestic disaster relief. You can help In this year's stepped-up training and pre- paredness plans by contribat- lng to the 1931 Red Cross Fund. South Koreans Over In Force TOKYO, Mar. 27 (UP) United States 8th Army forces were generally on the 38th parallel or within artil- lery range of it all along the 140 mile Korean front today. South Korean troops on the East Coast drove into North Korea in force. Americans decimated one Chinese regiment and so- lated part of another in the Uijongbu area, on the main highway 10 miles north of Seoul. CLU-MTC Finds Congressmen Sympathetic' A "sympathetic reception" to presentation of the case against a retroactive Income tax and of other employe problems was giv- en to representatives of the Cen- tral Labor Union-Metal Trades Council last night by four visit- ing Congressmen, labor men said today. A group of seven labor repre- sentatives, headed by CLU-MTC President W. K. Greene met for two hours last night at the Hotel Tlvoll with the following Con- gressmen :Rep. Jere Cooper, ranking member of the House Ways and Means Committee; Rep. Carl T. Curtis, Rep., Neb., also a Ways and Means Commit- teeman; Rep. John Beamer of Indiana and Rep. T. M. Machro- wicz of Michigan. The labor men presented ques- tions of Income tax, with empha- sis on the retroactive clause, leave, wages and general work- ing conditions, as well as the rate of turnover, in the Canal organ- ization. They were given the Impres- sion, a labor spokesman said, that the Congressmen do not favor the retroactive tax. Rep. Cooper was quoted as say- ing that he had been working on this question in Washington with CLU-MTC legislative representa- tive Walter Wagner and with a representative of the AFL, and that he was sympathetic toward a measure to kill the retroactive feature. Cooper told the group, the spokesman said, that the com- mittee has been occupied with the current tax bill. Public hear- ings on this have been complet- ed and when the committee again meets after the Easter recess, members will meet with Treasury Secretary John Snyder. They will then work up the material ob- tained from the hearings. In connection with the leave Question, Curtis, who had intro- uced legislation to cut federal leave to 15 days, assured the lo- cal labor men that his bill was Intended as an economy measure but that he did not intend It to apply to overseas employes. Members of the labor group hope to meet with other members of the Congressional party be- fore their departure Friday. US Embassy Office In BA Gets 'Painted' BUENOS ADES. Mar. 27 (UP) Unknown men threw two con- tainers full of pitch against the Boston Bank building here last night. The United States Em- bassy offices are on the top two floors of the building. United States troops began mopping up operations in the Seoul area. In some areas the United Na- tions troops moved their line for- ward without firing a shot. When a Chinese regiment, part of the 77th Division of the 26'h Armv Corps, tried to fight a rear- guard action six miles south of the border United States troops killed or wounded 350 Reds in a sharp clash. Daylong rain slowed the ad- vance of United Nations divisions on the central front. One Yank division occupied a dominant ridge after a "tough engagement with mud." Observers reported defensive Red positions are being built a- bout two miles north of the par- allel. Clearing skies allowed allied warplanes to prowl over the Western and Central fronts de- molishing gun positions, pillbox- es, vehicles and tanks opposing friendly units. Tactical aircraft hit at the Communists' rear, destroying or damaging eight tunnels between Sarlwon and Kaesong on the Reds' main supply route to the western front. Planes of the 5th Air Force flew 750 of a total 970 sortie* mounted during the day. About 330 5th Air Force sorties were armed reconnaissance while a- bout 250 were In direct support cf ground troops. Seventeen Superfortresses flew through rain-filled skies from Okinawa to drop 140 tons of bombs by radar on Pyongyang and Hamhung marshalling yards. The South Koreans' advance across the parallel Is along the same highway they followed lo within 55 jnlles of the Siberla.i border last winter. Spokesmen with the 8th Army scoffed at reports that the South Koreans are defying the United NaUons high command with their northward plunge. In London the British Foreign Office confirmed that a new de- claration on Korean policy by the United Nations is being consid- ered both in London and the United 8tates. Iranian Oil Trouble Spot Grows Worse TEHERAN. Mar. 27 (UP) All communications between Tehe- ran and the strike-bound oil- fields of Khuzistan province are cut off. The Iranian government is reported to have sent troops info the trouble zone. Government officials here said the strike against the British- controlled A n g 1 o-Iranlan OH Company Is Communist inspired. British Ambassador asked Pre- mier Hussein Ala this morning to assure protection for British workers In the oilfields. The main trouble spot is be- lieved to be Abadan. largest oil Installation In the world, on the Persian Gulf near the Iraqi bor- der. The rich Kuwait and Iraqi oil- fields are in the same area. To Err's Inhuman! So you want to be a Control House Operator? You figure you can throw an average of 416 switches per day, answer 12 telephones and perform the other multiple operations which are part of the Job? The most natural action in the world is putting a fork in one's mouth. Try it 486 times a day. Then try it using a barber's razor instead of a fork. It is a matter of record that one of the highest officials of the Canal, in making- a decision with respect to an em- Rlove, once said, "a Control House Operator must be in- illihle." Maybe he didn't know he was dealing with human beingsand that to err is human. But there Is no room for error in this joba job which under 50 men in the entire world are competent to fiU. Read the special feature in tomorrow's THE PANAMA AMERICAN about the man who manipulates the brain of the robot that runs the Panam Canal. PAGE TWO THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER TUESDAY, MARCH tf, 1951 Cargo and FreightShips and PlanesArrivals and Departures Shipping & AirLine News i UNITED FRUIT COMPANY Great White Fleet Nw Orleans Service Arrive* Cristbal 8.8. Leven Bend .............................Mmreh 35 8.S. Chiriqui ...................................April t 8.8. Fidor Knot ...............................April 9 S.S. Chiriqui ...................................AprU 16 (lUndlinc Rcfrlirrated Chilled and General Careo) Arrives New York Freight Service________________Cristbal S. Cape Avinof .............................March 25 S.S. Cape Cod ..................................April S.S. Cape Cumberland .........................AprU 8 S.S. Cape Ann .................................April 22 Freight Sailings Weekly from Havana to Crlitobal Weakly Sailing* to .New York Loa Anieles, San Francisco, Seattle Occasional Sailings te New Orleans and Mobile. (The Steamers In this service are limited to twelve ease angers) Frequent Freight Sailings from Cristobal to West Coast Central America Sails Cristbal to New Orleans via Cristbal Puerto Barrios, Guatemala_______________Midnight S.S. Chiriqui (Passenger Service Only)........AprU 2 S.S. Chiriqui ...................................April 16 TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL 2121 PANAMA 2-2804 COLON 20 The Pacific Steam Navigation Company INCORPORATED BY ROVAL. CHARTER ISM Royal Mall tines lid. FAST FREIHT AND PASSF.NUER SERVICES BETWEEN EUROPE AND WEST COASTS OF NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA_______ Fo COLOMBIA. ECUADOR. PERU AND CHILE M.V. "SALINAS" (omits Chile I...................April 6th M.V. "REINA PEL PACIFICO"*....................May 2nd TO UNITED KINGDOM VIA CARTAGENA, KINGSTON, HAVANA, NASSAU, BERMUDA, CORUA, SANTANDER and LA PALLICE M.V. "REINA DEL PACIFICO".....................May 26th ro UNITED KINGDOM DIREC1 S.8. "TALCA" ..................................March 30th M.V. "LORIGA" ..................................April 1st ROYAL MAIL LINES LTD../HOLLAND AMERICA LINE TO NORTH PACIFIC PORTS M.V. "LOCH AVON" .............................April 23rd M.V. "LOCH GARTH"...........................April 28th TO UK/CONTINENT SB. "DALERDYK" ...............................April 13th SB. "BERBICE" ................................April 28th Accepting passengers In First, Cabin and Third Class. Superior accommodation available for oassengers. AU Sailings Subject to Change Without Notice. PACIFIC STEAM NAV CO.. Cristobal Tel. 1654 1656 FORD COMPANY INC.. Panam Tel. S-1Z57/1258: Balboa 1905 WATERMAN LINE S/S WAR HAWK Sailing For SAN FRANCISCO about MARCH 29th All rooms with private bath. Apply PAYNE & WARDLAW BALBOA Pacific Terminal Bldg. Phone 2/1258 CRISTOBAL Masonic Temple Bid*. Phone 3/2161 Pressing Machine OBIZONTAJL 1 Depicted machine Tllbi modero 13 M our. tain crests 14 Animosity 15 Clamp 14 Crime i II Article 19 Diminutive of Edward 20 Liner | 22 Alleged force S Symbol fot i nickel 24 Preposition 26 Deer track 25 Stripe 31 Carry icon.. 82 Honey-makei JJYal* 34 Executor JS Blackthorn 3? Efficient 15 Notary public (ab < IS Rupee* < ab., 40 New Zealand native fort 42 Repeat 48 Symbol (or thoroo 50 Beverage made with mall S3 Muse of poetry 51 Scottish boeprold 94UITCD M Willows M TranquU IS Sacred song VRBTfCAL I Horse's neck hair* Df7 3 Fiber knots 4 Great (ab i 5 Fot (ear thai Domestic sUv ' Mohammedan priest 8 Garden implement 9 Chemical suffix 10 Louse egg 11 Reverberate 12 Thatch 17 Babyloninn deity 20 Location 21 Pilfei 23 Idea 25 Wealthy men 26 Sainte* (ab I 27 Sprawl Answer to Previous Puzzle UMiallll IU.1BU'_<: K-JI II-] ?uiLiEJiaasiaui sipim II* Jli m k:][ in MOTHER kilJBlPJIdi--JsjM[li IrVMM [ 4[ iMiiiyi'iliiirjMMi i -: Staggei Sdame Negroid Challenge Roof finial Moccasins Wing Year between 12 and 20 Sea eagle Son of Nut 46 On top 47 Hurl 48 Duration of office 49 Promontory 51 Make a mistake 53 Unit of reluctance 55 Eye (Scot.) 57 Medical suffix 1 r- 5- I r- | ^ p o ii r- 1 w u ... r a ii dsf^^^S 1 Lo M ll W\ u i .... M u r 9 ti a ir *M r K/A w r 1 V r r" 1 n ; i J Locks Reopening Gatun Locks resumed normal operations at 7 ajn. today, after completion of the overhaul. Be- ginning today the locks revert to the normal operating schedule of 7 a.m to 11 p.m., with both sides In use. Yesterday afternoon ships were lined up waiting for the north- bound transit and the first in line did not enter the locks until a- bout 8:30 p.m. Pacific Side pilots were being taken off at Gatun and relieved by their Atlantic Side colleagues, who shuttled the northbound vessels the remainder of the way down to Limon Bay. The lock overhaul started Jan. 8 and was completed In record time. cently a Panama Canal pilot, made the Canal transit again yesterday but not, this time as a pilot. He went through as chief mate on the Pacific Atlantic Steamship Line's Elmer A. 8per- ry, from Portland to New York. London Visitor Donald Cameron, local mana- ger for British Overseas Airways left early Sunday by plane for London. He was accompanied by Mrs. Cameron and their young son. They will be away from the Isthmus about 10 days. During Cameron's absence, he Is being relieved by Roland Rose- vear. / Easter Season Even the waterfront felt the Easter touch last week. Through the Canal were two ships with Easter names: the Nazarene and the Mount of Olives. The Nazarene, an Italian ves- sel, northbound Friday from Iqulque to Alexandria, Panama Agencies local agents. The 7,176-ton Mount of Olives, Fernle, local agents, was south- bound a few days earlier. She was destined to Yawata, Japan, from Norfolk and via Honolulu wltn a cargo of oal. Girl Scout Leader Christine Miller of Columbus, Indiana, chairman of the Olrl Scout International Committee, is due here next Sunday for a nine - day visit in the course of a tour of five Latin countries. Miss Miller, according to Pan American Airways, has been In San Juan, Puerto Rico, for the meeting of a special committee bn Girl Scouting In the Western Hemisphere and left last Friday for Caracas. She is scheduled to remain in Panama from Apr. 1-9, when she leaves for Guatemala City. On the present trip, she Is dis- cussing with local Scout leaders plans for the meeting of Western Hemisphere Rangers and Scouts in San Juan July 2-16. Former PUot Charles A. Savlckl. untu re- Individuals Told Grades In Test For Sreno-Typist Results of the Civil Service ex- amination for stenographers and typist positions in the Canal Zone held here Mar. 3 at Balboa have been mailed to individual appli- cants, It was announced at Bal- boa Heights. It is expected that the results of the same examination, given Mar. 10 at Cristobal, will be sent to those applicants in the near future. The announcement under which these examinations were held is a continuous open an- nouncement and applicants for the next examination for steno- graphic-typist positions in the Canal Zone will continue to be accepted. Applicants who receive a rat- ing of Ineligible on the examina- tion which have already been held may apply again immedi- ately to take the next examina- tion which wUl be given when a sufficient number of applicants have been received. A total of 208 persons took the examination on both sides of the Isthmus, 117 of whom were ex- amined at Balboa and 91 at Cris- tobal. As a result of the Pacific side examination for which Indi- vidual ratings have been mailed to contestants. 45 participants, or 38 per cent of the total number taking the examination, were rated eligible for employment. World's mosr famous Location 2000 modern room bothradioMwicsk spotless comfort t sous st! NEW YORK IN TIMS SHIM M IJUft CUT llri* Iws. Str MilHi 1st., nanism Braniff Visitors > Marjorle Goldlng and Barba- den Borden, both of Branlff's Kansas City office left during the weekend for their home office after spending several days in Panama. They have been on a combined business and pleasure trip over Branlff's South Ameri- can routes. Miss Goldlng handles booking of all International passengers out of the Kansas city office. CIO Suggests ' 3-Point Plan On Income Tax WASHINGTON, Mar. 27 As- suming that from $16 to $17 bil- lion must be raised in new tax revenue to put the defense econ- omy on a pay-as-you-go basis, the CIO In Its current "Econo- mic Outlook" suggests that this amount should come from three main sources: 1. "Raising individual income taxes an average of four per cent, but with no increase for Indivi- duals making less than $4,000 a year. 2. "Closing of loopholes in the present law. 8. "A substantial Increase in corporation normal and excess preflts taxes." Only two criteria should be ap- plied to new tax proposals, the Outlook says: ability to pay, and equality of sacrifice. "To increase the already heavy tax load on low-income families simply because there are so many of them and because payroll and excise taxes are so easy to collect would be a tragic miscarriage of justice," the publication de- clares. On individual income tax rates, the Outlook proposes leaving the present $600 ex- emption unchanged (since this "actually b\iys much less food, clothing and shelter than the $5,000 exemption allowed dur- ing the last war"). It also sug- gests leaving tax rates where they are for the large group making 34.900 m year or less. In- creasing the next bracket by 2 per cent. Jumping rates for the group earning from $5,090 to $10,090 by four per cent and ap- plying a higher percentage In- crease to incomes above $10,090 "to make up for losses result- ing from the lower rate in the lower brackets." The total raised by this meth- od would be $3'/2 to $4 billion, and it would be far more equit- able than the straight across- the-boards 4 per cent proposed by Treasury Secretary Snyder. Closing exlstlnr loopholes in the tax structure should raise from $4i 2 to $5 billion, the Out- look says. Specifically, the CIO suggests: doing away with the split-Income provision; increasing the capital gains tax to 50 per cent: taxing E resent) y exempt state and local onds; forbidding corporations to sell stocks to their executives be- low market price; withholding taxes due on dividends and In- terest paid out by corporations: tightening up on estate and Ift taxes; doing away with special benefits to oil. gas and mineral companies; working out some equitable system of taxing insu- rance companies. Most important gain In this group, the Outlook says, would come from abolishing the split- income Drovlslon. "A married Kerson with two dependents must ave an income of $4,000 before he receives $1 of tax benefit from this provision," the publication says. "On the other hand.. .while Secretary Snyder's proposed new income tax rate would be one point above the World War II peak, the split-Income provision would actually reduce tax pay- ments in the higher brackets to levels substantlsllv below, the World War II peak." On corporation taxes, the Outlook comments: "Certainly, there is no moral justification for profiteering during this na- tional emergency. Nor is there any economic Justification for profits at these levels." The suggestion: increase the straight corporate tax rate to 55 per cent; increase the excess profits tax rate to 85 per cent; change the basis for determin- ing what constitutes "excess profits." "Instead of allowing a corpora- tion to pick Its best three years from 1946 to 1949, as at present, to determine its excess profits tax base, the entire foinvyear pe- riod should be averaged," the Outlook says. Snyder has Sug- gested simply increasing the nor- mal corporate tax. Snyder's pro- posal would raise an additional $3 billion from this source: the CIO approach would net $8'j to $9 billion. Finally, the Outlook strongly opposes Snyder's Idea of raising $3 billion through additional ex- cise taxes. "Excise taxes and sales taxes are particularly unfair to low and middle income families." the Outlook explains. "They are taxes on consumption. They are borne in inverse proposition to incomethe higher the income, the less the burden." TERRY THE SILENT HOOKUP FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS How's That? By MERRILL HLC So SALLY IS BRCAKIWG HER. NECK T> MeT HOT LOSS. LARRY,BH? Yeah. WATCH we HAver SOME RJrJ , wrrn her/ So LARRY ASKED METDGeT HIM A DATB, BUT AFTER ALL, i WOULDNT FEEL RK3HT- OETTINO HIM ONE WITH SALLY/ | ^ , *// SHE SHOULD WAIT A FEW YEARS TILL SHE- Bf^Oa&M Kill feJ^i ^^rW/y/Msfr^. r*Va?^&^i^Lo/ ALLEI OOP That Was Close By ?. T. BAM I IB TALK ABOUT LUCK// OUTA ALL THOSE STARS. I HIT OL' MOTHER EARTH RIGHT ON TH' NOSE.' BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES OVV^PR'. \ VHl *>0 -SO 60\\."W. ViVXfct V SOME. ON* 1 wow wovyiS <=i\\ Mt ?? Surprise By EDGAR MARTfi CAPTAIN EASY Be Sees Pretty Well By LESLIE TURNER THE CAUTIOUS OLD BLIGHTER, f ELT 5APB IN LEADING A BLIND MM HERE. HE COULDN'T SEC Wi EVES WERE BUSf BEHIND THOSE PARK GLASSES'. VIC FLINT L-syga it, s. rftu. A Warm Greeting By MICHAEL OTV1ALLEI (hsV*' 'you NAAA6' pumsrt)" OCR BOAKUINO BOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLE OUT OI1V WAY Bv J. R WILLIAMS J-.R.WILUAM5 THE PROTECTIVE MEASURE ZiiVriXb.m. TUESDAY. MARCH 27, 1951 niE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER lAGE TBREC racific J^ocietu ifln. Js*nntk rltwfand Bo> 9b, BalU Jlmtku 0*1 2 1336 ACTING- GOVERNOR AND MRS. VOGEL ENTERTAINING CONGRESSIONAL PARTY ON TRIP THRU THE CANAL The Acting Governor of The Panmma Canal and Mr. Herbert D. Vogel will entertain members of the visiting Con- gressional party on a trip throuch the Canal tomorrow. Lun- cheon will be served aboard the "Woleott" during; the trip. Luncheon Honors Bishops Bentley and Gooden The Right Reverend John B. Bentley and the Right Reverend Reginald Heber Gooden were the g-uests of honor at a lun- cheon given at El Rancho to- day by members o the Episco- pal Clergy of the Isthmus. The luncheon preceeded a meeting of the clergy with the two Bishops held this afternoon In Bishop Morris Hall of Lt. Luke's Cathedral. , Mrs. Vogel to Visit In Washington Mrs. Herbert D. Vogel. wife of the Acting Governor of The Panama Canal, plans to sail April 6 for a visit of a week or two with her mother in Washington, D. C. General and Mrs. Kiel Return from South America The commanding General Ca- ribbean Air Command and Mrs. Emil a- Kiel have returned to Al brook Field from a trip to South America. Cocktail Party to Honor Mr. and Mrs. Sanborn Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge L. Cap- well are giving a coctuall party this evening at 6:30 at their re- sidence In Bella Vista as a fare- well for Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sanborn. Mr. sanborn is to be transfer- red from the Fuerza y Luz in Panama to the jame company In San Jose,'Costa Rica, where he will be manager. He and Mrs. Sanborn, who have lived in Summer Recreation Panama for many years, will leave Sunday lor Costa Rica. Mrs. McLavy Sailing Friday Mrs. John Robert McLavy of Balboa Heights is sailing Friday on. the S.S. Panama to spend several months with her son- in-law and daughter, Dr. and Mrs. John Wilson Clark In Wllllamsport, Pennsylvania. Mrs. Sartaln Entertaining At Dinner Tonight Mrs. Amy V. Sartaln is giving a dinner tonight at El Pana- ma Hotel for her daughter, Miss Sue Sartaln, her fiance, William Hubbard Clark, and the mem- bers of their bridal party. The Program Schedule Almost Completed By Gilbert Thorne Vacation time is here again and volunteer teachers are hard at work completing "last-minute plans" for the coming Sumirtr Recreation Program. Robert Likins, supervising t;acher of Local Rate Play- f rounds, commented on the at- endance at the last meeting In which James A. Rodgers was. chosen to head the program. With Likins assistance and an der his supervision, the kids will be able to engage themselves in several new. useful activities such as. photography, woodcraft, tail- oring, tennis, basket and beit weaving and many others. Extensive and elaborate plans have been made: and a 1-urc and capable staff of teachers have volunteered their help; so. parents, won't you give us some help in making this protram suc- cessful? Have your children come out and take part in the activi- ties once they're started. Teachers who have volunteered their services are: W. Holder, nrt; J. French, archery; H. Phil- lips. M. Blanchard, H. Cooper, boxing; J. Rodgers, C. Fomeca. G. Wade. Barbelle; D. Miller, W Nurse, R. Burns, cricket; P. AI- levne. dancingdirector and mu alelan; Mrs. D. Palmer, dancing director; K. Brown, R. Whar- ton. musicians; F. Myrle. O. Headley, painting: I. Mederick. Mrs. D. Baxter. Mrs. C. Dyer, Mrs. V. Williams. J. Jackson. C. Allen. J. Ibarra. L. Perryman. C. Headley. basket-weaving, em- broidery, sewing, knitting, mu- sic; K. Haughton. photography and woodcraft; L. Salnten. wood- craft: C. Hunt and J. Rodgers, tennis; J. Hunt and L. Walker, tailoring; W. Dunn, roller-skat- ing. Teachers are asked to be or. time for the March 28 meeting at the gym. New volunteers and the curious may also attend. The re- port of the Recreation Board will be discussed. Rodgers and Parris will give further information on request. NAM Urges Equitable Sharing of US Goods In Latin America NEW YORK, Mar. 27 (USIS) The National Association of Manufacturers of the United States urged the U. S. govern- ment and its own member firms to continue their policy of dis- tributing U.8. production among Latin American customers on u ialr and equitable basis during the current emergency period. The NAM said in a statement to the conference of American foreign Ministers in Washing- ton that "the mutuality of In- terests and objectivef of all the American Republics dictates a policy of equitable sharing of those products essential to the maintenance of stable civilian economies and to the further development and production of vital strategic materials." The association, which re- presents the greater part of U.S. industrial capacity, extended Its "fullest collaboration" to the foreign ministers. It urged them to agree upon a cooperative program of action which "will serve as an example to the en- tire free world and a warning to aggressors." The statement continued: "To this end, we recommend that the defense of the western Hemisphere be recognized as a joint responsibility, each nation making such contribution of its own resources as may be most effectively utilized In the com- mon effort. A strong Western Hemisphere with Its rich re- sources of strategic materials and productive power Is in- dispensable to the attainment and preservation of freedom everywhere." Fossils From Ocu, Pese Are Subject Of Cazin's Talk Dr. C. Lewis Gazln. curator of the Division of Vertebrate Pal- eontology of the Smithsonian Institution, will be the speaker tomorrow evening at the March meeting of the Panama Canal Natural History Society. The so r-iety will meet at 8 p.m. at the Gorgas Memorial Institute In Panama City. Dr. Gazin will talk on "Fosll Bones from Ocu and Pese. Pan- ama and will Illustrate his tal'-: with 35 mm Kodachrome slides Accompanied by Dr. FrarikL'n Pierce, also of the Smithsonian, he arrived here early In January and has been working In the In- lerlor of Panama. He spent several months on the Isthmus last year after the dis- covery of fossil bones at Pese and Ocu. The fossil remains' were those of Megatherium. Mylodon and Toxodon. The first two were giant ground sloths, the latt?r u rhinoceros-like animal of the same period between 100 000 200.000 years ago, in the late Ple- istocene period. dinner will follow the rehearsal of the wedding. Bride-To-Be-Honored By Mrs. Boyer Mrs. Robert Boyer of Curun- du honored Miss Beverly Ruoff at a tea and silver shower given Sunday afternoon In the Fern Room of the Hotel Tivoll. Miss Ruoff, daughter of Carl M. Ruoff of Cristobal, and the late Mrs. Ruff, is to be married Friday at the Hotel Washington to Robert Berger of Cristobal. Among those Invited to the tea were the bride's grand- mother. Mrs. A. Kenyon, her sister, Mrs. Leo Goulet, her aunt, Mrs. Albert Ruoff, Mrs. F. H. Olsen, Mrs. D. R. Boyer. Mrs. Emmett Zemer, Mrs. William Hall. Mrs. Nora F.athgeber, Mrs. James Burgoon, Mrs. Tristan Enjuto, Mrs. T. F. Hotz, Mrs. Carl Beck, Mrs. Beatrice Kong- able, Mrs. F. J. Harrington, Mrs. C. Dldrlkson. Mrs. Milton Davis, Mrs. Arthur Goule.. Mrs. Horace Smith, Mrs. Ruben Robertson, Mrs. Roy Redman. Mrs. D. M. McLaren. Mrs. David Haw- thorne. Mrs. Robert Heddeaus, Mrs. Charles K. Wright, Mrs. Macel Thompson. Miss Rita Goulet. Miss Barbara Boyer, Miss Shirley Zemer. Miss Arden Armstrong, Miss Pat Leach, Miss Nancy Sullivan. Miss Joanne Corliss, Miss Patricia Kuller, Miss Mary Sullivan. Miss Virgi- nia McLaren and Miss Patricia Kenealy. Visitor Leaving Tomorrow i After a stay of five days at Fl Panama Hotel, John J. O'Connor of Chicago. Illinois. Is leaving tomorrow for Havana an Miami. THE NEWLY ELECTED OFFICERS of the Navy Wives Club met recently to plan the program for the coming year. Already underway is a project to raise money for local charities. Early in Mav an old fashioned melodrama will be offered to Isthmian audiences bv the Navy Wives Little Theatre Group. Pictured above at the quarters of Captain Harry Carson are, left to right: Mrs. Edward R. Halloran, Vice President; Mrs. Carson, President; Mrs. Robert van der Maaten, Secretary; and Mrs. Howard Rezner, Treasurer. (U.S. Navy Photo) Export -Import Bank Lists Projects Completed In 1950 Mrs. Bess Returning To Connecticut Mrs. Walter W. Bess, who has .spent the past two months with her son and daughter-in-law, Captain and Mrs. Gordon W. Bess, at Fort Kobbe. is leaving Thursday for her home In Me- rlden, Connecticut. April Meeting of College Club Monday Afternoon The April meeting of the Ca- nal Zone College Club will be held Monday afternoon at 3:45 at the Jewish Welfare Board Armed Forces Service Center on La Boca Road in Balboa. An Informal tea will be followed by a short business meeting and a program presented by the World Problems Study Group of the club. Dr. Shirley Gage, a visitor in Panama, will be the guest speaker. Dr. Gage returned about ten months ago from two years In China with the Amer- ican Friends Service. She spent nearly a year in a hospital In Honan Province and later work- ed in the Suchow battle are. She will give an Informal talk and answer questions about her experiences In China. All members of the club and women Interested In Joining the club are cordially invited to this meeting. WASHINGTON,Mar. 27 (USIS) The semi annual report of the U.S. Export-Import Bank lists completion of several of the de- velopment projects lt has helped finance. Some of the better known of these projects, which are how in operation are the integrnt steel mill In Chile; a nitrogenous fertilizer plant and a hydroelec- tric power plant In Mexico; and power generating and transmit- ting facilities In Brazil. Most of the Bank's activities during the last six months of 1950 were with Latin American coun- tries. New credits during that oerlod Include: BRAZIL: A loan of $25 million Awards Night At Diablo Gymnasium Children of Diablo Heights held an "Awards Night" weenie roast, sponsored by Mrs. Morris, at the town gymnasium Thurs- day evening. The Girl and Boy Scouts held a contest In fire building. After supper there was a contest in making corsages which wa3 won by Bud Kurtz and Billy Thornton. The supper and contests pre- ceded the giving of awards for outstanding performance In in- tra-mural sports during the past year. The honors went to Emily, Wilkinson. Sue Taylor, Mary Buckaloo, Danny Wink- losky, John Winklosky, Joey Pustis, Billy Halvosa and Terry Corrigan. CZ Taxpayers Are Promised Further Consideration A ray of hope for the re- vocation of the retroactive In- come tax for 1950 has been re- ceived by Acting Governor Her- bert D. Vogel In a personal let- ter from Congressman Daniel A. Reed, of New York, ranking Re- publican member of the House Ways and Means Committee. "I feel that you have made out an excellent case with re- ference to the tax situation as lt relates to the officers and employes In the Canal Zone,'' Representative Reed wrote. "I am very much Interested In and Impressed with your statement or conditions in the Canal Zone, and I shall take up this matter with our Committee to see if something can not be done to relieve the situation." Representative Reed, whose home Is In Dunkirk, New York, represents the 45th Congression- al District from his state. He first entered Congress in 1919 and Is one of the mast in- tluentlal members of the House. In addition to his membership on the Ways and Means Com- mittee, he also serves on the Joint Committee on Taxation. In the expansion of the steel mill at Volta Redonda. v ...,pif A loan of $1.800.000 to the Corporacin de Fomento oe la Produccin for road buildl."g machinery for about 300 milss of the Pan American Highway. COLOMBIA: A loan of $500.000 for a merchant vessel for coast- wise service. IRAN: $25 million for agricul- tural and highway development. ISRAEL: $35 million for agri- cultural development. PANAMA: $500,000 for a hotel to promote tourist travel. PERU: $20.800,000 for a Ceno de Pasco zinc refinery. SAUDI ARABIA: $15 million for projects in agriculture, trans- portation, power, health and san- itation. ' YUGOSLAVIA: $15 million for capital equipment and food pro- ducts. In addition to these new cre- dits, the bank allocated from pre- vious credits $31 million for the Mexican irrigation construction program, Including the Falcon Dam. Three Accountants Arrive To Survey PC And PRR Setup George Hill, Jr., James Lamb and Maurice Hoffman of Arthur Andersen Si Company of Chica- go, public accounting firm re- tained by the Canal-Railroad organization in connection with the establishment of the new Panama Canal Company next July, arrived on the Isthmus yesterday on the S.S. Panama. These representatives, together with other employes of the firm of certified public accountants who will Join them later, will make a study of the accounting methods, organization, activities and operations of the Canal and Railroad. On the basis of their studies, the firm will advise the Governor on toll rates and other charges which may require re- vision in the new corporation. A preliminary survey was made here in February by Robert Jones of the same company. The present visitors will re- main on the Isthmus for an indefinite period. Mr. Hill is accompanied by his wife and two children, 3 and 5. and Mr. Hoffman is accompanied by his wife and one child. 11{on Executive Committee Meets Tomorrow The executive committee of American Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 1 will meet Wednesday at 7:30 in the Legion Hall. Followin the meeting the no- minating committee will meet to choose a slate for the forth- coming elections. HAVEN'T YOU HEARD.. THAT CHROMIUM-PLATED FURNITURE WILL BE IMPOSSIBLE TO GET VERY SOON? BUY YOUR SET TODAY! ONLY $22.50 down "LA EUROPEA" Furniture Store Central Ave. at E. 21st St. EASY TERMS Phones: 2-1130 Si 2-1833 CLUB PLAN Benefit Card Party I ridav Evening The Evening Guild of St. Luke's Cathedral is giving a be- nefit card party Friday night at , :)() in the Nurses Quarters at Gorgas Hospital. Tickets at $1.00 may be bought during office hours at the informtion desk in Bishop Morris Hall of the Cathedral or by telephoning to Mrs. McNevln, at Balboa 2797 Bridge, Canasta, or other card games mav be played. Tnere will be table and door prizes. Those playing are asked to bring their own cards and score pads. Cuban Senate May Launch Probe Of Local Reds HAVANA, Mar. 27 (UP.Cu- ban 8enate President Antonio Varona introduced a motion Into the senate today calling for the formation o" a five-man Congressional Commission to in- vestigate Communist activities throughout Cuba. He said the investigation was sought because Communist acti- vities "plot against the external security of the state, seeking to prevent the Republic from carrying out its International commitments." They also extend a fifth column "'n the service of an aggressive power." PANAMA TRUST COMPANY, INC. Special Stockholders Meeting NOTICE Stockholders are hereby notified that a Special Stock- holders Meeting shall be held at the offices of the Com- pany, in I Street No. 20, in Panam City at 3:30 p.m. on Monday, April 9, 1951. The purpose of the meeting is to present and consider In- auditor's reports available at the time and any other reports on the actual position of the Company, and to resolve upon any matter as may properly come before the meeting on motion of Stockholders, Directors or Board of Directors, including amendments of the article of incorporation. The meeting shall be held with stockholders of record as of March 31, 1951. Panam, March 26, 1951. THE SECRETARY. TREAT BABY GENTLY! The THING ... this tantalizing mystery will be revealed at the ALL FOOLS DANCE MARCH 31st TIVOLI HOTEL Sponsored by Beta Sigma Phi Tickets $1.98 per cotinle! On Sale at Ancon Liquor Store fmt baby's skin, nothing soothes and protect! like Johnson's Baby Powder. Use I after baths, at diaper changes. Mtrrot tusr... fsr ro rou P-.....Of,w ilc*. H J S A | . Bird of Paradise Nude 15 denier $ J.95 and 2-25 A PAIR Bird of Paradise*. Holeproof new 'tint of Apricot' nude, is the perfect complement for the colorful new bright fishions you'll be wearing. And these nylons ire wonder- fully sheer and slenderizing, specially snag-iaving, durable. 'implied bv the Twentieth Century-Fox chnicolor production, "Bird of Piridne" 'Husbands For Sale9 Idea Wheels Into High In Miami MIAMI, Fla., Mar. 27. (UPl The "Husbands for auction" idea of a young Miami Beach men may never be put on a solid busi- ness basis. But if lt ever Is, idea- man Stan Farber will have plen- ty of willing; bachelors to sell. Dozens of letters from men willing to mate for money have poured into the "Miami Herald" since Farber's unique plan for publicly auctioning off unmar- ried men to wealthy women was disclosed prematurely several days ago. Offers to go on the auction block have come from men tn 25 states. Canada, Cuba. England, and. naturally, from Paris. The available bachelors are of all ages and types, from the strictly com- mercial to the Just lonely, from the handsome to the horrible. Some approached the idea with a definitely lay-lt-on-the-llne attitude. "I will not consider anything less than $300,000." writes a Lynchburg. Va., man. "and wnl be available on a moment's no- tice." A bachelor from Perry. Ark., said he was ready to go on the block "provided the bidder has one half a million dollars.. .and Is In poor health." Another from Indianapolis. Ind wants $100.000 in cash and a monthly stipend thereafter." He suggested in a post-script that the beach auctioneer might be "cut out of the deal" so he and the Herald could put through the Mi* "'hout "a middle man." Other potential spouses-for-a- prlce were not as demanding. A St. Louis factory worker 'will marry any woman up to 65." but doubled If he reallv was wortn mors than $1.000. A writer from Sioux City, la., simply wanted "to live In the manner to which I would like to become accustom- ed." Many of the letters enclosed pictures, one of a young man of Washington, D.C., In a bathing: suit who is "a lover of good mu- sic," another of a 38-year-old "Ea- gle Palm Scout" from Detroit in full scout regalia. A touching plea from Sur- ton. Surrey, England, came from a husband who feels he has earned a change after living with the same woman for 16 years." But he urged the auction- eer to disguise any reply to his offer. "Otherwise, my wife will be in a panic wondering what on earth. I want to shoot off to Florida r.bout." Friendship Club Sets El Valle Dance For Saturday Night Plans for a Friendship Club Dance, to be given at the Pan- American Hotel in El Valle Sa- turday evening were announced today. , Jimmy Dunn and his orch- estra will furnish American and Spanish music for dancing. Tha ball-room dance team of Har- nett and Dunn will present sev- eral numbers. If Saturday evenlng-'s dance la successful, a similar dance will be held there once a monjil. Admission will be 75 cents ver person. ********* CASA FASTLICH N S orwegian terling at 30% below U.S. prices : If you like something graciously different, it's Norwegian Sterling for you! a/afa/Ufch MWmM* WAOOUABTM PANAMA 34th Street Lux Building Tel. 3-0897 SECOND FLOOR I WE ARE UNPACKING Meat Tenderizers ..... $1.75 Metal Frying Protectors 1.40 Plastic Soap Trays........80 Rubber Scrapers.......20 Metal Cookie Sheets .... 1,25 All Colored Plastic Tooth- Picks (box) ............ 1.00 Plastic Liquor Measuring Glasses................35 Plastic Corks.............35 Plastic Pie Boxes......30 T*#PR Picnic Tablecloth with Matching Cups and Saucers............... 3.50 Plastic Tablecloths, all Colors................ 150 Plastic Toaster Covers ... .80 Plastic Mixer Covers..... 1.35 Plastic Roaster Covers ... .85 Plastic Bread Covers___ 1.10 Plastic Vegetable Bags .. 