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R PanmtCkmericati "Let f/ip people know the truth and the country is safe** Abraham Lincoln. Seagram's V.O. $ CANADIAN WHISKY J TWENTY-SIXTH WEAR PANAMA. R. P., TUESDAY, APRIL U, 1951 FIVE CENTS, } ? WASHINGTON, April 24 (UP)Sen. Hubert H. Hum- phrey, D., Minn., said today "it may be necessary" to bring Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower back from Europe to testify in the Truman-MacArthur fight over military-diplomatic po- licies in the Far East. But he added he hopes such action will not be neces- sary because Eisenhower has "a big enough job" in build- ing Europe's defense "without being involved in a partisan debate." r- L lu It was the first suggestion that Eisenhower might be projected into the bitter dispute.__________________ ' ? j> V > 1 r * i Chairman Richard B. RUssell, D Ga of the Combined Senate Armed Services and Foreign Re- lations Committees, aid It Is "possible" that Elsenhower may testify although he has no pre- sent plans to call the Atlantic Pact commander. Meantime, the debate over MacArthur's ouster continued unabated. In Worcester, Mass., House Re- publican leader Joseph W. Mar- tin, Jr., Mass., said that public wrath" over MacArthur's dis- missal will "double In its fury" If the Administration tries to "smear" the general. Simultaneously, the Veteran* of Foreign Wars called on Mr Truman to fire Secretary of State Dean Ache-ton and re- place him with a man who can "paye the way for a re-birth of our bipartisan foreign pe- UcT" In the House, Rep. Leon H. Gavin. R., Pa., said Congress should take action to remove Acheson if he refuses to resign. He said the "arrogant Inner- White House clique's defiance of Congress makes It necessary for the Congress to do some firing also." Senator Brian McMhon, chair- man of the House-Senate Atomic Committee, in a speech prepared lor Senate delivery said Mac- Arthur's proposal for hitting Communist china might set off a world war which would bring atomic bombs on United States ities. He said: "There are four fun- damental strategic facts which passion may obscure but which we Ignore at our peril: 1) The United States is not firepared for all out war except n the field of atomic energy; "2) The industrial war poten- tial of Western Europe has no remote counterpart In Asia. Eu- rope must get priority. Lose Eu- rope and you lose your arms race; "3) The major allies of the United States oppose spreading the Korean war; "4) Russia Is able to drop a number of atomic bombs upon American cities right now to- day." Charles G. Dawes, 85, Dies Of Heart Attack CHICAGO, April 24 (UP) Charles G. Dawes, 85, Vice-Pre- sident of the United States un- der Oalvln Coolldge, died last night of a heart attack in the Chicago suburb of Evanstown. 97 Die When Train Becomes Burning Heir YOKOHAMA, April 24. (UP). Some 97 persons, Including seven United States soldiers, were burned to death In an el- ectric commuter train here to- day. About 30 persons were in- jured, but saved their lives by escaping through smashed win- dows. Only four or five passengers escaped unscathed. Flames ravaged the first car of the train from end to end when an overhead power line broke and set fire to the car as the train entered Yokohama Station. A witness said: "Within three minutes the car was mostly ashes." A passenger said: "The car was packed. The air compressor doors did not open. It was a burning hell." Attorney Admits Rita Considering Divorce From Aly NEW YORK, April 24 (UP) Rita Hayworth's attorney in- dicated today that she is con- sidering divorcing Prince Aly Khan but added "no decision has been reached yet." In Hollywood Harry Cohn, head of Columbia Pictures, aid Miss Hayworth is plan- ning to return to work at the studio. Rita arrived here April 2 with her two daughters. Aly Khan remained in Europe. She said them there was ab- solutely nothing to rumors they had parted. But she admitted she did not know when they would meet again. Paper Claims Britain Owns H-Bomb'Key LONDON, April 24. (UP). With the help of convicted spy Dr. Klaus Emll Fuchs, Britain has discovered the key to the making of the hydrogen bomb, according to the weekly news- paper Recorder. German-born Fuchs Is serving a 14-year term for giving atom4 ic secrets to Russia. The Recorder said: "Britain has thus become the first coun- try to find the elusive key to set off the hydrogen bomb, which has so far baffled American scientists. "Among scientists it is com- mon gossip that the formula for the key to setting off the H- bomb was evolved in his" cell at Stafford prison by Fuchs." A spokesman for the Ministry of Supply, which runs Britain's atomic plants, said he could not comment on the report so far as the solving of the hydrogen bomb riddle was concerned. But he said: "Fuchs Is not working for us, and has not worked for us since he has been In prison." Atllee Moves To Hold Together Shaky Government LONDON, April 24 (UP).Pre- mier Clement Attlee moved to- day to prevent his Labor Gov- ernment falling apart. He picked Attorney-General Sir Hartley Shawcross to suc- ceed Harold Wilson as President of the Board of Trade. Allred Robens, former Parlia- mentary Secretary to the Min- istry of Fuel and Power, be- comes Minister of Labor In suc- cession to Aneurin Bevan. Mea n w h 11 e John Freeman, Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Supply, quit the Government In the wake of Bevan and Wilson. Though Bevan's rebellion has shaken the Labor Party It is thought Attlee will be able to resist election demands at least till autumn. Laborltes hope that by then the meat situation and other domestic problems will be bet- tered, restoring some of their ebbing favor with the elector- ate. * * 250,000 Reported In Push With 400,000 In Reserve TOKYO, April U (UP). Front Une reports Indicate the Communist command has thrown elements of seven Chinese army corps and five to seven North Korean divi- sions 180,000 to 200,000 Chinese and 50,000 North Ko- reans into the all out offensive. Another 200,000 to 400,000 Communist troops, largely Chinese, are believed to be in reserve and more Commu- nist troops are on call in Manchuria, From Washington comes a report that Soviet trained Mongolian troops have entered North Korea. Some of them are said to be from Inner Mongolia, which is under Chinese influence. Others are from Outer Mongolia, which is dominated by Russia, though China claims the area. A Soviet force in 1939 fought and defeated Japanese who tried to grab Outer Mongolia. Ever since then this territory nominally a republic has been virtually a part of Russia. Time Extension Sought For Income Tax Filing Shucks, We're Well Off WASHINGTON, April 24 (UP) Secretary of Agriculture Charles Brannan today claimed the United States working man has an easier time now paying his' meat, milk and other food bills than he did in the boom year of 1929. Brannan, appearing before the House Agriculture Commit- tee, attacked those who blame rising farm prices for the cur- rent high cost of living. A move to extend time for payment of the retroactive In- come tax was reported this morning bv Rufus Lovelady. president of AFOE lodge 14. At 9:20 p. m. yesttrday Love- lady sent the following cable to the national president of the AFGE: "Please contact Governor Newcomer now (In) Washington and (the) Internal Revenue re- garding extension time (for) filing our tax returns (to) Sept. 15 If tax postponement bill (Is) not passed by June." Date for making tax returns for the previous calendar year Is normally March 15. Lovelady recalled. Payment of the 1950 tax for Zonians was. however, extended to June 15 with a six per cent annual Interest charge added. Since no action has yet been taken on bills to repeal the re- troactive feature of the tax as affecting Zonians, and It was possible ib&t none might be taken until after June 15, the further extension Is being asked Lovelady also reported receipt of copies of three more bills whic directly, or Indirectly, would af- fect federal employes. First of these Is HR 3714, In- troduced April 13 bv Rep. Otto E. Passman. Dem. La., to reduce the annual leave and sick leave of Government employes. The annual leave would be cut from 28 to 20 days, the sick leave will be made 10 days per calendar year with the right to accumu- late up to 30 days. The second, HR 3713. Introduc- ed the same day by Rep. John A Tickets On Sale Ar$l For Guild's Show 'Dover Road' Tickets for the Theatre Guild comedy "Dover Road," to be given at Diablo Theater tomor- row and Thursday evenings are still available at $1. All seats are reserved. . They are on sale from 7 until 9 p.m. at The Shack, House 5041. behind the old messhall In Dia- blo, and may also be purchased at Lewis 8ervlce on Tivoll Ave- nue, Panama City. Theater Guild members will also sell tickets tonight In the Balboa Clubhouse between 6:30 and 9:00 p.m. Remaining tickets, will be a- vallable at the box office on the nights of the show. \t Actor John Gar field Denies Being Red; Heddo Hopper, Writers Called In Probe 4 i - > 4 WASHINGTON, April 24 (UP) Movie tough guy John Gar- field testified today that he never was a member of the Com- munist Party or its front orga- nizations and urged Congress to outlaw the party as protection lor "outspoken liberals." He made the statement at a House Un-American Activities Committee hearing during which it was disclosed that Hollywood gossip colu m n i s t Hedda Hopper will be subpenaed to turn .over the names of six movie colony Communists on whom she claims to have in- formation. Rep. Bernard W. 'Tat" Kear- ney, R., N. Y., aald Miss Hopper accused the committee In a broadcast of trying to "white- wash" Its Investigation of Com- munism In the movie capital The 38-year-old Garf ield testified that he knew no Holly- wood Communists and did not inquire into the politics of those he worked with. Questioned abotu his activates during the war years, he said: "I was a busy fellow, with a lot more things to do than get- ting involved with a bunch of crackpots." Rep. Morgan M. Moulder, D., Mo., told the actor the commit- tee had no evidence linking him with the Communist Party or any subversive activities. Mould- er said not everyone called be- fore the committee is a Com- munist and not every liberal should be condemned. This drew an angry protest from Rep. Donald M. Jackson, R., Calif., whose district em- braces part of the movie colony. He said Garfleld was summoned because he was "assclated vlth an Industry which has been sus- pected." "I'm not convinced with the entire accuracy and entire co- operation you are giving the committee," Jackson said. Hollywood writers Marc Law- rence and Abe Polonski and agent George Wlllner are sched- uled to testify. Polonski has been named as a Communist In testimony by actor Sterling Hayden. screen writer Richard J. Collins and Mrs. Meta Reis Rosenberg, former assistant story editor at Paramount Stu- dios. Together with actor Larry Parks, the three have testified that they once were Commun- ist Party members and named 30 others they said were ex- Reds. The committee had been scheduled to hear Academy Award winner Jose Ferrer this week, but a spokesman said no date had been set. Garfleld described hjmself as an "outspoken liberal He add- ed that Communists "don't like liberals' and therefore would be unlikely to discuss politics with him. Asked whether he had been associated with the Young Com- munist League, he replied: "If I had heard that name, I would have run like hell." Garfleld read the committee a statement in which he said: "I am no Red. I am no 'Pink." I am no fellow-traveler. I am : democrat by politics, a libere by Inclination, and a loy citizen of this country by every act o ny lile.'' McGuire, Dem. Conn., would amend the Civil Service Retire- ment act to provide annuities for those involuntarily separating from the government service with at least 20 years of ser- vice. Both of these bills have been referred to the Committee on Post Office and Civil Service. The last of the three bills. HR 3689, was Introduced April 12 by Rep. William L. Dawson. Dem. 111., and would establish a Department of Social Security and Education. In accordance with recommendations of the Hoover commission. This bill, marked Introduced "by request," was referred to the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Department. Film-Theater Panic Hits Slates As TV Stations Multiply HOLLYWOOD, April 24 (UPi. Reports from round the Uni- ted State Indicate a movie theat- ed panic is In the making, and that it will soon hit Hollywood with a depression. The panic reports come from movie theater managers whose only concern it Is to fill their house with an audience. The blow is being delivered prlmately by television, an In- fant which to movie operators has grown Into a monster. Theaters are still doing quite well in areas not penetrated by television. They are doing worst in areas where there are several tele- vision stations. By the end of this year the United States may well have 150 television transmitters. Ridgway At Forward Posts For Battle Info Edward Mc In tosh Yachtsman, Mate, Fishing For Money From yachting folk into mas- ter mariner, mate and commer- cial fishermen is the sea change that has come over Edward and Alice Mclntosh, who wen ac- tive members of the Balboa Yacht Club until they cast off for their home in New Hamp- shire a year or so ago. Then they were aboard their own sleek cutter Starcrest, now tied up In a New England port. Today they are back In Bal- boa at Pier 7 for a few days as master and mate of the 64 ft. 11 inch fisher "Lucy," bound for the Galpagos out of San Juan, Puerto Rico. The Lucy also carries a cook and two able seamen. Every- body, (Mac" says, gives a hand with the navigating, the fish- ing, and operation of the deep- freezing apparatus. The catch they hope for is to be frozen fresh from the sea and win be brought back through the Canal for sale in Puerto Rico. Ed formerly worked In the Mechanical Division, and Alice In the laboratory at Gorgas Hospital. Tires In Sight But No Fat Ones WASHINGTON, April 24. (UP) Civilian essentials which through May and June will get normal rubber alloca- tions include truck and tractor tires, conveyor bells and ir- dles. TOKYO. April 24 (UP) Lt. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, Su- preme Commander of the Unit- ed Nations Forces In Korea, told newsmen he flew to the fighting front from Tokyo today because lt Is a basic responsibility of command to be on the spot In advance when potentially deci- sive phases of a battle occur. He said a commanding officer also should be on the ground during the development of deci- sive phases In order to obtain from commanders and from conditions on the spot at the time of action an accurate sens- ing of the situation. This, he said, was the best basis for command decisions. Ridgway spent several hours on the ground with 8th Army commander Lt. Gen. James A. Van Fleet at his forward com- mand post. Then he and Van Fleet visit- ed other United Nations com- manders at their forward com- mand posts. Ridgway said: "It appears to me at this time that this attack Is another malor effort by our Communist enemy to drive the United Nations forces from Ko- rea or destroy them, regardless of the further destruction of his own' troops and the continued criminal destruction of Korea. It appears also that this will be the heaviest attack vet made, though lt has not yet attained full strength." He said he was hlghlv pleased with the tremendous losses In- flicted on the Reds. ____________i______________ HP Police Close Radio Station For Faulty Equipment The National Police, through an order of the Ministry of Gov- ernment and Justice, at 12:05 p.m. today ssupended the opera- tion of Radio Nacional (Stations HOQ and HOQQ) until defects reported by Technical Engineer of Communications Richard D. Prescott and Chief of Radio- Communications Ramon Valdes have been corrected. Stations HOQ and HOQQ have been utilized by the radio-news- paper La Tribuna, the propa- ganda sheet of the violently op- positionist Partido Revoluciona- rio Independiente. The radio- newsoaper has been conducted bv the antl government an- nouncers, the Velasquez bro- thers, Homero and Mario. The closing of the stations, located behind the Kodak store on Central Avenue, was carried out bv the police In the com- pany of Engineers Prescott and Valdes. A Ministry of Government and Justice spokesman said the or- der was given because of nu- merous complaints lodged a- gainst the stations for faulty eoulnment which resulted in in- terference with other stations In Panama City and also the Arm- ed Forces station In the Canal Zone. Practice Air Alert Set Tomorrow A practice air alert Is being held at Quarry Heights at 5 p.m. tomorrow lt has been announc- ed. An orientation meeting Is to precede the alert. The orienta- tion, at the post theater, will begin at 1:30 p.m. On the other side of the Isth- mus, it was announced today that an air alert Is scheduled for Fort Davis at 3:45 p.m. Thursday. Maurice Chevalier Faces Canada Ban MONTREAL, April 24 (UP) French singer "Maurice Che- valier, already refused a visa to enter the United States, faces the possibility of being denied entiy to Canada. He will be questioned by im- migration authorities when he arrives here tonight. Denying Communist affilia- tions, but admitting signing the Stockholm Peace petition, Che- valier said today as his ship ap- proached here: "I signed the petition in good faith, like mil- lion* of other persons." O------ fej Chinese Reds Tear Allied Line In Drive May Call Ike |To Testify On McA Squabble Breakthrough Causes Retreat Of UN Forces TOKYO, April 24 (UP) Chinese Communists ripped a 10-mile gap in the Allied lines in Korea today and sent 40,000 troops swarming south to points nearly 10 miles below the 38th parallel. The Red breakthrough threatened to cut the vital Seoul-Chunchon supply highway west of Chunchon, isolat- ing Allied forces on the East Central front. On that front the Allies lost Inje during the day and began a forced withdrawal from the Hwachon resevoir area. The Reds are advancing by night and hiding from the Allied Air Force by day. Red troops from Inje began trying to cut off the retreating Allies pulling back from Hwachon by driving, down to the highway toward Chunchon. Front line commanders rail the situation was serious despite terrible Communist losses run- ning to 15,000 In the first 24 hours of the attack. But they added: "We are going to fight." Intelligence officers say the Red) are throwing everything they have Into the breakthrough on the central front. Including cavalry. The breakthrough developed when South Korean defenders broke and fell back, allowing the Reds to swarm through and at- tack the neighboring allied forc- es on the flanks. The Reds have rolled back the United Nations line everywhere along their 95-mlle offensive front, but have paid a terrib.'e price for their gains. One report said Chinese sur- vivors from an ambushed force "slipped and slid" In puddles of blood" as thev tried to remove their 700 dead from the ambush area. Allied artillery was credited with cutting down 8,000 to 9,000 as they surged south over ridges and down mountain trails. An unceasing aerial attack was1 kept upon the Reds. Superforts blasted Red bridces and potential airfields far behind the fighting front. Red aircraft have not appeared1] over the battle area, but United States Sabres shot down one Mig-15 when 24 Sabres had a riog- flgh1 with 20 Migs over north- west Korea. Balboa Tides Wednesday, April 25,1951 High Low 6:06 r..m..............12:14 p.m. 6:22 p.m.............. 3 Destroyers Due Tomorrow For Four Days Three U.S. destroyers, Just re- activated after having been with- drawn from the "mothball fleet." ara due in Balboa at 7 a.m. to- morrow from Long Beach, CaM- fornle, via Acapulco. They will berth at Pier 2, Rod- man, where they will spend the | day. making the northbound transit Thursday. On the Atlan- tic Side the destroyers will doe* at the Coco Bolo naval station until Saturday when they clear for Ouantanamo Bay, Cuba. The destroyers are the US3 Picking (DD 685), the U8S Pres- ton fey (DD 724.) The Picking and Preston are modified Fletch'-T class destroyers of 2,050 tons and, according to Jane's Fighting- Ships, carry a complement of 353 officers and men. The Laffey is a Sumner class destroyer, dis- placing 2,200 tons and carrying, agaai according to Jane's, a com- plement of 350. Commanding officer of the USS Picking is Lt. Commander A. C. Edwards, while the Preston is commanded by F. D. Rilcy. Commanding officer of the US3 Picking is Lt. Commander AC. Edwards, while the Preston is commanded by F. D. Rlley. Com- manding officer of the Laffey has not yet been reported here. Officers and men will have lib- erty or. both sides of the Isthmus. Shebds Capital Discovered By Wisconsin U. Expedition CAIORE. Egypt, April 24 (UPi An American expedition has explored the traditional capital of the Biblical Queen of Sheba after penetrating a country of blue-painted, long-haired Arab tribesmen, lt was disclosed to- day. There at the southwest corner of the Arabian peninsula the expedition found a mammoth dam. two templesone used bv worshipers of the moonand more than 600 alabaster statues. The expedition found what it believed to be the site of a ' beautiful ancient city which Is to be explored later. Prof. Burr Wendell Phillips of the University of Wisconsin, president of the American Foundation for the"" Study of Man, told of the find at a press conference. Phillips first visited King Saif ,A1 Islam Ahmad of Yemen, the Arab state at the bottom of the Red Sea and obtained his per- mission to visit the areaMarlb. about 80 miles east of the Yemen capital of Sana. No archaeolog- ical expedition had ever been permitted there, he said. "We had a difficult iournev through the desert." Phillips said. "Several thousand tribes- men, inhabiting the old fortress of Marlb. were told in advance about our visit.as a matter of safety. "Armed to the teeth, with hair down to their shoulders, man/ of them painted indigo blue, th9 tribesmen took some convincing of our peaceful intentions." Phil- lips continued. "But the arrival of a representative of the Kimc put everything right." Marlb today consists of sev- eral hundred acres of ruins In various strata or levels, extend- ing at least 60 to 70 feet deeu. he said, on the site of a once prosperous Biblical city. Abauot 2'2 miles outside Marlb the expedition found the ruins of a gigantic dam. with a> horizontal width of several miles. Parts of the dam still stand 30 feet above ground. "I know of no dam in the i world today which is as ex- I tensive." Phillips said. One temple, the "Moon Tem- ple," has beautiful square col- umns about 30 feet high, on which are inscriptions showing that those who attended it were moon worshippers, Phillips said. The other temple was a big cir- cular building, resembling ft coliseum, with a series of monu- mental inscriptions going all the way around the wall. Phillips said. In Marlb fortress the statues were found, he said. King Ahmad agreed that the expedition should keep some uf the antiquities. Phillips said, and they will be sent to the Carnegie Museum In Pittsburgh. PACE TWO' THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER Tuesday, april u, iosi Cargo and Freight-Ships and Planes-Arrivals and Departures Shipping & AirLine News UNITED FRUIT COMPANY Great While Fleet New Orleans Service Arrives Cristbal S.8. Levers Bend ....................... .......April 22 S.S. Chiriqui ...................................April 30 S.S. Fiador Knot ........................... May 7 S.S. Chiriqui....................................My M fllamlllni Itrfrlairatfil Chilled arid Renrnl Oirioi New York Freight Service Arrives Cristbal S.8. Cape Ayinol ..............................April U S.S. Cape Cod..................................May * S.S. Cape Cumberland..........................May 12 S.S. Cape Ann ..................................May 20 Krclthl slllpi:*Wrrkl from Havana la Crtitahal Weekly Sailings lo New York, l.o Anieles, San Francisco, Seattle Orcaalonal Sailing* lo New Orleanr anil Mobile. The Steamer In thl rnrlr are limited lo twelve pamrniera) a reenrnl rretfhi Salllnc* trom CHstonal lo Weal Coaal Central America Cristbal to New Orleans via Puerto Barrios, Guatemala Sails Cristbal S.S. Chiriqui.....(Passenger Service Only)......May 1 S.S. Chiriqui .....(Passenger Service Only).....May 15 TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL 2121 PANAMA 2-2804 COLON 20 H k The Pacific Steam Navigation Company INCORPORATED B ROYAL CHARTER 1040 Royal MaH lines Lid. FAST FREIGHT AND PASSF.NUER SERVICES BETWEEN EUROPE AND WEST COASTS OF NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA. TO ECUADOR. PERU AND CHILE M;V. "REINA DEL PACIFICO"* ...."..............May 2nd M.V. "LORETO".....(calls at Buenaventura'......May 3rd 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 M.V. "LOBOS" ...................................May 2nd M.V. "SARMIENTO"..............................May 4th ROYAL MAIL LINES LTD../HOLLAND AMERICA LINE TO NORTH PACIFIC PORTS M.V. "EASTERN PRINCE"" .....................April 25th S.S. "LOCH AVON"" ............................April 30th M.V. "DURANOO" ................................May 1st TO UK/CONTINENT S.S. "BERBICE" May 2nd 'Accepting passengers In First, Cabin and Third Class Superior accommodation available for passengers. All Sailing Subject to Change Without Notice. _ PACIFIC STEAM NAV CO.. Cristbal Tel. 1654 1155 i nun COMPANY INC. Panam Tel. 3-1257/1258; Balboa 1905 Writing Machine Answer to Previous Puzzle HT HORIZONTAL 1.5 Depicted writing machine 11 Gloomy (poet) 112 Prices anew ' 14 Short-napped I fabric 15 Screen 17 Goddess of i infatuation II Half-em VERTICAL 1 Stupor 2 Affirmative 3 New Zealand native fort 4 Former 5 Infold 6 Interpret 7 Angers 8 Symbol for tantalum 9 Greek letter UlUUli mnreMMUM'j'int-i; iiio arai iwrawraum n hpju iPiAiRgNietiPi siniiuih Ki Ifilwliff. h?WFIt*pI 10 Narrow bands io Draw back JO Oriental 11 Great fear measure 21 Pain 24 Observed 28 Forest ' creature 27 Wings 2* Egyptian sun god 20 Entangle JO Type of lettuce 31 Pint (ab.) 32 Iroquoian Indian 33 Not as much S Varnish ingredients 37 Sea eagle 3 Any 39 Nuisances 44CorrelaUveof either 45 Louse egg 47 Caper 48 Exist 49 Genus of sh.'ubs 1 Constellation 03 It doesn't take a-------to operate this machina 04 Decays 24 Specimen 25 Click beetle 30 Brain case 32 Antelope 34 Breathes 13 Net 16 Exclamation 22 Epic 23 Expunges 41 Heavenly body 42 Palm lily 43 Clcatrix 46 Malayan tin coin Sunk Confirmation that the small coastal ship Galante had sunk Saturday morning off Parida Is- land was received yesterday af- ternoon by telephone from Da- vid. Confirmation came in a te- lephone call from the vessels owner, Joseph Campanelll, to the shipping agency. Payne and Wardlaw. It had been reported earlier thr.t Galante went down when she was struck by lightning and th?'. one man the ship's cook, had been lost. Details were not clarified in the telephone call. The other five men aboard ara safe. , Galante Was recently the object of court action in the Canal Zone. She was attached In two admir- alty proceedings, one resulting from unpaid handling charges and the other for Indebtedness, claimed by a crewman, agaiiK-t the fchlp. . Service Increased An additional tourist flight is being added to PAA's service be- tween Panama and Miami Mav 1. the airlines has announced. The additional flight boosts the num- ber wfekly to five and will oe made nonstop. Under the new s c h e d ule, northbound nonstop clippers wli'. leave Tocumen at 6:40 a.m. Sun- days. Thursday and Saturdays and reach Miami in approximate- ly six hours. On Tuesdays and Fridays the planes will stop en route to Miami at Kingston and Camaguey. Southbound flights will oper- ate Mondays. Thursdays and Fri- days, nonstop and the Tuesday and Saturday southbound flights and Fridays, nonstop and the Tuesday and Saturday south- bound flights stop at Camaguey and Kingston. Vaention Over Charles E. Hlgnett of Fernle's Balboa office, is back at work after a month's vacation in Cos- ta Rica. Cradled The yacht Monsoon was finally cradled yesterday. After an Im- passe arose in which the Indus- trial Bureau (ex-Mechanical Di- vision) was unable to build the cradle and could not allow out- side workmen in its Balboa yards, the cradle construction was turn- pd over to Chris Skele. a retired Mechanical Division employe. (A spokesman for the Indus- trial Bureau pointed out that the Lf^Hv'.sion had-anamber at priority jobs, that It was asked on a Wed- nesday to do the Job the follow- ing Saturday and did not have the force available for the work. The regulation against allowing outside workmen in the yard Is of long standing.) The cradle was fitted onto the Monsoon at the docks and she was hoisted, with an Industrial noisily in sleep 48 River islet 35 Withers 50 While 39 Gasp 52 Universal 40 Grafted (her.) language SSTHMA and RONCHITIS Don't i-ouili a.id couch, transa. lP and choke ao bad that you can hardly breathe or eleepaont aullar aMthar day from Bronchltle or Aathma, without trying Mandato. Thta treat Internal medicina, racaatly dveIopea by a, acientlfle Am*rlcn laboratory, wort through tha blood, thua reaching your lima and bronchial tubaa. That a why Mandac worka ao faat to help you three way. 1. Helpa nature dleeolva and re- move thick atranflln mucua. X. t*ro- motta ire eaiy breathing; and Bound aleep ao you aoon leal O.K. I. Quickly all)latea coughing, wheeling:, eneee- Ing. Uat Mandate from your drugglel today. 8 how much better you may aleep tonight and how mush bettor yea feel tomorrow. fveryboy Raads Classifieds M WtfriS most famous Location 2000 mooorn room bothradioMwiok spotless comfort 7#r^if,MQfti, 7th AVE. MC/UJ VAtMf ttvothot. fit IT I ImA IN THUS SINK AT MM CITY inri lera, a laHH a......... Bureau crane, aboard the West Coast-bound Martin Bakke. Sail- ing aboard the same ship were the Monsoon's owners, Capt. and Mrs Donald H. Radcliffe Of Ca- lifornia Their Mexican crewman had left earlier in the day by plane. Cargo The PandT Pathfinder arrlve.1 late yesterday in Cristobal for southbound transit today. She is docking in Balboa to take on 250 tons of cargo for West Ooaat ports. Local agents are Andrews and Co. w JACOBY ON BRIDGE BY OSWALD JACOBY Written for NEA Service NORTH 01 O None K7 ? KJ72 OA87042 WROT BAST 4163 0109 74 VAQ32 4/54 ? 53 4>Q1090 d>KJ109 <0>Q3 SOUTH (D> OAKQJ5 O J 109 8 6 ? A4 *5 N-S vul. Seettli West North 14 Pass 20 2 4/ Pass 3 * 3 O Past 4 */ Pass Pass Opening lead# 5 Pass Pass Pass "Some time ago you wrote a- bout the correct way to bid a mistit hand." writes a Detroit correspondent. "I believe your point was that the smart plaver quits before he gets too high. Woula ynu make the same com- ment on this hand? "West opened the five of dia- monds, dummy played the j ck, but East covered with the queen and South had to win with the ace. Declarer decided that hi* fifth spade might not be good, and therefore ruffed it in dum- my. He returned the king of hearts from dummy and wet took the ace. "West continued diamonds, dummy winning with the king. Declarer cashed the ace of clubs and ruffed a club with the eight in order to gain the lead. He next led the Jack of hearts, and West, took the queen. West returned a club, thus bringing South down to only one trump. Since Wst had two trumps, the contract could not now be made. "South tried for an even trump break bv cashing the ten ol hearts. This left West with a good heart and a good club. "At what point should North and South have stopped bidding so as to stay out of this doubtful contract?" The contract was difficult, even doubtful, but I would not call !t unsound. The North-South hands were not a complete mis- fit, and South should not have felt disappointed at being In a game contract. As a matter of fact, he should have made his game. Coirect play is to win the open- ing diamond lead In dummy with the l:ln gof diamonds. The king of hearts is then returned at once. West takes the ace of hearts and returns a diamond (as good a lead as any to South's ace. South then leads the jack of hearts, knocking out West's queen. West's best continuation 1 a club, dummy winning with the ace South then ruffs a club ro regain the lead, but still has two trumps with which to draw those held by West. He can draw trumps and run his top spaces, fulfilling the game contract. The big mistake in this hand lay not-ln the bidding, but In the play to the first trick. Declarer must conserve entries to his own hand in order to save his trumps. FOR CUTS AND BURNS Soothing rtlif with famou s TERRT THE WORD FCMBLERS 7--------------------------------rr 11 TRIEP TO TELL HOT4HOT THAT I'M S0WIN6 ) OOH, 60LLY! HOPE 4NAPPER I4NY OiHt TO A*K Me , OUT OF TUB O'HARA WEaWAKaV*, BUT HE J, JO MAHAY HIM... eETTSR-TSU- HIM M0T4H0T* , BRDHEP ME OPF..O I'LL HAVE TO BMP 3~ 4PRAY BACK TO HIM ONLY HOW PO I A TELL HER...? *S-~^xgl^^rA FRECKLES AND H18 FRIENDS Look Out, Hector *j MERRILL BLUSHER MEBBE TOO DRIPS DONT REALIZE IT- BUT THIS CROCK BECOMES MINE. IF YOU DON'T REBAY THAT LOAM "Think I'll have it painted bright rep with yellow trim, I ALLEY OOP She's Rolling! 7 ?. T. HAMLIM 4) BOOTS AND HER BIDDIES That's Different By EDGAR MARTIN f ROO,1 POCK DOV. WtYV,V\S\ \.tVs MOT Sftt WW 6VW.VL m CAPTAIN EASE Yes, He Sees Well By LESLIE TURNER THIS WUST BE WHERE ERIC SENT THAT PACKAGE, PEMNV! I HOPE WE'RE NOT TOO LATE TO CATCH HIM IP A FRIEND O MIME IN YORK-/ IP VOU MEAN SHIRE MAILED A SMALL. I MR POON, HE PARCEL TO BE HELD FOR V HAS, SIR! HIM AT THIS INN. I WONDER. IF HE'S CALLED FOR IT VET? THATS QREAT' RV ^ 1 THE WAV, D/D HIS EVE* 'SIGHT SEEM-ER-NORMAL VIC FLINT CUOATTuOErVaXQ, fiAUVTDMEET VIC AT THE. STAsr&AZEKsau. OVTASetL KiAMEC SWKRV MTKOC7UCE5 MCP- OtL^aAe FAI0O5 *viveooD* ?JR' Following "Miss Flipp" By MICHAEL O'MALLE* OUR BOARDING HOUSE .... with .... MAIOR HOOPLE OUT OUR WAT tty j. b, Williams WSY, MA'SOR.' We enrizeos WArJT TO HEAR YOUR LeTTER- TO THC EDITOR.' |\ -~~ X'LL HOLT) > BACK THE MOB ( VJHILe VOU ^ReATJ IT' - 'A \ ^ORRV.SOVS.'x'V/e BA.LED MV PLEA TO COR PATRIOT^ AND OSED M.V LAT STAMP/ BUT IF VOU READ IT 1M THE PAPER , VOU'LL (JeST A BETTER EFFECT -~- HAK-PMPH.' 15 tMAT THE SAME EDiTOC VOU HIT POR. PUBLlClTV > ON YOUR ) (2EVOLMING \ DOORMAT ? HE MAV FILE IT WllTHTHE , E66AY5 PkOVV THE NAPOLCOiO WARD/ ' S TUESDAY, APRIL 24. 1951 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE THREE l' ' ft [. : Army, Navy, Air Force News NEW WARRANT OFFICER at Albrook Air Force Base is for- mer Master Sergeant Joseph C. Klettner (centn shown as he was sworn In last week by Major Charles T. Coleman, Adjutant General for the Caribbean Air Command while Col- onel William M. Brown, Albrook base commander, looks on. Klettner, whose home is in Wheeling. West Virginia, was for- merly chief clerk In the office of t<-e deputy chief of staff, personnel. In his new rank he will serve assistant adjutant at Albrook. (U.S. Air Force Photo) 'Operation Cracker To Test Zone-Wide Canal Defenses The Commander in Chief, Ca- ribbean, Lt. General William H. H. Morris, Jr., announced today that a "Full Alert" wlll.be order- ed in the near future to test movement plans and deployment plans of trie U.S. Armed Forces in the Canal Zone, in a full dress military exercise. General Morris stated that the exercise is named "OperaUon Cracker." "We have devised a field exercise Involving all Armed Forces in the Canal Zone. Our fontag will act upon order to ac- complish missions which will be assigned them in the course of the exercise," he said. "Operation Cracker." he said, "may require that certain forces move during the hours of dark- ness to designated places. The movements will be at night for two reasons. The first is to min- imize inconvenience to the civil community and the second rea- son it to provide night training for our forces." Commander Lyndon Goes To Cruiser St. Paul Completing a tour of shore duty in the Canal Zone as War Plans Officer for the 15th Naval District. Commander Dennis C. Lyndon. USN. will soon return to service with the fleet as Executive Officer of the cruiser USS Saint Paul. Commander Lyndon's replace- ment. Commander Arnold H. Newcomb, Is en route here from the Naval Base at Bremerton, Washington. Commander Lyn- don and his wife, the former Wmifred de Lorimier, and their four children. Dennis C. Jr., Arthur, Mary, and Christopher. will leave May 28 for Long Beach, California, where the of- ficer's family will reside during his period of sea duty. General Morris added tbat training exercises will be con- ducted from time to time. This wiU be the first joint night op- eration, wherein all three of the Armed Services are parti- cipating. Operation Cracker comes on the heels of the recent Army ma- neuver in the Chepo Area. In concluding the press query. General Morris stated that Pan- ama and Canal Zone police will be requested to assist the mili- tary in carrying out the night movements during Cracker, and he hopes that the people living along convoy routes will not be unduly concerned. The press and radio are coop- erating with Caribbean Com- mand in order to notify as many people as possible of the impend- ing exercise. ROTC Unit To Fire Blank Ammunition In Friday Class The M-II class of Balboa High School ROTC unit will hold an additional class in Small Unit Tactics on Friday, during the hours 8:00 to 9:00 a.m.. 11:00 to 12:00 and from 1:00 to 2:00 p.m.. in the vicinity of the Adminis- tration building. Blank ammunition will be fir- ed during these classes. Not more th^n 6 rounds per class will be fired. 