1.10 Shower Curtains (1 Yd. Wide) ................ 1.75 Shower Curtains (2 Yds. Wide) ................ 3.95 Rayon and Lace Curtains 5.75 Satin Bedspreads........ 14.50 Lamp Shades (Large Size) ........... Irom 2.75 to 4.95 Condiments Sets ... 7.50; 7:95 Olass Egg Beaters....... 150 Bur NOW Second Floor 5a Avenida fAGE por* THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER Tl'ESDAT. MARCH 27, 1951 Kansas State Favored Over Kentucky In NCAA Finals Tonight by JOE WILLIAMS MIAMI BEACH.-Havinj already wrapped UP *h ^""L'K 1s their spring custom, the Boston Red Sox are d with their usu.l quandary. Who .tart in the first ram e of the World S eries. Best guess at the moment Is Mel Parnell. But It could be Ray Scarborough. Or even Harry Taylor, rnubbv cheerful Steve O'Neill, the manager, admits he has Strong Softball Teams To Compete In Gamboa Title Tourney Saturday^^ more Ditchers than lie ran snaae a aw;. *< *'""" "r'C: ca tai has been the other guys shook the stick. For three stralght years gertlon :.._ n^j o *= o,nn iho nennant down here and lost u oacK h_, Some of the beat softball game.' of the local season will be on tap at the second annual Men's Soft- ball Tournament at Gamboa on SatUrdav. Mar. 31. This tourna- ment Is sponsored by the Physi- cal Education and Recreation has been tne otr.er guys siiui.'r ub "-' * .""" ^ ,".7 ,, -hnric the Rid Sox have won the pennant down here and lost it back home. It feems that no guarantee goes with Florida penna.vs Farii vpar the Red Sox are the team to beat. And thai s wnai haoDeiis Thev get beat Each year owner Tom Yawkey digs down Ks purse anT comes up with new stars. As they.say or, the turf he'll never be ruled off for trying. It must pain him to know H ss&rtasr- sxsks s.; ** ShiTcoKt'.. "liftM tm l.cted lire .n,WUo|> A host of strong aggregations from the Armed Services and both sides of the Isthmus will see action In the tourney to decide the softball championship of the Canal Zone. All of the teams are coming Into the affair with ex- ceptional records, consequently none of the teams will be seeded, all the drawings will be made from a hat. The strong Firemen's Insur- ance team managed by Don Bo- wen have an impressive season's heVaKro^ Bo?fUdsrpeaarksWsaoS S^WK' 3g Tlaf m SZ^SKZ- jolimbufand one year had Picked 1^^^M-!"5^.S^ Sis'SeTto a w^idTch^m^nsfiip^ make a bum of AJax. Mr. America and Vitamin B munition Depot team which wi'l boast of such stalwart pitchers as Wallace. Bryant and Mitzell, the Navv team is managed by Joseph DeSilva and Ted Farrls. One of the dark horses of the tournament is expected In the THEY BEAT THEMSELVES Seemlnelv nothing can beat the Red Sox now except the Red Sox themselves a challenge which would give any other_ team tournament , expected in me opuse but these fellows, being experienced and talented, too. face 5700lh Ma,ntenance and Supply the task with unshaken confldyce I will, no doubt take an all- Ua|n of Albrook whicn won the nut effort since the odds against failure are greater than evei. Alu,, ,,, rhllmninnhin ht ft is alwavs smart to stick with the champlon-and the Red lox h& aWbaayckgSrnound of frustration second only to the German MM WT%nrlhlttl Boudreau fit In. how can he help? The Red Sox THE CASE OF BOUDREAU tt mv be that Boudreau will replace Stephens at short on ^rm^hanktul I had the sense not to mention Boudreau to ?,~nafm, I beUele Boudreau^ presence In this respect Is being "Terp^ed and"very Hkely to the deposed Cleveland managers ;nlbRrudSreaunUs no authority. Eventually he may replace O'Neill Boudieau i as nu auj ondary performer ostensibly hired '?D> and Doe r haven't the big league urge by now Boudreau- "even a" unshackled Boudreau-lsn't going to get the lead out of " fttlHmnd thought, the Red Sox may start Kinder Rem.em- b ^hePhniies almost got away with Kostanty In the first game Of the World Series last fall._________________.-----------------_ Schoolboy Sports / BY GILBERTO THORNE Santa Cruz's Juniors relln- uuished all claims to the Junior League trophy as they went un- der a humiliating 10-0 defeat at the hands of the Silver City squad. The two-year champs will now keep the trophy and a new trophy wUl be played for, next year. Santa Cruz became Pacific champs when they defeated Pa- raso. 5-0. and edged Red Tank, winners of the Red Tank-La Bo- ca game. 3-2. in the round robin games at Red Tank early tola week. Bob Likins, supervising teacher of Local-Rate Play- grounds made curt remarks con- cerning the league and as.si.sted In the presentation of the tro- phy to Manager Benard of the Silver City nlae. Jos French should have been at home resting his leg, which he fractured In a softball Instruc- tion class a few months ago. but mm LAYGftWn INNINGS VISITORS GAMBOA 3D TSKET championship. The winners of this game will journey to Sliver City to play for the Isthmian Championship. L. B. H. S. students can pre- pare for their Chorrera Field Day trip on Friday, Mar. 30. Junior High School students will be going on the following Friday, April 8. All boys 12 years old and under are urged to report to the P. E. instructor of his district for in- formation on the requirements of the Little League, which will be started among Local-Rate com- munities on June 15. The Little League baseball was started in the United States and is now very popular there. Little League baseball has been featured in manv magazines- this month's Albrook League Championship. The 5700th team is managed by Sgt. Albert Creel who has the exceptional pitching staff of Wil- lis Rhodes and Victor New. The Balboa All-Stars and Cris- tobal All-Stars are made up of Elavers from several teams. These earns have combined Into all- stars In order to give a better account of themselves and avoid any weak teams in the tourna- ment. All games will start promptly on time, Infield and hitting practice must be taken prior to the start of your respective games at Field Two. Each team will be allotted one-half hour on this diamond prior to their game. In case of rain the tournament will be held the following day, April 1.! The home team will be decided by the flip of a coin fifteen mln-' utes previous to your respective, game. Any team that is not ready ! to play within ten minutes of scheduled time will forfeit the game and their entry money. All game balls will be furnished by the host of the tournament. The all-day affair will start at 8:30 a.m. and continue through- out the day with the champion-1 ship game to start at 5:15 and the third-place championship at 4 p.m. Bob Likins and Harvey Parkers will umpire the entire | tournament and their decisions, will be final. Charlie Magee will; handle the loud speaker system. All plavers are invited to Bring their families as the Gamboa swimming pool for small and large children will be open | throughout the day. also the swings and Jungle Jim will be available for the small children, picnic tables will be available for families who Intend to make a day of it along with a barbecue oven. ,, Free beer will be available throughout the day for the PLAYERS ONLY. Each player will be stamped to indicate him as a player in the affair. The Gamboa Recreation Council will operate a concession stand with refreshments for all'others In at- tendance. K.S., fnjury-Ricldled, Has Strong Bench; Foes Tired By UNITED PRESS MINNEAPOLIS. Mar. 87.According to the coaches, tonight- NCAA championship basketball game will be played between tired Kentucky and injury-ridden Kansas State. Coach Jack Gardner of Kansas State says he's afraid the aches and pains may slow up his wildcats in the final contest at Minneapolis. Gardner says four of his players are suffering from injuries, but he Isn't getting much sympathy from basketball fans. The fans are aulck to point out that Kansas State has a strong bench. They recall Gardner's second team did as weU as the first against the Oklahoma Aggies Saturday night. Gardner is not making any predictions, but he says he thinks the big job is to stop Kentucky's seven-foot Ail-American enter, Bill Sphrey. Gardner adds that six-foot-eight-inch Lew Hitch may be just the man to stop the Kentucky ace. Coach Adolph Rupp of Kentucky is getting more sympathy for his complaints. Rupp says his team is tired and hasn't been playing its best game recently. Rupp adds "We haven't had one In a long time we were real pleased with." Kentucky is expected to be the under-dog by game-time to- night. The Wildcats had a tough time beating Illinois In the Eastern finals. Saturday night while Kansas State walked all over the Illinl in a warm-up game before the NCAA Tournament started. "D" LEAGUE CHAMPS This Is the team th tion Junior Baseball "D" League championship the title Rame at Mount Hope Stadium. Durl and dropped two. Front row from left to rig rls. third baseman; Carlos Seise, pitcher; Don George Flgel. utility; James Drlscoll. right fiel son, second baseman; Winters Hope, center fie first baseman. at copped the Physical Education and Recrea- by virtue of a 10-0 victory over Cristobal In ng' the Reason, the champions won 20 games ht: Captain John Magee. catcher; Kenny Mor- Ryter, shortstop. Back row from left to right: der; Steve Herring, left fielder; Lloyd Hender- lder; James Powell, right fielder; Miles Metcalf, Houston Buffalos Trounce Army All-Stars 14-1; Meet Albrook Flyers This Afternoon The nation's basketball coaches are meeting in Minneapolis to see if they can find a new rule to cut down excessive foul- ing. The rules committee and coaches association will take up the question during a three dav conference. Rules Committee Chairman Tony Hinkle of Butler University savs he doubts if anv drastic changes will be agreed uoon. "There's still too much difference of opinion," Hinkle saya, "over what should be done." _______. Little League PACIFIC SIDE Teams Curundu....... 3 Sears Mailorder .. 3 Saint Mary's .... 2 Diablo-Hlllmen .. 2 Police Dept..... 1 Fire Dept....... 1 Won Lost Pet. .750 .750 .500 .500 .250 .250 . gue pitching star. Who knows, ne apparently couldn't desert his maybe someday your son. or your boys with such ai important, neighbor's son or your little match coming up, so game-time : friend from across the street may Sundhn in the stands with a be featured In such an article. All six teams are in action this afternoon. The game of the day will be at Curundu. where the home team will be entertaining the Dlablo-Hillman Automen. This is a MUST for both teams. aany magazinesmus nnmui s Curundu must win to retain the Ebony carries an Interesting league leadership and the Auto- article about a Negro Little Lea- men must knock off the Coun- Last night the Houston Buf- falos of the Triple "A" Texas League got off on the right foot in their four-game exhibition series here. They trounced the Army All-Stars 14-1 at Balboa Stadium before more than 3,000 fans. Dick Bokelman went the route for the visitors, allowing only six scattered hits. The only run scored against him was the re- sult of a walk to Delvalle fol- lowed by Beaudoln's triple In the second Inning. The soldiers one-run lead stood up until the fifth Inning- when the Buffs pushed over seven runs. In this Inning. Rockinskl who started on the mound for the All-Stars tired after facing eight batters. Hanson, who replaced Rochlnskl. faced another four men before the side was finally retired. Houston added two runs in the sixth, single tallies in the seventh and eight and three In the ninth inning. (The Buffs mlscued three times while the All-Stars erred four times. Bill Costa and Shofner clout- ed horn, runs for the winners. Costa also had a triple and a single to give him three foT six. However, McGaha with three for five and Kokelma with two for three had better aver- ages. Jerome Wltte also had three for six. For the All-Stars, Bergeson with two lor four was the only player to get more than one safety. This afternoon the Buffs are slated to n.eet the Albrook Fly- ers at 2 p.m. at Beam Stadium. The Flyers will go into the game with a string of 18 consecutive victories. Hall Of Famer Eddie Collins Funeral Set For Tomorrow BOSTON, Mar. 27 (UP> One of baseball's all-time greats will be laid to rest on Wednesday. Funeral services for Eddie Col- linsvice president of the Bos- ton Red Soxwill be held Wed- nesday morning at the Church of the Advent In Boston. Collins, who was a member of baseball's Hall of Fame, died Sunday night In a Boston hospital at the age of 63. The Red Sox executive had been In the hospital since Martn 10 when he suffered a stroke. Collins' death has saddened the entire baseball world. The former great second baseman spent a lifetime in the game and was loved and respected by all who knew him during his career as a ball player and, later, as an executive. "He was the best of all second basemen." says Connie Mack. "He didn't fit the bill as a short- stop, so he became the greatest of all second basemen." Jimmy Dvkespresent manag- er of the Assays he Is heart- broken at the news as he didn't know Collins was 111. "He was a fine man." says the former third baseiwan. "He help- ed me a lot and we've always been verv friendly." Manager Casey Stengel of the megaphone shouting encourage jnent and advice to the boys on the Held. He also took Dart in the presentation ceremonies. P. E. teacher. Clinton Parrls, who has temporary charge here iiiiti i....... - -------- cllmen if they intend to go any- where in the first half. Diablo suffered a setback when their star pitcher went on the sick list. Undoubtedly Pedro Sa- las will be called upon to keep the Councllmen from staging an- .,-. i.ai..,.. ^........ w. w.c ~...- other last Inning rally to pull the sion of Schools Is hoping to be game out of the fire. able to send a team to the U. 6. In the Balboa Stadium, the The Physical Education and Recreation Branch of the Dlvl- to participate in the Little Lea- gue World Series. Please help to at Kanta Cruz while Jos French i make this dream possible, not ponce ueparimem suppers, me is laid uu was all out for the only for the P. E. R. B.. but also' Saints should win this one and Santa Cruz club Had he been at i for your boy, or your neighbor's stav in the running for the title - his hometown. Gatun. he would boy. or for your little friend from i the event one of the leaders upsetters of Sears, namely the Saint Mary's Saints will meet the Police Department Coppers The Ilia nuniriuwii. v.aiu.1, ti>- w.. )---------- - .no doubt have been rooting for across the street, -the Sliver City group, but as it i *3as. he came out with the Gam-, ^oa team and although the boys lost, all extended warm appre- ciation of his earnest efforts. , Parris may leave us at the end ~9i this month to take up new du- fies elsewhere. We are going to I "be mighty sorry to lose him, and the manv friends he has won over in his short stav here will t jhiss him. Good luck on your new Job, Mr. P. Fight Rheumatism While You Sleep If you suffer iharp. tat>Mng pain. If Jnlnta i' swollen, li ihowi >our blood mar b |.lind through faulty klclnty >rhr armpoma <>f Kldny IHa- ar<- Hunting, Itching Paaaagta, ludy urine, Oattlng O Harold Scott. 8. C.'s physical i director. Is mlghtv proud, 'cause, ,,-,, his boy, Smith, rjitched a no-hit.' strong, riou... urine, uu no-ru game here at Santa Cruz: NJebt. Backache, i.umbaso. kee aground. That boy has a long Jgg ^l^rA^tnZ't way to go, and Scott made hiin. _ . .... i .___-i_____-.., helping the K'>li,*\ i In 3 wm: 1. llflii Red Tank forfeited her chances . -,. * aifaJ'vo tnreo ii'ium- try tiftlplhsT lh Ktftn*>p In t wa>i; I. Helps issas, iWieY .-- ----------- ritan out poisonous acids. 2. Coinbsts ?"at the Midget Leanue tropny! v*rms in th urinsrv BMtem i. gnott.*. sfhen non-rMisten-i- were used ( ff^ cain irritated tissues Get Cytt.x thpy belonir on top. Alfred Bruiv * the game" against La BocaJ # -f "gffgJWS&aftai ho has won two and lost no- _^nta Cruz defeated Paraso and asean will start for Sears and tin Will play La Boca lur the Pacific slip. Joe Cicero, former major I leaguer, has been drilling the 1 Saints and in baseball parlance the Saints have plentv of savvy. On the other hand, the Coppers may pull out of their trance and still make trouble for the other teams. At Diablo. Sears Mailorder boys will play host to the Fire De- partment Smokies. The Smokies were really hard hit yesterday, when two of their mainstays went on the sick list. John Ham- ma. who was being groomed to knock Sears off the top, himself was brought down with the mumps. Kirchmeir also wi'l be out of the game for the same ill- ness. Sears Mailorder boys will try to Erove that their defeat at the ands of Saint Mary's was Just Soothe i one of those things, and that they belong on top, Alfred Bruhr Exhibition Results Lakeland Giants 000 001 2025 6 1 Tigers 300 000 1004 7 5 Maelie. Bamberger and West- rum: Hoeft, Herbert and Gins- berg. Sarasota Athletics 000 020 0103 7 1 Red Sox 222 000 03x9 14 2 Coleman, Shantz and Astroth; Stobbs, Taylor and Scherbarth. Evans, Wallace Bout In Making The managers of Kid Evans and Sylvester Wallace were scheduled to meet this after- noon to settle final arrange- ment! for a bout between these two top-ranking feather- weights, according to informa- tion received from reliable sources. Evans handlers had demand- ed a $500 side-bet plus a win- ner-take-all basis for the fight. Wallace's handlers immediate- ly accepted. However, the two factions could not finally come to terms. If this match is arranged, it would be the final elimination in the 126-pound class with the inner meeting Sammy Medi- na for the crown left vacant by Stanley McKay. New York Yankees best express- es the general feeling. "Baseball Is going to mlas Col- lins," says Stengel. "He was an outstanding manon the field and off it." At the Red 8ox training camp in Sarasota, Florida, Outfielder Ted Williams was the hardest hit by news of Collins death. It was Collins who discovered Williams In 19.36. and the star slugger says the Red Sox execu- tive was "the closest friend I had in baseball." Williams says that whenever things went wrong for him, Collins would call him in and give him advice. Says Ted "He was always on my side, al- ways my friend." The Red Sox will wear black mourning bands on their sleeves this season. Club Secretary Tom Dowd says he Is trying to cancel Wednesday's exhibition game with the Detroit Tigers. Collins was a star In the major leagues for 25 vearsfirst with the As and later, the Chicago White Sox. His life-time batting average was .333. He also was a dangerous man on the base- naths. Collins stole 81 bases in 1910 and wound up with a total of 743. In 1909a year after being converted into a second baseman Collins was part of Connie Macks famous $100.000 infield along with Stuffy Mclnnls, Jack Barry and Frank "Home Run" Baker. Mack broke up the com- bination in 1915 and Collins was sold to the White Sox for the then fabulous price of $45,000. IUST LIKE HIS BOYReversing the usual trend. Bill Brown, -ight, follows in the spike prints of his son. Tommy. The Brooklyn foungster, who in three seasons will be a 10-year man at 26, intendi c share the Dodgers' left fielding with Gene Hermanski. (NEA) 1 n ill .ildii 1U1 ocio ai.i. .in . kies will try with Don Randie. Phillies '' 003 OH) "-6 10 0 pM Re-faJUTeS Cardinals 000 010 0001 6 4. r Chrisante. Stuffel and Wllber, .. CliAiililae Semlnlck; Mizell. Lanier. Tiefe- Left aMlOU-OCr nauer and Sarnl. San Bernardino Cubs 000 000 001 4 10 2 Pirates 000 001 101 -3 9 0 Minner. Rush and Burgess; , Werle, Pettlt and McCullough. Bradenton Reds 000 001 0001 3 11 Graves 001 000 02x3 7 1 Fox. Blake and Pramesa: Sain. .ohnson, Hogue and St. Clalme. i TAMPA, Ha Mar 27 Former Featherweight Cham- pion Willie Pep re-Injured his left shoulder last night in win- ning a ten-round derision from Pat Iaccobucci in Miami Beach. Pep's manager, Lou Viscusi, said the injury was "very pain- ful" and left Pep's arm in a sling. After last night's fight. Pep said he would be "ready" for Sandy Saddler in June or July. SJmJ* * i y JKJj V& Meet Scotland's \ Favourite Son Born 1820 still going strong JOHNNIE WALKER SCOTCH WHISKY The fashionable drink everywhere JOHN WALKER SONS LTD, Seen* Wfckky DUilD, KIIJIAaNOCK VlTAlK hd+h* *60-SeeoM Vvferfcout' FOR SALE fN ALL PACKAGE STORES AND BARS Distributor: DIRN Tel. t-VU* Nothing like a brisk bridle-path workout, say riding* fans, to make you j*el fitter, took better. And-nothing like the famous Vitalia "60-Second Workout" to make your scalp feel fitter, hair look better. 60 seconds' brisk massage with itimulatint Vitalia and you FEEL the difference la- yout- scslp- prevent drynesa, root flaky dandruff. Then 10 aeconds to comb and yei PT '.'.'" (iifference in your hairfar handsomer, hsalthtsr-looking, neatly (roonseaV set Vitalis today! ihyowse*lf>- fiyootfttir/ e l^rwsjwCt ^C **1$t4l*MyVTV NEW! for cream tonic fans . lighter-bodied V ITALIS HAIR CREAM Gives your hair that CLEAN-GROOMED LOOK fUESDAY. MARCH 27, 1951 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE PIT! -/itlcmtic S^ociety (4ox 195, Qalun JtUpkotM Ql* 37b ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED AT DINNER PART Mr. and Mrt. Robert E. Sisman, of the Coco Solo Naval Station, announced the engagement of their daughter, Shir- ley Jean, to Mr. Fay Louis Alken, at a buffet dinner party given Easter Sunday evening at their home. _,___. Mili Sisman graduated from Washington Hlrh School in Washington, Pa., and attended the University of Miami In Miami. Florida, before" coming to the Isthmus last June, to Mr. Alken Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest M. Alken f Reading, Vermont. He graduated from high school in his home town and has been a member of the Marine Corps for the past six years. He has been stationed on the Isthmus for the past two years. ... _ The weddint will take place April 18 at the Coco Solo Naval Chapel. The buffet table was decorated with an Easter motif f using silver and crystal appointments. The friends who were present Included: Mr. and Mrs. M.S. But- ler, Mr. and Mrs. W, E. Downing. Mr. and Mrs. N. F. Hurley, and Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Martin. Combined Birthday Dinner And Kitchen Shower Mr. and Mrs. David Hawthorne entertained at their New Cristo- bal residence last evening with a family dinner partv and kitchen shower complimenting Miss Bev- erly Ruoff and her fiance. Mr. Robert Berger. Mrs. Leo Gonlet was also honored a It was her blrthdav anniversary. The dinner table was centered with miniature kitchen furniture and each of the honorees had a cake. Mrs. Goulet's was a birth- day cake and the other two were decorated with equipment to car- ry out the kitchen shower motif. and small figures to represent Miss Ruoff and her fiance. The other members of the fam- ily who were present were: Mr. Carl M. Ruoff. Mr. and Mrs. Al- pha Kenyon, Mr. Leo Goulet, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ruoff, Misses Joyce. Pamela, Evelyn, and Carol Hawthorne and David, Jr., and Oren Hawthorne. Surprise Birthday Supper Party and Dance Mr. and Mrs. James Recela ar- ranged a surprise buffet supner party and dance at the Elks Home at Brama. Heights, Satur- day morning, to compliment their daughter. Joanne on her six- teenth birthday anniversary. A pink and white scheme was used on the buffet table and the three-tiered blrthdav cake was decorated with the same colors, aod apnroprlatelv inscribed. The Royal Sultans orchestra furnished music for"dancing. The youne people who helDed Joanne celebrate were: Misses Jackie Bovle. Nancy Ramsey, Nancy Karlger. Jeanlne Nix, Bar- bara Hickey, Ann Thomas, Dora Weich. Helen Klsam, Pat Ged- des. Nellie Holgerson, Karen Stroop. Mercedes Peterson. Len- eve Dough. Virginia Fahle. Jane Compton, Joan Spraeue. of Bal- boa, with Messrs. CarJton Croft, Walter Kuhrt. Bob Bailey. Casev Zimmerman, Bob Slevers. Bob Salter. Tomm Hushes. Dlek Du- cote, Lanky Flores. John Frank, Vernon Bryant. Talmadge Salter, Bill Wllloughby. Pete Johnson, Dick Sullivan. Jerry Ravmond. and Frankle Ravmond of Balboa, and Ralph Recela. and a canopy of pastel stream- ers completed the decorations. Corporal Robb and Fernando Aguilera were responsible for the transformation of the ballroom. Two young ladles were honor- ed during the evening, and led the grand march. Miss Lillian Williams receiver* a gift and a certificate of commendation as the girl of the Month for Feb- ruary. Miss Raquel Garzan re- ceived the red seal certificate of commendation for completing 500 hours Of service since Jan- uary 1949. Mrs. Leslelgh Davis and Mrs. .E. F. McClelland were In charge of the refreshments. The young ladles who were Dresent were: Misses Dorothy Rowley, Beverly Llndstrom, Dol- ly Tucker, Dawn Preston, Mar- line Peacock, Dorothy Engle- brieht, Mlckle Taylor, Lillian Williams, Raquel Qarzan, May Thomason, Eunice Hassan, Ma- ria Carpentler, Betty Ebuenga, Faye. Rita and Lois Howard, and Anita Cheeseborough. Guests for the evening were: Mrs. William Brady, Mrs. Rose Tome, Mrs. George E. Dentn, and Mrs. Margaret Austin, Se- nior hostess. under the instruction of Mrs. Maybelle Thomson, will meet to- morrow at 9:30 a.m. at the I.A.W.C. Building. Terry Sears Celebrate! Birthday Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Sears, of the Colo Solo Naval Station enter- tained with a party at their quarters Saturday afternoon to honor their son. Terry, on his 11th birthday anniversary. The children enjoyed an East- er egg hunt, with Jerry DeTore winning the prize. A picnic sup- per was served after which Terry cut the birthday cake. The young guests were: Bruce Van Hoff, Gary Hargrove, Roger Huff. John Ambrose, David Eber- enz. Bobby and Argean Cox, Don and Francis Mandevllle, Doris Duncan, Clara Taylor, and Ellen Hamilton. Decorating Class Meets Wednesday The Interior decorating class which is being sponsored bv the Inter-American Women's Club 'See How They Run' Is Major 1951 College Drama Show I.A.W.C. Invited to Tea The members of the Colon Unit of the Inter-American Women's Club are Invited to a tea at El Panam by the Panam Unit, on Wednesday, April 4. All who desire to attend are re- quested to make their reserva- tion by" calling Mrs. Hans lilies. Colon 207 or Mrs. Fred Haseloff. 3-2103, not later than Saturday. VMting at Santa Clara Mr. and Mrs. Dashwood Darl- ing, of Brazos Heights, and their house guest. Mr Darling's sister. Mrs. Ernest I. DuPont, Jr.. left todov to spend the week at Santa Clara. Silver Tea at Gilbert House The Cristobal Woman's Club is sponsoring a silver tea at the Gilbert House tomorrow from 3:00 to 6:00 p.m. for the benefit of the Plillantrophy committee. Music will be furnished bv the Cristo- bal Hteh School string ensemble with Miss Anna and Miss Rita Fisher as accompanists. All members are requested to bring four guests. Mrs. Stanley Kidd is chairman of the tea. Official Opening Of Teen-Age Club The Atlantic Side Teen-Age Club will open officially Friday, Arrangements have lust been March 30. There will be a block completed for the College Drama dance in the parking lot In front to present "See How They Run'' at the Diablo Clubhouse Theater oh Wednesday and Thursday. A- prll 18 and 19. Since the January^ production of the Canal Zone Junior College was cancelled be- cause of the polio ban, this will be 8:80 Pm- the only major stage show given ; -- this year by the drama group. "See How They Run" was the smash hit of the theater season of the Margarita Clubhouse with music by Caleb Clement's Orch- estra. The house-opening will start at 6:00 p.m. and the dance at The Ruth Link of the Oatun Union Church Auxiliary, under the leadership of Mrs. Leon Visiting at Fort Gulick Mai. John F. Lovd. M.C.U.S.A., and Mrs. Loyd of Fort Gulick have ps their houseguests Miss Anne Child and Mrs. E. Thomp- son Child of Findlay. Ohio. The visitors are Mrs. Loyd's sister and sister-in-law. Thev arrived last evening by Pan-American Air- ways from Cleveland. Miss Child is having her spring vacation from Ohio Wesleyan and they plan to spend the time on the Isthmus. Eater Ball The Armed Forces Y was the ^Jn^aSn^oi^TmS" *" wlnmet" Thursday at7-30 ffstagVfn ^.'whe'n TZ ' at ^ home f MrS' HW" ard Harris. There will not be a covered first produced in London, Thea ter World, had this to say about it: "An apt title for an excellent dish'spper'as'formerly planned, farce-comedy of the most involv- ed variety......Nor is there any ,__.., r\ at a offense anywhere in this admir- ISTHMIAN DATA ably written play Which deservos a Ion grun for it rollicking good humor." Samuel French, Inc. of New York, publishers of "See How They Run" in the U.S.. sent Dl- Marriage Licenses CLARK, William Hubbard. 24. crorTuberTTurVfiofThVc: of Old Hickory. Term, to>8AR- nal Zone Junior College a copy of: TAIN- Marle Susanne, 20, of An- the play last summer with these 'on- words, "this is the funniest play | BENNETT, Donald James. 20, we've had on our lists for years." of Fort Kobbe, formerly of Fres- So swift is the action, so Involved no. California, to DUNYAH, Do- the situations, so rib tickling the rothy Eleanor, 26, of Fort Gulick, plot that at Its finish, audiences formerly of Perth Amboy, N. J. are left as exhausted from laugh- themselvcs West To Make Peace With Japan Without Soviets, Sino-Reds - BY HAROLD GUARD LONDON, Mar. 27 (UP> Tin rt iiuw appears little doubt that the Western powers w'!l proceed with a Japanese Peace Conference without Russia an I Communist China, according to official sources here today. Now that the United States nos made known Its terms the wiy is open for discussion among friendly powers, they said. British officials think mem- bership of the peace conference should be open to three bro:id categories: 1) Those countries who made direct contributions to the war against Japan; 21 Those who suffered from Japanese aggression; 3> Those with special interests in the Pacific. Britain believes the confer- ence should proceed with all participants counting techni- cally as equals, but that the "major interest!" of the United States must be taken into ac- count. Britain still believes every opportunity should be given both Russia and China to at- tend the Japanese peace con- ference, with the proviso that they agree to a generally ac- ceptable procedure. It ; understood the Common- wealth countries and the United States agree the conference should include all nations Join- ing in tjae Pacific war "who would abide by the decision of a two-thirds majority." The number of points of dif- ference remaining between the Commonwealth countries and the United States on the Japanese peace treaty is not large. 15-Day Sentence Is Handed Down For Cable Theft Theft of 48 feet of lead-sheath- ed cablelatest in a series of lo- cal cable theftsled to a 15-day Jail sentence for Wesley McNlsl, 30, Panamanian. The cable, valued at $38.40, was stolen last Friday from the Cu- rundu plants of contractor LouU Sommers. In Balboa Magistrate's Court, where McNlsh pleaded guilty today,- It was brought out that he had made a deal with a "man in Panam" to steal the cable which would then be sold and the proceeds split. Tyrone and Linda Lose Furs and Jewellery LONDON, Mar. 27. (UP) Ports and air terminals are be- ing watched by the police today for $42,000 worth of Jewelry and furs stolen over the weekend from the Mayfalr apartment of Tyrone Power and Linda Christ- Ian. The United States' generous terms are unlikely to present any dlf'lcultles. They might even be an inducement to the Peiplng Government not to align Itself with Russia's position on the procedure. There is little likelihood now of the United States being voted down by the Commonwealth countries and other participants at the Japanese peace confer- ence. There are likely to be inltl differences at the conference ie garding Japan's international status in matters of trade and defense, but these are likely to be smoothed out by a majority vote. Special interest Is being at- tached to United States pro- posals that the future of South Sakhalin and the Kurlle Is- lands be called at the peace conference. This is an offer to re-open the whole question of the Yalta de- cisions, and to challenge Russia's tight to these ex Japanese is- lands. > In London the move Is seen as' carefullly planned for the atten- tion of the Japanese, while tlis United States suggestion that the future of Formosa and liie Pescadores should be discussed fat the same time as South Sakhalin and the Kuriles is thought likely to prove attractive to Commun- ist China. Third Assassination In Iran Is Thwarted By Arrest of Four TEHERAN. Mar. 27, (UP) A 6lot to assassinate Oeneral Abdul usseln Hejazl, military govern- or of Teheran, was thwarted to- day by the arrest of four men, po- lice report. The four men are said to have confessed tbey belonged to the extremist Moslem politico-reli- gious sect Fldalyan Islam (Devo- tees of Islam). Members of this sect have al- ready assassinated Premier Gen- eral All Razmara and his Educa- tion Minister Hamid Zanganeh. Zanganeh died yesterday from gunshot wounds inflicted a week ago. Razmara was slain at a Te- heran mosque Mar. 7. Police sources said the four would-be assassins of HeUv' wee arrested on suspicion while hang- ing around police headquarter. They were found to be carrying loaded pistols. They confessed they planned to kill Hejazl. 8even other members of the Fl- dalyan Islam sect were arrested Saturday after a gunflght with the police. The sect said Razmara and Zanganeh were slain because they opposed the nationalization of Iran's rich oilfields. It threat- ened further assassinations of foes of the scheme, which has been approved by both houses of the Iranian parliament. Hejazl was appointed military governor of Teheran and charged with the enforcement of martial law in the capital after the shooting of Zanganeh. &*^"S2~* 5minutt-,0<'dn,i' Births OSBORNE, Mr. and Mrs. Silas ter as though they had run a footrace. Tickets for the college drama s: ss^^ssws ari^ra.?0 iVaS. wr3.Tg.-g5; 5 ^rvieemen attended by 87 gtudent ^adMcm members of Mar. 21. Colon Hospital. the college. Special boards will be MAITLAND. Mr. and Mrs. El- set up In Balboa clubhouse and win S., of Silver City, son, Mar. in Diablo Clubhouse on Sunda,-.: 22. Colon Hospital. The ballroom was decorated with cutouts of Easter eggs, with two large bunnies forming the backdrop for the 60th Army Band, which furnished music for the evening. Artificial flowers before the presentation of the farce-comedy on Wednesday, Apr. 18 and on Thursday, Apr. 19. BABY'S TEETHIN6 need give you no anxieties l"here need be no restless night, no tears, no baby disorders, if you have Ashton & Partoni Infant' Powders bandy. Mothers all over the world bave found them soothing and cooling, when baby is fretful through teething, and, best of sB, they are ABSOLUTELY SAFE. ASHTON ft PARSONS INFANTS POWDERS GIBB, Mr. and Mrs. C. I., of Paraiso, son, Mar. 22, Gorges Hospital. GREGORY. Mr. and Mrs T. F . of Panama, daughter, Mar. 22, Gor car, of Vista Hermosa. daugh-;r, Mar. 23, Gorgas Hospital. STENCIL. Commander and Mrs W.J.. of Quarry Heights, son. Mar. 23. Gorgas Hospital. ASPRILLA, Mr. and Mrs. A., of Gamboa, daughter. Mar. 24, Gor- gas Aospital. NESFIELD. Mr. and Mrs. U., of Panama, son. Mar. 24, Gordas H.-spital. WHEATON, Mr. and Mrs. J. M.. t.f Colon, daughter, Mar 24, Gor- ges Hospital. SANDERS. Sgt. and Mrs. G.E.. of Fort Kobbe. son, Mar. 24, Gor- gas Hospital. SMALL. Mr. and Mrs. IB Of Tank, daughter, Mar. 25. Gorgas Hospital. WILLIAMS.Mr. and Mrs. RM., of Parque Lefevre. daughter, Mar. 25. Gorgas Hospital. THOMPSON. Mr. and Mrs. James, of Panama, daughter. Mar 25. Gorgas Hospital. BARTLETT, Mr. and Mn. Frank, of Pedro Miguel, son, Mar. 25. Gorgas Hospital. LAIRD, Mr. and Mrs. D. L., of Pedro Miguel, son, Mar. 25, Gor- gas Hospital. ALEXANDER. Mr. and Mrs. Al- bert of Chepo, son. Mar. 25, Oor- gas Hospital. Deaths GrTTEN8. Baby boy. five hour", Mar 22. Gorgas Hospital. LE8LIE. Washington I., 57, of La Boca. Mar. 23, Gorgas Hospi- tal. CHANDLER. Walter P.. 76. Of Balboa. Mar. 24. Gorgas Hospital. LAYNE. Frederick B., 58. of Camp Coiner, Mar. 25, Gorgas Hospital w.odwf-id.-H.