'Slock Taking' Is Keynote of Defense Week Observance A time to "take stock of the strides made in the unity of ef- fort and purposes of our Servic- es" u the way the Secretary < 1 Defense. General George C. Marshall, defines Armed Forces Day. Saturday, May 19, the cli- max of National Defense Week, May 12-19, which is to be observ- ed all over the world, wherever Americans are congregated. "It has been demonstrated," the Secretary continues, in a statement received here by an-? U.S. Army Caribbean, "that cur land, sea and air forces have per- formed as a great co-ordinated tepm in Korea. In the present buildup...the co-ordination of the Services has been splendid. "As a new Secretary of Defense, I have been surprised and high- ly gratified by the practical pro- gress that has been made toward genu:r.e, working unity." General Marshall was Joined in his endorsement of the coming anniversary observance by the Secretaries of the three Armed Services and by their respective Chiefs of Staff, as well as by General Omar N. Bradley, Chair- man of the Joint Chiefs. Patriotic, veteran, lndustr'al, religious, women's and civic or- ganizations, wherever the U.S flag Is flown, are Joining to make May 19 a memorable day. Ths will be the second annual Armed Forces Day, the first hav- ing been observed May 20, 1950. In previous years, each Individ- ual service celebrated its own an- niversary, but in keeping wiih the rplrlt of unification, all now Join n observing the third Satur- day in May. May 19 was officially proclaimed as the date for this year by President Truman last week. Here in the Canal Zone, some of the features being planned for the week of May 12-19 are a street dance in the Balboa Pra- do, a Reserve Officers' dinner and participation by the church- es of the community, in addition to displays of Armed Forces equipment both on Armed Forces Day and on previous days during the week. He's Wound Up WAKEFIELD.Mass. (UP) -In- creasing age forced a hobbyist Manley B. Barber. 77, to give up the dally winding of his collec- tion of clocks. He has 100 of thsm. Panama Students Blow 'Shell Casing' Bugles Army Gift Noisier but happier are the students of the newly-establish- ed Justo Arosemena Vocational School at Bella Vista followlna the presentation last week of 30 I musical instruments by Colonel' Edward T. Donahue. U. S. Army Caribbean Chaplain. Chaplain (Majori John J. Nagle and Sgt Lester J. King. Officials of the school wishing to organize a drum and bugle corps, and having but $250 to spend, contacted the Army,' Chaplain's office, which assist- ed in the procurement of the instruments. They included one base drum, three snare drums. 12 bugles and six flair trumpets. None of the instruments were new except for the 12 bugles, which were manufactured In Japan from U.S. Army artillery shell casings. (NEATclephoto) NEW YORK POURS OUT ITS HEARTAnd Manhattan pour- ed out a blizzard of confetti, too, for General Douglas Mac- Arthur's big welcoming parade. Here you're looking down on the man-made snowstorm in Wall Street, a traditional high-point in any New York parade. Arrow Indicates Mac- Arthur's car. Panam American's Candidate Chosen For Coln Queen COLON, April 24 Chosen last Saturday to be one of the seven finalists for the title of Queen of the Coln May Fair was lovely Miss Virginia Rodriguez, candidate of The Panam Am- erican.Mlss Rodriguez was chosen by a jury of five, in a secorfd scrutiny held at the Atlantic city's Monaco Garden. The beautiful young lady will be taking part next Saturday in the third and final scrutiny, when from among the seven re- maining candidates the Queen of the Fair will be elected by popular decision. The other six candidates elect- ed by the Jury last Saturday were: Miss Olga Leignadier, can- didate of the Inter-American Women's Club; Miss Nancy Bas- so, candidate of El Pas; Miss Margarita Barcenas, candidate of the Military School at Fort Gullck; Miss Gioconda Apolayo, candidate of the Star It Herald; Miss Thelma Castillo, candidate of the Coln Lions Club; and Miss Alicia Wong, candidate of the Civic Society of Chiriqui. Skin Sores Don't let .itching Retenta, rimpl. s. CANASTA jjy BY OSWALD JACOBY Written for NEA Service The proper method 9 scoring at a Canasta tournament is much the same as the scoring at a bridge progressive. This brings up a much debated question. "Do vou count only your own score, or do you count the dif- ference between your score and that of your oppnoents?" Let's begin with fundamentals. You're going to play against five or six different sets of opponents during the course of the evening. You are provided with a tally card, and you are supposed to write down what happens against each set of opponents At the end of the evening a prize is usually awarded to the play- ers who have the best total score. Now, suppose that vou and your partner begin the evening by scoring 4000 points while your opponents score only 3000. Do you get your 4000 pointsor do you get only the difference of 1000 points? Most social players like to score the full 4000 points. In a real tournament, however, you would score only the different e of 1000 points. Your opponents would go forward to the next round with a score of minus 1000 points. The fairness of the real tournament rule can be seen if you imagine that at another table the score is 4800 points Tor one side and 4900 points for the other side. If the full score is carried forward, the loser at the other table gets 4800 points for losingwhile you get only 4000 points for winning at your table. It must be unfair for a loser to get a better score than a winner. 4.H.owfver, this is a question that should be settled bv the tournament director or by the committee that sponsors the tournament. If most of the play- ers are "social" players and if no serious claim to a champion- ship Is made m the tournament, there Is no harm in letting the players score their full amounts. If It's a serious tournament however, the official rule should be followed. If the plus-and-minus rule 1 followed, lt la customary to set a limit to the amount that can be won In any single round. A , limit of 3000 points is ample. When the margin of victory In any round is more than that, only the limit of 3000 points Is added to the score of the win- ners. The losers, however, are debited with the full amount of their loss. 4 Such Lovely things. . , at SUCH LOW LOW PRICES will be featured at our great ANNUAL SALE SALE STARTS APRIL 28TH Main Store only FELIX B. MADURO. S. A. 45 IT SHOULD Bil Rlnrworm, Blackheads, Acne, Psoria- 1 ala, loot Itch, Athlete'e Koot (Alipunia) j or other blemishes disfigure jour akin "C embaraaa you another day without trying Nlxodarm. Thla great medicine) i combata the erme and paraaitee which, often axe the real cause of akin trouble!. That la why Nlxodarm so quickly make* your akin aoft. olear, smooth and at. tractive. Get Nixoderm from your druf- . fast todayaee how much better you I akin looka and feels tomorrow. M Y> luir" x\ 'X TV n*S HO** t*#L ^vS&L f! <5aJ- I?. ,'/./. J*?*t *'Cf *A? ^T** S|X CITIES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE Ml on a round trip ticket to Rome! A TERRIFIC TRAVEL BARGAIN ... that's KLM'b "Multi-stopover" Plan. Here's how it works. Your round trip ticket gives you the choice of fast, through transportation to your European destination or of stopping over in your choice of cities en route ...at no extra cost. Because of KLM's vast European network, hundredsof variationsare Doesibie. For foil information tee: BOYD BROTHERS, 3 "L" St. Panama Tel. 1-200 and all approved travel agencies. WORLD'S HMT AIRUNt J FLIGHTS WIIKLY TO ALL EUROPE * THl NOITHMN IOUTI IT CONSTIUATION * INI SOUIHUN IOUTI BV C-* KLM HOYAL DUTCH Ammu SECOND FLOOR WEHM* WE ARE UNPACKING s Rubber Foam Pillows with ft, j Zipper .....................14.95 S." J White Pepperel Pillowcases .80 .- Plastic. Mattress Cover with M Zipper (Twin and Double a,i Bed Sizes) ..........4.75 5.50 \ I \,', Plastic Bedspreads ........ 8.95 } Satin Bedspreads (all ,*' color) .....................14.50 ^m Bedroom Curtains...3.25 to 10.00 Bedroom Rugs 27x48. 6.95 a Bedroom Rugs 30x60. 10.50 a Ruffllngs...................30 : Garment Bags with Zipper i Holds 8 and 12 Suits i.... 2.9E to 9.1 Cotton Laundry Bags...... 1.65 Ironing Board Covers.......95 Ironing Board Covers with Pads.....................,. 2.10 Bath Mat Sets............ 5.95 Bedroom Lamps ___2.95 to 5.95 Lamp Shades (large siiei ................2.75 to 5.50 Decorated Demi-tasse, Set. 1.25 - Pictures with Ballet Vi Motifs .............5.95 to 12.50 ek \ . a Landscapes ........3.50 to 10.50 m> V Mirror without avTTk *5* ' Frames ............10.00 16.50 t.^JL Moisture Proof Cookie Cans 2.10 ll-tfV-. Moisture Proof Salt Shakers 1.50 aUkV^L V Plastic Napkin Holders......20 Plastic Double Wall Ice Buckets ................... 2.95 Tld-Blt Trays ............. 4.75 a Plastic Butter and Cheese Dishes .....................60 Buy NOW Second Floor 5a Avenida "Opportunity knocks at your door! FOR SALE house located in the commercial center of Panam City modern commercial spaces and warehouse Up -11% annual profit on your investment For more details call a i Grant Advertising de Panam. S.A.i No. 12 Cuba Avenue "Laredo" Building ft f age rom THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER TUESDAY. APRIL 24, 1951 Favorite Giants Continue Their Losing Streak Cards Nip Reds: Dodgers Edge Braves In Thriller Bv UNITED PRESS By United Press NEW YORK, April 24 Despite homers by Jack Lohrke and Bobby Thomson, the skidding Giants bowed, before the Phillies 8-4 in a Philadelphia night game. Jocko Thompson was given a chance to start by Manager Eddie Sawyer and came through with his first victory of the campaign. Harrv Brechecn hurled the' score and drag the ame eleven Cardinals to a 2-1 triumph over' Innings more. Uk Reds I a St. Louis night i Andy Palfco doubled with two t-onlelt Veteran Ken Raf lens- out in the ninth to drive home berger 'suffered his .econd set- the winning run as the Cubs ack of the season. Connie defeated the Pirates 2-1 at Chi- R van's second Inning homer ac- > cago and Dutch H Her edged counted lor the Reds lone run. Mel Queen hi another fine pitch- The Dodgers edged the Braves lug battle. 2-1 In a gruelling 16-lnnlng | . battle at Ebbets Field which was' Queen struck out nine In de- derided when Carl Furlllo. who feat and gave up only five hits had won Sunday's ten-inning to eight for Hlller. The Cubs' came with a homer against the! Bill Serena clouted a round- Oiaius. connecteda single with tripper. AMERICAN LEAGUE Vic Wertz blasted a three-run went to third as the Brakes Tiers a 7.4 ivctory over I he Qene Mauch made an error^oa ^ Herben grounder bv pinchhitter Eddie ^rne(J Wg flrst vlc,orv o lhe season, In ^eight-hitter. The Tigers Myron Ginsberg also homered. Once more Mickey Mantle was the show at Yankee Stadium as the Yankees edged the Athletics 5-4 at the Stadium. He hit three singles to set the pace fur V I c Raschi's six-hitter. Athletics' pinchhitter Lou I.imnirr made it close with a two-run homer in the ninth. i No other games were sched- uled. Symposium Wins Jamaica Feature two. out to score Billy Cox. Cox had led off with a single and after being sacrificed, he Miksis. Braves pitcher Warren Spahn went the route while (he Dodgers used three hurlers Joe Hatten. who lolled eleven-and-one-third innings. Err Palica and Clyde Kin. The Braves took a one-run lead in the third on Ray Muel- lers double. Buddy Kerr's single a^ri a eroundball bv Sppfin in Which Gil Hodges unsuccessfully Uifcd tO peg Mueller at home- plate. Hodges got even with a homer in the fifth to tie the Ex-Zone Leaguers Starring In Majors v Bob Young and Lou Sleater. former Cristobal Mottas players, are now starring with the St Louts Browns of the American League. Last Sunday Sleater dropped a Tieart -breaking 4-3 decision to the Cleveland Indians Sunday. He gave up seven hits as com- pared to eight allowed bv his Pearl Trim Equals Summit Course Record In the P. W. G. A. monthlv tournament which was held at Summit Hills, Mrs. Pearl Trim, one of the leading golfers of the Isthmus, breezed around her home course ln 76 strokes to tie the course record which is cui- rentlv held by Miss Virginia Keenan. When all the blows were added up, this is the way the score card read: '. Hole 12 3 4 5 8 7 8 9Tot. Par 54435344 335 Trim 4 5 5 4 5 3 4 3-39 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 1* 18Tut. 54435344 3-35-70 5 4 5 4 5 3 4 4 3-37-78 In tieing the course record, Mrs. Trim'walked away with the Low Gross honors of the day. Spot prizes and the rest of the prizes were as follows: Best 9 holes 37 P. Trim Birdies 2'Mr. Taylor Worked hardest on 18 holes M. Uhrlng. Worked hardest on 5 (10) W. Sealy. 1st Low Net (58>S. Hipsosi. 2nd Low Net (63 > E. Mathle- B3rd Low Net (64)D. Corsale. 4th Low Net (65> M. Davlcb- son. 5th Low Net (691-E. Kenna. 6th Low Net (70)-M. Taylor. W. Lavers". 7th Low Net (71>G. Morris. M. Hammond, 8. Carpenter, M. White. P. Marsh. 8th Low Net (72)E. Judson, j D. LaCrolx. . 9th Low Net (73) 3. Home. ! A. Allnut. W. Walters. 10th Low Net i74)L. Rey- nolds. M. Spagna. 11th Low Net 177)R.Daniels. NEW YORK. April 24 iUP> The odds-on favorite, "Sym- posium." won the featured Quel Jeu Purse at Jamaica yesterday after giving Jockey Ted Atkin son a few anvlous moments. Symposium took the lead In the six furlong New York fea- ture at the far turn, then wenv wide on the turn and lost con- d bv httjWiae on tne turn oSponen't.MTke Oarcla. Onlv one -Iderable ground Oi the four Cleveland runs was I Atkinson straightened earned. Lou also struck out five 6d walked eight. Young teamed with Sleater to account for half of the Browns' hits. Bob got two doubles ln five tros lo the plate while Sleater bfnged out a trirjle and single. Young Is defending the second sack for the Browns, the same position he once played for Cris- tobal. . Sym- posium away, but the four-venr- old gelding bore in sharply and the jockey had to pull him straight again. Despite this zig-zag ride. Sym- posium ran the six furlongs ln one minute and 12 seconds. He won bv a length and one halt over "Mighty Quest." "Deep Blue" ran third. Symposium Daid three-20. two-30 and two-30. Hoop Officials To Hold Meeting Thursday Evening All persons interested ln bas- ketball officiating are urged to attend the next meeting of the local Basketball Officials Asso- ciation which will be held Thurs- day 7:30 at the Fort Clayton Service Club. Plans are being made by the Association to conduct a re- i feree's clinic. All members should attend ln order to discuss new rules changes a well as rules Interpretations. This meeting should be Inter- esting not only to persons in- terested in officiating but also to coaches, players and specta- tors alike. Happy and Healthy . . Sparkling evaa and little roar rkeeka tell of correct feediag LACTOCEN IrrHiuf. LACTOCEN ia m pure. m/c m Babv'i natural food. Put yaw boar a w LACTOCEN. LACTOCEN provides, m a form Baby caa easily dij-ii and aaaimlUte. the food eleaieata necraaary lo aatiafy the needs ol hia faM growing frame and body: food to make good dente bone; sound teeth; firm, lithe moacle; quiet aenea; a happy diapoaition and a atroog rigorous coaMitalioa. LACTOCEN ia pure, freah, fullerean milk modified eepenaUr for iafaat trading. ^e-tfe A NSTL HOOOCT ME'AKtO ISPtClALlY K* INFANT OIN BASEBALL CHAMPIONSHIP TROPHY Is awarded to Chief Henry A. "Red"-Boucher, manager of the Albrook Flyers by Brig. Gen. Francis A. March, chief of Staff US Army Carib- bean. Major Earl Leaser, right, is Personnel Services officer at Albrook. The Albrook Flyers, piloted by Red Boucher, swept the championship of both the SVOP and USARCARIB leagues and won the Canal Zone Interservlce championship for the second straight year. (Photo by Albrook Photo Lab.l. National League American League Teams W L Pet. Teams Brooklyn .... Chicago .... Pittsburgh . Boston..... Philadelphia . St. Louis .... New York . . Cincinnati .... 15 .167 St. Louis W L Pet. 5 1 .833 1 .833 4 1 .80) 1 .800 3 2 .667 Washington . 4 1 .800 4 4 .500 New York . 4 2 .667 1 3 .500 3 .500 1 2 .500 4 .333 2 e .250 Philadelphia . 1 6 .143 TODAYS GAMES Boston at Brooklyn New York at Philadelphia (Nl Pittsburgh at Chicago Cincinnati at St. Louis YESTERDAY'S RESULTS 7 2 Boston: 001 000 000 000 000 01 Brooklyn. 000 010 000 000 000 12 12 1 Spahn '0-2i and Mueller, Cooper. Hatten. Palica. King (1-0) and Campanella. 1 6 .143 TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Celeveland St. Louis at Detroit Washington at Boston Philadelphia at New. York YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Plummer, Evans In Final Phase Of Training Lanky Federico Plummer and Kid Evans today entered the final phase of their training program for their clash Sundav night at the Panama Olympic Stadium in a 15-round battle for the featherweight champion- ship of the Isthmus. Interest in this contest is high. Though both boys have long been among the top 126-pound- \ ers in the country, this will be their first meeting. Plummer briefly held the, featherweight crown before los- ing it to Stanley McKay by a knockout in Colon. In that bout: Flummer'g jaw was broken. I However, he is completely re-1 covered now and has already j chalked up two impressive win! since then. __ lighting in the lightweight division where most observers I believe he belongs Plummer put Kid Allen to sleep In six rounds. He scored an easy ten- roimtl decision over a washed- np Miguel Acevedo his next time out. Plummer made 182 against Allen and he was beautiful and effective piece of fighting mach- inery. Against Acevedo he made 128 and appeared listless at times. His punches seemed to have no sting or power against the Cuban. The main question In thii bout is whether Plummer will be strong enough at 126 pounds to hurt Evans or even to stand up under Evans devastating punches. Evans, rated more a puncher than a boxer, has improved greatly since veteran trainer Aubrey Woodruff took him under his wing. Evans earned the right to this title bout by scoring a clear-out victory over Kid Cho- colate II in an elimination bout. Sammy Medina and Svlvester Wallace were also listed as con- tenders in the elimination but have been sidestepped to allow Plummer the chance due to his greater drawing power and popularity. > Sunday night's program will be rounded out a six-round semifinal and two four-round preliminaries. Unbeaten Lionel Peralta takes on Joe Allen at six-rounds in a 135-pound match. The sensational Peralta is expected to make short work of his opponent. James Milton meets Young Robinson at 126 pounds in one prelim while K. O. Lester takes on Manuel Aguirre at 135 in the other contest. U.S.A., Russia Post Nine Of Ten New World's Records Accepted Officially Today ti< i By United Press The United States and Russia have posted nine of the 10 world's records accepted today bv the International Amateur- Athletic Federation. The American starswho set six of the new recordswere Jim Fuchs, Dick Attlesey, George Rhoden. arid Mai Whltfleld. Fuchsa former Yale Univer- sity standoutbroke the old standard for the 16-pound shot three .times last year, and all were listed as new marks by the Federation. The 1950 N-C-A and National A-A-U Champ set an all-time high of 58 feet io-and-one-half inches last August in Sweden. The Federation also recognized two other 1950 heaves by Fuchs one of 58-feet-elght-and-one- half inches, and the other of 58 feet-flve-and one half inches. Fuchs Is the only man ever to toss the 16-pound shot 58 feet, more than once. His new marks wiped out the old record of 58 feet-and-three-eights of an inch set bv Chuck Fonville of Michi- gan in 1948. Attleseya former Southern California star was credited with a new record of 13-and- New York, but has failed to re- gain that form, winding up eighth In both the Experimental Number Two, and the Wood Memorial. one-half seconds for the 120- yard high hurdles. The U-8-0 track ace won 40 straight high hurdles events last year, and set his mark In a trial heat at tho West Coast Relays last spring. His time bettered the world, mark set by Harrison Dillard, America's 100-meter Olympic champion in 1948. i Rhodenof Morgan State Col- legeset the new 400-meter mark in a meet at Sweden. His 45-and-elght-10th seconds was one-10th of a second better than the time posted by Herb Mc- Kenlev in 1948. The Federationmeeting ln Londonalso credited Whltfleld with a record perfomance at 880-yards. Whltflelda United Slates Air Force aerial gunner equalled the one mlnute-49- and-two-lOth seconds mark set by Sidney Wooderson back ln 1938. Russian athletes were award- ed three of the four new wo- men's world records. There were no records accredited to Rus- sian men. The Russian women set re- cords ln the 800-meter run. the 800-meter relay, and the 24- hundred meter relay. The 10th record to go into the books was oosted bv a Swedish woman athlete in the 880-yard run. She set the mark ln 1945, bnt It wasn't accepted until to- day. Riding High! ^a^aauatjui;- '"'""?'." Phila. 200 000 0024 8 0 New York 020 002 lOx5 13 0 Brlssle 0-2> Wyse and Tipton. Raschl (2-0) and Berra. Pittsburgh 100 000 0001 8 0 Chicago 000 010 0012 5 0 Queen (0-11 and McCullough. Hlller '2-0' and Walker. (NIGHT GAME i Philadelphia 8 New York 4 i NIGHT GAME i St. Louis 2 Cincinnati 1 AROUND AGAIN HAMILTON. N. Y.. (NBA.. Paul Bixler Is starting his fifth season as Colgate's head football coach. RAW, IRRITATED THROAT? For Prompt Relief TryTAHCRQ For coughs due to colds. Pleasant-tasting effec- tive for both adults and children. At your druggist. LIABLI TdlsCrO Cauu.l.Sqr-p omit NORWICH ftoowci St. Louis 300 100 0004 8 4 Detroit 001 030 0037 8 0 Johnson, Fannin (0-1) and Moss. Trout, Herbert (l-0i and Gins- berg. No other games scheduled. Uncle Millie May Not Start In Derby NEW YORK, April 24 (UP) The winter book favorite for me Kentucky Derby. Uncle Miltle,-' may miss the classic for three- year-olds. Trainer Andy Colan- do says the colt is about 50 pounds underweight. Unless he makes back that poundage, he'll be withdrawn from the Derby. If Uncle Miltle falls to come back, he'll be given a short rest, and then pointed for the Preak- ness Stakes May 19 at plmlico. Uncle Miltle beat some top Der- by ellglbles two weeks ago at %60-Seeohd Workout* Nothing Ilk. a brisk bridle-path workout, say riding fans, to make you /el fitter, look better. And-nothing like the famous Vitalis "60-Second Workout" to make your scalp feel fitter, hair look better. 50 seconds' brisk massage with itimnliiting Vitslis and you feei, the difference in your scalpprevent dryness, rout flaky dandruff. Then 10 seconds to comb and Jeu S**l '.ha difference in your hairfar handsomer, healthier-looking-, neatly grooina*. tiet ViUlis todayl jhyottrsaotp- ihyoort#itJ A Pnatad at Iri.tal-Myara New, for cream tonic fans . lighter-bodied VITAL HAIR CREAM Gives your hair that CLEAN GROOMED LOOK FOR SALE IN ftaVt. PACKAGE STORES AND BARS Distributor; DURAN Tel. 2-2226 M Her*, indeed It a watch which you will cherish with pride and fondness. Winner of 165 Obeervatory Awards, Movado ia famous the world ovar (or its leadenhip in design, accuracy and workmanship. I a/o fa/Wch JBIWUrf HbTADOUAUTBs HAM ILTON If you want to give the watch that meets all iho standard, of fine watchmaking, give a Hamilton. For lime-enduring beauty and tested accuracy, Hamilton is the world's finest"The Aristocrat of W aleles." 1 Ag*ntm Gafiarof M. Espinosa, Apartado 493, Panamo, R. ti j 4.< *\ 4, * Tl'ESDAY. APRIL U, 1951 TH PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE FIVE ' f^acihc Society Be 96, &/lo. JJmfku 3,1 2.1336 MR. AND MRS. OTIS MAXWELL RAMEY, JR., who were mar- ried early this month at a twilight ceremony at the W. H. Of den home in Corpus Christ!. Teias. She Is he former Miss Barbara Boyer, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Boyer, of Balboa. Mr. Ramey is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Otis Max- well Ramey, also of Balboa. For her wedding, the bride wore a white cashmere suit, with a white cloche hat and Tell. Her corsage was of white orchids. Mrs. Langston Crlder was matron of honor and Mr. Crlder waa best man. Following the reception, the couple went on a wedding trip to Monterrey. They will live in Cor- pus Christi, where the groom is stationed with the Navy. DAUGHTER OF NICARAGTJAN AMBASSADOR AND MRS. SANCHEZ MARRIED LAST EVENING IN PANAMA At eight o'clock last evening in Cristo Rey Church, Pa- nama, Miss Maria Ernestina Sanchez, daughter of the Nica- raguan Ambassador to Panama and Mrs. Eloy Sanchez, be- came the bride of Teddv Galen Keller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hubert G. Keller of Efflngham, Illinois. The Reverend Fa- ther Serrano officiated and the blessing was pronounced by Monseor de Paulo Bernier, Charge d'Affalres of the Holy A profusion of white lilies from Costa Rica decorated the candlellghted church. The nuptial music was played by the cnurch organist. Sponsors of the wedding in- cluded the President of Nicara- gua and Mrs. Anastasio Somoza, who were represented by Colonel and Mrs. Jose Antonio Remon: the Minister for Foreign Rela- tions and Mrs. Carlos N. Brin, the Ambassador of Peru and Dean cf the Diplomatic Corps. Dr. Emilio Ortiz de Zevallos, Mrs. Sanchez, the Minister of El Salvador and Mr:;. Joaqun Valdes, the Minis- ter of Honduras and Mrs. Marco A. Raudales Planas, the Chatg d'Affalres of the United States Embassy and Mrs. Murray M. Wise the Charge d'Affalres of the COSta Rican Embassy and Mrs. Gerardo Jimenez and Captain Colon Eloy Alfaro. former Am- bassador of Ecuador to Panama and the United States and Mrs. AKaro. The bride, given In marriage by her father, was gowned in fine white lace and nylon tulle. Her gown was made with a High -.eck. lone lace sleeves, a fitted bodice and a bouffant skirt with a ful! length train. Her veil of tulle was hell In place with orange blos- soms and she carried white rose". and orange blosoms. Mrs. Noel de Rodriguez was t he- matron of honor and the brides- maids were the Misses Rosario Ortiz de Zevallos, Juliana Maria- nl, Patricia Porter and Edelmira Valdes. They wore bouffant gowns of tulle In pale shades of blue, green, violet and rose and car- ried pink rosebuds. The grooms- men were Ricardo Brln. Manuel Hidalgo, Jr., Marco Raudales, Jr. Julio A. Lopez Munlz. Jr., and Norman A. Vlena. Deyanlra Ara- e Arguellos was the tralnbeanv. Jo.-.e Eloy Sanchez Arguellos, the rlngbearer and the flower girls were Marcela and Angelica Po- rras. After the ceremony Ambassa- dor and Mrs. Sanchez gave a re- ception at the Embassy on 51st Street In Bella Vista. The bride's mother waa gowned in grey lace and her corsage was of orchids. Mrs. Keller wore periwinkle blue lace with a corsage of pink rose- buds. Mr. Keller and his bride have gone to Costa Rica on a weddin trip. They will return to Panama for a stay of several months be- fore golqg to Illinois to make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Keller, parents of the bridegroom, who have been at Hotel El Panama for the past two weeks, are leaving by air- plane Wednesday for their home. Bridal Shower Honors Miss Curie* Miss Coila Goodin and Miss Margaret Ryter gave a tea and miscellaneous shower Sunday af- ternoon at the home of Miss Goodln's parents In Gamboa ?o Miss Edna Curies who it to be married early in May to Clyue Bain. Their guest list included 20 of Miss Curies' intimate friends. Mrs. Ralph Curies, mother of the bride-elect, presided at the tea table. The hostesses were as- sisted by their mothers, Mrs. Ma- rlon J. Goodin and Mrs. Clifton W. Ryter and by Mrs. Marvin Baa'on and Mrs. C. A. Herring. Mrs. Eaton Honored by M-. nr.d Nn Hoelile Mr. and Mrs. William o. Hoel- t>aiooa entertained at the Wes. Bank Navy Officers Club, Saturday evening, honoring Mrs. Edwin Eaton who Is leaving on vacation for the States. The guests were: Captain and Mrs G. Fish, Captain and Mrs. O. L. Carlson, Commander and Mrs. W. W. Winters, Lt. and M>3. W. Little, Mr. and Mrs. J. Bush, Mr. and M:. E. Altman, Mr. and Mrs. T. Hoseman and Mr. Edwin Eaton. Dinner at Hotel El Panama Miss Irene Ange of Diablo Heights and Miss Marilyn Slsson of Balboa had as their dinner guests Saturday night at Hotel ill Panama, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harrison. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sis- son and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Carpenter. Bon Voyage Party Miss Allison Davidson enter- tained a group of her young friends at a dinner party Satur- day evening at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Rosa Da- vidson of the 15th Naval District. The occasion was to honor Ed- dy Eaton who Is leaving on vaca- tion next week with -his mother. Invited to the party were the Miss?., Cynthia Orr. Angela Val- entine, Janls Cauthern, Alice Tim3. June Lewis, Jean Kelly. Su- nn Hale and Olorla Rinker. Mes- srs David Forman, Jimmy Mc- Keown, David Pace. Bily Green, Tommy Hae, Jon Broderlck, Jerry Nash and Joe Cicero. Birthday Luncheon for Ceciia Maduro Mr. and Mrs. Oswad Maduro gave a unchen Saturday at their home In Las Cumbres for their daughter, Cecilia, on her seventh birthday, entertaining a few of her neighbors and classmates. Sailing Tomorrow Mrs. Lewis B. Moore of Balboa Heights and her sister, Mrs. Bronson Rigby of Balboa, are ex- pected to sail for the Isthmus to- morrow on the S8 Ancon from New York. Visitors In Colon Mr. end Mrs. Asger Kierulff of Panama City and Mr. and Mrs. William Robert Byrd of Las Cumbres were In Colon Saturday night for the dinner which Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ullrich gave in celebration of the 51st anniver- sary of their wedding. Reception Tonight at Union Church The Balboa Union Chinch Council is sponsoring a reception to be held tonight from 7:30 to 9:30 In the Church Parlors In honor of the new Minister, the Rev. A. H. Shaw and Mrs. Shaw. All friends of the Church are in- vited. Luncheon at Hotel El Panama Several wives of United States Embassy Officers had luncheon together yesterday at Hotel El Panama. Covers were laid for \. A.S.C.E. Dinner Dance Saturday Night Members of the American So- ciety of Civil Engineers and their ladles are holding their annual cocktail-dinner-dance Saturday evening at the Union Club In Pa- nama. Installation Dinner Dance at Fort Kobbe On Saturday evening the Fort Kobbe N.C.O. Wives held their in- I stallatlon dinner and dance )n i their clubrooms at the N.C.O. ; Club Covers were laid for 42. Chaplain Ahrend installed thf new officers who are: Mrs. Le- Roy McCracken, president; Mrs. Alberto Batolomei. vice-presi- dent ; Mrs. John Kerner, secreta- ry; and Mrs. William Mathes who is serving her second term as treasurer. Retiring officers wcic: Mrs. Bruce Rawls. president. Mrs. Peter Zanls, vice-president; and Mrs. Charles Ratlner, secretary. All of the officers were given cor- sages by the club. Mr. Wright Guest of Mr. and Mrs. Caldwell David E. Wright. Attache of the United States Embassy in Cos! a Rica, arrived by airplane Monday for a short stay In "an- ana. He Is the guest of the At- tache of the Embassy In Panama and Mrs. William B. Caldwell. DAG MAR. NEW SHIPMENT OF ORIGINAL JEWELRY HANDMADE BY STIGBERT OF SWEDEN Tivoli Ave. No. 6 Telephone 2-0170 Dover Road Opens Tomorrow Evening "The Dover Road." Theater Guild Comedy, will open tomor- row evening at 8 at the Diablo Heights Clubhouse Theater. Theic will also be a performance at the same time Thursday even- ing. Evening Guild Meets Tonight An important meeting of the Evening Guild will be held to- night in Bishop Morris Hall of St. Luke's Cathedral. Ancon. All members are urged to be present. Nurses Association * to Meet May 2 , Th3 next meeting of the Isth- mian Nurses' Association will ce held at the J.W.B. Wednesday evening, May 2, at 7:30. Farewell Party for Mi Young Honoring Miss Betty Young, program director of the Balboa YMCA for the past two years. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Stevens held an open house on Monday evening, at their quarters on Morgan Ave. Miss Young sails on the Panama Line next Friday, en route to her home at Amherst. New Hamp- shire. A vraduate of Mt. Holyoke Col- lege with several years teaching experience. Miss Young entered U.8.O. work during the late war She remained with the YMCA and rerved at the Charleston Branch in Boston before coming ic Isthmus. During her oeer she has made a wide circle jf friends and has headed up an Panama Teachers Due Home From Study At Texas SCW The group of 12 Panam school teacners from the Interior who have been spending their "sum- mer" vacation at Texas State College For Women under the volunteer guidance of Dr. and Mrs. William O. Campbell, will be home Saturday. A letter from Mrs. Campbell, who with her husband is a for- mer teacher at the National Uni- versity of Panam, informed The Panam American today that they will arrive via Braniff Air- ways at 10:30 pjn. The Camp- bells will be with them. Mrs. Campbell's letter says In part: v active program at the Balboa "Y." Her personal Interest In flow- ers of the tropics led her to seek the help of Mrs. Pat Morgan in the series of popular flower ar- rangement classes which have been held at the YMCA. Recent- ly 790 men and women of the Canal Zone and Panama attend- ed the flower show which was the culmination of the eight weeks session of the flower classes. At- tending the open house for Miss Young were the following: Bis- hop R. H. Gooden. Chaplain W. W. Winter, Mr. and Mrs. J. Wen- dell Greene. Mr. and Mrs. F. II. Irwln.Mr. and Mrs. Pat Coakley, Mr. pnd Mrs. John Kromer, Mr. and Mrs. David Westman, Rah- bl and Mrs. Nathan Wltkln, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. 81ebellnk. Miss Lveme Fong, Mrs. Lena Haa3, Mrs. Effle McGlade. Mr. Wei ton Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Piper, Chaplain and Mrs. Frank Wiley Mrs. Judie Dickerson, Mr. T. F Hotz. Mr. and Mrs. John P. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Fred 8111. Mr. and Mrs. J. Howard De- marest and Mr. and Mrs. Merle L. Piper. "We can't begin to tell you what a success the whole experi- ment has been. We are, to say he least, more than pleased with the results of this semester, and now hope to bring a much larger group next year. "The girls have worked like troopers, have made a real name for themselves, have been receiv- ed everywhere with open arms and attended more receptions, teas, banquets and the like than they ever knew existed. "They, with our help, have put no Innumerable programs of na- tive songs and dances in native costume, for all the clubs of lm- fiortance here, some stage per- ormances, some performances In other towns and cities near here, including a half-hour tele- vision show. Dr. Campbell ac- companies this with a lecture beforehand, and some explana- tions about the girls and what they are doing here. "The result has been to spread a little knowledge about Panam to people who had never heard of the place before! "We have also taken the girls on innumerable educational ex- cursions to schools, rural and city, to the Fort Plant In Dallas, to various Institutions and hos- pitals, and will Include a stop off at Austin to visit the captol, the University, and several of the state institutions before we head back. "The girls have earned from 13 to 15 University credits here, and go back with a feeling of a full summer well spent, and leav- ing everyone here with a real desire to have them all back again. We'll bring some of the many newspaper spreads articles and pictures that have appeared and In the Dallas and Fort Worth paoers. so that you can have a look at them. I be- lieve you will be Interested." ^Mtlanlic ~2)ocLeti &>* 195, QtM D*Lfk Qmlmm 37& *& $AVE SAVE SAVE ~V during Felix's great ANNUAL SALE SALE STARTS Saturday April 28th FELIX B. MADURO, S. A. Main Store 21 Central Avenua MR. AND MRS. LOUIS WEICH, above, after their marriage on Friday evening, April 20 at the American Episcopal Church of Our Saviour. Mrs. Welch is the former Miss Arden Arm- strong, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Armstrong of Mar- garita. Mr. and Mrs. Welch will be at home In Quarters 15, Apartment "A" New Cristobal. Girls' State Board Meeting There will be a board meeting of the executive board for th- Girls' State at Margarita ClUb- ! house at 7 p.m. today. Mrs. Lois Magner will preside. Mr. and Mrs. Canavagglo Celebrate Wedding Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Frank Canavagijio lentartalned with a cocktail sup- per party In the lounge of the I Hotel Washington last evening I o celebrate their 16th wedding an- niversary. Paims and tropical greenery were used to decorate the large room with hydrangeas and other flower. Their guests were: Captain and Mrs. Robert S. Bertschy, Colonel and Mrs. James E. Bowen. Jr, Dr. and Mrs. Harry Eno, Mr. and Mrs. William Adams, Captain and Mrs L. L. Koepke. Mr. and Mrs. . ...r lick. Mr. and Mr. Jashwood Darling, Captain and Mrs. Robert Fahle, Dr. and Mrs. Sum Taylor. Mr. and Mrs. Mar- cel Orlngolre. Captain Francis L. Busey. Captain and Mrs. Sam L. Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Erick Tnelo- marck. Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. 'Hardy. Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Kelly. Colonel and Mrs. James Pumpei- ly. Dr. and Mrs. Rafael DeBoyi '*. Dr. and Mrs. Frank E. Rlefkoh:, Mr. and Mrs. William B. MlddlF- , mas Dr. and Mrs. Wayne Glider, i Mr, and Mrs. Albert Motta, Mr and Mrs. Eustace Lee. Miss Thelina Godwin, Miss Adamnry Anderson, Miss Thora BaudlU c. Miss Dorothy Henry, Miss Hope Menendez. Miss Betty Lempke, Mrs Elsie M. 8klllman, Mrs. M. J. Baas, Mr. and Mrs. James . Dorow, and from Panama City: Dr. and Mr*. John Canavagglo, Mrs. Pascal Canavagglo, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Nev.land. Mr. an I Mrs. John W. Shaw and Mr. *nd Mrs. Raymond Rose of San Jote. Costa Rica. ISTHMIAN DATA Marriage Licenses NIGHT. John Murray. 22. of Rodman, formerly of Waverlv, III., to DORWRT, Marjori* Jean. 20, also of Waverly. Births GIVAN8, Mr. and Mrs. Theo-, philus C. of Silver City, daugh- ter, April 19. Colon Hospital. ROOK. Mr. and Mrs. Israel. Of Silver City, daughter, April 1 Colon Hospital. VENNER, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred, of Cativa, daughter, April 20, Colon Hospital. BETHANCOURT. Mr. and Mrt. Pedro, of Gamboa, son, April 20, Gorgas Hospital. CHESTNUT. Mr. and Mrs. W. D, of Curundu, son, April 20, Gorgas Hospital. THOMPSON, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin, of Colon, daughter. April 21. Gorgas Hospital. CORONADO. Mr. and Mrs. Al- fonso, of Panama, son, April 21. Gorgas Hospital. STOCK. Mr. and Mrs. William, of Curundu. son, April 21, Gor- gas Hospital. BUDARRA. Mr. and Mrs. Juan, of Panama, son, April 22, Gorgas Hospital. Want to sleep like a baby? -j V Put some POSTUM in cup V add hot water or milk X,"m V and you'll have a delicious bar- rage, free of stimulant, whiofc will halp you to enjoy a raatful, soothing sleep. Oat POSTUM today and try HI., . TOE BALLET TAP Why give your child dancing lessons ! Here are 3 important reasons and answers. 1. To cultivate and develop the natural ability of those with Inborn talentsTomorrow's Dancers. 2. To help those who may be naturally awkward, stiff, backward and shy by giving them the proper exer- cises suited to their specific needs. 3. To give pleasure In general by assisting their phys- ical development and adding poise and grace much needed In every day Hie. Register now with DOROTHY CHASE Call Balboa 1751 Classes will be'taught all thru the Summer. Leonard H. Stark To Be Fare welled Al Cristbal Friday CRISTOBAL. April 24A fare- well party will be given next Friday evening at the Cristobal | Boat Club for Leonard H. Stark. well-known Industrial Bureau employe. "On the Seven Seas and In many ports of the world are merchantmen who have had the i good fortune to have him, as ; Foreman Pipefitter, supervise I their repairs or Installations and I who greatly appreciate and | praise his superior judgment i and workmanship," one of his i friends said of him this week. Stark, known as "Spider," was born in Missouri, came to the Canal Zone Jan. 20. 1919. to In- stall an ammonia system for the Building Division. When his work was completed there he was transferred to the Mech- anical Division's pipe shop. He was awav from the Isth-1 mus for almost six years, from September, 1921. to July. 1927,' but since the latter date has been employed continuously In the Mechanical Division, now the Industrial Bureau. He has j served In all capacities In the Pipe Shopfrom Pipelitter to Acting Master. DON'T DEPRi VE YOURSELF OF THE PLEASURE OPHAVING LOVELV PljRNlTUCE Jli 4tt fin onty 12 M ~~* CASH CREDIT CLUB PLA Nl DAGMAli SALE MECHANICAL METAL TOYS A N D CHILDREN'S FURNITURE Tivoli Ave. No. 6 Telephone 2-0170 Rio Abajo Meeting Is O'led Bv Local 900 Local 900 of The Govern-1 mentand Civic Employes Organ- izing Commlttee-CIO In Its or- ganization program has urged all local rate and civilian em-, ployes of the Panama Canal an! j Armed Services residing In the! Rio Abajo district to a sDecial meeting which will be held 7:30 p. m. Thursday at the Nazarene! School 9th street Rio Abajo. FOR BABY'S TENDER SKIN! furNI ;ntralave.at2iste.st. phones: 2-133C & 2-1833 Uta Johmon's Baby Powder after baths, at diaper changes, and in be- tween times, too. It soothesprotects! KSr FO IMY... erro you^\ u. MWKI 0?win!uO|ln*uKk.|U..||.S.*- At aalh lime, wash bby *i'h |intle, frajrant Johnson-! Baby Soap. Ask for it today! ^^^^^^^^ * GAv uifcu* or FRENCH GIFTS Crystal Perfumes Dinnerware GIFT SHOP 16 Tivoli Avenue Panam (Opposite Ancon Playahed) Festiv, Flavorful... JELL-O Tapioca Pudding Joys I It fun to deck out a quick Jell-O deeeert! Try Vanilla Tapioca Pudding with banaa* licei. Orange Coconut with drained orange action. Chocla* with chopped nuU. What lovely deeeert could be aim- pier? Get eome today! i - FACE SIX at THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER The More You Tell ...The Quicker You Sell! USE PANAMA AMERICAN CLASSIFIEDS Leave your ad with one of ou/ Agents or our Offices Minimum for 75 words 3' each additional word. LEWIS SERVICE No. 4 Tivoll Ave. Phone 2-2291 KIOSKO DE LESSEFS Parque de Until Panam MORRISON'S No. 4 fourth ot July Ara. Phone 2-M4I BOTICA CARLTON W 059 Melendei Air Phone 755 COLON SALON DE BELLEZA AMERICANO No 55 Weal 12th Street THE PANAMA AMERICAN No. 53 H" Street Panam No I2.IT Central A>e. Cote* COMMERCIAL b PROFESSIONAL COPPER WILL BE HARDER TO GET. We still have it in ROLLS SHEETS TUBES PIPES FITTINGS GEO. F. NOVEY, INC 279 Central Ave.Tel. 3-014 NOTICE We wish to Inform the public that ntir UPHOLSTERING AND SLIPCOVER SHOP-SHOWROOM is REOPENING at our new address: No. 77 National Ave (Jose Fsco. de la Ona) New telephone Panam 3-4628. A. Herea. CALIFORNIA Liquid Fertilizer No Dirt No Dust No Odor Contains Nitrogen. Potash and Phosphoric Acid. Recommended for SHRUBS LAWNS TREES Now available In pinta and gallons at all TROPIDURA Paint Stores ROPIDURA The Best for Less LEICA CAMERAS Model IIIF Synchronized LENSES sfc ACCESSORIES AT BELOW U.S. PRICES. Direct C.Z. Shipments At Factorv Prices. Porras Plata 5 de Ma.vo Panam. R. P. Just Received 4STRATOFLAME' BUTANE-GAS LIGHTERS $7.95 (JoatELfiG * Sth of May Plaza ^seV LUlftBtR BUILDING AGENCIAS GLOBALES Via Espaa. Near Joan Franco Tel. 3-1503 wrn, POLAROID Jafut CAMERA , Too enap the ahutter then lift out . jrour Sniihed. permanent picture unnuU later. Yea. if a aa >r>ple aa that to uac the amaaing new Polaroid Camera. No liquida, no dark room... no fuaa ... the film makea the picture automatically aa you advance II for the aeat shot. See it to action at INTERNATIONAL JEWELERY Adjoining International Hotel FOR SALE Automobiles FOR SALE: CHEVROLET Vi ton Pickup 1949, excellent condition. 5 speed transmission, undercooted. overlood springs, heavy duty reot bumper, heoter. Phone Novy Poci- fic 3758. FOR SALE: 1950 Nosh Stotesmon, 4-door Sedan with radio, seat co- vers, weather-eye heater and de- froster. Reasonable pnce. Con be financed. Tel Balboa 2-1710 or Balboa 2-1595. Corey. House 5715-C Dioblo Heights. FOR SALE:1947 Plymouth Tudor, radio $900 ond 1949 Chevrolet Club Coupe $1.350 in excellent condition. Can be financed. Con- tact quarters 2013-B or Phone 83-6159. FOR SALE:1938 Buick, 4-door Se- dan. Solid dependable clean trans- portation. $160.00. Tel. 2-1185, "Q" Street No. 27. FOR SALE:1950 Buick, Speciol, 4- door Sedan, highest over $1,700. Con be financed. House 2107-D Curundu. Call 86-7294. FOR SALE:Yellow Mercury Conver- tible, bought new, late '47; original owner, 34,000 miles. Plaid nylon, seot covers; cleon, smooth-per- forming motors. $1,000. Coll Al- brook 3145, Moj. Walsh. FOR SALE:1950 Dodge Kingsway Coupe, like new, 300 miles, seat covers. Insurance. Save yourself $500.00. 1488-C Dormon Street. Tel. 2-1760. MISCELLANEOUS Do you hove a drinking problem? Write Alcoholics Anonymous Box 2031 Ancon. C. Z. FOR SALE Miscellaneous FOR SALE:High floss oil points and anamals. Mildew-proof. $3.25 gallon Tropiduro Stores FOR SALEBaby buggy. House 0805 Plank St., Balboa. Tel. 2-2565. FOR SALE: Brunsigo colculoting machines, Germon, new. From $145.00. "Porros," Plazo 5 de Mayo, Panama. FOR SALE: Good seots for the event of the yeor. "Merrily-Merrily" to be seen ot Cristobol YMCA Audi- torium April 27th at 7:30. Don't fail to get your tickets for this special talent mixture of pep, class, comedy, colorful doncing and special scenes. The Zuyderiee, the forest, the circus. All exhibited by well trained pupils of Madge Locke. Pupils from Cristobal, Balboa. Gotun. Curundu. Represent- ing Dutch Folk, Diny Geese, beauti- ful birds. Gypsy ond Latin Canees, tiger, poodles, ponies, clowns, Maggie the mystery horse, hob-gcblins, balle- rinas. Something for every toste and age. "Merrily-Merrily" by all means ot YMCA Cristobal, April 27th. Bal- boa dote to be announced later. FOR SALE:1941 Ford, duty paid, radio, excellent condition, cheap. Call Avenue Tivoli 2000. Phone 3-0974. 0530 0630 p.m. FOR SALE:1946 Ford Tudor Se- dan. See at 5627-D Diablo ofter 5 p.m. FOR RENT Automobiles DRIVE YOURSELF 50< per hour plus 7( per mik. Insurance and driving permit included. Call Panama 2-1995. Garage Elias. LOST & FOUND LOST:35 mm. Welta Camera and Cose in Balboa Theatre. Reward. Call 85-3172. LOST: One brown wallet in the name of Frank Diers containing Panama Cdula, Canal Zone and Panama operators licenses. If found please bring to Diers & Ullrich, Melndez Ave. and 16th Street Coln. REWARD! REWARD Substantiol reword is offered for in- formation landing to recovery of a 1949 Chevrolet, Fleetline, Tudor Sedan, motor No. GAM249812. Color, when stolen from Curundu on March 27, light green. License No. Zl 1241. Phone Balboa 1813 or call at Firemen's Insurance Co. otfica in Special Engineer's Bide., Diablo. Jane Gallimore Dies; Funeral Services Set For Tomorrow P.M. Jane Gallimore. 59. a native of Jamaica. B.W.I.. died at 6 a.m. to- day at her residence No. 90 Ave- nue "A" Panama City. Funeral services will be held tomorrow afternoon at the Pan- ama Wesleyan Church. The cor- tege will leave the church at 4:80 p.m. for Amador Church where tntarment will take place. She Is survived by a daughter, Rena. and a sister, Mrs. Julia Ro- binson of Paraso. Shr was a member of the U.B. Society. 'Night Of Fun' Is Due Friday Night At St. Peter's A "Night of Fun" will be held next Friday evening at St Peter's Parish Hall In La Boca. The public is Invited. The evening's program will Include such games as horsf- racln. a treasure hunt for chil- dren, a shooting gallerv. as well as dancing and refreshments. The "NiRht of Fun" will begin at 7 p. m. Admission will be '0 cents FOR SALE:Collins 75A-I receiver, precision signal generator; supreme audio signal generator, 25 or 60 cycle. All in perfect calibration and operating condition. 611-B Ancon Blvd. or call Balboa 3574 evenings. Bargain Round-trip to Rio. Braniff DC-6. $450. Call 2-5851 after- noons. 2-1653 evenings. FOR SALE:Hoteles Interamericanos stock at $1 1.00 a share. Telephone Balboo 3631. FOR SALE:Typewriter. Smith-Co- rona, 1951 silent model, used 2 weeks. Priced ot $85.00. Fort Kobbe. Tel. 84-6276. FOR SALE: 4 Locker trunks and wardrobe trunks $10.00 each, Ri- viera Building. 46th Street No. 18. FOR SALE: i National accounting machine. Perfect condition. Bar- gain price. Tel. 2-0610. Ponomi. WANTED Miscellaneous WANTEDModel "A" Ford, fair conditions, foir price. Call 2-2983 Balboa, after 4 p.m. WANTED:Electric refrigerator. 25 cycle, 4, 5 or 6 cu. ft. capacity, in excellent condition, but con- not be over 23 inches wide ac- count limited space. WANTED:A good cook that can olso do pastry. Very good salary. 50th Street No. 14, Apt. 1. WANTED:June, September, lody to coach young girl in English first year Junior High School studies preferobly ot student's home. Ap- ply Box 376 Panama. 250,000 Italian Civil Servants In Wage Strike ROME, April 24 (UP) An estimated 250,000 Italian civil servants went on strike for two hours this morning In three scat- tered regions In the first of a Communist-called series of walk- outs which the Reds have level- led protests against rearmament. Actually the strikes were call- ed for economic reasons after the Government refused to grant a 5,000 lire monthly ($81 wage boost to all civil servants. The anti-Communist unions l.ave refused to Join the strikes pending further negotiations with the Government. FOR RENT Houses FOR RENT: Spacious, completely furnished rtsidence built on 1600 meter lot, with 1000 meters of lawn and garden. Three bedrooms with two bathrooms, two servants quarters with servonts bathroom, large kitchen with breakfast nook, vestibule, diningroom, parlor, of- fice, garage, two terraces. Furni- ture is muted modern and in first , class condition. Located between Panilla and Panama Golf Club. Available for one year. Telephone 3-0255. FOR RENT: From Moy 16 July I 5, furnished 3 bedroom penthouse apartment "Riviera." 46th Street No. 19. Wright. " FOR RENT Apartments OR RENT:ALHAMBRA APART- MENTS. Modern furnished-untun- shed oportment. Contact office No. 8061. 10th St., New Cristobal. Phone 1386, Coln. :OR RENT: Two bedroom apart- ment living-diningroom; $-55 Key, 85 Cuba Avenue. Leaving for States in Moy for one year. Want to rent apartment while away. Inquire 1470-C Hol- den Street, Balboa after 4:30 p.m. FOR RENT:Quiet, well ventilated 2 bedroom apartment, each with bath, living-diningroom, servant quarters, hot water installation, good locotion. Bella Vista 44th St. No. 32. Apply Tel. 3-0815. FOR RENT: Furnished apartment best location, lorge balcony, 2 bed- rooms. Also bachelor apartment 1 bedroom, both. Tel. 3-1648 after 5 p.m. *" FOR RENT: Nice oportment for married couple or bachelor. Apply Perejil, House 7 "Maria." Tel. 3-1404. FOR RENT: Two bedrooms nice painted oportment. Servant quart- ers, etc. Bella Visto, Calle Colom- bia No. 8, Apt. 5. RESORTS Gramlich's Santo Cloro beach. cottages, furnished, electric, re- frigeration, moderte rates. Phone Gomboo. 6-541 or 4-567. FOR RENT:Foster's furnished cot tages, between Santi Clore ond Rio Hato. Phone 2-3'42. Panana or see caretaker. Willioms Sqnt Clara Beach Cottoges Two bedrooms, electric refrigera- tion. Rockgas ranges. Phone Bal- boa 2-3050. Except weekends. Phillips. Beach cottages, Sonta Clara Box number 435. Balboa. Phone Ponomi 3-1877 or Cristobal 3 1673. Casino Santo Claro no registra- tion, oops, sorry! NO RESERVA- TIONS NECESSARY! Enjoy bracing cool swimming at Panama's most beautiful beech resort. Doubles $4.00. FOR SALE Household FOR SALE: Complete household furnishings, "Salterini" iron set. mahogany bureaus, studio ceuch, Maytag washing machine, etc. Ca- lle 50 No. 30, first fleer. Tel. 3-0631, Panama. FOR SALE: 4 pc. Guatemolan livingroom, practically new. RCA. Radio. 9088, 10th St. Tel. 670, Coln. FOR SALE:GE washing machine, good condition, 1 rocking chair, mahogany China closet. House 1442-A, Owen St. Balboo. Phone 2-2624. FOR SALE:Mahogany dining table and 6 choirs, $90. Mohogony telephone stand with bench, $17. Kitchen table, $4. Mahogany end table, $8. Screen for beby room, $10. High chair, $10. 3 way floor lamp and shode, $10. Table lamps, $3 ond $5. Frigidaire, $75. Stove, $20. Can be seen any time. Call 3-3001. No. 6. 49th Street, "Fran- conia" Bulding,~Apt. 2-B. FOR RENT Rooms FOR RENT:Cool independent furn- ished room. Splendid surroundings. All conveniences, Bello Vista No. 13, 43rd Street. FOR RENT:Furnished room with or without board, to respectoble person, Bella Vista 48th Street No. 7, coolest ond nicest location. Clean independent furnished room for single man only. Bella Vista, Calle Colombia No. 8. Apt. 5. Tel. 3-0338. FOR RENT:Nicely furnished, lorge double clean and cool room mo- dern convenience. To respectable people. Peru Av. No. 65. Lower left. FOR SALE:Bedroom set, $250.00 Small diningroom set, $180.00. No. 21 West )7th Street, Apt. 15, Ponomi. FOR SALE:Philco 4.5 gerotor, duty paid. 2I5I-D Curundu. cu. ft. rffri- Reosonoble. FOR SALE:1 Moytag woshing mo- chine; I Vi yeor old. 1488-C Dor- mon Street, Balboa. FOR SALE: -r- Electric fon 15 inch. Electrolux all attachments, beam scole, carpenter tools and chest*, garden tools. Mony odds ond ends of use 0777-B Williom Place. Radio Programs Your Community Station HOG-840 Where 100.000 People Meet Presenfs Today, Tuesday, April 24 : 30Music for Tuesday : 00Music Without Words : 15Promenade Concert : 30What' Your Favorite 00PANA M U 8 IC A STORY TIME : 15Evening Salon :00BUgh of the Bounty (BBC) :30PABST SPORTS REVIEW :45Jam Session : 00NEWS (VOA) : ISWhat's On Your Mind (VOA) 45American Viewpoint (VOA) 00Jazz Club (VOA) 30Battle Report (VOA) ;45Sports World and Tune of Day (VOA) 00Variety Bandbox (BBC) 30Cavalcade of America (VOA) 00The Owl's Nest 00Sign Off. TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1951 1 K\ Tomorrow, Wednesday, April 15 A.M. 6:00Sign On, Alarm Clock Club 7:30Morning Salon 8:16NEWS (VOA) 8:30Morning Varieties 8:45Music Makers 8:00NEWS 9:1bSTAND BY FOR ADVEN- TURE 9:30As I See It 10:00NEWS 10:05Of The Record 11:00~NEWS 11:05Off The Record 11:30Meet The Band 12:00NEWS PJM. 12:05Luncheon Music 12:30Popular Music 1:00NEWS 1:15Personality Parade 1:43American Favorites 2:00Cross Country USA. (VOA)' 2:15It's Time To Dance 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:46Notes On Jazz 3:00Alistar Concert Hall 3:15The Little Show 3:30Music For Wednesday 4:00Music Without Words 4:15FRENCH IN THE AIR (RDF) 4:30What's Your Favorite 6:00MANDRAKE THE MAGI- CIAN 6:15Evening Salon 7:00Songs of France (RDF> 7:15EDDY ARNOLD SHOW (TD) THE PASSENGER LIST on the United Fruit Company's Cape Ann shows the couple above as "Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Liechtenstein." but their cards read "Prince Ferdinand" and "Princess Dorothy." The 51-year-old prince and his 55-year- old American wife sailed this afternoon for New York aboard the Cape Ann after a five-day visit here. They had arrived last Thursday from Kingston. Jamaica, and have been divid- ed their time between El Panama where this picture was taken, and the Hotel Washington. Prince Ferdinand says he is a cousin of Prince Franz Joseph II. ruler of the 65-square mile principality which, except for San Marino and Monaco, Is the smallest Independent state in Europe. His wife is a native of Missouri. The tiny principality from which Fer- dinand derives his titles nestles next to Switzerland, Is only 12 miles long, has a poupulatlon of about 13,000, no Army, and its post and telegraph system Is administered by Switzer- land. Yesterday the Llechtenstelns called on acting Gov. H. D. Vogel, whose spotless white suit looked somewhat subdued against the Prince's attire of a gav sport shirt, shorts and knee-length socks, and the Princess's gaylv colored peasant- type dress and apron, brim-down blue hat, tan sandals and brown ankle socks. With this, she wore gloves. The Prince carried a sun helmet. Congress May Press Crime Probe Deeper WASHINGTON, April 24 (UP) Democratic members of the Sen- ate Crime Committee today pro- posed establishment of a Federal Crime Commission and a Senate- House "watchdog" committee to carry on the spectacular Inves- tigation of nationwide crime. . It was their answer to a pro- 7:30_PAB8T SPORTS REVIEW Pal by Repblican Sens Alex- -Her. comes Louis Jordan'-^WHey^Wis. J^^ special Senate Crime Committee next Jan. 15. FOR SALE: Over stuffed choirs $15 a piece- firenloce electric lop serum $600. Kitchen table 4 chairs, $20, set of 4 tob'es gloss tope $25. Desk $25. Vacuum cleaner $25. Miscellaneous. 7040, 4th St. Coln. LESSONS THr l.firTVRr: CORP Phone 2-XU3 I his i ok SALE Down Pavmenl Site. Monthly Payment SIS LOTS on Paved Street trom SI 00 round leveling rte Rent lt op Long Terms e_Lgj_CluPS al S3 ana S4 Weekly Reckless Driver Pays $25 Fine Reckless driving the morning Of April 16 on Gaillard Highway cost Rogelio Antonio Pacheco. 30. Panamanian, a $25 fine this morning in Balboa Magistrate's Court. Zone police said that Pacheco's car was Involved In an accident at 4:15 a.m. near Fort Clayton. The car Pacheco was driving rammed Into a guard rail around several valve boxes on the right side of the highway, bounced off i his and into a guard rail on the opposite side of the road. Sometime In this maneuver a woman passenger in Pacheco's car was thrown out. She was not badly hurt, however. Pacheco is employed at the Dredging Division at Gamboa. Thousands Defy Government. Spread Walkout In Spain SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain, April 24 (UP) Thousands of Spanish workers today defied Govern- ment threats of dismissal from their Jobs and fanned their strike against the high cost of living. The strike reaches across the northern provinces of Spain. The Government cracked down | hard, ordering workers to get back to plants and shops im- mediately, or be fired. Widespread arrests are report- edly being made. The Government is exhorting the workers to Ignore "foreign propagandists" and "political agitators." Pope Plus XII has written the Bishop of Barcelona saying that difficulties for the middle clas- ses caused by Inflation and ex- cessive fiscal charges must be solved with urgency. The Pope's letter was written on occasion of the coming Catho- lic Social Week for Spanish Catholics. CONVERSAT I O N A L SPANISH" BY MRS. ROMERO. Wonderful System Estudiante St. 7 7-A. lovely Pains in Back! NERVOUS! Rheumatic! Vt rone; foods and drinka, worry, over- work, and frequent colda often put strain on the Kidneys, and Kidney a*4 llladdrr troublea may eauae ureas* Acidity. Strung. Cloudy Urine. flatting I |i Nights, Burning Paaaagta. Lea. Pains. Nervousness, nisalnea*. Swollen Anklea, Rheumatism, Puffy Evellda and feeling old before your time. Help your kldneya purify your blood with Cyetex. Cyetex goes right to work helping your kldneya > ways: 1. Cleans out poieonoug acida. I. Combats ger.ns In the urinary syatem. S. Hnothee and raima Irrltatae tissues. And thus you quickly get en tag road t* enjoying fife again. Oat Oystes rroaa your Oiugglei lad*/. A-Bomb Is Neither To Look At, Delightful To Know NEW YORK, April 24. (UP) The 1951 model atom bomb is a five ton mechanism resembling a big hot water tank with a round- ed nose, according to Look ma- gazine. In a copyrighted article the magazine said: "The completely assembled bomb is an ugly thing like nothing else on earth." It added that bombardiers can drop It with astonishing accur- acy. The article said the current version of the bomb is about 20 feet long, nine or 10 feet in dia- meter, weighs 10.000 -pounds and can bf set to explode 40 seconds after being dropped from a bomber. Describing a test run with an atom bomber of Strategic Air Command the article said the butt of the bomb tapers but ends in a flat disc surrounded by fins. A cylinder about four inches In diameter and two feet long Is at- tached to the flat butt. This holds the split-second explosion timer. The magazine quotes Ma]. Gen. Roscoe Wilson, deputy chief of staff on Operations for Atomic Energy: "I think it Is high time some of the ridiculous stories cir- culated about the A-bomb be killed and buried once and for all. "I have even heard that hun- dreds of thousands of American people fearfully believe an ene- my agent could board the Hobo- ken terry toting the bomb in a zippr bag and blow Manh*ttan clear into Brooklyn.". 8:00NEWS (VOA* 8:15Short Stories Theater (VOA) 8:45American Journal (VOA' 9:00COMMENTATOR'S DI- GEST (VOA) 9:15Jo Stafford Show (VOAl 9:30Radio Forum (VOA) 9:45Sport* World and Tune of Day (VOA) 10:00BBC Playhouse 11:00The Owl's Neat, 1:00Sign Of Explanation of Symbols: VOAVoice of America BBCBritish Broadcasting Corp. RDFRadiodilfuslon Franchise Vogel Will Head Radio Panel Friday Lt. Gov. Herbert D. Vogel will head a radio panel scheduled to dlsc.'ss the Veterans of Foreign Wars Loyalty Day program on a local station at 6 p.m. Friday, A- pril 27. Other speakers will include Commander E. J. Eglington of the VFW Department of the Ca- nal Zone; Frank Leahy, Loyalty fDay chairman; A. A. Hannberg, Commander of Post 3822; Rich- ard Harper, Commander of Post 40; Stephen Palmer, Chaplain of Post 3822; fid Scott, Command- er of Post 727. Mrs. Frances 8e- bastian. President of the VFW Ladies' Auxiliary of Post 3822, will represent the distaff side In the discussion. until ... The Senate committee is sche- duled to die the end of this month. One member said, how- ever that lt may briefly revive its hearings before then to ques- tion a number of witnesses who have become available since it ended its public sessions a month Some have been dodging ago 'The witnesses Include Rocco Flschettl and Murray (The Ca- mel) Humphreys, both Identifi- ed in committee hearings as leaders of the notorious Chica- go Capone syndicate. Air of them Conservatives Score Landslide Victory In Jap Elections TOKYO, April 24 (UP) The Conservatives scored a landslide victory in Monday's nationwide local elections, in which a post- war record of almost 40,000,000 Japanese participated. Political observers Interpret these results as reflecting con- fidence* in the United States Government's policy to conclude an early peace treaty with Jap- an. Tl.e Conservative government of Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshi- da has advocated all out support of the United States' policy while the Socialists and Communists have voiced opposition: Committee Pushes Boys1 Stale Plans Th Boys' State Committee of the American Legion, meeting yesterday at the Legion Hall in Balboa, furthered plans fir Boys' State, to be held under Legion auspices June 15-22. The program will be staged ;t either Fort Sherman or Fort Gu- llck, lt was announced following the meeting, rather than at Fort Kobbe, as originally planned. The committee is composed of the following Legion personnel: Director, John R. Barr, Chair- man of the Legion Department of Child Welfare; Secretary, Mrc. Evelyn Gardner, Department Ad- jutant; Police Counselor, C. Nor- man Little, Commander of Post No. 1; Inspector, Hans Pedersen, Department Commander; Publi- city Director, E. H. Reld, Com- mander. Post 7. and City Counso- or. William S. Loehr, Chaplain of Post 1. About 40 boys will be accommo- dated, the committee said. though lt Is possible the number may be increased if the presen; budget is augmented. It is planned to Invite the Com- manding General, U.8. Army. Caribbean, or his representative and the Governor of The Panama Canal, or his representative, to bo among the speakers. are under bond to Senate Ser- geant-at-arms Joseph C. Duke. ; Sen. Herbert R. O'Conor, D.J Md., formally introduced two re- solutions to create a 10-member Joint Congressional committee)) and a new three-man crime com J mission to work together on as) "full and complete study. lnves-J tigation and surveillance" of In- terstate crime problems. He acted on behalf of himself. Crime 'Committee Chairman Estes Kefauver, D Tenn., anoj Sen. Lester C. Hunt, D.. Colo- Kefauver has said he will noa serve on any new investigative body because of the press of! other Senate business. O'Conor said both Republican and Democratic committee mem-, bers are convinced that some* agency should continue the ex-i plosive investigation Into inter- state gambling and extend it to other phases of criminal activi- ties, especially narcotics and prostitution. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover opposes creation of a crime com- mission on grounds lt might lead to a federal police force. i Pacific Saddle Club Semi-Annual Dance Scheduled Friday The Pacific Saddle Club will sponsor another of Its very popu- lar dances at the Pedro Miguel Boat Club on Friday at 8 p.m. to midnight. The advance sale ot tickets assures a capacity crowd. Door prizes, spot prizes, chair and many other valuable prizes have been donated by the mer- chante of Panama. The Pacific Saddle Club de- sires to thank the merchants of Panama for their splendid sup- port and cooperation In helping this community project. Gerald's Orchestra will furnish, music for the dance. Everybody is welcome and tic- kets may be purchased for $1 by contacting H. W. Mundt, 2-1598 or E. B. Curling 4-382. LUX VENETIAN BLINDS Immediate Delivery. Tel. 3-1713 #22 E. 29th St. i TUESDAY. AFRIL 24, 1951 THE P MN AN INDEPENDENT DAlLi NEWSPAPER PAGE SEVEN > THE PANAMA AMERICAN * *~u* jarosa ssrr* sr*,NC- HARMODIO AMIAS. EOlTO" 17 M STRUT P. O OX 134. PNMA. B OF P. TtLCHONl PANAMA NO. 2-0740 '8 LINt> CAW.B AJOOII. PANAH^ICAN. PANAMA Ccuon MP.O, .2 .7. ewm Av.-ur ferwN an. j.o Uth t.,t. Fo.c.ON HEPMMNTATIVI JOSHUA O POWER. INC 34 MADISON AVB NW VOBK. 17 1 N. V. IOC! "- PM Mm. IN ADVANC I ' .? IS ,o. ix onth. im aovanct ?" 24 o& rol ONI VSA. IN AOVANCt, =w ^ Walter Winchell In New York Labor INewa And Oimment Gernimo! SALUTE TO A SOLDIER The rousing melodies of brass bands shatter the air and tin- gles dance tlpSt the spine. Fragments o ticker Upe execute ae- rial baltots... These festive occasions are as jubilant as the flags unfurled. Yet brass bands aiul ticker tape merely represent the inner pride that celebrates a holiday In the heart *?*% honoring great Americans are public expressions ofpersonal friendship The equivalent of a private handshake MacArthur not only a military hero-he Is the living symbol of a nation's greatness His glory Is national as well as personal Our pride In ni, SSmpltohmeSs Is as deep as his respect for the nat on he served Thus we render tribute to one of our most magnificent "idlers, who symbolizes the courage and devotion of every Am- erican soldier. A nan af great persc**TUfnity, he carries himself like a banner Stranger frequently have the imoression 'h-t be 1 stern and cold. Almost marble-like.. His friend know better 'AlacArthur compassion is deep and his sentiment honest: After sun-eying the nibble of war-wrecked Manila he weat. _______ British leader played a major role In forcing his dismiss- al Yet during World War ii the British Oov't expressed It* gratitude toward him when King George conferred upon him one of Britain's highest decorations: The Order of Knight Grand OIYou can wager not many members of the British gov't cur- rently belittling him have been similarly honored by their own nation. The papers have noted he was a member of the general court- martial that found Gen. Billy Mitchell gutty of Insubordination. But they haven't mentioned this: After the trial one curious Wash- ington correspondent examined the contents of the wastebasket in the judges' chamber. He discovered MacArthur had voted a- galnst the sentence!... When Mitchell heard about It he urged the reponer to drop the matter. However, that fact was known to several people. Including Mitchell's secretary and Fiorello My source Is Isaac Don Levlne's blog of Mitchell, "Pioneer of Air Power." published by Duell. Sloan ti Pearce In 1943. When he was Chief of Staff during the early 1930s MacArthur endeavored to arouse Congress and the people to the immediate necessity of establishing a mechanised army. His appeals for appropriations filled numerous pages of the Congressional Re- cord. .. Tragically, his appeals were Ignored. Working with MacArthur at that time was an officer who compiled and wrote the reports to CongressIke Elsenhower. * 'Any sane man who has experienced the agony of war despise* bloodshed. To accuse the General of desiring a Third World War Is as stupid as it is ridiculousand his accusers know it.. Just one year ago he declared: "All responsible leaders know that no one can gain by another war; the pot- ential of destruction is so great that, win or lose, It would be almost committing suicide.'' He has a skeleton rattling around his closet: MacArthur has composed poetry. Sshhh!... When he was a dashing young lieut- enant he wooed his lady fair with the following poetic love letter: Fair western girl with life wvhlrl... Of love and fancy free... Tls thee I love... All things above .. Why will thou not love me? > The ordeal at Bataan made the most profound Impression upon him. His triumphant return there was a tribute to his military geniusbut what he endured during the tortuous days before the Japs overran Bataan will forever remain a monument to his personal valorand the courage of those who fought with him He said this about the soldiers of Bataan: "No army has ever done so much with so little, and nothing became It more than its last hour of trial and agony." Ha has become a legend during his lifetime. And what Is more notablehe Uves up to it. A biographer once observed his career is a series of bests, firsts, mosts and onlys. That fact Is stressed by several highlights: He was the youngest general In World War I, youngest superintendent of West Point, youngest Chief of Staff. But any American mother will tell you his greatest accom- llshment was attaining victories with low cost in human life, hroughout the Pacific campaign his primary objectives were not only victoriesbut methods of obtaining them with the least cas- ualties. .. When he was criticized for moving too slowly and urged to throw more soldiers Into battle. MacArthur responded: "I will not take by sacrifice what I can achieve by strategy*' Thr General twice protested against FDR's orders to leave Bataan. The third time he was forced to go... It was a matter of military expediency. During those dark days FDR was desperately anxious to bolster the morale of Australia and New Zealand. That It why MacArthur was ordered to leave. His handling of Russian representatives In Japan should as a model for dealing with Communists. He was aware that they respect only forceful methods and acted accordingly... A Rus- sian General was once arrested by U.S. MPs in Tokyo for reckless driving. When released, he demanded an apology from MacAr- thur... The following day MacArthur called In the officer in charge and asked If the Russian General had violated traffic laws. When he was assured the violation had happened-^MacAr- tur snapped: "Tell him there will be.no apology I" When the Red General heard about MacArthur's attitude, he roared with glee: "What a man!" His most vigorous critic cannot deny his genius for lead- ership and the intense loyalty he Inspires.. He was caught In an open field during a bombing of Bataan. Two of his orderlies tried to protect him with their bodies by forming a human shield.. MacArthur was forced to order them to leave and seek shelterwhile he remained to observe the type of planes the Japs used and how they maneuvered. -------* Fortv-eight years ago a young cadet received his lieutenant's bars at West Point. He was told, as are all West Point graduates, that upon him alone might some day evolve the fate of his coun- try, and he was told for the honor of the corps never to fall that trust... Gen. MacArthur wears his answer to that solemn res- ponsibility in' the form of a small blue ribbon with white stars above all others on his tunic. It Is the Congressional Medal of Honor for devotion above and beyond the call of duty In the face of an armed enemy. None is given for an even higher type of braverymoral courageor he would be wearing that. too. His countrymen, by their tumultuous welcome, are trying to convey to him a message: That the tiny stars he wears on his uniform are one Important reason there are still 48 in the Flag. Welcome home, General! THIS IS YOU SQUUM THt APERS OWN COLUMN THE MAIL BOX By Victor Rieei There were more pictures -of General MacArthur hanging in Sovletlzed Clhnese cities this past week than there w* de- corating San Francisco, Wash- ington and New York. But the photos were touched up to give nlm an evil leer. And the cap- tions marked him as Red Cni- na's public enemy number one. There were thousands of tnese laked photos of "The Old Sol- dier" In every Red war factory, above every vital machine. Each picture was labeled by the Rea propaganda ministry with a captain reading: __ -This machine will smash y"ur factory Is our battlefield and our machines are our wea- "^For the truth is that our na- tion and our people have not yet learned what the antt- Communist underground oper- atives on the Sovletlzed Chi- na mainland know and that Is that the FefpWiPro- paganda ministry has told th< Chinese that they are actual! at war with u and that aen. MacArthur stiff < the one man tcho can destroy the Oriental Conttnjorm. AH over China these slogans go up on factory walls and down fnto mine shafts In every ptant, workshop and mill, select work- er brigade leaders." Just back from special briefing sessions to Peiplng, grind out these anti- American war slogans saytag, In effect, that the "elimination o one more defective product means the "elimination O" one more American soldier. Reporting back to the com- bined phco-prpaffftnf1*;mDV tary headquarters, staffed by Russian experts in Pe.pmg. the Red Chinese workers adre asenta have said recently that the "new (war) atmosphere now Pervades all Industrial enter- prise!" That quote is from a Peipfng document smuggled on the mainland. At the same time, the flying propaganda squads have been ordered to set up regional head- quarters of something called the Rcsist-Amerlca Assn. On April 2 the Red rovers were able to dis- MUh word that unions and St'h? Communist fronts would soon run thousands of Resist America" rallies W all plants, immediately, they received or- derTw "carry out similar educa- tion among the broad mass of labortag people in the villages." ' But the Russian propaganda experts are hardly ones u let t0 ftX'kindo, equa- tion o/ the Orient's P^e,f the Orient's loathing of beg- ging, o/ the Orients aware- Sthat its civilization and strength have crumbled nithe dust of 5.000 years o) archaic dynasties that General Mac- Arthur ripped open in hU Speech. It is the, Russia** ost powerful weapon. And they're using it. Htie WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND y DREW PEARSON Dream World By JOB RUARK FACtTIC-lTnxE LEAGUE Sir: The Pacific Little League wi.