-ivor""'-"" Army, Navy, Air Force News Army Artists Will Compete In Five ~; Different Classes COLONEL JAMES E. BOWEN. JR., (center) who Is leaving the 33rd Regiment Combat Team to assume command of the Atlantic Sector, receives a scroll "in testimonial of their re- gards" from the Officers of the Combat Team. Presenting the scroll in behalf of the officers are Major Howard G. Bardes, left, and Capt. Oscar Drake. The action took place at the Fort Kobbe Officers Club recently, where a reception was held In honor of Colonel and Mrs. Bowen. (Official U.8. Army Photo) A Bomb Radiation Burns Respond To Simple Care AS IT SHOULD BE! try Maxwell House and eajoy a really delicios cap of tea...the just -right drink at any time... aeynhere! Available abo in lea bags. TEA MAXWELL HOUSE TEA The announcement that two new methods developed by Army research to simplify and Improve the treatment of extensive radia- tion burns was received at Head- quarters USARCARIB today. One treatment, called thi "open'' method, is carried out without the use of any type of dressing. The other type of treat- ment requires a standardized pressure dressing. Both treatments were descrio- ed recently In a talk prepared Tor delivery by Colonel William 8. Stone. Army medical officer, at the annual post-graduate assem- bly and convention of the College of Medical Evangelists in Los An - geles, California. Colonel 8tone, commandant of the Army Medi- cal Graduate school at Washing- ton. DC, spoke on "Individual Protection and Treatment of Thermal Burns Following An A- Bomb Explosion." Colonel Stone described the open treatment, new in medic A circles, as simply exposing the burned surface to warm, dry air using no medication. A dry crust forms in 24 hours, after which a high calorie nutritious diet is supplied. Infection is preveo.el by formation of the dry crust. The pressure method, he said. Is more applicable to extensive burns involving more than 20 pet! cent of the body surface. In inn treatment a new specially con- structed dressing is used which requires no change until second degree burns are healed or thlcM degree burns are ready for skm grafting. In order to make effective treatment possible Immediate.'y Rfter an atomic explosion. Co'. Stone suggested a plan be devel- oped to organize and train per - sonnel to meet the situation. He explained that a study of thermal burn cases by the open method of treatment showed that persons with 15 per cent or less of their body surface in- volved in first or second degree burns, with minor third degree burns, get along very well with- out any assistance if Infections and pain are controlled in the first 24 hours. These individ- uals, he said, could be taught to care for themselves, using the open method and a tew items in a first-aid packet. Although first and second degree burns are the most painful, he said, these people could be taught by trained instructors to use self-treatment during the crl - tical period. This would relieve the load on medical facililie-, which should accept only burn cases involving greater than 20 per cent of the body surface and those complicated by other injuries. Colonel Stone suggested the following tentative classification of burn patients following an A- homb explosion: Mild: second degree bWns over less than 15 per cent of the body with no contained areas of third degree greater than one inch in diameter and with no third de- gree lnvolvment of the hands. Treatment: open method with minor dressings, with remedy for pain and drugs for infection on :i seli-help basis. Moderately severe: second de gree burns over 15 to 20 per cent of the body with contained areas of third degree burns not greater than one Inch In diameter. Trea; - ment: largely self-help, as with "Mild" cases, with some cases needing dispensary care and wa- ter with salt and sodium bicar- bonate added, taken by mouth. Severe: second degree burns over 2C per cent of the body with varying amounts of third degree or where the hands are Involved with major third degree burns. Treatment: hospital care. "If every person Is taught to fall to the ground and huddle In- stantaneously upon perceiving the flash of an atom bomb." Col. Stone said. "the. severity of the burns and blast damage can be reduced by greater than 50 per cent." U.S. Army Caribbean officials announced today that an art contest for members of tht command will be held, as a pre* limlnary to an All-Army con- test to be conducted In October under the auspices of the Ad- jutant General. Entries in the Panama area must be made through service clubs at the respective posts not later than June 1. Authorization for submitting entries in the Antilles command has been given, with the same deadline to be observed. The entries will be grouped n five categories: pesters, car- toons, design, painting and drawing. The "Design" category, the most extensive, embraces design of "any Item or object of common use, such as tex- tiles, clothing, furnishings, ve- hicles, weapons, and others." and also "plana for model homes, and recreation centers or buildings." Prizes will be provided for the best entry and the runner-up entry in each category. A board of judges is to be selected by the Recreation officer, Special Services Section. Headquarters, U8ARCARIB. Fort Amador, who has been designated Contest Officer. This section will provide detailed Information to persons Interested in entering the con- test. Navy Wants Payroll Supervisor for Rodman The Industrial Relations Of- fice, u. 8. Naval Supply Facil- ity, Rodman, is accepting ap- plications until April 6 for a civilian payroll section super- visor, GS-5. Applicants must have two years experience with government payroll work. The annual base pay s $3,873. PC's 1st Sanitary Chief To Get NYU Hall Of Fame Place A bust of Major General Wil- liam C. Gorgas, first chief Sa- nitary Officer of The Panama Canal, will be installed in the Hall of Fame In special cere- monies at New York University May 24. according to informa- tion from Thomas W. Martin of Birmingham, Alabama, chair- man of the Gorgas Hall of Pama j committee. I This committee, largely respon- sible for the nomination of Oeneral Gorgas for a place in ' the gallery of great Americans, j has recently received and for- I warded to the Hall of Fame the ! necessary funds for the lnstal- ! latlon of the bust, Mr. Martin said. General Gorgas was one of I six chosen this year for a place In the Hall of Fame and re- ceived more votes than any of the other candidates. The se- lection of persons to be accord- ed this honor Is made every five years by a group of 119 se- lectors from all over the United States. Others who will be accorded the same honor this year art Woodrow Wilson. Susan B. An- thony. Alexander Graham Bell, Theodore Roosevelt and Joslah Willard Gibbs. dom* your watch Army Commissions 1st Woman Dentist At Captains Rank The first woman dentist to be commissioned in the Army Den- tal Corps reported for duty Mar. 21. according to Information re- ceived by the United States Ar- my Caribbean, today. She is Dr. Helen E. Myers, of Philadelphia and Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Dr. Myers will oe assigned to Fort Lee, Virginia, in the grade of captain. Dr. Myers, the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Wiley E. Myers, of 720 N. 40th Street Philadelphia, shares offices with her father, who has practiced dentistry at that address since 1906. She also maintains an office in Lan- caster. Dr. Myers received the degree of Doctor of Dental Surgery from Temple University In Philadelphia In 1941. Dr. Myers Is a member of the American Dental Association, the Association of American Women Dentists, Soroptomlst International Association, the West Philadelphia Odentogra- phlc Society, and the Lancaster Chamber of Commerce. Legislation enacted last Aug. authorized the appointment of female professional personnel for the first time In any Re- serve Corps of the Army Me- Pimples Go Don't let ltd.ins Pimples Hoseme, Ringworm. Blsckhsade. Acne. Psoriasis, Foot Itch, Athlete's Pool (Allpufga) or other blemishes disfigure your skin and embarrass you another day without trying Nixederm. This great medicine eombats (be germs and parasites which eften are tbe real cause of skin troubles. Tost Is why Nlxoderm so quickly makes your skin soft, clear, smooth snd at- tracts*. Get Nixederm frosmyour drug- gist todayese how much setter ysesr akisj looks aod feels tomorrow. dical Service. A wartime law authorising the appointment of female physicians terminated in 1947. As officers on active duty, wo- men dentists appointed In the Reserve will be given same op- portunities for clinical practice and advancement now available to male officers in comparable grades. The pay, allowances, and retirement benefits which ac- crue to male officers also apply to women dental reservists. BEST SUNBURN Lour wstch tells how up-to- date you re. In fsct, people are often judged by the wstcji they wear! Be sure of msk- ing the best impression ... wear a Gruen Americs's choice for beauty, accurscy, value! See our selection. TAHITI THE JEWELRY STORE 137 CENTRAL AVR. 1ST e4Sr C./T UMTfJ s f.E srx THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER TTTESDAT, MARCH 17, 1951 The More You Tell ...The Quicker You Sell! w \ USE PANAMA AMERICAN CLASSIFIEDS^ Leavt your ad with one of our Agents or our Offices Minimum for 1 15 words 3r each additional word. LEWIS SERVICE No. 4 Tivoli Ava. rhuns 2-22*1 KIOSKO DE LESSEFS rarqu* I.nttpa Panam MORRISON'S Ns. 4 I'ourlh of Jnly Ava. Phuna 2-9441 BOTICA CARLTON 10 059 Mrlrndrz Ave. Phone 255 COLON SALON DE BELLEZA AMERICANO No. U Wa 12th Ilr.,1 THE PANAMA AMERICAN No. 47 "H" Street Panam No 12.17 Cutral Ave. Coln FOR SALE Automobiles FOl< SALE: Chrysler 1949. New "i orke:, used one yeor, cost new $3.600. rodio, seat covers, best offer over $2.000. See Ned Neville N.C.C.S 2-2851 or 2-1653. Balboo._____________^^ FCR SALE:-49 Buick Super Con- vertib'e. Quorters 249-D. Coco So- lo 302^_____________________________ FOR SALE1950 Olds "88," 4-door Sedon, hydramotic. radio, under- cooted. 5623-D Hecker Place. Dio- b!o. 4-6 p.m. Tel. 2-1889. FOR SALE OR TRADE:1950 Pock- ord. 4-door Sedan. W S W tires, radio, new condition will accept trode. smoller cor. Con be fin- anced. Telephone 25-3520. NEW heavy duty coterpillor D-4 with ongle doier. 1942 Mack truck V.i ton. good condition. All duty paid. 1439-C. Owen street, Balboa. FOR SALETwo Ford Panel Delivery Trucks. Closed bids accepted. In- quire ct Pan American World Air- ways, Inc., "L" Street No. 5, De- Lssseps Pork. Manager's Office. FOR SALE: Chevrolet Pickup 1-2 ' ton 1940. Motor overhouled. Duty paid. Internotional Pickup 3-4 ton. jffctellent condition, priced to sell. 'Garage Smithy. Colon 1102-J. Cristobal 2325. ______________ FOR SALE: Chevrolet 1949 four door sedon, low mileoge. duty paid. Tel.j-1289 _3J818.________ FOR- SALE: 195 I Ford Custom. 4- Door. Phone 83-6185, ofter 4:30 p\ m. MISCELLANEOUS Do you hove a drinkmf problem? Writ Alcoholics Anonymous Bo. 2031 Ancn, C. 1. We drill water wells. For information telephone 3-0931, Panama, Mr. Charles J. Hilbert. If your piono need fixing, call Sidney E. Hyoms. Box 3493, Ancon, C. Z. FOR SALE Miscellaneous FOR SALE:High gloss oil paints and enamels. Mildew-proof. $3.25 gallon. Tropiduro Stores. Bomboo magazine rack, $15.00. Porch screens. $ 10.00. Louvers (duplex). $10.00. 6 piece wicker set, $50.00. Electric clock, 25 cycle. $2.50. Motors, 25 cycle, new 1/4 h.p., $25.00, used 1/4 h.p., $20.00, 1/6 h.p., $10.00. Bench, grinder. $8.50. Set sockets, $25.00. 1/2" electric drill AC-DC, $30.00. 10" band sow Delto, 4 blades. $35.00. Desk, $10.00. Wood vise. $2.50. Sewing machine. $50.00. 30. volances Iduplex), $15.00. One chifforobe, $20.00. House 5758-B Diablo. Tel. 2-2937. FOR SALE Household FOR SALE: Diningroom furniture, livingroom furniture, Simmons double bed, Servil got refrigerator, all exceptional bargain. Plomara Nocional, Central 210. FOR SALE:Westinghouse refriger- ator 9 cubic feet, all porcelain, house 027 I-A, Gamboa. FOR SALE: 1950 9 cu. ft. Frigi- daire. 25 cycle. $200.00. 1947 7 cu. ft. Frigidaire, 25 cycle, $100. 00. Terms if desired. All Frigidairos have 5 year guorantoa from data of purchase. Barry Kenealy. House 172-A, New Cristobal. Phono 2378. FOR SALE:Westinghouse Refrigr- alo. 25 cycle. 7 cu. ft. 1948 Mo- del. Excellent condition. House 807-A, Tavernilla St. Balboa, phone 2-3635. RESORTS Phillip*. Beach totiogos, Santa Clara Bo number 435. Balboa Phone Pona mo 3-1877 or Cristobal 3- 167.* GRAMLICH'S Santo Claro beoch. cottages, furnished, electric. re- frigeration, moderate rates. Phone Gamboa. 6-541 or 4-567. Will.ams iunto Clora beach Cottages. 'wo Dedrooms, electric refrigera- tion. RocKgas range* Phone Sal- boo 2-3050. Except Week-ends. FOR RENT:Foster's furn shed cot- tages, between Santa Clai ond Rio Hoto. Phone 2-3'42, Panan-o or see caretaker. FOR RENT Houses FOR RENT: Furnished residence. Heights Golf. Call Tel. 2-1456. FOR SALE: Dont fear BURGLARS. Buy o Belgion Police pup. Except- ional breed. Phone Shropnel, Bal- boo 2820. FOR SALE:Upright piano, newly re- built, A-l condition, suitable for ledge hall, club or church. Price $300.00. Phone 4-565. FOR SALE: Pure bred Pekinese puppy, one month old. Peru Ave No. 58, upstairs. FOR SALE:1949 Ford 6, 4 Door Sedan. Call 2-1467 or 5647, Apt. It "Diablo, after 6 p. m. FOR.iSALE: 1948 Dodge Sedan, "excellent condition throughout, new .tires, fluid drive. House 41 Gatun 'tight House Rood. WANTED Miscellaneous FOR SALE: Dodge corryall front . -wheel dnve, duty paid, child's ...crib. Excellent condition, mahogony coffee table, office desk and lamp, ._Ctric fon. mahogany dming- room set. Telephone Panoma 3- . "078.__________________ SJOJ i i :. Position Offered ..|-M------------------------------- ------ WANTED :-Typiit clerk. English - Spcnish speaking, preferably know- ledge shorthond; permonent posi- tion for person guoranteeing move . from Colon to Panama when offices "' move to Pcnama within eight months, or Panoma resident who con work in Colon until offices move Panamo. Columbia Pictures, Justo Arcsemena Avenue between _ .7 ond 8 Phone Colon 177. Honda Governor Calls Crime Prober 'AH Kinds of Liar* . TALLAHASSEE. Fla..' Mar. 27 (UP. Gov. Fuller Warren de- clared today that the operating director of the Greater Miami Crime Commission Is nine kinds of a llai. Commission Director Daniel p. Sullivan had accused Warren of telephoning the State Racing Commission in behalf of race track rackeleer Charles Brnid after a National Democratic Party official telephoned War- ren. in a statement challenging Sullivan to prove the charges, th Governor asserted that the crime commission official was > il) persistent. i2i unembar- rassed. 3i productive. '4 slip- rfry, 5i intemperate, 6" etjreei- ns. <7i continuing and 18 j/erienced liar, and 9 > a liar or a price. --------------------------------------- WANTED: Good dancers to act as partners. Contact Harnett & Dunn. Balboo YMCA, Thursday 6 p. m. to 9 p. m. s WANTED: Excellent and reliable young woman seeks employment as house maid and laundress, very good references. 3 days .per week Contact Mrs. Myer. P.A.D. 5288. LESSONS LFSSONS: Learn Walti. Fcx-trot. Jitterbug, Rumba, Sambo, Tango, mambo. Studio Balboa YMCA. Tuesday. Thursday. Saturday, oil day 10 a. m. to 9 p. m. Harnett & Dunn. CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH BY MRS ROMERO. Wonderful system Estudiante St. 77-A. Mrs. G. P. Edwards Of Coco Solo Dies Suddenly At Home .DELICIOUS. CRISTOBAL, Mar. 26 Mrs. Gladys Phillips Edwards, 41, of =o!o, died late Sunday en route to the Coco Solo Naval Hospital, a short time after she was found unconscious on the floor of her home. Mrs Edward had recently hefn discharged from a local hospital where- she had under- gone surgical care, members of her family told Canal Zone pcr- llce. Sunday afternoon she com- | plained of a severe headache i and had lain down to sleep. About 5:45 p.m. Mrs. Edwards' 20-year-old son. who had also . been asleep, was roused by the telephone. He found his mother ' lying on the kitchen floor. She apparestly had struck her head in falling. Medical assistance was sum- moned and an ambulance call- I cd. b. v Mrs. Edwards died before she reached the hospital. She is survived by her son i and by ha' husband, George, a former Chief petty officer now employed with the Navy's Pub- lic Works. Funeral services will be held at Cristobal Union Church at 3:30 p.m. Thursday, with burial immediately thereafter at Mt. Hope Cemetery. Viet Minhs Attack Red RiverDelta SAICON. Mar. 27 vere fighting broke out today I along the northern edge of the i Red River Delta, according to ; French officials. Several outlying posts and pro-French fortified villages were attacked by the rebels, but the Viet Mlnh forces were re- pulsed everywhere. One French partisan force "after magnificent resistance' counter-attacked with artillery support and inflicted heafy los- ses on the rebels. Thoueh the weather was bad French aircraft attacked rebel concentrations near Vletri, 21 miles northwest of Hanoi, and Phulan"thuon". ?o miles north- east of that city. FOR SALE: Mahogany diningroom, bedroom sets. China dishes, porlor lamps, American educator. 8045, Apt. 3, 9th. St. Colon. FOR SALE:_7 ft. 25 cycle Westing- house refrigerator. 2 year. 8 months guorontee. $150.00 14" 25 Cy. fan. Used tires and tubes 6.70 15. House 476-C, Cocoli. FOR SALE Real Estate TWO LOTS FOR SALE: In cool Los Cumbres, (25 minutes from Anconi all utilities, available, near crest of gentle hill, obout 1,000 square meters. Section is being rapidly built up. Good investment or build- ing site. If you wish to inquire about this, coll 2-1293 or write P. J. Runkel. Box 249 Dioblo Heights. FOR RENT: Completely furnished chalet. Livingroom, diningroom, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, porch, terroce. garage, servant's room, garden, large patio. 6th Avenue, Golf Hgts. Phone 3-2541. FOR RENT:Chalet: three bedrooms, livingroom, diningroom, kitchen, garage, two services. Big "patio" fenced. Good vecinity .!1js stop.. B.75.00 a month. Inform 91-B, Belisorio Porras Street. FOR RENT Apartments Cast Is Announced For Cristbal Show 'Love Or Money' CRISTOBAL. C.Z., Mar. 27 Cathy Barber will be seen In the highly-coveted role of Janet. Bla^.e, the naive young heroine of "For Love or Money." when the Cristobal Little Theater's presen- tation of F. Hugh Herberts laugh hit opens at the Scout Shack on Colon Beach next Apr. 21. Carol Rice has undertaken the direction of this comedy Written by the same author as "Kiss and Tell" the highly hilarious pro- duction during the last war. Much speculation has been a- roused as to who would be chose-n for the so-called "star-making" role ever since the Cristobal Lit- tle Theater announced that they would do this successful new plav from the pen of the same F. Hugh Herbert who wrote the hilarious "Kiss and Tell." The part of Ja- net was created In New York by June Lockhart. who was catapul- ted to Broadway stardom and oe- sleged with Hollywood offers while playing the role. Walter McCracken has been chosen to play Preston Mitcheil. stage star of forty-five, in "For Love or Money." The curtain ris- es on the day that Mitchell has become a widower, after having been married to an Invalid wile for ten years. Into his Long In- land home bursts a rain-drench- ed girl of twenty, Janet Blake, fleeing from a party where sh. had been affronted. As her shel- ter under actor Mitchell's roof becomes prolonged, his romantic interest in her mounts, thoir-h he remains mute because of the discrepancy in their ages. Mat- ters are further complicated by the Intrusion of an pr-fen' * veterar from next door, a friend of the actor's wno. ioo. i*uu, fugitive.Janet engaging. In 'hi end she must make a choice be- tween the two, but not before many hilarious complications have taken place. Also comically Involved are the actor's servants, to be played by Betty Du:.:an and John L. WU1- iam.s. the parents of the young man from next door, to be play- ed by Orace Williams and Roger Orvis: and Nlta Havemeyer. Mti chell's leading lady who has prior claims on his affections, to oe acted by Fran Orvis. Jim Fernandez will be seen as the ingratiating BUI Tremalne, the actor's rival for Janet's al- tentions. The Little Theater's presentation of "For Love or Mo- ney." which Is being staged by Agnes Allan will continue for 3 performances through Apr. 24t:i at the Scout Shack on Colon Beach. FOR RENT:One independent floor, private entrance. No. 4 First St., Perry Hill, 3 bedroom. 2 baths, garage. Coll 2-2374.' FOR RENT: Modern 2 bedrooms apartment, in newly constructed building, for further details call Mndez & 7ubieto. Phone 2-3035. ALHAMRA APARTMENTS for rent. Modern furnished ond unfurnished apartments. Contact office No. 8061. 10th Street. New Cristobal, phone 1386. Colon. FOR RENT: Modern one bedroom opartment with livingroom, kitchen ond bath on Tivoli Avenue, across from the Ancon Post Office. Coll ot Tivoli Trovel Agency. Telephone Panama 2-0465. FOR RENT: Modern apartment, chalet style, for morried couple only. 1st. Ave. "El Carmen" No. 24, Panama. COMMERCIAL fir PROFESSIONAL YOUR HOUSEWORK WILL BE EASIER WITH KITCH'K HANDY CABINET ATTACHMENTS Disappearing towel bars Cup Shelves Spice Shelves Pot Holders Utensil Holders and many others. Geo. F. Novey, Inc. 279 Central Ave. Tel. 3-0140 RE-UPHOLSTER Your furniture like new. Lowest prices. Let me figure your material need. Tree ultimate* AI.BKRTO HERE.? Pae. 3-3151 I a.m. to 7 p.m. ' DRY SEASON is the season for PAINTING Visit our stadium area store on new concrete road. Light Traffic Easy Parking English speaking clerks EVERYTHING IN PAINTS ROPIDURAJj; THE BEST FOR LESS FOR RENT: Aportments of one bedroom, sitting-diningroom, kitch- en, bath, at Via Espaa, No. 20. see De Costro. "B" Avenue No. 24. Phone 2-1616, Panama. FOR SALE: Furnished apartment one-room, both, Frigidaire, no kitchen. Also two-room, both, kitchen. Bella Vista. Phone 3-1648. FOR RENT:Aportments of one bed- room, sitting-diningroom, kitchen, both, at 44th Street East No. 9, Bella Vista. De Costro. "8" Ave- nue No. 24. Phone 2-1616. Pan- amo. FOR RENT: Apartment concrete house. Modern commodities. "S" Street and Mariono Arosemena. Coll Tel. 2-1456. FOR RENT Room FOR RENT:Furnished room, Amer- ican home, near Ancon bus-stop, to American woman. References re- quired. Tel. Ponomi 2-3067. FOR RENT:Nicely furnished cool clean room, meols if desired. Bella Vista. 46th St. 18-A Phone 3- 1789.. office hours. 2-1693. FOR RENT:Best located furnished room in Bella Vista. With all com- forts. No. 13. 43rd Street. High Flood Pressure If High Blood Prsssurs mafcaa rou dlny, bin pains aroaasl heart, headachaa, short breath, ka- diiresllon, palpitation, and swollen ankle, you can get almost instant rallef from these dangerous ay Dip- loma with HVNOX. Ask your ohrmlat for HVNOX today and tael rears younger la a faw dayi Truman Praises OAS; Proclaims April 14 Pan American Day WASHINGTON Mar. 27 (USIS) I President Truman says the Organization of American States "has demonstrated Its effective- ness In the maintenance of peace in the Western Hemis- phere.'' In a proclamation naming April 14 as Pan American Day. he added, "The Inter-American system may serve as an example o progress In the achievement of peace, security, and coopera- tion." That date Is the 61st an- niversary of the founding of the Pan American union, which now serves as the General Secretariat of the Organization of American States. The President's proclamation urged, "all Interested organiza- tions, and the people generally, to unite In suitable ceremonies commemorative of the founding of the Pan American Union, thereby testifying: to the close bonds of friendship existing be- tween the people of the United State-t and those of the other American republics." LEICA CAMERAS Model IMF Synchronised LENSES ft ACCESSORIES AT BELOW U.S. PRICES. Direct C.Z. Shipments At Factory Prices. Porras Plata 5 de Mayo Panam, R. P. DR. CARL AHLTEEN CHIROPRACTOR #20 Tivoli Ave. Apt. 1. Tel. 2-3387. Hours: 10 to 12 a.m.3 to 6 p.m r III A B R BUILDING AGENCIAS GLOBALES Via Espaa. Near Juan Franco Tel. 3-1503 mm a POLAROID j&* CAMERA .,2"E.1h '"u,,,r ~ * '" jour flm.hed. prrmsnrat sictura a fhT. uu.r *" "'* S^J that to us* lbs niuini ot Polsroid Caara. No liquids, so dark room . no fuss the Ira nakt. th. p|cu.ra automatically sa you advance it for tba aaat aboc. Sos it in action at INTERNATIONAL JEWELERY *,d join In International Hotel Explosions Shake Downtown Miami MIAMI, Florida. Mar. 27 (UP) Three mysterious explosions were heard in Miami last night. One of them shook a downtown hotel. There was only one minor casualty. Police said an explosive charge shattered windows and wrecked one room of the Imperial Hotel. An hour and a half later an- other blast was heard from near a school building In another part of the city. The mayor reported a third blast in the southern sector of the city, but police cars could nol find where. Peronista Deputy Formally Protests U.S. Paper Probing BUENOS AIRES, Mar. 27 (UP) Peronista Deputy Raul Bustos Fierro Introduced a resolution in- to the Chamber of Deputies to- day protesting questions asked Argentine Foreign Minister Tip- ollto J. Paz In a recent Washing- ton press conference by the Washington Dally News, of the Scripps-Howard chain. Much of this questioning cen- tered on the closing of La Pren- sa. Bustos Fierro saldthe questions asked Paz were "documental evi- dence of the systematic tergiver- sation of Argentine reality by a section of the United States press. "This section responds solely and exclusively to the financial interests and imperialistic orien- tation of the plutocratic enter- prises which edit and distributes them in 'chains' in the United States." Another Peronista deputy. Jo- s Emilio Visca, introduced a re- solution urging changing the names of all towns in Argentina presently named after Jos C. Paz. founder of La Prensa. The Buenos Aires regional or- ganization of the General Con- federation of Labor renewed its demand for the expropriation of La Prensa when it adopted a new- resolution urging the nationali- zation of that newspaper and the trial of its top executives for "il- legal association." 6 Cyclists fined For 'Escorting' C.Z. Fire Engine Delaying a fire apparatus on GaiHard Highway Easter Sunday afternoon led to $10 fines today in Balboa Magistrate's Court for three civilian and three soldier motorcycle riders. There were more than six mo- torcycles in the gronp which sur- rounded a fire engine en louie from Diablo to Pedro Miguel but the numbers of only six were ob- tained. Police said that the cycle- riders were all over the road in front, beside and behind the fire engine and at more than one time were trying to race it The offense was considered of unusual seriousness inasmuch as 31 fire alarms, most of them tor grass fires, were turned In Sun- day and every available piece of fire apparatus was busy. At the time of the motorcycle incident, the Diablo rig was en route to Pe- dro Miguel to stand by, after the Pedro Miguel rig had been called out. Defendants In the morning ac- tion were: Harold W. Klrby. ?8, John Desmond Wood Howie. 20, Jerry Franklin Fox, 17, all civil- ians, Raymond E. Hedges, 23, Noah Allen Pyle. 19 and Bernard William Mello. 18, all servicemen. Hedges, police said, has a leng- thy record of traffic violations and was warned that further conviction would lead to recom- mendation for suspension of his license. He has, however, a traf- fic bureau citation presently out- standing. British, French Press Flay McArthur LONDON, Mar. 27 (UP)Brlt- | lsh and French newspapers of all forties. Including the organ of he British Labor Government, I loosed a blast of criticism at Gen. | Douglas MacArthur today for his latest declaration on the Korean war. Some said he had exceeded his authority. Some said he had flouted the United Nations. Some said he may have wrecked a plan for a new approach to the Chi- nese Communists. MacArthur said In a statement I Issued In Tokyo, that the Chl- , nese Communists lacked the ln- I dustrial capacity to wage mod- i em war. He said they faced the risk of collapse if the United Na- | tlohs decided not to contain the war to the area of Korea. He offered within his authori- ty as UN military commander to confer with the enemy com- mander in chief on military means by which "the realization i of the political objectives of the I UN In Korea.. might be accom- plished without further blood-1 shed." Said the London Dally Herald, organ of the Labor Government: "General MacArthur. wearing his self-tailored mantle of pro- consul, coupled his Invitation for a truce with an imDlied threat of an extension of the war Into Communist China Itself." It Is clear, the Conservative Dally Telegraph said, that the State Department in Washing- ton is "once again very annoyed with General MacArthur." "The last thing Washington wanted at this moment was to tickle the sore subject of Gen- eral MacArthur's battered ego, or revive speculation about what he might and might not be able to do If only he was allowed to storm ahead," said the Liberal Manchester Guardian's Washing- ton corresoondent. "The (UN) General Assembly becomes embarrassed, resentful or merely Incredulous when Gen- eral MacArthur... .speaks again of carrying the war to the Chi- nese mainland," the independent London Times said. "...He cuts across nearly everything that has been said and done at Lake Sue. cess for the past six months." MacArthur roused the British Communist newspaper Daily Worker to ask: "W,ho the hell la MacArthur that he should claim any such functions?" The Conservative Paris news- paper Figaro said MacArthur'a negotiation offer was "an olive branch with a bayonet hidden amongst the leaves." The leftist-independent Com- bat said It was a peace offer "with an olive branch In one hand and! a good dose of dynamite In the other." It looks, Combat said, as if MacArthur "wants to end a war in Korea in order to enter one with China, dragging along with him the United Nations which he has always abused and his own. government which he has often Ignored." , Meanwhile at Lake Success MacArthur declared that thai "myth of invincibility of Com- munist military power" has been exploded in Korea where the Chi- nese losses "have been among the bloodiest of modern times." This conclusion was contained in the field commander's reoort to the United Nations for Feb-' ruary. MacArthur made no estimate! of the Chinese Communist cas-' ualtles, but he concluded his re- port: "I am entirely satisfied with, the situation at the front where the enemy has suffered a tactic- al reverse of measurable propor- tion. His losses have been among the bloodiest of modern times. "As these are from Communist China's finest troops, It will be difficult to adequately replace' them. The enemy is finding It an entirely different problem fight- ing 350 miles from his vase than when he had his 'sanctuary' In, his immediate rear, with our air, and naval forces practically ze-i roed out. "He is now paying for the llln. slon, so falsely but effectively propagandized when Communist China initiated undeclared war.i that he had decisively defeated' these same forces." | Soldierrs Tiff With Dance Hall Girl Sets Off Town Riot EPINAL, France, Mar. 27 (UP) Strong police riot squads pa- trolled this shot-up town after nine persons were injured in a military mutiny over a French girl's refusal to dance with a Mo- roccan soldier. Nine Moroccan soldiers arrest- ed during a battle with the Epln- al police were released early to- day after they agreed to turn In the arms they had seized in a raid on their battalion arsenal. But five submachine guns are said to be still missing, and the provincial police prefect has ask- ed the military authorities to move the Moroccan battalion out of town Immediately. The trouble started Sunday when a Moroccan sergeant slap- ped a local girl at a dance hall for refusing to dance with him. The sergeant was arrested. When 30 Moroccan soldiers marched on the police station last night he was released to avoid trouble. But the Moroc- cans attacked the police and an armv sentry with stones and bricks. Russia Moving To Sign Peace Treaty. With East Germany BERLIN, Mar. 27, (UP) Rus- sia has assured East Germany that she will sign a peace treaty with the Communist-dominated East German government this year, according to an official In that Government. He said Russia believes Germa- ny's partition will continue for the forseeable future because there is no hope of winning ac- ceptance In West Germany for the East German offer to nego- tiate the unity of the country. Russia is confident of getting the West to include on the For- eign Ministers Conference agen- da the question of a general peace treaty with Germany and the withdrawal of all occupation troops, the official added. By signing a.peace treaty with East Germany Russia could still have troops stationed in Poland posing the same threat to West- ern Europe that they do now. If Russia withdraws her troops from Germany the Communists could again seize the initiative in the propaganda battle by forcing the Western Powers to defend their continued occupation of West Germany. The officials said the East Ger- man Government has already been putting out feelers through a third party to India and Swit- zerland to have them accredited diplomatically in East Berlin. Both these countries now main- tain a mission in West Germany. They are being told that diplo- matic recognition of East Ger- many would not mean withdraw- al of recognition of West Germa- ny. PRICE GOUGING AT HOME, (Continued from Page 1) cratlc world through the Econo- mic Cooperative Administration. Stabilization would crack down en nations receiving ECA bene- fits when such nations also were souging United States taxpayers on high priced raw materials. As one stabilization author: I y said: "8ome of our foreign friends seem to think ECA is a one way street. That way of thinking must stop. ECA Is a tv.o way street, or ECA aid should stop." That Is rough language, but in simple words which the Unlt"d States' foreign friends readily can translate and understand. Exasperated stabilization men say the United States should be eager to pay fair and reasonable prices to rearm and reinforce it- self and the rest of the free world against Communist ag- presslon, but they insist also that the United States should nolong- -r permit itself to be victimized >y foreign high price pirates. GI Found Dead On Bank 0i Canal Identified By Army A local serviceman, whose body was found Sunday afternoon at Fort Amador on the canal bank behind building 7, was identified today by Army author- ities as Cpl. Stanley E. Howard. 34. He had seen six years and 11 months of Army service. His nearest of kin, who has been notified of his death, is his mother, Mrs. Nellie A. Lewis. 405 Ohio Ave., New Boston, Ohio. Meanwhile an autopsy to de- termine the cause of his death nad not been completed. He had been dead for over 36 hours when his body was found, The Panama American learned. He had been missing since midnight Friday and his body was found about 12:45 p. m. Sunday. Feature Writer Bob Considine At Hotel Panama Edward Pool, executive in charge of advertising for the Klrkeby Hotels Corporation, Bob Considine. noted feautre writer and author, and Carl Spier, publisher of the magazine "Mil- lion-Air Holiday." are registered at the Hotel Panama. They will remain In the city for several days. Pay Bill Action To Be Delayed * For Some Weeks Action on pay raises for fed- eral employes can not be ex-' pected for several weeks. 8en. | Olln D. Johnston, chairman of the Committee on Post Offices and Civil Service has written! AFGE local 14s president Rufu, Lovelady. In a letter dated Mar. 13 and I received here last night. Sen.i Johnston wrote: "Your recent communication relative to the pay increase leg-1 lslatlon which I Introduced has been read with much Interest. "General hearings have been1 concluded on this measure.' However, there will be a delay' of several weeks to allow the' Administration to decide Its pol- icy and to appear before this' Committee to state Its position' with regard to this legislation. "I want to assure you of m*! deep and wholehearted interest; In the welfare of our Federal, emploves and to let you know, that I will exert every effort to obtain favorable action on this measure." Youth Burned By Flash Exolosion Of Hand Grenade Gil Castillo, 12. of Naranjal near Chepo, was burned last Fri- day by the flash explosion of a practice hand grenade, Army sources reported late yesterday. The boy is in Santo Tomas Hos* pital where he is In satisfactory condition. Young Gil was reported to have found the fuse-type gre- nade in the maneuver area. Ha took It home with him and at- tempted to stand It on end to light it, although he had been cautioned by his mother not to play with It. He held It at arm's length in one hand and applied a hot coal with the other. His hand, abdo- men and chin were burned In the resultant powder flash. Philippines Will I Seek Aid To Cope With Hukbalahaps MANILA. Mar. 27 (UP). President Elpldio Qulrlno is pre- paring to ask the United States for a considerable Increase in military aid to cope with the Hukbalahaps' mounting threat to the Internal security of the Philippines, according to press renorts from Baguio City. Qulrino is scheduled to con- fer today with MaJ. Gen. Le- land S. Hobbs, chief of the Joint United States military advisory grouD to the Philippines. Hobbs has Just been to Wash- ington for talks on Philippine military matters. . ,.i TUESDAY, MARCH 27. 1951 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE SI ~~ THE PANAMA AMERICAN OWNED ND PUBLISHED BY TH PANAMA AMBWICAN PMII. INC. foundid BY NIUON NUNHVnX IN IBIS HARMODIO AMIAS. EDITOR 7. H STRUT P 0. BO 1S. PANAMA. R. O P. TILIRHONI PANAMA NO. I-OT40 IB LINES I CARLI AdDSSSS. PAHAJMBIieAM. PANAMA _____ COLON OFriCIl 18 17 CINTSAL AVINUi BITWEIN 12T*I AND ISTH ITHtTI POMISN PlFRMINTATIVM. JOSHUA S. P0WEH8. INC. S48 MADISON AVB.. NSW YOB*. <7> N. V. LOCAL ' "" 9 1.70 8.80 .SO I .00 MM 'IR MONTH, IN ADVANCt FOR SIX MONTHS. IN ADVANCt. FOR ONf YIAB. IN ADVANCE- IS. 80 Walter Winchell In New York BROADWAY BEACON The Kefauver probe on tv enatche. "entlon like . ebot-ln- the-dark. Like the UN sessloris-seelng he^^ l^lng mjd*- packs a dramatic wallop lew playrlghts can rwrtable. Have *? eTetowholster: Screen Guide ha an article laudlng Errol Flynn -penned by hla former mother-in-law... The Rockettesi are portourlng dancing orchlda In the Music Hall' current stage froiS Thev ratei them Margie Truman's long-playing record fOUea^l?A^3Lan song. Tsweilodlc... Barbara Bel Gedde clicked in the film. "14 hour." the aune week she rea^ raves In the stage click, "The Moon Is Blue." It could t happen to more talented actress. ^___________ *> "Musical Playtime" (on Channel 4) offers an expert music- al appreciation course. It explains the part.each instrument pays a symphony... Turkey feathers: The 8 shows that iofded the past lortnlght represented a deficit of more than one mlSton $. Add constructive ideas: The records for small fry narrating biogs of statesmen, lnvensors. etc. Grown-ups can auo learn something... For the hot-Jlggety dep't you can add the >ouncy novelty tune called "Aba Daba Honeymoon." An old Pant- ages Circuit snow-stopped. ' --------- r Rocky Grasiano's win over Reuben Jones Monday night was exciting. The old Rockabye Rockya left hook that starts away down here and when it landsads the fight. His opponent made dramatic shots for the photon around the ringside trying to beat up the referee, the doctor, his managers, second, and, later, on the way to the dressing room, some of the fans. He was awfuUly angry at the wrong people... Virginia Hill's financial backer, as he Is amusingly called (Joe Epstein), is getting away from It all in Miami Beach. One of his best false friends reports that his real name Is Ike Epstein, not Jos, so let* stop the presses for that. Bob Dunn has a name for TV's newest team: Alibi ft Costello. Power ef the press? The current film box-office champ, "At W with th Army." was rebuked by most reviewers Despite the critical barrage, some of radio's sudsy serials have been weep- ing for two decades... Trend of the times: Movie mags are add- ing tv sections... Bethel Leslie's performance in the play. Mary Rose," Is sprinkled with the silver pepper of Stardust... Some charmers In Hollywood are displaying a new fashion fad: Black nylons and white shoes... The Lindsay-Crouse upcoming mener has an attractive title: "The Hepcat and the Canary." Teevy devens material like an elephant gobbles peanuts: MovlevUle would have to produce 4,000 feature-length films an- nually to fill all available tv time... Old Home Week on Broad- way: Last week's premieres ("The Green Pastures" and "Spring- time for Henry") wre produced on the Main Stem more than 20 years ago... "Short Story" is blessed with something you rare- ly find on kilocycle dramas literate scripts. The show is based on yarns by Hemingway. Lewis. Fitzgerald and other top-flight word-wizards... We're getting slckantahd of psychiatric explan- actions in cinemas. Gad! Freudian touches are now being added to Westerns. Labor New* And Comment The Story That Comes Down Through the Years A lass with plenty of promise in her voice Is Marion Mor- gan on "Stop the Music"... Here's something novel: A new song title that writes an editorial: "A Nickel Ain't Worth a Cent Tsday"... Pitan careers ride roller-coasters: After 18 yean as a star Bette Davis appeared in 4 so-so elnemas and was considered wsshed-up. Then she loomed to the top again with ene flicker-dlller: "All About Eve"... a dial-worthv radio drama Is "The Halls of Ivy", with Ronald Colman', voice giv- ing the dialogue the velvet touch. Time mag's posy for Josephine Baker: "She delivered her specialties in her big soprano with a shake of satiny shoulders and a dip of swiveled hips"... Talk about candor: Paulette Ood- dard's flip crack about her curren romance: "Our relations are strictly dishonorable"... Belly-whopping hllarltv In the film, "Royal Weeding," is provided by Keenan Wynn. He portrays the dual role of a Broadway press agent and his Brltlsh-as-a-crum- pet twin... Vital statistic: Betty Grable has added 2 Inches her hips. (The more the merrier!)... The latest daffy teen-age fash- ion: Fluorescent socks. The success of the film, "Molly," proves you don't need mayhem and slnuendoes to make a movie entertaining. This cinema is as wholesome as milkand just as nourishing... A gal who's aulek-on-the-auip Is Elolse McEIhone on the "Leave It to the Girls" panel of .experts... MovlevUle is khaki-whac- ky: 47 war films will be produced this year... The average actor earns SZ.OOs per annum... This is America: Ava Gard- ner's beauty and talent have given her fame and fortune. She's the daughter ef a sharecropper... One movie mag is drunk on superlatives: "The only honor left for Blng Cros- by's old age with the possible exception of the Presidency sf the United States, would be an outright gift of Fort Knox". The ballad. "If," has a melody and lyric, that are perfect for romance. Kiss me!... F. Cost ello* Co. are fairies compared is the White House Mob. THIS IS YOU OKUM TH1 MAMM OWN COLUMN THE MAIL BOX The Mel it aa opta rema lot readers af The Panama Amanean Lsttsfi ara fcahwjs' araretattt and are handlad is o wholly confidential MRRtr. It ysu (onttibuta a latter daa't be impatient H It sosia I appeal ras iwl day. Uttara ara >lsksd la the orear rataivad Plasta try to keep the letters limitad to ona sat* leafftb. Identity af latter writer is held la strictest ceatiseaca. * This eewspeper asssaaaa as rataeniibHrry fsi statements ai osmism tspraatad la latter fres* raedora. Balboa Heights, C. Z., March 22, 1951. Miss Sandra McKay, Box 132, Gamboa, C. Z. Dear Sandra: ___ The PANAMA AMERICAN baa turned over to me your very nice letter of March 21st, enclosing $2.25 as a contribution to the pello fund. I note that the money was collected by means of two shows which were presented under your house by the chil- dren ef your neighborhood. Ton and your frienda are certainly to be highly commended for the fine spirit shown in helping to collect funds to fight In- fantile paralysis. On behalf of the Canal Zone Committee of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, I wish to ex- press to you and to each of the children In your neighborhood who participated In the shows, our sincere appreciation for this very kind and generous contribution. Sincerely yours, I. L. WRIGHT, ' Treasurer. PATS TO ADVERTISE Margarita. C.Z. Oentlemen: I'm r golfer but darned if it's not a pleasure to ride to the Guif Club now since that progressive gang of horsemen cleaned up the eye rare on Brazos Road. The Golf Club offers plenty of exercise and diversion for me oat none for my kids, now It looks as If I must Join the new saddle club so that my children can have fcnii fun. Go to it horse people, your cluL seem." to be the most active and entertaining on the Atlantic Side today. Why dont you advertise? "This letter is Just a change rom a lot of klc. and complaint*. Horseman to be By Victor Ristel HOLLYWOOD A scarlet let- ter was mailed from this movie town to an undercover Commun- ist" cultural chief," one summer afternoon Just about 13 years ago. I urge you to remember this well-guided missive to a certain camouflaged oltice at 136 W. 13th Street In New York. Remember It as the Klelg lights go on again in Washing- ton's Congressional hearing rooms and light up the celluloid comrades and their foolish pho- togenic fellow-travellers who conspired for years to tie their glamor to the sickle. That letter, more than any other one document, reveals why the Communists concen- trated on Hollywood. It was written by Jeff Klbre, an inti- mate of ulcerous 'Arry Bridges, who's doing so much national organizing of pro-Communist machinery these days. It was sent to a Communist called Reed and urged him to contact the most mysterious member of 'the American Communist Politburo, Jack Stachel. convicted on charges of teaching the violent overthrow of the government The letter asked for help here money, manpower and members to be used tn capturing the movie colony. Apparently Kibre got what he wanted, for ok Nov. I, 1938, he wrote to one o] Bridges' aides that: "1 want to bring to your at- tention several points in con- nection with Hollywood which might...... clarify our general perspective. The political cam- paign (1938) has clearly de- monstrated the strategic import- ance of Hollywood. Hardly any- one will question the fact that Hollywood was a dominant fac- tor in the campaign. Obviously the potency df Hollywood as a public force need not be confined to the political field. It can be Just as effective on the trade union front. "Developments in Hollywood can have a decisive Influence on the trade union situation in Ca- lifornia and nationally. And further, a well-organized and ably functioning union in Holly- wood can easily become a na- tional example." The Communists' dream in movieland was to create a "solid base" for the comrades in Ca- lifornia, and then "to open up" to their controlled unions "the virtually untouched field of the amusement Industry as a whole approximately 300,000 work- ers." But much more than that was revealed by the Klbre letters. He wanted to give a "tremendous spurt" to the "movement as a whole" by lining up the Movie Capital and capital from the movie people, and to link "Hol- lywood and its prestige to the harbor and the longshoremen." This, of course, was Bridges' pro- Communist machine stretching the length of the West Coast. To do this, Kibre, among oth- er chores, had confidential talks ("comradely ones") with V. J. Jerome, the Party's Holly- wood whip, and Paul Kline, the Party's Los Angeles secre- tary. Such was their dream of empire that they believed they could use the film gla- mor, the movie stars' sincere decency (though frequently unrealistic) and even the movie makers' millions as their bate. Their first aim was a 300,000-member glam- orous union of entertainers, and then they planned to build on that for a national labor federation and new third party. But .their dreams of glory led to a political grave when the Screen Actors' Guild and the International Alliance of Thea- trical Stage Hands fought them and again later when the CIO kicked them out. More trouble came still later when the Pro- gressive Party drew smaller crowds than Hadacol's cure-all tent shows. Mr. Klbre's friends then shifted him to the Fisher- man's Union, which has small boats running up and down the Alaska coast where we have Ar- my and Navy bases. s After a while. Brother Kibre was able to report to hit superiors that he be- lieved hit colleagues control- led to per cent of the active people in the movie talent unions and technical crafts. And men who thought as they did some trained in the old Loyalist Abraham Lin- coln Brigade, got into the bloody Hollywood strike deep enough to practice some mi- litary formations. Among1 other things they stacked automobiles in echelons to block the entrance to the Colombia rtudios here on Oct. 10, 1946, during the mass rioting that took place. The screen actors and the stage hands fought back and retrieved their Industry. And today it Is. of course, unpopular io be waiting on lefty for a, po- litical Une. So, when the breast beating starts in Washington, remember that scarlet letter. Ceeyrifbt 1951, Port Hall Jyndk.l Texas Party By BOB RUARK HOUSTON, Tex. Well, now, I tell you, old podner, I'm so tard I'm like a gnat without strength enough to swim acrosst a dipper. I'm rlat beat. Altnough I must ay it was business doing pleasure with you. This Texas thing is getting out of hand. Once a year, the patron saint of a certain cult call- ed the oil business, a Mr. Glenn McCarthy, throws a party in honor of his shrine, which is a hotel named Shamrock. Mr. McCarthy, as I may have mentioned once before, is one of the few people who Is rich enough to erect his own personal shrine in honor of himself. The odd thing, too, is that it makes money Just like Hyde Park. Houston Is a fur piece to go to a party, but It Is always worth it, because you bump into at least one new Texas Joke. Current and best one is about the long, thin old boy who is talking to the short, fat old boy at the bar. and all oi a sudden the tall thin one hauls off and whangs the short fat one a beautiful belt In the chops. The solicitous folks gather around, and ask the victim why he got smacked. "I dunno." he says. "I am Just talking politics with,that old boy when he hits me in the chin." "But what did you say?" "I Just said Mr. Truman had raised the tax- es." At this Juncture the slugger brushed up and profusely begged the victim's pardon. "It was all a mistake, old podner," the slugger said. "I misunderstood you. I thought for sure you said Truman was raised in Texas." Mr. Chill Wills, an actor, was present at Glenn's annual ceremony, and contributed at least one fine piece of philosophy. Mr. Wills was not feeling to ochlpper after an evening of high sport, and he exnlalned his miseries "I must of got a-holt of some bad Ice," he said. Apart from Mr. Wills' bad ice. there were few mishaps to Mr. McCarthy's second anniversary of his shrine. This was not the year for riding the horses into the dining room, and Mr. Robert Mitchum was not around to bust firecrackers off the wall. Mr. Mitchum has given up firecrackers for Lent. There was much festivity, of course, somewhat dampened by the fact that Miss Sophie Tucker, the entertainer, came down with the flu on the eve of the big party, and was hustled off to the hospital. Her farewell speech was reminis- cent of all the better deathbed scenes in all the better dramas. "You go on without me, kids," she said from her stretcher. The kids went on. And on. And very much on. The Texas approximation of wealth has bur- geoned with the times and taxes. "That old boy ain't got but a couple hundred million," one man said. This time last year they were not saying "couple." I can report that there is at least one auto- mobile that is not a Cadillac In Houston. It is an Oldsmoblle. I rode In it. Houston has television, now. but in a skimpy sort of fashion. Houston Is not concerned with Mister O'Dwyer, or Mister Costello, or Miss Vir- ginia Hill. Houston is more concerned with Miss Mary Beth McDonald, a pretty creature, who teaches Houston how to walk correctly up and down stairs. This is as close to culture as I have come lately. Final bulletin: Jesse Jones still don't own the Shamrock. Mr. McCarthy's shrine is still hls'n, old podner. ____ Matter Of Fact By JOSEPH ALSOP DANGEROUS CORNER AHEAD BERLIN. This tragic but brave city is the best place to thins: about tne projected conier- ence of the Big Four Foreign Ministers. W Washington, they worry about tactics. In i>aris. the deputies wrangle about the agenda. But here In Berlin, you see all around you the nu- man and material stakes in the desperate game the Soviets are playing. In sum, these stakes add up to Germany. Germany nowadays is the key, both strategical- ly and politically, of Western Europe, wence mis projected conierence which in America seems so remote is likely to be as signlllcant a turning point as the London meeting in 1Mb, that led the United States to adopt tne policy of "patience and firmness." To be sure, no one who surveys the scene from Berlin can possibly credit tne rumor, so sedulously spread by the Kremlin, tnat the So- viets will take this occasion to offer the basis of a serious world settlement In pressing for the four power conference they have had much harder and more sell-serving alms. The first aim has been to delay decision on the vital matter of the German contribution to tne defense of the West. In this the Soviets have already triumphantly succeeded, gaining about six months' time thereby. The second aim is vastly more ambitious. The Soviets hope to use the conference Itself to divide and dis- rupt the Western alliance for good and all. The question Is how Soviet Foreign Minister Vlshinaky will seek to attain this planned ob- jective. What is feared in Washington Is of course well known. The American policy makers fear that Vlshlnsky will offer the unification of Germany on the basis of genuine free elections. In return for guaranties of German demilitar- ization and withdrawal of all occupation forces. On the surface such an offer would be very attractive, especially to the Germans. For the Fussians, It would mean the temporary loss of their profitable province in East Germany, where their stooge government would be snow- ed under in any free voting. But for the West- ern allies this deal would also mean the loss oi the strategically vital central German position. Western rearmament would thus, at best, be ap- pallingly hampered, and more probably would >e permanently disrupted. Meanwhile the Russian armies would retreat jnly a few score miles from the German border. They would be as ready as ever to flow out again over a Germany leu with no defenses whatever, and a Western Europe exposed by the loss of the German glacis. Thus superficially, Washington fears (which are authoritatively re- ported to be shared by Chancellor Adenauer) would appear to be Justified. The Berlin signs suggest, moreover, that the Soviets have at least been playing with the Idea of this whole gamble. At the Prague meeting, when the new, Kremlin line of "German unity" was first announced some months ago, Vya- .-.cheslav Molotov not only rode rough-shod over the satellite Communists to make them agree to his draft declaration; there is also some evi- dence that Molotov called in the non-communist so-called Foreign Minister of East Germany, Oeorg Dertlnger. and gave him a little speech about the virtues of free elections. 81nce then, It Is known that the Soviet Kom- mandatura has discreetly checked what "the probable result of a free election in East Ger- many would be. And it is also known that the leaders of the East German government, fore- seeing abandonment by their masters, had be- gun to be exceedingly concerned about their own future. On the other side of the ledger, however, are three still more important items of evidence. First the Soviets have not only continued ex- n'.oltatlon of the East German uranium mines in the Erzgeblrge; they have also recently open- ed a large number of shafts producing very low quality ore. This suggests that the Erzge- blrge resource is still vital to them and cannot be gambled with. Second. Gromyko at Paris, contrary to the Prague line, has laid all his stress on German demilitarization rather than "German unity." Third, the East German leaders. Orotewohl, Ul- bricht and Oerhard Elsler, have lately each gone out of the way to define "free elections" as the kind of transparent farce that would de- ceive nobody and receive no consideration at any four power meeting. On balance, therefore, it appears more likely i although verv far from certain) that the So- viets will avoid the great gamble with East Ger- many that has worried Washington. Unfortun- ately, however, there are other tactics, equally menacing, which are also open to the Kremlin These require discussion in another report qtie WASHINGTON . I- . ' OR MERRY-GO-ROUND y DRIW PIARSON Drew Pearson soys: McCloy has difficult job guiding Ger- many on delicate course midway between errors of 1923, when Allies starved Germany, and 1936 when loans to German industry helped to arm Hitler. BERLIN.Here are three pictures I have received of Berlin the most controversial city in the worldduring the last three decades. Berlin In IMS was a city of despair. People waited in she alley behind the Hotel Adlon ready to pounce on garbage cans immediately they were placed outside the hotel's kitchen. Inside the hotel women waited, willing to sell their souls for a cup of eoffee that cost one million marks one day, a million and a half the next and two million the day following. Inflation ran riot at the time, with braggadocio foreigners burning marks to light cig- arettes and the workingman's wages lagging miles behind the dally depreciation of the printing-press money In which he was paid... I interviewed President Friedrich Ebert, the onetime saddle maker who, after the World War I armistice, suddenly had found himself at the helm of the new German Weimar Republic. The Kaiser and the Prussians of Potsdam were gone, leaving a group of sincere but inexperienced Social Democrats to take their place. The result was chaos, desperation and despair. Berlin in 1936 was entirely different. The Allies had failed to help the struggling Weimar Republic until too lateuntil the German people, in their desperation, had turned to a swashbuck- ling dictator who promised them the moon and who, by 1938. had occupied the Ruhr, built up the German army and, If he couldn't produce the moon, was well on his way toward producing the rest of Europe... While the Allies gouged the German people to pay reparations, Wall Street bankers poured loans into German in- dustry and German industrialists in turn placed their bets on the swashbuckler who promised them the moon... So, from starving Germany In 1933 we went to the opposite extreme of rearming Hitler in 1936and Berlin was cocky, confident and supreme. Berlin In 151 is still a city of ruins. Though other German cities have made great progress In getting back to normal, parts of Berlin still are like no man's land. In the Russian zone are piles of neatly stacked bricks and beside them neat piles of scrap iron, for the Russians have taken the ruins apart chiefly for the purpose of shipping the scrap Iron back to Moscow... You pass long Unes of gaunt walls and skeletonized buildingssome blast' ed by British incendiary bomb, which set fire to the buildings, some blasted by American explosive bombs which knocked down the walls of the buildings. Take your pick; the Berliners didn't like either... Over near Unter Der Linden, Hitler's dugouta huge block of concreteIs now turned upside down and near it what was once the Relchschancellery is now rased to the ground with almost every brick carted away by the Russians. Across their zone, in the American sector, the Reichstag is gutted but .till standing and the Tlergarten, where nurses pushed baby carriages and couples strolled arm-in-arm among Its trees in 1936, now Is without one tree standinga waste as barren as the New Jersey swamps between Newark and the Hudson tunnels. Never has man wrought such destruction! MCCLOY HAS DIFFICULT JOB The biggest problem facing the United States and the world today is how tc avoid the mistakes of both 1923 and 1936how- to draw a line midway between crushing Germany as in 1923 and rebuilding the German military and their lust for power as in 1938. The man who has the difficult job of guiding Germany on this delicate course is John J. McCloy, a former New York Re- publican lawyer who served as Assistant Secretary of War under Henry L. Stimson. He has some of Stimson's passion for making the world a little better. 8ome Americans think McCloy has been coddling the Germans. The Germans, on the other hand,, think he has been too tough. When I put some of these ideas-up to him, McCloy's reaction was extremely frank. "On Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays," he said, "I think we are doing a good Job. On Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays I think we're not. Twenty-five years from now you'll be able to tell whether we've really done our work well. I realize," McCloy continued, "that a lot of people claim we are relinquishing too much power to the Germans but whom are we relinquishing It to?To the men who have spent their lives in Jail or In die because they dared to oppose Hitlerto the men who have their roots deep in the principles of the Weimar Republic. We ate not relinquishing any Allied powers to the Nazis. Of course, you may read in your paper about some dogcatcher or minor official who Is a former Nazi, but you won't find any former Nazis at the top. "If we are to build a firm foundation," McCloy concluded, "we have to give these men gradual power. Some time or other, these men ana the government they are building will have to stand up and take the big test. We know that. We aon't know whether the test will be Fascism or Nazism, but we know that test is coming. Then we'll know how well we have built." TOUGH HURDLES AHEAD My own Impression Is that McCloy has done a better job than could be expected In encouraging democracy for the German people but he still has some extremely tough hurdles to overeme witii German officialdom and Industrialists. McCloy has an American resident stationed in every country oi tne American zone whose Job it Is to mingle with the German peopie, nold town meetings every two weeks, listen to their gripes, and encourage them to debate government problems. This is some- thing the German people never enjoyed before and many of them are pleased but llaDbergasted. These town meetings have been so successful that the Bonn Government isn't too happy. It feels the Americans are getting a greater hold on the people than their leaders. McCloy himself has traveled all over the American zone participating in these meetings and letting the Germans fire questions at him. He feels that, if he can get their gripes out in tne open and have a chance to answer them, he will have won an Important part of the battle for a German democracy. Converting Bonn officialdom to Democracy, however, is a tougher problem. McCloy still hasn't persuaded them to revamp the German civil service system, which makes every German bu- reaucrat a petty quaal-dictator and which tolerates arrests and jailing without warrants, nor has he been able to persuade the Germans to revamp their school system which gives free public schooling only through the tenth grade. Furthermore, the Bonn Government appears veering toward the side of the big German industrialiststhe same men who refinanced and rearmed Hitler. This Is McCloy's biggest problem. For, if this drift continues, history might repeat all over again. (Copyright, 1861, by the Bell Syndicate, Ine.) rAGE EIGHT THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1M1 Canal Zone School Activities B.H.S. Notes By Louise Glud Boy. oh, boy! How lazy can you get In Just one week? Un- doubtedly you all ate recuperating and so mi I-wh ich, li.the main reason this Is going to be a short (but not sweeU column Excuse me a sec-there, I Just had to shake some more sand out of my left ear. Which again only reminds me of that vacation (not that I'm anxious to steer clear of Khool-heh, .hehi. heh). The way things are typing along now, I don t think 111 ever start getUl^u0stthdawnWedtoennme that here I am gabbing about my vacation when practically everyone else did something that was all) went to Spring Training Camp. I can't state for sure what happened between Monday and Thursday. (You see they didn t al'ow anyone but ROTC cadeU at the camp so that meant I ouldn^go Anyhow, I hear that the kavdets; enjoyed themselves. Now up to the Interior of Panam and the BHSers who vacationed there. The first stop on this road was made at El Valle Here a crowd escaped the city heat and found comfort in to soo\hfnga coolness of a deep valley. Furthei: on were he beaches. Yup, the beaches of Oorgona, Sea Cliff Acres, Las ouias, and Santa Clara. Sorry, but I'm stopping abruP"Vmv V^Ush win5? savin' no more. (See what one week away from my English dais dd to my grammar. Oooh! That's right, if 1^went Into detail about all the happenings at Santa Clara, I d have to tell what went on here in town, up at El Valle, ana all tne ocner olaces And truthfully, I don't have the slightest notion what Rened any other place but Santa Clara I know that that proves I'm not such a star reporter but-gee. I ah, uhh, ooh-(oh, t lust can't think up a good excuse for that one). I just can t mm i^ ^ some mifhty wh t read a couple more paragraphs. Remember the week of Ma"ch 19-23P (that's the week before we went ^vacation)? Some important things happened that week ^ "Md-, the NHS held an assembly initial on. Fridayoh, man, that was a big day. In the morning there was a pep rally-the first since November. And was it a humdinger. Coach Zemer "reduced his baseball team and then team captain Pete Fbrera challenged the faculty to a softba 1 game. The faculty accented. I believe the game will take place tomorrow aernoon I'm not sure so listen to the bulletin. Anyway, to continue with the rally. Coach Fawcet then UMlHwd bit track team that would be competing in the Triangular ^e^tetcoachntobdo some introducing was Coach Potter Miss Potter told the students about both the girls' basketball and toftball All-8tars. She also introduced them. D,KQ ,h That night at the Triangular Track Meet. Balboa High School took top honors. Again I missed up and didn t pet the cores I apologize not only to our team but to those of Canal 7nne Junior College and Cristbal High School for not mentioning toeir standings In tonight's column, but like I said. I'm a poor "^Finally we're caught up and can ramble on about this week's news. Sht there is going to be a PTA meeting in the library. Better tell Mom and Dad to rush over. Big doings tonight! Therms an ROTC dance this week and another dance coding ud is that sponsored by the Junior class. They are putting on aVeep-Sea Formal at the Tivoll Hotel next Friday April 6. Bovs here goes that old story againget a date. Some girl Is waiting, anxiously waiting, for you to come up and tap her on e shoufder. She wants to hear you whisper one sentence-yes thote wonderful words asked In a deep masculine tone to mold the question, "Will ya go ta the dance wld me?"-How about It, fellas ask her tomorrow. If you're the anxious type too, call her UP tTher1et Is one more message before signing off and it to ad- dressed to all sophomores. Sohps, come to your class picnic this Saturday. It'll be loads of fun. Cr-nlte. .----------------, JACOBY ON BRIDGE BY OSWALD JACOBY Written for NEA Service College Corner By Martha Irvin Just catch all the sunburned faces walkln* around the halls this week. Seems like everybody in the wortd went to Santa C ara or somewhere last week over'the holidays. Up at Santa Clara the were the Varsity girls and two or three other groups of glrlb. and at least two groups of boys. Down at the Varsitv house, there was a perpetual canasta game going and there was always somebody sleeping. But lile was definitely not in a rut. But it was a pretty nice life, wasn t it/ By the end of the week poor Mary Feliz thought she was going to be sick in bed with sunburn. And Vickie Mlzarahi Just did not want to come back home. ... .... . Well the girls had a super time, but they might have been a little outdone bv the J.C. boys. They had a five-day slumber party. Except that contrary to ordinary, they did slumber some of the time. Why one time Wally Trout was so tired he went right to sleep on trie road to the beach. And the rest of the boys went and lelt him there. These stories are strictly by the grape vine, so don't come dashing up with a sword iri your hand if I'm wrong. And one of the other boys went to sleep on the lawn outside somebody's house. That's what comes from not getting enough sleep and rest and drinking too many root beers. Gee, wasn't swimming at night the popular port. The beach was almost as crowded at night as it was during the day. It's pretty dangerous... this swimming at night... but as long as no one,gets hurt, I guess it's okay. At least I have- n't seen anyone with moonburn. And now it's all over. The last Easter vacation we'll have for a whole year. Now we have mid-term exams to look forward to. They're next week, so you people had all better get busy and forget your sunburns and study for a while. The week before vacation started, the Freshman class had a meeting to elect new officers. The only surviving officer from the elections in September, was the secretary. So at the meeting last week. David Robles was elected as President, Jackie Blau as Vice-Presldent. and Anne Howze as Treasurer. Congratulations to these kids and good luck with the Banquet and all. Me, I'm tired too, so I'm going to sign off early this time. Sorry! I'll try to better next week. NORTH (D) ai WEST A1085 ? A74 ? AQ7S BAST *Q84 4732 W53 VAJ ? QJIO 4>K98S3 109863 *J5 SOOTH AKJ8 107642 ? 62 + K4 Both vul. North 1* 2v 2N.T. Pats tart S Radio Programs Your Community Station HOG-840 Where 100.000 eple Mttt Presents Today, Tuesday, Mar. 27 IN HOLLYWOOD By Erskine Johnson NEA Staff Correspondent Summer Recreation Program Meeting Called At Cocoil X meeting of all persons whd are interested in the Summer Recreation Program on the west Bank will be held at 7:30 to- morrow night at the Cocoil Oymnasium. Preliminary registration of children who plan to participate In the program will be held at 10:30 Saturday morning at the Cocoil Oymnasium. Mrs. G. O. Parker, coordinator Of the Summer Recreation Pro- gram, will be at the meeting to- morrow hlght to help make plans for the summer activities Everyone who is interested In the program is urged to attend this Important meeting at which orders must be placed for arts and crafts material to be used in the summer courses. All children who wish to take part in the program should be registered Saturday morning. The fee will be $1 for the first child and 50 cents for each additional child in a family. Asthma Coughs Don't roush end couf h. etranjle, aP and i-liok eo bad tlit you can hardly lireatho or Bleepdon't aulTar another day irom Bronchltla or Asthma without tryln Mandace. Thla fraat Internal medicine, recently developed, by a aclentlflc American laboratory, works throiifh the blood, thue reaching your lunge and bronchial tubee. That'a why Meneaco worke ao faat to help you three waye. I. Helpe nature dlaeolve and re- move thick etrangllng mucua. 2. Pro- motea free eaay breathing and sound aleep ao you aoon feel O.K. 8. Quickly alleviates coughing, wheeling, snees- Ing. Uet Mandato from your druggtet today. See how much better you may leep tonight and how much better yea may feel tomorrow. THIS WEEK-END'S ATTRACTION OPENING THURSDAY! AT THE LUX and CECILIA THEATRE JOHN FORD'S GREATEST ROMANTin triumph i JOHN WAYNE MAUREEN O'HARA co .(o//,.o KN rutiHoUN CLAUDE JAR-MAN, JR. HAIRY CAREY, JR. HUMUS Diretted by JOHN FORD A RIPUBUC PICTURE HOLLYWOOD(NEA) Hol- lywood can't turn its cameras on the stage hit "South Pacific" for at least 10 years, but there's no- body to say that the film facto- ries can't play hide-and-go-seek behind the palm trees and come up with variations of the musi- cal's plot, songs and characters. Ezlo Pinza makes no secret of the fact that his first movie star- rer with Lana Turner "Mr. Impe- rlum," has a "South Pacific" fla- vor. He told me: "I'm the same kind of a char- acterstrong but gentleand the same type of songs are spotted in the same type of places." At Fox, "Friendly Island" smacks of the song "Bali High." The plot centers around an is- land loaded with only men, an- other occupied only by women. e e e Wedding bells for Peter Law- ford and Sharman Douglas? As Peter's mother, Lady Law- ford, sees' it : "Sharman pops in and out of our home. She arrives in hik- ing pants and sprawls all over the chairs. A perfect dear. I don't think they're very much in love, though. Besides, Peter won't marry until he's 30. He feels that he has enough re- sponsibilities already." e e e They haven't definitely decided yet. but Warners will build new- comer Lucille Norman and eith- er Gordon MacRae or Dennis Morgan as a new McDonald-Eddy combination. Blonde Lucille Is the first high C warbler to be signed by the studio since the days of Irene Manning. "THE ROBE" CONTROVERSY The forthcoming court battle between Howard Hughes and producer Frank Ross on legal ownership of "The Robe" will In- volve correspondence from the late Lloyd C. Douglas, who wrote 1 the best-seller. It isn't generally known, but Douglas completed his autobiography before his death. During the last year of his life, he was permitted to leave his Iron lung for 15 minutes each day and In that time finished his life story. e e e The Mickey Awards by the Hollywood press at Barney's Beanery will be, I'm happy to re- port, an annual affair. I had the honor of presenting a 1950 Mick- eya martini glass on a wooden pedestalto the Los Angeles the- ater manager who put the most butter on his popcorn during the year. Naturally, I expected the the- ater manager to reciprocate by presenting Mickmaster George Jessel and assembled guests all the available popcorn in L. A. This, at least, would curtail the- ater popcorn eating in the local area for several wonderful, silent days and the butter-than-ever Mickey award will not entirely be in vain. e "High Button Shoes" to slated for a Dallas, Tex., revival this summer with Constance Moore and Eddie Foy. e a Kirk Douglas ex. Diana, is dating former juvenile actor Terrv Killburn In New York... Lili St. Cyr, the stripper, to headed for a TV series. A charm school idea yet!.. .Fame: Rub- ber-Jowled S. Z. Sakall is being paged by a toy maker who wants to use his likeness on a squeegee doll. e Greer Garson, who should know, insists husband Buddy Fo- gelson has not retired as boss of his big Texas oil and ranch em- pire because of two heart attacks. She told me: "He's working 15 hours a dayIf that's what peo- ple want to call retirement." GOT THE RANGE Rod Cameron to still blushing When today's hand was played in a recent team-of -four match, the bidding and the opening lead were Identical In the two, rooim. As a matter of fact, the play con- tinued to be similar until the fourth trickbut then there was a great difference. In both rooms dummy won the first trick with the ace of dia- monds. Both declarers then made an attempt to get rid of the los- ing diamond on a high club. They cashed the king and ace of clubs, and then led the queen of clubs from dummy. In the second room East ruffed the queen of clubs with the nine of hearts. South over-ruffed wit! the ten of hearts and led a trump. Dummy played the king o* hearts, and East won with the ace. East thereupon cashed the king of diamonds, thus getting a diarnond trick back for the trirmp trick he had apparently sacrificed. But the story was far from finished. When South ruffed the third round of diamonds, he naturally led another trump towards dum- my. West played the five of hearts, and declarer went Into a huddle. Who had the missing Jack of trumps? If West had It, a finesse of dummy's eight would assure the contract. If East had It, no fin- esse should be taken. But how could East have the jack of hearts. South reasoned, and give up sure trump trick by ruffing the queen of clubs with the nine? Therefore South finessed the eight or hearts, and East got his trump trick anyway. West even- tually got the queen of spades as the setting trick. PM 3:30Music for Tuesday 4:00Music Without Words 4:15Milt Herth Trio 4:30What's Your Favorite 6:00PANA MSICA STORY TIME 6:15Evening Salon 7:00AZCARRAGA AT , THE ORGAN f7:15SONGS OF FRANCE (RDF) 7:30PABST SPORTS REVIEW 7:45Jam Session 8:00NEWS AND 8PORT8 (VOA) 8:15COMMENTATOR'8 DI- GEST (VOA) 8:30Jo Stafford Show 8:45Voices of America (VOA) 8:00BLIGH OF THE BOUNT/ (BBC) 9:30American Band Concert 9:45AMERICAN DEBUT 10:00The World of Movement > (BBC) 10:30Date for Dancing 10:45American Favorites 11:00The Owl's Nest t2:00Sign Off Jane Russell Sings Discovered to have unusual singing voice, Jane Russell gets opportu- nity to warble two numbers in RKO Radio's "His Kind of Woman* in which he co-stars with Robert Mitchum. Here she is ltotening to playback of her first recordingand pretty good it must be, too, judging by that smile. about it, but three movie fan magazines popped out with yarns on why he would never give up being a bachelor AFTER he had married Angela Alves-Llco. e e e Tyrone Power has notified Fox to look for another swashbuckler after "The Way of a Gaucho." Ty and Linda Christian, by the way, want to live in London as long as the studio will permit. Qk^iu 1001 THRILLS I statiini DEBOBAHKERR 51WART GRANGER 7'eatte *.*,/.,!. CARROL NAISrl VICTOR McLAGLEN 6KANT WITHERS SONS OF THE PIONEERS STARTING THURSDAY AMERICA'S! alexis SMITH-scott BRADY ** RICHARD EGAN ROYAL DANO GLADYS GEORGE TROPICAL TODAY! Robert ROCKWELL Barbara FULLER TOMO RROW Screenplay b> HARM ESSEX- Prodoted by AUBREY SCHENCK Dinette b, JOSEPH rtVNEi A UNIYHSAt INTERNATIONAL PICTURE THURSDAY JAMES MASON In a gripping tale of romance and suspense! I. MTHMt BUST '<> Tomorrow, Wednesday, Mar. 2# AM 7:30Morning Salon 8:15NEWS (VOA) 8:30Morning Varieties 8:45Music Makers 9:00 NEWS 9:15STAND BY FOR ADVEN- TURE 9:30As 1 See it 10:00NEW8 10:05Off The Record 11:00NEWS 11:05Off The Record 11:30Meet The Band 12:00NEWS PM 12:05Luncheon Music 12:30Popular Music 1:00NEWS 1:15Personality Parade 1:45The New Frontier 2:00Old Chlsholm Trail 2:15It's Time To Dance 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45 Notes On Jazz 3:00Hoosier Hot Shots 3:15The Little Show 3:30 Music For Wednesday 4:00Music Without Words 4:15FRENCH IN THE AJR (RDF) 4:30What's Your Favorite 8:00MANDRAKE THE MAOI- CIAN i 8:15Evening Salon *r0Azoarraga at the Organ 7:15EDDY ARNOLD SHOW (TD) 7:30PABST SPORTS REVIEW 7:45Here Comes Louis Jordan 8:00-^NEWS AND SPORTS (VOA 8:15COMMENTATOR'S 131- OEST(VOAl 8:30CROSS COUNTRY USA (VOA) 8:45SPORTS PAGE USA 9:00BBC PLAYHOUSE 10:00Song and Dance in Brit- ain 10:30Les Brown 10:45American Favorites 11:00The Owl's Nest 12:00Sign Off Explanation of Symbols VOAVoice of America BBCBritish Broadcas ting Corp. / RDFRadlodiffusion Franchise PANAMA CANAL CLUBHOUSES Showing TONIGHT! BALBOA 6:75 & 7.50 Air Conditioned * Metro Goldwyn.Meyer's thrilling! "DIAL 1119" Wednesday "ELLEN" ANCON Wednesday Ingrld BERGMAN "GASLIGHT" COCOLI 6:15 & S;I5l Glenn FORD VALLI "WHITE TOWER" * MASON LCCKWOOD'ri" A PLACE OF ONE'S OWN A* im um ntM NtMaM GAMBOA Wednesday John WAYNE Petrlcl NEAL "Operations Pacific" GATUN 6 p.m. only! Kethryn Mario GRAYSON LANZA "Toast of New Orleans" In Technicolor I Friday "I'D CLIMB THE HIGHEST MOUNTAIN"__________ Margarita 6.75 & 8:00 Joan Andy DAVIS DEVINE "THE TRAVELING SALESWOMAN" Thursday "Toeet of New Orleans" Cristobal 6:75 & 8:75 Peulelte GODDARD "THE TORCH" Wednesday 'COLT ." ! "M Vears Before Your Eyes" BALBOA THEATER Open In i Sarardayt GARY COOPER in - "DALLAS" In Technicolor 1 ___ 6/ (Hijo [Perdido Radio drama Avena Quaker de Lunes a Viernes * 3 30 PM ESTA TARDE H O A ^NINfe fanamaAmnca ANO VIGSIMO SEXTO DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE DIVULGAMOS LA VERDAD QDB LOS DEMS OCULTAN PANAMA, R. P., MARTES. MARZO 87, 1OT1 TUBERA galvanizada AGENCIAS GLOBALES Via Espaa 121 Tel. 3-13M CINCO CENTESIMO T Los supervisores demandarn la nulidad del decreto que ref orm ese cuerpo educativo Mapas del Censo servirn a la Defensa Civil Los mapas y planos de las ciudades de Panam y Colon y sus alrededores, levantados por el Departamento de Censos de la Cotralora General de la Repblica, as como las ci- fras de poblacin de sus distin- tos sectores, estn sirviendo a la Comisin Nacional de Defen- sa Civil para planear sus me- didas de seguridad en favor de la poblacin de las ciuda- des terminales en caso de un ataque con bombas atmicas al Canal y para sus programas de proteccin y defensa del pas en general. La Oficina de Defensa Civil solicit para su importantsi- ma labor, la cooperacin del Departamento de Censos, que con toda diligencia y en l.i forma ms amplia se la ha prestado y la Informacin ob- tenida por les Censos de 1950 asi como sus mapas y planos, han resultado de un valor in- .