-li - es to take this means to thank ail those who contributed to the success of rmr benefit show at tir: Ancor theater last,. Saturday night. Special thanks go te the skilled and captivating dancers of the Ruoff Troupe and their di- rectoi. also to the personnel of the Moving Picture Division cf th* Clubhouses. it unexpectedly heavy or- prvrint of Little League wril- i:hers made a hasty revision of the program necessary The Ru- off Troupe willingly put on their act a second time to accommo- date the overflow, thereby assur- ing the League maximum finan- cial returns for the evening. Alter certain minimum ex- penses were deducted, am) mately $283 was realized for ihc- Pcclflc Little League. As the need arises this money will be spent for the benefit of all the youngsters In the league. Veiv truly vours W. M. Hamma. President Pacific Little League Every factory and workshop must now have Its "speak b t- erness meeting." There, top Chnese workers are ordered to recall their miseries In the old so^tety and contrast their past tiering with their present prospects." And to toe Chinese who doesn't see Red China through rose colored to""- Nor does this todoctrination ol hatred stop here. Hatred must swiftly be reconverted into pro- Son of guns. So, linked with the "speak bitterness" rallies, is something new the Patrlotto Emulation Campaign. Jo this factory fanfare, with a fancy nameI call special attention Fsnecially do I ask the workers m toe Ford, General Electric and U. S. Steel planU to look closely. fc Our workers are about to be besieged by American Com- munist literature urgtng them not to produce swiftly for war. Well, let me tell you about the Red Chinese "Patriotic Emula- tion Campaign" whicn means, in plain old U. s. a. talk, a cruel, sweating speed- up schedule ichich iclll break the backs of the Chinese workers. It's double talk for new pro- duction schedules, which, If set in an American plant, would provoke screaming from the Comrades. ' It means that all Chinese workers must now keep pace with a set of "Labor Heroes" such as Chao Kuo-you, in the Number 3 plant of the Mukden Machine Tool Factory. wro turns out more tools than most humans could, even In Toledo cr Cleveland. And then, there Labor Hero U-yung. who has driven the Mao Tse-tung Loco- motive 200.000 miles without a breakdown. And if all this Labor Hero worship doesn't exactly enthuse the Chinese into breaking their backs, then there's toe picture Of General MacArthur pasted above toe machines. That's sup- posed to get them real mad for the Communist agit-props have labeled him the Comln- form's public enemy number one. Such flattery. I'm certain Is well deserved. (Copyright 851. PAihHall Syndicate, Inc.) NEW YORK. As mentioned before, there are some decided advantages to illness. For ex- ample, Gen. MacArthur and I got back home at approximately the same time he from Japan, me from the fuzzy fastnesses of fever-and-anti- biotlc no-man's land. I was therefore spared the early MacArthur-Truman harangue which swept the countrv after Capt. Harry flreo the general, and came fresh to the general's presen- tation of his position before the lolnt session of Congress. MacArthur's speech has been tagged as a masterpiece and needs no extra comment. But the thing that hit me hard, as a recent, rela- tive stranger to the times, was a restresslng of reality from which we seem to have flown far. I felt mighty like Alice with a foot full of look- ing glass. The general mentioned that war's very object Is victory, not prolonged Indecision. You would think we all recognize that as the primer por- tion of the copybook, but that Is not how we have operated In Korea. We have become used to a part-time, stylized conflict, with no logical conclusion in sight a war of shifting, arbi- trary rules, made by civilians In safe places and nurtured on the blood of Innocents. It suddenly looms as extra-ridiculous that a Chinese Red is a legitimate adversary so long us he attacks on other people's real estate, but must not be chastened on his own ground for fear of fomenting war with the same people with whom you are already at war. This passeth understanding, since we have been at technical war with Red China since the Chinese poured across the Yalu River. It makes no sense to MacArthur that Korea, which we chose as a ward for our personal pro- tection, should serve as a football field for the battle, while "the enemies' sanctuaries are fully protected from such attacks and devastations After the clarity of the MacArthurlan prose, It would appear we have been living in a Jabber- wocky world for some time. I dreamed some pretty fancy and illogical dreams when the fever was chewing at me. and the miracle drugs were working their own pe- culiar miracles, but none were more fantastic than toe picture of Douglas MacArthur, fired summarily by his commander In chief, come home as a hero, to the slavish adulation of his nation. * It makes a peculiar tableau at that the Pre- sident sulking and lonely at the White House, while his constituents and his legislators heap honor on the man he has attempted to degrade and discredit. It made a funny picture, too the little man from Independence sending his court Jester, Harrv Vaughan. to meet one of the half-dozen Immortal military aenulses of our history, when Truman himself has wasted vast Presidential time on nonentities who just hap- pen to fall under the category of crony. MacArthur got out of Washington without Presidential audience this again a weird hap- penstance when one considers that our nearest living Immortal was home for the first time in 14 years, after his triumph of conduct in the Pacific war and in the occupation of Japan. Truman made no gesture, and MacArthur did not feel it necessary to approach the throne with his gold hat In nis hand. Thev tell me that at first there was a feeling that Truman was a prettv gusty kid for firing the hitherto inviolate MacArthur. but after the MacArthur speech before Congress the President emerged not so brave as pettish and bullheaded and childish. A. _. My feeling was that here was a child who, lr. a fit of temper, decided to announce his dis- belief In Santa Claus. on Christmas Eve. But nothing makes a whole lot of sense these days not when a midget has to fire a giant in or- der to make th* giant loom taller and the mid- get shrink smaller. ^^^_________ Matter Of Fact By JOSEPH ALS0P THE DEADLY CHAIN WASHINGTON.Both President Truman and Gen. MacArthur sometimes seem like actors in a Play, who have learned their Unes well but who can have no real Influence on the outcome of the drama. Certainly, ever since the Korean aggression, each event has had an inner logic of its own, leading Inexorably to the next event, inespective of the views or wishes of Presidents or Generals. What has been true of the past may well be true of the future. Consider how logical, even hi retrospect in- evitable, has been thr progression of events leading up to our present situation: l.i The United States withdraws Its troops from Korea, and the government adopts the policy that South Korea Is neither militarily defensible nor strategically essential. Given the nature of the American state, it was inevitable that this policy should become known in detail to the Kremlin. Given the nature of the so- viet state, which demands toe expansion of So- viet power wherever the risk does not appear too great, the Korean aggression was then also i tip v it&blc 2.) Faced with the reality of aggression, ra- ther than an imaginary contingency, the Amer- ican government instantly and inevitably re- cognized that successful aggression in Korea would lead straight to disaster. With almost unanimous national support, Truman committed American power to Korea. 3.) Sooner or later, American power was sure to destroy the power of the North Koreans- Once this was done, the militarily meaningless line of the 38th Parallel was sure to be cross- ' 4> Given both the fears and the ambitions which Communist doctrine engenders, it was then at least logical that the Chinese Commu- nists should Intervene It was logical that sur- prise and numerical superiority should give.the Chinese Initially a great military advantage. And it was logical also that mobility, fire^wer and air domination, all of which the Chinese lacked, should then swins toe military advant- age apiinst the Communists. ... 5.) It wps then logics! that the Soviets should try to make up these deficiencies, by supplying the missing components for a successful; offen- sive transport, heavv weapons and offensive air power to their Chinese satellites. This the Soviets have now aonarentlv done. This is where we stand now. Fortynatelv for the sanity of the hum-in race, he future'Is; un- 'knowable. But consider the steps which couia logically derive from the present situation, whatever President Truman or Oen. MacArthur may propose or desire: 6.1 The use of offensive air power for the first time behind our lines could have the most serious consequences, as Gen. fatratemeyer has hinted. If the consequences threaten to be suf- ficiently serious, toe Manchurian air bases will certainly be attacked, as both Truman and Mac- Arthur well know. 7.) Having once extended the war to Chinese territory, it will then be logical to hit Chinese supply lines and even cities; to blockade the China coast: to support the Nationalists: and to take all the other steps which MacArthur fa- vors. Again, as Truman and MacArthur know, elaborate plans lor dding all these things if it becomes necessary have already been made. 8.i This will be the great turning point. But judging from the Chinese precedent, the Rus- sians will then logically intervene, whether openlv or in some thin disguise. This will lead to a third World War. It Is President Truman's position that some- where between 5i and 6), or at least between 6) and 7i. this deadly chain of logic can be broken. But he does not say at all how this is to be done. Jt is Gen. MacArthur's position that 6) and 7> can be undertaken with decisive effect, and without bringing on 8i. But he gives no convincing reasons for believing either that the effect will be decisive, or that the Russians will not Intervene. , But what is clear from the foregoing is that events, rather than the views of MacArthur the united States alone cannot break the chain simplv because the United States cannot and will not adoot a policv of appeasement or sur- render. Yet the chain may vet be broken. Events are sure to force some sort of showdown, probablv soon. When It comes, the showdown must be with the real masters of the situation, the men in the Kremlin, rather than tneir s traps in Peiplng. / .. ... . Those best ouallfled to judge still believe that the Soviet rulers do not want war. If only be- cause atomic war would surelv destroy their re- gime Thus if it is made crystal clear that tne dismissal of MacArthur Is not the nrelude to ap- peasement: that a reasonable Korean settle- ment which does not reward aggression Is never- theless Dosxlble: and that the ultimate alterna- tive U a third World War. there is still a chance for peace. It mav even he a booh chance (Copyright. 1951, New York Herald Tribune Inc.) Drew Pearson says: Senator Vandenberg shortly before he died felt discouraged over our foreign-policy disunity; Vandenberg once refused Chicago Tribune's demand that he run for vice president; Senators quiz Truman's speculating military doctor. WASHINGTON.The last time I talked to Senator Vanden- berg was In December, shortly after toe tragic December defeat in Korea. Following this, certain GOP Senators had gone hog- wild against the bipartisan foreign policy, and I phoned Van-, denberg In Grand Rapids to see if he had any ideas about get- ting that policy back on an even keel. A couple of friends were then trying to get Truman and Taft together for a personal, face-to-face talk, minus publicity, In order to pull our harassed and sadly disunited foreign policy cfl the partisan rocks. Telling Senator Vandenberg about this, I asked If he couldn't help. Perhaps a statement from him, or a phone call to Senate leaders would start the ball rolling. But Vandenberg was skeptical. "The boys have the bit In their teeth." he said, "and I doubt f anything can stop them. No matter how many times you call them to the White House to discuss foreign policy, I doubt if It would do any good. They wouldn't stay put." He seemed tired, old, and quite discouraged. Looking back' on what has happened since then, I can see that he was right. Vandenberg went on to say, in our telephone conversation, that when he was actively in the Senate, there were constant conferences and genuine teamwork between the State Depart- ment and his Foreign Relations Committee. As a result of-tnU teamwork, the North Atlantic Pact had been written and rewrit- ten about seven times. "It really was a bipartisan foreign policy then," he said. ^But there doesn't seem to be the same relationship now between! the State Department and the Hill." Part of this, I suspect, was due te the fact that Vandenherg himself was no longer in harness. For his grasp of foreign falrs was as great as his prestige in the Senate. VANDENBERG AND MCCORMICK History will attribute many great things to Arthur Varftlen- bergincluding passage of the Marshall Plan and the North At- lantic Pact. But perhaps Vandcnberg's greatest achievement*was the ability to change hls-mind. Some statetmen can't do that. They get rigid and Immobile. ' Vandenberg once tola me how, during the 1936 Republican convention in Cleveland. Col. McCormlck of toe Chicago Tribune had come to him late one night to urge that he run for -vice president on the Alf. Landon ticket. McCormlck was then'ex- tiemely close to Vandenberg. Both were strong isolationists, both saw eye-to-eye oh most Republican policy. The Michigan Senator, however, refused. The incident illus- trates the closeness of their friendship, which later was breken hy Vandenberg's desertion of the isolationist cause. That was the biggest political change in Vandenberg's jlfe. With V-E Day, he saw that atomic weapons, long-range rockets and big bombers had ended the traditional Isolation of the IJnJted States. Abruptly, he deserted the Chicago Tribune bandwagon. The Tribune, In turn, never forgave him. To the very end? Its most scathing cartoons were directed at Arthur Vandenberg,|the turncoat. In civilian life, the American people do not usually*" fete their political heroes. The politician is so close to the people that they see all his imperfections. He has to battle dally in' the public arena where he gets soiled by the mud and Invectivfc of political combat. His statements cannot be censored; the photo- graphera snap him as they will. But though no pomp or circumstance honored toe closing days of his life. Arthur Vandenberg deserves all the tributes the American people can give him. He will go down as one ol the gieat political heroes of our day. SPECULATING GENERAL A General whom the President did not fire, but recently promoted, came In for hot-cross examination behind the closed doors of the Senate Armed Services Committee. He is MaJ. Gen. Wallace Graham, the President's personal physician, who was caught speculating on the commodity market. Despite this, he vas promoted by Truman from brigadier to major general. Snapping back at heavy GOP cross-questioning, General Gra- ham testified: That he has stopped speculating on the commo- dity marketsince he was caught by the Senate Investigating committee in 1947...He spends "an average of two hours per day" with President Truman to keep him in physical trim...It was Maj. Gen. Harry Vaughan who got him his White House job...He parachuted into .Europe with the paratroopers and was wounded three timesthough he only bothered to collect one Purple Heart. The GOP cross-examination was sparked by Senators Know- land of California and Cain of Washington. Both asked search ins questions about Graham's "meteoric rise'' from a first lieu- tenant in 1941 to a brigadier general In 1948. The promotion to brigadier general came In September. 1946exactly one year alter he had been appointed President Truman's personal phy- sician. Knowland also wanted to know how Graham happened to get his White House Job. Graham admitted the approach from Gen- eral Vaughan. denied he had known Vaughan previously, J>ut said he had spent considerable time in Missouri. It was 8enator Cain who asked Oraham about his giain speculating. However, Graham not only reported he had stopped speculating but claimed he was living on his military salary. Democratic Senators Russell of Georgia and Johnson of TejcaJ came to Graham's defense, pointing out that the Senators had an admiral it*. George Calven on duty full time to watch "put for their health. Johnson also started identifying the ribbons on Grahams chest bringing out his war record as a field surgeon In the end. Knowland was the only Senator with courage enough to buck the White House and vote against Ora&ains promotion. . CRIME REPORTER The Washington Daily News' crack reporter. Milt Berilfter. not the last laugh on Congressman James Davis Georgia Demo- crat Berliner wrote a series of articles, critlclztag Davis weak crime probe into the Capital underworld, in which it appeared to some that Davis was pulling his punches. " Berliner's articles so got under Davis' skin, that le compon- ed to Berliner's editors ___ . The other day, however, Davis' chickens came home to rjost vnen Berliner received a Newspaper Guild award for his sgtos on Davis Significantly, the judges included Sens. Margaret Cku*. Smith of Maine and Mike Monroney of Oklahoma, both forgier colleagues of Davis. (Copyright 1951. by The Bell Syndicate. Inc.) PAGE EIGHT THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER TUESDAY, APRIL U, 1*51 Canal Zone School Activities B.H.S. Notes By Louise Glud Again the juniors take top billing, and this time it is for their remarkable work that made the Junior-Senior Banquet and From o 1951 the most memorable affair this year for the gradu- ates. A special thanks are due for the committee that was under the chairmanship of Coila Qoodin. The committee members were Bill Yerkes, Mary Adclia Morley, Sam Maphis. Fred Lee, Leona Hart, Betty Wilkinson, Tibby Nolan Murray Falk, Shirley Karst Virginia Selby, Anna Galloway, Clair Godby, Sheila Fearon Beth Lockrlge, and Anne Morrill. _, ... Before the eating stage of the Banquet, Junior Class President .Irwln Frank welcomed the Class of '51 to the Stardust Room and hoped thai everyone present would enjoy themselves. Then Terry Ford, Senior Class President, took the stand for 3ust a minute and offered his thanks in behalf of all seniors for the Banquet. He also mentioned that it was appropriate at the an- nual banquet for the graduating class to present some token of gratitude to the juniors. However, since the Class of '51 Is different, the presentation of this gift will not be made until June 5. the day of graduation. A few clues were given concerning this gift. It will be some- thing, useful not only to the juniors but to all BHSers. Terry con- cluded his speech with a remark concerning the gift. It was, "Good Other speakers that evening were Superintendent of Schools i)r. Laurence Johnson, and Senior Class Advisor Mr. Harold J. fierten. The banquet hall was given the name of the Stardust Room. All about (-littering silver stars peeked from behind deep blue backgrounds. However, the. main stars were those r that framed the individual pictures of seniors. These were ' high in the sky above the head table. A dreamy and heavenly effect was given to the room of the great Milky way by chang- ging colored lights. Even the menus were sprinkled with sil- verv Stardust that spelled Junior-Senior Banquet, 20 April : 1951. . Inside the menu booklet was a message from Irwln Frank to The Senior Class of 1951. So that all may know the feeling of the Junior Class, the message is reprinted below: - "The senior class for whom we. the juniors, are putting on this banquet, is one with many talents, sprouting ambitions, and satisfying accomplishments. It is a class of fine people. The seniors, who have been our rivals from the time we were fresh- men, are probably the finest set of rivals we glorious Juniors will ever have the honor of encountering. "Now, however, Is the time when the 1951 seniors are to re- ceive small white papers with black lettering on them which be- gins with the words, 'Let Ik be known to all men here present...! Believe it or not, this diploma represents four years of hard work. "On the other hand, were they hard? True, there were many long hours of solitary meditation or study which was sometime followed by an occasional disappointment when those familiar re- ports cards came out. But then there was that 'last word' under the clock just as the final bell was going to ring tor classes to start and, of course, the perpetual shower at that certain fountain every time anyone took a drink. There were the football games, dances, assemblies, and the yet to come "Tug of War." "It is with these pleasant and undying memories plus a lump In our throats that we, the Class of '52. bid you. the graduating class of 1951 of Balboa High School, farewell, and wish yon hap- piness and success in everything you do throughout your lives." We, the seniors, also find a lump In our throats when we real- ise the nearness of that parting day. We feel that leaving you the juniors, and our freshmen and sophomore classmates is Tike loos- ing our best buddy. And we do not relish the thought. We shall al- ways, through the manv years to come, cherish our days with you In our alma mater, Balboa High School After drying my tears, I would like to go on and say the "Banquet Bugle," published by the "Zonian" class, also re- called to mind our four years at BHS. The Last Will and Test- ament plus the Class Prophecy made each and everyone think of liis iprcinl traHs mid future plans. There is only truth In the statement that all Juniors and seniors thought that the Banquet and Prom were JubI "won- derful.". An invitation was extended to the students of BHS to pay a visit to the USS Missouri on Sunday. The four classes, freshmen sophomores, Juniors, and seniors, visited "Mighty Mo" at various time intervals. Thank you, Commander Halloran, for extending the invitation to us teen-agers. Nancy Ladd, Barbara Jones, Doris Brad- ley, Lee Brooks, and Dick Seeley were among those who enjoyed themselves touring the USS Missouri from stem to stern and visit- ing the spot where Japan had signed the unconditional surrender. Nominations for Student Association Council were being made last week and this. Voting for the officers will take place in the very near future. Seniors, however, sre not permitted to vote since they will not be attending BHS next year. The tentative list of can- didates Includes Sam Maphis, Clair Godby, Fred Lee, Irwln Frank Ray Davidson, Mike McNevin, Ray Tucker, Dick Dillman, and Ri- chard Abbot for president; and Bill Dawson, Eddie Arm latead Bob Peacher. Ted Norrls, and Noble Holiday for the second highest ot- flce of vice-president. Today at 2:20 a pep rally was called In the new Lower Gym in preparation for the first basketball game of the season for BHS The game is also In the Lower Gym at 7:00 tonight against Canal one junior College. Hn^vir^h6,11!3" boysare out to wln ar>d they have what it takes. However, the team needs rooters and they know only too well that they depend on the student body of BHS to be in the grandstands yelling them to victory. With the splendid write-up about two of SH'iif?!" ,m,eKmbers in the PANAMA AMERICAN, there should be no Sm v -piiS f are "l.orewihaun JuSt the peD 8QUad rootln? '' ur boys. There .s also no doubt that the Balboa Basketball Bovs are gonna fight tonight so that they can come out on top y After they beat College tonight, they will meet their nrher i ponnents Cristobal High School-lthls Friday night P" After Friday night's game, there is going to be an nomine dance of the "Red Door" in Diablo. The "Red Door" is new ?h\nC' hu'octe> l h blo Clubhouse. The dances held SnW"Ib(e sJ,onso'ed "y the SA. It'll be loads of fur?" ^ffi$UXS^*%&. ThlTea^'r ? thtt 85 TSK FtffStf Z^JSSST^tB College Corner By Martha Irvin We got the basketball season off to a good start last Friday night with our game against Cristobal High School. We didn't win but, as the saying goes, we put up an waful good fight. CH8 was definitely favored, but by the end of the first half it looked as if J.C. might surprise everybo- dy and come out on top. It was a fast game, moving up and down from one end of the court to the other. Trout was showing off his usual basketball whiz, and those McArthur boys were really some- thing to watch. Oh, but everybody played a wonderful game. It wjs just heartbreaking that the final score had to be 33 to 40 in favor of CHS. They were quite a few J.C.ers out at the game, comparatively. But there were still an awful lot of you who didn't come. There are a lot of you who Just don't bother to come out to the games. In fact there's one boy who al- ways comments on the prodding this column gives to folks to come to the games, but who never shows up. What's the matter with you people? Ain't you got no loy- alty? Now let's see vou all at the gam?tonlte. We are paving Bal- boa High School, and think of what m excuse it makes for not doIn- homework! Most of J.C. did turn out to sea the play last Wednesday and Thursday nites. We were glad to hear that the "dorm boys" thought so much of It they ca'nle to see it both nltes. The show really went over with the audi- ences and Mr. Turbyflll certainly deserves the proverbial orchids. He really did a good job of knocking that cast into shape. And that's just about what he had to do sometimes. Of course the cast deserves some applause too. But they had enough fun do ing it to make up for the lack of glory here. AXtei the final show Thursday night, the cast and all the stage crew went out to a bar-b-que (that means hamburgers) to ce- lebrate. There they sat going over the whole thing like the foot- ball team used to replay the games in the Lounge. Dru Mc- Connell bemoaned the trials and tribulations of making those bibs and tuckers for all the vickers; Tom Peterson was still holding his Jaw where Larry Parks carried away aiyl really slu$*etl him and so It went on into the night. Then up bright and ear'y the next morning to tear down the scenery. And another good show bites the dust. A lot of the folks from J.C. turned out to see the Missouri and the other ships while they were here last week-end. Sunday some of them went on a minor Coo'-.s tour of the Missouri. That's quite an impressive ship. Did you know that every time they fire one of those big sixteen-lnch guns It costs the same as a brand new Packard? Yup. And with the navy flooding the town, Frances Far- rell (of the ankle-dangling fame) and Knee Knee Dorgan rode a- rounc town "singing" the old basketball cheer "Knit one, pearl two. Navy, yoo hoo!" What fun! M 3 Our ex-J.C.-fellow-lnmate, Jim Roddy is up In Gorgas Hospital now. He had an operation on lib leg last Friday, and is expecting another one soon. It Is possible that Jimmy may need some blood, so you folks with lota of blood you'd like to give awav, keep posted on Roddy's progress. Oke> And if you've got lota of spare time going to waste, whv not drop in and see him. It gets awfully boring up there flat on your back. Two other ex-J.C.ers are get- ting married soon. Jean Bolln is becoming Mrs. Testa this Friday night at the Cocoli Episcopal Church. Phyllis Malson will be- come Mrs. Flynn next Wednes- day up in Florida. Well, best of luck and happiness to you, lean and Phyllis. Edna Curies has been honored several times lately for her forth- coming marriage. The latest was a surprise shower out at Gamboa at Colla Goodln's house. Edna is really being showered with all kinds of lovely things for h M marriage. And there's no one we would rather shower! Well, fellas, there's a dance comltig up this Friday that aro- mlses to be a peach. It's the Gamma Chl's Barn Dance. This is Tuesday and that is Friday so let your dates right away. They have gotten up a cute little floor show and everything for It. So get a move on. While you're at it, you mlRht get a date for the banquet too. It's going to be on May 18, in case you haven't seen the. posters and the date box will be out soon. So get your dates soon. C.H.S. News By Jane Compton , These days are busy days! No one has time to do anything yet somehow it all gets done. There wasn't even time to write School News but here it is. The S. A. candidates for the coming school year were chosen by the Nominating Committee In room 102 on Monday. Some additional members who were petitioned by the students were considered for the ballot. The candidates for President are: Bob Bulley, Yolanda Diez, and Noel McGinn; for vice-president Betty lair, Carl Pinto, and Nancy Karlger. Francisco Wong, Nellie Holgerson, and Joanne Recela are in the running for seoretary, and Charlie Thompson, Vllma Rodriguez, and Robert Cranberry lor treasurer. Campaign plans are in the making. To date there is calmness which may develop into soap-box speeches etcetera any moment. Even the senlori can't resist voicing opinions. Seems strange to believe they won't be here next year. Seniors! Caps and gowns will be distributed May 1. Please turn in rental fee of $2 as soon as possible to Albert Attia or Dick DuCote. Honor Society members who wish to buy their tassels should bring an addltolnal thirty-five cents. Officers for the Atlantic Side Teen Age Association were'chosen and the results were as follows: Jacquie Boyle, president; vice-president, Nellie Holgerson; secretary, Betty Tarr; and treasurer, Talmadge Salter. The dub was open for members on Saturday night. The Art Honor Society met to discuss the plans for their annual Apache party. Each member Is to bring a guest of the opposite sex. The scene of the party will be the Margarita teen- age club, which will be decorated as a French tavern, a fitting place for a gay rendezvous. Virginia Fahle Is in charge of the guests, Rita Fisher Is in charge of the French dishes and Andy Lim in charge of decorations. Diane McLaren Is in charge of programs. Miss Worrell and the rest of the members are looking forward to the night of the 27th. The Thespians met to discuss plans for an operetta next year. There is much work in back of a production like this. Sing- ing and dancing talent must be found. A short assembly was held Tuesday afternoon. There were plans to present two short plays, but the one the ninth grade English classes were to. give was cancelled, because one of the members of the cast was absent. Anyhow a fine performance of "The Trystlng Place" was enjoyed by everyone. Parts were taken by Bob Granberry, Martha Graham, Pat Howard, Dick DuCote, Kathryn Daniel, and Jack Randall. In the line of sports CHS. played three games against Col- lege this weekend. On Friday night our Junior Varsity beat the College Junior Varsity by a score of 39-19. Following that game our big Varsity played a very exciting game against the College Varsity. The boys really gave the crowd a thrill; the score was too close for comfort In one spot. Finally C.H.S. came out on top with a score of 40-33. On Saturday morning the College girls' softball team came over to slug It out with our "A" League Allstars. It drizzled, but the weather cleared and they played It out to a 23-10 victory in favor of Cristbal. Irma Leignadlrr, our little pitcher, made a home run on a line drive down third. Hannigan and Boyle also made the home run list on errors. The "21" Club has been enjoying free soft drinks for five days. The drinks were generously donated by Mr. Tagaropulos, who was impressed with the showing the "21" Club gave at the Rotary meeting. The Varsity Club had a meeting on Wednesday to discuss new membs. The girls decided to let some girls In at the end of this year, a new policy which was initiated for the senior girls who won't have another chance to Join the Varsity. The names haven't been decided upon, but those girls who have made at least two all-stars this year will be Initiated. That about culminates the news of the week. Don't forget the big, important event of the year comi/.g up in the near future: the Junior-Senior Prom on May 5. Hale Story Is Basis For CZJC Broadcast On HOG Next Sunday A esser-known story by a fa- mous short story writer provides the basis for the radio broadcast to be given by the class In drama- tics, of Canal Zone Junior Col- lege'Sunday at 7 p.m. over sta- tion HOG. Panama. Edward Everett Hale, author of "The Man Without a Country" and many other outstanding sto- ries, wrote "My Double and How He Undid Me," which will be g!*- en by six men and five women of the theater group of the college, under the direction of Subcrt Tuibyflll, and by special arrange- ment with Len Worcester, station manager of HOG. This Is the third and final dra- matization in the series of "les- ser-known stories" by famous au- thors given during the present theater season by the college dra- ma group. It is also the sixth pro- duction of the current season and will oring the ninth season to a close. All theater patrons will be a- greer.bly entertained with a most unusual comedy when they tune ft for "My Double and How He Undid Me" over station HOG Sunday at 7 p.m. St Lukes Spring Festival Lists Full Afternoons Fun Jap War Criminals Listed For Parole TOKYO. April 24 (UP)Seven Japenese war criminals will be Raro led from Sugamo prison ere effective May 3. This will bring to 242 the number of war criminals who have been permitted to serve on- ly a portion of their sentences under the SCAP sponsored parole plan. Using by permission the spe- cial call letters KZ5KZ of the Canal Zone, R.M. Howe, local "ham" radio operator, will de- monstrate to the public how a "ham" station works at St. Luke's Spring festival, which will open Saturday, at 3 p.m. at Mor- gan's Gardens. If atmospheric conditions per- mit and the wave band behaves, spectators may get a chance to talk to someone In their home town. The operator will make "spot calls" In an endeavor to pick up "ham" stations In the States. Listeners will hear calls com- ing in over the laud speaker, and those lucky enough to be present when and if contact Is made with a home station will have an opportunity to talk. There will be pony rides for children, arranged for by Col. and Mrs. A.A. Dobak. Three ponies, lent by Horace Pires, will be led over a track on the old railroad embankment on the far side of the garden. At 7:15 p.m. Corporals Jerry Sherman and Ellis Fortune of the Station Hospital, Fort Clay- ton, will open a G.I. Jam Show Corporal Sherman will also ap- pear at Balboa Stadium Friday evening. Arrangements for the G I Jam Show have been handled by Corporal A.S. Levlne. Dart games under the direc- tion of Corporal David Hutch- ings may be played during the afternoon hours. Other attractions are a super- vised wading pool for mat children, "Free the Goote," i Fortune Telling booth, movies fa, children and adults, community singing, and country dancing. Plant and bake sales will b*> conducted during the afternoon. The country store and rellgioua bookshop will open for business at 3 p.m. Also for sale at the re- ligious bookshop will be prints of the facade of St. Luke's Cathe- dral and All Souls' Chapel and Columbarium, now being cons- tructed. A white elephant auction will be held at 5:30 p.m. Balloons, "cokes," hamburgers, hot dogs, coffee, and Ice cream will be sold. urged rde Camera enthusiasts are to bring their cameras, garden tours having been arranged for by Mrs. "Pat" Morgan. General admission to the fes- tival Is twenty-five cents, child- ren under twelve being admitted free if accompanied by an adult. Tickets may be obtained at Bishop Morris Hall, from mem- bers of the parish, or at the gate. High Blood Pressure If Tflat. t>tM,l D..______..___ If Hlajh Blood Preaeure makes you dlaay, have pair around noarl. haadachea, abort breath, In- dication, palpitation, and swollen ii ' you c"n ' ,r"' Inatane reliar from these dangerous ayrnp- toraa with HYNOX. Aak your chemist for HTNOX today and real aara younsar In a raw daya. Today-CENTRAL Today FORBIDDEN TO MEN! ... SECRET PARADISE OF PAGAN BEAUTIES! And Torran speeds to tho rescue, whan whit* man's vil strikes! W0MLUR MK. SHEFFIELD [fia ama L,ana/ K^iubhouses- Showing Tonight BALBOA Alr-< tindltlnned 111! l:ts Caaar ROMERO June HAVOC "ONCE A THIEF" Wed. A Than. "THE ML'DI.ARK" A N C O N 5:1 A 7:1 Rory CALHOUN Jane NIGH COUNTY FAIR" (Color) Thursday "FAGLIACCI" COCOLI f:15 ltd Robert YOUNG Bev DRAKE "ELLEN" Tharsday "DARK CITY" GAMBOA (Wednesday! Gary COOPER Ruth ROMAN 'DALLAS" (Technicolor) G A T U N :N Marshall THOMPSON s> Vlrajlnla FIELD "DIAL 1119" Friday "THE MAGNIFICENT YANKEE" MARGARITA :I5 7:15 William BENDIX Una MERKEL "KILL THE UMPIRE" Wednesday "FAUST AND THE DEVIL" CRISTOBAL Alr.l ondio.-nad :I5 a !:! Ida LUPINO Howard DUFF "WOMAN IN HIDING" 'Wad. a Thurs. "IN A LONELY PLACE" Air-Conditioned LUX TODAY! A Marvelous Picture! Among All-Time Best! "THE MAGNIFICENT YANKEE" with Louis Calhern Ann Harding Latigh! Love! Kiss! TOMORROW! "GROUND FOR MARRIAGE" Kathryn Grayson, Van Johnson, Paula Raymond Opening THURSDAY! LEEJ.COBB and JANE WYATT JOHN DALL vho (heated himself A 20TH- CENTURY FOX Plclural TROPICAL Today and Tomorrow? | Starting THURSDAY! WANIA lltl KM MRPN, HENMIX IVES MKE! CENTRAL King of The Jungle JOHNNY WEISSMULLER, in "TARZAN AND THE AMAZON' LUX THEATRE SPECIAL RELEASE! Dramatic...! Sensational...! He fought for the love of his country and his wife! 'Magnificent Yankee" BELLA VISTA When love Is wild. Ufa la violan) and death Is cheap! FAITH DOMERGUE, in CECILIA THEATRE oso ROMANTIC COMEDY IN TECHNICOLOR I... Esther Williams Van Johnson John Lund t Paula Raymond, In "DUCHESS OF IDAHO" _____with Lena Home Eleanor Powell_____ TROPICAL THEATRE TWO DAYS RELEASE! Don BARRY Ella RAINES, in "RINGSIDE" A Picture Stained With Blood! ENCANTO THEATRE Air Conditioned AT :00 P.M. WAHOOI $115-00 in Prizes! Also: Yvonne De Carlo. In "CALAMITY JANE AND SAM BASS" Douglas Fairbanks. Jr. In "TheFihnfO*F^nn" TIVOLI THEATRE Rosa Carmina, in "TRAICIONERA" with Fernando Fernndez "Araares Para Tu Boda" CAPITOLIO THEATRE BANK NIGHT! JZtO.Oe to the Public! At 9 p.m. Also: "WOMEN FROM HEADQUARTERS" and "Good Men of Abilene" VICTORIA THEATRE William BendU. In "GUADALCANAL" James Cagney, in "WALK IN THE SUN" i< 11 I si 411 ( SZKATlE DID IT7 Starring _ 'ANN BLHH-MARK STEVENS asaCECt KUAMr-imMaTOUR STHOB A UnMURSAl INTERMTIONAt PICTURE * , ' K tit It THE FUNNIEST SCANDAL THAT EVER WRECKED A SMALL TOWN!... THURSDAY 2 PICTURES AL80: FIRST ANNIVERSARY * THE GREATEST WAR PICTURE EVER MADE! IT RIPS THE HEART TO SHREDS AND TATTERS! AIL QUIET ON THE s.0-,0, LEW AYRES LOUIS WOLHEIM I l_ IHH auu HI.UOIJII .>! D.KaJ kv IIWH MS* t"WI k-~fH. / LOS C'GARRILLOS CAMEL presentan MARIA DE JORGE ISAACS Adaptacin de In. Santo*. RED PANAMERICANA ____ A Us 1:15 de Is n*he. Sff t O A _) JtiB PanamaAmrtca DIARIO [(DEFENDIENTE DIVULGAMOS LA VERDAD QUE LOS DEMS OCULTAN TUBERA galvanizada r i" -1" H" r AGENCIAS GLOBALES Via Espaa 121 TeL 3-IMS I I* u I 'H ARO VIGSIMO SEXTO PANAMA, R. r.. MARTES, ABRIL 4, 151 CINCO CENTESIMO Se ampla la brecha abierta por los rojos Han perdido los rojos 15 mil hombres Persiguen la destruccin de los aliados a cual- quier costo TOKIO, bril 24. El General Matthew B. Rldg- way dijo que "todo parece Indi- car que la ofensiva comunis- ta es un nuevo esfuerzo del enemigo para sacar a las fuer- zas d las Naciones Unidas de Corea, o destruirlas, sin tener en cuenta la destruccin de sus propias fuerzas y la continua devastacin criminal de Corea". Rldgway se encontraba visi- tando a Corea, y dijo a los periodistas que se encuentran sumamente complacidos con las tremendas bajas ocasionadas al enemigo. Clculos no oficiales Indican que mas de 15,000 sol- dados comunistas han sido muertos o heridos en las pri- meras 24 horas de la ofensiva. Rldgway dijo que se encon- traba en Corea porque es "la responsabilidad bsica del Co- mando" de encontrarse en el campo de batalla cuando lab fases potenciales y decisivas de una batalla ocurren. Dijo que el Comandante Supremo debe estar en el campo durante el desarrollo de las "fases decisi- vas" a fin de obtener de los Pasa a la Pag.. 2. col. ) No se encuentra el el presupuesto de modo de Rentas balancear ^ un cos* e8Ca^^"anle se cierne la amenaza de que se corte la ruta Suel-Chunchon ) Gastos Hay conflicto de criterios en el seno de la Comisin Legislativa que lo estudia No debe alarmar el caso de fiebre habido en Bocas El Director de Salud Pbli- ca, doctor Roberto Sandoval in- form en la maana de hoy que solo se habla registrado un caso de fiebre amarilla en el pas, y qu estudios realizados por una comisin de expertos en fiebre amarilla de la Zona del Canal en Bocas del Toro, haban confirmado qre la si- tuacin no era de alarma. Que era probable que en los meses de agosto o septiembre, huble- (Pasa a la Pgina fc. Caltwna 7> Por cuatro votos gan su primera prueba el Gabinete de G. Bretaa Aneurin Bevan, quien renunci un Ministerio, se mantuvo leal al Partido Laborista Una grave situacin se plan- te en el seno de la Comisin Legislativa en la maana de hoy, al surgir una "Impasse" en el seno de la misma cuando una mayora de los comisiona- dos se pronunci en el sentido de no aprobar un recorte par- cial de sueldos, por conside- rarlo una Injusticia en vista del alto costo de la vida. Un voce- ro de la comisin declar que en caso de que se llegara a la medida extrema de rebajar los sueldos sta debia afectar al Presidente de la Repblica, a los diputados a la Asamblea Nacional y a los miembros del Poder Judicial. Como quiera que a estos dos.ltimos grupos no se les puede rebajar los suel- dos si no es por ley, la medi- da no podra llevarse a cabo. Por otra parte, no hay am- biente tampoco para eliminar ms empleos, y lo que es ms grave, no hay entradas sufi- cientes para pagar la suma a que asciende el proyecto de presupuesto, segn los Informes (Paaa a la Pg. . coi. i) Al Tesoro de la ciudad de Coln deben B/. 32.000 COLON, abril 24. Del Te- sorero Municipal seor Teodoro Navas L., hemos recibido el si- guiente comunicado que damos a continuacin: "Despus de una revisin ge- neral de las cuentas de todos los contribuyentes del Distrito, el suscrito ha realizado que s- tos adeudan al Fisco Municipal, et concepto de Impuestos atra- sados, la crecida cantidad de ms de treinta y dos mil bal- boas. Como es fcil comprender una situacin semejante, no puede continuar por tiempo Indefini- do, mxime cuando entre esos comerciantes morosos hay al- gunos que deben Impuestos de un ao y hasta dos. Nadie Ignora que el comer- cio colonense atraviesa por una era de estrecheces y dificulta- des; el suscrito tesorero, cono- ce perfectamente esa situacin y por ello est listo a entrar (Pasa a 1 Pg. 2, col. C) Decreta el Gobierno el cierre de la emisora ;Radio Nacional' que funciona en esta capital Por orden del Ministro de Oo- Ingenieros Prescott y Valds. blerno y Justicia, la Polica Na- cional suspendi a las 12.05 mi- nutos de hoy, el funclonamlen- Al tomar esta decisin, el Mi- nistro de Gobierno y Justicia se pronuncia en los siguientes tar- to de los transmisores de la | minos en la Resolucin que so- "Radio Nacional" (Emisoras HOQ yHOQQ) hasta tanto pue- dan ser corregidos completa- mente defectos reportados por los seores Richard D. Prescott, Ingeniero Tcnico de Comuni- caciones y Ramn Valds, Jefe de Radiocomunicaciones. Por medio de dichas emisoras se transmite el radio-peridico "La Tribuna", rgano de pro- paganda del Partido Revolucio- narlo Independiente (PRI) La clausura de la emisora, cuyas oficinas y plantas se en- cuentran ubicadas detrs del almacn "5a. Avenida", en la Avenida Central, fue ordenada por el Mayor Camarena, que se present acompaado por los n "Alerta Completo se realizar en la Zona del Canal El Comandante en Jefe del Caribe, Teniente General Wi- lliam H. H. Morris Jr., anunci hoy que muy pronto se or- denar un estado de "Alerta Completo" para probar los pla- nes de movimiento y despliegue, en una maniobra militar total, de las Fuerzas Armadas de los Estados Unidos estacionadas en la Zona del Canal. El General Morris declar que este ejercicio se ha distingui- do con el nombre de "Opera- cin Cracker". "Hemos trazado un ejercicio de campaa que requiere la participacin de to- das las Fuerzas Armadas en la Zona del Canal. Nuestras fuer- (Pasa a la Pg. . Col. ) LONDRE8, Abril 24 (UP) Aneurin Bevan apoy al Gobier- no anoche en la primera prueba a que se ha visto sometido el Gabinete Laborista desde que Bevan renunci al Ministerio de Trabajo, y ayud a derrotar la propuesta Conservadora. La propuesta Conservadora para anular el aumento de ta- rifas ferroviarias fu rechazada por 207 votos contra 203. Bevan encabez la revuelta dentro del Partido Laborista contra el Primer Ministro Cle- ment Attlee, pero anoche el di- rigente del ala Izquierda del La- borismo indic claramente que no se propone provocar la cada del Gabinete y hacer posible que los Conservadores de Wins- ton Churchill tengan oportuni- dad de conquistar el poder. Aparentemente, Bevan se pro- pone seguir la misma poltica que sigui el Conservador An- thony Edn en 1938 cuando abandon el Gobierno de Neville Chamberlain por no estar de acuerdo con su poltica respec- to a la Italia de Mussolini. Eden. Pks a la Par Col. > Pagando un 50% ms Inglaterra recibir de la Argentina 200 mil toneladas de carne anual Fue herido por un polica en Coln un maleante ayer COLON, abril 24. (AM). A las 4:30 de la madrugada del dia de ayer fue herido mientras se daba a la fuga. Ignorando las voces de alto de la polica, Harmodio Murlllo, quien fue sorprendido mien- tras se dedicaba a robar en la casa 8054 de la Calle 11 entre Avenida Melndez y San- ta babel. El mencionado sujeto fue he- rido mientras trataba de es- capar despus de Ignorar los disparos hechos al aire por el agente No. 1199 Jorge Morales, quien lo persegua. An despus de herido logr eludir a su perseguidor solo para ser capturado minutos ms tarda cuando se present (Pasa a la Pg. I. Col. ) CIRCULACIN PAGADA AYER MAS DE 22.300 BUENOS AIRES, Abril, 24 (UP Tras nueve meses de eslar suspendidos los embarques de carne argentina a Gran Breta- a, los dos pases han firmado un contrato mediante el CtfJ estos se reanudarn. Gran Bretaa recibir ahora un mnimo de 200 mil tonela- das al ao, pagando aproxima- damente un 50 por ciento mas Las siete semanas de nego- ciaciones las ms difciles y secretas en la historia entre los dos pases dleson por rebul- tado la firma protocolar del Tratado de Comercio Anglo-Ar- cntlno de 1949, que hace ur este documento ms prctico y icll de cumplirse. Argentina logr que se acep- tarn la mayor parte de sus puntos de vista, pero por o.ra parte los britnicos no tendrr c,ue suministrar tanto petric.-, carbn y hojalata. Gran Breta- a reducir sus embarques e petrleo de 5,550,000 toneladas a 4,000,000, presmese que te- niendo en cu entra las perspec- tivas en la zona de Irn. El carbn disminuir de 1,- 500.000 toneladas a 500,000, y la hojalata de 30,000 toneladas a 27,000. El protocolo fu firmado a las 5 de la tarde de ayer por o Canciller Argentino Hiplito Pas y el miembro del GablniU Britnico, John Edwards. El Tratado originalmente e, Estrena el jueves la Republicana el pasillo "Don Pepe" La Banda Republicana estre- nar en su concierto del Jucvi-r estrenar un pasillo, del cual fc3 autor el Director de la inii- ma, el maestro Eduardo Chai- pentier, dedicado al Ministro de Gobierno y Justicia, Jfs Clemente de Obaldia. La nueva produccin d?l maestro Charpentler se tltala Don Pepe", y sin duda alguna >,ue ese da concurrir una e- norme cantidad de pblico fti Parque de Santa Ana para es- cuchar sta nueva pieza m'-oi- cal, ya que segn hemos so informados es una de las me- jores creaciones del Director de ia Banda Republicana. Siete criminales de guerra nazis morirn ahorcados WASHINGTON, abril 24. (UP) Siete nazis criminales de guerra morirn en la horca, al negarse el Tribunal Supremo a considerar el recurso de ape- lacin presentado por su abo- gado Warren Magee, con ofi- cina en Washington. Los nazis fueron condenados por los tribunales militares de Alemania, quienes los declara- ron culpables del asesinato de miles de paisanos durante la segunda guerra mundial Todos ellos son ex-oflclales de las tro- pas de asalto y funcionarlos de los campamentos de concentra- cin, quienes debieron ser eje- cutados el 13 de febrero. La ejecucin se suspendi por Intermedio d e 1 Departamento de Estado mientras el Tribu- nal Supremo estudiaba el ca- so. Previamente dos tribunales federales hablan rechazado sus apelaciones. El rechazo del tri- bunal cierra el caso y de hecho confirma la orden de ejecu- cin. En el cementerio de la pri- sin de Landsberg en Bavie- ra, en donde se encuentran es-' perando el resultado del fallo, se han abierto dos veces las fo- sas para los sentenciados, es- perando su ejecucin. Magee adujo que los senten- ciados ya no son extranjeros enemigos porque Alemania Oc- cidental coopera con Estados U- nldos en la defensa comn dei occidente europeo, y que la nue- va Constitucin de Alemania, aprobada por los aliados, pros- cribe la pena de muerte. Adujo tambin que no hablan tenido trato legal equitativo en los tribunales militares que los Juzgaron, y de los tribunales federales secundarlos que re- chazaron sus recursos de ape- lacin. En enero pasado las au- toridades aliadas revisaron las sentencias de otros condena- Drsticas disposiciones se adoptan para construccin de aceras en lotes y casas -..-' El Alcalde Municipal del Dls-de sesenta (60) das a partir trlto, Licenciado ngel Vega Mndes, ha sancionado un a- cuerdo del ayuntamiento por el de la sancin del presente cuerdo. Artculo segundo: Vencido el cual se dictan disposiciones re- trmino establecido en el Art. anterior, el Alcalde del Distrito ordenar la construccin o re- aracln de las aceras, segn uere el caso, disponiendo que latlvos a la construccin y re- paracin de aceras. Las disposiciones son del si- guiente tenor: Articulo primero: Todos los propietarios de bienes inmue- bles situados dentro del radio urbano o dentro del extra-ra- dio, segn lo delimiten los A- cuerdos Municipales, estn en la obligacin, bien se trate de casas o de lotes, de construir y reparar las correspondientes aceras en un plazo no mayor P llu-n, tii t,oov/i uiain/iiixiiuv uwv la obra se ejecute dlrectamen- Jori Wcn y que esta bre el particular fue dictada esta maana: "Desde hace varios aos, con bastante frecuencia, se han ve- nido presentando quejas con- tra las transmisiones de dichas estaciones HOQ y HOQQ, de- bido a deficiencias de los trans- misores y a negligencia del ope- rador, que en muchos casos no es un tcnico en la materia. Todo ello constituye violacin de los decretos Ejecutivos y a los principios generales adop- tados en Convenios Internacio- nales sobre radiodifusin". La Resolucin dice que "Las estaciones HOQ y HOQQ no renen en la actualidad el m- nimo de condiciones para efec- tuar sus transmisiones sin In- terferir con otras estaciones de Panam o del exterior, y tam- bin con los receptores de los radioescuchas vecinos del lu- gar donde estn instaladas". Los chinos envan regimienta tras regimiento qu "se resbalan en un charco de sangre" TOKIO, Abril 24 (UP) Ur- gente. Miles de comunistas cuinos avanzaron entre 18 y 20 millas a travs de una .f- cha en la linea de las Naciones Unidas en Corea, y amenazan cortar la vital carretera 3cl Chunchon bastante al sur el Paralelo 38. Regimiento tras regimiento c'.e chinos, incluyendo la caballera continuaron pasando por la Me- aba que se abre ms y ms en el frente central, y lograron a- vanzar a diez millas y mo U sur del Paralelo a un costo t>- calofriante para sus propias ti opas. El General James A. Van Fleet, Comandante del Octavo Ejrcito se apresur a enviar efuerzos en un Intento de con- tener el avance rojo antes que sta atrape a las fuerzas de ias Naciones Unidas en cualquicia de los flancos. Justamente al oeste de la biecha, una columna de las Na- ciones Unidas se abri pase Jcl encerramiento en que se en- contraba al sur de Chorwon, a 17 millas al norte del Paraie.u y masacraron a casi 700 chin'* a quienes emboscaron en el ta- lle. Un informe dice que IM sobrevivientes chinos "se rea- balaban y caan en pozos da sangre" mientras trataban d# sacar a sus muertos del valle. (Pasa a la Pierna b. Columna 71 Los universitarios discutirn sobre el alza de matrcula En el dia de ayer se rer.l el Comit Central Ejecutivo del Llrectorlo de la Unin de Eva- cuantes Universitario para dis- cutir lo relacionado con la ulti- ma decisin de la Administra- cin de nuestra ms alta Casa e Estudios de aumentar la uU tricula en un ciento por ciento. Se nos ha pedido informar a todos los estudiantes unive. si- tarlos que se abstengan de m&- incularse hasta tanto no se llegue a n acuerdo definiti- vo en tal asunto y aslmii..o estamos en capacidad de afir- mar que odo el estudiantado universitario Ir a la huelga S e* necesario una vez que se de- crete una Convencin en el pro- ximo mes de Mayo para diluci- dar una vez por todas, todas les fallas de la Administracin uni- versitaria. B Dr. Laureano mismo ya tiene ms esperanzas RIO DE JANEIRO, Abril 24 (U. P.)La vctima de cncer, Dr. Napoleao Laureano, le dijo a la prensa que le acreditaba su me- Don Fabio Arosemena El ltimo superviviente del primer Consejo Municipal de Panam, Instalado en el ao de 1903, don Fablo Arosemena, celebra hoy su cumpleaos. Al registrar esta nota social, nos complace presentar a tan Ilustre patricio nuestras feli- citaciones ms cordiales. te por empleados municipales o por Intermedio de contratis- tas particulares. Articulo tercero: El valor del trabajo ejecutado en las con- diciones del Articulo anterior ser pagado por el propietario remiso a su Justo precio, acor- dado ste mediante consulta del Alcalde del Distrito con las per- sonas o empresas dedicadas a los trabajos de construccin. Artculo cuarto: En caso de que el propietario comprendido en los trminos de los artculos anteriores no cancele* el gasto ocasionado en el trmino de R das, la deuda contrada se con- siderar de plazo vencido y el Municipio recabar su pago me- diante el ejercicio de la Juris- diccin coactiva y entrando en gos ocasionados por el juicio, la liquidacin final los recar- gos ocasionados por el juicio. Artculo Quinto: De confor- midad con lo establecido en el Artculo No. 44 de la Consti- tucin Nacional y en vista de que en la actualidad hay va- rios propietarios de casas y lo- tes en el Distrito i capital a quienes se les han construido aceras por cuenta del Munici- pio que se niegan a pagar el Importe respectivo, se les con- cede un plazo Improrrogable de cinco <5i das a partir de la sancin de este Acuerdo para que cubran el monto de la obra ya realizada. Si asi no lo hi- cieren se proceder a su cobro por los medios legales al alcan- ce de la Tesorera Municipal, la cual entregar esta suma a los contratistas que realizaron (Pasa a la Pgina 8. Columna ) lipulaba que Gran Bretaa re- dos a muerte y libraron de la 'Pasa a la sagiwa t, cal. > horca a 21. Los mdicos particulares ya no atendern ms casos de T. B. C. por cuenta del Seguro Social La Caja de Seguro Social ha expedido el siguiente comunicado: A partir del le. de Mayo prximo, los asegurados que reciben rdenes de tratamiento per T.B.C. de esta Insti- tucin en esta ciudad, sern atendidos en el Dispensarle Anti-taherculoso situado en Avenida "A". Las horas dt atencin sern en la tarde a partir de las 2 p.m., EXCLU- SIVAMENTE para lo asegurados de la Caja, pudiendo escoger les pacleates su mdico entre de la lista de pro- fessesMlee *ue van a prestar ese servicio. En consecuen- cia, la Caja de Seguro Social a partir de esa fecha no extender sas rdenes de tratamiento per T.D.C. a m- dicos particulares en la ciudad de Panam. La atencin mdica que se prestar en el Dispensarle EXCLUSIVAMENTE para lea asegurados ser completa j abeetatamente gratuita. Paaasa, Abril 24 de 1S5I. CAJA DE SEGURO SOCIAL. esperando las instrucciones de su descubridor, Stevan Durovic desde Chicago para aplicarse la segunda serle de Inyecciones. El Dr. Laureano, quien ee un cancerlogo, y haba abandona- do todas las esperanzas de se- guir viviendo, ha continuado me jorando desde que se le aplico la primera serle de Inyecciones el 5 de Abril. Laureano dijo que los dolores haban cesado y su temperatura es casi normal, agregando que si no fuera porque tiene la pier- na derecha enyesada "se pa- rarla y caminarla." Dijo que es demasiado tempra- no para predecir los resultados finales, pero expres la creencia que si la droga no cura comple- tamente, por lo menos prolon- ga la vida varios meses. Arrestos por centenares se realizan en Espaa para sofocar los paros Pero no hay todava indicios de que los obrero proyecten regresar a sus labores SAN SEBASTIAN, Espaa, Abril Gobierno les ha pedido que no ------ -wi-------------_ ie hagan caso a los 'propagan- Aun que diga q no ser candidatizado el Gral. MacArthur WA8HINTON, Abril 24 lUP) Los grupos que gestionan que MacArthur sea candidato pre- sidencial en las prximas elec- ciones, estn siendo organiza- dos en todo el pas y los elec- tores se negarn a abandona! esos empeos "aunque el Ge- neral diga que no". Esa es, al menos, la opinin de Ervin He- neaste, Jefe del movimiento "MacArthur para Presidente" en Washington. Hohensee sostuvo que a pcar que el General Dour,las Mac- Aithur ba declarado que no de- sea ser candidato poltico, sus partidarios creen que si se de- sarrolla un movimiento de gran- des proporciones en su favor, "el General tendr que acce- der a los deseos del pueblo". Hcicnsee, quien ha estao.e- cido su oficina aqu, infor.no c sldente" han sido organizados en las ciudades de Denver en Colorado, y Aaron y Canton en Ohio. Agreg que saldr esta sema- na para Nueva York, en don.'c establecer una oficina del C'.-.b en un hotel neoyorquino. Ho- hensee trat infructuosamente que MacArthur fuera candida- to presidencial en 1948. i (UP) El Oobierno comen- z a detener las huelgas en ti noroeste de Espaa, pero to- dava no hay indicios que Us trabajadores han regresado a us labores en grandes canti- dades. Los Gobernadores Civiles en .as provincias de Gulpuzcou y Vizcaya han ordenado a los fl- oreros a que regresen a las la- bncas Inmediatamente o sern despedidos, y agentes del Go- bierno estn efectuando arres- tos en gran escala en amoas provincias. En la poblacin In- dustrial de Mondragn se han arrestado a 50 personas En las calles de Vergara, To- ln y otras poblaciones de la piovincia de Guipzcoa se han visto refuerzos policiales por .as calles. El Gobierno ha nombrado al Juez Juan Esteve Vera en Bil- bao para que juzgue a los dl.l- rfentes del movimiento en Viz- caya, indicando que se han e- icetuado muchos arrestos. Va- rios cientos han sido arrestados cu las recientes huelgas de Barcelona. Al exhortar a los obreros a jue regresen a sus trabajos, el distas extranjeros" y los "agi- tadores polticos". Registra mejora la salud del ex- Mariscal Petain ILE D'YEU, Francia, abril 24. (UP). El ex-Marlscal Philip- pe Petain, aparentemente est mejorando hoy dia de su cum- pleaos, el nonagsimo quinto. Miembros de su familia di- cen que la bronconeumonia que contrajo Petain el 7 de abril ltimo, casi ha desaparecido por completo. Pero el que fue- ra durante la pasada guerra Jefe del Gobierno de Vlchy si- gue en estado grave y los m- dicos se siguen mostrando 'muy reservados'. Petain, quien cumple hoy 85 aos de edad, ha recibido ya los ltimos sacramentos de la Iglesia catlica. El boletn emi- tido esta maana por sus m- iPa >% Pe Col T Por desicin popular escogen el domingo a la seorita que reinar en la Feria de Coln COLON. Abril, 22 (BPF) - Entre las siete candidatos cic- gldas el sbado pasado en ia ciudad de Coln para el Rema- do de la Feria de Mayo, se en- cuentra la bellsima y encan- tadora Srta. Virginia Rodrguez, candidate de "El Panam /.inrlca"- Ante numerosjslma eoncu- unca en las salones del Jar- da Monaco fueron elegidas, a- jtmas de la mencionada seno- uta, las siguientes Jvenes bel- dades: Srta. Olga Lelgnadlti. Candldata del Club Interamcl- cano de Mujeres; Srta. Giocon- da Apolayo, candldata de La hitrella de Panam; Srta. fan- cy Sasso. candldata de "El Pau" Srta. Margarita Barcenas, can- dldata de los cadetes latinoa- "Esenciales" son consideradas las fajas elsticas WASHINGTON, Abril 24 U?) Las fajas elsticas son con- sideradas esenciales para l>l mujeres, y por lo tanto el Go- bierno ha anunciado que u..a ran cantidad de ellas sciun abricadas durante Mayo y Junio. La Oficina Nacional de Fn- duccln ha anunciado que h concedido un diez por ele..to ms de caucho para artceos n.trcanos de la Escuela Mi..- j civiles esenciales en Mayo ,ue lar de Fort Gullck; Srta. Tlic< .na Castillo, candldata del Cl ar- de Leones; y Srta. Alicia Wcng, candldata de la Sociedad Cvi- ca Chlricana. De' entre este grupo de elwta ser elegida la Reina de la Fi- na, en acto que tendr lu;,-r el prximo sbado. Las seis rei- nantes pasarn, a formar paite de la corte de honor de . Reina. (Pasa a la Pg. f. Col ) ei concedido en Abril. La mLa.a cantidad ser concedida en Junio. Al anuncio significa que ias reservas de caucho para cop- sumo civil sern casi lo mls.no que el promedio mensual de consumo durante 1940-50. Los productos civiles "esen- ciales" Incluyen llantas para camiones y tractores, correa maquinarla y tajas elstica para mujeres. PAGINA DOS El PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE MARTES, ABRIL 24, W51 PanamaAmrca MARIO INDEPENDIENTE HARMOOIO AMIAS. omiCTM CDITORA PANAMA ANMICA, a. A. Tilifono 2-0740 (CtNUtiL Privada i Apartado Postal No. 134 |N U1 TALLERES SITUADO EN ESTA CIUDAD. CALLE H. NO 57 LA REBAJA DE SUELDOS Se considera ahora en la Comisin Legislativa Permanente la conveniencia o la inconveniencia de hacer una rebaja general de sueldos con el objeto de reducir los gastos del Estado a la cifra en que ge han calculado sus rentas. Se estima que es in- dispensable para esa finalidad que el recorte sea de unos tres millones de balboas para el resto del presente ao. Es evidente que el mtodo ms sencillo para obtener la reduccin que se busca consiste en fijar el porcentaje necesario que deba rebajarse. Es una operacin elemental. El sistema es simplista en ex- tremo. Su resultado matemtico ha de ser ms o menos exacto. Pero sus repercusiones en la econo- ma nacional y en la eficiencia de los servicios p- blicos han de ser desastrosas. Los empleados p- blicos, por regla general, hacen mucho menos de lo que estn llamados a hacer. Con la rebaja de sus sueldos harn muchsimo menos. Por otra par- te, es tan alto el costo de,la vida y son tan bajas las asignaciones oficiales que stas quedaran re- ducidas a raciones de hambre. Bien est que se contemple una rebaja general de sueldos cuando una empresa ha puesto ya en prctica otras medidas de economa y stas deben ser realmente de mayor alcance. Pero iniciar las economas con disminucin de salarios en una po- ca de elevados costos envuelve un grave error. La situacin que se producira sera poco menos que insostenible. Como todo mundo sabe el Estado mantiene ser- vicios claramente innecesarios y como es un hecho palpable que an dentro de los servicios necesa- rios hay muchos gastos superfluos, lo prudente es efectuar los recortes con eliminaciones de esta ca- tegora. Y no se diga que es difcil determinar cu- les son los gastos superfluos. Ellos saltan a la vista, por as decirlo. Cualquier jefe de oficina sa- be o debera saber que en su departamento abun- da material de donde se pueden hacer recortes sus- tanciales que, de llevarse a cabo, produciran una mayor eficiencia en la labor administrativa. No debera cometerse la injusticia de aplicar una medida de carcter general y eminentemente gravosa que envuelve un castigo para los emplea- dos eficientes que estn ya mal remuneradas y en ciertos casos recargados de trabajo. La solucin, como se ha dicho muchas veces, es otra. Se encuen- tra en la eliminacin de los gastos superfluos y en una mayor efectividad en la percepcin de los im- puestos existentes. Y no debe soslayarse el problema. Grave error sera aprobar un presupuesto que autoriza eroga- ciones que no pueden cubrirse por falta de entra- das. El pas ha sufrido ya la dura experiencia de gastar ms de lo que produce. "La amenaza comunista es global" declar MacArthur en el Cong reso ESCUELA PRACTICA DE COMERCIO MBFRTARIA DE MEL y UASTON FARAUDO P. Directores Profesores Cursos d> Perito Comercial. Secretariado Contabilidad. Estenografa Gregg. Mecanografa. Ortografa v Redaccin, Aritmtica Comercial. Ingls. CURSOS SUPERIORES: Contabilidad Avanzada, Taquimecanografia y Problemas de Auditoria. MATRICULAS ABIERTAS S P.M. a 8 P.M. LAS CLASES COMENZARAN EL 2 DE MAYO. Avenida A No. 48 Telfono 2-2921 La matrcula de la Academia Mercantil contina abierta para lodos los cursos Cl'RSOS NOCTURNOS: Mecanografa B/.3.00 Esteno- grafa B/. 3.00 Contabilidad B/. 3.00 Taquimecanografia B/.5.00 mensuales. ESTENOGRAFA A MAQUINA (Esteno- tipia. Fcil de aprender. En cuatro meses puede escribir y transcribir hasta 100 palabras por minuto. Venga a pre- senciar clases y a conocer las mquinas cuando guste. Are. Central altos Farmacia Preciado Tel. -0227 WASHINGTON. (USIS). La siguiente es una transcripcin extraoficial del texto del dis- curso pronunciado por el Gene- ral Douglas MacArthur en la sesin conjunta del Senado y la Cmara de Representantes de los Estados Unidos, ayer. "Seor Presidente del Senado, seor Presidente de la Cmara de Representantes, distinguidos miembros del Congreso: "Vengo a esta tribuna con un sentido de profunda humil- dad y gran orgullo. Humildad ante aquellos grandes ameri- canos, arquitectos de nuestra historia, que la han ocupado antes que yo. Orgullo ante ta reflexin de que esta forma de debate legislativo representa la libertad humana en la forma ms pura que se haya conce- bido. Aqu se concentran la espe- ranza, las aspiraciones y la fe de todo el genero humano. No estoy aqu como abogado de ninguna causa partidarista, pues las cuestiones son fun- damentales y estn ms all del radio de la consideracin partidarista. Ellas deben resol- verse en el ms elevado pla- no del Inters nacional para que resulte firme nuestro ca- mino y se proteja nuestro fu- turo. Confio, por tanto, en que me "Durante los ltimos 50 aos el chino se ha militarizado en sus conceptos e ideales "Los que apaciguan a la China Roja son ciegos a las lecciones de la historia," dijo vez de .seguir un camino a ciegas a la realidad de que ia era colonial es cosa del' pa- sado y de que los pueblos del Asia no tienen el derecho de forjar su propio destino libre. Lo que ellos quieren ahora es orientacin amistosa, compren- sin y apoyo, no direccin im- perativa, quieren dignidad e Igualdad, y no la vergenza de la subyugacin 8u nivel de vida de antes de la guerra, angustiosamente bajo, es infinitamente ms ba- jo ahora por la devastacin causada por la guerra. Las ideo- logas del mundo actan es- casamente en el pensamiento asitico y son poco entendidas. Por lo que lucha el pueblo es por la oportunidad de un poco mas de comida para el estmago, un poco ms de ro- pa para su cuerpo, y un te- haris justicia al acoger lo que cho ms firme sobre sus ca- tengo que decir tan solo comO|bezas, y para la realizacin de expresin de punto de vista de I ias nacionalidades normales cla- un conciudadano americano. Me dirijo a vosotros sin rencor ni encono en el crepsculo de la vida con un solo propsito- en man por la libertad poltica. Estas condiciones politico-so- ciales tienen solo una relacin indirecta sobre nuestra propia man un antecedente para el planeamiento que debe conside- rarse minuciosamente si quere- la mente, servir a mi patria. seguridad nacional, pero for- Las cuestiones son globales y se hallan tan entrelazadas que la consideracin de los proble- mas de un sector con olvido de los de otro slo conducira al desastre del todo. Aun cuan- do se hace comnmente refe- rencia al Asia como la puerta de Europa, no es menos cierto que Europa es la puerta del Asia, y la amplia influencia de una no puede dejar de refle- jarse sobre la otra. En estas condiciones, el Pa- cifico no representa ya ave- nidas de amenaza o" acceso de un potencial Invasor. Asume, en su lugar, el aspecto amistoso de un lago de paz. Nuestra linea de defensa es natural y puede mantenerse con un mnimum de esfuerzos y gastos militares. Ella no con- templa ataque contra nadie, ni provee los bastiones esenciales para las operaciones ofensivas, pero, debidamente mantenida, seria una defensa invencible contra la agresin. El soste- nimiento de esta lnea de de- fensn en el Pacifico occidental depende por entero de qu man- tengamos todos los segmentas de la misma, pues una brecha grande de esa linea por una potencia no amiga, la hara vulnerable a un ataque deter- minado contra otro segmento grande. Esta es una tesis mili- tar con respecto a la cual no he hallado an~' un dirigente militar que disienta. Por esa razn, he recomen- dado firmemente, como asun-, to de urgencia militar que ba- jo ninguna circunstancia- de- be caer Formosa bajo el con- trol comunista. Ese acontec- . miento amenazara de una ves mos evitar los fracasos de la la libertad de las Filipinas y la ausencia de realismo. De importancia ms directa prdida del Japn, y podra obligar a nuestra frontera oc-' tratelco del Ocano Pacifico en el curso de la ltima gue- rra. Antes de ella la frontera estratgica occidental de los Hay quienes alegan que nes-1 Estados Unidos se hallaba en tra fuerza es inadecuada para la lnea literal de las Amrl- proteger los dos frentes, que no. cas con una saliente insular podemos dividir nuestro esfuer- | expuesta, que se extendera a Z0" SJ.,pued0 t*"531" e" "na j travs de Hawaii, Miday y expresin de mayor derrotismo. I Guam hasta las Filipinas. Esa j B'un, Po^ncial enemigo pue- saliente result ser, no un pues- de decidir su fuerza en dos < to de fuerza de avance para rentes, corresponde a nosotros cualquier fuerza agresora que contrarrestar sus escuerzos. Xa intentara atacar las reglones amenaza comunista es glota: terfestres, ?, g <, Su avance en xito en un s*c- Todo Jo ha sido carn(iaQO tor ameniza la destruccin Ide por nuestra victoria en el Pa- cualquler otro sector. No po- cifico. Nuestra frontera estra- deis apaciguar o entregaros de tgica ha sido cambiada para otra manera al comunismo en abarcar todo el Pacfico, el Asia sin socavar simultnea- cual se ha convertido en vas- mente nuestros esfuerzos para to foso que nos protege mien- detener su avance en Europa tras los tengamos. En verdad Aparte de indicar estos aspee- acta como un escudo protector tos generales, limitase mis pa- para todas las Americas y tle- Iabras a las regiones del Asia rras libres de la regin del Pa- en generad cifico. Lo controlamos hasta las Antes de poder avaluar de tierras de Asia por una cadena manera objetiva la situacin I de klas que se extiende en br- que actualmente existe all, de- m* de arco desde las Aleutianas bemos comprender algo del pa- hasta las Marianas, en poder sado del Asa y de los cam-1 nuestro y de nuestros aliados blos revolucionarlos que han se- Ubres. alado su curso hasta el pre- i Desde esta cadena de islas sent. Explotada desde hace I podemos dominar con el poder e Inmediata para nuestra segu-! cidental a retroceder a las cos- ridad nacional son los cambios tas d.e los Estados de California, producidos en el potencial es- Oregon y Washington. muchsimo tiempo por las lla- madas potencias coloniales, con escasa oportunidad de alcan- zar grado alguno de justicia social, dignidad Individual o un nivel de vida ms elevado co- mo el que gui nuestra noble martimo y areo todos los puertos del Asia, desde Vladi- vostok hasta Singapore, y evi- tar cualquier movimiento hos- til en el Pacifico. Cualquier agresin desde el Asia debe ser un esfuerzo. an- admlnistracln en las Filipinas. lDl- Ninguna fuerza anfibia los pueblos del Asia hallaron en' Puede tener xito sin el con- la guerra que acaba de pasar |tro1 de las r"tas martimas y del aire que domina esas ru- tas. Con supremaca area y naval y modestos elementos le- a oportunidad de ^acudir el yugo del colonialismo, y ahora ven la autora de nueva opor- tunidad, una dignidad hasta rrestres para defender las ba- ahora no sentida y el propio i8es' cualquier ataque del Asia respeto de la libertad poltica. I continental contra nosotros o Con un total de la mitad de i nuestros enemigos en el Pac- la poblacin de la tierra y el i flc0 estara destinado al fra- sesenta por ciento de sus re- caso, cursos naturales, estos pueblo! estn consolidndose rpida- mente en una nueva fuerza tanto moral como material, con la cual elevar el nivel de vida y erigen adaptaciones del pro- Teso moderno a su propio am- biente cultural. Sea que no adhiramos o no al concepto de la colonlzacljn. esta es la ten- dencia del progreso del Asia y no puede detenerse. Es un co- rolario del cambio de las fron- teras econmicas del mundo, pues el epicentro de los asun- tos mundiales gira de nuevo hacia el rea donde Inici la rotacin. En esta situacin, es vital que nuestro pas oriente su polti- ca en consonancia con esta condicin evolutiva bsica en Para comprender los cambios; que ahora se presentan en la! tierra firme china, debemos: comprender los cambios que se han operado en la conducta y la cultura de los chinos du- rante los ltimos SO aos. Has- ta hace cincuenta aos, China careca por completo de homo- geneidad, estaba dividida en, grupos en pugna. Casi no exis- ta la tendencia de hacer la I iuerra, pues seguan todava: os dictados del ideal confucia- | no de la cultura pacifista. Al Iniciarse el siglo, el'al-1 gimen de los esfuerzos para ob- tener una mayor homogeneidad produjo el surgimiento naci- i nallsta. Se desarroll con ma-: yor xito bajo la direccin de Chiang Kai Shek, pero ha lle- gado a su friccin ms grande; bajo el actual rgimen hasta el' punto de que ha tomado ahora! el carcter de un nacionalismo unido cuyas tendencias domi- nantes son cada vez ms agre- sivas. Durante los ltimos cincuen- ta aos el pueblo chino se ha! militarizado en sus conceptos y en sus ideales. Los chinos son ahora excelentes soldados, con comandantes competentes. Elle ha producido un nuevo y do- minante poder en el Asia, el cual, para sus propios fines, est aliado con la Rusia Sovi- tica pero que en sus propios conceptos y mtodos se ha con- vertido en agresivamente im- perialista, con ansia de expan- sin y con el creciente pode- ro normal de este tipo de im- perialismo. Existe escaso concepto ideo- lgico en una forma u otra en la estructura china. El *n\- vel de vida es tan bajo y la acumulacin de capital ha si- do de tal manera disipada por la guerra que las masas estn desesperadas y ansiosas de se- MUEBLES DE HOSPITALES DISEADOS FUNCIONALMENTE Para comodidad del paciente Para seguridad del mdico Para facilidad de la enfermera -HARD MANUFACTURING COMPANY" Distribuidores exclusivas: F. Icaza y Ca., S. A. Originalmente establecidos en 1865) Apartado 2140 Avenida "B" 79 Telfonos: 2-1913 y 2-1918 HONRADEZ , PRIMACA SERVICIO CALIDAD ANTISPTICO LISTERINE (N SIGUIDA II AnH.,,|t. USTIMNI puro demure millones de ensenes en la superficie de ' garganta. Ataque estos grmenes que Parecen conlo. resfriad, ,nte de * lo ataquen Ud. . no deje que le ,. '*" "i l. T,yores- Tome las precau- cones debidas contra las complicacionei sptico LISTERINE puro! loumS*8 "All2A0AI WliAWl MAS DI 12 AOS gulr cualquier direccin que les prometa alivio a sus angustia. Desde el principio he credo que el apoyo de los comunis- tas chinos a los norcoreanos ha sido el dominante. 