-------,.--- apreciable para los fines y pa- | que se han recibido en el dia de (Pasa a la Pgina 6. Columna 6) hoy^__________________________ El siguiente comunicado nos ha sido entregado para su publi- cacin por un grupo de Inspec- tores de Educacin. A raz de la nueva organiza- cin que se ha dado a la inspec- cin escolar en la Repblica, con la cual se trata de volver a los Distritos escolares que funciona- ron hasta 1946, lo que significa adems de un retroceso en el sis- tema una burla a la opinin del inspectorauo, que en el Semina- rio de Educacin reunido en Santiago de Veraguas, no hace quince das, solicitaba al Minis- terio, con razones fundamenta- das el mantenimiento del actual sistema, ms de la mitad de los Inspectores se reunieron en la maana de hoy para considerar este hecho y otros que afectan el trabajo de la educacin nacio- nal. "Acordndose entre otros pun- tos lansar un manifiesto al pas particularmente a todos los edu- cadores, hacer un estudio docu- mentado y comparativo de los diferentes sistemas de inspeccin que han operado con el que se proyecta poner en funcin, Nom- b. ar un Comit Permanente pa- ra la direccin de una campaa de defensa de la educacin y de- mandar la nulidad del Decreto No. 394 de 21 de los corrientes. "En esta campaa se cuenta, con el respaldo casi unnime del lr.spectorado a juzgar por los mltiples mensajes telegrficos Se propugna econmica cooperacin en la Amrica Panam ratifica carta de la 'OEA' Panam y Espaa restablecen sus relaciones diplomticas anunci hoy la Cancillera Don Santiago Ruz Tabanera tendr la representa- cin espaola hasta qne se designe al Ministro "Muy oportuno" dice Brln que fue el discurso WASHINGTON, Marzo i." (UP) El Ministro de Relacio- nes Exteriores de Panam, Car- los N. Brin, dijo que el dlscui- so de Truman es "muy oportu- no ", agregando que le Interes de modo particular a su dele- gacin la mencin que hizo el Pi imer Mandatario sobre la cooperacin de Estados Unaos con los dems pases del con- tinente en el sentido econmico. El Canciller Argentino, Hi- plito Jess Pas dijo que "am- bos discursos me parecieron in- teresantes. Tanto el de Truman que consider los diverses as- pectos que sern sin duda al- guna objeto de dilucidacin en la reunin de consulta, como el del Canciller Brasileo que ex- puso con franqueza su pensa- miento, sealando la necesidad de conciliar la defensa de lw Intereses comunes con la pre- servacin de los nacionales" El Canciller de Venezuela, Luis E. Gmez Ruis dijo: "Los elocuentes discursos pronunca- las a la Pac. 6 Coi. I) La Cancillera de la Repblica inform esta maana a la pren- sa que Panam haba restable- cido sus relaciones diplomticas con Espaa, despus de un In- tercambio de mensajes entre el Ministro de Relaciones Exterio- res de Panam Dr. Carlos N. Brin y el Ministro de Asuntos Exteriores de Espaa, Alberto Martn Artajo. "Esta determi- nacin del Gobierno de Pana- m dijo un vocero de la Can- cillera est fundada en el mu- tuo deseo de consolidar los nexos que unen a los pueblos paname- o y espaol y proporcionar los medios que contribuyan al bie- nestar de ambas naciones." Al frente de la representacin espaola estar don Santiago Ruiz Tabanera hasta tanto sea designado el Embajador de Es- paa en la Repblica de Pana- m. Los siguientes son los textos de los mensajes cruzados entre el Ministro de Relaciones Exte- riores de Panam, Dr. Carlos N. Brln y el Ministro de Asuntos Exteriores de Espaa: Panam. 30 de Marzo de 1951. Excelentsimo Seor Alberto Martin Artajo Ministro Espaol de Asuntos Exteriores Madrid Por cuanto se ha convenido en restablecer las relaciones di- plomticas entre Panam v Es- paa y con el mutuo deseo de consolidar los nexos que unen (Pasa a la Ptina b Columna 7) Las comunicacioiies con zonas petroleras en el Irn han sido totalmente suspendidas TEHERN, Marzo 27 (UP> Todas las comunicaciones entre Tehern y las zonas en hueija tu la Provincia de Khuzlstar.. rica en petrleo, fueron corta- das y el Gobierno de Irn hn enviado refuerzos militares a ese lugar. Funcionarios del Gobierno di- jeron que la huelga contra la Compaa Anglo-Irana de Pe- trleo estaba inspirada por co- munistas- El Embajador Brit- nico, Sir Francis Shepherd le 4 hizo una una visita al Premier Hussein Ala esta maana, y fuente* informadas dijeron qje fehepherd le pidi al Gobierno que asegure la proteccin de I.k obreros britnicos en los cam- pos petroleros. Se tiene- entendido que Shep- herd y Ala tambin discutran sobre la nota britnica envia- ua al Gobierno de Irn, en la cual se hacia nfasis que los a- cuerdos vigentes especifican qae la Compaa Anglo-Iranla de Petrleo tiene concesiones on Irn hasta 1993. Hasta el momento Irn no ha contestado la nota, aunque la recibi hace dos semanas. Con las comunicaciones teie- gi aflea y telefnicas cortadas, no se pueden tener Informes de buena fuente respecto a la Jl- tuacin en las zonas en huelga. Cinco pueblos de Khurlstan a- badan, Agha, Jarl, Bandar y Mashur fueron puesto bajo (Pasa a la Pac. . Col ) Motn militar por no bailar blanca con un negro EPINAL, Francia, Mar. 27 (UP) Fuertes pelotones de Polica se encuentran patrullando a este pueblo, despus que nueve per- sonas resultaron heridas en un motn militar cuando las jve- nes francesas rehusaron bailar con un soldado Marroqu. La polica arrest a nueve marroques durante la batalla de ayer con la polica, y fue- ron puestos en libertad hoy des- fius que accedieron a entregar U armas que fueron tomadas del arsenal del batalln. Un poitavoz municipal dijo que todava se hallan extravia- das cinco sub-ametralladoras y la polica provincial le ha pedi- do a las autoridades militares que retiren al batalln Marroqu de la poblacin inmediatamen- te. WASHINGTON, Marzo 27 (USIS) Panama ha sido la undcima repblica americu.a en depositar su Instrumento i ratificacin de la Carta de la Organizacin de los Bstau-is Americanos. La Unin Panamericana de- claro que an cuando la Carta est en vigencia provisional, ai- ra adoptada fomalmente tan pronto sea depositada en la ta- tiicacin de otros tres pases El Encargado de Negocios de Panam en Washington, seor Guillermo Endara, present el viernes el Instrumento de rati- ficacin al Dr. Alberto Lleras Camargo, Secretario General de la Organizacin de los Estauos Americanos. Las otras naciones que lian accedido fomalmente a la Cur- ta, adoptada en la Conferncla Interamerlcana en Bogot en 1943, son: Bolivia, Brasil, Cota Klca, Repblica Dominicana, E- cuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Mxico, Nicaragua y Paraguay. Ms patrimonios distribuirn a los agricultores Nuevos patrimonios familia- res sern entregados pronto ven la politics de dotar de tierras y facilidades agrcolar a loa a- grlcultores de nuestro pais. La fecha de la tntrega de los nuevos patrimonios no se ha Ji- jado an, pero se sabe que as- f/clende a cuarenta y tres patri- monios en la regin de Santa Rita, en La Chorrera. Los nuevos ttulos de propie- dad beneficiarn a un aprecia- ble nmero de familias, que ca- recan de tierras propias y que urgan de las mismas. El Minis- terio de Agricultura, anunci que el proceso de dotar de pa- trimonios familiares a todo el pas signe su curso firme y gra- dual en una forma metdica y cientfica. ____________ Irregularidades se denuncian en las inscripciones Declaraciones del Secretarlo del Ministerio de Gobierno y Justicia don Jorge Rubn Ro- sas, formuladas a EL PANAMA AMERICA: "En mi visita a las pobla- ciones interioranas con motivo de las festividades de Semana Santa, observ notorias irregu- laridades en la inscripcin de adherentes a los partidos pol- ticos en proceso de formacin. Las disposiciones de la Ley 39 y los Decretos posteriores son vulnerados de manera flagran- te por la mayora de los Se- cretarlos de los Consejos Mu- nicipales al servicio, no de sus respectivos municipios, sino de ocie... 1 ai retidos polUJi,n En algunas poblaciones los se- cretarlos de Consejos Munici- pales deambulan de casa en casa con los libros de inscrip- cin en sus manos presionando a los ciudadanos a Inscribirse en el partido de sus simpatas. Gran parte de las inscripcio- nes logradas por determinados partidos- se han efectuado en altas.horas de la noche en re- sidencias particulares mediante el registro de cdulas acapara- das desde 1948 cuando estos do- cumentos personalslmos se dis- tribuan por sacos a los Jerar- cas Interioranos del Gobierno de entonces. La veracidad de estas afirmaciones reposan en el hecho de que hay inscrip- ciones que ni siquiera han sido firmadas por los adherentes, sencillamente porque no exis- ten. Los campesinos e indgenas son dolorosamente engaados y obligados a inscribirse bajo a- menazas de ser despojados de sus tierras por parte de auto- ridades municipales al servicio incondicional de determinadas facciones polticas. Los libros de inscripcin son Impenetra- bles al conocimiento del p- blico. A este Despacho estn llegando protestas de distintos lugares del interior de la Rep- blica por la completa ignoran- cia tie las disposiciones legales vigentes sobre inscripcin de partidos polticos por parte de los secretarlos de Consejos Mu- nicipales. Estimo que el Jurado Nacio- nal de Elecciones 'tendr que (Pass a la PgtM , Col. X) Pern quiere desviar ahora la atencin con el anuncio de la bomba, dicen en Brasil RIO DE JANEIRO, Marzo 27 (UP). Los diarios matutinos se mostraron escptlcos sobre el anuncio hecho por Pern de que se habla logrado la liberacin de la energa atmica, y se pregun- taban si esto no haba sido he- cho a propsito para desviar la atencin del caso de La Prensa. El diarlo independiente "Ca- rioca" dijo: que "Pern sola- mente est tratando de desviar la atencin mundial del ataque a La Prensa. Pero todo el rui- do y la publicidad de la explo- sin no han tenido xito en a- callar los ecos del crimen que ha perpetrado". El independiente "Crrelo da Manhana" dijo que "la orden es una medida que indica cmo Pe- rn sabe qu su delegacin lle- g a Washington en una posi- cin lamentable, v que esto fu suficiente para aue en una for- ma de propaganda apresurada se lanzara la leyenda de la nue- va energa atmica de Argenti- na". El "Jornal dp Brazil" dijo que no faltan los escptlcos que mi- ran el anuncio como una pro- paganda preparada para crear sensacin, con el fin de desviar la atencin de esa otra realidad que es la libertad de expresin". ----------------? Ser el principal objeto de reunin de cancilleres Una verdadera anarqua de precios se constata en las tiendas de nuestra capital Don Eduardo Briceo explica Cul es su actuacin oficial en el caso de la Fiduciaria El seor don Eduardo A. Bri- ceo, Gerente del Banco de Ur- banizacin y Rehabilitacin e Interventor del Gobierno en el Banco Fiduciario, nos ha envia- do para su publicacin las sl- Bfinda agasajo al Mayor Alemn hoy la Polica Nacional El Mayor Alfreds Alemn, ex- Ministro de Gobierno y Justicia, ser objeto de un agasaja de parte de la oficialidad del Cuer- po de Polica Nacional por las gestiones ene ha realizado en be- neficio de esa Institucin y co- mo un reconocimiento a su la- bor en el Ministerio que tuvo a su cargo. A este agasajo han sido invi- tados numerosos amigos perso- nales del Mayor Alemn y se lle- var a cabo en el local del Es- cuadrn de la Polica. gulentes declaraciones. "Mis funciones como Inter- ventor del Gobierno Nacional en la Compaa Fiduciaria de Pa- nam, S.A. son limitadas y es- tn contenidas en el acuerdo a que llegaron representantes de esa entidad bancarla y funcio- narlos del Ministerio de Hacien- da y Tesoro, si dia 8 de Marzo de 1951." Mi Intervencin de carcter transitorio en las actividades de esa institucin de crdito, es la de vigilar, fiscalizar e Inspeccio- nar sus operaciones en cumpli- miento del convenio para pro- teccin de los intereses dei Go- bierno". "Despus que el Juez lo. del Circuito orden el da 8 del pre- sente mes, la suspensin de las operaciones de la Ca. Fiduciaria de Panam S./., por no estar dentro de su encaje legal, mi ac- tuacin se ha limitado a asistir a algunas reuniones de la Junta Directiva, que han sido de con- sulta sobre la actual situacin por que atraviesa esa compaa" "No debe confundirse mi po- sicin de representante del r- gano Ejecutivo en la Cia. Fidu- ciaria, con la de un Interventor, depositarlo o liquidador desig- nado por autoridad Judicial, que debe tomar Inmediata posesin de los negocios y haberes de un establecimiento bancarlo en ca- sos especiales previstos por la Ley, y resolver controversias contractuales entre los deposi- tantes, acreedores, deudores y accionistas del mismo". "Mi intervencin y responsa- bilidad en este asunto puede considerarse que es dentro de un periodo normal de operacio- nes y solamente por el tiempo que el Gobierno mantenga dine- ros depositados en esa Institu- yas a la Pg. S. col. .) WASHINGTON, marzo 27. (UP). Hoy se supo que Es- tados Unidos ha presentado mi- nutas de tres resoluciones so- bre la cooperacin econmica para ser consideradas en la Conferencia de Cancilleres A- merlcanoa. Los documentos no se han dado a la publicidad, pero fuentes fidedignas revelaron q' consisten en lo' siguiente: 1) Una declaracin general. 3) 2) Proyecto de resolucin so- bre la cooperacin econmica en la actual emergencia. 3) Proyecto de resolucin sobre planes para el fomento econ- mico y cooperacin tcnica. Al someter las minutas a la consideracin de los cancille- res, Estados Unidos, dijo que stas hablan sido redactadas tras consultar a varios gobier- nos y se cree que representan, hasta donde ello es posible, las opiniones que en comn susten- tan las repblicas americanas. En la breve declaracin gene- ral se dice que tras reconocer que las repblicas americanas tienen que fortalecer Inmedia- tamente sus defensas frente a "las fuerzas del imperialismo comunista internacional", y que "las repblicas americanas se comprometen s o 1 e m nemente, unas con otras, y para el be- neficio del mundo Ubre, a co- operar mutuamente para forta- lecer su defensa comn, por medio de medidas eficaces de cooperacin econmica". En las minutas de la resolu- cin sobre la cooperacin eco- nmica de emergencia se de- clara en sus considerandos: "Que es imprescindible que ca- da uno de los Estados ameri- canos desempee su papel en toda su amplitud en contribu- cin a la defensa comn y en el sostenimiento de la estabi- lidad econmica del mundo li- bre; que el esfuerzo mutuo en (Pasa a la Pgina S col. t> Sern examinados fsicamente todos los nios que ingresen a su primer ao de escuela Para conocimiento de los Pa- dres de Familia y Acudientes se nos ha suministrado el "Hora- rio" del "Centro Emiliano Pon- ce J." v de la "Cln'lca Escolar" a fin de que durante el pero- do de Vacaciones se examinen los nios que van a Ingresar al primer grado de las escuelas de la Capital. Para el (entro "Emiliano Pon- ce J." de Lanes a Viernes de 8 a 10 a.m. Escuela Repblica de Chile. Escuela Guillermo Andreve. Escuela Repblica de Venezuela. Escuela Pedro J. Sosa. Escuela Jos de Obalda. Para la Clnica Escolar: Lunes a Viernes De S a 11 a.m. Escuela Estados Unidos. Escuela Federico Llbbv Escuela Repblica de China. Escuela Jos de Obaldia. Escuela Manuel Jos Hurtado. Escuela Simn Bolvar. Escuela Gil Colonje. Escuela Nicolas Pacheco. Escuela Repblica de Mxico. Escuela Repblica de Colombia Escuela Repblica del Ecuador. Circulacin pagada ayer 22,400 Tres explosiones misteriosas oyen cerca de Miami MIAMI. Florida. Marzo 27 (UP) Anoche se operon Ues explosiones misteriosas, y ua gc ellas extremecl un hot-i de la ciudad, pero solamente ocurri un pequeo dao- La Polica dijo que la carga de ex- plosivos rompi varias venta- nas y desarregl un cuarto del Hotei Imperial. Una hora y media desp-'ls, se oy una explosin cerca a u.ia escuela en otra seccin de la ciudad. El Alcalde William B. Wolf, llam al cuartel cential El panam-Amrica destac ayer uno de sus redactores para averiguar precios de algunos ar- tculos de primera necesidad y se pudo constatar que existe cierta anarqua en los precios de loa mismos, sobre todo cuan- do se baja a las capas humildes de la ciudad. Las sopas de vegetales en la- utas, por ejemplo tienen diver- sos precios en distintas tiendas, an cuando sean ellas vecinas. El precio de las latas de sopa de vegetales oscila entre quince y diez y ocho centesimos de bal- boas, siendo las ms caras las que tienen carne que llega a diez y nueve y hasta veitin centavos la lata. Las sopas de tomate en latas cuestan quince y diez y siete centesimos de bal- boas. Los paquetltos de sopa Llpton cuestan entre doce y doce centavos y medio. Las mayores fluctuaciones en precios se encuentran en la le- che Klim en sus distintos tama- os. Por ejemplo, las latas de una libra tienen diversos pre- cios. El corresponsal de El Pa- nam-Amrica encontr pre- cios de 92, 98 centesimos y has- ta un balboa con precios arriba de estas cifras en las afueras de la ciudad. Las latas de dos libras y media varan entre 2.30 2.38 y hasta 2.39 y en las afue- ras an ms alto. En dos tien- das vecinas la lata de cinco li- bras era vendida en una a 4.40 y en otra a 4.80 y en las afue- ras a 493. La leche Valle Verde de cua- tro onzas costaba 22 centavos, pero en algunos lugares era vendida a 22 centavos y medio. La de una libra a 78 y a 80 cen- tavos. Nuestro redactor encontr que las michas de. pan generalmen- te pesaban dos onzas y se ven- dan a dos centesimos y medio (medio). Las michas de pan pa- recen pesar en casi todos los lu (Pasa a la Pg- t Col. ti Panam es miembro de la Organizacin Mundial de Salud La Organizacin Mundial do la Salud anunci que Panam es desde 1951, miembro de esa organizacin, al rectificar los tratados respectivos. La Organizacin Mundial de la Salud es la mxima autori- dad en cuestiones sanitarias d/l mundo. La autoridad regional para Amrica es la Oficina Sa- nitaria Panamericana a la cual Panam pertenece desde hace muchos aos. El Cdigo Sa- nitario de nuestro pas, por ejemplo, fue elaborado con la colaboracin de los tcnicos de ese organismo y se considera actualmente el ms avanzado (Pasa a l* Pit B Col 7> Se exhibir una cinta en colores en la Universidad Interesante pelcula en colo- res se exhibir en la Universi- dad de Panam maana mir- coles a las 8:45 p.m. Se trata de una cinta intitu- lada "Explorando el Pasado Pre- histrico de Panam", la cual presenta los trabajos arqueol- gicos realizados en diversos si- tios de Parlta, Provincia de Co- cl. por la Institucin Smith- sonlana y la Sociedad Geogr- fica Nacional de Washington. La pelcula pertenece al Mu- seo Nacional y se ofrece por cortesa de su Director, el Prof. Alejandro Mndez. Esta se pro- yectar en el auditorio del Edi- ficio de Humanidades de la Universidad de Panama. Estn invitados especialmente los profesores y alumnos de los Cursos de Verano, y adems po- dr asistir el publico que de- see. Truman proclama el 14 de abril Da Panamericano WA8HINQTON. marzo 27. (U8IS). El Presidente Tru- man ha declarado que la Orga- nizacin de los Estados Ameri- canos "ha demostrado su efec- tividad en el mantenimiento de la paz en el Hemisferio Occi- dental". En una proclama en la cual designa el 14 de abril como "Da Panamericano", el sldente expresa: "El sistema interamericano puede servir como ejemplo de progreso en el camino de la paz, la seguridad y la coope- racin". El 14 de abril se cumple el 61o. aniversario de la funda- de Polica unos minutos despas, clon de la" Unin Panamerlca- para informar que se hsba es- cuchado otra explosin en el sector sur de la ciudad, pero i ladios-patrullas no pueden sa- ber en donde ocurri. La Polica dijo que tendran t siones iueron. En la escuela o*- bia un leve olor a azufre, pero an con los reflectores dl Cuerpo de Bomberos no se pu- dieron encontrar huellas. na, entidad que hoy da acta como Secretaria General de la Organizacin de los Estados A- merlcanos. En la proclama el Presidente pide a "todas las organizacio- nes interesadas y al pueblo en general que se asocien en las ceremonias apropiadas conme- morativas de la fundacin de la Unin Panamericana, testi- moniando asi los estrechos (Pasa a la pgina C calumas ) Sobre posible evacuacin de Panam y Coln discuti hoy la Comisin de Defensa Civil El viernes 30 pe celebrar e la Zona del Canal importante reunin que, por lo que toda la or- ganizacin de primeros auxilios y evacuacin tiene que recaer sobre la poblacin civil misma. (Pasa a la Pag. . Col. Z> Ya se produjo el primer tanque Walker en E.U. Autoridades de la Defensa Civil de Panam y la Zona del Canal se reunieron esta maa- na para preparar el temarlo de una conferencia sobre de- fensa civil que' se celebrar en la Zona del Canal el viernes 3u y en la cual se abordarn prin- cipalmente los problemas de una posible evacuacin de las ciudades de Panam y Coln, en caso de un bombardeo areo. En dicha reunin, a la que asistirn altas autoridades del Ministerio de Gobierno y Jus- ticia, se estudiarn tambin los planes de una vasta campaa de divulgacin sobre defensa civil, que abarcar entrena- miento de las guardias civiles. Estas conferencias han sido precedidas por otras entre las autoridades mdicas y las en- fermeras del pais. Se trata de brindar el mayor servicio en caso de evacuacin a la pobla- cin civil co nel elemento hu- mano disponible para una ac- tividad de esta envergadura. Segn estos planes, la ciudad tendr que ser dividida en zo- nas de evacuacin y las iglesias y edificios con grandes espa- cios, habilitados para los ca- sos de emergencia. En los bom- bardeos atmicos el ejrcito tiene que. estar dedicado por entero a la defensa de la clu- CLEVELAND, Mar. 27 (UP). El primer tanque "bulldog" del tipo Walker, y el primer tan- que en ser producido por una compaa privada desde la se- gunda guerra mundial, comen- z a salir hoy de la fbrica, con tres meses de anticipacin. El tanque es ligero, y se bau- tizado con el nombre del Ge- neral Walton Walker, quien mu- ri en un accidente en Corea. Este es el primer tanque que ha sido diseado para el ejr- cito desde la pasada guerra. El Secretarlo del Ejrcito, Frank Pace dijo que el tanque 'puede pelear, disparar y ma- niobrar mejor que cualquiera en su clase en el mundo." El "bulldog" pesa 28 tonela- das y tiene un nuevo tipo dt torre con un can de 76 mi- lmetros. La produccin llegar a su mximo en agosto o sep- dad y a la labor de contraata- tlembre en la fbrica Cadillac. En trminos "fuertes" piden que MacArthur no invada el terreno de los diplomtieos WASHINGTON. Mar. 27 (UP) Se har tenido noticias que el Departamento de Estado, en Programa de tres puntos contra el comunismo WASHINGTON. Marzo 27. (UP). El Secretarlo de Esta- do. Dean Acheson. al dirigirse a la primera sesin regular de la Conferencia de Cancilleres A- merlcanos. pidi a todas las Americas que se unan en un programa de tres p-intos. para la defensa contra el comunismo. basado en la "distribucin equi- tativa de sacrificios". Acheson dUo que "el imperia- lismo comunistas es la ms gra- ve amenaza en la historia de las naciones Ubres del mundo y nos llama a la accin aho- Umdca V oue-d? llevar Ktt ^eAfi ft carga Dijo: "Juntos debemos, por MacArthur podra entorpe. .ras a la P*i. iMll eer sus gestiopea. trminos "bastante fuertes" han pedido al Departamento de De- fensa y al Presidente que eli- minen las actividades del Ge- neral Douglas MacArthur en el terreno diplomtico. Al parecer, la decisin fu motivada por las declaraciones de MacArthur la semana pasa- da, de estar dispuesto a con- ferenciar sobre el terreno con los jefes militares Nor-Coreanos para negociar el cese de hosti- lidades. Esta declaracin, con decidido tono diplomtico, cau- s asombro entre los funciona- rlos del Departamento de Esta- do. An antes de estas declara- clones del Departamento de Es- tado estaba deseoso que Mac- Arthur se abstuviese de hacer declaraciones pblicas que lin- dan con las propuestas diplo- mticas. La ltima declaracin de Mac- Arthur, llegada a Washington la noche del Viernes, no obtuvo la autorizacin previa de los funcionarios del Gobierno y es- At.l.NA DOS El. PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE MARTES, MARZO 17, 1951 Panamamrtca MARIO INDIPENDUNTI H1HMODIO ARIA!. DIRECTOR IDITAOO ROR LA BDITORA PANAMA AMERICA. . A. Til irONO *-074O CENTRAL PRIVADA! APARTADO POETAL NO 114 N >Uk IAL..ERE SITL'ADOI IN UTA .IUD0. CA'.LI H. Hi. ST PI1MEKAS MEDIDAS DE AMERICA FRENTE A LA EMERGENCIA MUNDIAL tiu la sesin inaugural de la Conferencia de Cancilleres se esboz el plan que adoptar el hemis- ferio ante la crisis internacional. En los discursos del Presidente Truman y del Ministro de Relacio- nes Exteriores del Brasil est la sntesis, puede de- cirse, de la idea y del espritu que anima el mo- vimiento continental. El Presidente de los Estados Unidos manifes- t claramente la urgencia y el apremio que hay en defender la democracia de la palpable agresin comunista de que es vctima. Dijo que para lograr esos fines es necesario no permitir que sucumba la Europa occidental ante la poltica imperialista rusa y dijo tambin que para eso es indispensable que nuestro Continente, unido por un slo anhelo y un slo esfuerzo, luche, decidido, contra las fuer- zas del mal El Presidente Truman habl de las cuestiones militares, pero de una manera fundamental puso nfasis en los aspectos polticos y econmico del problema. En relacin con lo ltimo destac la im- . jjortancia de la cooperacin econmica entre todas las Naciones Americanas para que nuestros pue- blos estn en condiciones de hacerle frente a la campaa con el xito debido. Por otra parte, cmo vocero de los veinte_ pa- ses de la Amrica Latina, el Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores del Brasil, para contestar al Presiden- te de los Estados Unidos en lo que respecta a esta cuestin vital de la cooperacin econmica, defini como una necesidad absolutamente ineludible la ayuda apropiada para mantener el nivel econmi- co en condiciones que hagan posible un aporte efec- tivo de Amrica en la lucha mundial contra el to- talitarismo moscovita. Todo parece indicar que esta dea est encon- trando slido soporte en las altas esferas oficiales del gobierno de Washington y, sobre todo, en la opinin pblica de la gran Nacin del Norte. Ojal que ella se comprenda en todos sus alcances para el mejor logro del destino y de la solidaridad de Amrica. En uno de los perodos de su discurso el Presi- j dente Truman dijo: "Creemos que los objetivos y propsitos del gobierno son promover el bienestar de todo el pueblo y no el de unos cuantos privile- giados solamente." Esta apreciacin poltica segu- ramente debi haber sido oda con especial inters en el seno de la Conferencia. Ojal que todos los Delegados a ella se hayan compenetrado de ese con- cepto que, para decirlo sin ambajes, no tiene vi- gencia cabal en algunos pases d la Amrica La- tina. Ayer, en nuestro editorial, nos referimos a ese problema que confronta la democracia conti- nental y que ojal encuentre en esta Reunin de Cancilleres una adecuada solucin para prestigio de nuestro continente y felicidad de nuestros pue- blos. NOVSIMO teatro CRITICO por ,ie. v. PASIN DE 1951 Por ALDOR REUNION DE ACCIONISTAS Se cita a los accionistas de la Destilera Central, S.A., a la Asamblea General anual que ha de celebrarse I da 5 de Abril de 1951 en las oficinas de la Compa- a en Avenida Norte No. 70 a I ; 8 p.m. Se considerarn los siguientes puntos: 1Discusin del Balance Ceneral al 31 de Diciembre de 1950. 2Eleccin de nuevos directores. DESTILERA CENTRAL, S.A. Anbal Tribaldos Secretario Compaa Fiduciaria de Panam, Si. Asamblea Ceneral de Accionistas CITACIN De conformidad al Artculo 13 de los Estatutos, por orden de la Junta Directiva, se cita a los accionistas a una Asamblea Extraordinaria que tendr lugar en las oficinas de la Compaa en Calle I No. 20 de la ciudad de Panam a las 3:30 p.m. del da Lunes, 9 de Abril de 1951. El objeto de la reunion es el de presentar y considerar infor- mes pertinentes sobre la situacin actual de la Compaa y resolver sobre cualquier otro asunto o medida que pro- muevan o propongan los Accionistas, Directores o la Jun- ta Directiva, incluso cualesquiera reformas del Pacto Social. La Asamblea se celebrar con los accionistas que apa- rezcan inscritos como tales en los libros de la Compaa el 31 de Marzo de 1951. Panam, Marzo 26 de 1951. EL SECRETARIO LAS MUJERES "PEOR VESTI- DAS DEL MUNDO" Tenia que ser en los' Estados Unidos. Y tenia que ser un cronista de sociedad "de so- ciedad"... de aquel pas quien se atreviera a designar las diez mujeres "peor vesti- das" del mundo. Porque si es difcil encontrar las diez mu- jeres "mejor vestidas" del orbe, el escoger a las diez peor ata- viadas dificulta el problema. Claro que el secreto reside en buscar ante todo un grupo de mujeres que sea conocido por mucha gente. Es una satisfac- cin para las no conocidas, o las menos conocidas. Ya dentro de la primera seleccin, habr que cuidarse bien. Pongamos una Virginia Hill, por ejemplo. Cualquiera se atreve a men- cionarla entre las "peor vesti- das" damas de la tierra. 81 nicamente porque la queran retratar o Interrogar' arreme- ti Virginia HU contra unos cuantos periodistas del gne- ro masculino y del femenino en Nueva York.. Qu hara ti criticaran su abrigo de pieles o su horrible sombrero? Pero volvamos a lo nuestro. Entre las mujeres mas lamen- tablemente ataviadas -se citan por el cronista de sociedad nor- teamericano a la seora Eva de Pern, la que se califica de "demasiado vestida", demasia- do llena de trapos no hay que ser mal Intencionado, com- paero, lo que, como mero contemplador de fot ografias admito. Pero... Podr decirse esto en "La Prensa" de Bue- nos Aires, lo mismo en la que se publicar ahora que en la que se public hace dos meses? El doctor Oalnza Paz no po- dra haberse refugiado en Mon- tevideo si se hubiera atrevido a tanto. Tambin se menciona como 'peor vestida" a la Princesa Isa- bel o Elizabeth de Inglaterra.: Probablemente le nter esar \ menos a esta hija de Jorge VI el pertenecer al grupo. Con re-; cordar a su bisabuela la Reina! Victoria, hallara un antece-' dente familiar Y de categora. Acusan a esta PrinceflPde "po- nerse aos". Es pecado mayor e imperdonable. Lo urgente es quitarse aos. A la Princesa, casada con un guapo mozo medio Ingls, medio griego- no le preocupa presumir de jo- ven. 8e cita a la seorita Mar- gare! Truman En realidad la manera de vestir de la hija del Presidente de los Estados Uni- dos es formidable. Pero a lo mejor el seor Truman se mo- lesta con el cronista de so- ciedad que Incluy el nombre de su hija en la lista ms co- mentada por las mujeres del' mundo entero. Y amenaza al humbre como amenaz al cri- tico m u s i cal washlngtoniano que se permiti apuntar de- fectos al modo de cantar del pimpollo de la Casa Blanca. La censura de prensa puede traer-, la un mnimo desliz de ese es-: tilo. Siempre se ha criticado a la actriz del cinematgrafo Pau- lette Ooddard por el mal gus- to de sus atavos. Se asegura que la eleccin de colores de sus trajes es terrible y se aa- de que usa demasiados ador- nos. Con lo bien que estar Paulette Ooodard al natural... A Rita Hay worth, la Princesa india por matrimonio por se- gundo matrimonio o por ter- cer Intento, no estoy seguro__ se la echa en cara lo mismo que a Evita Pern: que se cuel- ga demasiadas cosas sobre su escultura, positivamente mag- nifica. Yo no me atrevera a decir tanto. Rita Hayworth. hi- ja de un bailarn medio espa- ol, es sencillamente estupen- da. Tengo ante mi un retrato de la princesa Inglesa y de la menos princesa pero casi princesa. Margaret Truman, y no admito comparacin: Rita triunfa. Quiz se aproxime mks a ese Ideal griego el de Lfy s>po. el de Praxiteles de la altura de las nueve cabezas en relacin con el otro ideal el de Fidias que apenas llega a siete y media... Lo que sea Rita triunfa, repito. Ahora bien: pertenecer a ese grupo de las diez damas "peor vestidas" del mundo ya es dis- tinguirse. No se conquista el puesto sin ms ni ms. Es ms sencillo conseguir un titulo de nobleza, de esta nobleza del si- glo XX. Sonriamos. Y lo cierto es que por mu- chos siglos que transcurran quedar siempre la mujer como milagroso atractivo. Aconteci en Orela, en la Grecia de Pe- reles: aconteci en Roma: y hasta en la encapuchada Edad Media recurdese a Lady Go- diva. No se hable del XVIII francs ni de la poca contem- pornea. Tanto se ha adelantado que comprendemos hoy que las mu- jeres menos vestidas son las mujeres mejor vestidas. Y cons- iltuye un homenaje antes que un insulto. El Insulto lo llera la segunda intencin. JH mi * ...La corona de espinas... Puntos de Vista Conozca y evite algunas enfermedades Varias clases de Conjuntivitis Un gran nmero de personan- est en capacidad de decir, en presencia de unos ojos enroje- | cidos, que duelen con la lus y amanecen llenos de una sustan- , cia blanca o amarillenta, que muchas veces Impide abrir los I prpados, que se trata de una j conjuntivitis: pero muy pocos; estn al tanto de las causas de j su produccin, de las conse-; cuenclas que su descuido puede acarrear y. sobre todo, de las! maneras de evitarla. Ante todo, se llama con] un ti-! vitis a la irritacin o infeccin de una de las membranas ex- ternas de los ojos que se en- ' cuentra recubriendo la parte in- terna de los prpados V el glo- bo del ojo en la parte que de ! ordinario se ve de un color blan- co azuloso. debido a la presen- ca de diversos grmenes extra- | os (el estreptococo, el estafilo- coco, el productor de la bleno- [ rragla. el de la difteria. etc.).| porque, normalmente, la baja | temperatura, la presencia v clr-, culacln permanente de las l- grimas aseguran una limpieza casi total. Hay varias clases de conjun- tivitis: agudas, crnicas y. den- tro de las primeras, las cuales son ms representativas de la enfermedad, la "simple", produ- cida por el contacto del viento y el polvo, la catarral sub-aguda. la catarral epidmica, la bleno- Risica y la diftrica. Conjuntivitis simple ha sufr-; do todo el mundo: la accin del viento, la tierra, durante viajes por carreteras polvorientas o en la demolicin de casas con pa- redes de adobe o tapia: del hu- mo, en fbricas y. muv frecuen- temente, en nuestro medio ru- ral, en cocinas de fogn sin ven- tilacin, donde el producto de la combustin de la lea no tie- ne salida distinta de la misma puerta de entrada: del calor, gases Irritantes, introduccin de cuerpos extraos, lavados hechos en la nariz con sustancias irri- tantes e ingestin de bebidas o alimentos excitantes: todas es- tas causas, la producen a dia- rio. Y la manera de prevenirla es sencilla: evitar en lo posible las causas enumeradas y usar anteojos protectores, de crista- les planos v ahumados. Las conjuntivitis catarral sub- aguda y catarral aguda epid- mica, producidas, la primera, por el bacilo de Morax y. la segun- da, por el de Weeks, tienen co- mo principal caracterstica su alto grado de contagiosidad. Son lo comnmente llamado "cegu- ra". que se extiende rpidamen- te en las escuelas, cuarteles, in- lernados. etc., pero nrincipal-: mente en aseo de los nios, la promiscui- dad en que viven y la tenden- cia a llevarse las manos a los ojos irritados v a tocar lueffn todo sin lavrselas. Su grave- dad es relativa por las compli-, caciones a que pudiera dar lu- gar y la extensin a otros gru- pos humanos: v la manera de evitarla radica principalmente en la separacin de los indivi- duos afectados v la desinfec- cin de objetos de uso personal, hasta el fin de su tratamiento y curacin. La ms grave entre las con- juntivitis agudas es. sin duda, la blenorrglca del nio (porque tambin se presenta en el adul- to), por el altsimo porcentaje de ciegos que produce (casi un 40%). La infeccin se produce probablemente en el momento del nacimiento, o desde varias horas o das antes, cuando ha habido un parto demorado y complicado, en una madre en- ferma de blenorragia: tambin se cree en la posibilidad de que se haga en el momento de lim- piar los ojos y cara del recin nacido. Por lo comn, la enfer- medad no se inicia Inmediata- mente, sino hasta el segundo o tercero da: aparece en los ojos y hace tres periodos: infiltra - tlvo, plorreico, con gran produc- cin de un pus espeso y amu- rillo o verdoso, y crnico. En el segundo, el plorreico. es don- de estn los mayores peligros de ceguera, por la perforacin de la crnea, produccin de cata- ratas v muchas veces Infeccin total del contenido del ojo. que convierte a ste en r.na verda- dera bolsa de pus. C. V. R. RED PANAMERICANA tiene los mejores orooramas COLEGIO JAVIER MATRICULAS AO 1951 El Jueves 29 quedan abiertas las matrculas para PREPARATORIA, PRIMARIA y SECUNDARIA hasta 4o. ao inclusive. Por la maana de 9 a 11:30 Por la tarde de 3 a 5:30 Se ruega a todos los antiguos formalicen tus ma- * trculas antes del 15 de abril. N INTA C0MPRE UN radio IUI IvH anteg de haber odo UN Radio PHILIPS "EL MEJOR DEL MUNDO" LEGITIMO HOLANDS UN AO DE GARANTA VALO! IGALO! y COMPRELO! Distribuidos poi: AGENCIAS PANAMERICANAS, S.A. PANAMA Frente al Institute Nacional Telefone 2-174 Ademas, de venta en: PANAMA: Casa Admirable Casa Sport Mueblera Dos Cuados Mueblera El Diablo Mueblera La Europea Mueblera Parisin Mueblera Rojas Mueblera Tua Fanamslca COLON DAVID: Agencias Panamericanas, 8.A. CHITRE: Agencias Max liles Abucen Agrcola LA GUERRA POR LA PAZ ESTRATEGIA DE DESGASTE Cincuenta mil proyectiles fueron lanzados por la artillera de la 35a. Divisin de Infantera norteamericana como preparacin liara efectuar el cruce del rio Han en dos puntos situados a 2* Kilmetros al Este de Sel', capital de la Corea del Sur; I avia- cin unitaria tendi un manto de fuego eon bombas de altos ex- plosivos y de gasolina gelatinisada napalm bombas-cohetea y ametralladoras de diversos calibres; patrullas blindadas inte- gradas por tin mnimo de 8 tanques "Gral. Patton" penetraban en el territorio enemigo, batiendo con el fuego de ana caones 7 ametralladoras todas las trincheras, "zorreras" y abrigos de loa comunistas; los contingentes de infantera, avanzando lentamen- te, hombro con hombro, limpiaban metdicamente el terreno para no dejar tras de si a un solo enemigo. Este cuadro de la lucha en el sector de Sel se repiti a to- do lo largo del frente coreano; las unidades surcoreanas y uni- tarias no avanzaron sino trae del apoyo que. les otorgaban la ar- tillera y la' aviacin, las cuales materialmente araban el terre- no. La maniobra, que resurgiera durante las guerras napoleni- cas y alcanzara su mayor grado en las "blitzkrieg" germanas do Polonia y Francia, brilla por su ausencia en les campos de Corea. Traa de haber realisado el desembarco en Inchn y avanzado so- bre la frontera manchuriana, los unitarios no han vuelto a rea- lizar una maniobra; los comunistas, despus de la maniobra sor- presiva en Corea del Norte, que culmin con la evacuacin de Hungnam, tampoco haban vuelto a realisar ninguna maniobra, excepto la pequea y corta ofensiva que acaba de ser liquidada al recuperar los unitarios el territorio que haban perdida a cau- sa de ella. Los unitarios llevaban a cabo lo que en trminos militares se llama una "guerra de material", aplastando al enemigo con rl peso de las mquinas e ingenios militares y no mediante una superioridad en la maniobra. Basndose en el mayor desarrollo industrial norteamericano, el Tte. Oral. Matthew B. Ridgway aplica el factor CIENCIA de la guerra y no el de ARTE: la tc- nica guerrera unitaria es la que contrarresta al enemigo. LA GUERRA es una ciencia y un arte: es ciencia por- ue se basa en reglas y principios inmutables, sean cuales ueren los cambios que se realicen en ella; j es arte por- que la adecuada combinacin de esos principios y reglas, aplicada por un comandante genial, produce resultados ex- traordinarios. No es culpa del Tte. GraL Ridgway el qu no pueda aplicar el arte de la guerra y se vea obligado a utilizar nicamente la ciencia: el personal que tiene a sus rdenes es insuficiente para recurrir a la maniobra con probabilidades de xito. La falto do soldados Instruidos y preparados para la guerra, lo heterogneo de los contingentes a sus rdenes, el distinto nivel de prepara- cin militar y de voluntad de lucha (que va desde el entusiasmo arrollador de los turcos que cargan a la bayoneta y no saben re- tirarse si les faltan municiones, hasta la incontenible tendencia a volatilizarse" que los snreoreanos demuestran constantemen- te), hacen que no pueda montar maniobras de gran rendimiento. La operacin "Matador" puede equipararse al avance de una aplanadora que lo arrolla y aplasta todo a su paso, pero que ca- rece de brillantez; solo la abundancia de material de guerra, de municiones, de transportes, de aviacin, es la que permite obte- ner los actuales rendimientos. No hay penetraciones profundas v rpidas que disloquen el dispositivo enemigo y le obliguen a efectuar grandes repliegues, mientras se copan miles y decenas :'Km.d' sla*I enemigos, come sucediera en las primeras ^ brillantes etapas de la "blitzkrieg" germana: se avanza por centenares o pocos miles de metros diarios y nada ms. Los comunistas (chinos y norcoreanes) no pueden realizar una guerra de material porque carecen de industria desarrollad que produzca este en cantidades ilimitadas: tienen que resiegar- ffSM *d,ilTl? de hlerro T ,ue, que ,e *I,M*- *n inferioridad tcnica con sangre a raudales, pero no ceden en su resistencia obstinada, esperando a que se presenten elreunrtan- cas favorables. LTD Pp-CHENG, comandante del Se. Ejrcito de Casa- pana, recibi su apodo de "El Dragn Tuerte" por faltarle ei ojo derecho, usa gruesos lentes de aros de carey y tie- 2./5S2?? ? Pro'esor: pero ha demostrado su capaci. .Ma. V. '" '" '"*?