8us intere- ses son actualmente paralelos a los del Soviet, pero creo que la agresividad recientemente desplagada no slo en Corea sino en Indochina y el Tibet, y quo potencialmente seala ha- cia el Sur, refleja potencial- mente la misma ambicin de expansin de poder que ha a- nlmado a todos los conquista- dores desde el comienzo de las edades. E pueblo japons ha pasado despus de la guerra por la reforma ms grande que se re- cuerda e,n la historia moder- na. Con encomlable voluntad, deseo de aprender y capacidad para aprender, ha levantado de entre los escombros dejados pol- la guerra en el Japn un edi- ficio dedicado a la suprema- ca de la libertad Individual y personal, y en el proceso sub- siguiente ha creado un gobier- no verdaderamente representa- tivo, consagrado al progreso de la moralidad poltica, la liber- tad de empresa econmica y la justicia social. Potencial, econmica y soclal- mente, Japn est hoy por de- lante de muchas naciones libres de la tierra y no defraudar de. nuevo la confianza universal. Puede contarse con que ello de- terminar una influencia pro- fundamente benfica en el curso de los acontecimientos en el Asia y asi lo testimonia la magnifi- ca manera cmo el pueblo japo- ns ha recibido el reciente de- safio de la guerra, desasosiego y confusin que lo rodea desde fuera y cmo ha detenido al co- munismo dentro de sus propias fronteras sin aminorar en lo ms leve su marcha de progreso. Envi cuatro de nuestras di- visiones de ocupacin al frente de batalla coreano sin que se sintiera el menor efecto en el Japn. Los resultados han jus- tificado plenamente mi f. No conozco una nacin ms serena, ordenada e industriosa, ni una sobre la cual puedan a- brigarse las ms altas esperan- zas para el servicio al progreso de ia humanidad. Con respecta a las Filipinas. podemos mirar hacia el futuro con la confianza de que la in- IrasMulBad existente serf co- rregida y de que surgir una na- cin fuerte y saludable despus de 1a terrible destruccin cau- sada por la guerra. Debemos ser pacientes y comprensivos y no fallarles, pues en nuestra hora de necesidad ellos no nos falla- ron. Las Filipinas, una nacin cris- tiana, se yerguen como un ba- luarte de la cristiandad en el Extremo Oriente, y su capacidad para una alta direccin moral en Asia es Ilimitada. En cuanto a Formosa, el Go- bierno de la Repblica de China ha tenido la oportunidad de re- batir por la accin muchos de los comentarlos maliciosos que han socavado la fuerza de su di- reccin en la tierra firme. El pueblo de Formosa recibe una administracin Justa y eficiente con representacin de la mayo- ra del mismo en los rganos del Gobierno, y poltica, econmica y soclalmente progresa nor cami- nos firmes y constructivos. Tras esta breve Incursin a las regiones circundantes, voy ahora a referirme al conflicto coreano. An cuando no ful consultado antes de la decisin del Presi- dente de intervenir en apoyo de la Repblica de Corea, esa de- cisin, desde el punto de vista militar, fu sensata. Como lo acabo de manifestar, fu una de- cisin sensata, pues echamos atrs al Invasor v dominamos sus fuerzas. Nuestra victoria fu completa, y nuestros objetivos estaban a punto de ser alcanza- dos cuando la China rola inter- vino con fuerzas terrestres 'nu- El Tesorero en conversaciones con los con- tribuyentes morosos para darles todas las facilidades posibles, a fin de que se pongan al dia. Pero de igual modo quiere in- formar a tales contribuyentes que la actual situacin no po- dr continuar Indefinidamente y que los Impuestos tendrn que ser pagados, bien por el camino de las conversaciones antes dichas o por cualesquiera otras vas que las circunstan- cias demanden. Oportunamente cada uno de los contribuyentes cuyas cuen- tas estn atrasadas recibirn una comunicacin sobre el par- ticular, pero la Tesorera est ya lista para conversar con ellos Dar el arreglo de la si- tuacin. Han Perdido comandantes y de las condi- ciones en el momento de la accin, un sentido preciso de la situacin como mejor base para las decisiones del Co- ' mando. Dijo que haba estado varias horas en el campo de batalla con el Comandante del Octavo Ejrcito. General James A. Van Fleet en su puesto de Coman- dante en las avanzadas, visi- tando luego, junto con Van Fleet a los otros Comandantes de las Naciones Unidas en sus puestos. mrlcamente superiores a las nuestras. Ello dl lugar a una, nueva guerra y a una situacin ente- ramente nueva, una situacin que reclamaba nueva* declsioues en la esfera diplomtica a fin de permitir un ajuste realista de la estrategia militar. Tales de- cisiones no se han producido. Aunque ningn hombre en sus cinco sentidos abogara por el envo de nuestras fuerzas terres- tres a la China continental, y a ello nunca se le ha dado consl- deraclnn, la nueva situacin exiga urgentemente una revi- sin de nuestro planeamiento es- tratgico si es que nuestro ob- jetivo era derrotar al nuevo ene- migo tal como habamos derro- tado al anterior. Aparte de la necesidad militar, como yo la vea, de neutralizar esta proteccin adicional dada al enemigo al Norte del rio Ya- lu, estim que las necesidades militares en la direccin de la guerra exigan: 1.La intensificacin de nues- tro bloqueo econmico contra China; 2.La imposicin de un blo- queo naval contra la costa chi- na; 3.La eliminacin de las res- tricciones al reconocimiento a- reo de la regin costanera de China y Manchuria; 4.La supresin de las res- tricciones a las fuerzas de la Re- pblica de China en Formosa, con apoyo logistlco para contri- buir-a la efectividad de sus ope- raciones. Por abrigar estos puntos de vista todos ellos de carcter pro- fesional tendientes a apoyar a nuestras fuerzas en Corea y a llevar las hostilidades a su final con la menor demora posible y a ahorrar Incontables vidas severamente criticado en crcu- los legos, especialmente en el ex- terior, a pesar de que tengo en- tendido que, desde el punto de vista militar estas opiniones han sido plenamente compartidas por prcticamente todos los jefes militares a quienes concierne la campaa de Corea, Incluyendo los propios Jefes de nuestro es- tado mayor conjunto. Ped refuerzos y se me Infor- m que no los haba. Manifest claramente que si no se permi- ta destruir las bases construi- das por ei enemigo al norte del Yalu, Si no se permita utilizar una fuerza de los chinos amigos de unos 800,000 hombres de For- mosa, si no se permita el blo- queo de la costa china para evi- tar que los rojos chinos recibie- ra* ayuda de fuera, y si no ha- ba*espranza de grandes refuer- zos, la posicin del comando desde el punto de vista militar era ajena a la victoria. Podamos mantenernos en Co- rea por medio de constante ma- niobra, pero lo ms que poda- mos esperar era una campaa indecisiva con su terrible y cons- tante desgaste sobre nuestras fuerzas si el enemigo usaba to- do su potencial militar. He pedido constantemente nuevas decisiones polticas esen- ciales para una solucin. Se han hechos esfuerzos para desfigurar mi posicin. Se ha di- cho en efecto que soy un azu- zador de la guerra. Nada ms apartado de la verdad. Conoico la guerra como pocos hombres la conocen, y a nada le tengo ms aversin que 'a ella. Desde hace mucho tiempo he a- boaado por su completa aboli- cin, pues su destruccin tanto para el amigo romo para el ene- miga la Inutiliza como medio para el arreglo de las disputas internacionales. En verdad, el dia dos de sep- tiembre de 1945, poco despus de la rendicin de la nacin Japo- nesa en el acorazado Missouri hi- ce esta advertencia: "Los hombres, desde el co- mienzo de los tiempos, han bus- cado el descanso. A travs de las edades se ha tratado de idear un proceso internacional para evi- tar o solucionar las controver- sias entre las naciones. Desde el mismo principio se hallaron m- todos viables en lo que a los ciu- dadanos Individualmente se re- feria, pero la mecnica de un mtodo de mayor alcance Inter- nacional Jams ha logrado xito. Las alianzas militares, equilibrios de poder, Ligas de Naciones, to- das han fracasado, dejando co- mo nico camino el de la gue- rra. La tremenda destruccin de la guerra ahora bloquea esta al- ternativa. Hemos tenido nuestra, ltima oportunidad. Si no idea- mos un sistema ms grande y equitativo, nuestro Armagendon. estar a. las puertas. El proble- ma bsicamente es todava de lgica y envuelve un espritu da Iridescencia y mejoramiento de< la conducta humana sincroniza- do con el casi sin rival avance de la ciencia, el arte, la litera- tura y todos los acontecimientos materiales y culturales de los l- timos 2,000 aos. Pero uitt m que se nos haya impuesto la guerra, no queda otra altern*- tlva que aplicar los medios apro- piados para obtener un rpido final de ella. El objetivo de las guerras es la victoria, y no una indecisin prolongada. En la guerra no hay sustituto para la victoria. Existen quienes por diversas razones apaciguaran a la China; roja. Son ciegos a las lecciones de la Historia, pues sta ensea de manera inequvoca que el a- pacjguamlento slo conduce a nuevas y ms sangrientas gue- rras. No hay un solo caso rt que este fin haya justificado los me- dios, en que el apaciguamiento haya conducido a algo que no sea la vergenza. Lo mismo que la extorsin ofrece la base para nuevas y sucesivas demandas hasta que llega el momento en que la violencia es la nica al- ternativa que queda. Por qu, me preguntan mis soldados, ren- dir ventajas militares ante un enemigo en el campo? No poda responder. Algunos dirn que es para evi- tar la propabacln del conflicto hacia una guerra total cor) Chi- na. Otros, para evitar la Inter- vencin sovitica. Ninguna da las dos explicaciones parece v- lida, pues China est dedicndo- se ya con el mximo del pode- rlo que puede comprometer, y el Soviet no entrometer necesaria- mente sus acciones en nuestros movimientos. Como una cobra, cualquier nuevo enemigo atacara con mayor probabilidad cuando considere que la relatividad mi- litar y otras potencialidades es- taban a su favor sobre una base mundial. La tragedia de Corea se des- taca an ms por el hecho de que su accin militar se confirma a sus limites territoriales. Ella con- dena a esa nacin, que tenemos el propsito de salvar, a sufrir el devastador impacto de un bombardeo naval y areo cons- tante mientras los santuarios del enemigo estn plenamente pro- tegidos de ese ataque y tsa de- vastacin. De las naciones de! mundo, Corea hasta ahora, es la nica que se ha arriesgado en la gue- rra contra el comunismo. La magnificencia del valor y la re- sistencia del pueblo coreano es tan ms all de cualquier des- cripcin. Los coreanos han es- cogido la muerte antes que la es- clavitud. Sus'ltlmas palabras para mi fueron":--No dejen per- der el Pacifico..." Acabo de dejar a vuestros combatientes hijos en Corea. | Ellos han hecho todo cuanto han podido y puedo informaros sin reservas que son esplndidas en todo sentido. Ha sido mi constante esfuerzo preservarlos y poner fin a este salvaje conflicto en forma hon- rosa y con la menor prdida pa- sible de vidas y de tiempo. Su creciente derramamiento de san- gre me ha causado la ms hon- da angustia y ansiedad. Esos va- lerosos hombres estarn eon frecuencia en mis pensamientos y en mis oraciones. Voy a terminar mis 52 aos da servicio militar. Cuando ingres en el ejrcito antes del cambio de siglo, realic las esperanzas y sueos de mi infancia. Mucha* vueltas ha dado el mundo des- de el dia en que preste Juramen- to en West Point, y esperanzas y sueos se han desvanecido, pero recuerdo todava una de las ms populares baladas en los cuarteles de aquellos da*, en que se proclamaba orgullosalhent* que los viejos soldados jams moran: solamente se alejan. Y como el viejo soldado de aque- llas estrofas, yo ahora pongo ,/ln a mi carrera militar y me alejo, un viejo soldado que, trat de cumplir su deber segn Dios le dl la luz para ver ese deber. Adis". C/J 200 Acabamos de desempacar HOY TRAJES de Cocktail y de Diario SOMBREROS de ltima moda en todos los colores B/. 3.95 e BLUSA8 FALDAS SWEATIRS CAPOTES PARAGUAS tambin Surtido completo de BRASSIERES I FAJAS de la acreditada marea "Lady Marlene" LA MODA AMERICANA Avenida Central 102 < *| MARTES. ABRIL 24, 1951 El. PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE PAGINA TREt I I H 1 t i "Serenata de Acapulco" que contina al "Son del Mambo" se estrenar en uno de nuestros teatros prximamente Por primera vez en la pan- talla mexicana aparece un gru- po de esas bellsimas modelos de Hollywood que han dado lama a las comedias musicales, que nos enva California. La firma productora que lo- gr contratar al puado de beldades no es otra que "Fu- madora Chapultepec" que nos dl "Al Son del Mambo" y que las presenta en la deliciosa co- media musical "Serenata en Acapulco", haciendo digno mar- co a favoritas y favoritos del pblico como Martha Roth que despus de lucir su esplndida belleza rubia, acta con des- parpajo y simpata. Su galn es nuevamente Roberto Roma- na el famoso "Carta Brava" y la parte cmica est a cargo de ese actor de la gracia que to- dos aplauden en cine, y tea- tro: Osear Pulido, quien por cortesa de 'Alameda Films" completa el tringulo estelar de "Serenata en Acapulco". Para los que gustan de la msica y del paisaje maravi- lloso de Acapulco creemos que todos gustamos, "Serenata en Acapulco" es un verdadero rn- galo para la vista y los sen- tidos. Mara Victoria, la tan. tan... famosa cancionista, po- ne todo lo suyo en su actua- cin, lo mismo que las escul- turales Dolly Sisters y el siem- pre magnifico Andrs Soler y Borolas y Pompn Iglesias pa- ra hacerlos rer. Completan el reparto: Tro Calaveras. Prez Prado y su orquesta. Tro Los Diamantes, el ballet de Chelo La Rue, y un nuevo galn des- tinado a provocar suspiros en- tre las damas: Ral Martnez, que canta con un buen gusto romntico, que encantar a to- das las damas, que estamos seguros no se perdern "Sere- nata en Acapulco" que dirigi ci.n habilidad Chano Urueta y que se presentar al pblico prximamente. Picazn De Los Pies Cicatrizada (orno Magia t* .rde-n, pican o queman loa pla tan doloroMmenta qua cm. lo vuelven loco? 8a la raja o sangra la piel da loa pies? La verdadera causa de estos traatornoa da la piel da loa plea a un a/erVnen muy extendido en todo el mundo y conocido con diversos nom- bres talea como Mal de Atletas, Plca- idn da Singapore, etc. Usted no podr versa libra da ate trastorno hasta qua o mata I germen qua lo causa, t'n nuevo daacubrlmlento mdico llama- do Nlxoderm acaba con la picazn en pocoa minutos, mata los (Prinenes r- pidamente y comienza a cicatrizar la piel hacindola suave, limpia y clara o pocos das. Nixodarm ha tenido tanto xito que ofrece acabar con la picaxon y cicatrizar la piel de loa plea sino tambin como remedio contra loa casos ms recalcitrantes da Eczema, Acn o erupclonea da la piel. Pida Nixodarm en su farms- Nixoctarm Sm*7 ara Desorden** da la Pial Los japoneses se sienten como hurfanos despus de la partida de MacArthur ELEGANTE RECEPCIN EN LA EMBAJADA D momento de la elegante recepcin ofrecida por en nuestro pas, para despedir a S.E. Luigi Ma en Panam y de Panam en Veneiuela, respec Mariani, rx-Embajador de Italia; S.E. Henrique Fernndez, Embajador de Panam en Venezue Carlos Brin, Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores; Teniente de Navio Antonio Eljuri, Agregado Na E VENEZUELA. La presente foto capta un S.E. Henrique Castro, Embajador de Venezuela riani y Luis Fernndez, Embajadores de Italia tivamente. De Izquierda a derecha: S.E. Luigi Castro, Embajador de Venezuela: S.E. Luis la: S.E. Emilio Ortiz. Embajador del Per; S.E. S.E. Marcos Raudales, Ministro de Honduras; val de Venezuela. Por Ray ralle (N. A. N. A) TOKIO, Abril 24 (EP8i Los japoneses se sienten actualmen- te como una nacin de ochc.rta y tres millonee de hurfano.-., a partida del General MacAr- thur conmovi las fibras emo- cionales de la nacin y dejo al pueblo como si le 'hubiciun hundido rpidamente el co- razn". Las masas japoneses apren- dieron a, confiar en el ex-j'.le supremo que los gobern con mano benevolente, asi como a respetarlo. Pero ahora su mun- do es un vacio y muchos ja- poneses destacados sustentan i.na idea un tanto pesimista en cuanto al porvenir del pais. Tie- nen fija en su mente la con- clusin del tratado de paz. pe- iu creen que puede que el n.ls- Red Panamericana llene los mejores protramas ADORNE SU MESA CON UNA PRECIOSA VAJILLA de I I ACUII A AVENIDA CENTRAL 91 50< 75* 1.25 SEMANAL PORCELANA adquirala en CLUB de 30 SEMANAS Rendir informe el Comit Mixto sobre MacArthur WASHINGTON, Abril 24 (UP) ! El Departamento de Defensa i anunci que los Jefes del Estado Mayor mixto presentaron una informacin completa ante las Comisiones del Congreso acerca las diferencias con el General Douglas MasArthur sobre la po- ltica en el Extremo Oriente. El anuncio fu hecho mien- tras la Casa Blanca parece ha-' ber iniciado un contra-ataque con el objeto de restarle fuerza, de ser posible, a la demanda de los que apoyando al General MacArthur piden Ir extensin limitada de la guerra Coreana contra la China Comunista. La declaracin del Departa- mento de Defensa la hizo Clay- ton Prltzchey, Director de Infor- macin Pblica, tras una conte- rencla de tres horas con el Se- cretarlo de Prensa de la Casa Blanca. Joseph Short, y una conversacin ms breve con Ro- bert A. Lovett, Sub-Secretario \ de Defensa. Dijo Prltzchey que "las ope- raciones en el Extremo Oriente se llevan a efecto de acuerdo con los puntas de vista del Es- tado Mayor mixto. Estos pun- tos de vista sern completamen- te explicados a las Comisiones del Congreso pertinente. Un anlisis de las diferencias b- sicas que existen entre los Jefes del Estado Mayor Mixto y el Ge- neral MacArthur ser presenta- do entonces". nio demore, a pesar de las se- guridades en* contrario que se es "nan dado. El teniente general Mati-h.w B. Ridgway es un ente descono- cido' en el Japn. Se le reco- noce como un magnifico lder en los combales, pero la gente le lanza abiertamente un reto a su habilidad como estadista, administrador y estudioso de Its- problemas del Asia- Los japo- neses no se dan cuenta de .os importantes papeles de proyec- tista y diplomtico ocupados yor Ridgway cuando era el ms an- tiguo de los delegados del Pen- tgono en las conferencias so- bre la defensa interamericana y el ms antiguo representante de los Estados Unidos en el co- mit de estado mayor militar de las Naciones Unidas. Pero los bservadores idneos. iiiie han visto al general en ac- cin en la Corea, creen que si se le da tiempo, Ridgway se ga- nar la confianza y el apoyo uel pueblo Japons. Algunos japoneses aseguran que el resultado de la destitu- cin de MacArthur ser un mayor Influencia britnica en el futuro del Papn. Londies desea Incluir en el tratado de paz clusulas que restrinjan la navegacin y las Industrias de tejidos del Japn, temindole a' ia competencia que en el co- mercio mundial constituirn es renacientes industrias del ar- chipilago. Creyendo que la in- fluencia britnica en la pol- tica exterior norteamericara est aumentando y dndose cuenta de que los Estados Uni- do* sienten simpatas por l:if aspiraciones japonesas. esi.n abogando por que se entabtn consultas directas con Londres para convencer a aquel gobier- no de lo Justificado que est el crecimiento industrial del Japn Creen tambin que, debido que se espera que varios jefes de seccin del cuartel gen<.r?i sigan las huellas de MacArthur, cierta cantidad de control y po- der sobre los asuntos demed- eos volvern a manos de los ja- poneses ms pronto de que lo podra haberse esperado en o- Iras circunstancias. "Quin", preguntan los Japo- neses, 'hay actualmente en el Japn que tenga la talla de) primer ministro Shigeru Yos- hida?" Y. a consecuencia de la partida de MacArthur, Yosntda se siente ahora ms grande J ms fuerte. Se cree aqui que el cambie de jefe supremo, significara ue ia seccin diplomtica del De- partamento de Estado tenur ms voz por lo que toca al as pecto poltico de la ocupacin. Hasta ahora, la seccin de go- bierno a cargo del mayor ge- neral Courtney Whitney, el a- scaor ms allegado a MacArthur habia estado fiscalizando la vi- da poltica del Japn. El Sbado 28 de Abril GANGAS A GRANEL encontrar usted en la GRAN VENTA ANUAL DE FELIX B, MADURO, S. A. Almacn Principal Avenida Central 21 SEGUNDO PISO !AAVENida Estamos desempacando Almohadas de espuma d> caucho con forre de zip .................. 14.SS ,., *J runda blancas Peppercl ......... t.M **' Forro de plstico para calchones de cama gemela y frandrs con Ie- rre de ilper ............... .75 y S.5. Sobrecamas de plstico a ........ SIS f ' Sobrecamas de saln a ........... US* Cortinas para recmaras con aran- delas. Todo color......... 3 2J a KM Si Alfombras 27 x 4K para recamara 5 Alfombras M v 6* para recmara lt.SS aaaaaaaaaaaaaaamflfaa! Cenefas en colores para adornar las tablillas de closets ........... 1.3* paa! Robas de plstico con zipper para guardar K a 12 vestidos ___ 25 a S.tS Saeaa de algodn para ropa sucia 1.S5 Cubiertas para Ubi., de planchar a.95 Cubierta ron colchoneta para tablas de planchar .......... l0 Cubierta y alfombra para servirlo S.SS Lamparillas para recmara, 2.95 a S.tS Pantallas grandes para lmparas de mesa y de pie ......... 2.7S a I St J,cl.u y *UMo "Torados para ca- f Unto. Kl juego a ...... i.s. C------ .. -e Ballet ......... s ti a 12.5a Cuadros de palaa)ca ...... 3:5* a I ...> .. Espejos sin marea ........ nit a I CM *.. \ l-alas ron deshumrredor para zuar- ^_. V dar galletas y dulces......... j.i ^A Jr. } Saleros a prueba de humedad ___ I M Tfc\^g. ? I iT a Thermos plstico* para censers ar "' ..............-........... 2. a> Bandejas redondas de 3 tablillas suprr-pur.tas para golosinas..... 4.7S Catata plstica para manteatttlla %< ............................ I.M COMPRE AHORA SEGUNDO PISO 5* AVENIDA ZlNG ACANALADO ARMCO DE LA MEJOR CALIDAD 2' x 6' y Y x 8* A. J. ALFARO Distribuidor Armco Telfono 2-1045 Avenida Norte No. 87 Apartado 1211 PREGUNTE 'A Si es cierto que nuestro clima tropical exige una dieta pobre en grasas de origen animal; y que para mantener nuestro cuerpo en mejor estado de salud se debe cocinar con grasas vegetales? la marca de ropa que toda madre prefiere por su DURABILIDAD FORTALEZA PRECIO para LA ESCUELA vista a su hijo con marca 'TABOCA'* desde la CORBATA hasta el VESTIDO UNIFORME. ROPA de DIARIO De la mejor calidad al ms BAJO PRECIO / VESTIDOS CAMISAS PANTALONES largos y cortos GUAYABERAS Fabricantes Exclusivos de los UNIFORMES OFICIALES de los COLECIOS LA SALLE, NUEVO LA SALLE y COLEGIO JAVIER UNIFORMES COMPLETOS PARA., Escuela Repblica de Chile Pantaln y Camisa. .. . 2 b. y.50 iLfloffl Escuela Normal "J. D. Arosemena", Santiago Colegio Guillermo Andreve Escuela Simn Bolvar Colegio de Aguadulce Colegio Cristbal Rodrguez i DESD w "1-3 DESDE .50 ELANTE Confecciones EL ARTE y Almacenes TABOGA . Avenida CENTRAL, No. 37 y Avenida CENTRAL, No. 92 (Frente a LA LOTERA) (Al lado del "CECILIA") _ r.\(;i\.\ cuatro EL PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE MARTES, ABRIL 34, 1M1 -* Por /a/fa de medicina puede quedar paralizada jira mdica Al llegar al segundo pueblo que atienden se termina la existencia de medicamentos No obstante al enorme to- iuerzo desarrollado por las Kc- Ueractones de Sociedades San- icias y Herreranas, la Jira Mt- . taco- Aslstenclal en la Produ- ca de Herrera y que dirige el Lr. Francisco Samaniego, c.is actualmente confrontando o- rlos Inconvenientes como 10 ef. la falta de medicinas b.-icas jara su ms o menos norata! desarrollo referente a la asi- lencia mdica La medicina es- caseo en Los Pobos, el sega, do pueblo visitado: actualmente se encuentra en Las Minas la co- mitiva sanitaria y casi esta vi- talizada su magnifica labor en po de la salud del camptsi..o Es de anotar aqui el gesto ai ik Comisin Legislativa Perut- nente, que, a peticin de eslua dos Federaciones, incluyeron u- na partida de B. 3.000.00 eu el Presupuesto para estos fines patriticos. Pero es el caso que tote dinero se necesita urgor.'.e- nienie para la compra de '.a medicacin bsica como lo son los antibiticos antiparasltarios, antipaldicos, tnicos y vitam- nicos etc., y su tramitacin de- mora en sentido inverso a >u uigente requerimiento. Es de es- pirarse que los organismos cuya tiamltacln les compete den to- das las facilidades para su p-'cn ia Inversin en los medicamen- tos citados. Las Federaciones de Socieda- des. Santeas y Herreranas es- peran la mxima colaboracin ue las autoridades y del pb- co en general para consegMir c) mayor xito en esta empiffsa cvico patritica de beneficio social. Pgina a cargo da JOSE (V CAJAR ESCALA NORMAS 'Lo Ciirre&uuiisaltk deber ceftirkr ir mas desanasiona das norn a periodstica Oebei enviar al peridico los asunto noticias ma Interesantes qu alerten a la comunidad En ab soluto se trata de ana oporta nidad oar hacer drrminal nimn(i nnlirtra - CRUCIGRAMA - [12 3 4 MS 6 7 8 1) l U l2 113 114 ' L8 l I 1 1 21 H^Bn 2S 6 27 28 M 30 B31 1 33 ^^ pn 36 37 BJ38 39 BTuT IT *Z aP J44 [45 1 |46| B47 yw |S2 11^ Marco Antonio Alvarado kaba realizado varias fechoras en el interior de la Repblica HORIZONTALES: 1Encarnada. 5Trapense. Abv. 9Ciudad de rFancla. 12Pedazo de madera. Inv. 13Raspar. 14Rio de Alemania. 15Ceremonia matrimonial.' 16Que profesa la ortodoxia. 18Famoso satrico italiano. 20Partido Unitario Catlico, Inic. 21Marchara. 22Cabos o bramantes 25 Fuertes de la baha de Cdiz. 28Instituto Socialista Oriental, Inic. SOViento suave y apacible. 31Rece. 32Animales con plumas. 33Terminacin de diminutivo. 34Del verbo precavo. XExtranjera. 38Marchar. 39 La unidad. 40Te atrevieras. 44Planta cuciubitcea. 47Nombre de mujer 48Metal precioso. 48Atreverse. 50Del verbo amar. 51Articulo. Pl. 52Pieza principal >; las casas. 53Nombre de mujer. 9Inclinado a una cosa mala. 10Ciudad de Francia. 11Del verbo unir. 17Combinacin de voces. 19Clera, enfado. 22Del verbo precisar. 23Uno de los hijos de Jacob 24Desabrida 25Famosa pera italiana. 28Letra castellana. 27Respuestas de los dioses fganos, etra castellana. 32Dao o menoscabo, Pl. 34Que tienen probidad, Pl, 35Altar. 37Nombre de mujer. 40Gazada. 41Nombre de mujer. 42Querer con amor. 43Saludable. 44 Planta hortense. 45Circulo o redondel. 48Agarradera m vr. h flgraaaaaaai 1Dei verbo "-obar. t Sensacin del olfato. 3Piedra semipreciosa. 4--Que tiene apata. 8Que truena. tPoco corriente. 7Madera que sirve para alumbrar, Inv. 8De uno mismo. I". MI! L'L'l>li fcULLJ nrannn tee eee BUR GDEE Dnnnn r>i r HP1RH EEE IH'il-U nran eee eeere nnriH jebe eee nnnnnr m % ni /y-yO^ t^OUACL estos riqusimos pudines qu* se pueden preparar en un santiamn... 385* XIJUOi $ las ogrago la-ha, 1 cecinan uno 5 minutos, eso as todo! ANTON. Abril 19 (Correspon- sal) Comentaba con el se- or Juez Municipal el caso de Ballis en relacin con el re- jo de Expreso Areo, y llene- mos a la conclusin de que as- tas cosas resultan por tolerar con descuido y negligencia que les delincuentes anden vagan- do por las ciudades y pueblos. Y hubo de convenir en estas a- preciaciones, despus que el ex- presado Seor Juez me dio las siguientes informaciones: Marco Antonio Alvarado costa- rricense, el mismo complicado en la investigacin en referen- da, fu condenado a pagar la ^ena de 16 das y ocho n.c- 3ts de reclusin por el delito Je hurto en asocio de Antonio No- varro Tendero, tambin- de Cos- ta Rica a quien condenaron con du> aos de reclusin, pena im- puesta por el Juez Municipal y confirmaba la sentencia por el Juea del Circuito. Copia de o ta sentencia le fu remitida al Sr. Gobernador de la Provin- cia, y al Director del Departa- mento de Correccin de Pana- m el 14 de Abril de 1950. Anteriormente estos seores fueron pedidos, ordenada su captura, a la Polica sin resul- tado alguno; y ya vemos en a piensa que Alvarado, quien de- ma estar pagando condena, an- daba libremente por la Ciudad de Panam continuando sus fe- choras. De igual manera ejla pasendose en la ciudad de Pa- nam, en donde ha sido visto por muchos que los conocen, el eo Mario Bethancort hijo, guien fu condenado a dos a- os de reclusin por sentencia de fecha nueve de Enero de 10V) confirmada por el 8r. Juez tiel Circuito. Copla de estas sentencias ue- roa enviadas al Sr. Gobernador de la Provincia y al Director del Departamento de Correccin, tambin sin resultado. Este in- dividuo fu pedido en dos opor- tunidades anteriores a la Po.'- cia con todas sus caractersti- cas para identificarlo y hu.,:a la fecha no ha sido capturado para que cumpla su condena- Otro caso: Santos Hernndez sindicado del delito de 'nurto y prfugo fu pedido al Sr- Co- mandante ere la Polka y al je- te de la Secreta, dando su ii- lacin y posible residencia en el Corregimiento de Pedresa] sin resultado alguno. Tambin lu pedido al Corregidor de use Corregimiento. Podramos dar otros casos si- milares para corroborar B.0.CJ- tras apreciaciones que motivan esta crnica pero no consldc.'i- r.os que sea necesario. Por con- ducto del Sr Fiscal investiga- dor en el caso de Ballis se pue- de conseguir que Alvarado in- forma el paradero de Antonio Navarro Tendero que puede tambin estar complicado en el robo de Expresos Areos. Hacen una solicitud al alcalde Bazn los vecinos de San Juan Panam Abril 23 de 1951 Sr. Don Jos D. Bazn Alcalde de la Provincia de Coln, Coln- Seor Alcalde la presente tie- ne por objeto comunicarle a usted, que de acuerdo con In- forma recogidos de la comisan que lo visit en su despun<> ei da 14 de los corrientes en representacin del pueblo de Nuevo San Juan, esta olv,uc precisarle acerca de la termi- nacin de la carretera, por sv. esta necesidad ms urgente, poique a pesar de los servlcion desplegados por la cuadrilla de mantenimiento esta a medlauos de Invierno se pone en estaoo casi Intransitable. Considero oportuno decirle que est en proyecto su termi- nacin hace aproxlmadamer. c 10 aos, reflejando as el de- .linteres por su realizacin las autoridades del Distrito que a usted han precedido. Conociendo nosotros de ous ejecuciones animado de la ms lirme esperanza esperamos que satisfaga esta,Justa aspiracin nuestra. Otra necesidad an'O- M a la indicada lo demues:: a ia falta de agua potable, la Que utilizamos escasea en el ve.a- no porque la corriente de et-e estrecho rio sufre el rigor de ia estacin. Y se nos obliga lu- gerlr sustancias noslvas produc- to de los desperdicios, que a' mismo arroja habitantes de ca- sera vecinos como tambin tos de la empresa "Cemepto l'i- nam S. A." amenazando la sa- lud pblica del lugar. Las do- rnas necesidades son de orden secundarias que permiten so- portar el olvido a que estn .-t- Icgadas. Soy su Servidor. Miejuel de la Rosa Cd. 28-18156 La manera segura de conseguir n -a cn la 'opa use este .i/ul en El trzalo se desata en Las Minas ahora LAS MINAS, Abril 23 (Co- rresponsal) Gran inquietud existe entre los campesinos de asta localidad por la apracicn del Trsalo, .enfermedad desco- nocida en esta localidad hasta ahora. Numerosas retes se en- cuentran contaminadas y se te- me que esta plaga afecte la existencia misma del ganado. Los ganados y campesinos de esta localidad, piden urgente- mente a las autoridades que despache los tcnicos para que se les presten auxilio Inmediato. Clausur Labores el Curso de Verano de Chiriqu ros pre Nescafe" En rcelo, flloi ulm preciar coma nadir !ai ru.tlJaJea r un burn cal*. NEsCAFH LrinJa mwifmtr n-rma aataaf ami ------rrnM hnktnp,y9t%m\mti%%mwm - mnima i. ,l.;.,J,., ,,,. r.^.rw .1.... Muy bien les va a universitarias del interior en EE. UU. Hemos recibido la attttlonci .arta sobre la labor de u n gru- po de damas Interioranas que pasan vacaciones en los Estados Unidos: Box 6402. N- T, Station Dentn, Texas Abril 20, 1951 Redactor de El Panam Amrica Panam R. de P. Eottmado Seor: Sin duda alguna Ud. ya '-".a oido del viaje de las doce se- oritas, maestras del Interior e la Repblica, quienes estaot.11 invitadas a pasar sus vacacio- nes en los Estados Unidos, co- mo estudiantes en el Texas oa- te College for Women. Ellas sa- lieron de Panam el dia 6 de Febrero, y comenzaron sus c tudios aqui el dia siguiente. El record que dejan aqu es admirable. Han cursado sus es- tudios en dos Idiomas lngits > espaol. Van a salir coir 12 a 15 crditos universitarios, que pueden aplicarse o aqui en Te- xas o all en Panam. Ellas ha:-. presentado programas, con \?. ayuda del Dr. Campbell, de bul- les y canciones tpicas de l-.v nam, en sus polleras y montu- nas, a los clubs y otros grupoj ms importantes de este iuet'.i" y en teatros grandes, y hasta una media hora por televisin En todo esto, el xito de alias ha sido algo muy extraordina- rio Estas presentaciones pan incluido una conferencia pre- sentada por el Dr. Campbell, haciendo explicaciones de as seoritas estudiantes y de Pa- nam. Todo el mundo lo ha e- cibido cn mucho entusiasr.-c. Tambin, en sus personalidades y su carcter han dejado una impresin inolvidable. T o dus que han tenido contacto cjp clias dicen la misma cosa que htguramente que son personas magnificas, muy buenas. Inteli- gentes, capaces. Ellas han coo- perado en todo, y han dejado una contribucin y una lmpic- sion que no olvidaran aqu nunca. Para ellas, el proyecto las ha dado mucho. Fuera de sus estudios en cia- ses, las hemos llevado en e\- uirslones a otras escuelas, a fbricas grandes, a institiu.u- nes de varios tipos, y visitaran la ciudad capltad de Austin cn MI regreso. Los contactos con la vida norteamericana, con s is compaeras en la Unlversir.d. con todas las personas que ias iian Invitado a sus casas, y to- das las experiencias distingas que han tenido aqu les ha titulo una suma experiencia educacio- nales de una valor lnestlmaole. Ellas aora estn para vol- ver. Llegarn a Panam. y Bianlff Airways el da 28 de Abril (sbado) a las 10.30 ce la noche Dr. Campbell y lo ias acompaamos. Le avisamos:. porque supongo que quisiera te- ner un fotgrafo presente. E- lias han cambiado mucho, an SIGA MI CONSEJO! Para librar da un catarro, asa BROMO QUININ GROVE! Millonea que mirra da reafriailoa bao encontrado pronto y deciaivo alirio to- mando Bromo Quinina Crova al primer aigno da reafriado. Calma el dolor de cabeza, re- doce la fiebre r acta con auare laxante. Pronto laa Tictimaa gozarn da franca aaejoria. Inaiata en la legitima BROMO QUININA UNGENTO PAZO para las al- morranasotra producto Grove. C. Gontalex Re*illa ft Unos. Distribuidores en Panam 4 He aqui el personal de profesores y alumnos del Curso de Verano que tuvo lagar este verana) un la ciudad de David y que clausur labores recientemente. En la foto aparecen el Dr. Bal- tasar^ Isasa Caldern, profesor de Espaol, Otilia Arosement de Tejeira, profesora de Educa- cin, y Rosalina Sent, de Ingls. El inters logrado por estos canoa justifica la necesidad de que continen hasta obtenerse el fin deseado. cr. el aspecto islco. ganando un peso de 5 a 15 libras caua una. Todas han florecido de tina manera increble. Puesto que tienen que salir cn segura para resumir sus labores en ias escuelas del Interior, este pro- bablemente ser su nica opor- tunidad ponerse en contacto con ellas todas. Le extendimos las gracias ;or e inters que siempre ha mos- Uado en proyectos educativa, y sabemos que e;te experimento y el xito que ha tenido le in- teresar muchsimo. Aprovecho esta oportunidad de saludarle y expresar mi a- preclacin del peridico que Ud tan dignamente dirige. De Ud, cordlalmente, Dr. Williams G. Campbell y Sra- Universidad de Panam Catarro Nasal Unas pocas gotas de Vick Va-tio-nol en cada fosa nasaly. usted puede rts- birar otra vez! Alivian la irritacin, iQojan la mucoai- dad, desinflaman suave* mente las membranas hin- chadas. VICK VATRO NOl COTAS NASAlSS Dt DOllC tfKIO Timaron a muchas personas ert Horconcitos con el cuento de que iban a poner electricidad HORCONCITO Abril 24 (Ls- pecial) Solicitando infor.i.es a la Gobernacin de la Pi >- vieta sobre noticia de nue.-tro Corresponsal Viajero y con e- lacln al levantamiento de pla- tea para alumbrado elctrico claramente que se trata de a.- ios ejecutados por un vlviuor que se hizo pasar por repres- bante de la Panam Elctrica y que hizo creer al vecindario que se Instalarla all una Plante A muchos vecinos les cobr por adelantado Instalaciones pai c sus casas y sorprendi tambin algunos comerciantes con CtCi- tos de mercaderas. Cuando se dl cuenta que la ente comenzaba a sospechar dijo que le hablan avisado que la Planta estaba aqu en David y que venia a buscarla. Dtvie ese dia no lo han visto ms. La Polica tiene orden de cap- onarlo donde quiera que se en- cuentre para exigirle cuenta aa sus fechoras. r El individuo que se hace lia mar Torres Gutierre demuci- tra una habilidad sorprendente, uues llev a efecto medidas, co- loc estacas, levant postes, etc. para inspirar confianza a sus futuras victimas, que hoy esta- rn lamentando el haberse e- jado engaar con el seuelo da una mejora apreclable para tu pueblo- ACLARACIN El seor Jos A. Camell B., se acerco esta maana a nuef- tra redaccin para manifestar- nos que no es la persona qua aparece en una informacin re- ferentes al hundimiento de la lancha "Galante", con la qe> no tiene la menor relacin. El seor Camell es un cono- cido comerciante local. 'I {Dolores dt Espalda. Nervioso y Dolores en las Coyunturas! El cuerpo humano dVihaoe dtl xceso de acldoi y desperdicio! vene- nosos de la sangre, por medio de los nueve millones de diminutos tubos o filtros de los rlftones. 81 estos venenos de los rones o la vejiga lo hacen sufrir ron levantadas nocturnas, ner- viosidad, dolort-s de piernas, ojeras lumbar;", dolores de las coyunturas, acides o ardor en los conductos, de- bido a la necesidad de estimulante tfiurtlro. pruebe Cystex. DeshAs^iKe del cido rico y loa venenos con la receta medica llamada Cystex, que es un diurtico estimu- lante de los rlftones y paliativo para la Irritacin funcional de la vejiga ? v'a urinarias en estado de acfdea Cystex satisfacer a usted completa- mente y aeri la medicina que usted necesita. Pida Cystsx hoy misma en su far- macia fa vorlta. Cystex V*jp BaSSBBBSl DAGA1AR' s VENTA ESPECIAL DE JUCUETES MECNICOS DE METAL Y MUEBLES SUECOS PARA NIAOS Ave. TvoN No. 6 a Telefono 2-0170 El buen automovilista MARTES, ABRIL 24. 1951 EL PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE PAGINA CINCO Informe* para esta seccin se reciben en la l accin Social telfono S-1M ocia He EL PAINAMA-AMERICA HORAS: ItM II:H |A Aaartado 1I De loi Estad01 Lnldoi Saludamos cordlalmente al te- nor Erie DelvaMe y seora Abi- gail H. de Delvalle, quienes acompaados de sus nios, re- gresaron de Nuevo Orleans en donde pasaron una corta tempo- rada. M I De Buenos Aires Grata estada le deseamos a 8.E. el Embajador de Argenti- na en El Salvador, seor Rafael Oeampo y seora, quienes se encuentran pasando varios das en nuestra capital. De Cesta Rica Procedente de San Jos, se encuentra hospedado en el Ho- tel El Panam, el seor Aniceto Esqulvel. Lo saludamos. Presentamos un atento saludo de bienvenida al seor Alfredo 8arria y seora Billle de Sarria, quienes llegaron hoy a Panam con el Un de pasar varios das huespede* de H.E. el Embajador del Per, seor Emilio OrtU de Zevallos y su hija seorita Ro- sario Ortiz de Zevallos. De- Colombia Saludamos a la seorita Mary E. Velasquez, quien regres de Barranqullla. Juegos de Cartas Para agasajar a un grupo de sus amistades, la seora Dora E. de Chiari ofreci ayer un juego de cartas y t en su resi- dencia en el Parque Lefevre. r Reunin de las Damas Guadalupanas El Comit Pro Rio Abajo d las Damas Guadalupanas, ten-1 dr su reunin mensual el pr- ximo martes, lo. de Mayo a las 5 p.m. en la Iglesia de Ro Aba-, jo. 8* cita por este medio, y se' les ri^ega puntual asistencia a i i ..............i mis todas las sodas de dicha aso- ciacin. Dtl Interior Saludamos al seor Jos An- tonio Paredes y seora Lola 8. de Paredes, a la seora Teresa b. de Arostmena y a la Keora Lolltin P. de Boyd y sus nios quienes regresaron de El Valle en donde pasaron la temporada de verano. Despus de haber pasado va- rios meses en Chorrera se en- cuentra de nuevo en la capital el seor Hctor Vaidts *r, y se- ora Ana A. de Valds y sus ni- os. Aniversario de Matrimonio Nuestras congratulaciones pa- ra el seor Arlstides Romero Jr. y seora Ana Gloria S. de Ro- mero. qi'iP'ies cumplen hoy aos de casados. _ BANDIDO EN LA SIERRA ESCUELA NOCTURNA DE COMERCIO COLON Prepara para Perito Mercantil, Contador y Secretariado. Cursos de Ingls, Contabilidad, Estenografa, Mecano- grafa, Ortografa, Redaccin Comercial, Aritmtica Comer- cial y Matemticas Financieras. Cursos especiales de Auditoria y Estenografa en Ingls. (Shorthand). Curso de Espaol para personas de habla Inglesa. Informes y Matricula de S p.m. a I p.m. en el Colegio Abel Bravo. Las clases comenzarn el X de mayo. f II AHORRE $ $ $ en la Gran VENTA ANUAL 4 sbado Abril 28 FELIX B. MADURO, S. A. Almacn Principal Avenida Central 21 Celebran en esta fecha el aniversario de su matrimonio el seor Carlos Berbey y seora Lucila de L. de Berbey. Los fe- licitamos cordlalmente. II DE LA FERIA DE COLON. De Izquierda a derecha: Roberto Fuello A., miembro del Club Los 'litres; J. J. Kcker, Thelma Castillo, del Club de Leones; Nancy Sasso, del Pas; Marga- rita Barcenas, de la Escuela Militar de Fort Gullck; seora Yolanda Salas, de Hirshfleld, Gio- conda Apolayo, de La Estrella de Panam; Virginia Rodrguez, de El Panam-Amrica; Alicia Wong, de la Sociedad Cvica de Chirlcanos; Lu is Gonzlez, Antonio Tagarpulos, Carlos Mouy- ns V., y Armando Moreno. Wanda Hendrlx y Audi Murphy, figuras principales de "Ban- didos en la Sierra", pelcula Univeml-Intr national, en Tech- nicolor, en la oe el ambiente, la calidad de los Intrpretes y el argumento, forman la ms perfecta unidad. Comienza el lunes en el Tropical. Felicitamos al seor Carlos Alberto Patterson y seora Flor de- Maria 8. de Patterson, quie- nes celebran hoy el segundo aniversario de su matrimonio. Enfermos Pro, restablecimiento le seamos a la seorita Glorela Calvo, quien sufre quebrantos de salud en su residencia. Guarda cama en el hospital Panam el nio Csar Ramn Snchez. Ojal mejore pronto. Cumpleaos de Hoy Seora Margarita D. de Arlas Seora Isabel F. de Ponce Seora Joselta Arlas Seora Amlnta B. de Duque Seor Fablo Arosemena Seor Carlos Icaza Nio Jorge Arlas Thompson Hio Carlos E. Van der Hans Nio Ramn Roy Correa Nio Olmedo Agullar Jr. Nia Rlna Elisa Rlpoll * I BRILLO? Ni los esmalte* para uias miia ernro* brillan ms que CUTEX B lastre Catsx di s li aim coa ms iedenii statical, aintia itlu a ninga precio lo di mejor. ('otex, sil* Cam, llena "rniroelon", l nutn y almbralo in|reJimtc %ar kaco perdnrar al brilla par din y afea, sin Igrietlrte, daiprandaria dar alaran*. Ea atadSMM Mitas. EaaMloa** ninol coa CUTE** F.l etmilte pmrm uhut ms popumr del mundo Cumpleaos de Maana Seora Carmen E. de Arlas Seora Lilia Ch. de Cucaln Seora Elisa Elena K. de Qui- ones. Seorita Marltza Urlbe Aran- o. Nio Francisco Arlas Paredes Viajero Distinguido El Ministro de Relaciones Ex- teriore de la hermana Repbli-' ca del Ecuador. Don Neftal Ponce, llegar esta noche a Pa- nam procedente de NueVa Yorn El Canciller Ponce opsar la noche en el Hotel El Panam y saldr en la maana en el vi.. - lo 319 de l Panagra hacia. Qui- to, Ecuador. ft H- a-mi imVaaaJ ^K* '%,'"* l'\ 3MHF CANDID ATAS A REINA. Thelma Castillo, del Club de Leones: Nancy Sasso. de El Pas; Margarita Barcenas de la Escuela Militar de Fort Gulick; Gioconda Apolayo, de La Estrella de Panam: Virginia Rodrigues, de El Panam-Amrica, y Alicia Wong, de la Sociedad Cvica de Chirlcanos. Falta en la fotografa la seor ita Olga Lelgnadler. ____________ Con un bagaje de 160 bultos que pesan 16 la Ca. Teatral toneladas llega Lope de Vega El Pdte. Arbenz ofrece interceder en huelga obrera pt'TiraT ^>--it 94 TTPi. El Presidente Jacobo Arbenz *>a o n -j jl tu- c.i .. uelga de obreros ferrovial loe " e se fie-ir^ el Jueves, inte- rrumpiendo los embarques d? cena na. La 'nuelga fu Iniciada res- paldando la demanda presen u- da por los obreros en relacin con los salarios. El Qoblerno ha declarado que la huelga es lest!. RED PANAMERICANA tiene los rp^forAt; nrwrm*< Estoy enamorada de la Pond's i old Cream' w dicela a d4& &iuai Es tan fcil conquistar amistades cuando se tiene un rostro bello I Para que su cutis luzca siempre encantador, comience hoy mismo a dar a su rostro este tratamiento de belleza con Pond's Cold Cream. Siempre al acostarseas como durante el dacuide su rostro como Iq hace la cautivadora condesa. Haga lo siguiente: Pmrm limpiar Aplique* aa toda ti rostro, coa movintianta circular. It ligera y sedosa Pond's-Cold Cretm part tuivizar t desalojar maquillaje e impurezas de las aberturas da lot poros. Quitaseis. Para "mmjmmgmr" Aplique otra capa da Pood's Cold Cream de la sail Minera. Qutetela. Esto elimin loa illtimol eitifiea de polvo y deja la tes un . aluda! Verdad que es maravilloso lucir un rostro fresco, radiante . sentirse la ts tan suave, tan tersa? No omita un solo da el eficaz tratamiento de belleza Pond's! El prximo 2 de Mayo llega- r, procedente de Buenaventura, la Compaa espaola de Tea- tro clsico "Lope de Vega, des- pus de haber cumplido una exitosa temporada en Colom- bia. Con un bagaje de 160 bultos y un peso de 16 toneladas, la Compaa Lope de Vega viaja con decorados realizados por los mejores escengrafos espaoles del momento. La Compaa se trasladar a la Capital para presentarse ante el pblico el dia 3 a las 8 y 30 sobre el escenarlo del Teatro Nacional, dando comienzo asi a su temporada de seis nicas funciones con "Los Intereses Creados" de Jacinto Benavente, y por este orden "telo" de Shekespeare,, "Citas del Aire", comedia moderna de humor, de Lpez Rublo "don Juan Tenorio" de Zorrilla, "El Lio Ajeno" de Benavente, finalizando con "La Vida es Bueno" de Caldern de la Barca. Para estas funciones se ha abierto un abono que puede con- seguirse en las taquillas del Teatro Nacional a partir de hoy martes. Telfonos 2-2302. y 2-2095. El precio de un abono para las seis funciones es de B. 12.00, precio relativamente ba- jo por la gran cantidad de gas- tos que supone un desplazamien- to de actuacin de una Com- paa de esta embargadura. compuesta de destacadas figuras de la escena espaola, entre ellas, Carlos Lemos, Primer Ac- tor, que posee el premio nacio- nal de Interpretacin 1948, Con- chita Montijano, Primera Actriz Allonto Muoz, durante muchos aos primer actor de Margarita Xirgu y Pilar Bienert. El elenco artstico, ademas, de ellos, eomrrpnde 16 'a+tores v actrices de primera linea en el Teatro Espaol. El personal ad- ministrativo y tcnico lo comple- ta un grupo de 27 personas que trabajan sirviendo el lema de la Compaa 'Camina mejor va mirando a las estrellas". La Compaa tuvo su origen en la Universidad de la vieja ciudad de Granada, donde un grupo de jvenes universitarios se lanzaron, a la empresa de (Pasa a la pgina 6 columna 8) balboa armed services y. m. c. a. Locuela de ingles Abbie de Linares Directora. Cursos de Conversacin. Gramtica y Literatura. Matri- culas" abiertas: 9 \m.9 p.m. Sesin General el 3 de Mayo a las 5 p.m. Tel. Balboa 2759, Balboa 2839. ULTIMO EMBARQUE! LAVADORAS EASY Las maravillosas que lavan la ropa de toda una familia en menos de una hora. SUYA con 67.50.00 Compre una hoy! CLUB: Slo B/.625 mueblera AVE.CENTRALyCALLE 21 e,l*TELS.2-l830 ----------------------- vY 2-1633 T- Alivlo y prevencin da SUFRIMIENTOS PERIDICOS LA CONaaSA LAIN DE I.S FSLA1SE. a>iaibra Dromixala da la itajtltl aaritinw. iin aaa Kt nacarada"Eiy roa. . TtaaHa etfaPead'satUaWjataratat part asi ca ta"dita lia tOk-taaia hay Poad-t CaU Oaaal Po \D'S COLD CREAM >.*u-M^.r.-c-i Contra ios sufrimientos que atv rut ti an s untas seoras y seoritas ciertos das, debe usarse un re- Stedio que no slo alivie el dolor * afeitar sino que tambin contri- tuya al buen funcionamiento dd vganitmo. Para eso est indicado d Regulador Gestara que hace mucho den al organismo, ejerciendo ua docto descongestivo, tnico y regu* ador. Alivia pronto y previene tsoa dolores, la tensin nerviosa j Mfos ma'eturet. Ea afamado po hst excelentes resultados contra las congestiones y desarreglos funciona- tai dd organismo femenino. Prueba (Jd. esta remedio cientfico y da resultados comprobado. Lbrete ate o sufrimientos I REGULADOR Gesteira - fnaHiia dd Dr. J. Catis. _. Fortalzcase lomando el Gran Vino Reconstituyente SANSN Tome ahora y siempre una copita de SANSN antes de las comidas y se conservar fuerte! DAGMAR UN REGALO PARA UD. LA CUCHARA DE SCOTT De Plstico Duradero en Colores Hermosos GRATIS! Pida el paquete grande de Emulsin de Scott conteniendo una cachara.linda. Obtenible en seis atractivos colores. Y entonces de a su familia codos los das este tnico alimenticio, rico en vitaminas y pre- parado cientfiesmente. Es recomen- dado por muchos mdicos. Pronto Ud. veri a su familia mis fuerte y en mejor salud. ^EMULSION de SC0IT Tnico Alimenticio de Alta Energa OFRECE UN NUEVO SURTIDO DE JOYAS STIGBERT DE SUECIA Ave. Tivoli rio. 6 o Telfono 2-0170 ajsjsj PA (UN A SIM El PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE u MARTES, ABRIL 24, 195! NO hay mejor Va para VENDER ALQUILAR COMPRAR etc. ^\ que la ruta al Departamento de los CLASIFICADOS DEL P. A. Nuestros Agentes o Nuestros Oficinas lo atendern: Mnimo por 15 palabras. 3* por cada palabra adicional. SERVICIO LEWIS V't. Tiioli No 4 Til :-2si KrOSKO DE LESSEPB rruf de Fiiuat NOVEDADES MORRISON Ave 4 inlle T(l 2-M41 BOTICA CARLTON A\t Meleaer ll.Nt T.L m-Col SE VENDE Miscelneas______ APROVECHE:Tinturo i ! Ir anulante* a pruebe Se raabe. i.3.25 taln. Alaucene Treaielu- SE VENDEN:Clava, tubera . acare acafelado, Fr-Te (carian aislodoi para cicla* rata) eaetie- a>. levimeno excusado etc. a la* precie mi* kaie* a*> pla*e. AGENCIAS GLOBALES. Va Ea>- a. Ilcponae e iuaa tronce. Tel 1-1503._____________________________ SE VENCb: licubodoro elctrico. Tl. 3-C255_______________________ SE VENCE:Elevador paro depsito de 2.000 libres capacidad. Uso manual. Ricardo A. Mir, S.A. Ci- II* 16 Este No. 4. Tel. 2-3436. Acabemos de recibir cemento blanco, cermica de color y vidrio verde contra calor. Cia Culcidio Gonza- lez, Fbrica de Mosoicos. Ave. Cu- ba No. 8. Oh SE VENDEN: Mquinas calculado- ras nuevas, almonos, Brunsviga. desde B'. 145.00. "Porros", Plaz* 5 de Mayo. Panam. SI VENDEN:De ecaiin llanta nutvos 700*15. S lena*. Canti- ao* limitado, ".constructora Na- cional, Ave. Per 7. Tel. 2-0406. SE VENDE:Piono, cama con col- chn y resortes Simmons, estufo de kerosene Perfection, maquino de coser Singer y otro pequeo* orticulos coseros. Todos en exce- lentes condiciones. Ocrrase a la Casa No. 3 I Rento 5> del Seguro Social entre Calles 26 y 27 Et, Apto. 29. '__________ 3E VENDE:100 hojas zinc acono- lodo 2x6 y 2x8. Precio mdico. Colle 38 No. 13. Tel. 3-0158. SE VENDE Bienes Raiceo SE NECESITA Domsticos SALON DE BELLEZA AMERICANO Calle II Oe*t* N*. U EL PANAMA AMERICA Calle ' Na S7 Panama aUt. Cu Ha I 11-17 Catea SE ALQUILA Apartamentos recemos bella y eke lata reate I mar. Precio: solamente B/.4 35 m2. Wolff y C. Ltda Co It 5. No. 22. Tel. 2-2388. SF VENDE:SOBRESALIENTE RESI- DENCIA A PRECIO DE ACTUA- LIDAD. Sus 6 relimaras, 3 baos, terrazas y grandes salone brin- dan comodidad a numeroso feni- lio. Situada en AVE. JUSTO ARO- SEMcNA No. 53. cere a todo os conveniencias. Para informes ins- peccin liame a: WOLFF Y CIA. LTDA., Colle 5.. 22. Tel. 2-2388. SE NECESITA:Carguera con reco- mendacin. Dormir en el trabajo. Ave. Per No. 28, Apto. 8. SE NECESITA:Empleada competen- te, extranjera si es posible para 3 persones, cocina y limpiezo. Via Espoo 106, Apto. 4 frente Po- sadeno. SE NECESITA: Empleada trabajos domsticos, debe dormir en el tra- bajo. Calle 52. Bella Vista No. 3. (Segundo chalet, mano izquierda). SE VENDE:Por no poder atenderla debidamente, acreditada cantina en Ave. Centrol. Escribo: S. G., Apto. I 34, Panam. Por motivo de' viaje se vende uno casa en Calle II No. 8, Va Po- rras. Entenderse olli mismo. SE VENDE:Moderna caso'concre- to, magnifica inversin, produce I0o. Calle "A" No. 14 esquina 12 Oeste. Vase dueo altos. PERSONALES Anlisis de tu letra es el medio de xito y popularidad. Escriba Box 403 Ancn. Para anlisis en su ca- sa o visite 36 Via Espaa Apto. G. SE NECESITA:Empleado poro ofi- cios domsticos, que duerma en el trabaio. Victoriano Lorenzo No. 10 bajos. SE NECESITA:Uno empleada par dormir en el empleo. Via Espao No. 20, Apto. 13. SE NECESITA:Una empleada que hable ingls, con experiencia, que- haceres coseros paro matrimonio sin hijos. Entrevstese mircole en U maana solamente. Calle Noble 5733-D Diablo. SE VENDEN:Lonos y llantos usa- das poro camiones. Vorios tama- os. Tronsportes "Intro." Calle Jernimo de la Ossa. SE VENDE:Mquina de contobili-! dad (NotionalI en perfectas con- dicione. Precio ganga. Telfono 2-0610. "________________ SE VENDE. Mquina de escribir morca "Royal." Cama de metal, uno peinadora. Vio Porras No. 4, Chalet Amarillo. SE VENDE: Cochorrcs perro lobo legitimes. Tel. 3-2690. Aviso Judicial EDICTO EMPLAZATORIO El Juw que suscribe. Tercero del Cr- ruii doe Panam, por medio del presente, ENFLACA At tenor GEORGE WALTER MOhS. cuyo paradero actual le desconoce, pa- i t|iie dentro del t. rmoo do treinta (90) ' tai contados de* de le fecha de la lti- i a publicacin de ene edicto, com*- ' ira a este Tribunal, por a o por me- io de apoderado, a fin de que liara va* ler sus derechoa en el juicio de divor- o promovido en ni contra por Ajri- > n Margues, advirtindoaelt que al ai i > to hiciere dentro del trmino exprtM- < i, Ir nombrar un defensor da au- * nte con quien bo continuar el juicio. Por tanto, ae fija I preaente adicto e i tugar pblico .! eita Secretarla, hoy ce de abril de mil noveclentoa cin- * .enta f uno, y copias dal mismo se * it reran a paite interesada para au piblieacin de conformidad con la Ley. El Juez. (Fdo ) Carlas Ivan Zuaif a. El Hteratario. Fda.) Rubn D Cardaba K* fiel conia. Panarra. Abril 12 de 1151. Carlos I vn Zur.ii a Siio. SE COMPRA SE COMPRA: Coleulodora MON- ROE pequa, porttil monuol. CORPORACIN DE INGENIERA, S. A. ___________ ' SE VENDE Automviles_____i SE VENDE:Pontiat 1950. 4 puer- tas "Streamliner", solamente 10.* 000 millas, puede verse.de 8 a 2. Llamando Tels. 2-3173 2-3175. De 5 de la tarde en adelante. Tel. 3-2458._____________________________ SE VENDE: Buick Sedan 1948, cuatro puertas. Buenas condiciones mecnicos, limpio. B'.160.00. Tel. 2-1185. Calle "Q" No. 27. SE NECESITA:Cocinera con expe- riencia que duermo en el trabojo y traiga recomendaciones. Ave. Son Martn, Coso 52, Bella Vista. SE NECESITA:Uno bueno cocine- ro, intil presentarse si no sabe co- cinar. Muy buen sueldo mensual. Calle 50 No. 15, Apto. I, Son Remo. SE NECESITA: Dependient con referencias y conocimiento* ingls. Buen presencia. Buen sueldo. El Siglo. Ave. Centrol 85. SE NECESITA:Empleado para ayu- dar en la cocino y limpieza de I caso. Sirva-e ocurrir a Calle 48 No. II, Apto. 3. SE NECESITA:Una buena emplea- do, debe traer referencias. Ave. del Per 75 pitos. SE NECESITA:Una empleada para una familia pequea que no duer- ma en la colocacin. Calle 30 Este No. 21 altos atrs. MISCELNEA Dov pensin paro estudiantes del In- terior, Ocurro Calle 8va. No. 25. Tel. 2-3846. SE DESEA:Seora responsable con recomendacin, paro cocinar, la- var y planchar. Calle 15 Portillo No. 117. Familia Calvio. EDICTO EMPLAZATORIO El que euscribe JUEZ PRIMERO DEL ( KC UITO DE COLON, por aala raadlo ( ITA al or JOHN VICTOR CARTER. 1 jrleamcri.:ano. portador da la cdula i identidad paraonal No. I-1S48R, pre- Irple v rcr-rrenlanle legal da la "'BA- I U LAND COMPANY. S.A.". para que > -piro del termino de treinta (101 di,,, i -fiiadoa a partir de la ltima publlca- < a da cite edicto, comparezca por al . por medio da acoderado a hai-erae or i i la aolirilud hecha anta aate Tribunal I t al saftor STANLEY GHAYSON. pa- out a* ordene la convocatoria de la nb'.ea General Se adrirele al emplazado John Victor 'ir'.er. que ai no compareciere a eate I capacho, per ai o por medio de apo- , >rado a haccrae or. en la aolieltud ae- , i. por el aeor Grayioa. dentro eel rsalaa a-riba indicado, ae le deairnar i deTen-cr de anente, con quien ae i mtinuar la tramitacin de la e*pre- uta eoicitu,!. Conforme k> ordenan lo artlculoa <70 y 471 del C.lii;.. Judicial, aa (iia el relente edito eir lursr elalbla de la feerrtarla del Tribunal hoy die (10) Ab-il Ie mil novcrtelit',. cimienta t t o (13I). por el trmino de treint, llol di v cnpiae del miun ae ponen a di,po,iriAn de la parle Interesada pa- Ku publicacin con laa formalidades l a I-<. El Juei. (Fdo ICuilleraa. Zurita El Secretario. (Fd.) Jos A. Carrillo Ea fiel conia de au oriffinal. Coln, Ahr:l 1 de 1951. Jet A Carrillo Secretari o. Persianas Venecianas LUX a 67.9.50 Entrena inmediata. Reparaciones generales. Industrias Panamericanas .Calle 29 E. 22 Tel. 3-1713 PENSION ISTMEA":Podres de familio. Desean completa atencin en alimentacin, comodidad y cui- dado en estudios de su hijo? Enva- lo, a "Pensin Istmeo" regentada por dos profesras responsables, en Avenida Central y Colle 9o. No. 9 altos. Lime telfono 3-1451. Po- ra informacin. SE NECESITA:Una buena cocinero que sepa disponer, no tiene que dormir en el empleo. Campo Ale- gre. Ave. Manuel Icaza No. 26. SE NECESITA:Una muchacha que sepa trabajo de refresqueria. Acuda LA CORONA, Va Espoo 45. PROFESORES Y MAESTROS Hocemos ponfletos mimeegrafiodos limpios y legibles con dibujos apro- piados o lo materia. Precios m- dicos, lame al 2-302), Estudiante 77-A. ~~SE ALQUILA Automviles SE DESEA MANJELO UD. 50t por her mu 7< por milla. Carra eiefiirade*. Tal. 2-1995 Garage Elia PERDIDO SE DESEA: Cambior apartamento grande por uno pequeo paro sol- tero. Ocrrase o lo Cosa No. 3 (Renta 5) del Seguro Social entre Calles 26 y 27 Este. Apto. 29. "recreaciones" Goce de un clima |re4*l. cata amueblado con todo I confort en Carra Camaina; tambin ca'as a arilla 1* le playa en Sonta Clara. Lime Shrapnel Balboa 2820 o veo al cuidador all mismo. SE VENDE Artculo de Casa SE VENDE:Un juego de comedor. pro verlo de 9 o 12. Colla Ve- nezuela No. 3. SE ALQUILA:-Apartmento, 2 re- cmaras, sala-comedor, B/.55.00 lave, 85 Avenida Cubo. CUIA COMERCIAL SE ALQUILA:Apartamento cmodo, cntricamente situado. Ocurro' Compaa F. Icaza, Avenida B 79. SE ALQUILA: Apartamento bien ventilado con gran terraza, altos de los oficinas peliculeras. Via Es- paa. Tel. 2-2443. SE ALQUILA: En vista del mar apartamento pequeo semi-omue- blodo, estufo, luz y gas. Mucho aire, lindo vista. Tel. 3-0276. SE ALQUILA:Apartamentos de una recmaro en Colle lo. Perry Hill, Casa No. 10 en planta baja, ade- lante y atrs. Recurra personalmen- te a Farmacia San Roque, Av*. Central No. 200. duronle los ho- ras de oficina solamente. _, SE ALQUILA:Un apartomento en Calle 15 Oeste No. 66 altos. Re- ferencias en la abarroterio "La Preferida", Calle 16 Oeste y "f" No. 8. SE ALQUILA: Aportamento sala comedor, recmara, bao, cocina. Ave. Jos de Fbrega No. 14, Pa- sadena. SE ALQUILA:Un oparlamento fres- co, cmodo de 4 recmaros y ser- vicios por El .60.00. Cerca de Va Espaa y Belisario Porras. Tal. ' 3-0471. RINDE MAS... ES EL MEJOR! ACEITE ELDORADO SE VENDE EN GALONES Y EN TAMAOS CHICOS De venta en LA BYZKAYNA SE ALQUILA:Un aportamento pe- queo en Calle 2o. No. 18. In- formes olios de la misma. SE ALQUILA Cuartos SE ALQUILA:Cuarto con muebles pora hombre. B'.600 semonoles. Ave. Ernesto Lefevre. Parque Le- fvre. Cosa 32. SE ALQUILA: Uno o dos cuartos con o sin muebles en casa de fa-' milio pora matrimonio o persono sola. Bella Visto. Colle 45 No. 14. SE ALQUILA:Una pieza a pareja responsable en Calle 7a. No. 11 segundo olio. SE ALQUILA:Cuarto independiente amueblado, residencia familiar, personas de buenas costumbres con o sin alimentos. Carretera Saba- nas. Tel. 3-2796. SE NECESITA General SE NECESITA:Muchacha que ten- ga experiencia en negocio de obo- rrotero y refresquera. Comisaria- to Sittn en Calle Coln. Hombre joven. Contable. Experiencia Secretariado. Escriba Apartado No. 3390. Exponga nombre y direccin. Buen sueldo. SE NECESITAN:Dos costureros pa- ra coser calzados para zapatera "El Record". Calle "B" 11. RECOMPENSA POR CARTERA PER- DIDA:Una cartera Carmela pro- piedad de Frank Diers con cdula de identidad y licencia de Panam y la Zona del Canal. Se ofrece re- compenso o la persona que la re- 5res a Diers & Ullrich, Melndez tve. and 6th Street, Coln. El seor Francisco Mainierl Borletta. propietario del carro Cadillac Modelo 1950, que se rifar el Domingo 29 de Abril de 1951. hace saber por este medio que. por haberse extraviado los tiquetes que o continuocin se enu- meren se considerarn nulos: 0635, 1762, 1823. 1825, 1929. 2098, 2148. 2160, 2531. 2564, 2712. 2802. 2812. 3299. 3377. 4093. 5728, 5957. 6091. 7501. 7503. 7504, 7527, 7543, 7597. 7409. 7431. 7437, 5949. 7610, 7958, 7995. 9019. 9092, 9032, 9034, 9041, 9081. 9010. 902". 9332, 9494. 9475. 9602. 9816. 9662. Francisco Momere Barletto Cdu- la No. 15-946. PERDIDO: Magnifica gratificecin * alreciae par nfermacin oare al paradera 4* un carra Chevrelet 1949 Fleet I, n. Tud.r Sedan, ma- tar Na. GAM249I12, caler cuanta fue rehada i Curuna, Mara 27, verde clara, place Na. Zl 1241. T.l 11(3 lalhea a llama a la Ofi- cina del Firemen' Insurance C. an al edifici. de Ingeniera. Dia- bla. |SE VENDE: Refrigeradora Philco 4, 5 pies cbicos, derechos paga- dos. Razonable. Casa 215-D, Cu- rund. SE VENDE: A precio de baratillo precioso juego de recmara como nuevo. Calle 34 No. 7 SE ALQUILA Locales E ALQU'LA:Local pora oficina arribo dal Teatro Centro,. b ALQUILAN.excluwomente (to- ro ofietnos loclas cntrico an tos alto* da Avenido Central 44 o precio mdico Soliciten into- mocin eti Almacene* 5 y IC cen- tavo. Dtsvontzca la Gordon. all la gordura arruina figura, a bao* QOO tenga dificultad par. raaptrar y pone au aalud en peligro, encontrar. ctj. e fcil perder m.ilio klle por da con el nuevo mtodo de Hoilywood llamado IORUOUK Nada da dicta draatl:* r. ej.rc manto aln peligra Pida t*ORtfOJ>H m m farmai la '-1 rita y empiece a ta^ LOCAL:Apropiado para estableci- miento comercial, cosa nuevo, cn- trica. Ocurro F. Icoza y Ca.. S. A. SE ALQUILA: Amplio local para cualquier uso de oficinos o escue- la privado. Cntrico. Va Espao 16. Tel. 2-2443. SE ALQUILA:Lo oficina y dep- sito actualmente ocupado por la Ca. Colgote-Palmolive-Peef con cabida de ms de 2.500 pies cua- drados. Situado frente al Estadio Nocional. Infrmese: Walff y Co. Ltd*.. Calle 5a.. 22. Tel. 2-2388. SE ALQUILA:Un local comercial, de dos puertas. Tel. 2-1366. Locales comerciales en Mariano Aro- icmcna y Super Mercado Celido- nia; tamben en Ro Abojo, B/. 12.00. Dirigirse A. de Boutoud. Local apropiado para mayorista, f- brica, deps to en olro negocio que requiera 400 metros cuadrados de eipocio con amplio estacionamien- to portict'lar. Diriri-te Ca de Le- 1 fevre de 8 a.m. a 9 a.m. SE NECESITAN: Costureros para camisas y pantalones. No se pre- sente sin recomendaciones. Sastre- ra Derby, Calle "I" "No. 5, Sr. Vargas. Por cuatro -oto* en aquella ocasin, continu vo- tando en favor de los Conser- vadores en casi todas las cues- tiones de Importancia. Adems de Bevan, el Ministro de Comercio Harold Wilson tam- bin abandon el Gabinete y se dijo que John Freeman, secre- tarlo Parlamentarlo del Minis- terio de Abastecimientos haba hecho lo mismo. Los observadores sealaron que la mayora Laborista fu de slo cuatro votos y que sta po- dra haberse reducido au n slo voto si Bevan, Wilson y Free- man hubieran decidido votar contra el Gobierno. Esferas polticas autorizadas anunciaron anoche que Attlee ya haba seleccionado los aue reemplazarn a Bevan y Wil- son. Setrn esos Informantes. Alfred Robens. actualmente Se- cretario Parlamentario del Mi- nisterio de Energa v Combusti- bles ocupar el Ministerio de Traba io y el Secretarlo de Jus- ticia Sir Hartley Shawcross pa- sar a ocupar el Ministerio ,de Comercio. Ms comodidad para los que usan DENTADURA POSTIZA He qui una manera agradable d evi- tar la incomodidades oue presenta una dentadura poetiza floja riXODENT IFa- teeth). un nuevo polvo para polvorear la dentadura postiza, la mantiene mi fir- memente en la boca, brindando rpayor comodidad. No deja sensacin pegajosa. Es alcalina (no-addo). No agria la boca. Contrarresta el "olor dentadura "a- tiza". Suaviza el aliento. Obtenga FIXO- )ENT iFaateetlil en cualquier farmacia hoy. * 1-B COBRE Ms Urde ser ms difcil conseguirlo. i Nosotros todava tenemos en existencia: ROLLOS HOJAS TUBERA ACCCESORIOS GEO. F. NOVEY, INC. Ave. Central 27Tel. 3-0140 CUEROS LEGTIMOS DE TAPICERA (Americanos) 69f pie cuadrado Ricardo A. Mir, S.A. Tels. 2-2988 y 2-3335 Calle 16 Este No. 4 Tenemos exacta- mente el VIDRIO que Ud. necesita! FABRICA DE ESPEJOS EL DIABLO Calle U Este #4 Tel. 2-28M Sabe lo que es M0NTECRIST0 ? FABRICA DE ESPEJOS LA GARANTA a La ms antigua, e La ms acreditada, e La de mayor stock. SIEMPRE A SUS ORDENES Ro Abajo #2164Tel. 3-0524 Almacn Calle "I" *4 Tel 2-1751 Fu herido por al Dispensarlo del Hospital A- mador Guerrero para solicitar curacin. Murlllo fue atendido por el mdico de turno, quien dicta- min "herida por arma de fue- go (calibre 38. largo) sobre re- gln lnfra-capular Izquierda, sin agujero de salida. Estado de observacin, quedando recluido en la sala 2, cama 3, de dicho hospital. El denuncio de robo fue pre- sentado por Rafael Mendoza A- costa, quien report el hurto de un mazo de llaves conte- niendo ocho llaves, una correa con hebilla de oro que lleva sus iniciales, diez pedazos de bi- lletes para el sorteo de este domingo con el nmero 7478, un reloj de bolsillo de metal blanco y unas fotografas y papeles personales. Harmodlo Murlllo cuenta con extenso historial policlvo en el cual se encuentran siete casos de hurto, 5 arrestos por vagan- cia y 2 juegos Ilcitos. Drsticas disposiciones el trabajo. Esta disposicin tie- ne fundamento legal, como se se dijo, en el Articulo 44 de la Constitucin Nacional que a la letra dice: "Las leyes no tienen efecto retroactivo excepto las de orden pblico y de inters social". La construccin de aceras es materia de orden p- blico y de inters social. "Alerta completo" zas actuarn, segn rdenes expedidas, para cumplir con las misiones que se les haya asignado a ellas en el curso del ejercicio", dijo el General. "Operacin Cracker", aadi, "puede requerir que ciertas fuerzas se trasladen durante las horas de obscuridad a lugares previamente sealados. Estos movimientos tendrn lugar de noche por dos razones; la pri- mera, para reducir lo ms po- sible cualquier incomodidad quv se le pueda causar a la pobla- cin civil, y la segunda, para proveer un entrenamiento noc- turno a nuestras fuerzas. El General Morris agreg que estas maniobras se llevarn a cabo de vez en cuando. Esta ser la primera operacin noc- turna en conjunto, en la cual tomarn parte los tres ramos de las fuerzas militares. "Ope- racin Cracker" sigue en pos de la reciente maniobra milita' que se acaba de efectuar en la vecindad de Chepo. Al contestar preguntas for- muladas por la prensa, el Ge- neral Morris manifest que se les solicitar a los agentes de FERTILIZANTE LIQUIDO CALIFORNIA NO ENSUCIA NO MANCHA SIN OLOR Contiene Nitrgeno, Potasio y Acido Fosfrico. Se recomienda para Plantas Arboles Prado. De venta en pintas y galones en los ALMACENES TR0PIDIRA TROPIDURA Lo mejor por menos. polica de la Zona del Canal y de Panam que ayuden a los militares a llevar a cabo los movimientos nocturnos duran- te "Cracter" y que espera que las personas que vivan cerca de laa rutas de los convoyes no se preocupan indebidamente. La prensa y las radiodifuso- ras estn cooperando con el Comando del Caribe para evisar al mayor nmero posible de personas de este ejercicio que est en proyecto. A un costo Las hordas comunistas tai.i- oin rompieron la linea de Oc- tavo Ejrcito en el Ro InXin a unas 25 millas al noroeste de Sel "y obligaron a las lineas ce as Naciones Unidas retroced v m todos.los sectores de su frc- te de ofensiva de 95 millas con excepcin del rea de la i- presa de Hwachon. Sin embargo, los rojos esta- ban pagando un terrible precio por sus avances. En las prime- ras 24 horas de su asalto litu perdido a 15,000 soldados en.ir- muertos y heridos. Decenas de miles d.soldados rojos reem- plazaban a los muertos, sincm- aigo- Informes del frente indican que el Comando Comunista ha lanzado a la lucha a elementos ce siete cuerpos de ejrcito y cerca de cinco divisiones or- coreana* 200,000 chinos y 5.