* c,Tl1' dnrante u cu"> e infirmo repetidas veces que habia muerto en campaa. Si el informe formosiano es correcto, entonces los cuatro me- ?I? "."'1"" de> Ch,na roJ* e"Ur*n entregado, a 1. direc- H..nr?e ',! c*m,n* en Corea: Fsng Teh-huel" subjofe el CG v! SS*? '."Tl*?*"^ ler *"* d CamVaa? Chen pJer^pi ?fto d" f'f; **0, I Lln PiM' eemandante del 4o. c1nf.nd?n^^.rae^rcitonCCh?no* ^ ^ RJJOTS VTTS^lSSfLSSS K'plna au! h."r,ec^.rnoC.r,,I,r el**"'to " eceriaddetocUca."; t..!1?1*!** **?*; continuara '* batana de material y la estra- ..?,."'JTSSt .del enemigo: se esperara 1 U.uidacioa d piI t^dTtSSL Z??* ""'uando el Dr. Syngman Rhee, presiden- ranT. rw. 1 ,SrJ"d"ra ,Be ,M fum*8 unitarias conquista- ?san*n! -.1 Nrte 'efectuaran I. nnificacin del devastado y sangrad* pas, campo de batalla de comunistas y anltarios Se estimaba que los comunistas continuaran renlernri** c.dUtriK 5"U4llet*r ,B ,B- e'enriv avanzSda1"^ cual trataran de detener a los unitario, mientras llerbn lo. ron Jvfr?8 de '"" le. permitieran l.r su contraofeSl siva primaveral. Esta lnea defensiva se supone une est itn.Ji un poco al Norte de Sel, sigue la mm? isooterdT Srt^ta Km" hMta CnUnCh0n T de *" "* ^lelStoaf'iira! i I** "Perloridad tcnica unitaria y su aplicacin en la bata. lia de material puede haber contrarrestado^u^ridadT n! h. 11 .TI P*1, *'*** Pueda romper el empate a eue ha ligado el conflicto coreano. Y mientras Vi GraHffirwav no ?m* V, di8Pfic'on uficiente infantera, tal cosa no ser no! Coreaeotrrrl0.Nn".P!e,n' ren,0.de ' ""obTpodrnth.ctr en torea otra cosa que lo que reaza la operacin "Matador". (Tomado de "TIEMPO", de Mxico) ESCUELA PRACTICA DE COMERCIO LIBERTARIA DE MEL y GASTN FARAUDO P. Directores Profesores Cursos de Perito Comercial, Secretariado, Contabilidad ^enm'VGrew- Mecanografa. Ortografa y Rodaecien Aritmtica Comercial. Ingls y Problema, de AnStwmT MATRICULAS ABIERTAS DESDE EL LUNES 2 DE ABRIL. S FM. a < P.M. / Avenida A No. 48 Telfono -JM1 No mis preocupaciones si compra usted por medio de nuestro ventajoso CLUB de 50 Semanas LAMPARAS OLLAS DE ALUMINIO JUEGOS DE CUBIERTOS (inoxidables) L-I.ACUU A Avenida Central ti ir MARTES, MARZO 27, 1951 EL PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE PAGINA TRrj Cruzan el Paralelo tropas surcoreanas Los norteamericanos forman una slida muralla de acero a diez millas de esa linea TOKIO, Marzo 27 (UP) -Lf Uopas surcoreanas uvanzaiuii i.i masa hacia ei norte del ba- rjelo 38, desde Kaumpo, a UM millas del Paralelo. Las tropas Sur-Coreanas avanzaron a lo largo de a costa este deipues ue haber cruzado en masa la vieja frontera. Un comunicado lacnico a nuncio la cada de Kaumpo y no se' dieron detalles, pero se cree que la villa fu capturada ayer. No se hizo mencin de resistencia comunista. Los surcoreanos estn avali- zando a lo largo de la rol&ha carretera que los condujo a Chongjln, a 250 milla sal ui- te del Paralelo y a slo 50 mi- li as de la frontera Slberla.it, el Invierno pasado. A'nora, ata embargo, las tropas avanzan con ms cuidado, protegienio sus flancos. Un portavoz del Octavo Ejer- cito hizo mofa de los "Inform s ue los surcoreanos estaban de- safiando el Comando de las Wj- cones Unidas avanzando hacia el norte del Paralelo. Todos sus avances han sido con rdenes del General Matthew B Ridg- uay, Comandante del Octave Ejercito. Otras tropas'del Octavo Ejer- cito so encontraban a tiro ds can de la vieja frontera a lo largo del frente de 140 millas a travs de la pennsula. Despachos del frente indican t,ue los comunistas estn esla- bliciendo nuevas.defensas op> siciones para demorar el avan- ce aliado en lugares clavs, Jos- de Justo al sur del Paralelo en el Oeste hasta varias millas al norte de este en el oriente. Tj- do parece indicar que los rojos estn planeando hacer una re- sistencia heroica en el oeste, tn los caminos que conducen desds Sel a Pyongyang. Se inform que las tropas co- munistas y sus tanques se ca- tn, atrincherando a lo largo de la carretera Sel-Pyongyang. Las fuerzas norcoreanas que so retiran al norte de Sel, se r:e que sa estn dirigiendo a Kne- song. a milla y media al sor del Paralelo. Las fuerzas norteamericants que estn avanzando a lo ia.-go de ambas carreteras, se unie- ron en tres puntos ayer, for- jando de esta manera una 0u lida muralla de acero a diez niiilas defensivas al sur del Pa- ralelo. Los informes de las prepaia- clones defensivas de los ro;os Nueve fallecen al estrellarse avin BUENOS AIRES, Marzo 27 personas resultaron m u e r tas cuando un avin DC-3 de Aero- lneas Argentinas se estrell a las 8.30 de la maana cerca del aeropuerto de Rio Grande en la Tierra del Fuego en su vuelo regular de Ushuaia a Buenos Aires. ucron dados por aviones ae tconocimienio, quienes divi-u- ron el mayor trfico comuiiu a que se ha visto desde hace be- uianas. Cerca de 850 vehculos comunistas fueron divisado movindose hacie el sur, sie.iao atacados. Los aviones B-20 con basej lo Okinawa bombardearon la ca- pital norcoreana, y le causa.on raves danos a los patios \ - rrovlanos en el centro clave .e aprovisionamiento de Hamhu.ip en el nOr-oeste- Vuelos,tcticos efectuados per ias fuerzas areas aliada ca- aion glandes daos a las cu"- uaitiias comunistas, destiuyn do ocho tneles entre Barfa f y Keasong en la principal linea de abastecimiento en el frente occidental. Todava no se han revelado los puntos militares que se tratarn en la Conferencia Variados comentarios provoca el anuncio d la Atmica de Argentina _xA^ 1 ILLAi Universitarias Pe2>.m,j.J. Al reanudar esta columna lo hacemos con el firme prop- sito de presentar con la co- operacin de los directores de la Universidad Nacional di- versas fases de la vida uni- versitaria. Queremos sobre todo discutir sobre la iniciacin de la Facultad de Medicina en Pa- nam, curso que es de primor- dial importancia, pero que en- gendra una organizacin efec- tiva. Nos parece que la Facultad de Medicina tiene sus ventajas para nuestro pas, cuya pobla- cin crece rpidamente. Su ini- ciacin llegar a cristalizar los deseos de un puado de estu- diantes, profesores y el Rec- tor de la Universidad doctor Octavio Mndez Pereira, quie- nes a pesar de las criticas y de los intereses mezquinos, han logrado su feliz realizacin. Ha- ce varios aos un grupo de es- tudiantes, de varias -facultades de la Universidad, se unieron con el fin de fundar mit, que se llam la de WASHINGTON, Marzo 27 (UPi El Ministro de Rela- ciones Exteriores argentno, Hi- plito Jess Paz. despus Ce conferenciar con el Secretario de instado, Dean Acheson paso c) da conferenciando con sus au- xares- Las conferencias de ?sz con sus consejeros polticos y militares y econmicos tienen por objeto coordinar los pla;es ut trabajo en la conferencia. A contestacin de un peivi- rUta Paz declar que la clau.r- ra de La Prensa no habia P'o mencionada en su entrevista con Acheson. El Dr. Alberto Cmpora Do- mnguez de Uruguay dijo quo Acheson "esl seguro que la onftrencia encontrar una so- lucin armnica de los pro'o.e- UiM polticos, militares y eo- r.mlcos que estn en lnea o ni ;os Ideales comunes y los in'.e- . tses de as nacionea Am** r'canas". Pedro Sllveti Arce de Boiiv'-i cijo que ACneson estuvo en 'Vxtremo cordial" Agreg .'ir tiataron sobre la conferencia en su aspecto general. Gonzalo Restrepo Jaramii.'.' dijo que expres a Miller "su mejores deseos para que la con- ferencia sea un xito". La mayor parte de los Minl>- t;os de Relaciones Exterio:e .o han revelado anticipadamen- te qu proposiciones militares i econmicas sometern a con- sideracin de la .reunin de onsulta de los Cancilleres, v algunos han dicho que no .a- n proposicin especifica alr- na y que slo expresarn s'is puntos de vista sobre los tr Estos tres puntos son: 1) Cooperacin poltica y mi- litar para la defensa de Ami- nca y prever y rechazar la R- giesln de acuerdo con los ce- venios nter-Americanos y con 'a Carta de las Naciones Uni- das y las resoluciones de diera Organizacin. 21 Fortalecimiento de la se- guridad interna de las rep- blicas Americanas. a i Cooperacin econmica de emergencia: at Produccin y distribucin de los productos escasos y la utilizacin de los servicios necesarios paca atcn- dei los requerimientos de la e- conomia interna de las rep- blicas Americanas; y medio-s para facilitar en lo posible la ejecucin de programas para el aesarrollo econmico. La sesin de apertura' oti- cial ser hoy- por la tarde- Li primera sesin de trabajo ten- dr lugar maana por la ma- ana y ser pblica, pero la icuniones subsiguientes y la. ~t las comisiones sern a puer- ! as cerradas hasta la s e s 1 o " llenarla, final, a no ser que ') Ministros deseen rfue alguna se- sin sea pblica. NUEVA YORK, Marzo 27 (UP) El anupelo por PeoM ae que Argentina ha logrado ia liberacin controlada de la e- nergia atmica fu destaca.'o en las primeras planas de 'us vespertinos. El "World Telegram" dio la noticia con el titulo "Pern r- cla explosin atmica dice que el provecto argentino no usa uranio". El "Journal American" anuu- :. "Nuevo mtodo atmico a- ..unclado por Pern". El New York Post dijo: "Pe- rn afirma que posee un nue- o mtodo secreto atmico". Asi mismo, el World Telegram y el Journal American, publi- caron despachos' de Washinc- ,011 que deca que los invcsM- gadores norteamericanos de e- ncigia atmica ponan en duda el mtodo anunciado por Perfil. El potencial humano de la Amrica Latina ser de gran valor si estalla la guerra Por ROSCOE SNIPES WASHINGTON, Marzo 27 (U. P.iEl Brigadier General Ed- win Slbert, Jefe del Estado Ma- yor de la Junta de Defensa nter-Americana dijo que el potencial humano de Latino Amrica, asi como sus materia- les estratgicos sern de mximo utico-J valor para las naciones aruan- Pro-escue- tes ae la libertad, si llega a es- MWiclna"Tesos mucha- tallar una guerra global. chos se agitaron con mucho entusiasmo y calaron en el am- biente local la necesidad de crear dicha escuela. Sus desve- los y su participacin fue es- timulada en aquel entonces por todos los directores de la Universidad. Esta labor tras- cendi a la radio, al peridico y se hizo intensa con festivi- dades y otras formas de pro- paganda. Esos muchachos en- contraron gran apoyo en el Rector Mndez Pereira y se puede decir que su labor du- rante varios aos escolares fue 'suficientemente efectiva. Des- pus de ser aprobada la fun- dacin de la Escuela de Me- dicina en Panam, se agita- ron tambin, en la organizacin misma de la escuela. J>ero su labor y desvelos por la Es- cuela de Medicina parece que ha pasado desapercibida. Sin lugar a dudas ellos plantaron un jaln que luego culmin con la fundacin de la escuela de galenos, y por eso deben si- turseles en un lugar prepon- derante entre los estudiantes que lucharon por la fundacin de la Escuela de Medicina en Panam. Manifest que "en la guerra global las reservas humanas de Latino-Amrica sern algo que no podemos pasar por alto. Para aquellos que pudieran abrigar dudas respecto a las cualidades combatientes de los Latlno- Amecanos, slo tengo que refe- rirme a la historia de la con- quista de las tres cuartas par- tes merldonlales de este hemis- ferio por pequeo grupos de es- paoles y portugueses, y al he- cho que hombres de la mismo base tnica conquistaron toda Europa Occidental, excepto Fran cia, bajo Carlos V y Felipe II. 'Tarrtbln tenemos el hecho que los Ejrcitos de Napolen hallaron su tumba en la Penn- sula Ibrica. La ms reciente ejecutoria de los ejrcitos de San Martn y Bolvar muestra que los Latino-Americanos son muy difciles de vencer. En este momento, el 65o. Regimiento de Infantera de Estados Unidos, de puertorriqueos, del mismo tronco tnco que las repblcas Antillas, est realizando una labor de prmera clase en Corea hasta el punto que debemos re- conocer que cuando los Latino Americanos estn debidamente instruidos y pertrechados son tan buenos soldados como otros cualquiera. Y cuando la situacin se ha- ga difcil en la guerra global, va a ser de mxima importan- cia que el potencial humano de Latino-Amrica, as como las materias primas esenciales, es- tn al lado de los pueblo aman- tes de la libertad." Slbert manifest que est su- mamente satisfecho que su Vice- Director del Estado Mayor de la Junta vaya a ser el General Gustavo Rojas Padilla, ex-Mi- nistro de Relaciones Exteriores y ex-Jefe del Estado Mayor de Colombia. Declar: "El hecho que Co- lombia enva un Vice-Director del Estado Mayor de tan alto calibre demuestra nuevamente la seriedad y calor conque Co- lombia responde a sus obligacio- nes con la causa comn. Puede ciertamente decirse que no es una de las naciones comn. Puede ciertamente decirse que BERKELEY. California. Mar- zo 27 IUP) El destacado qumi- co nuclear, de la Univerisda de alifornia, Dr. Gelnn T- Sea- uOig coment el anuncio ;irf Argentina de una explosin - inlua diciendo: "No conozco mtodo alguno de hacer, bombas atmicas sin utilizar el uranio". Seaborg descubri el plutonio usado en la primera bomba a- tomica- SOUTH N O R W A L, Cor.n. no es una de las naciones ms ricas de Latino-Amrica y ser quizs una misin bastante cos- tosa y difcil la que asumi cuan do ofreci una fragata y bata- lln para el* servicio en Corea. Me descubro en saludo ante Co- lombia". Se espera que el General Ro- jas llegue a Washington pron- to para hacerse cargo de su puesto que se asigna por sorteo peridico al pas que no tiene otro alto cargo en la Junta. To- das las repblicas Americanas tienen derecho a pertenecer al Estado Mayor de la Junta, pero actualmente solo estn repre- sentadas ocho, aunque todas tie- nen representantes en la pro- pia -Junta. Argentina acaba de anunciar, slnembargo, que nombrar re- presentante en el Estado Mayor. Slbert dijo que espera que des- pus de la Conferencia de Mi- nistro de Relaciones Exteriores en Washington, otros pases adicionales nombren miembros del EstadoM ayor y ste se am- plia. El Estado Mayor, rgano filial de la Junta, formula los planes para la defensa del hemisferio, en cumplimiento de instruc- ciones dictadas por la Junta. Sus 14 miembros actuales son jefes de alta graduacin de Bra- sil, Colombia. Cuba, Repblica Dominicana, Ecuador. Per, Es- tados Unidos y Venezuela. LECCIN DE ACTUALIDADEn la Escuela St. Mary en Cleveland, los nios aprenden a leer, escribir, y defenderse contra los ataques areos. Estos ejercicios se hacen una ves a la semana, para que los nios sepan cmo protegerse durante un ataque areo.____________________ ''* Lluvias torrenciales causan derrumbes en Colombia MANIZALES. Colombia. Marzo 27 (UP)Diez personas mu- rieron y hubo un nmero ue casas destruidas, dejando sin hogar a unas 200 personas, de- bido a derrumbes provocados por las lluvias torrenciales. Marzo 27 'UP) El Genaul Leslie R. Groves, quien dur..ir ia gucria pasada fu jefe ce los trabajos atmicos en les Estados Unidos, llama "Manhattan Project", declar que "es tericamente poaible producir una explosin atmica sin usar uranio. Desde hace a- os se ha reconocido que no habra monopolio del conoci- miento de la energa atmica". WASHINGTON. Marzo 2ii (UPi Los delegados a la reu- nin de consulta de Cancilleres Americanos asumieron una ac- DAAIA INFERNALSaliendo del escenario para asustar al pbli- co, vemos a la joven de 18 aos, .Vita Weiner. durante el Festival de Arte de Chelsea en Londres, con trinchante, cuernos y cola. Para la playa.. de hombre JUEGOS DE COMBINACIN (Cabana Sets) Variados estilos y colores de fantasa "Jantaen" y # "McGregor" CAMISAS SPORT # "Arrotc" y "McGregor" LA PARISIN Avenida Central 113 LA AVENA QUAKER presenta EL HIJO PERDIDO Radiodrama escrito por VERA FONTANELA, interpretado por el cuadro de comedias de la RED PANAMERICANA. De lunes a viernes de 3:30 a 3:45 p.m. < Un programa estelar en la radio favorita- la [Red Panamericana titud reservada frente al anun- cio de el Presidente Pern de que los hombres de ciencia ar- gentinos haban logrado pro- ducir una explosin atmica. Varios Cancilleres escucha- ron con inters las noticias so- bre el anuncio de Pern pero declinaron hablar al respecto Algunos miembros de las dc.e- gaclones Latino Americanas se mlstraron. en cambio, rauca- mente escpticos El Canciller de Colomo.a. Gonzalo Restrepo Jaramillo se enter del anuncio al abando- nar el Departamento de Estado, en donde habia conferenciado con el Secretarlo Adjunto Ed- ward Miller. "Para qu puede Pern usarla?", pregunt el Canciller sorprendido. Luego, encogindose de hombros agre- g: "Todos es posible bajo el sol". El Canciller del Uruguay Al- berto Cmpora Domnguez es- cuch a un peronista relatar ia conferencia de prensa de Pern pero se neg hacer declaracin alguna. Se inaugura nueva tarifa de vuelos NUEVA YORK, Marzo 27^, (UP) La Pan American Air ays inaugur lo que dijo ser la "tarifa ms baja para vue-j los de Itinerario en la histo- ria". La Junta de Aeronutica Ci- vil prob la tarifa de 64 do- lares una va de Nueva Yor a Puerto Rico y vice-versa, ba- jo la condicin que la Pan American no d nada de co- mida en este vuelo ni siquie- ra caf. Una tarifa parecido ser co- brada por la Eastern Air Liner. Desvanezco la Gordura 8! la cordura arruina u figura hace que lenca dificultad par., respirar y pono su alud an pellero, encontrar* qua es fcil perder medio kilo por da con el nuevo mtodo de Hollywood llamado FORSIODB. Nada, de 22K drnmir o ejercicio. Almolulamente aln panero. Pida FORMObE n . rarmai'Ja, favorite, y empiece a adel- fa zar maana. ------ "** SEGUNDO PISO AVENIDA Estamos desempacando 1.75 1.40 0.60 Martillos dentados para machacar la carne-----.. 3 hojas de metal para evi- tar que salpique afuera la manteca de la sartn----- Jaboneras plsticas ..... Raspador de caucho para ollas y sartenes.......... 0-20 Hojas de metal para, ga- lletas ................ 125 Palillos plsticos en colo- res para bocadillos, caja 1.00 Medida de plstico para licor .................... .35 Tapn plstico para soda 0.35 ,J Cajita plstica para "pie" 0.30 - Batidor en vasija de vidrio 1.50 * Mantel para picnic, con , tazas y platos............ 3.50 Manteles plsticos Imi- tando dibujo de damasco, t colores modernos ....... 1-50 i Cubierta plstica para r, tostadora ............... 0.80 Cubierta plstica para mezcladora ............. L35 a Cubierta plstica para a- sador ................... 0 95 Cubierta plstica para pan 1.10 -Lfft.I- Bolsas plsticas para le- 03 (\. chugas ................. 1-10 ^Ui*\ Cortinas de bao, angos- tas de 1 yarda de ancho 1.75 ~, _ . Cortinas de bao. 2 yds. 3.95 t Cortinas de rayn y enea- je ...................... 5-75 Sobrecamas de satin.....14.50 ,'* -T^*' _, Pantallas grandes. 2 75 a 4.95 e Convoy para vinagre, ^-^t"*)' salsa, pimienta, sal. t*^ aceite .............750 y 7.95 COMPRE AHORA SEGUNDO PISO 5* AVENIDA AGINA CUATRO It PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPEMDHNTt i,. -- " MARTES. MARZO 27. INI La Asamblea de A huimos del Instituto de Verano da su respaldo al Doctor A. Cantn " 8ANTIAGO, marzo 26 de 1951 - La asamblea general de a- himnos del Inatltuto de Vera- no, dl tcitamente su respal- do al doctor Alfredo Cantn, al aprobad en el pliego de as- piraciones que cata Institucin debia aer dependencia de la Normal y por conalgulente el director de ella deba firmar los diploma*, tal como el doc- tor Cantn haba manifestado a los alumnos en presencia del Ministro de Educacin. Tam- bin se pronunci la asamblea en el sentido de negar un ar- ticulo en el sentido de que se permitiera al Director de la Normal supervigilar el Instituto de Verano, respaldando en es- to tambin al doctor Cantn. La asamblea general acord nombrar una comisin forma- da por los seores Ral Gon- zlez, Gilberto de Len, Rafael C. Medina, Armando de Gracia, Gregorla de la Espada y Ma- nuela Moreno, para que solici- ten al Ministro de Educacin y al Presidente de la Repblica, deje este punto claro. Con res- pecto a las declaraciones del lnlstro Salamin, se comenta a- qui la posibilidad de que el Di. Cantn renuncie la direc- cin del Inatlttuo de Verano, si no se mantiene el mismo criterio en el sentido de que el director de la Escuela Normal firme los diplomas. Corresponsal Cajar Escala - CRUCIGRAMA - Labor de revisin catastral se eecta en el Interior De acuerdo con la labor que la Direccin del Catastro e Im- puesto de Inmuebles viene des- arrollando en el territorio na- cional con el fin de obtener datos concretos que permitan la confeccin de nuevos catas- tros de casas para la liquida- cin de dicho Impuesto de In- muebles, en las ciudades de Las Tablas y Penonom se obtuvie- ron los siguientes resultados: Us Tablas: Nuevas Inscripciones: 82 ca- sas, con un valor gravable de 17 24,200.00. Reavalos: 133 casas, con un ialor gravable de 120,787.00. .Diferencia gravable obtenida > CTI casas 244,987.00. . Total de los avalos y re- gfralos asignados por la Co- mlsln, 383,350.00. Total de loa valores catastra- les anteriores, 138,363.00. Diferencia gravable obtenida: i vase cuadro anterior): 244,- 087.00. Penonom: Nuevas inscripciones: 60 ca- sas, con un valor gravable de B. 115,500.00. Reavalos: 179 casas, con un valor gravable de 147,189.00. Diferencia gravable obtenida en 239 casas: 262,739.00. Total de loa avalos y reava- los asignados por la comisin: 601,000.00. Total de los valores catas- trales anteriores: 338,261.00. Diferencia gravable obtenida: i vase cuadro anterior) 262.- 739.00. i El Arte en T.S.C.W. Al llegar a esta bella y a~o- Edora tierra'del'Norte, he te- uo una grata impresin Je! Texas States College for Women ti aves del magnifico Edificio fc Arte y de algunas informa- Sones sobre al arte aqu, de lo rjtie me ocupar a continuacin Con el gran deseo de que sir- va de estimulo a aquella per- sonas que sienten inters por estas cosas y que no encontrai- 0o las oportunidades para su estudio en nuestro pas, pueciem unirse a nuestro grupo dirigido por el Dr. William Campbell y su seora, Dra. Caroline >1< Campbell, de quienes estamos muy agradecidas las 12 estu- diantes panameas. En un amplio, nuevo y mo- dernamente equipado edificio. 14 miembros de la Facultad rip Arte guian las clases, en as cuales la personalidad e indi- vidualidad de los estudiantes reciben especial atencin. Es grande la demanda de tcnicos en este ramo egres?- doa de T8CW., especiamlc.it un diseo tipleo e ilustracin de modas. Cada ao las g,a- duanda.s de estas materias pa- san directamente a formar patr- ie de casas de modas en el jr- oeste y en Nueva York. TSCW da entrenamiento a mujeres en el delicado arte de pintura, escultura, e historia Je! arte, como tambin perfeccio- narse en diseo general y dtse- no interior. Para el Arte Educativo los es- tudiantes tienen la oportuniufcd de practicar en la escuela a- nexa ai colegio, localizada cci- C al edificio de arte- CORRESPONSALES oAJtum LAS rALMASXiunoo UulMrraa L L BfcAl^-Srm. ObaTulla Ca.tr.ra. PROVINCIA 01 CHimoui DavidCunn airaras* 4, rru. AHuuiLLaalu.. ara, OqUETfc tartana it. LAS LAJAS cu balrara OOLEGA-AUtru* turn CERRO O PUNTABatirla Mirara, fc Cabal CONCEPCINLmU a Ovaras -AN FELIXDnwh a,,, lUALACATniaioclt* Putin. "OBCONCITO*fcr. V Ctaaaai) DQDERONAmonic Ble 3LBFidel Santamara, Jr. AN ANDRES Fiitlao Mlraaaa cocui Hr.NONOalElauta V Catata ar.lTAMJLOiv Konlw Bablaa *NTON-A.toalo J. < NATA-J.aa a* O. tiHW LA UNTADACtrarHa flara.aaa, B OLAOlaaloa Gama. BJO OatANDEJora *a Craaaa 1(> HATOTarta. Qalraa POCaJ A. Cor.*. VERAGUA* JO OK JI8U-ruui lotaata LAB PALaiSCaaai Gordill. CALAZASPadra J. Herida ?AL< BRE Miau.1 Coalilaa ATALAYASamoa) Piaia BAN FRANCISCOEllo Arrtaka T. ANTA riJateara Garca (Varaaaa* LOS SANTO* LA VILLA Da LO i M OS Praattaa Caltart O. OUntt asta Partir LAS MINAS tmataiaaa Q ala tara W. '.ARAF1STULO Jua VOlarraa (Law Saatati Cu'ANGO [Maaelaaa Maatata BTA MARIARlaaarta Baku. alACARACABAtolli.a Maraaa t PABITA Laaaalao Ara. >.*. rONOlJoa.jula Moaatara frOASltWrmHi, Otilia Van OCU-.VIrsflie Arfalt LA I ABLAa.loa. atavia aaaaaaa HARARFJ.i Nla.aa uak OC1tI--Edatataa H ea CaaaAlaa PESEJara AtaArraa* COLON FALENOUR-Oaaiaairc *aaaa. O CATIVA A..1 BArtaat PUEItro Pil.ON-t.u'a JiBKaaa rcMiOBELLOTtafila Mata Como proyecto de los alum- nos del IV ao, permanece en Cote edificio, hasta hoy, una in- teresante expresin del arte pr:- r.iitlvo del Congo Belga, Atrita Melanesia, Polonia, Indonesia y tambin del Pacifico, NoroeUe y Alaska, donde pueden ser ofre- cidos curiosos e interesantes ob- jetos autnticos del Africa y Oceania. Ni siquiera Panam ha dejado de ser representado en esta exposicin, pues pudlinu' experimentar la grata sorpresa de encontrar en ellas objaios que peitenecen a los indios de Cocl y que muestran al mun- do el arte de nuestra raza au- tntica. Del Arte Moderno pue- den ser apreciado valiosas fin- Luas especialmente del Museo c Nueva York. Estos son breves comentai.es que apenas si dan una idea r- pida de la realidad le Arte en esta Universidad, pero confio en que sern suficiente para llevar mi voz de aliento y mi palabra de estimulo hasta a- quellos que arran una de las expresiones ms sublimes de la mente humana: el arte- Viola Lpez C. Dentn, Texas 15 de Marzo ce 1651. En La Sardlnllla desean que se les construya escuela Para su publicacin se nos ha trado copla del siguiente me- morial : Sardlnllla, febrero 12 de 1951. Excmo. seor Ministro de Educacin, E.3.D. Seor Ministro: Los que firmamos esta soli- citud, vecinos todos de Sardl- nllla, Corregimiento de San Juan. Distrito de Coln, respe- tuosamente le pedimos que el Ministerio a su digno cargo es- tablezca una escuela para nues- tros hijos en nuestro vecinda- rio, en el cual hay actualmen\ te ms de 40 nios de edad escolar privados de los benefi- cios de la educacin por en- contrarse muy lejos las escue- las. Acogidos a la Ley del Pa- trimonio Familiar hemos con- seguido tierra para nuestros cultivos en esta regln y esta es la razn por la cual aban- donamos nuestras v 1 v i e n das construidas en tierras ajenas que nos fueron pedidas en las inmediaciones de la carretera transstmica y hemos venido aqui a colonizar esta tierra vir- gen. Queremos que nuestros hi- jos no sean privados de asis- tir a la escuela y le rogamos que se abra una escuela para ellos en Sardlnllla y se nombre una maestra para atenderla. Para facilitar el estableci- miento de esta escuela, nos- otros construiremos una casa de palma, humilde como las nuestras para la escuela y otra Dar la maestra, y dotaremos la escuela de bancas rsticas hechas de troncos de rboles hasta que sea posible dotarla de mejores facilidades. Con la esperanza de que nuestra justa peticin sea - tendida, nos suscribimos de us- ted atentos servidores, Anastasio Gonzlez, Catalina Gonzlez, Esteban Gonzlez, E- leuterio Moran, (alimaa Mo- ran. Aquilino Moran, y siguen muchas firmas. OBRAS PUBLICAS EN SAN FRANCISCO -Est ado en que se encuentran las obras Publicas qu adelanta la actual administracin en San Francisco, Provincia de Veraguas. Puede ob- servarse la estructura de la Escuela Pblica de San Francisco y las obras de reparacin que solevan a bo en la Itlesia del lugar, joya histrica y artstica de enorme valor ideclarada monumento nacional y para cuya reconstruccin y mantenimiento el Gobierno ha votado una partida apreclable de dinero. ^_____________________ Hace explicacin Hacienda sobre los terrenos baldos Comunicado a la Prensa Con motivo de la expedicin de leyes durante el mes pa- sado por la Asamblea Nacional con respecto a tierras baldas, este Ministerio cree convenien- te hacer resaltar por la pren- sa al pblico interesado y a loa agrimensores, ciertos aspec- tos de las mismas: lo. La Ley 25 de 19 de febrero de 1951. por la cual se establece una zona de te- rrenos nacionales a lo largo de las mrgenes de las carreteras y se reglamenta su uso y ad- judicacin, i Gaceta Oficial 11433 de l de marzo de 1951) declara lnadjudlcable una fa- ja de 19 kmetros de ancho a lo largo de las carreteras en construccin o en proyecto; al mismo tiempo autoriza-al Go- bierno para expropiar las tie- rras de propiedad particular no explotadas dentro de la misma zona en el caso de las carreteras ya construidas. Esta disposicin, pues, obliga a los agrimensores que hagan men- suras de terrenos dentro de ev tas condiciones a anotar tal circunstancia de ubicacin en el plano correspondiente. 2o. La ley 2 de 71 de fe- brero, por la cual se dictan me- didas sobre adjudicacin de tierras nacionales (Gaceta Ofi- cial 11428 de 3 de marzo de 1951). establece una tarifa es- calonada para las tierras bal- das; y permite transformar en ttulo de dominio por compra los ttulos gratuitos. 3o.La Ley No. 8 de 26 de enero de 1951 por la cual se reforma el Artculo 202 del C- digo Fiscal y se toman me- didas de carcter fiscal (Gaceta No. 1412 de 12 de febrero de 1951), en su articulo 2o. mo- difica la disposicin del De- El fallecimiento de Adn Delgado es muy lamentado COLON, marzo 26. (RCSK Honda conmocin ha causado en la Costa Abajo la muerte del seor Adn Delgado. Por Informe llagado a EL PANAMA AMERICA el aludido seor es- tuvo toda la maana del s- bado en una ria de gallos, en la cual, l tena participa- cin. Pero en la noche del mis- mo dia falleci repentinamen- te; se presume que su muerte se deba a causas naturales, ya que el anciano Adn, como comunmente se le llamaba, era persona muy apreciada por to- do el que lo trataba y donde nunca lleg a tener enemigos Red Panamericana tiene los mejores Programas creto No. 35 de 1928 que exiga al Agricultor solicitar permiso del Gobernador respectivo para efectuar una mensura, en el sentido de obligar al Agrimen- sor a avisar con 10 das de an- ticipacin por lo menos que va a efectuar la mensura, con es- pecificacin del lugar, los co- lindantes, cabida aproximada y cualquier otro dato que permi- ta su fcil Identificacin. Tal aviso ha de formularse, segn el ordinal lo. del artcu- lo 2o. de la Ley 49 de 1946, en papel sellado, salvo los casos de solicitudes a titulo gratui- to. Las mismas condiciones de- ben llenarse para las mensuras de terrenos cuyo arrendamien- to ha de solicitarse a la Na- cin. 4o. El Decreto No. 543 de 3 de febrero de 1951, por el cual se adiciona el Decreto No. 36 de 22 de marzo de 1938 (Ga- ceta Oficial 11426 de 28 de fe- brero de 1951), exige a los Agrimensores hacer constar en el iniorme que acompaa a la mensura declaracin en el sen- tido de que se ha sealado con monumentos permanentes 1 o s vrtices del polgono medido. A este respecto precisa ob- servar que en los casos en que existan postes slidos o rbo- les que marquen esos vrtices, no precisa reemplazarlos por varillas o tubos de hierro en- castrados en hormign, s di- chos postes son conveniente- mente descritos en dicho pla- no, para su identificacin. Eric Hunibrr. Secretarlo del Ministerio de Hacienda y Tesoro. Nombran mdico para atender Unidad de Pes Para atender la Unidad Sani- laiia de Pes y a la vez las po- blaciones de Los Pozos y L3 Minas acaba de ser nombrado por ei Ministerio de Previsin Social el distinguido mdico es- paol-madrileo Dr. Jos M. Reverte. El nombramiento de este distinguido mdico ha loo muy bien recibido en Pes, ya que viene a llenar una de .as necesidades por largo tiempo, sentida. Dado lo urgente de un mdico en Pes, es de espetar- se que todo el pueblo le brlnft la cooperacin necesaria pura que su labor se haga sentir en todo el sector bajo su direccin. Esperamos que el Dr Reve , que al mismo tiempo es un e- ciucador, reciba la cooperacin del Sr. Alcalde del Distrito. o:l Inspector de Educacin y a] Magisterio y de la Asociacin Cvica "Pes Unida". Piel Que Pica Cicatrizada por el Nueve Descubrimiento Ru piel tien cerca de 50 mllIonM d diminutos poron y an-ura en donde se alojan los grmenes y causan una terrible comeson y ardor, grietas, rap* clones da la piel, eccema, piel sea* moia, acn, espinillas, barros, come* *n de loa pies y otros males. Loa tra- tamientos ordinarios producen nica* mente alivio temporal porque no ma- tan loa grmenes caucantes del mal. Kl nuevo descubrimiento N.xodtrm mata loa grmenes en poco* mlnutoa y dejar, su cutis limpio, suave y atractivo en una semana. Pida hoy n la botica Nlxedirm para eliminar la vsrdadara causa da las enfermeda- des cu- tneas. la Mal Dictan resolucin por la muerte del Dr. G. Amador Para su publicacin se nos ha enviado copia de la si- guiente Resolucin: Acuerdo No. 21 Por la cual se honra la me- moria del seor don Gustavo Adolfo Amador Garca. . El Segundo Tribunal Superior del Primer Distrito Judicial CONSIDERANDO: lo. Que el da diez y nue- ve de los corrientes, falleci en la ciudad de Santir.go de Ve- raguas don Oustavo Adolfo A- mador Garca, quien form parte de la rama Jurisdiccio- nal del rgano Judicial de la Repblica. 2o. Que el extinto Ama- dor Garca, ltimamente des- empe el cargo de Magistra- do titular del extinguido Se- gundo Tribunal Superior, hoy Tercero, luego de haber des- empeado con lucimiento los cargos de Secretario y Juez 2o. del Circuito de lo Civil de Pa- nam. 3o. Que en el ejercicio fo- rense y en las funciones ad- ministrativas que desempe el expresado seor Amador Gar- ca, entre las ltimas, la de jefe de la Seccin Segunda de la antigua Secretaria de Ha- cienda y Tesoro, se distingui como conocedor del derecho y servidor de relevantes virtudes pblicas y privadas. 4o, Que en los diversos cargos que el finado ejerci en la Administracin Pblica, dio siempre renovadas pruebas -de su singular Inteligencia, auste- ridad, rectitud, consagracin y probidad ejemplares. 5o. Que muri en estado de relativa pobreza, acogido al amparo de una modesta pen- sin de retiro a ttulo de jubi- lacin estatal, que es como mueren o fallecen la mayora de los funcionarios de la ra- ma jurisdiccional del rgano Judicial, que practican con in- tegral conviccin el hermoso 'lema de moral forense: "Justi- cia Sin Prevaricacin". ACUERDA: Lamentar sinceramente el fa- llecimiento del destacado ser- vidor del rgano Judicial, don Gustavo Adolfo Amador Oarca. Exaltar sus virtudes como e- jemplo eficaz para todos los funcionarlos del rgano Judi- cial de la Repblica. Ordenar que copia de este Acuerdo sea publicado en el "Registro Judicial" y en la prensa local, y que se pase co- pia, con firmas autgrafas del mismo y con nota de estilo, a los deudos del antiguo compa- ero desaparecido. Dado en Panam, Capital de la Repblica, los veinte das del mes de marzo de mil no- vecientos cincuenta y uno. El Presidente, (fdo.) J. A. Pretelt. El Vlce-Pdte. Interino. (fdo.) Carlos Guevara. El Magistrado, (fdo.) Rubn C. Mir. El Secretario, (fdo.) Carlos Peres C. Es fiel copla. Panam, marzo 26 de 1051. Carlos Peres'C, Secretarlo. HORIZONTALES: 1Mucho. 4Proyectiles. 9Hijo de No. , 12Del verbo unir, Inv. 13Musa de la elega. 14Del verbo arar. 15Natural de Roma. 17Naturales de Irn. 19Emplee. 20Puesta de los astros. 21Parecido al serafn. 24Cocinar en seco. 27En el mar, Inv. 28Enfado, clera. 29Desage de las embarca- clones. 30Caso de pronombre. 31Piedra semlpreclosa. 33Existe. 34Hace su nido. 36Terminacin de dlminu*'-'o. 37Circulo o redondel. 38Del verbo sacar. 39Que no causa dolo. 41Del verbo abonar. 43Terminacin de diminutivo. 44Desconfianza. 4Patos. 49Propietario. 50Cerro en medio de un valle 52Alga filamentosa. 53Posesivo, Pl. 54Plores. 55Cloruro de sodio. lOcano. 2La unidad. 3Valle de Cuba. 4Beneficiosa. 5Del verbo arar. 6Nota musical. 7Parte superior de un edificio. RRedondeles rgidos, Inv. 9Que tiene el cabello blanca 10Igual al 37 horizontal. 11El ao tiene doce. 16Agarradera. 18Del verbo asar. 20Instrumento musical. 21Recibidores. 22Nombre de mujer. 23Marchar. 25Parte que sobresale de los tejados. 26Soldados. 29Relativo a los nades, Pl. 31Ladrillo de fango y agua 32Terminacin de diminutivo. 35Prutas tropicales. 37Polos o terminales elctrico! 39Tomo notas. 40Ciudad del Per. 42Sensacin del olfato. 44Igualdad de nivel. 45Ave australiana. 46Altar. 47La primera mujer. 48Igual al 55 horizontal. 