- 000 norcoreanos en la oenai- va general- Se cree que otros 400,000 rol- dados comunistas, en su ma- yora chinos, se encuentran en xeserva listos para entrar ai a luc'na, y se han pedido mis tropas a Manchuria. Los enormes caones aa- os, hasta de 155 milimetro, y enjambres de aviones nor- teamericanos se encuentin sembrando ,1a muerte y destuc- cin entre las tropas chinas con ataques continuos. La sola artillera ha causado tntre 8,000 y 9,000 bajas a i'- 10J08. En algunos sectores 1"S iandes caones dispararon an- danadas cada 2 segundos. Ti resto de las bajas comunistas fueron causadas por la avia- cin aliada. Los aviones B-28 estuvieron bombardeando detrs de las li- neas enemigas destruyendo un punte en SinanJu en la linea de ieiuerzo desde Manchuria. Tam- bin destruyeron un campo de a ten-Iza je al sur de Pyongyang y varias barracas en Hungnar. en la costa oriental. Olas humanas de enmos y norcoreanos estuvieron atacan- do las lineas aliadas a todo io largo del frente desde Kae3or.? en el oeste hasta In je en el ete. en lo que puede ser ur. intento final de los comunUlas para sacar a los altados ae I Corea. Unos 40,000 soldados rojo3 1- ! Liumpleron a travs de las i:- ; neas aliadas -en el frente ecu- I iial al sur y sur-este de Kun.ii- ; wa tres horas despus de u*l- ciado el ataque. Regimiento tres regimiento di I rojos surgan hacia el sur por los riscos y entre los valles, en medio del incensante caoneo y bombardeo areo de la aliados. CLUB DE B/. 2.50 Qavetero y ropero moderno. Cama de caoba, spring corriente, colchn de algodn. Cama de hierro, spring corriente, colchn de algodn. MUEBLERA TON Mueble Ganado... Mueble Entregado. Tenemos en existencia: HIERRO DE REFUERZO CLAVOS de toda clase ZINC ACANALADO 2' x 6 y 2' x 8' Calibre 26 Agencias Globales Via Espaa No. 121 Tel. 3-1503 Registra mejora dicos dice que el estado dei viejo soldado "contina mejo- rando ligeramente". Agregan que el paciente se alimenta li- geramente y que su tempera- tura es de algo menos de 38 grados centgrados. El anciano, que otrora fue considerado como hroe nacio- nal de Francia, ha' sobrevivido 125 gobiernos de su patria y durante su enfermedad ha re- cibido muchsimas cartas y re- galos de todas partes del mun- do con motivo de su cmple- senos. La correspondencia y rega- los han sido enviados a Mada- me Petaln, quien ha vivido en una pequea habitacin en es- ta isla desde que su marido vi- no aqu como. desterrado. No debe alarmar ra posibilidad de que se regis- traran uno o dos casos en la zona de Limn, pero que todos los habitantes de esa regln es- taban vacunados ya. En cuanto al sector de Cho- rrera, nos manifest el doctor Sandoval que como se haban registrado en la zona de Los Mortales, La Valdesa y Caimi- to tres casos de tifoidea en un lapso ms o menos largo, se ha- bla procedido a vacunar a to- dos los habitantes de esas re- giones y para ello se ha refor- zado la Unidad Sanitaria de La Chorrera con empleados de Pa- nam. No se ha registrado, agreg el doctor Sandoval. ningn ca- so de fiebre amarilla por esas reglones. Habr barbacoa a beneficio de una j guardera infantil El da 27 de los corrientes, el Club nter-Americano de Muje- . res celebrar una barbacoa en la residencia del seor Ricardo A. Mir, en la calle Colombia, a fin de acoplar fondos para la guar- dera infantil que sostiene esa institucin. El acto tendr lugar a las sie- te de la noche y se confa que d los resultados esperados, pues la Guardera atiende a 30 nios, de ocho de la maana a las cinco de la tarde, todos los dias. Se nombra directora de costura en el Hospital S. Toms Por Decreto Ejecutivo No. 228 de fecha 24 de Abril ha sido nombrada la Srta. Mara Gon- zlez Torres, Directora de Cos- tura del Hospital Santo Toms, en reemplazo de la persona qua se encontraba encargada de esa direccin, cuyo puesto se decla- ra insubsistente. La Srta. Torres se encargar del puesto con una asignacin mensual de B.125.00. Pelean a golpes por la disputa Truman- General MacArthur CIUDAD DE MEXICO. Abril 24 (UP)La Polica dijo qua la controversia entre Trunin y MacArthur ocasion una pu- la* entre familias aqui, resil- lando cuatro personas sena*1 mente heridas en la discuaiiaa Dos miembros de una familia, simpatizadores de Truman - se trenzaron en una lucha con- tra otros dos, quienes simpati- zaban con MacArthur. ---------------------------__ j Por decisin El jurado del sbado pasada estuvo integrado por la Sra. Yo- landa Salas de Hirschfeld, I-.e? sldente del Club Interamerleauo ce Mujeres; el Sr- Luis E. Gon- zlez, Presidente del Sindica'."' de Periodistas de Panam; el Sr. Armando Moreno, Redact t Jefe de "El Panam Amrka"; i los Sres. J. J. Eclcer y Ca los Mouynes. La eleccin de la Reina el pioximo Domingo, en lugar del Sbado, se 'nar por declai popular. i No se encuentra presentados por la Contralo- na. Fuentes enteradas nos infor- maron asimismo que tampoco tiene ambiente la rebaja da sueldos en las altas esferas ofi- ciales, ya que con ello se per- judicara a una gran masa de empleados pblicos de escasea recursos y al final de cuentas ella no resolvera el problema. Hasta el momento de cerrar planas, no se haba hallado nin- guna solucin en el seno de la comisin a este respecto. Pagando un elbiria 300 mil toneladas da carne argentina, pero desde que as negociaciones anglo-argtn- ilnas quedaron Interrumpida. ti ao pasado, los argentinos omentaron otros mercado... El protocolo aumenta el em- barque de carne en con.se.va de 27,000 que estipulaba el Tra- tado a 30,000. Gran Bretaa pa- gar ahora precios que fluctan entre 18 a 146 libas estera.as por tonelada, comparado con el precio que fijaba el Tratado de 37 a 536 libras esterlinas. Con un bapaie revalorlzar el teatro. Poco des- pus la Compaa se origin {irofeslonalmente incorporando a as mejores figuras del momen- to teatral espaol, recorriendo en triunfo durante cuatro aos toda la peninsula e Isla adya- centes, consiguiendo durante es- te tiempo tres premios naciona- les, al mejor repertorio, a la mejor interpretacin y a la me- jor compaa del ao.-Entoncej sus inquietudes les llevaron has- ta las playas americanas para iniciar la temporada de Teatro Espaol en este Continente. Debutaron el 21 de Octubre da 1949 en La Habana De enton- ces ac, han recorrido con xito creciente. Puerto Rico, (seis me- ses actuacin ininterrumpida). Repblica Dominicana, Venezue- la y Colombia (8 mesesj, desde donde pasaron a Panam a San Jos de Costa Rica y Mxico, fi- nal de su primera temporada da dos aos en Amrica. AVISO AL PUBLICO De conformidad con lo que establece 1 Art. 777 del Cdi- go de Comercio, aviso al p- blico que por medio de la Es- critura Pblica No. 612 de Abril 21 de 1951 de la Notara 2a. del Circuito de Panam, he comprado al seor JULIO CINIGLIO. el establecimiento comercial de su propiedad denominado "ABARROTERIA 8AN RATAEL", que funciona en el No. 52 de la Calle 17 Oeste, de esta ciudad. Teung Kin Law Niio Panam. Abril 21 de 1951. 75c por una Refrigeradora Todava puede Ud. obtener una magnifica Refrigeradora ADMIRAL pagando slo /JC diarios I MUEBLERA CASA SPARTON Aproveche esta oportunidad! Central 223 Celidonia Tel. 2-ltSl 4 'I 0 ti ' MARTES. ABRIT. ?4. 1S51 EL PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE PAGINA SIET Finaliz El Torneo Nal. De Baseball Logrando Herrera El Subcampeonato Se entregaron los Trofeos y Premios El Cerrad clasific para la serie final del Sed Comercial Los mlleos do Matias Cernid clasificaron para Ir a la Serie' Final del Campeonato Comercial de Softball al vencer anoche al Istmeo por nueve carreras a tres en Santa Rita, colocndose a la vea en el primer lugar del torneo con siete victorias v dos derrotas a medio Juego del Ca- f Duran que baj al segundo lugar. En el Juego de anoche la ba- teria el cernid castig con 10 Imparables, dos de los cuales fueron Jonrones de Solanos en' el sexto acto con un corredor en . base y tro de Luis Mel con dos bases en el tercer episodio. Por los msicos lanz Luis Mel seis actos y un terci, en- trando en tu lugar "Lacho" Spencer quien termin. Meto se acredit el triunfo y tiene ahora cuatro triunfos sin derrotas. Al-. varado* hasta el quinto y Molinai hasta el final del Juego lanzaron por el Ron Istmeo que sufri su sptima derrota anoche. Al-! varado fu el perdedor. El score condensado del par- tido fu el siguiente: C. H. E. I M. Cernid 031 230 *9 10 1 Istmeo 000 M3 03 2 El softball comercial acord nuevo V calendario con algunos juegos diurnos Nuevo calendario acord la Liga Comercial de Softball en ltima reunin, y adems resolvi celebrar "algunos partidos en las horas de la Urde y doble luego loa domingos comentando a as nueve de la maana. El calendario reformado es el siguiente: Mircoles 25.V. Pre vs. B.IT.R. a las 4:30 p.m. Jueves 26.Hudson vs. Caf Darn a fas 7:30 p.n Viernes 27.Fiduciario vs. Cervecera a Us 4:30 p.m. Sbado 28.Ron Istmeo vs. Packard a las 4:30 p.m. Domingo 29.Caf Duran va. Packard a las 9:00 ajn. Domingo 29.e. Comejn vs. V. Peres a las 10:45 p.m. Lunes 30.Cervecera va. M. Cerrad a las 4:30 p.m. Martes 31.B.UJt. ts. M. Cerrad a Us 4:30 p.m. Mircoles I.Mayo Caf Purn vs. B.U.R. a las 4:30 p.m. El "Panam-Amrica" Jugar Maana Con El "El Pas", Sofl Maana u las cuatro de la tarde se medirn en el campo de Juegos del Instituto Nacional los equipos de El Panam Ame- rica y El Pas, en encuentro que tuvo que ser aplazado a causa de la lluvia An cuando El Pais tiene a jugadores que todava no han; soltado el bibern, los pipones de El Panam Amrica espe- ran darles una gran paliza. El ms conspicuo dueo de equipos de softball del presente ao. doctor Mariano "Rano" So- sa actuar como arbitro princi- pal de este juegazo. La entrada es gratis, an cuan do se pens en un principio cobrar un balboa por persona. Chiriqui y Coln triunfaron ayer ECO UNIVERSITARIO Por R. L B La liga de Basketball prorroga hasta el Jueves el cierre de inscripciones Seor Reeior: La Universidad Necesita an Instructor Deportivo Entraremos a divulgar la sp- i tima leccin Definicin de Edu- cartn. Es necesario que desde j ahora nos formemos una ideal completa y exacta sobre lo que as la Educacin Fsica; por lo tanto debemos llegar a una conclusin precisa de lo que es I esa materia. Pero como la Edu- cacin Fsica en nuestro tiempo; es un conjunto de disciplinas' que tienden al desarrollo blol-1 trico de nuestro ser, es necesario por lo tanto analizar detalla-, todamente la definicin que va- mos a dar. La Educacin Fsica consiste en un conjunto de re-! glas biolgicas, psicolgicas y pe i dagglcas que propenden al de- sarrollo armnico del cuerpo y la pslquis del hombre, empleando para ello la moderna conquista de las ciencias biolgicas, fsicas, psicolgicas y tcnicas. Sus m- todos no son unilaterales en su; realizacin, sino por el contrario racionalizados y globalizado den tro de los programas educati-j ' vos. Ella abarca desde el pero-: do pre-eacolar (lactante) hasta x el post-escolar, alcanzando gran! importancia durante el perodo' ' escolar. Por ltimo, ella no per- ; sigue como objetivo principal realizar una tarea selectiva, si- no hacer participar al mximo de los humanos en la disciplina del desarrollo corporal y la hi- giene corporal. Esa definicin 1 termina afirmando que Educa- cin Fsica pretende conducir a hombre "hacia loa altos nive- les de la cultura universal". Es- ta sola enunciacin tiene un sentido dentro de los postulados > de la cultura. Es decir, que la Educacin Fsica no es sola- mente una ciencia tcnica sino que tiene su contenido y su pro- yeccin cultural. La "nueva" i Educacin Fsica se opone, fuer- , te y gil, como una nueva moda- > lldad. tomo una actitud intelec- tual y filosfica, ant- e! tradi- cional concepto (ya desechado por las mentes cientficas) de < que ella preparaba al Individuo para la lucho, para ir. guerra ? Cierto eminente intelectual y glmnasiarca moderno Ingls, a- flrmata que el verdadero atleta cuito moderno "posee una sore- na actif.itl interior, porque tie- ne fe en el triunfo y confianza en sus propias fuerzas, y tam- bin sabe perder con noble a-! ballerosidad, tal como lo hacia I el atleta intelectual de la nacin , Helena" (Continuar) ' La Liga Provincial de Basket- ball, acord prorrogar hasta el jueves 20 el cierre de las ins- cripciones para la prxima tem- porada. Hasta el sbado tolo estaban inscritos en las cate- goras mayor masculina, los equipos Cyrnos, Bam y Ches- terfield, inscribindose en el da de ayer el Mauricio y se espe- ra que el conjunto de la Po- lica Nacional lo har en el transcurso de la semana. Los equipos inscritos en la segunda categora son: Carlos Eleta, Re- beldes, Parque Lefevre. Fuerte 15, Bam Jr., y Elisa Barrera, esperndose tambin que Otros equipos se inscriban de aqui i al jueves 20. da en que queda- rn definitivamente cerradas las inscripciones. La liga, de acuer- do con la reglamentacin de los estatutos, acord llamar a se- sin extraordinaria el viernes 27 y nombrar en esa fecha los nuevos dirigentes. Las sesiones del Jueves 26 y viernes 27 se- rn en ei saln de descanso de la Cervecera Nacional a las 5 de la tarden En la categora mayor feme- nina no han Inscrito ningn equipo. Se informa a todos los equipos que deben presentar su nmina de jugadores debida- mente firmadas. 11 ..... Los Dodgers Vencieron a Los Bravos En 16 Entradas (Servicio de la Prensa Unida) DETROIT.Un Jonrn de Vic Wertz con dos en bases en la novena entrada decidi el par- tido a favor de los Tigres sobre los Carmelitas. Previamente en la quinta jornada Pat Mullin con dos en bases, como bateador emergente, dio otro Jonrn que empat el desafo. NUEVA YORKLou Llmer dio un Jonrn con uno en base en la novena entrada que puso en peligro para los Yanquis el de- salo en que vencieron por 5 a 4 a los Atltlcos. Estos anota- ron dos carreras al comenzar el Juego por dos sencillos y tres pases seguidos concedidos por Vlc Raschi. Los Yanquis empa- taron en el segundo por un pa- se y tres sencillos. En el sexto sacaron a Lou Brlssie por pase a Larry Berra, doble de Joe Dl- maggio, pase intencional a Jac- kie Bensen, sencillo de Johnny Mlze seguido de otro de Phil Rlzzuto. Mickey Mantle que dio tres sencillos en cinco veces al bate se anot uno de ellos en la sptima entrada, pas a se- gunda por sacrificio y anot por sencillo de Jansen la que final- mente result la carrera decisi- va. EN LA LIGA NACIONAL Los Dodgers de Brooklyn ven- cieron a los Bravos de Boston por 2 a 1 en un desafio que dur 16 entradas y que se deci- di cuando Cari Furillo conect un single que empuj a Bill Cox con la carrera ganadora. Wa- rren Spahn tir toda la distan- cia por los Bravos, mientras que los Dodgers utilizaron los servi- cios de Joe Hatten, Erv Palica y Clyde King.. Harry Breechen condujo a los Cardenales al triunfo por 2 ca- rreras a 1 sobre los Rojos. Con- nie Ryans en el segundo acto conect un cuadrangular para anotar la-nica carrera de los! Rojos. El veterano Ken Raffens- berger sufri su segundo desca- labro de esta temporada. A pesar de jonrones de Bobby Thompson y Jack Lohrke los Gi- gantes perdieron con los Phillies de Filadelfia por anotacin de 8 carreras a 4 anoche. Jocko Thompson fu escogido por el manager Eddie Sawyer y alcan- z su primera victoria en esta temporada. Andy Pafko conect un doble en el noveno acto para empu- jar la carrera ganadora por me- dio de la cual los Cachorros de Chicago derrotaron a los Pira- tas por anotacin de 2 carreras a 1 Por k>s Cachorros conect un cuadranguilar Bill Serena. Con las autoridades de Obras Pblicas Se hace imprescindible 1a Construccin de an Servicio Sanitario en el Campo de .loceos de SANTA RITA. ESTADO FINAL VIII Campeonato Nacional de Baseball Amateur, Chltr. G. P. Pje. PANAMA ..........9 l.Mt Barrera .............. 6 S .666 Chiriqui.............. 6 S .666 Coln ................ 6 S .666 Bocas del Toro.....6 1 .666 Cort ................ 4 5 .444 Daen ............ 4 6 .444 Veraguas ............. i 7 2X1 Los Santos ......... 2 7 22* San Blas ............ i .m Resultados de Ayer Chiriqui le gano a Veraguas Coln venci a Bocas del Toro lise ayer el VIII Campeonato Nacional de Baseball Amateur, terminando cuatro equipos em- patados en el segundo lugar, de- cidindose dar el subcampeonato al equipo de Herrera por tener el mejor promedio de bate. Panam conquist invicto el torneo, Chiriqui, Coln y Bocas terminaron empatados en el tercer lugar; Darin y Cort II- naUaaron empatados en el sexto puesto; Los Santos y Veraguas nivelaron acciones en el octavo lugar y San Blas termin ce- rrando el grupo. Despus de los juegos anun- ciados en el programa se repar- tieron los Trofeos y premios, medallas y Diplomas al Mrito a los ganadores, jugadores des- tacados y campeones en los di- ferentes circuitos, para declarar despus clausurado el VIII Cam- peonato Nacional de Baseball Amateur. En los juegos finales del Ca- lendario, el equipo de Chiriqui termin sus compromisos con una victoria sobre Veraguas por Sat donde los chirlcanos pe- garon siete incogibles y come- tieron 4 errores, y los veragen- ses conectaron cuatro impara- bles y fallaron ocho veces; el lansador ganador fu V. Selles y el perdedor R. Tejada. In el otro partido el equipo de Coln le gan ampliamente al conjunto de Bocas del Toro Citacin Deportiva Se cita para esta tarde a las' 5 y 30 en el Gimnasio del Ma- raen a las Jugadoras del equi- po El Daar, y especialmente a los Jugadores siguientes Flix Sarlat. Herlberto Torres, Carlos Arriete, Alfonso y Pablo Smith, Roberto Tapia, Eduardo Carrera, Jos Mara Guardia, Plllta Araz Edmundo Gordon, Luis Farfait y Rojas Sucre. Carcajadas! Chistes! Chascarrillos! Mil y una ancdotas . . forman el Almanaque de la Panamericana A PARTIR DEL 1* DE MAYO TODOS LOS DAS A LAS 6 A.M. Despirtese alegremente. . _ sintonizando ----Un programa estelar en la radio favorita El Pern termin con el invicto del Dep. Remn en ftbol ESTADO DE LOS EQLIPOS (Ftbol del Chorrillo) G. E. P. Pje. C. Ramn ........4 1 1 9 Dep. Pern ....... 4 1 2 9 PRI ..............2 13 5 Mendosa........... 2 6 3 4 Nacional ........... 114 3 El equipo Coronel Remn per- di su Invicto frente al Depor- tivo Pern por dos a cero en la continuacin del Campeonato del Ftbol Mayor del Barrio del Chorrillo. Con este resultado los argentinos empatan el pri- mer puesto. Anotaron los tantos por el Pern, Armuelles y Chester Brown. En el otro partido los mu- chachos del PRI. y el Nacional empataron a un tanto; el pri- mer tiempo inalia a favor del PRI, con un tanto que lo ano- t el delantero Francisco Bru- nei; en el segundo tiempo cuan do faltaba pocos minutos para terminar el partido Henry Tho- mas cobr con xito un penal. Ftbol Nacional IVAN KANCHA Tomamos al azar este sugesti- vo nombre para darle prominen- cia al tema que vamos a tratar, por que afecta por lo general a todos los futbolistas: dirigentes y dirigidos. Tomamos como base el desa- rrollo local que es la espina dor- sal del futbol,que se prctica en la Repblica. Existe eii la actualidad un despertar enorme y un entusias- mo digno de ser aprovechado por todos los quo quieren que este deporte ocupe lugar de pro- minencia, no ya en los linderos patrios; sino en el concierto in- ternacional. Los dirigentes todos como un solo hombre deben trabajar y luchar denominadamente por- que sus eventos organizados ten- gan el xito colectivo deseado, sacar futbolistas de todas las categoras y de todos los rinco- nes de la ciudad, estimulando a la legin de Jvenes que hoy pugnan por lucir orgullosos al- gn dia la chaqueta internacio- nal. Esta tarde pesada no debe cargara ni uno, ni dos, ni tres hombres sino todos los que de una manera moral se han com- prometido a servir al deporte nacional. Por lo regular en estas andanzas siempre se cosechan ingratitudes y mal querencias, pero como deportistas debemos ser fuertes y seguir con entereaa por el camino adelante y sentar precedente de dinamismo, de honradez, de valor moral y f- sico, para que los que vengan a reemplazarnos tengan sus ideales y su inspiracin, que la obra quede hecha aunque su au- tor permanezca entre las nieblas del anonimato. En cuanto a los jugadores, aunque dicha sea la verdad mu- chos no han recibido la ms mnima enseanza elemental de ftbol, pero es necesario subir el porcentaje tcnico, porque el que se tiene es sumamente ba- jo. Debemos evitar esos conti- nuos saques de bola afuera, de- bemos conceder menos saques de esquina, tener mejor visin del arco, abolir por completo la zancadilla, el pise, la carga Ile- gal, para evitar sanciones; me- joremos el espectculo para que sea ms atractivo y tenga ms simpatizadores. En cuanto a los conatos matonlles y la lenidad de ciertos arbitros trataremos de enfocarlos maana en artcu- lo similar. EL SELECCIONADO DE LA COMERCIAL CONCEDE REVANCHA A LOS ZONEITAS ESTA NOCHE Magnficos Aprontes Realizan Los Competidores Del Clsico Se miden en softball por 3a. vez en el cuadro de Sta. Rita Por tercera vez se enfrentan esta noche a las ocho en el dia- mante de Santa Rita, los equi- pos Polica de la Zona del Ca- nal y Seleccionado de la Liga Comercial de Softball, en parti- do amistoso para levantar fon- dos para esa Liga, El combina- do de la Comercial ha derrotado dos veces a los "pacos" Zoneitas y una vez al Camel que termi- n en el cuarto puesto de la Liga Social. En el Juego de hoy los mu- chachos locales tratarn de mantener su invicto y los zonei- tas de propinarles su primera derrota. La Seleccin de la Co- cercial ya se encuentra acopla- da y estamos seguros que rendi- r una gran labor frente a los "gringos" que tienen un fuerte equipo. ir DEPORTES EN LA FUERZA Y LUZ Esta tarde continuar la Jus- ta de Softball entre las nove- nas representativas del Depto. de "Telfonos Automticos" vs I 'Distribucin", esto si el tiempo lo permite, ya que ayer tarde la lluvia impidi la celebracin ' del partido que tena sealado el Calendarlo de este Torneo entre "Ingenieros de Telfonos Automticos" vs "Garage y Al- macn". El partido que sostienen hoy los Telefonistas y Distribuidores es de suma importancia para ambos, debido a que si los Dis- tribuidores ganan hoy termi- narn con el invicto de los Te- lefonistas: en cambio si los Telefonistas salen airoso obten- drn su octavo triunfo conse- cutivo. Empataron a cinco carreras Leones y Villa Aguilar Por N. S. ZAMBRANO En un Juego de extra inning y lleno de momentos emocionan- tes empataron Los Leones de La Chorrera y el Deportivo Villa Aguilar con el score de cinco ca- rreras a favor da ambos, ban- dos en el octavo inning cuando se tuvo que suspender el juego por la lluvia. Descoleron por Los Leones: Roberto Moreno como lanzador quita hizo pasar sus malos ra- tas al villa Aguilar y a sus "fa-; ntlcos", el Presidente de Los Leones de La Chorrera Ernes- to 8einmat quien cubriendo el RF hizo tres cogidas sensaciona- les estando las tres bases lle- nas, tambin "descoll" Manuel I. Avila que pareca una estaca en la tercera base y 'Manteca" Cedeo como animador de Los Leones (cuando tenan la ven- ala a su favor i. Por el Villa Aguilar sobresa- lieron Miguel Supo tanto en el bate como en el campo. Ramn' Ruiz en el bate, en el campo y en las discusiones con el r-, bitro Jefe Rolando Mundo, y, el "Fat" Izaza con su recia ma-i Jagua. Los Leones de La Chorrera esperan hacer una sesin espe-! cial para decidir la fecha del prximo partido, por lo tanto i auedaremos en la espera de sus' decisiones. Presidente De La Repblica" por RDEME Magnficos trabajos estn realizando los ms sobresalientes' ejemplares que participarn en el Clsico "Presidente de la Re- pblica" que se correr el prximo Domingo en el Hipdromo Na- cional. Los que ms estn impresionando a los dockers son los de* Jensores del Stud Blue i "Vhlte, Dictador y Plnard, que sin lu- p.ar a dudas ocuparn el primer lugar en el favoritismo el dia do ia carrera. Tambin los clockers se encuentran maravillados con los tra- bajos presentados por el magnifico Ingls Main Road, que el Do- mingo pasado ocup el segundo lugar entre los campeones ape* sar de ser la primera vez que competa contra los mejores caba- llos de la pista. He aqui los probables Jinetes que Rularn a los competidores del Clsico "Presidente de la Repblica": DICTADOR ......................... J. BRAVO P1NARD .................... JOSE RODRIGUEZ ROYAL COUP ...................... G. ALFARO MAIN ROAD ........................... ? RATHLIN LIGHT ...........,......... A. MENA WELSH LOCH ..................... K. FLORES LINNEY HEAD ................. J. CONTRERAS HUAIRO ........................ F. JARAMILLO PHOEBUS APOLLO ............... B. AGUIRRE MARISCALITO ................... Willis y Hele pasan a los semi finales del Torneo Spalding Maana mircoles y el jueves se celebrarn los juegos semi- finales del torneo de tennis por, la Copa Spalding, pugna que se est llevando a cabo en forma muy interesante y bajo los aus- pelos de la Comisin Nacional de Tennis. Participaran los Juegos semi- finales los siguientes tenistas: Pinilla vs G. Motta se enfrentan maana a las 4pm. Willis vs Hele el Jueves a las 4 p. m. Los ganadores de estos dos semifinales jugarn el Domingo en la maana el partido por la Copa Spalding. En los ltimos Juegos celebra- dos Bill Hele derrot a Pinato por anotacin de 6-2 y 6-4 para pasar a los semifinales. En los Juegos celebrados el domingo H. Willis gan a F. Hladky por 6-2 y 7-5. G. Motta venci a Me Perera por 6-1 y 6-1 Julio Pinilla derrot a M. Chand wlck por 6-4 y 6-2. Comandancia y Compaa No. 2 triunfaron en la apertura del softball de los bomberos Con marcado entusiasmo y ante numeroso pblico se inau- gur el Primer Campeonato de Softball del Cuerpo de Bombe- ros de Panam, triunfando el equipo de la Comandancia., en e encuentro de apertura. El acto tuvo lugar en el cua- dro de la Plaza Amador y rem gran animacin durante la Ce- remonia y en los dos partidos que se celebraron. La Comandancia triunf so- bre la Guardia Permanente por carreras a 5, pegando nueve imparables los ganadores por 8 de sus rivales. Zarak fu el pitcher ganador y Ublllus carg con la derrota. En el otro partido del Progra- ma de Inauguracin, el equipo de la Compaa Uo. 2 derrot al conjunto de la Compaa No. 6 por 20 carreras a 12. donde los vencedores pegaron 15 inco- gibles por 13 de los perdedores, cometiendo entre ambos equipos 17 errores. Guerra se anot la victoria como lanzador y Earl fu el perdedor. La Competencia continuar el prximo fin de semana, y debu- tarn los otros seis equipos que estn inscritos en el Campeo- AHORA! Una Crema de Afeitar que es realmente buena para la piel Maravilloso ingredienteelogiado por los mdicos ayuda a conservar el aspecto sano y juvenil del rostro nato en la siguiente forma: Sbado 28 COMPARIA No. 5 vs COMPARIA No. 3 Domingo 29 Electricistas vs Compaa No. 1 Compaa No. 4 vs Banda El Wninter sigue en el comando del ftbol menor del Chorrillo El Deportivo Whlnter derrot al PRI por seis a cero en el Cam- Seonato de Ftbol del Circuito lenor del Chorrillo, anotaron los tantos Luis- Macias con tres Manuel Domnguez con dos y Alfredo Brown, con uno. En el otro partido el Deporti- vo Whlnter derrot al PRI por uno a cero. RITOS IN AUTOMOTORI1 CONCURREN . . Para mayor potencia motriz -decdase por CHAMPION L (Red Q>> anamertcana ESCOJA SU IDIAL ENTRE ESTAS 4 PAL: Os UNO y DOS filos GRUESAS MEDIANAS y DR6ADAS.J INYECTORES METLICOS Distribuidores: CA. CYRNOS, S. A. PANAMA COLON Desde hace aos, ios cientficos saben que el lavar y raspar que acom- paan cada afeitada tienden a dejar la piel arrugada e irritada. Pero, ahora, se ha elaborado una nueva y admirable crema de afeitar que refresca la piel a la vez que usted se afeita ... y ayuda a conservar el rostro terso y juvenil. MARAVILLOSO INGREDIENTE Esta frmula revolucionara en cremas de afeitar tiene por base una maravillosa subs- tancia llamada Extracto de Lanolina. El Extracto de Lanolina es 26 vece ms concen- trado que la Lanolina que los mdicos rece- tan usualmente para la piel. Le permite a usted, mucho mejor que antee, afeitadas a ras de piel, ntidas ... y sin irritacin! lUOGADA POR LOS MIDICOSI Jams crema de afeitar alguna fue tan acla- mada por la profesin mdica. 251 especia- de la oiel aus han probado la nueva Williams alaban el que es haya agregado Extracto de Lanolina. Ahoracada vez que usted se afeita con la nueva Crema de Afeitar Williams disfruta de esta substancia mara- villosa. Y, cuanto ms use Williams, ms se convencer de lo benfica que es para la piel. |USE WILLIAMS LA PRXIMA VIZ QUE SE AFIITII Si usted desea afeitabas ntidas, a ras de piel, que ayudan a conservar el aspecto sano y juvenil del rostro, use la nueva Crema de Afeitar Williams. Es la nica crema de afeitar que contiene Extracto de Lanolina. "Loi Champion hocen diferencia en cuanto Dolencia mo- rr," die. .1 Dr. ATTILA INFANTE VIEIRA do Re d (anoiio, "y cuanto mayor poloncia tenga mi tractor, tanto mol rpido ha do cumplir su* tareas. No hay ms quo probar un nuovo juogo de Champion para ver como debe funcionar un motor. Son las oujlas de encendido - -guras que amos te usodo." Predilectas del mundo entero por ms de un cuarto do siglo ptr.tv* PT PANAMA ARTlRICA DIARIO TTOOTKWDreNW MARTES, ABRIL 24, 19Sf, fc| WHISKY CANADIENSE Ucytadb en bdo enmiendo assE JUEVES ESTRENO! TEATRO CENTRAL JUEVES ESTRENO! ~2~ Triunfal regreso de HAROLD LLOYD TROPICAL HOY y MAANA! GRANDIOSO ESTRENO! IMPRESIONANTE ESPEC- TCULO... que lo manten- dr vitoreando asalto por a- saltoa la vez que le brinda una tierna historia de amor y lealtad!... 41 LA LEY DE LA HOMBRA" JUEVES ESTRENO! PRESIDENTE CON AIRE ACONDICIONADO HOY < A Peticin del Pblico! UN SOLO DA! UN DRAMA FUERTE! CRUDO!... REAL! La hlatoria de -un hombre 1 que no' era bigamo y iln embargo, estaba casado con do6 mujeres a un tiempo! MARGA LOPEZ, VICTOR JUNCO, GUILLERMINA GRIN. *n MAANA!* 35< DA POPULAR! SENSACIONAL DOBLE PROGRAMA! Amalia Las Hnas. AGU LAR DOLLY PEREZ PRADO y su orquesta RESORTES, en AL SON DEL MAMBO UNA MUJER ^ SIN DESTINO f ... /.: Dav:d Silva, en "EL DESALMADO" < COMIENZA EL JUEVES ESTRENO ) ARRABALERA Con Cinco Bellsima Canciones! i Ret! Tierno I i Htmona ! i i.#Mitev0 dwi I- JUEVES JUEVES TIENE DERECHO UNA MUJER A COMPRARSE UN MARIDO? ES ACONSEJABLE que un HOMBRE se ofrezca en VENTA? Obtenga las respuestas a estas escabrosas preguntas, viendo la delicada, alegre y sobre todo, moderna comedia... Mi MARIDO con ARMANDO CALVO RITA MACEDO DALIA IIGUEZ -- EL CHICOTE La Famosa Pareja de Bailes Espaoles ANTONIO Y LUISITA TRIANA Y el Sensacional Tro "LOS DIAMANTES"' CECILIA* JUEVES! MONTAAS DE RISA EN LA VACILADA MUSICAL MAS DIVERTIDA DEL AO! CUBANA POR TODOS LOS COSTADOS . CON MUCHACHAS POR CIEN- TOS Y CHISTES POR MILES!... CON RUMBAS, GUARACHAS Y MAMBOS COMO SE DEBEN TOCAR Y BAILAR...Ill "ESCUELA DE MODELOS" CON LOS ESTUPENDOS CMICOS CUBANOS GARRIDO y PINERO Las DOLLY SISTERS LAS MULATAS DE FUEGO LA SONORA MATANCERA Actuacin Especial de OSCAR LOPEZ XONIA BENGURIA La Venus Cubana! Y MUCHAS CUBANITAS! Agustina de Aragn, mujer espaola A todo lo largo de la his- toria de Espaa, desde los das dantescos de Sagunto y Nu- mancia, siempre surgieron mu- jefes gloriosas para Espaa. Presididas desde la cumbre del genio por Santa Teresa de Je- ss, por doa Mara de Molina, Reina de Castilla y de Len, y por doa Isabel, Reina de to- das las Espaas y ensanchado- ra del mundo, dieron a la pa- tria espaola, con la gracia y la delicadeza de su feminidad, el temple de la raza. Una vez ms, las mujeres se inmortalizaron en los sitios, gloriosos y espantables, de Za- ragoza. Ni el fuego ni el plomo las hizo retroceder, ni la brbara y bien adiestrada superioridad numrica del enemigo. Desme- lenadas como leonas, tomaban las armas y mataban, curaban, despus, a sus heridos; llena- ban de clamores, protestas y plegarlas las naves del Pilar y no permitan los hombres que entraran al rezo, sino que los obligaban a cubrir las mu- rallas; despus..., ellas, con fie- ros impetus, saltaban a los lu- gares de mayor peligro y, arre- batando las armas a los que caan, se plantaban en sublime relevo. No teman a la muerte y no teman nada. En Zara- goza, hombres y mujeres-, todos eran hroes. La historia de los Sitios con- decora a los nombres gloriosos de doa Maria Consolacin A- slor, condesa de Bureta; Be- nita Portles, Casta Alvarez, Maria Agustiu y Manuela San- cho. La ms popular se llam Agustina Zaragoza su apelli- do parece un anticipado galar- dn providencia]; tena vein- te aos, era morena, de gran- des y hermosos ojos; si no lin- da, graciosa; alta, bien forma- da, de viveza agradable y aire despejado. En un parapeto, cuando ms peligroso y enco- nado era el asalto esta brava mujer culmin st- heroica ges- ta disparando enfurecida un can. Y con su exaltacin y patriotismo decidi la suerte del combate. Ahora, la cinematografa es- paola exalta esta figura glo- riosa de la Independencia es- paola, en la produccin de CI- FESA, "Agustina de Aragn"' que se preestren el martes lo. de mayo en el Teatro Presi- dente. Nadie mejor que Aurora Bautista para encarnar ese per- sonaje que, de la vulgaridad de una vida oscura, alcanza por el aliento heroico de.1 momento, ;a sublimidad de los elegidos. RadiO PANAMERICANA P.M 3:30 3:45 4:00 4:15 4:30 6:00 6:15 6:30 6:46 7:00 7:15 7:30 7:45 8:00 8:30 8:45 9:00 9:15 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 12:00 A.M. 6:00 6:03 6:30 7:00 7:15 7:3 8:0O 8:30 8:45 9:00 9:30 HOT MARTES El Hijo Perdido Drama Avena Quaker Coctel musical Noticiero R.P.A. Robert Garden y su Orq Peticiones Vibraciones' del Aire (Nacho Valds) Filigranas musicales Msica escogida Noticiero deportivo Merel y Arango. Solos de rgano Lucho Azcrraga por el Ron Carta Vieja Mara (de Jorge Isaac) Cigarrillos 'Camel" El Radio peridico "Accin" Por los Senderos de Historia. Ritmos populares El Favorito de Hoy Melodas hawaiianas Cantares de Espaa Msica variada El Hit Musical de Hoy Msica favorita Dramatization de BBC Fiesta Panamericana Buenas noches la MIRCOLES Buenos Das El Despertador Musical Noticiero R.P.A. Msica tiplea Espaoleras Melodas matinales Grandes maestros La voz de hoy Cantares de Mxico El Correo del Aire Ei Disloque Musical 7ctir-.o * JUEVES * DOS PELCULAS! PARA CONMEMORAR EL 1ER ANIVERSARIO DE ESTE TEATRO Una picaresca comedia! Los traviesos amoros de una da- mita muy serieclta y un pin- tor muy "inspirado"... fue (/-vof bMm hoUfouiadi o ANN BLYTH MARK STEVENS ADEMAS: Una pelcula Inolvidable! LA GUERRA... con toda su crueldad y todo su herosmo!... ELDORADO HOY Contina el xito Arrollador de... EL GAVILN POLLERO PEDRO INFANTE ANTONIO BADU LILIA PRADO Canciones, Picarda, Amores y millones de Besos!... =| JUEVES PEDRO ARMENDARIZ RITA MACEDO ANDREA PALMA - en - LA PUERTA FALSA ...Por ella entraron la riqueza. ...el Amor...pero tambin la in- fidelidad y la destruccin!... Una ambicin desmedida de dinero y de poder... Y una pasin encendida por aquella mujer... lo Iban consumiendo, por- que todo lo haba logra- do... pasando. "Por la Puerta Falsa"...! AIRE-ACONDICIONADO TEATRO LUX HOY Solamente! Soberbia!... Una biografa ejemplar!... Entre las me- jores pelculas del ao! "HOMBRE del PUEBLO" (Magnificent Yankee) Louis Calhern Ann Harding MAANA! Jocoso Estreno Romntico Cmico-Musical! "A CASARSE LLAMAN" (Grounds For Marriage) con Kathry Grayson Van Johnson Paula Raymond DESDE JUEVES! Los lmites de la decencia... El amor filial... Los conceptos del deber... Todo lo olvid cuando lo ceg la pasin! \. POR UNA MALA MUJER" LEE J. COBB and JANE WYATT JOHN DALL Un drama extra- ordinario da Crimen y Pailn! Am a una mujer que lo quera Iodo... Y cao ara demasiado para cualquier Hombrel... El Rey de la Selva JOHNNY VfFIS8MLU.KR y BRENDA JOYCE, en 'TARZAN Y US AMAZONAS" ________ COPIA NUEVA I . TEATRO LUX ESTRENO ESPECIAL) Dramtica...I Sensacional... 1 Luch por su Patria...y por 1 amor de su esposa I "Hombre de Pueblo" con Leuls CALHERN Ann HARDING Una pareja Inolvidable! BELLA tlSTA Una historia de odio, venanla y muerte! FAITH DOMERGUK, en VENDETTA" TEATRO CECILIA 0:50 0.25 Romntica comedia musical en colores! Esther WILLIAMS Van JQHNSON. en "LA SIRENA SE ENAMORA" (Duchess of Idaho) con John LUND Paula RAYMOND TEATRO TROPICAL Don Barry Ella Raines - en - "LA LEY DE LA HOMBRA" UNA PELCULA HECHA CON PURO Y SANGRE I TEATRO ENCANTO Aire Acondicionado A LAS 9:00 P.M. WAHOO! B 115.00 en Premios! Adems: Yvonne De Cario, en "ENTRE DOS AMORES" Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.. en "ESPADA Y CORAZN" TEATRO TIVOLI Rosa Carmina Fernando Fernndez, en "TRAICIONERA" y "Azahares para Tu Boda" TEATRO IRIS Luis Aguilar, en "Una Cancin m la Virgen" "LOS MARIDOS ENGASAN DE 7 A ?"________ VARIEDADES ,ii.i as. ni ii-. Una crnica de actualidad hecha con la cmara t Accin!... Intrlgal- SuspensoI... JORGE SALCEDO SEBASTIAN CHIOLA - en - "APENAS UN . DELINCUENTE" Un xito del Cine Argentino! TEATRO CAPITOLIO NOCHE DE BANCO! B 200.00 para el Pblico! A las 8 y 9 p.m. "MUJERES POLICAS" - y - "VICTIMAS del TERROR" TEATRO EDISON DA DE BANCO! B.I2S.M en efectivo! "El Misterio de La Playa" - y - "ALAS EN LA NIEBLA" TEATRO VICTORIA William Bendlx, en "GUADALCANAL" y James Cagney, en "PASEO AL SOL" HISPANO DA DEL PUBLICO! . 3 Pelculas! - La Mujet DUUnier" 'Esclavo del Deber" t Rubia Explosiva" PAC f ico Irma Torres, en "PASIN JAROCHA" y Nlni Marshall, en "UNA GALLEGA EN ____MEXICO" APOLO 'TIERRA DE PASIN' con J. Negrete y M Moro Adems: 'OJOS NEGROS" con F. Soler y Manolita Moro IDEAL LA ESPADA FATAL' Episodios 1,2-S - Ademas: - DOS PELCULAS!... VISTERMOSA A Us t:00 pm. El Prof. SANTIERMY M. A. Pona, en "MARCO ANTONIO Y CLEOPATRA" Hufo del Carril, en ' LA NO ROOSEVELT NOCHE DE SANCO' PATRIA NUEVA" - y - "1M HOMBRES V UNA MUCHACHA" r i I |
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| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
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