51Del verbo ser. SOLUCIN O ATER aiiran hh'.i nntin UMMU HMlil l-K4l;!U Maestras panameas en Danton El da en que el Dr. Campad! nos dl a conocer la Invitacin muy galante hecha por el Club rtlwanis de Dentn para Mtittt al acto anual que este presen- ta con fines de beneficencia, quedamos grandemente impre- sionadas. Dicho acto reviste cierta so- lemnidad ya que son presenta- dos los actlstas que han obte- nido los mayores xitos duran- te el ao. El grupo formado por Mr. y Mrs. Campbell. Integrado pjr doce maestras del interior y que son alumnas de la Univer- sidad de Panam, se present al North Texas States College a picsenclar el acto el dia 22 de Febrero. La actuacin se i.l- elo a las 8:15 y termin exac- tamente a las 10:15 ante nu- merosa concurrencia. Hubo canciones preciosas qua merecieron el aplauso unnime nmero de equilibrio por artis- tas famosos que nos deja: on impresionadas con sus baoiil- dades y nos hicieron vivir mo- mentos de intensa emocin, un grupo de cmicos que hlcleoa las delicias del pblico. Filial- mente, los bailarines que Bjenal- taron las mas variadas y arts- ticas danzas no fueron meaos admirados y aplaudidos Fuimos invitadas por este el 'b a presentar el prximo ano nuestros bailes tpicos (tam'jj- tito. cumblas, ecti. El prximo ao posiblemente 6er mayor el grupo que este ao ha aprovechado la mag- nfica oportunidad que nos brind el Texas State Colics lor Women y' la acogida van familiar que nos han ofrecido gracias a las desinteresadas y valiosas diligencias de los Drs. Campbell. Dentn 5 de Marzo 1951 Nixoderm Para Desrdenes rfi SE SIENTE INCOMODO DESPUS DE COMER? P^t Cuando sienta incomo- didad, dolor de cabeza, o nusea despus de haber comido con exceso, tome inmediaumenie Alka-Sellzer. Una" o dos tabletas en un vaso de agua. Tras la eftr- xescencia. beba la refrescante y agradable solucin. Para mayor alivio, reptalo cuantas veces lo crea necesario. Alka-Seluer es de JobU accin. Por ser alcalino neutraliza el exceso de acidez g.cunca. Por ser analgsico alivia el dolor de cabeza. Aika-Seltzer no es laxante, se puede tomar a cual- C""pUn*'a,H"0 ' quier hora. Tenga siempre a mano Allta-Seluer. a tutx j." > i^>uu AlkaSeltzer lo toman a diario millones do ptrsaaas. Tmelo Ud. tambin. Alka-Seltzer MUS LABORATORIf S INC EIKHART IND E. U A. no se apodera de la calle al iprnat lasC "" MARTES. MARZO 27, 1951 EL PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE PAGINA CINC* Informes para esta seccin se reciben en la \eaaccn Social Telfono S-31M de EL PANAMA-AMERICA BORAS: 8:W a 10:M a.m. Apartado 134 Para Sur Amrica Despedimos atentamente a e E. el Embajador del Per y De- cano del Cuerpo Diplomtico, seor Emilio Ortiz de Zevallos, quien sigue hoy hacia Lima por la via area. Participacin de Matrimonio Circulan las participaciones para el matrimonio de la seo- rita Loida Vleto, hija del sear Ezequiel Vleto O. y seora Vir- ginia G. de Vleto, con el caba- llero talo Humberto Consolanl L, acto Que se verificar el mir- coles 38 del presente a las 6 de la tarde en la Iglesia de Cristo Rey. Para Chile Despus de haber pasado una temporada en Panam visitando a sus familiares, regres hoy a Santiago la seora Rosita Prie- to de Vivado acompaada de su hija seorita .Maruja Vivado. Las despedimos cordlalmente. D Costa Rica Presentamos un cordial saludo le bienvenida a la seora An- Alivio y prevencin da < SUFRIMIENTOS miomos Contra los tufrimirntoa que an- utan a tantai seoras y seoritas m cierto* das, debe usarse un re- asedio que no llo alivie el dolor t snalcitar tino que tambin contri. buya al buen funeionamiento del j arganimo. Para no est indicado d Regulador Geiteira que hace mucha sien al organima, ejerciendo un afecto descongestivo," tnico y regu- lador. Alivia pronto y previene tos dolores, la tensin nerviosa au excelentes resultados contra las .ongestonea y desarreglos funciona- 1st del organismo femenino. Prueba Ud. este remedio cientfico y d* resultados comprobados. Lbrese da caos ufrimiento! gela F. da Ouardia, quien regre- j de San Jos tn donde pas varias semanas. De Venezuela Grata atadla le deseamos al seor Hartford Bealer, quien acompaado de su hija Nancy, se encuentra en Panam en donde pasar una corta tempo- rada husped del Mayor Walter B. Russell y seora en Fort Clayton. Del Interior Despus de haber pasado va- rias semanas en Boquete se en- cuentran de nuevo en la capital el seor Mario Gallndo y seora Marta Teresa M. de Gallndo y sus hijas seoritas Mara Tere- sa y Malvina Gallndo. Al seor Samuel Lewis y se- ora Lupita C. de Lewis y la seora Adela C. de Sosa y Ma- ra Ehrman regresaron de Bo- quete en donde pasaron varios das en el Hotel Panamonte. Tambin se encuentran de regreso del Boquete el Dr. J. J. Vallarlno y seora Isabel E. de Vallarlno. Despus de haber pasado va- rias semanas en El Valle st en- cuentran de nuevo en la capital el seor Octavio Mndez O y seora Marina P. de Mndez acompaados de sus nios. mejora de la seora Marcela L. de Haseth, quien durante varios dip- guard cama en su residencia. Despus de haber pasado varios das recluida en au re- sidencia, se encuentra com- pletamente restablecida la se- orita Maritza Urlbe Arango. Nos alegramos. Anotamos complacidos al completo restablecimiento del hio Eduardo Antonio Lewis Na- varro. Cumpleaos de Hoy Seora Matilde A. de Palomo Seora Lola C. de Tapia. Seor Vasco Arosemena Seor Rogelio Daz. Seor Carlos Jaramlllo S. Seor Rogelio Icaza Seor Richard D. Prescott Joven Juan Gilberto Puer- ta Gmez. i Cumpleaos de Maana Seora Cecilia C. de Levy Seora Lisa M. de Vallarlno Seor Carlos Enrique Mouynes Sociales de Coln Por JDITB BERTONCINI Te) 432 Aptdo 104 Regresaron de El Valle en donde pasaron los dias Santos en compaa de sus nios el seor Adolfo Arias Jr. y seora Susana L. de Arlas. Regresaron tambin de El Va- lle en donde pasaron varios das de descanso el seor Arlstldes Romero Jr. y seora Ana Gloria S. de Romero.^ r REGULADOR Gesteira . Frmula del Dr. J. Geatdra Se encuentra de nuevo en la capital, despus de haber pasa- do varios dias en Santa Clara el seor Juan Eskiidsen y seo- ra Elmlra Mara A. de Eskiidsen y sus nios, el seor Julio Igna- cio Alemn y seora Irene A. de Alemn y sus nios y el seor Jos F. Oller y seora diga Z. de Oller. Regresaron de Las Tablas en donde pasaron una corta tempo- rada el seor Camilo Porras y seora Rosita de Porras y el se- or Jaime de la Guardia Jr. y seora Rosemary P. de la Guar- dia. Felicitaciones .......... > El 24 de los corrientes celebr ; sus natales la nia Olga Virgi- nia Snchez, hija del seor Juan ! B. Snchez y seora Virginia de | Snchez. Hasta Changulnola le ! hacemos llegar nuestras fellcl- i aciones aunque algo tarde. El 23 de los corrientes sum un ao ms de vida la seora Angela de Forte, esposa del s- or Ernesto Forte. Con tal mo- tivo nos place saludarla. Cumpleaos de Ayer En el da de ayer se vl feli- citado con motivo de festejar su onomstico el seor Eduardo Eloy Jan. A las muchas con- gratulaciones que haya recibido unimos las nuestras cordiales. Cumpli ayer un ao ms de vida la niftlta Candelaria Joly, hija del seor Adalberto Joly y seora. Le deseamos a la peque- a Candelaria muchos aos ms de vida. Descubren complol para asesinar a un gobernador TEHERAN, marzo 27. (UP>. Fuentes policiales dijeron que habian descubierto un complot para asesinar al General Abdul Hussein Hejazi, Gobernador Mi- litar de Tehern, y que se han hecho cuatro arrestos. Los cuatro hombres arrestados confesaron que pertecen a la secta religiosa-poltica Fldayan Isln (Devotos de Islam), cuyos miembros ya han asesinado al Premier Alt Razmara y el ex- Ministro de Educacin Hamld Zanganeh. Zanganen muri ayer de las heridas recibidas la sema- na pasada cuando un estudian- te le hizo varios disparos. Las fuentes policiales dijeron que los cuatro que planeaban asesinar a Hejazi fueron arres- tados bajo sospecha, ayer mien- tras se encontraban rondando el cuartel de Polica y se les en- contr pistolas cargadas. Cuan- do se les interrog confesaron que estaban planeando asesinar a Hejazi. Las mismas fuentes dijeron que otros siete miembros del Fl- dayan Islam fueron arrestados el sbado en la noche durante un tiroteo con la Polica. La sec ta dijo que Razmara y Zanga- neh haban sido asesinados por que se opusieron a la nacionali- zacin del petrleo de Irn. Tam bln amenazaron con cometer otros asesinatos del os que se opusieron a la nacionalizacin. El asesinato de Hejazi se ha- ba planeado porque ste habla Implantado la Ley Marcial des- pus de los disparos a Zanga- neh. El Dr. Galnza Paz est dedicado a la cacera CUMPLE ARO" HOY Aniversario le Matrimonio Enviamos nuestras felicita- clones al seor Evaristo Senz y seera Maria P. de Senz, quienes celebraron ayer el noveno aniversario de su ma- trimonio. Restablecidos Anotamos complacidos la MONTEVIDEO, Marzo 27 (UP) El Director de La Prensa Alberto Galnza Paa permanece en la estancia Anchorena, man- teniendo el propsito de no for- mular declaraciones a los oe- nodlstas. Oainza Paz recibi hoy nu- merosos amistades y deaic buena parte del dia a cazar TELEFONO 2-2548 ESCUELA PRIVADA "GREGG' Calle a. No. 1 MATRICULA ABIERTA ELVIRA BRAVO DE SUCRE Directora Prop. Matrimonio Contrajeron matrimonio l do- mingo en la Catedral el seor Alcldes A. Alcazar y la seorita Hilda Salza. Nuestras felicita- ciones a esta hueva pareja. Cumpleaos de Hoy Nuestras congratulaciones ha- cemos llegar a la seora doa Emilia de Morales en la fecha de sus natales que celebra hoy martes. Tambin cumple hoy un ao ms de vida la seora doa Ma- ry Walker de Sasso. Le hacemos llegar nuestras cordiales y sin- ceras felicitaciones. Sabe mejor! I CMPRELA HOY MISMO ! 1-4 Despedida de Soltera Fu objeto de una "despedida de soltera"* la seorita Anlta I. Donado, quien contraer matri- monio el 31 del presente mes ron el joven costarricense seor Francisco Mata A. El agasajo fu ofrecido por la seora Olga de Diego de Herrn en su residencia el domingo de 4 a 6 p.m. Asistieron a la despedida de soltera adems de la seorita Donado las siguientes seoras: Llborla de Donado, Clementina de Hart, Cristina M. Amador. Mara de Senz, Julieta de Lam, Raquel de Muschett, Hermisen- da de Lancaster. Ella t'e Barcia, Carmela Mndez, Cristina de Simmons, Sara de Quintero, Ro- sa de Mendoza, Ida de Chad- wlck, Nena de Mojlca Felipa de Tom, Mlrtlla de Beliz, Sabina de Garca, Monzerrat de Can asco, Olga M. de Eckw, Amanda de Limpio, Berta de Ruiz, Hazel de Morales, Delia de Cruz, Marina Doria, Dora de seixas Esilda de de Diego. Teresita de Garca y las seoritas Yolanda Magdale- nas a la Pau.na . Col. 1) NUEVA ORLEANS. Marzo 27 iUFi Jos Dutriz y su her- mano Rodolfo, propietarios d* La Prensa Grfica" de el Sal- vador, declararon que todos los peridicos Latino Americanos estn respaldando "moralmcntc a La Prensa de Buenos Aire.,. Jos Dutriz dijo que es "ami- go" dcl.Dr. Alberto Guian P*'- Agieg que su peridico ha o- decido a La Prensa sus colum- nas si las necesita para hue r or su voz. "La Prensa tiene el apoyo moral de todos los pe- ridicos Latino Americanos" UN MUNDO CONTRA EL POLIO-Ante una mesa de conferencias, igual que los dejnae edad el- las Naciones Unidas, estos nios de dies pases se renen para honrar a Larry MoKentie. qu en a- parece en los carteles de la Marcha de los Die. Centavos, Larry, de po*+**.SSgZ una estampilla de Tokio, donada por la Sra. de Roosevelt, esposa del ex-Presldente quien fundo la Institucin, de la Marcha de los Diez Centavos. _________^__________________________________ gran escala, an ante el peli- gro de ataques areos desde la China continental. Dijo: "El bloqueo del futuro ser, sin lu- gar a dudas, una combinacin de esfuerzos areos y navales'. El partido rojo es la amenaza de Estados Unidos WASHINGTON, marzo 27. P.)El Director del Bur Fede- ral de Investigaciones (FBI) J. Edgar Hoover declar en en- trevista con la revista 'United States News and World Report" que "la amenaza ms grande" a los Estados Unidos es "El Par- tido Comunista de los Estados Unidos y sus simpatizantes." Dijo que los rojos "estn ex- cesivamente activos" y admiti que 'ellos prefieren que Mosc, en lugar de Washington, gobier- ne a Estados Unidos. Hoover dijo tambin que los rojos estn actuando en forma subterrnea y que no confian las comunicaciones regulares, si- no que envan "correos de dis- trito a distrito por palabra y en esta forma pasan las rdenes del partido". 'El objetivo principal es evi- tar la Interrupcin de nuestro programa de movilizacin. Debe- mos tomar todo.*, los pasos pre- ventlvos posibles para salva- SIGA MI CONSEJO! Par librarse da un catarro, uae BROMO QUININA GROVE! Millonea que sufren da retinados han encontrado pronto y deciaivo alivio to- mando Bromo Quinina Grovo al primar signo da resfriado. Calma el dolor de cabesa, re- duc la fiebre y acida como uae lasante. Pronto laa victima gozarn de franca asajoria. In.iiu en la legtima MOMO QUININA SOLO LA NUEVA LE PROPORCIONA . C&00& SL_h ODO ROO ** r#" ESTAS el ilbiuili,mte efic.i/ ' \fc VENTAJAS 1 Detiene rpidamente, sin 5 No mancha ni daa la peligro, el sudor. ropa. 2 Hace desaparecer inmedia- Nunca se seca ni se pone arenosa, como lo* deaodo- tamente < olor del sudor. 3 Le ofrece completa pro teccin de uno a tres das. 4 No irrita la piel normal puede usarla a diario. rentes ordinarios. 7 To es grasosa, se desvanece como "cold cream". MiUontt it mujtru usan conlaititimu la Bloqueo contra la China roja puede hacerse efectivo TOKIO, marzo 27. (UP). El vice-Almlrante Arthur De- wey Struble. Comandante de la 7a. Flota Americana, dijo que las fuerzas navales norteame- ricanas en el Lejano Oriente estn capacitadas para llevar a cabo un bloqueo efectivo de la China Comunista "si tal de- cisin fuera acordada por nues- tro Gobierno". 8truble dijo que la 7a. Flo- ta es ahora cinco Veces mas poderosa que cuando comen- zaron las hostilidades en Co- rea. Aunque Struble no dio a en- tender que tal bloqueo era In- minente, dijo en la conferencia de prensa que se senta con- fiado que sus barcos y aviones podan imponer un bloqueo en i" guardar nuestro poderlo de pro- | duccin para el caso que nos I enfrentemos a una grave emer- gencia nacional", termin di- ciendo Hoovrr. Engalanamos esta columna con la fotografa del simptico nilto Carlos Augusto Carbonell, ouien en el dia de hoy cumple dos aos. Por ese motivo, sus padres, los aprecame* esposos, seora doa Victoria Gascn de Carbonell y seor Celso A. Carbonell, Mi- nistro de Obras Pblicas, se en- cuentran de plcemes, pues C- sar Augusto ha sabido gran- jearse el cario paternal con SU gracia y simpata. Varios amlguitos del pequeo Carlos han sido Invitados a su residencia de Calle 52 No. 3, p;.ra celebrar con una flesteclta esta fecha. Que cumpla muchoi ms son nuestros deseos. GOCE UN MERECIDO DESCANSO! DESPUS DE UN DIA DE DURO TRABAJO EN UN COMODISIMO LOUNGE ACABAMOS DE RECIBIR MUY POCOS! MJBLERIfl AVE.CENTRALyCALLE21E..1*TEL^2-1830 UN REGALO PARA UD. LA CUCHARA DE SCOTT De Plstico Duradero en Colores Hermosos /^ ESTAS ( UCrtARASmOOSAS V. TINEN TANTOS USOS 18% CM dt tamao 3ef GRATISI Pida el paquete grande de Emulsin d Scott contenitndo una cuchara linda. Obtenible en seis atractivos coloree. Y entonces d a tu familia todos lot diss este tnico alimenticio, rico en vitaminas y pre- narado cientficamente. Es recomen- dado por muchos mdicos. Pronto Ud. ver a su familia ms fuerte y o mejor salud.. . Secretario General de ONU Vitita Amrica Latin* El Presidente de Chile, Excme. Soar Gabriel Gomales Vidala (de pi a la derecha), d la bienvenida al Secretarlo General to las Naciones Unldaa, Sefcor Trjgre Lia (de pi a la iaauierda), ta la sesin inaugural dei Consejo Econmico y Social, relabrada et> Santiago de Chile. Sentado al centra aparte al Embajador Sano Hernn Santa Crui, delegado permanente de Chile anta laa paciones Unidas y Presidente del Conseje Economice 7 Sedal. Jf (ted1* neontatn ssfps obroto pvli* i Son tonmicos y muy ttM * hacar! Son econmicos y muy 1 f / Ni el ms caro brilla ms que CUTEX Convierta tua uas en relucientes "joyas" naturales esmaltndolas con Culex. Ni aun los esmaltes ms caros ton tuperioret a Cutex. Porque Cutex contiene "enamelon", nuevo y maravilloso ingrediente, exclusivo de Cutex, que conserva el brillo inalterable, bellsimo, por diat y diat, y hace que no te agriete, te desprenda o te descolore. Modernsimo matices. Adquiera mano de prinrrta eon CUTEX. Compre boy CUTEX Kl i-smalle para uas ms popular del mundo FAGINA SF.I8 L PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE .. rrlARTES, MARZO 87, 1951 NO hay mejor Va para VENDER ALQUILAR ..COMPRAR etc que la ruta al Departamento de los CLASIFICADOS DEL P. A. Nuestros Agentes o Nuestras Oficinas lo atendern: SKRVKJO LEWIS NOVEDADES MORRISON SALON DE BELLEZA AMERICANO Mnimo por 75 palabras. 3* por cada palabra adicional. Ave. Tlvall Ne. 4 Tl. i-ZMI KKISKI) DE LESSEES r.Kiur de [< Panam Ave. 4 a> Julio Tal. t-Ui BOTICA CARLTON Avt. Melndi U.I5 Tal 255-Coloi. Calla 12 OeaU Na. U EL PANAMA AMERICA Call' "H" No 57 Panana Ava. CaatfaJ 12-171 Colea SE VENDE Miscelneas APROVECHE:Pintura, y esmaltas aarra brillantes a amaba ala meha. B.3.25 falin. Almacenas Trepidu- ra. SI VENDEN:Clavo, tusara nafta, acara canalado, Fir-Tai icorton islodor paro cielos rosos i made- ros, lovainonoi ascuiodos etc. a loo preciar, mil bajos aa plata AGENCIAS GLOBALES. Via Sipa Aa, lieaonda a luaa planea. Tal 1-1503_____________________________ SE VENDE: Incubodoro alctrico ful 3-0255________________________ SE VENCE:No temo a LADRONES. Compre un perro Policio Belgo. Ra- zo excepcicnol. Lime Shrapnel. Balboa, 2820. SF VENDE:Por vioie, gollinos li- nas, ponedoras, corotos, blancas. a precio rozonoble. Pedregal corre- tero Villalobos, casa No. 7. SE VENDE Bienes Races SE ALQUILA:--O ta venda. Cow de campo an Chorrera (El Coco) Tel. 3-0255. SE VENDE:Dos lotes en Los Cum- bres, 25 minutos de Ancn, todas utilidades adquiribles, cerca cuesta bonita, como 1,000 M2. seccin creciente, bueno inversin y sitio para su casa. Paro informes llame 293 Balboa o escriba P. J. Runkel, Apdo. 249, Diablo Heights. SE VENDE:De un mes de nacido, "Peckinee puppy", de roza fina. Avenida Per 58 altos. SC VENDE:Cria de gallinas en ple- na produccin, paro informes en El Super Mercado. Ave. Central No. 239, Sr. Dimaso. SE VENDE: Foeton Dodge trasmi- sin delantero, derechos pagos, cu- na nio, excelentes condiciones, meso de caoba pora cof, escrito- no de oficina y limparo, abanico elctrico, jdego de comedor, caobo. Tel. 3-0978. Ponomi. VENDO:Finca con cosa de madera en Arraijan, una milla de la Adua- na, arbole, frutales en produccin, facilidodes de pago. Toleteo* 2- 2944. SE VENDE:Los ltimos lotes da 735 y 760 M2 que quedan en "El Can- grejo". Tambin Tote de 1076 M2 con vista a la baha, a $6.95 el metro. Telfono 3-2407, o Via Porros 66. SE VENDE:Lote de terreno en Por- que Lefevre, 1000 M2. Esquina Calle C v D. Precie B.2.50 M2. Llame Tel. 3-3224. SE VENDE:Abarroterio en calle 13 Oeste No. 29. Para mis informes dirjase all mismo. "Muy oportuno dos huy en la cuarta reunion de consulta por el Presidente Truman y por el Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores del Bras., ponen en manifiesto el alto es- pritu de cooperacin con iiai se Inicia y dentro del cual ha- br que desarrollarse la presen- te reunin, llamada a contri- buir eficazmente en pro de bolldaridad defensiva de la co- munidad de naciones ameri- canas' . El Canciller del Brasil, Joao Neves Da Fontoura dijo ojie el discurso de Truman en la I- iiauguracin de,la Conference ce Cancilleres Americanos era "una perfecta sntesis de la ac- tual situacin mundial". Gonzalo Restrepo Jara,.i.o Ministro de Colombia dijo: "Pienso que el dlscuro del Pi,- sidente fu constructivo muy bueno"- Programa de tres buscar la manera de evitar la distribucin injustada e Incon- trolada de los sacrificios a que nuestros pueblos se encaran". Acheson le pidi a los Can- cilleres: li Acordar las medidas que faciliten a la Junta de De- fensa nter-Americana preparar "en el menor tiempo posible 'a delensa coordinada del hemisfe- rio". 2) Buscar las formas v ma- nera de mejorar las medidas rie seguridad interna en cada pas para detener "el uso de la sub- versin v otras formas indirec- tas de agresin del movimiento comunista internacional". Al mismo tiempo dijo que es Igual- mente imuortante que las na- ciones individuales tomen me- didas para fortalecer sus Insti- tuciones democrticas. 3> Aunar Isa fuerzas econmicas del con- tinente 'a travs de nuestra co- munidad econmica". Sociales de Coln no, Virginia Rodrguez, Silvia Saenz. Berta Hernndez, Cha- chy Vilar, Xenia Vilar. Olsa Harry'." Mamy Harv, Zoraida Nieto, Raquel Levy. Ena Haves, Ety Aguilera. Negra Aguilera, Mara Luisa More!'. Mara A. Hernandez, Gloria Pardo. Babv Herrera. Daisv Chang-. Gloria Davis. Dora Herrera. Esther Ra- mos y Betty Simmons. SE VENDE:Mognifico cholet dos ra- cimaros, sala-comedor, cocina, ser- vicios, porch, 600 metros cercados, garage, por solo B.3.500 pago ini- cial. Patterson, 2-2346. SE VENDE Automviles SE VENDEN:Dos Panel Trucks Ford en buenas condiciones, por coti- zaciones carradas. Solicite en la Oficina del Gerente, Pon American World Airwoys en Colla "L" No. 5. Porque DeLesseps. SE NECESITA Domstico SE NECESITA:Empleada pora aseo, caso y cocina. Debe dormir en tra- bajo. Calle 49 Este No. 24. SE NECESITA:Buena cocinero. No tiene que dormir en casa, y una empleada para servicios generales de casa, tiene que dormir en el empleo. Ave. Manuel Mara de lejza No. 26. Campo Alegre, SE ALQUILA Apartamento SE NECESITA:Cocinero con expe- riencia, para dormir en la casa. Familia pequea. Intil presentarse sin recomendaciones. Calle 52 Es- te. No. 15. SE NECESITA:Planchodoro. Aveni- da Ecuador 26, frente Legacin Inglesa. SE NECESITA: Muchocha para atender una persona. Avenida An- cn, coso 86 Apto. No. 5. SE NECESITAEmpleada pora oficios domsticos para hacerse cargo de uno casa de familia, debe presen- tarse con buenas referencias. Ocu- rra a Calle del Estudiante No. I 40 Tel. 2-4022 de 7:00 a. m. a 9:00 o. m. c de 3 :30 p. m. en odelan- te. SE VENDE:Chevrolet 1949 Sedan 4 puertas, millaje bajo, derecho pagado. Tels. 3-1289, 3-1818. Cristobal. SE VENDE:Willys Panel ltimo modelo, nuevo. plocns y seguro contra todo riesgo pagos. B 1.950.00. Garage Zappi. Colle 17 Oeste No. 78. Ponomi. SE NECESITAEmpleodo paro tra- baje en general que sepa planchar, paro dos personas, hoy que dormir en la casa. Calle 46 No. 22. SE NECESITA:Una cocinera que se- pa cocinar. Calle B No. 12, altos. Ponomi. SE ALQUILA:Piso entrodo inde- pendiente. No. 4. calle lo. Perry Hill, 3 dormitories, dos baos, garage, informes Tel. 2-2374. SE ALQUILAN:2 apartamentos, B. 50.00 y H.60.00. Jernimo de la Ossa No. 10. informes Tel. 2-0364 (oficina Gelabertl. CUIA COMERCIAL SE ALQUILA:Un apartamento, en calle 12 Oeste No. 5, con sola- comedor, y una recmara. Informes, colle 1. Perejil No. 18. ALQUILASEApartamento muv c- modo, moderno, con garage, etc. casa 5. calle la. Perejil. Llame telfono 2-1456. SE ALQUILA:Apartamento moder- no de uno recmara, salo, cocina, servicio sanitario, en Avenida Ti- voli, opuesta ol Correo de Ancn. Llame al "Tivoli Travel Agency", telfono 2-0465, Panam. SE ALQUILA:Moderno y ventilado apartamento: Sala comedor, dos re- cimaras, dos servicios, cocina, la- vandera, garage y amplios balco- nes. Edificio "El Pondo", Colla 52 No. .Bello Visto. Informes en los telfono 2-1109 y 3-1504. SE NECESITA:Empleada responsa- ble de 30 a 40 aos, poro aten- der a tres personas. Debe saber co- cinar; dormir en el empleo. Buen sueldo, buen troto. Traiga referen- cias. Calle 47 No. 26 tltimo ca- so.) SE NECESITA:- Acuda Calle ment 2. Carguera panameo. 48 No. 2, aparto- SE ALQUILA:Aportamento pora pa- reja o familia pequea. Absoluta- mente independiente. Calle 15 Son Francisco No. 3; informacin tel- fono 2-3239 de 7 a. m. a II a. m. y de I p. m. a 3 p. m. Se exi- gen referencias. Lugar cntrico con varias lneas buses y chivos al frente. Casa como nuevo. SE ALQUILA:Pora familia pequea, aportamento dos recmaras, cocino, servicios independientes, parada autobus, B.40.00, esquina Calle 3a. con Avenida 5a. San Francisco. 2- 2346. LECCIONES S.E NECESITA:Empleada pora of i- . cios domsticos. Debe dormir en el Aprendo ingls en corto tiempo por empleo. Calle 50 Este No. 48. Delivery, derechos SE NECESITA: Empleodo para el MISCELNEA I. IROUWIKPintor de casas, con- tratista, consejos tcnicos, garan- ti por ,m ao. presupuestos gratis Tel 2-1276 servicio domstico. Dirijose a calle 15, San Francisco. No. 114 e lla- me al telfono 3-3903. PERSONALES Para la reparacin perfecta de su radio: Autos Omphroy, telfono 2- 0810. Perforo Pozas de Aguo. Telfono 3- 0931. Ovarles J. Hilbert. SE ALQUILA Miscelneas SE ALQUILA:Tengo pora alquilar tractor D4. Llame al 3-2429 des- pus de los 12 o. m. SE ALQUILAN: Cuortos refrigera- cin, carnes, legumbres, pescado. Informes calle H No. 18. Telfono 2-2948. Se propugna RED PANAMERICANA tiene los mejores programas Ahorre Dinero con SWP! La Pintura Para Ca> sat Favorita en F.E. L I'll d A Ohtenaa miseconomia pelle- ta oroiec- cip eot eu dinero. PINTUKA C WD PMPAHADA OWWr al* SHIAWIN-WILLIAMS la defensa comn puede oca- sionar ajustes econmicos que exijan medidas y controles a- decuados para evitar una in- flacin de carcter serlo; que la movilizacin de recursos eco- nmicos, de mercaderas y ser- vicios para asegurar su produc- cin, distribucin y utilizacin mxima, y que la adopcin de medidas de defensa econmica son esenciales al objetivo co- mn de alcanzar la seguridad". Las minutas de resolucin se dividen entonces en cinco par- tes: l) Aumento de produc- cin. 2> Asignaciones y prio- ridades. 3' Control y Precios". 4) Consulta y Cooperacin n- ter-Gubernamental. 5) Facili- dades de Transporte. Irregularidades revisar cuidadosamente las ins- cripciones de los partidos poli- ticos actualmente en proceso de formacin, en virtud de que el procedimiento de impugna- cin de las Inscripciones ile- gales y fraudulentas estableci- do en el articulo 10 del Decre- to No. 17 de 1947 es inoperan- te porque tal conocimiento co- rresponde a los mismos funcio- narlos que sin ei menor repa- ro a la dignidad del cargo que representan estn violando las disposiciones legales sobre ins- cripcin de partidos polticos. Club de Amistad ofrecer baile en el Hotel Panamericano, El Valle, or- questa Jimmy Dunn, presentando lo pareja de bailas de saln. Sba- do Marzo 31, 8 p. m. B.0.75 por persona. Para reservaciones, llame Sr. Dunn 2-2446. Ponomi o 274- 3105. un sistema de conversacin. Calle Estudiante 7 7-A, Apto. |. SE ALQUILA Locales SE ALQU'LA:Local para oficina, crnbo del Teatro Centro,. SE VENDE Artculos de Casa .t ALQUILAN.Exclu.vomente pa- ro oficinas locales cntricos en los alto de Avenido Central 44 o precios mdicos. Soliciten Infor- macin en Almacenes 5 y IC can- fuvos. SE ALQUILA:Local para oficina en Avenida B No. 59 altos. Acudo sucursal Sylvania en mismo edifi- cio. SE VENDE:Motivo de vioje. ra- dio, mquina coser, aparato aire acondicionado, estufo, muebles y enseres de casa. Pablo Arosemena o. 12. SE VENDE: Por motivo de vioje, juego de comedor completamente nuevo, compuesto de mesa, seis si- llas, aparador, vitrina y bor. Acu- da a Via Espaa No. 57. SF VENDE:Juego de solo, bamb, comedor, caoba, recmara, refrige- radora Philco, 7 pies y estufa de gis; relativamente nuevo, por mo- tivo de vioje. Dirijose o calle 45, No. 7, apartamento No. 2 de 2 p. m. a 6 p. m. Precio razonable. SI VINDI:MueUes ele cemador muebles ale seta, carne dable Sim- mans. refriaeraaera fas Serval, ta ae a recias de ecasin. Plemene Nacenel, Central 210. >E VENDE: Uno estufa de gas marca ROPER nueva, dirjase o ca- lle del Estudiante No. 82, mano derecha, pregunte por Lliya. SE VENDE:Ocasin, lindo juego de recimato. Diseo moderno. Tam- bin como de nio. Calle 34. No. 7. SE ALQUILAN:Dos locales, B.80.00 en Ave. Norte No. 61. Informes oficina Gelabert, Tel. 2-0364. SE ALQUILA:Ideal para peluquera nios, monicurista o modista, bello locol comercial en Colle 48 Este No. II, Bella Visto, B.55.00. In- formes en Refresquerio Pingino, al lado, o Home Tel. 3-1897. ___________ SE ALQUILA:Local comercial am- plio, bien situado, propio para ofi- cinas. Colla Chiriqui No. 2, 100 Balboos. Telfonos 2-2948 2- 2739. SE ALQUILA:Paro clnica, negocio, tienda o depsito, local Avenida Per, esquina Calle 36. 8.60.00 3- 1001. SE NECESITA General SE NECESITAN:Agentes vendedo- res de club de muebles, con refe- rencias. Mueblera Tun (mueble ganado mueble entregado^ Aveni- da Central 200. SE NECESITA:Chofer. Dirjose Ave. Justo Arosemena No. 65. SE ALQUILA (.lasas SE ALQUILA:Cholet omoblodo, 3 recmaras. 2 bonos, cuarto servi- cio, garage. Magnfica situacin. Ave. Justo Arosemeno 92. Tel. 3- 3488. SE ALQUILA:Una caso solo. ' Belisorio Porros 124. Va SE ALQUILA:Chalet tres reclinaras, solo, comedor, cocina, garage, 2 servicios, patio grande y cercodo, buen vecindario, parada autobs. B.75.00 mensuales. Informes 91-B Calle Belisorio Porras. CASA MAYORISTA necesito vende- dor para visitar al comercio. Buen porvenir paro hombre trabajador Cosmetera Imperial, Ave. Central 27-A. SE NECESITAN: Dos montadores para zopotero El Record en colle B No. II. Norte S Tel. 2-6611) Martin Sosa No. 3 --' 3-MM k Sobre posible flMTUHAS SHIRWm Wiiam; ol < Los hospitales de emergen- cia debern situarse en reas fuera de peligro, generalmente varias millas de la ciudad. Se estima que para una ciudad co- mo la de Panam que pasa de los cien mil habitantes, en las primeras veinticuatro horas despus de la cada de una so- la bomba atmica, las bajas deben subir a 25,000. AVISO: Para los fines legales aviso al comercio y al pblico en general, que por Escritura Pblica nmero 590 de 22 de Marzo de 1951, de la Notara Primera del Circuito de Pa- nam, he comprado al seor Enrique Simhon. su estableci- miento comercial denominado BAZAR PANAMA, situado en los bajos de la casa nmero 104 de la Avenida Central de la ciudad de Panam. Panam. Marzo 26 de 1951. Murad Harn Harari SE NECESITA:-Oficinista hable in- gls-costellono. Prefirese conoci- miento estenografi. Posicin per- manente. Solo emplearas persona garantice mudarse de Coln a P- name cuando se trasladen las ofi- cinas dentro ocho meses, o a per- sono de Ponomi dispuesto traba- iar en Coln hasta traslado ofi- cinas a Panam. Columbia Pie- turas, Justo Arosemena calles 7 y 8, telfono Coln 177. SE ALQUILA Cuartos SE ALQUILA: Cuorto omoblado. Precio B.22.50. Calle 5a. No. 30. tercer piso. Informes Tel. 2-2376. SE ALQUILA: Cuorto esquinero o dos grandes, amoblados, balcn, telfono, cocino, refrigeradora, va- rios meses, motivo vacacin. Calle 9a. No. 12, altos. No. 4. SE ALQUILA:Cuarto pora una c dos personas en catM 43 Este al lodo coital ** '* RINDE MAS. .. ES EL MEJOR! ACEITE ELDORADO SE VENDE EN GALONES Y EN TAMAOS CHICOS Do venta en LA BYZKAYNA Sus oficios domsticos se le facilitarn usando accessorios de gabinete KITCHEN HANDY tales como Toalleros Desapa- recedores, Tablillas para tazas y. Oanchos Dar ollas. Geo. F. Novey, Inc. Ave. Central 278 Tel. 3-0140 TECLES Diferenciales de 1, 1 y 2 toneladas. CORREAS de transmi- sin de lona y caucho. BISAGRAS de bronce y cobreadas. Ricardo A. Mir. S.A. Calle 16 Este No. 4 Tel. 2-3335 Panam, R. P. Nuestros ESPEJOS embellecen el hotel El Panam , FABRICA DE ESPEJOS EL DIABLO Calle 16 Este #4 Tel. 2-260 Alambre de Pas Grapas da 1 pulgada Horquillas de Ropa Machetes "Collins" Alambre para Gallinas Almacenes Romero Ave. Norte No. 48 FABRICA DE ESPEJOS LA GARANTA La ms antigua. La ms acreditada, e L'a de mayor etock. SIEMPRE A SUS ORDENES. Rio Abajo #2154Tel. 3-0524. Almacn Calle "1" #4 Tel. 2-1752 Se abre en Brasil campaa contra los comunistas RIO DE JANEIRO, marzo 27. (UP). La Polica Federal ex- pidi una orden prohibiendo las demostraciones comunistas en todo el pals, despus de se- rlos disturbios en Bello Hori- zonte anoche, en donde result un polica muerto. La polica inform que hubieron diez po- licas y 20 civiles heridos. Los comunistas planearon de- mostraciones s 1 m u1tneas en Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paolo, y Bello Horizonte, en protesta de la inauguracin de la Confe- rencia nter-Americana en Washington, pero la Polica en estas ciudades les prohibi las manifestaciones. Los comunistas de Bello Ho- rizonte no hicieron caso de la orden y se reunieron en la pla- za pblica. Cuando la polica trat de disolver la reunin, comenz un tiroteo. La polica dijo que logr cap- turar a la persona que hizo los disparos, sin divulgar su nom- bre, Informando que ste se > haba herido de gravedad l mismo. Mapas del Censo nes de la Defensa Civil. Como se recordar, la Contralora Ge- neral de la Repblica, por me- dio de la Seccin de Cartogra- fa del Departamento de Cen- sos, hubo de levantar mapas y planos exactos de toda la Re- pblica y de cada uno de los distritos, asi como de las ciu- dades y poblaciones principa- les y tambin de los distintos sectores de estas poblaciones, con la demarcacin del nme- ro de edificios y viviendas y el nmero de habitantes de cada uno. A la Defensa civil le es f- cil ahora, pues, gracias a la informacin de los censos, sa- ber con exactitud el nmero de edificios y de personas que lo habitan en cada calle y en ca- da sector y Distrito de nues- tras ciudades y planear de a- cuerdo con la realidad sus me- didas de proteccin. Esta es la segunda aplicacin prctica in- mediata que se da a la infor- macin y trabajos del Depar- tamento de Censos. Sus cifras y planos estn tambin sir- viendo de bases para los eslu- dios del alcantarillado y ex- tensin del acueducto en las afueras de la capital, trabajo que realiza una importante cor- poracin de ingeniera de los Estados Unidos. Han sido so- licitados tambin por la Mi- sin Agrcola de los Estados que visit nuestro pas hace poc oy por el Servicio Coope- rativo Interamericano de Edu- cacin. El Hemisferio Occidental se debe armar para la paz, dicen dos estadistas de la Amrica WASHINGTON. Marzo 27 iNSIS) El Presidente Tra- man y el Ministro de Relacio- nes Exteriores del Brasil, Jouo Neves de Fontoura, coinciden en que las 21 repblicas a.n; ricanas deben movilizar sus r ;- cursos polticos, militares y ecu- nmeos para mantener la paz y la libertad. Truman habl aqu en la a- pertura de la Cuarta Reun sn de Consulta de Ministros-de Re- laciones Exteriores de las re- pblicas americanas, "Fontoura, en representacin del pas gue lu sede de la ltima reunion en 1942, correspondi a las pa- labras del Presidente. Ms de 300 delegados de los pases latinoamericanos, Inclu- yendo los ministros de relacio- nes exteriores, asisten a este reunion que se espera durar." por lo menos dos semanas. La conferencia fu convocada pul los Estados Unidos con la a- cuiescencla del Concejo de Id Oiganizacin de los Estados A~ niciicanos. para planear los .lie- dlos para el fortalecimiento de la defensa comn del Hemia-.- rio Occidental. Truman dijo a los delegados "Las repblicas americanas Je- ben todas sus comienzos al mu- no haz de ideales, los mis.irn conceptos de libertad humai.a e internacional. Hemos seguido lodos y seguiremos dos prlne'- plos bsicos: Primero, creen.o," (fue los asuntos internacionales deben basarse en la cooperador entre las naciones libres e in- dependientes y no en la coc- Pan TODOS APROVECHAN EL VERANO PARA I PINTAR! Resuelva su problema de Pintura visitando los ALMACENES TR0PIDURA Atencin esmerada por expertos en pintura TODO EN PINTURAS ROPIDURA PINTURAS PARA LOS TRPICOS! ama es de Amrica. Panam era miembro nomi- nal apenas, pero desde este ao se convierte en un miembro de hecho y de derecho. Ello aca- rrea algunos compromisos co- mo la obligatoriedad de las pautas sanitarias que dicta la OMS y tiene que pagar algu- nas cuotas para el manteni- miento de las labores de la OMS a cambio de recibir to- da clase de ayuda tcnica y an material en casos de epidemias y de proyectos de gran enver- gadura. Panam se considera pais de seis unidades segn las clasi- ficaciones de la OMS, por tan- to su cuota es de B. 3,550, ms los gastos para pagar las Co- misiones Internas entre 1948 y 1948. que asciende a 1.023 balboas, lo que suma a B. 4.- 573.00 como cuota para nues^ tra Repblica. Corno existe adems un con- venio por el cual cada nuevo cin o la fuerza; Segundo, crea- mos que los fines y objeti/ec del Gobierno son promover el bienestar de tood el pueblo y. no tan slo 1 de unos cuantos privilegiadas'. i Estos principios, dijo Trj- man, son atacados en todo el mundo por el comunismo, q .a niega el concepto de la libenvJ humana y establece un slir>- uia bajo el cual el pueblo exis- te totalmente para servir a les nes del Gobierno. "Como resultado de ello, el sistema sovitico es de un go- rier desenfrenado que lmpc.e ia esclavitud en su pas y la agresin al exterior", dijo el Presidente. Este imperialismo sovitico amenaza al mundo entero, y, las naciones americanas decca ayudar a los pueblos de Bur a. y Asia que estn luchando tu r la libertad, expres Truman. El Canciller Fontoura serW-r tambin el peligro que el < ;- munismo ha trado a los hou-- res libres. Dijo que la amenaza a la integridad de la democra- cia" es tan grande, si no mayor que durante la segunda guerra mundial"- Fontoura continu: "Las Na-a clono Libres del mundo ten- drn que unirse y reforza. ) para la defensa comn, pu.s de lo contrario perecern Di."o el terror de un imperialismo si- niestro. Como en 1943, las Arue- ricas son llamadas a levar... c el escudo de su conciencia t - mocrtca y a movilizar sus . - cursos materiales contra l3 maquinaciones tramadas en a obscuridad". Fontoura dijo ms adelan.e Nuestra presencia en esta A- samblea es necesaria puesto q< Jas circunstancias exigen ^va nuestros gobiernos provean i a. seguridad continental, incluye.i- Jo tanto la preparacin militar como les imperativos de l coo- peracin econmica. Tal como se hizo en 194% durante la segunda reunin ' consulta, deben adoptarse al:u- ra medidas conjuntas y efec'!* vas contra cualquier acci^: procenente del exterior, ene - minada contra nuestras insti- tuciones nacionales. Fqntoura puso nfasis en qua la solidaridad poltica entre Ln 21 repblicas americanas no bJ sufrido en estos aos turba;. * de pa lost guerra la ms ieva alteracin,, blep en su integri- dad o en su intensidad". Por I contrario, dijo, se ha fortalecavj.* Truman proclama emu jjui ei cuai caaa nuevo , miembro deposita cierta cantl- Vlncul0s de amistad que exis rlnal ^1 ...^^.^_1_ * I Ion finlvn n I niiahU al I.. TT.. Especial!... B/ 42.50 RIFLES AUTOMTICOS Calibre 22 H&R K ro *mJUfhBJa Tenemos en existencia: HIERRO DE REFUERZO CLAVOS de toda clase dad. de acuerdo a su clasifica- cin y poblacin, par el ca- pital o fondo de trabajo de la OMS. Panam deber pagar B. 1.922. lo que hace ascender to- do el pago a B. 6.495 para este ano. El Presupuesto de 1950 de la OS ascendi a cuatro millones d dlares. La suma para este ao destinada a la Repblica es realmente insigni- ficante en comparacin de los beneficios que debe recibir. Panam y Espaa nuestros pueblos y asimismo proporcionar los medios que contribuyan al bienestar de am- bas naciones, plceme suscribir este mensaje para que. realiza- do su intercambio con una co- municacin anloga de vuestra Excelencia quede normalizado este acuerdo. Aprovecho la o- portunidad para expresar a vuestra Excelencia las segurida- des de mi ms alta y distin- guida consideracin, Carlos N. Brin. Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores. ten entre el pueblo de los Es- tados Unidos y los de las otra* repblicas americanas". Una verdadera gares igual. Un biril pequeo pesaba cuatro onzas, pero costa- ba cinco centavos. El pan ideal pequeo de diez centesimos pe- saba 9 onzas. La mantequilla tiene un pre- cio que oscila entre 73 y 60 cen- tavos la libra y l azcar cuesta entre 12 y doce centesimos $ medio. ZINC ACANALADO 2' x 6 y 2* x V Calibre 26 Agencias Globales Via Espaa No. 121 Tel. 3-1503, Madrid. Marzo 22 de 1951. Urgentsimo Excelentsimo Seor Don Carlos N. Brln, Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores. Panam. Contesto con agrado en el mo- mento en que llega a mis ma- nos telegrama Vuecencia relati- vo acuerdo normalizacin rela- ciones diplomticas entre Espa- a y Panam v me apresuro sig- nificar Vuecencia que Gobierno espaol adopta simultneamen- te idntica determinacin cual corresponde a lazos unen nues- tros pueblos v al bienestar de loj dos pases estimando que con es- te telegrama v el de Vuecencia queda formalizado por las dos altas partes acuerdo reerido a- provecho esta oportunidad para expresar a Vuecencia el testi- monio de mi ms alta v distin- guida r-onsideracin. Alberto Martin Artajo, Ministro de Asuntos Exteriores Madrid. Exteriores, Marzo 23. Excelentsimo Seor Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores. Panam. Normalizadas felizmente re- laciones diplomticas entre Es- paa v Panam, ruego Vueceu- - -^-w. w .. wia.- cla aceptar y reconocer todos e- i tica bancaria, sin encuadrarse fectos usuales como encargado j dentro de los lmites mnimos de negocios Espaa sa a don de la Ley bancaria. Las comunicaciones > Lty Marcial. - Los Informes dicen que el principal punto de disturbio- 6* . encuentra en Abadan en 1a i frontera con Iraq, cerca c0V protectorado britnico de H! i-' nalt. Tanto Kuwait como m*! campos petroleros de Iraq se encuentran en la misma arca. Ambas Cmaras del Pana-, ment de Irn aprobaron i* nacionalizacin de la lndustiia petrolera, y una comisin ea i encuentra estudiando la m&L- ra de poner la ley en vigencia Don Eduardo clon". Para mejor ilustracin se co- pia a continuacin el Acuerdo en referencia. ACUERDO 1Reducir gastos de operacio- nes por lo menos en una ter- cera parte de lo que eran en el ao 1950. 2Cobrar crditos pendientes en forma ms activa, sobre todo reduciendo los que estn exage- radamente altos. 3Trazar plan para reducir las inversiones y liquidar accio- nes que no tienen demanda e mercado abierto o que sean im- productivas. 4Reducir gradual de todos los sobregiros, principiando por los que no e.nn debidamenta garantizados. 5Mantener encaje adecuado sobre todo sobre depsitos ex- tranjeros a la orden. Esto debo ser de acuerdo con sana prc- Santiago Ruiz Tahonera. Primer Secretario de la Embajada, quien al ser acogido benvola- mente por vuecencia rjermane- cer al frente representacin Es- paa sa hasta tanto se haga cargo con beneplcito Gobierno Panam futuro Embajador Es- paa sa aprovecho ODOrtunidad para reiterar a vuecencia segu- ridades mi ms alta y distingui- da consideracin. Alberta Martin Artajo, Ministro de Asuntos exteriores. 6Crear puesto de Interven- tor o Contralor para hacer lec- tivos los puntos anteriores, coa facultades de veto sobre toda operacin o gasto que no consi- dere recomendable. La designa- cin del Interventor o Contralor corresponder ul Ministerio de Hacienda y Tesoro y durar mientras se le adaude al Gobier- no y a la Caja de Seguro Social. Panam, 27 de Marzo de 195L Eduardo A. Bricen*. V immrc. marzo 7. msi Jt. rANAMA AMERICA DIABIO INDCPKNDIENTV PAGINA 8IETB- El Houston debut con un triunfo sobre los militares y hoy juegan con Albrook y mna. con otro seleccionado El equipo de los Bfalos de Houston de la Liga de Texas, debut anoche en la Zona del Canal, con un amplio triunfo sobre el Seleccionado del Ejrci- to por 14 carreras a 1 en el Es- tadio de Balboa. Bockelman fu el lanzador ga- nador permitiendo seis impara- bles; los militares usaron cua- tro lanzadores, Rochniskl, Han- son. Gibson y Cruz, permitiendo entre todos 14 incoglbles a sus rivales. Hasta el quinto episodio los militares de la Zona mantuvie- ron blanqueados a los visitantes, pero en este acto los Bfalos se desataron 7 anotaron siete veces para asegurarse la vic- toria. La nica carrera de los zoneitas la anotaron en el se- gundo episodio. El Houston juego esta tarde contra, los aviadores de Albrook Field en el cuadro de estos l- timos; maana se presentarn frente a un Seleccionado de va- rias dependencias zoneitas, y el jueves volvern a medirse con los pilotos de Albrook. La visita de los Bfalos dei Houston se debe a gestiones de las autoridades militares de la Zona del Canal para entrete- nimiento de los saldados. Se miden maana en el ftbol del Chorrillo los equipos Remn y Mendoza ESTADO DE LA JUSTA FTBOL DEL CHORRILLO O. r. E. Pje Dep. Pern ...... 1 1 3 Cre. Remn ...... 1 0 2 Nacional ..._... 1 1 p.r.1..........H-5r. i Mendosa ......... 1 La contienda del Circuito Ma- yor del Ftbol del Chorrillo se reanudar maanad espus del receso de Semana Santa, con el partido entre los conjuntos | COROiEL REMON y MENDOZA j a las 415 de la tarde en el cua-1 dro de Calle 27 Oeste..abajo. Los pupilos del Coronel Re- mn se presentarn a defender su Invicto y subir al primer lu- gar mientras que sus rivales del Mendoza lucharn para entrar en la columna de ganadores y salir de la retaguardia. Ambos conjuntos han pre ti- cado con inters y manifiestan gran confianza en el resultado del Juego de maana, espern- dose un lance movido e intere- sante. Por otra parte, la Liga de Ft- bol del Chorrillo tiene una reu- nin esta noche a las 8 en el Gimnasio Nacional, y pide a to- do* los interesados puntual asistencia por los asuntos de lm portaola que se tratarn y re- solvern. Oportunidad Juegan Hoy De Mejorar ColocacinE1PanamAmlicaJuegaGm Cerveceros e Istmeos A NORBERTO NAVARRO LE DEDICARAN EL JUEGO LA HORA-E PANAMA AMERICA LANZARA LA PRIMERA BOLA DE ESTE PARTIDO LA SRTA. MARTA SPADAFORA La seorita Marta Spadafora, m Amrica que se celebrar Candidate al reinado Interiora- maana en la noche en Santa no lanzar la primera bola del Rita y que ser dedicado al partido de softball final de la gran propulsor del deporte na- serle entre La Hora y Bl Pana- cional Ing. Norberto Navarro. Se aprueba pelea entre Joe Maxim y Bob Satterfield CHICAOO, Marzo 27 (UP) La Comisin de Boxeo de Illi- nois aprob el encuentro por el cetro mundial peso semipesa- do entre el campen Joe Maxim y el contendiente Bob flatter- field a celebrarse en el Estadio de Chicago el 27 de Junio. La Asociacin Nacional de Bo- xeo habla Ordenado a Maxim que firmar para defender su cetro antes del 31 de Marzo. Ma- xim quizas pelee pues por dos ttulos en el espacio de un mes ya que se ha llegado a un acuer do extraoficial para que luche con el campen Ezzard Charles por el cetro peso pesado en Chi- cago el 30 de Mayo. El himno de Cuba w locado cuando pelee Kid Gaviln NUEVA VORK, Mareo 27 (U. PiBaby Quintero en la colum- na que escribe para el diario en espaol "La Prensa" dice que Fernando Balido, manager del campen welter cubano, Kld Gaviln, exigir que cuando se efecte la pelea de ste contra Johnnw Bratton en el Madison Square Garden por la discusin del campeonato mundial welter, se toque el himno nacional cu- bano y se despliegue la ban- dera de Cuba y que aduce que ai con loa campeones franceess se tienen la cortesa de tocar la Marsellesa y exhibir la ban- dera francesa, deben guardarse Iguales cortesas con Gaviln que tambin es campen en su patria. La seleccin de ftbol se prepara para lugar el dgo. La seleccin Nacional de Ft- bol reanudar maana mircolt; sus prcticas regulares, en el campo de Barraza, segn anun- ci hoy el director Temi Molina. La seleccin se prepara para ti partido que sostendr el pr- ximo domingo, frente al potente onceno Deportivo Pacifico, en un choque amistoso a beneficio del guardameta nacional Gerar- do Warren, quien como es sabi- do se encuentra en Colombia Ju- gando en un equipo profesional. Bl director del combinado na- cional espera la asistencia de to- dos los jugadoras a las prcticas. Red Panamericana tiene hs Mejores progranas El Martini blanque al Casa Mike anoche en el torneo de bolos Por Tere D. de Burrell Estado actual de los equipos PG. PP. PJ. Casa Mike -......... 17 11 2* Entrometidos .......14 10 24 I. Selecta ............... 14 10 24 Martini................16 12 28 Pinocho ..............12 12 24 Carta Vieja............ 14 14 21 Flan Royal ..........9 15 24 T. Tropical ............. 12 16 28 Balboa Expresa ......I 16 24 Martins blanquea sensacional- mente al Casa Mike. Ante la sorpresa y expectati- va de jugadores y concurrentes del juego de anoche, el equipo Martinz, volviendo por sus anti- guos laureles, le propin al Casa Mike su primer blanque de la temporada, al ganarle por 2437 a 2311. El Martinz reciba 45 pun- tos de Handicap por linea, pero a pesar de ello, no necesit en dos de sus lineas del menciona- do Handicap para ganarles am- pliamente, pero hay que reco- nocer que Casa Mike no jug su promedio habitual. Con la derrota del Casa Mike, el Torneo de Bolos auspiciado por el conocido Caf Duran, se pone ms interesante, ya que los equipos ahora se hayan a pocos puntos uno del otro. A Continuacin el cuadro de anotaciones: donde se puede ver que se destacaron dos del os ju- gadores del Martinz: Andrs Fistonlch con serle de 558 y J. A. Padilla con serie de 611. CASA MIKE Mike Maduro 150 154 151 464 Negro Arias 157 146 178 481 A. de Jann 152 157 120 429 A. Arango 136 150 185 471 C. Hermann 162 149 155 466 766 758 789 2311 MAhTINZ M. Jercovlch 120 96 186 402 J. Maduro ill 172 1I7 400 J. A. Padilla 158 188 165 511 Plinto Rangel 165 123 143 431 A. Fistonlch 184 193 181 558 738 772 794 2302 Handicap 45 45 45 135 783 817 839 2437 Corresponde a la contienda del softball comercial ESTADO DE LOS EQUIPOS . (Liga Comercial de SoftbaU) G. P. Pje. M. Cerrud ................ 4 1 .*M Duran............... 4 1 9M Fiduciario..........S 1 .756 C.C.C................ I 1 .756 Radio Bush.......... I 2 .N Moptesuma .......... I 2 .<* Packard ............... 2 4 .434 V. Peres............. 2 2 .466 Cervecera ...........t I ,4N Istmeo ............... 1 3 Mi Hudson.............. 1 4 2M BUB ..................... I < ,m La contienda del Softball Co- mercial seala para esta noche el atractivo partido entre los equipos CERVECERA VS IST- MEO en el cuadro de Santa Rita comenzando a las 7 y 30. Cerveceros y licoreros se Jue- gan hoy una gran oportunidad de mejorar colocacin y opcin para la serie final. Un descala- bro puede resultarles de conse- cuencias funestas para sus as- piraciones. Ambos conjuntos se presenta* rn esta noche con sus mejores unidades y se pronostica un re- ido encuentro. Maana se presenta un atrac- tivo doble Juego, en el primero aparecen los caseros del BUR que dirige Jlmmle Samudlo contra los aguerridos automivi- listas del Hudson. Ambos estn a la zaga en la contienda y es- peran mejorar posiciones en es- ta oportunidad. El segundo par- tido es el tan esperado encuen- tro entre los pipones de La Ho- ra y El Panam Amrica. El Jueves se enfrentarn los punteros del Duran contra los fuertes contendores del Monte- zuma. El sbado se cierra la semana con un buen partido entre los potentes equipos del Fiduciario y el CCC. La Liga nos ha solicitado ci- tar a los representantes de los equipos a una reunin muy im- portantes el Jueves a las 6 p.m. De La Galera De La Fama frBfrmm^ i RUBEN DARO MEREL, ms conocido por "BOMBITO", es en el equipo de softball de El Panam-Amrica columna slida, baluarte inexpugnable, aunque a veces sea una autntica co- ladera humana. Hombre verstil, distribuye su tiempo entre el softball. el mambo, la universidad y el necrocomio del San- to Toms. Es tan "as" descuartizando cadveres como rom- piendo pelotas con el bate, aunque esto ltimo slo sea en sueos. Es campen calienta banco del equipo. Es el Benja- mn, el jufador de ms estilo y desenvoltura, el bufn del equipo. Cuando Bombito falta en las lineas de El Panam- Amrica hay un vacio difcil de llenar. Por eso se dice que es la carcajada hecha camiseta y gorra de la novena. Esta caricatura data de cundo el gran "Bombito" tenia 11 aos de edad. MUNDO DEPORTIVO Por BCTC TEJADA Por estar en pugna con la re- glamentacin, no podr ser aceptado en la Liga Provincial de Basketball an equipo inte- grado por vecinos de la Zona del Canal. Lee reglamentos vi- gentes de la Liga Provincial se- alan como mnimo de extran- jeros (se incluye a los de la te- na) a tres Jugadores, teniendo que ser les otros nacionales. Ne bay duda que un equipe inte- grado por Norteamericanos re- sultara una atraccin en nues- tro torneo, pero si las regla- mentacin estn en pugna con su aceptacin, no debe ser acep- tado. En interesante juego se impuso anoche al Los muchachos del Vidrieras Prez se impusieron anoche en un Interesante juego a los auto- movilistas del Packard por pi- zarra de 10 a 8 con Haywood en la lomlta de los vidriosos, en la continuacin del Softball Co- mercial. Los automovilistas tomaron el comando desde el comienzo del partido hasta el cuarto episodio cuando los Vidrieros, que estn ahora muy mejorados. Iniciaron una racha en la que ligaron va- rios toques seguidos y empuja- el Vidrieras Prez Packard por 10 a 8 ron cinco carreras, teniendo dos outs y el marcador por seis a tres en su contra. En los episodios siguientes continuaron anotando ambos equipos pero siempre los mu- chachos del Vidrieras defendlen do su posicin de delanteros. Con este triunfo se han colo- cado los pupilos de Gustavo P- rez en el 9o. lugar de la justa empatados con la Cervecera. El pitcher perdedor fu Sali- nas que lleva uno ganado y dos perdidos. Maana mircoles, a las 5.00 de la tarde celebrar el equipo Mauricio, Sub-campen de la contienda Provincial Mayor de Basketball, una importante reu- nin en la Avenida Central No. 47. Asuntos de sumo Inters se- rn tratados en esta reunin y se espera que acudan todos los canasteros de dicho equipo. Luis Ortega ser el sustituto de Chimblo Prez, en la nmi- na del Lord Chesterfield, Cam- pen de la temporada pasada de Basketball Mayor. Todos sus unidades a excep- cin de Mario Oarcern estn ya firmadas, y este prometedor Ju- gador de no lograr con xito unas gestiones que realiza vol- ver a formar parte del Lord Chesterfield. Sobre la direccin del equipo es muy probable que se escoja entre Flix Gmez y el chlnlto Ricardo Kam. Art Doering gan lomeo de golf de Greensboro ayer GREEN8BORO, Carolina del Norte, Marzo 27 (UP)Art Doe- ring, conqusit el primer pre- mio de 2.000 dlares del torneo de golf de Greensboro recorrien- do los 16 hoyos de la cuarta y ltima vuelta con 69 golpes pa- ra un total de 279. El argentino Roberto de Vi- cenzo empat por el cuarto lu- gar. El segundo premio de 1400 dlares toc a Jim Ferrelr con 69 en la ltima jornada y un total de 284 y el tercero de mil dlares a Sammy Snead con 66 y 287 respectivamente. De Vlcenzo, Jack Burke y Eearl Stewart empataron por el tercer puesto con un total de 286 tocando 700 dlares a ca- da uno. En el quinto lugar con 2887 termin Mary Furgol. De Vlcenzo recorri la ltima Jornada con 71 golpes y las tres anteriores con 74, 72 y 66 respec- tivamente. El Clsico Hpico "Presidente de la Repblica", que se corre el prximo mes en Juan Franco, mantiene desde ahora con dolor de cabeza a los amantes de las carreras de caballo. Tenemos que son fuertes candidatos para actuar en l los magnficos ejemplares MAIN ROAD, un po- tro de Too Anguizoia que est Invicto por lo pronto y todos sus compromisos los ha ganado sua- ve; el ejemplar de Osear Ghitls, DICTADOR,. El primero lo mon- tar Blas Agurre y el otro Paco Bravo, actuando tambin en esa carrera Royal Coup, Welsh Loch, Hualro, Daiquiri y otros de nuestra hpica. Se rea al equipo de base de San Carlos El equipo "Talabartera Pana- m" reta por este medio al equipo de San Carlos a un juego amistoso de baseball. Loa directores del Panam es- peran que en el curso de esta semana sea contestado el reto, para asi disponer la fecha de su celebracin y el lugar. El Veracruz se impuso ayer al Ciudad de Mxico MEXICO, Marzo" 27 (UP)El Veracruz venci sin sustos al equipo de la Ciudad de Mxico por 18 a 5 en Juego de la Liga mexicana de baseball. El San Luis de Potos venci al Jalisco por 8 carreras a 1 en otro de los juegos. El arbitro cubano Palma fu suspendido por la Liga al ha- ber golpeado a Salvador Her- nndez, tambin cubano, mana- ger del equipo Nuevo Laredo. Segn se informa Palma visit a Hernndez en su cuarto del hotel despus del desafio del s- bado y lo golpe repetidas veces en la cara y el estmago. Her- nndez no recibi lesiones Im- portantes. i------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Citacin Deportiva DEP. MAURICIO Que participar en la con- tienda de Basketball pide a to- dos los Jugadores la asistencia a la reunin de maana a las 5 p.m. en el Almacn del mismo nombre en Avenida Central No. 47. Luis "Camalen" Garca regresar maana a los E. U. CARACA8, Marzo 27 (UP)8e inform que Luis "Camelen" Garca, quien abandon el cam- po de entrenamiento de los Me- dias Blancas en California hace dos semanas por estar enfermo de nostalgia regresar a loa Es- tados Unidos maana mircoles. Camalen ir esta vez acom- paado de su esposa. Importante juego sostienen hoy Alemn y Mauricio Se disputan su opcin a la serie final del Softball Social Estu tarde sostienen Impor- tarte y comentado juego en Santa Rita, los equipos Mau- ricio > Alemn Jr., en el tur- neo scclal de Softball, donde se disputarn su mayor opor- tunidad para la serle final te- mer.do cada conjunto cinco vic- torias y tres derrotas. Z\ tncuentro de ayer lo gan el Sosa, que implant un nuevo recoru de victorias en el Soft- ball, ai lograr su dcimo triun- fo sin derrota en esta canica- fia, siendo ocho de los triunfos obra del excelente lanzador Luis Walker, y los otros dos ce Fergunson. La vlctorio U.l Sosa fu ayer sobre el Pinocho por 7 carreras a 2. Los exalumnos del 'IPA' tendrn paseo a Taboga La Sociedad de ex-Alumnos del Instituto Pan- Americano tendr un paseo a la Isla de Ta- boga este Domingo lo. de Abril. La lancha que llevar a los participantes de esta Jira cul- j tural saldr del Muelle Fiscal de ' Panam a las 8.30 de la maana ! del dia Domingo y los que de- seen asistir deben estar en dicho lugar al as 7.30 a.m. a ms tar- dar. Los Jefes de Redaccin de los peridicos han sido invitados a ! dicho paseo, asi como tambin varios invitados especiales, tales como el director del IPA, los profesores del mismo colegio y otras distinguidas personalida- des. Los boletos estn a la venta en la Kodak, National City Bank Almacn La Mariposa, sasso y Ca., Ca Istmea de Seguras, Ca. Internacional de Ventas, i Banco Nacional, Instituto Pan- Americano, Esso Standard Oil Co., Banco Fiduciario y en el Muel le Fiscal el da del paseo. El paseo de los ex-Alumnos del IPA est siendo organizado .. desde hace ya varios das y la lancha ha sido conseguida gra- 1 cas a la cooperacin que ha prestado la Polica Nacional, que ofrecido su lancha que tie- ne capacidad para 100 personas. Los ex-Alumnos del IPA es- tn desarrollando una serie de actividades culturales que le hacen honor a su lema: Honor, Cultura y Panamericanismo. Con las autoridades deportivas Se hace imprescindible la Construccin de un Servicio Sanitario en el Campo de Juegos de SANTA RITA. La Hora y El ptica Sosa El Mircoles y Viernes pxmos. Por CESAR PINZN Los diablos rojos de XI Pa-' nam-Amrlca, el ms poderoso equipo de softball de loa perl-' dlcos locales, tiene esta semana i dos compromisos que dilucidar. El Juego decisivo contra los p- jaros azules de La Hora, maa- na mircoles en el estadio de Santa Rita, bajo la luz de los reflectores y el viernes en la tarde contra el invencible equi- po "ptica Sosa" que dirige, el gran Slkl Mass. En el juego de, maana se- rn utilizados los servicios de. Culebrn Ruiz y ser colocada' la ms poderosa escuadra roja en el diamante, ya que se trata de un Juego decisivo. Bl viernes, mediante arreglos hechos entre los Directores, el Eltcher estrella del ptica Sosa, u Walker y el catcher Joseh, Jugarn para el Panam-Am- rica, a fin de equilibrar las po- sibilidades. Los doe Juegos han levantado una gran ola de entusiasmo. Los campeones del basket mayor iniciarn sus juegos de prctica el 7 err Antn Ei equipo de basketball ma- yor, Lord C'iiesterfield, cam- pen provincial de la pasuda temporada, viajara a Antn el Sabido 7 de Abril para sostener en dicho lugar su printer jue- go-prctica contra el Seleccio- nado antonero. Ln Seleccin es un conjunto aguerrido y peligroso y el sana- do pasado se impuso al quinte- to capitalino de Carlos Elcta en un movido encuentro. Lsu victoria los ha alentado y estn practicando con ma- yor inters para ofrecer una lucidu actuacin frente a loa / campeones- Con los cigarrUleros jugara el prometedor novato Luis Or- tega, que dar el salto con Co- te equipo, y justamente debuta- ra con el Chesterfield en la tierra que lo vio nacer, Antn Con los clgarrllleros viajarn el 7 de Abril, Ricardo Sanios* Femando Tom, Cecilio Williams, Allomo Frazer, Perciral Quln- ti'ie, Tomy Armuelles, Pedro za- pata, Quique Cuadra, Mailo Oarcern y Luis Ortega. Deportes a Granel Per KKDtMB "El Aviso Oim:-i"o' PERITOS EN AUTOMOTORES CONCURREN: Se obti&ne mas kilometraje por litro CHAMPION Decamos anoche por la Radio.. El triunfo de Welsh Loch ayer en el Hipdromo, derrotando na da menos que al -"crack" de ln pista Royal Coup, ha sido bas- tante comentado por los fan- ticos del turf. Welsh Loch rea- liz una magnifica presentacin mientras que el gran hijo de Coup de Lyons no figur en la carrera. Segn nuestra opinin, el caballo no fu extendido lo suficiente por su jinete, quien desde la partida demostr poco Inters por ganar. Sall suma- mente retrasado y en toda la prueba busc la manera de en- cajonarse. Omos decir que el preparador est sumamente dis- gustado por la forma como se desempe este equino. Plnard ocup el segundo puesto en la carrera y era el gran favorito para adjudicarse esta prueba Toda la fanaticada hpica se muestra entusiasmada por la proximidad del Clsico "Prest- dente de la Repblica", en don- de participarn los mejores ca- ballos de Juan Franco. Dentro de poco se celebrar el Clsico "Polica Nacional", en el cual competirn los campeones de la pista. Esta prueba clsica ser- vir para tirar linea de carrera para el clsico de los diez mil balboas... Esta semana debe reaparecer DICTADOR, el corredorazo ca- ballo del Stud Blue te White, que tiene cuatro triunfos conse- cutivos en nuestro Hipdromo. Dictador, segn se ha rumorado por los corrillos hpicos ser con- ducido en la prueba grande por el jinete chileno Jos "Paco" Bravo. Como es sabido el Paco parti para los Estados Unidos hace algunos das y dej muchos re- cuerdos a todos sus simpatiza- dores. Tambin debe reaparecer es- ta semana el caballo MAIN ROAD, otro de los probables competidores en el Clsico Pre- sidente. Este fin tf semana cayeron tres jinetes en las redes de los Comisarlos de Juan Franco. En tre ellos tenemos al Jinete Puli- do que recibi 12 reuniones por cambiar de linea de carrera con Fulmine y cuatro ms por es- torbar a Royal Coup. Doce reuniones tambin reci- bi el Jinete Julio Rodrguez por su monta sospechosa sobre Ste- lla. A. ngulo fu penado con con Seaoroms^O. WHISKY CANADIENSE en Gh& c/mu*u> Los Rones Deben Eliminar Los ArJdos B imch humano m deehace del xceae Se cUUa y daeaarSIclo vene- noaoa 4* 1* aura, por modlo So loa nuevs mlllonaa fle diminuto tuboa o riltroa da loa rifionaa. SI aatoa renanot da loa rifionaa a la vajlga lo hactn ufrlr coa ievantadaa nocturna, ner- Hoelead, atara a ptoraaa, ojera. tusabas*, laura a uta coyuntura. SsajSsa arar lea oaaitnnfna. Sa- to a la a acal da a da aatlmulant rdtleo, araa* Cyetex. Daahaaia Sal cido rico y toa aneaos eon la racata medica llamada &!f*b V* . aretee aatlma- *..* !" r,fl"" r sanativo para la Irritacin faaotaaal da la vejlaa y Jlaai armarla an atado da acldti. Cyatax eatlafacer a uatad complata- mato r aari la aiaaloma ana noted aaaealu. lda Cyatax hoy mlam ..Cyst ex un u far- Mvela fa- ->-a "No conoice atejo* memora da economizar an coateaerl- ble"-acriba Albert Colmo*, chorar da tail an Pon. "Soy un chfer da taxi. Como a* natural, cuanto mayor kilome- traje me rinde cada litro do combustible, mayores ion mis ganancial. Por e*o, relatelo nuevo 8uilai Champion cada 15.000 kilmetro. No conozco manera ms eficaz da ahorrar combustible y visar trastornos en el motor." rilOllICTAS Ol MUNDO INTIIO POR M 01 UN CUARTO 01 SIOIO Ayuda a conservar ese aspecto juvenil una iwtva y maravillosa crema da afeitar que refresca y "entona" la piel Ahora usted puede "entonar" su piel a la vez que se afeita. Puede obtener afeitadas a ras de piel ms ntida, que lucen inejory al mismo tiempo hacer que su pie) re- ciba el efecto benfico de una nueva y maravillosa substancia que ayuda a conservar el aspecto sano y juvenil del rostro. Esto lo consigue usted con la Mueva Crema de Afeitar William que contiene Extracto de Lanolina reciente descubrimiento mdico con mayores propiedades "benficas" para la piel que la lanolina corriente. Kl Kxtracto de Lanolina le refresca | ?1 rostro a la vez que se afeita. Con- | Torta la piel ... la deja ms suave. Salo or. WUUAMS Despus que haya probado la Nueva Crema Williams con Extracto da Lanolina, jamas quedar satisfecho con cremas de afeitar corrientes. seis reuniones por monta defi- ciente sobre Sismo. LCWDRESScotland Yard y el Jockey Club estn empeados en la actualidad en dar con una organizacin llamada "The Dlngers". la cual agrupa a vario'' individuos que habran realizado enormes ganancias sustituyendo a ltimo momento caballos de carreras "lentos" a caballos "r- pidos", lo cual Iba en su propia ventaja. Los detectives de Scotland" Yard desenterraron hoy los res- ' tos de un caballo que, segn se cree, habra sido muerto por esos gangsters cuando se vieron a punto de ser descubiertos. Fu dominada la cima del Monte Carahairazo QUITO, Marzo 27 (UP) Por primera vez en la historia el Viernes Santo ltimo fu domi- nada la cima del Monte Cara- hairazo que est a 5.106 metros de altura de la Cordillera Occi- dental junto al Chlmborazo. Efectuaron esta hazaa Jean Morawleckl, Encargado de Ne- gocios de Francia, Arturo Elch- ler, andinista y el fotgrafo Robinson, 71 aos despus del primer Intento hecho por el explorador Ingls Whymper. C^A JQS PatX*- LI0 CONO ELLOS. \ / ELLAS, per el \ / P"*l suave 1 / ( duke rece rece del dele File \ cere PAL \ >l feitede tnla \ ce* - Ji ff* PAL ESCOJA SU IDEAL ENTRE ESTAS 4 PAli De UNO y DOS files HUESAS} DIANAS y DELGADAS:! INYECTORES METLICOS Distribuidores: CA. CYRNOS, $. A. PANAMA COLON , Me- *. EL PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE MARTES, MARZO 27, 1981 JORKKO-TELEVISION.La televisin le sirvi de correo a esta nia. Su padre se en- conti ba en un hospital sufriendo de polio y quera ver a su hija. Las reglamentacionesi no permitan l" visita de la nia, asi que un estacin de television proyecto la imaen de la nina na-ta el leco del enfermo, salvando asi un obstculo._____________ Magazine de Hollywood PARRAR EN CARNE I HCESO Durante el primer dia que pas en Hollywood, el actor Da- vid Farrar, que desempea el rol estelar al lado de Ann Blylh en el film Universal-Interna- tional Samarkanda". alquil un automvil y sall con l a re- correr Beverly Hill en busca de antiguas amistades. No pudlendo dar con una direccin, Farrar se detuvo an- te una residencia y llam al timbre. La duea de la casa abri la puerta y se qued mi- rando a David tan desconcer- tada que estuvo a punto de "dejar caer el nio que llevaba en brazos. Bendito sea Dios!" exclamo la sorprendida seora. "En este preciso momento estbamos vindolo a usted en televisin!" La familia reunida en la sa- la contemplaba una pelcula In- glesa protagonizada por Farrar en 1939. CURVAS PELIGROSAS Bridget Carr cambi de pa- pel por culpa de sus llamativas curvas. La actriz que debia repre- sentar a una de las doncellas de un harn, en el film Uni- versal-International "The Prin- ce Who Was A Thief", hizo su entrada en el escenarlo, ata- viada con el llamativo vestido due iba a lucir en este film Technicolor. Pero cV director Fudy Mate despus de lanzar- le una escrutadora mirada con- sider la figura de la Carr de- masiado provocativa para los censores. En vez de recostarse en un mullido cojn de seda, en una er-cena de "The Prince Who Was A Thief", la estrelllta de la Universal-International se traslad al escenarlo donde se rodaba "Bonzo" para encarnar a una linda colegiala, a la que un chimpanc de cinco aos da un susto maysculo cuando se le mete por la ventanilla de su automvil. "Bueno", coment la ex-mo- delo encogindose de hombros, al menos este ltimo rol es ms dramtico". UNA PEDRADA OPORTUNA En una de las cmicas esce- nas del film Universal-Interna- tional "Ma and Pa Kettle at the Fair", Marjorle Main, en su papel de Ma, tuvo que Impro- visar una honda con una de sus ligas y disparar una piedra a un caballo para hacerlo pa- sar del trote al galope desen- frenhdo. Esta prctica de tiro al blan- co se ha convertido en uno de los pasatiempos favoritos de Marjorle en el hogar. La actriz tiene en su casa un precioso jardn cuajado de flores y su mayor preocupacin la constituyen los atrevidos cuervos que constantemente destrozan sus mejores plantas. Recordando la escena del caba- llo, Marjorle tuvo una brillan- te Idea. Se llev la honda a casa y ahora pasa sus fines de semana defendiendo su jar- dn a pedradas. La Main ase- gura haber causado numerosas bajas entre los cuervos atacan- tes. UNA SEORA BOFETADA del cuarto". Es uno de los momentos cul- minantes del film y el director Joseph Pevney asegura que con la colaboracin entusiasta de Chandler y la Keyes, lograrn una escena tanto o ms real que los sopapos que Cagney ha- ya podido propinar a la Mayo, Mae Clark o Jean Harlow. ANTIALCOHOLISMO PURO El oficio ms triste de Ho- llywood es el que desempea Rollo Kemble, el cantinero que todava no ha logrado compo- ner un coctel de veras. Rollo se gana la vida prepa- rando mezclas que las estrellas beben ante la cmara. A nues- tro amigo le repugna llamar- las bebidas pues en el senti- do que generalmente se aplica a la palabra no lo son. Cuando Kemble agita su coc- telera en el aire para despus verter su contenido en las co- pas de los artistas en el curso de una escena, lo que sale del recipiente no son nunca tra- gos verdaderos. Esto le remuer- de su conciencia profesional, si bien le permite asegurar ro- tundamente que. en su larga carrera filmlca nunca ha pre- parado una bebida que no fue- ra Inofensiva o Inspida. En este caso el olvidarse de los verdaderos principios de la profesin reporta a Rollo sus beneficios. Considerado como el ms hbil improvisador de be- bidas no alcohlicas de la colo- nia cinematogrfica, sus ga- nancias anuales dan un por- centaje de ms de $2.00 por ca- da copa que sirve. El extra- ordinario sueldo de que dis- fruta est justificado porque Kemble sabe el secreto de c- mo dar al agua la misma apa- riencia que el ms mortfero coctel. Este decepcionado cantinero JUEVES A las 8:00 P.M. EN EL TEATRO . PRESIDENTE DEBUT ! DE LA GRAN COMPAA CUBANA DE COMEDIAS Y VARIEDADES ELDORADO HOY ULTIMO DIA! MADRE QUERIDA - con - ESPERANZA ISSA - y - MANUEL ARVIDE Si Ud. no la ha visto, Vala! Es la pelcula para todos! JUEVES! Un Reparto excepcional I - en - CORAZN DE FIERA ANTONIO BADU RITA MACEDO LILIA PRADO Evelyn Keyes se est prepa- rando para recibir la ms gran- | de bofetada dada a una bella' actriz por un hombre, desde, que Virginia Mayo fue puesta fuera de combate por James Cagney en "White Head". En la pelcula Universal-In- ternational, "Iron Man", el cor- pulento Jeff Chandler de un metro 90 cm. de estatura tiene a su cargo la misin de tirar a la delicada Evelyn de un ' extremo a otro de la habita- cin. En esta escena Chandler, i que representa a un ex-mlnero, i descubre que la Keyes ha pa- gado a su contrincante para I que se deje ganar en una pe- lea por el campeonato mun- dial de peso completo, de suma importancia en la carrera del pgil. Evelyn no sabe todava si obr cuerdamente cuando pi- di desarrollar la escena en persona en vez de ser substi- tuida por una de las extras que se encargan de estos me- nesteres. Su zozobra parece justifica- da pues las Instrucciones del guin cinematogrfico dicen: "...sin previo aviso y en for- ma despiadada, l le cruza la boca con el revs de la mano. La muchacha se reclina hacia atrs por la fuerza del golpe, pierde el equilibrio y va a caer hecha un ovillo en un rincn JUANITO BORRAS BAILES!... CANCIONES!... SKETCHS CMICOS!... REVISTAS MUSICALES. Con el Estreno de la Divertidsima Comedia YO QUIERO UN HOMBRE TROPICAL HOY ESTRENO! La (repugnante historia del ms vergonzoso negocio del mundo es ahora revelada: JUEVES ESTRENO! MASON!... En la emocionan- te historia llena de suspen- so de un amor que enfrent al ms all!... i MftSON L00QO "LA MUERTA ENAMORADA" with DENNIS miCE DUICIE 6MY MO0M MARRIOTT HELEN HAYE Produced by . J. Minns ' Directed by Bernard Knowlei tucutlve Producir Miurlce Ostrsr * Galniborouih Picture An Elf li lion Film Relent Canta Antonio Bad... Rita Macedo canta... la curvi- lnea Lilla Prado... baila... y cmo baila...!! El prefera tener corazn de fiera, que un buen corazn! Ella, que lo amaba tanto, al conocerlo, comenz a odiarlo! Otra seleccin de ELDORADO otro xito de su temporada popular a 50 centavos! s H O W D E S H O W s TEATRO PRESIDENTE Aire-Acondicionado HOY A LAS 9:00 P. M. UN ESPECTCULO COMPLETO! Grandes nmeros de xito combinados para deleitarlos por ms de una hora!... Es el "SHOW DE SHOWS" que presenta a MARIA RUIZ la magistral cantante cubana! EL GRAN TRIO AN-RO-YE formidables bailarines acrobticos! con: COQUI y MECHE cmicos excntricos! ZOILA la guarachera! MARTA y CARLOS la mejor pareja de MAMBO! TALI A Bailes Espaoles! GLADYS O'CAMPO cantante sentimental! - y - Una Orquesta Estupenda de S Profesores! Teatro CECILIA ufW ORAN SHOW MUT A LAS 8:5 P.M. 8 GRANDES ATRACCIONES TEATRALES! - y - La Pelcula Cmica: "EL NIO PERDIDO" - con - TIN-TAN El Sin Igual Pachucol Presentacin del Eminen- te Mago-Cientfico!.. Sen- sacional Astlogo! El Do- minador de las Fuerza Ocultas!... SANTIERMY "T-^ HIPNOTISMO! TRASMISIN DEL PENSAMIENTO! ESPIRITISMO! ADIVINACIN del PASADO, PRESENTE y FUTURO! Asistido por MISS DAISY La Gran Medium SHOW Y PELCULA PROGRAMA GIGANTE! A LOS PRECIOS CORRIENTES DE B.0.80 y 0.30 HOA-1090 HOW-1230 Radio Panamericana P.M. 3:00 3:15 1:30 3:45 4:00 4:15 4:30 6:00 0:15 6:30 6:45 7:00 7:15 7:36 7:45 ft: 00 8:30 8:45 9:00 PANAMA HOT MARTES Msica variada Una Mujer sin Importan- cia Dramatizacin. El Hijo Perdido Drama Avena Quaker Coctel musical Noticiero R.P.A. Selecciones variadas Peticiones Vibraciones del Ajre (Nacho Valds) Filigranas musicales Msica escogida Episodios. KelloKC Noticiero Deportivo Merel y Arango Solos de rgano Lucho Azcrraga El Caballero Varona dramatizacin Camel. El Radio peridico "Accin" Donde el Rio Nace. Dramatization. Msica popular Favoritos americanos Espaoleras Msica favorita COLON demuestra actualmente sus ma- ravillosas dotes en el escena- rlo donde se rueda la cinta Universal-International "Holly- wood Story", que protagonizan Richard Cont y Julia Adams. 9:15 Melodas porteas 9:30 El Hit Musical de Hoy 10:00 Msica sin palabras 10:30 Cancionero Nocturnal 11:00 Buenas. Noches ' MIRCOLES A.M. 6:00 Buenos Das 6:03 El Despertador Musical 6:30 Noticiero R.P.A. 7:00 Melodas latlnoameri- 7:30 7:45 8:00 8:30 8:45 9:00 9:30 10:00 11:30 11:45 12:00 P.M. 12:15 12:30 1:15 1:30 1:45 2:00 canas Espaoleras Msica variada Grandes maestros La voz de hoy Cantares de Mxico El Correo del Aire El disloque musical Dedicatorias Invitacin al baile Msica variada Msica de saln Noticiero Solos de rgano Lucho Azcrraga Noticiero Deportivo Guillermo Rolla Delicias tropicales z z Acordes porteos Cantares de Mxico Noticias Lotera Nacional ' Intermedio selecto Peticiones El "Aviso Oportuno9 "El Mercado Sin Igual" Es Borato y Efectivo it Jattr JUEVES! HOY NICO DIA! Luis AGUTLAR Alicia CARO, en "UN CAPITN DE RURALES" Una Super-produccin cubana toda fuego y' alegra!... Vea bailar el Mambo en su verdadero ambiente... De- letese con la msica, los bailes y la gracia inimitable del cubano!... SALVADOR BEHAR Prestnta BELLAS MUJERES... ARTISTAS DE FAMA INTERNACIONAL DESFILE DE CANCIONES eon, GLADYS GEORGE Guin de Hy ESSEX Producida por AUMEY SCHCrtCK Diri|.di por WSErU rfYNCY KLICUIA UMKRSA1- INTDIHATrONAl LA MAXIMA ATRACCIN DE ESTE FIN DE SEMANA! ------------------- DESDE JUEVES! ------------------- TEATRO LUX (Aire-Acondicionado) y en el TEATRO CECILIA (En el Corazn de la Ciudad) Toda la grandeza en drama, estrellas, accin y emocin, que la pantalla puede recoger la ver en el super-film "RIO GRANDE" con JOHN WAYNE MAUREEN O'HARA -T-f, Dirigida por JOHN FORD (tres veces laureado) En la Pantalla: __ COn Gene Keiiy Fierre Aumont IVctor McLaglen J. Carrol Naish Claude Jarman Jr. Peter Lorre. en Ben Johnson Harry Carey Jr. Chill Wills ' LA CRUZ DE LORENA" I El astro de "Iwo Jima" en otra obra magna de aventuras gloriosas (Cross of Lorraine) y espectculo de vibrante accin!... TEATRO CECILIA GRAN SHOW Presentacin del eminente Maso cientfico! Senjclonl Astrlogo! El dominador de las Fuerzas Ocultasl "PROFESOR SANTIERMY" En la Pantalla: Gene Kelly Joan Pierre Aumont, en "LA CRUZ DE LORENA" VARIEDADES Msica y Canciones Rancheras en una estupenda pelcula costumbrista! Luis AGOLAR Alicia CARO - en - "UN CAPITN DE RURALES" JUEVES1 Una Pelcula 100% Cubana! "RINCN PORTEO" - TEATRO ENCANTO Aire Acondicionado A LAS :00 P M. WAHOOI B 115.00 en Premios! - Adems: - Sterlln Hsyden. en "MIENTRAS LA CIUDAD DUERME" Joel HcCrea. en "Corona de Estrellas" TEATRO TIVOLI Pjeston Foster, en "GERNIMO" Franchot Tone, en "Cuco Tumbas al Cairo" TEATRO IRIS Mara Antonleta Pons. en NUESTRAS VIDAS" Ral de Anda, en EL CHARRO NEGRO EN EL NORTE" EN El. PRESIDENTE A las p.m-----Precios: 0.(0 1.30 Grandes nmeros de xito combi- nados para deleitarlos por ms di una hora!... "SHOW DE SHOWS" - con - MARIA RUIZ (estilista cubana) ZOILA (excitante rumbera) TRIO AN-RO-YE (bailarines acrobticos) En la Pantalla: Tln-Tap y su Carnal Marcelo, en "EL NlfiQ PERDIDO" TEATRO CAPITOLIO NOCHE DE BANCO I Laraine Day. en "LOCURA" Mala Power, en "ULTRAJE" - Adems: . B 200 00 para el Pblico! B I fe a lai r t e-aa. TEATRO EDISON Noche de Banco! B 125.00 - Adems: - "EXTRAO CONVENIO" "Caravana de Valientes" VICTORIA COLOSAL DOBLE I Jeff Chandler, en DEPORTADO" Adema Frederic March, en PACIFICO Antonio Bad. en "MI PREFERIDA" Adems: - Ramn Pereda, en "EL MEDICO DE LAS LCK CINE HISPANO 3 Pelculas! Dia Popular! "CHOQUE DI PASIONES" 'XA MARCA del LOBO" "La Huell^anerienta" VISTERMOSA Luli Afullar. en "UNA CANCIN A LA VIRGEN" ., Adama: - F. Fernndez, en U Milano Amor ROOSEVELT NOCHE DE BANCO I Adems: Dos Grande* Pelculas de Accin! Premios en Efectivo! APOLO "LA HNA. IMPURA'' LLUVIA HOJA" MAAANA! Mujeres en sal Vida- "AajrseadeAjrabar IDEAL "LOS PELIGROS DE NYOKA" (Ep. 12 y U) - Adems: - DOS PELCULAS! |
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| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
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| 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 |
| 69 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |