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r RIO DE JANEIRO AN flfDBVM^ Panama "Let the people know the truth and the country is $afe" Abraham Lincoln. -$muAi& MtL%^ PANAMA, R. P.. SATURDAY. MAT It, UU FIVE CENTS Political Prisoners In Interior Released ------- Korean Strategy Would Buy Time For US And Keep Allies By John L. Steele WASHINGTON, May 12 (UP) President Truman told Gen. Douglas MacArthur last Jan. 13 that his Korean war strategy is aimed at buying time for U.S. rearmament and keeping our "desperately needed' Allies m case of war with Russia. . Defense Secretary George C. Marshall read the let- ter yesterday to Senators investigating MacArthur s ous- ter. The Senators demanded it after parts revealed two days ago showed that Mr. Truman cautioned MacArthur to exercise "great prudence" in any steps that might draw Russia into the war. . Marshall told the Senators the threat of world war is "far more acute" in Asia than in Europe In the Far East, he said, the Soviets stand to lose something they already possess Communist China. M'Arthur Feels US Is Veering To His Views Marshall alao disclosed that American forces were told last June 2ftlour days aiter the Ko- rean war broke outto defend themselves If Russia intervened. But they alao were warned that Soviet Intervention would not necessarily mean a declaration of war against Russia. Mr. Truman's Jan. 13 message was sent to MacArthur at a time when it looked as If the Chinese Communists might push United Nations forces out of Korea. But verf If evacuation uecame necessary. Mr. Truman said, no steps should be taken which might touch off World War III. "In reaching a final decision about Korea," he wrote, "I shall have to give constant thought to the main threat from the So- Tlet Union and to the need for rapid expansion of our armed forces to meet this danger." In his letter, the President made these points: 1) Holding the Chinese Com- munists would demonstrate to the world that the United Na- tions will not tolerate aggression and would rally the free world by assuring It that It did not have to "come to terms with Communism." 2) If UN forces are evacuat- ed, it might be "practical" to fight from Islands off the shore of Korea, but nothing must be done to provoke Russia pending the "rapid build-up" of Amer- ican strength and the defenses of the free world. S)A successful stand In Korea wouud puncture Com- munist China's prestige and stiffen resistance to Com- munism all ever the world, even behind the Iron Cur- tain. It would show the world that "the friendship of the United State I* of inestimable value in time of adversity." 4) Success In Korea also would bring the United Nations through "Its first great effort In collective security." 5) There was some wishful thinking" among several UN allies, but most only wanted to be "absolutely sure" that all avenues to peace had been "fully explored." Mr. Truman said he believed there ultimately would be a "formidable combi- nation in defense of freedom" among democratic nations. The president concluded by expressing his gratification for MacArthur's "splendid leader- ship In the difficulty struggle in Korea and for the superb per- formance of your forces under (Continued on Page 6. Col. > The Weatherman Says- NEW YORK. May 12 (UP) Gen. Douglas MacArthur be- lieves the controversy over his dismissal has brought the Ad- ministration around to some of his ways of thinking on Far Eastern policy, his spokesman said today. MaJ. Gen. Courteney Whitney, MacArthur's chief aide, said the general is "pleased" by what he considers changes in the Ad- ministration's attitude and also that of the British. As examples, he mentioned Gen. George C. Marshall's stand against "yielding on the issues of Formosa" and granting the Chinese Communists a seat In the United Nations, greater aid to the Chinese Nationalists and the British moves to stop send- ing supplies to Communist Chi- na. Whitney said MacArthur be- lieves there is "hope that a real- istic policy on the conduct of the Korean war may now be emerg- ing under the pressure of the Congressional Investigation and an aroused public opinion." Commonwealth To Join Britain In Red Embargo LONDON, May 12 (UP)Other Commonwealth nations are ex- pected to join Britain soon In announcing their support of United States proposals In the United Nations for economic sanctions against Communist China. Only India, among the Com- monwealth countries, is likely to hesitate, In line with her policy of steering a middle course in the Far Eastern dispute. Australia Is expected to be the first Commonwealth country to parallel Britain's declaration. Soviet Officers Die At Hands Of Poles, Berlin Sources Say BERLIN, May 12 (UP) - Polish partisans reportedly shot Etven Soviet officers in an at- tack on a bus on the Lodz Warsaw highway April 27. An explosion In the railway repair shop in Soviet-occupied Mtlntnveh killed 11 workers and Injured 11. others this wee*. The explosion was caused by hand grenades placed In a lo- comotive furnace by Russian soldiers. i Hot? Sure. But don't blame the temperature. It's all the fault of that ole debbll humidity. The weatherman says that when the mercury hits the top of column and the humidity Is high, living Is almost unbearable (he's telling us!) but that when the temperature is high and humidi- ty Is low you really don't feel the heat at all. (He says!) He puts it this way: humidity refers to moisture in the air. In relation to human comfort It is relative humidity which concerns us most. And relative humidity is the amount of water vapor ac- tually In the air compared with the greatest amount which could be present at that same temper- ature. This comparison is usually expressed as a percentage. If a sample of air contains on- ly one-quarter of the possible a- mount of water vapor, the rela- tive humidity is 25 per cent, and the air is relatively dry. If the a- mount is one-half that possible, relative humidity Is SO per sent, moderately moist. But if the re- lative humidity reaches 100 per cent, the air is saturated. The effect of humidity on hu- man comfort in hot weather is mostly a matter of evaporation of moisture from body surfaces, he went on. If the air is dry. bo- dy moisture evaporates rapidly. with a cooling effect. But when the air is hot and moist at the same time, there win be little evaporation and people feel op- pressed and sticky. Movement of air helps evapor- ation. And anything which aids evaporation such as loose clothing or a fan to Increase air motion makes for more comfort. Out of doors, the direct rays of the sun tend to Increase human discomfort on hot. humid days. Indoors, where there are no di- rect sun rays, air temperatures, humidity and air motion are the important factors. j He cited some examples: an In- door temperature of 95 degrees with a relative humidity of 55 per cent produces an oppressive effect which is somewhat abated by air movement. An indoor temperature of 85 degrees with relative humidity of 20 per cent and freely moving air should be comfortable for those in light loose clothing If they do not exercise unduly. An Indoor temperature of 5 degrees with a relative humidity of 90 degrees without air motion means coolness which would be relieved by physical activity. This would Induce perspiration. And then there would be little eva- poration and a resultant feeliug Chinese Reds Rushing South In New Assault TOKYO, May 12 (UP) Chinese Communists stream- ed south in thousands across the 38th parallel today un- der a dense smokescreen. United Nations troops have been alerted for another Red assault at any moment, possibly within 72 hours. The Allies are outnumbered two to one, but are con- fident they can beat off round two of the Reds' costly spring offensive just as they beat off round one. Nehru Proposes India Bar Reds By Amendment NEW DELHI. May 12. (UP) Prime Minister Jawaharlal Neh- ru today proposed an amend- ment to India's Constitution which would permit the Govern- ment to crack down on Commu- nist agitators and "others who abuse freedom of speech and of the press." .. He told Parliament here tne amendment was necessary be- cause Indian courts have given the Constitutional article on in- dividual rights so wide an inter- pretation that persons are not judged guilty even if they advo- cate murder. He also proposed amendments which wquld enable the Govern- ment to nationalize Industries, and to push through land reforms which are blocked by State courts. If passed, as it Is expected they will be, the amendments will be the first to India's 15-month-old Constitution. Nehru's amendment would em- power the Government to Impose restrictions on expression of opin- ion "In the interests of the se- curity of the state, friendly rela- tions with foreign countries and public order, 'decency and moral- ity." ___________^ Chiriqui Bringing Mail And Cargo From New Orleans CRISTOBAL, May 12. The United Fruit Company's Chiriqui, on her every-other-week pas- senger and freight run from New Orleans, Is due here at la..m. Monday, Fruit Company officials said. She has aboard 21 cruise pas- sengers and is picking up 45 here for the voyage to New Orleans Chiriqui is bringing 1,900 sacks of mall for the Isthmus and l ,200 tons of cargo, including some re- frigerated cargo. She sails at 3 p.m. Tuesday. Red screening forces today stiffened their resistance to Uni- ted Nations raiding columns striking north from the central front and at the extreme eastern and western ends of the 100-mile long front. Two huge smokescreens over the central and western fronts cloaked the Communists' final preparations. It Is believed the Reds might throw 500,000 men against the Bth Army In a supreme effort to destroy the United Nations forc- es or drive them Into the sea. The 8th Army, superbly condi- tioned and confident, is waiting behind sandbags, barbed wire barricades, and at the lanyards of their big guns. The Communists may unleash their long threatened air assault In conjunction with the ground attack. To meet this threat the Allies have put up special defens- es at forward air bases, alerted anti-aircraft gun crews and low- ered the tops of vehicles. Allied fighter and bomber wings have been alerted for a possible Red air offensive. Allied planes searching out Red concentrations In North Korea ran Into Intensive anti-aircraft and small arms fire over smoke- filled Munsan and the central front areas. Southeast of Sinulju today 12 Sabres tangled with 16 Migs. Af- ter a five minute dogfight the Mlgs headed home, one of them damaged. . In the afternoon an unarmed reconnaissance plane was Jump- ed by three Mlgs in the same area. PAA Flying Drugs, Clothing To Aid Quake Victims Colombia, a country well ac- quainted with the effects of earthquakes, is one of the first Latin American nations to come to the aid of El Salvador, where approximately 1,000 persons were killed and 4,000 Injured by a se- ries of earthquakes Monday May 7. The Colombian National Red Cross is sending nearly a thou- sand pounds of drugs and cloth- ing to the Salvadorlan victims. Pan American World Airways Is flying the supplies free of charge from Barranqullla. Co- lombia, to San Salvador, capital of the Central American repub- lic, by way of Panama. Another Atomic Weapon Tested At Eniwetok HONOLULU, May 12 (UP). Representative Henry M. Jack- son said here today that another atomic weapon has been success- fully tested by the United States at the Pacific proving grounds on Eniwetok atoll. Jackson attended the tests as a Congressional observer. He declined to comment on the type of weapon tested or the date of the operation. However It is assumed the tests probably climaxed between Mon- day and Tuesday this week, as it is unlikely he remained on at Eniwetok after the operations were completed. Jackson said the Atomic Energy Commission plans no formal an- nouncement on the tests or their outcome. In Seattle last Friday Senator Warren G. Magnuson said he had learned from sources which could not be disclosed that either an H-bomb or an A-bomb would be tested soon In the Aleutians. Meanwhile In Washington the latest Eniwetok tests prompted expert speculation that S Oak Ridge Puts Up Frogskins For Radioactive Leaptron mpt tnr types of new weapons have been fired, or soon will be. 1) A stockpile atomic bomb of improved type, said to have about twice the destructive range of the bomb that blasted Nagasaki; 2) A smaller atom bomb, de- signed for delivery by speedy Air Force attack bombers; S) An atomic warhead for ground artillery, perhaps In the form of a giant mortar shell. If these weapons were explod- ed In the latest tests, which ap- parently began early last month, they would bring to 17 the num- ber of known atomic blasts 18 American and one Ruslan. Atomic experts had erected a "target city" on Eniwetok In an effort to learn the effect of ato- mic explosions on all types of construction, Including bomb shelters. There is little chance that the latest tests Included the first ex- plosion of the super-lethal hydrogen bomb. However, military and atomic chiefs may now know whether a practical atomic artillery shell Is possible. Truman Asks CZ Be Out Of Labor Convention WASHINGTON, May 12 (UP) President Truman yesterday asked the Senate specifically to exempt the Canal Zone when It ratifies the International Con- vention on Wages and Hours statistics. The president had submitted the Convention, drawn up at the 1938 nternatlonal labor conference In Geneva, for Sen- ate ratification last January. In his new message the Pre- sldtnt said: "As a result of a reappraisal of the situation in regard to the territorial application of the convention, I now request that the Senate give advise and consent to ratification, subject only to the understanding that the convention shall not apply to the Canal Zone. The convention established uniform International proce- dures for calculating and pub- lishing wage and hours statis- tics. Many To Leave Jails In City All of the political prisoners in the interior of the Republic will be released immediately and from Panam City's saturated Crcel Model prisoners are to be set free in large groups, according to an announcement, today by Minister of Government and Justice MigueJ Angel Ordo- nez. Colonel Jos Antonio Reman, head of the police force, told The Panam American he believed from 200 to 300 would be released from the Crcel Modelo this afternoon. Up to this writing there was a total of 813 under ar- rest. This number includes two women, Former Cabinet Minister Mrs. Maria S. de Miranda and Mrs. Ana Matilde Linares de Arias. The wife of the ousted president said yesterday she would stay in jail, preferring to be by her husband's side, but Col. Reman said she would leave this afternoon. Mrs. Miranda is being held pending an investigation into the shooting of Lt. Col Lezcano Gmez, 32, and Capt. Juan Florez, 28, inside the Presidencia. Gomez and Flores, posthu- mously promoted, were burled yesterday. They were given a state funeral with President Al- clbiades Aroaemena and his ca- binet heading the long proces- sion. , .. Dr. Arnulfo Arias and his aide- de-camp, Roberto Angulzola. meanwhile stUl were being held at police headquarters under or- Raging 'Ole Hiss' Flooding Keokuk Industrial Area KEOKUK. Iowa, May 12. (UP) The swollen Mississippi River flooded the industrial area today, forcing one big plant to close, curtailing operations in four others and virtually halting all rail services. But the major flood threat Is 20 to 50 miles downstream where the Mississippi forms the border between Missouri and Illinois. Levees protecting Canton, Han- nibal and Quincy are reported are all that protect some 400 fa- are all taht protect some 400 fa- milies and 175,000 acres of rich farmland. . Flood water is reported In the business districts of Canton and Hannibal, where the Na- tional Guard and the Red Cross have been alerted. ders of the district attorney. The former president, his aide, some of his cabinet ministers and some 1,200 of his loyal fol- lowers defended the Presidential Palace for four hours Thursday before surrendering to the well- armed forces of the National Po- lice. Of the "Arnulflstas" who stay- ed by the former president's side to the last were almost 400 wom- en. They were set free yesterday afternoon as the first act of the new administration. Former Ministers Rodolfo Her- bruger, Celso Carbonell, Carlos Brln. and Adan de Urrlola have already been released and police revealed that Former Secretar* General of the Presidencia Joai E. Ehrman Is taking refuge la the Mexican Embassy. Meanwhile Panama was back operating on a normal scale. The Caja de Ahorros reopened Its doors but there were no long lines of people seeking to draw out their savings. At closing time, as a matter of fact. Manager Guillermo de Roux said he con- sidered the day's operations "Just about normal." Most of the business hosea had reopened their doors and the Republic was no longer off limits for servicemen.___ Balboa Tides Sunday, May 13, 1951 High Lw 8:25 a.m. 2:21 a.m. 8:37 p.m. _______Z:51 p.nu By JULIAN GRANGER OAK RIDGE, Tenn., 12 . May (UP). An atomic-powered m frog dubbed Leaptron will enter Leaptron hop farther or faster, the International frog Jumping neither Leonard nor Chamber of- sald a spokesman for the Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce whose silks Leaptron will wear. Whether the dosage will make Leaptron hop farther or faster, Jubilee at Angel's Camp, Cal., and Its backers said today he's a sure bet not to develop a top-heavy goiterat least. Robert E. Leonard, a frog fancier who works at the ura- nlum-235 production plant here, will snare the atomic city's can- didate next Wednesday night. He's been scouting ponds and frog leapgrounds hereabouts every night for two weeks. On Thursday night, just before Leaptron boards an American Airlines plane for Oakland, Cal., a biologist from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory will shoot the croaker with 10 mlcrocuries of radioactive iodine 131. That's less than an eyedropperful. "He'll be radioactive enough to ring bells on a Oelger counter," ficials would even guess But. they said, he won't get goiter to slow him down, as Mark Twain's "celebrated Jumping frog" was slowed with a load of buckshot. Souped-up iodine 131, made In the Oak Ridge chain-reacting "pile," collects In the thyroid Eland and prevents goiter when ijected into the blood stream. It has a "half-life" of eight days, which means that half as "hot" after days. Biologists doubted that Leap- tron's shot would harm him or anyone who gets near him. He'll give off gamma rays, the least harmful of the radioactive waves. Some radioactive frogs exhi- bited by the American Museum of atomic energy here have been known to "croak'* after two weeks. Chamber officials had hoped to line up a biologist from the Ato- mic Energy Commission's Labo- ratories at Berkeley. Cal., to give Leaptron another slug of iodine before he competes. But scien- tists said that would not be ne- cessary. Leaptron will go lt alone to California, where he'll be met by "Miss Oakland," secretary-man- ager Carl T. Miles and other of- ficials of the contest scheduled . for May 18-20. They assured his lt becomes sponsors that Leaptron will get every elgtrt excellent handling when he's let out of his gaudy, pyramlnd- shaped plywood box. His leaps will be televised and "broadcast" via a Gelger counter, which clicks or rings bell when placed near a radioactive object. The world's record is 18 feet, 2 inches, se"t In three hops, and the winner receives a $1,000 prize. Bar Association Meets To Honor Late Dr. Fairman CRISTOBAL. May 12 Mem- bers of the Canal Zone Bar As- sociation yesterday afternoon honored the dean of local at- torneys, Dr. Chauncey P. Fair- man who died Thursday after- noon In Coln Hospital. In a special session of the Ma- gistrate's Court, local attorneys, led by Judge E. I. P. Tatelman Eald tribute to Dr. Fairman who ad practiced law here since 1906. The lawyers present passed a resolution on Dr. Fairman's ac- complishments as an attorney. A copy of this resolution, to- gether with a note of condolence is to be sent to Mi a Fairman. PRESIDENT ALCIBIADES AROSEMENA and his cabinet were amone the thousands of mourners who paid tribute wsterdaV to Major Lezcano Gomez and Lieutenant Jue Flores? who were killed in Thursday's fighting to Pre*: dencla Streets were thronged with mourners as the funeral procession pasted. *f page rwo THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEFENDENT DART NEWSPAfER SATURDAY, MAT IS, lt51 Cargo and Freight-Ships and Planes-Arrivals and Departures UNITED FRUIT COMPANY Great White Fleet New Orleans Service Arrive Cristbal S.S. Fiador Knot ...............................May 1 S.S. Chlrlawl ....................................May 14 S.8. Levers Bend ...............................J> *3 U.S. OUttsjsl !..................................My 2 'llnmillnr Rafrliaratnl Chilian and Roncral Canal /New York Freight Service Arrives Cristbal S.S. (apt Cumberland..........................May It SJ8. Cape Ann ..................................May 20 S,8. Cape Avinof ...............................May 26 S.S. Cape Cod .................................J"e 3 frrlfht slllnr Waaklj fram Havana to Crtnabai rterkl Sailing*, lo New York, Ins Aoialca, San iramlwo. Sealtl* Oreas lanal Sailings lo New Orleans and Moblla. (Tkt Sttaaaara In thU wtiln ara limitad to twalve paaunirn) rrfaarnt t'ratfhi Sailing* from CrMohai to Wait Coast Central Amarla Cristbal to New Orleans via Puerto Barrios, Guatemala Sails Cristbal S.8. Chirlqui .....(Passenger Service Only).....May IS S.S. Chlriqui..................................May 29 TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL 2121 PANAMA 2-*t4 COLON SO GRACE LINE I FROM NEW YORK TO WEST COAST SOUTH AMERICA 8.8. "SANTA MARGARITA" .......Due Orlstbal. May 10th 6. "SANTA LUISA" ..............D6 Cristbal, May 16th FROM WEST COAST SOUTH AMERICA TO NEW YORK 8.8. "SANTA MARIA" ............Sails Cristbal. May 14th 8.8. "SANTA BARBARA" .........Sails Cristbal. May 21st FROM U.S. PACIFIC & WEST COAST CENTRAL AMERICA TO BALBOA & CRISTOBAL II. V. "GUNNERS KNOT" ............Due Balboa, May 15th M.V. "ANCHOR HITCH" .............Due Balboa, May 28th FROM CRISTOBAL TO WEST COAST CENTRAL AMERICA TO U.S. PACIFIC M.V. "GUNNERS KNOT" .........Sails Cristbal, May 29th Balboa Only. PAJNAMA AGENCIES, CO. (rlStMI 8144 2150 Panam 2-9558 0557 Balboa 1597 2151 The Pacific Steam Navigation Company INCORPORATED BX ROTAL CHARTER ISM Royal Mall Unes Ltd. FAST FREIGHT AND PASSENGER SERVICES BETWEEN EUROPE AND WEST COASTS OF NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA ' TO ECUADOR. PERU AND CHILE M.V. "SANTANDER""... i omits Buenaventura).. May llth tfi. "FLAMENCO"...............................May 23rd TO UNITED KINGDOM VIA CARTAGENA, KINGSTON, HAVANA, NASSAU, BERMUDA. CORUA, SANTANDER and LA PALLICE M.V. "REINA DEL PACIFICO"..... ..............May 20th TO UNITED KINGDOM DIRECT M.V. "BALAVERRY" ..............................May 19th ROYAL MAIL LINES LTD../HOLLAND AMERICA LINE TO NORTH PACIFIC PORTS M.V. "DURANGO" ................................May 18th B.8. "DUIVENDYK" ...............................May 21st TO UK/CONTINENT 8.8. "LOCH RYAN"..............................May 25th Accepting passengers In First, Cabin and Third Class. Superior accommodation available tor passengers. Ail Sailing* Subject lo Chama Without ivotlce PACIFIC STEAM NAV CO.. Criitbal Tel. 1954 1S5S FORD COMPANY INC.. Panama Tel S-1257/125: Balboa 1N5 Atfl rKKiUHTKM NKRVIt BETWEEN CtKorF. A.ND NORTH AND SOUTH PACIFIC COASTS (A Limitad Number of Passenger Bertha I TO OJBOrt: May 17 Juna 1 TO ECHADOS. PERU AND CHILE: May IT TO CENTRAL AMERICA AND WEST COAST U.SA. Juna 1 PA88F.NUUI SERVICE FROM ro PLTMOUTH LE HAVRE: S.S. Uborta .............................. NEW ros May IS Crialital: FRENCH UNE. P.O in Mli Panam: UNDO V MADURO. S Tel. Panam S-1SU - rot A -I-ICfl 3-247 A ISIS Sai ISIS 'Cincarib' Will Set Pace For Armed Services Day Within a cluster of pre-World War 1 buildings at Quarry Heights is located the head- quarters lor overall control oi the Armed Forces o the United States In the Caribbean Area. This is Caribbean Command a noteworthy example or tne unification which is celebrated In this year's second annual Armed Forces Day, Saturday, M"Unlf'icaUen has worked well in the Caribbean Command said a commentator in iai. when the Joint organization was a little more than two years old. It still does. The Commander-ln-Chief oi Caribbean Command, Lt. Gen. William H. H. Morris, Jr. also commands the Panama Area forces of the Command, while those in the Antilles chain of islands are under the command of a Naval leader. Rear Admiral Marshall E. Oreer. "Joint organization means that the three services are equally represented on the stall of "CINCARIB," as the Com- mander-in-Chief is designated. This staff, in existence for al- most four years now, has weld- ed itself into a strong team. The three components of Caribbean Command are the US Army Caribbean, 15th Naval District (also called the Pan- ama Sector of the Caribbean Sea Frontier), and Caribbean Air Command. They are head- ed, respectively, by MaJ. Gen. Ray E. Porter, Rear Admiral Albert M. Bledsoe, and Brig. Gen. Emll C. Kiel. Because of the geographical location of the command, at the crossroads of the Western He- misphere, lt is Important as a contact point with the Latin American republics. Armed For- ces liaison with these nations Is carried out by military mis- sions in 14 countries, from Gua- temala to Argentina. The mis- sions assist in many functions, from the direction of training schools to the maintenance of the more intricate military wea- pons. The missions have their coun- terpart in the Canal Zone. Di- rected by the Army and the Air Force are schools in the Tun every tal lit a reel pititn by serviit KELLOM'S lilt Krittrii! Canal Zone for Latin American officers and .enlisted men. More than 3000 men have attended the schools since their incept- ion. The students learn subjects ranging from radio communi- catlonsto the repair of aircraft engines. The schools in the zone are doubly important, for besides training the officers and men from the attending military services, they serve to bring students common understanding of the problems of each of their American neighbors. The schools assist in .welding a bond of everlasting friendship. As in all United States mili- tary installations, emphasis in the command is placed upon training for all possible emer- gencies. Particularly to the Ar- my, the area presents a proving grornd and a training area for ampnlbiou8 operations and Jungle warfare. Today, a crack Jungle platoon of the 33rd In- fantry maintains proficiency in Jungle fighting by carrying on experiments In the Jungle, and performing search and rescue missions in the dense under- growth of the tropics. Since the opening of the Panama Canal on Aug. 15, 1915, the Armed Forces have been responsible for its defense. The defense haS been successful. Not one single warlike incident has occurred to slow up vital traffic through the Canal dur- ing the world wars. The Panama forces of Carib- bean Command will be on dls- Elay this coming Armed Forces lay. Their slogan, "Defenders of Freedom," will be the theme of every exhibit and demonstra- tion. Caribbean Command Is ac- complishing a tremendous Job; first in guarding one of the world's most important water- ways; and second, In protecting the Western Hemisphere from attack in an area where under- sea forces of the enemy were active during World War n. Thousands of soldiers, sailors, airmen, marines, and civilians are valiantly working together to Insure an effective defense. Caribbean Command is truly teamed as "Defenders of Free- dom." Congress Jolted Into Giving Korea Fighters Vets' Rights fMMJM Pllaa .n.th.r aaar wltkaut trjlai Ch.nar.ia. Upo ap.llaatla. CMnarali Uru crala*JPlla ralaarta S wayii 1. Room ooJa at Itcbiaff. S. Hala akrlak KU'l "tltU ""bran* ad ay PlT Talle iH'ri gMMRHRjl Mew me atlb < sugar fade. Mew oloiattitMl... Yni aim.I, ' * MRRMMrt Skis ! KELLOOO'S MI-MI ar braakfail. fee tupatr *>4 tetweea aw sea relieve Inteotlnal enassHm with HMsef SAL HEPTICA oyal J/etherlands Steamship Company K N S M TO EUROPE: HYDRA ............................May BREDA.......................... .May SI HERA ..............................June 3 TO THE CARIBBEAN: PLATO .............................May 14 CLIO ...............................May SI DOURO ............................May SI TO ATLANTIC CENTRAL AMERICA: PYGMALION ................ ......May 2S TO COLOMBIA, ECUADOR, PERU and CHILE: HELDER ...........................May 14 HERA ..............................May IS BAABN ............................May 2 TO ARGENTINE. URUGUAY and BRAZIL: HELDER ...........................May 14 ORESTES..........................Jane S 'K.N.S.M." CRISTOBAL, S-1S1S. S-1218, S-1218 (Passenger And Freight) BOYD BROS., PANAMA CITY. 2-2448 (Passengers Only) BLOR AGENCIES BALBOA: S-S71S (Freight) By PAUL SOUTHWICK WASHINGTON, May IS (UP) Stirred by the unhappy ex- perience of a Tucson. Aria., Mar- ine veteran, congress today rushed through legislation giv- ing Korean war veterans the same medical and pension bene- fits held by World War II veter- ans. The measure, which now goes to President Truman for his certain signature, was sped through after lt was disclosed that David R. Abellano, 21-year- old Korean veteran was denied treatment of suspected cancer at the Tucson Veterans Admln- stratlon hospital. The Senate first voted to give Far East veterans only VA med- ical and hospital care. But It later agreed to a broader House bill, passed at almost the same time, which will give Korean veterans both medical and pen- sion rights. Korean war veterans would not get the educational and Job rights provided to World War II veterans under the OI Bill of Rights but one lawmaker promptly announced an at- tempt to obtain them too. Events followed swlftlv after Arellano's experience was de- scribed in press reports. President Truman told a news conference the VA hospital was right from a legal standpoint since Korea was not an officially declared war. But he said Con- gress should change the law. Within hours, he sent a letter to the Capitol urging that Korean veterans be given hospital and medical benefits. The Senate Immediately ap- proved the measure without go- ing through the formality of re- ferring it to committee. The house with equal speed and without dissent approved a resolution bv Chairman John E. ankRln, D., Miss., of the House Veterans Committee to give Ko- rean war veterans both medical and pension benefits. The legislation would permit Korean war veterans to obtain beds in VA hospitals for non- service connected ailments and injuries provided beds were available and provided the veteran signed a statement that he could not afford private care. Pensions for families or men killed on active duty in Korea would be boosted to wartime rates. The $72 monthly old age pensions now available to other veterans under certain circum- stances also would be available to Korean war yeterans under those same conditions. The legislation would be re- troactive to last June 27 when the first American troops land- ed in Korea and continue unta the end of the present state of national emergency. It does not give Korean war veterans educational or Job be- nefits under the OI bill of rights. but allows hoapltallzatlon for non-service-connected aliments and pensions. Rep. Edith Nourse Rogers, R.. Mass.. said she will sponsor legislation to give Ko- rean veterans other OI rights. Other benefits voted bv the House Included those of home medical care and burial pay- ments for non-service-connect- ed illnesses. Korean war veter- ans already had these benefits for death or Injuries Incurred in active service. World War II vets now can be treated at VA hospitals for all- menu not brought on by active service, if bed-space is available. Arellano was refused admis- sion to the Tucson VA hospital for a cancer operation. He later underwent surgery at Plma County hospital where surgeons removed a gland In his neck. The father of two Infants, trie veteran said he could see no difference between his Korean experiences and a "genuine" war. "They were shooting at me there," he said. Now GLO-COAT gives your floors a shine that lasts St*** wM mor*""1 With GLO-COAT, your floors keep their shine even after you wipe up spilled water-even after your damp- ened mop cleans off surface dirt! And GL-COAT is sjnaiiogly easy to use. Just apply to tile, wood, cement, linoleum floors. 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PANAMA -{Established 1903) -COLON SATURDAY, MAT 12. 1951 lit PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE II V ^aciflc ^ocie i $ flirt J(.t*nth rUwianJ Bo. 96, &&~ JJ^b D.( 2336 EDNA MAE CURLE8 AND CLYDE BAIN MARRIED LAST EVENING AT PEDBO MIGUEL UNION CHURCH Miw Edna Mae Curies, daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Curies of Balboa, became the bride of Clyde Bain, son of Mrs. William Bain and the late Mr. Bain of Balboa, at a service held last evening at seven thirty o'clock in the Pe- dro Miguel Union Church. The Reverend Raymond Gray of- ficiated. Before the service Mrs. Wayne F. Thomas sang "Because" and "The Lord's Prayer." She was accompanied by Mrs. Leland Brooks, church organist, who also played the processional and recessional. White flowers and ferns in pro- ' lusion decorated the candlelighted church. The bride was escorted and even In marriage by her father, er bridal gown was of whit* boicaded satin made with a fit- ted bodice, a cowl collar, cap sleeves, and a full, ballerina length skirt. She wore a should- er length veil of tulle held In place with a satin coronet and carried a white bible marked with a white orchid. Miss Barbara Anne Curies, her sister's only attendant, was gowned in orchid colored em- broidered organdy. Her head- dress matched her gown and she carried a nosegary of yellow roses. , William J. Bain acted as best man for his brother and the ushers were Leon Herring and James Fraser. After the ceremony a recep- tion for relatives and close friend was held In the church parlors. For her daughters wed- ding Mrs. Curies chose an aquamarine blue gown of nylon faille and a corsage of orchids. Mrs. Bain's gown was of ecru colored lace and her corsage was of yellow roses. The brides younger sister, Miss Martha Louise Curies had charge of the bride's book. Mr. and Mrs. Bain have gone on a short wedding trip and will be at home after May 21 at 0775-K, Williamson Place, Bal- boa. For travelling the bride wore a navy blue gabarne suit with white accessories and a cor- sage of white orchids. Mrs. Maphis Entertains For Dr. and Mrs. Irvin Mrs. Samuel W. Maphis enter- tained Informally at dinner at hr home In Balboa recently for Dr. and Mrs. Samuel s. Irvin who are leaving soon to reside In North Carolina. Mr. and Mrs. Houx Sail on S.S. "Panama" After a residence of many years on the Isthmus, Mr. and Mrs. Carrol Houx left on the S.8. "Panama" to make their home In the United States. They were accompanied by their children, William and Phyllis. / Mrs. Million and Mrs. Ebdon Entertain Jointly Mrs. H. J. Million and Mrs. T. J. Ebdon. Jr. were Joint hostesses tor a coffee party given this morning at Mrs. Million's home in Pedro Miguel for several of their friends who are leaving the Isthmus soon. The honor guests were Mrs. T. J. Ebdon, Mrs. Rob- ert Fitch, Mrs. Truman Hoenke, Mrs. J. H. Jones. Mrs. R. C. Meiss- ner and Mrs. Mrs. Corn. The guest list .also included Mrs. J. A. Dombrowsky, Mrs. Leo Cagley, Mrs. W. A. Dryja, Mrs, R. W. Abel, Mrs. F. J. Patterson, Mrs J. R. Smith, Mr3. W. H. Essllnger, Mrs. E. W. Zelnick, Mrs. Murrav Wright. Mrs. W. J. Herman. Mrs. R. M. Turner. Mrs. D. P. Hutchinson, Mrs. B. D. Powell. Mrs. W. F. Young. Mrs. J. L. Phillips and Mrs. Edith Ep- pley. Returns to Chile David McMorris, Second Sec- retary of the United States Em- bassy in Chile, left yesterday by airplane for Santiago after a short visit with his brother-in- law and sister, Lt. Commander and Mrs. J. E. Halnes at the Bal- boa Naval Reservation. Miss Childress Honored by Friends A group of her friends enter- tained at a no host tea Wednes- day afternoon for Miss Janet Childress who ailed yesterday on the S.8. "Panama" to visit her sister in Ohio. The party as held at the home of Miss colleen Parker In Balboa and others pre- ent included Miss Peggy Loe. Miss Lelia Flores, Miss Marilyn Barnett, Miss Cynthia Evers, Miss Judy rooks and Miss Rene hllds. Visitor Sails Mrs. Joseph Kosker of Balti- more, Maryland, sailed yesterday on the S.S. "Panama" after a visit at Pedro Miguel with her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. William G. Hull. As a farewell party for Mrs. Kosker, Mt. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Adler gave a dinner of twelve covers Thursday evening at their residence in Panama. Mrs. Bright Honored At Luncheon Mrs. N. Z. Stephens and Mrs. George V. Daniels honored Mrs. William James Bright, Jr. at a luncheon and shower given Thursday at Mrs. Stephens' home in Curundu Helghti About 20 guests were Invited. Theater Guild Dinner This Evening The Theater Guild is holding its annual meeting for the elec- tion of officers and board mem- bers this afternoon at 5 in the auditorium of the Balboa Ar- med Forces Y. M. C. A. The meeting will be followed by a buffet dinner, celebrating the Guild's 1st anniversary, and by entertainment. All members and prospective members of the Guild are cordially Invited to be present. ' Penuomen to Meet For Dinner The Writers Group of the Na- tional League of American Pen- women, Canal Zone Branch, will hold a dinner at 6:30 p.m. Tues- day in the Fern Room of the Ho- tel Tivoli to which will members of the organization are invited. During the dinner there will be a round table discussion of articles and stories by members. Those planning to attend the dinner are asked to call Miss Mable Shaffar for reservations. Agnes Johnson's Paintings At Hotel Tivoli Paintings by Agnes Peterson Jt oLove/ier llllner She deserves something spe- cial for Mother's Day . . Why not treat her to a lovely natural looking permanent wave or a new flattering hair style! Make her appointment today! Balboa 3677 Armed Services YMCA Beauty Salon (YMCA Bldg.) Balboa Open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Dorothy Gray Cosmetics. .sis By Appoint -, Cn Dtillera jp H.M. KiBf Gcorg* TawpNray, Cordon " b*C*.L*4) ( S-44 ft it/if ordon's Stands Splame, Johnson are still hung In the Pen Women's Little Gallery at the Hotel Tovlll and may be seen, there until Tuesday. Radio Programs Your Community Station HOG-840 Whtr. 100.000 P.opl. Mat* Presents Today. Saturday, May lt P.M. 3:30Bebop Bash 4:00Music For Saturday 4:30What's Your Favorite* 6:00Guest Star 6:15Masterworks from France i RDF) 6:45American Folk Songs 7:00Gay Paris Music Hall (RDF) 7:30Pabst Blue Ribbon Sports Review 7:45Jam Session (VOA) 8:00Newsreel USA (VOA> 8:15Adventures In Hlstoiy (VOA) 8:30Opera Concert (VOA) 9:00Voices of America (VOA) 9:1Stamp Club (VOA) 9:30Battle Report (VOA) 9:45Sports World and Tune of Day (VOA) 10:00HOG HIT PARADE 10:30B.B.C. Bandstand 11:00Owl's Nest 1:00 a.m. Sign Of Army, Navy, Air Force News Tomorrow. Sunday, May 13 .A.M. 8:00Sign On and Musical In- terlude 8:15Newsreel U.S.A. (VOA) 8:30Hymns of all Churches 9:00Bible Auditorium of the Air 9:15Qrfl Neighbors 9:30- Studio Concerts (BBC) > m 10:00- .empo of Jazz 10:30Ain.wcan Composers 11:00National Lottery 11: J5Sacred Heart Program 11:30Meet the Band 12:00Invitation to Learning (VOA) 12:30Salt Lake Tabernacle Choir 1:00The Jo Stafford Show (VOA) 1:15American Chorales 1:30Rev. Albert Steer 2:00Opera and Symphony Hour 4:30What's Your Favorite 6:00University Theater (VOA) 7:00Opera Concert (VOA> 7:30Thru the Sports Glass 7:45Radio Varieties, U.8.A. ' 8:00Newsreel UsB. A. (VOA i 8:15Adventures In History (VOA) 8:30The Hit Parade (VOA> 9:00Commentator's Digest (VOA) 9:15 Voices of America (VOA > 9:30The Bing Crosby Show 10:00American Symphony 11:00Sign Off Explanation of Symbols VOAVoice of America BBCBritish Broadcasting Corp. RDFRadlodlffusion Francalse Letter Rides Free MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP)A let- ter sent to a Memphis firm from New York wound up In Mexico City, going all the way with no stamps and no postmark. THE FIRST PRIZE-WINNER in the U. 8. Army Caribbean S holography contest Is examined by the three Judges. Left, ean A. Karch, art supervisor of the Canal Zone schools, holds 'Mystery of the Surf," Cpl. Richard L. Loesel's prize- winning salon photo. Center. Gordon Summers, 15th Naval District photographer, former president of the Diablo Camera Club, scrutinizes Lesela picture as he holds in his left hand the second Drlze photo, submitted by Cpl. Chester L. Crank. Right, the third judge, Capt. Charles S. Howe, Engineer and Construction Group, The Panama Canal. (U.S. Army Photo by Pfc. Shirellng) Mothers' Day Dance Listed By Cristobal YMCA For Tonight Mother's Day will be celebra- ted by a dance at the Cristobal Armed Services YMCA tonight. While th affair Is dedicated to all mothers, Mrs. Marga ret "Mom" Austin will be particular- ly honored. An appropriate program has been planned by the Social Acti- vities Committee Including con- tests, stunts and dancing. The dance will start at 8:00 p.m. and will feature the music of Gardners Band. This is another Red Feather ac- tivity for servicemen made possi- ble through generous contribu- tions to the Community Chest. ewe jewelry FROM YOUR FAVORITE JEWELRY STORE HAWAII 5 Central Ave. M We offer you high quality Swiss and American Watches from 91S.50... Beautiful silver hollow - and flatware, solid gold rings and many more articles to her heart's desire.. Photograph Contest Winners Announced Cpl. Richard L. Loesel. 7461st AU (Signal), was the winner of the US Army Caribbean Ph-i'.o- graphy Contest. Judged by a board of three at the Fort Ama- dor Service Club. Loesel's prize-winning entry, untitled, is a study of a young mother introducing her son to the mystery of the surf. Another beach scene. Involving Puerto Rlcan native fishing boats, won the second prize in the sa- lon photograph division for Cpl. Chester L. Crank, 7500th AU, Ft. Brooke. Puerto Rico. The winning color slide was "Future Planning," by Capt. Mehl M. Logan. 85th AAA Group. Fort Clayton. Second was "Red at Night," by Capt. V. G. Oberg, 7470th AU. USARCARIB School. Fort Gulick., Appropriate prizes will be - warded to the four winners shortly. Meanwhile the winning pictures are on display at the A- mador Service Club until Mon- day. The four winners and twelve other photos submitted will be sent to Washington for further competitive showing in the Worldwide Inter-Service Photo- graphy Contest, said MaJ. Will- lam H. Peterson USARCARIB Contest Officer. The Judges were Jean A. Karch, FOR Mother's Day Cards VISIT Lewis Service 4 Tivoli Avtnue ant extra-plump, extra-tender chicken? Fryers and roasters, clsansd, cut, roady to cook. ' Every unce you boy goe on the tabla. MI 11AO allOM IHl 10N1I1 Jil Nl ItJtli xiiw :z wnx 10I1NCO isiiomis na un a io nao j sift 11)1 '8 m p*-*!* *? i * i rtlix 'I ip* ?*! *n pipniwj t| fi\-yn top ? f-oM pinx *s i,| * *l *? ft I IN E i|J+J ?.<,,i- i..., puf J| *"'......wnn iJnpojd ol I iqiod i ii jjnni *>!?"* "9 V> ^l noA " iraiinjtnS oi |ojiuo j iiipmf) jo uijivai, ujpioy I qi jjpun paiipin si Sui>|)>d pal SuicuxMd qtnanp Xjip aaij pjinSjj arta jja 3 pGOnpakJsi art supervisor of the Canal Zone schools; Gordon Summers, pho- tographer. 15th Naval District, former president of the Diablo Camera Club and Capt. Charles S. Howe, Engineer and Construc- tion Group, The Panama Canal. RECORDS 45 UttA^lfto^ 0LDSM0BILE TRIM AS USUAL Offers you the new SUPER 88 Place your order now for immediate MAY OR JUNE DELIVERY SEE Your OLDSM OBILE DEALER PANAMA AUTO, S. A. Ave. Justo Arosemena and 30th Street Phone 3-0759 page rout TITE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER SATURDAY MAT It. 1991 Dobson Hurls 1-Hitter As White Sox Whip Indians Chisox Move Into Third Place Tie; Tigers Win By Umttd Pfss SA3S *OW NEW YORK, May 12 The White Sox moved into a tie for third placo with tht Indians in the American Lea- gue when Joe Dobton pitched a one-hitter 12-1 victory at Chicago in the best performance of his ten-year career in the Majors last night. Dobson appeared to be going * for the second no-hlt no-run - name in the Majors in a week when, with two out in the eighth inning, pinch-hitter Bob Avila lammed a double to break the apeUf Avlla's hit didn't provide the. Indiani with their lone run. J- however. That came in the ninth ,"Z- f>n two walks, an mlleld out and n Infield error when the pres- SSure on Dobson was off. Orestes Mioso. whom the In- dians traded away to tbc White -Sox, set the hitting pace tor the winners with a triple and .two sine Is* while batting In two 'runs. The Indians new admit It was rerkleee to sal away with Mioso who has the po- tential ability U be a great star. Al Carrasquel also got a triple and two singles for the White 8ox while Eddie Robinson, another player who used to toll for the Indians, hit a two-run homer -his fourth of the season - The White Sox wrapped up vic- tory with a seven-run rally In the seventh inning. The Tigers1 Dizzy Trout pitched - four-hit 7-1 victory over the Browns at St. Louis In another arc-light contest. Vic Wertg hit a two-run homer and the Tigers cashed In on ten walks by the Browns' throwers. PARI8. Prance, May 13 (UP). Paris in the spring appeals to "Sugar" Ray Robinson, the middleweight champ who has become something of a roving sports ambassador. "In Paris I am the happiest man in the world," Robinson told newsmen today in his 10-room hotel suite overlooking the Ave. Des Champs -Eh/sees. Robinson says he likes the City of Lights so much he may rent a villa In residential St. Cloud for the sum- mer season. ' Robinson went to Paris for a May 21 date with Kid Marcel, the French middleweight champ. But the "Harlem Hotshot" has been relaxing mare than train- ing. He's quite a boulevard sight in his red sport shirts, pink slacks and jaunty walk. And the Paris- Howard Rommel of Sturgls, | ians love "Sugar.'' Robinson Is Michigan, almost scored another invited to swank teas. Magazine perfect game earlier In the day. j editors call for appointments. Trenton Bowler Scores Perfect 300 In A.B.C.T. ST. PAUL, Minnesota, May 12 (UPi. A 38-year-old bowler from Trenton, New Jersey, has reached the goal of every kegler. Vincent Luccl fired 12 conse- cutive strikes yesterday for a per- fect1 score of 300 while competing in the doubles division of the American Bowling Con grass feline in "l" at St. Paul. Min- nesota. Luccl's perfect game is the llth in the 48-year History of the A.B.C. Tournament. In that time, more than three mil- lion games have been shot. Trout pitched shutout ball af- ter the second Inning, yielding only two more hits. NATIONAL LEAGUE In the only Senior Loop game, Cliff Chambers who hurled a no-hlt no-run game for the Pir- ates only last Sunday discov- ered that fame was fleeting In- deed when he was bounced f?r a sharp single In the first inning nd went on to lose a 10-4 deci- sion to the Cubs at Pittsburgh last night. Chambers gave up four more hits, good for three runs In the second Inning after which he was removed. Andy Palko, who is having one of hie | rr a test seasons thus far, hit his seventh and eighth homers for the Cubs to move within one home run of 'Major League leader Gil Hodges of the Dodgers. Bob Rush won his second game even though he was reached for eleven hits and contributed three hits himself. Waily West- lake hit a three.run Pirate homer. All other National League games were rained out and there were no other American League contests scheduled. Sports Briefs By UNITED PHE88 A field of 12 has been entered for today's 13th running of the o.OOO Gallant Pox Handicap at Jamaica. "Cochlse," top-weighted at 120 pounds, is overnight favorite for the mile and three sixteenth New York feature. TRACK A world champion at hurdles Dick Attlesey will be out to break his own record today In the West Coast Track and Field Re- lays at Fresno. Attlesey admits that the weather and track conditions will determine whether he has a chance to break his record of IS and five-tenth second for the 120-high hurdles. Dick will run for the Los Angeles Athletic Club. Another boy they'll be watch- ing in the field of 1,300 is Ollle Matson, from the University of San Francisco. Matson is well known for his football, but ran the 100 yard dash in high school in nine-six. Now he's switching back to track, hoping to make the Olym- pic squad in the 440-yard event. Since the 440 is not listed today In the Relays, Matson will run the 100. Annual National Brewers' Beer Mug Matches Open Tomorrow National League Teams- W I. Pet. Beaten . Brooklyn i << It .Me .IS ll .MS 81. Louis . .! ..Ml Pittsburgh . .U 1* .324 Philadelphia . 11 12 .418 Chicago . New fork . 1 11 .Ml .11 14 440 Cincinnati . 1 IS .SSI Fight Dope The Green Bay Packers of the National Football League have signed one rookie and a hold- over. The freshman is fullback Clarence Balsch who scored 14 touchodwns last season for Lewis and Clark University at Portland- Oregon. The other Packer who signed ia tackle Don Stansauk, a former Denver University star... Beverly Baker of Santa Mo- nica, California, has reached the women's semi-finals of the Hurl- lngham Club Lawn Tennis Tournament in London. Miss Baker defeated Miss Gem Roar- ing of China 3-8, 7-5, 6-3 In a final match. TODAV'S OAMBI C'hlcago at Ftttsburgh- St. Louis at Cincinnati. Philadelphia at New York Brooklyn at Beaton (N.) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS (Night Game) Chicago II, Pittsburgh 4. St. Louis at Cincinnati. (Postponed, rain). Philadelphia at New York. (Postponed), Brooklyn at Boeton. (Postponed). American League Teams New Yerk . Washington Cleveland . Chicago . Detroit . Boston . Philadelphia St. Leuli . W IS I .11 .11 .11 . * I 7 I S t Pet. .714 12 .57S .571 5M .SM .2M .237 TODAY* GAME! New York at Philadelphia. Boston at Washington (N.) Detroit at St, Louis. Cleveland at Chicago. YEITEHDAY'I RESULTS (Night Game) Detroit 7, It. Luis 1. (Night Game) CWeaga if. Cleveland Only games scheduled. U.S.A. Takes 3-1 Lead In Walker Cup Matches The 44-year-old accountant fired 11 strikes in a row, but counted only nine on his last roll for a score of 299. Rommel's mark is the 14th 299 score to be recorded In a A.B.C. history. And he's hounded for autographs every time he makes a public appearance. "I love It here," says Ray. "I would stay if I didn't have so many interests in the States." Jubilee Stakes Field Still Very Much In Doubt BALTIMORE. Maryland May 12, (UP. The field for the Mav 26 running of the "Jubilee Stakes" at Pimlico is still very much in doubt. That's the race Pimlico of- ficials hope to match the first four horses of the Kentucky Der- by and Preakness. The only candidate Maryland Jockey Club officials can count on is/ "Count Turf," surprise winner of the Kentucky Derby. "Royal Mustang," which finished second and "Rhue,'' which ran third, apparently will pass up the Jubilee. Pimlico authorities say they have received no official word, but it is reported Royal Mustang-and Ruhe will run In the Peabodv Memorial at Lincoln Fields at Chicago on May 30. The four Preakness entries for the Jubilee 8takes will come from a field of 14 probable starters in 'he Preakness. It will be run May 19. rom Scotland every precious Pacific Side Hoop Officials To Meet Monday Afternoon The Pacific Side Chapter of As- sociation of Approved Basket- ball Officials will meet at the Balboa Armed Services Y.M.C.A. Monday, at 7:30 p.m. This meeting is called by Roger Williams, president of the local chapter, and request all mem- bers listed In the 1950-51 Hand- book to be present. Election of officers for the 1951-52 will be held. RING FOR BELL'S BUCHANAN'S BLACKiWHITE SCOTCH WHISKY Distilled, Blended and Bottled in Scotland MM K. , &,o.|. VI fcotck Wkiakr DmUUw. mm luch.ni* C. LH. lAMeS BUCHANAN ANO CO. LTD.. GLASGOW. SCOTLAND BIRKDALE, England, May 12 (UP). American golfers had It yesterday when the Walker Cup chips were down at Blrkdale, England. Halfway through the four scotch foursome matches It look- ed as If the British would spring a major upset. They led in three of the matches and had the other one tied up at the luncheon break. Evidently tne English food agreed with Captain Willie Tur- nesa and la boys. They rallied beautifully on the last 18 holes to win two matches and halve the other two. Since a tie means one-half Bint, the Americam new lead ree points te one. Turnesa and company need enly an even break in the eight singles matches today to retain the historic Walker Cup which symbolizes international su- premacy in asnateur golf. In yesterday's foursomes played with each player taking alternate shots for his team Turnesa. who Is out of Elmsford, New York, teamed with Sam Ur- aetta, the national amateur champ from Rochester. New York, and Turnesa scored a 5r4 victory. Willie and 8am were three down at the end of 20 holes. They pulled even on the 27th, then won five straight boles to drub Jim Bruen and John Morgans. Dick Chapman of Pinehurst, North Carolina, and Bob Knowle of Brookllne, Mas sachusetts. turned In the other U. 8. victory Alex Kyle and Ian Caldwell had them one down at the end of 18 The British golfers were hitting the narrow fairwaysbut Chap- man and Knowlas rallied for a 1-up win. Frankie Stranahan of Tole- do and Bill Campbell of Hunt- ngton, West Virginia, halved their snatch with Ronnie White and Joe Car?. So did Charlie Cae of Oklahoma City and Jim McHale Junior of Philadelphia. Both American teams led late in the snatch but the British golfers refused to crack. Some 10,000 English fans cheer- ed as their golfers resisted the American pressure. Stranahan and Campbell, trailing by three strokes at noon, rallied to go two-up at the 29th. But the two British veterans managed to save the match with superior Iron play. , Cecil Swing and John Langiey wiped out the one up lead Mc- Hale and Coe had the 29th to square things. Even the most rabid English rooters admitted the Yanks, who wore brilliant yellow and green sweaters, were superior. Even the weather favored them. Up until 48 hours ago, the weather at Blrkdale had been windy and chilly a definite ad- vantage to the British who are used to it. Yesterday it was warm and only a light breeze swept the course. In today's eight singles match- es... Urzetta is paired with Sam Mc- Cready. the former British ama- ' teur champ. Stranahan takes on Joe Carr. Coe plays Ronnie White. McHale meets John Langiey. Campbell plays Cecil Swings. Turnesa plays Alex Kyle. Harold Paddock, Junior, of Cleve- land plays Ian Caldwell and Chapman plays John Morgan. The annual National Brewery Beer Mug matches will open at Brazos Brook Country Club to- morrow morning. May 13. The Beer Mug is the golfing festivity that originated back in, the dark ages when Summit Hills was the Miradores Oolf Club and Brazos Brook was still a dream of the Gatun Oolf Club. Thru the years It has been an extremely popular affair and always has all the Na- tional Brewery's fans out "en masse." The .Cervecera Nacional per- petual trophy how reposes at Brazos Brook by virtue of their victory in last year's matches. However, the Summit Hills Sweater Olrla fully expect to fol- low up their triumph In the Inter-Club with a repeat per- formance in the Beer Mug. Last year the National Brewery individual trophies were won by Jim Rlley and Jeff Spltznogle, botii of Summit Hills. Jim won the low gross trophy with a 145. just one stroke ahead of Al Saarlnen. Rlley was one stroke behind Saarlnen and George n- gelke after the first weeks play at Summit when he carded a 71 to*their 70. At Braaos Brook, however, long-hitting Jim added only 74 blows to his total, while Al was taking 76 and George En- gelke soared into the 80s. Jeff Spitanogte won the low net award with a 133. JOE by WILLIAMS National Brewery Is awarding two sets o flndlvldual trophies this year one for men's low gross and low net; the other for women's low gross and low net. Should make the gals come out In hunches. All players, regard- less of handicap, are urged to come out for the fun May 13th at Braaos Brook and May 20th at Summit Hills. INDIANAPOLIS. Oat here these days sports daffinesi cent- n ground the set shot and the hot rod. The highest height of boyhood ambition i to captain the Butler basketball team or win the 500-mile automobile ree t the Id Speedway. In auother generation it was different. Every kid for miles around wanted to fight Jack DUIon. An that's not hard to understand. Ernest Cutler Price, to give ttm his square monicker, was one of the best the ring ever aw. ound tor pound there couldn'i have been many who were ever better. He was one of an endless parade of great fighters I got to see as a youngster back home In Memphis when the stars stopped over on their way to California for championships. He was a handsome fellow of middleweight build with what we now oall a orew haircut, fast on his feet and a double-barreled p'in-her, aa Scotch-Irish farm product who had the looks and, bearing of a college man. In later years I was to see a football Saver, Doc Blanchard of Army, who resembled him remarkably, aclally and physically. Dillon never took much money out of the ring because In his day, Urn early 1900s the pay Was short, and of what he took ha saved little, there being a wide disparity between his resolution In and out qf the ring. He died In squalor and for reasons not clear the body was buried in Florida, though locals raised money to bring it here. Last time I saw him alive he was running a sandwich shop which waa no more than a miserable hack on the road to the Hialeah cace track- This was also his living quarters. Bob Smith, who had won the Derby the year before with Cavalacade, and I I hod visited with him for half an hour or so. As a fight manager Smith had been a contemporary. It was a tragic and unwholesome adventure. . Pro Footboll Star Pleads Not Guilty To Murder Charge LAS CRCB8, N. M May 12 (UPj Jerry Nuium. pro-foot- ball star, pleaded not guilty yesterday at the opening of his preliminary hearing on a charge that he murdered a wajtres here early In 1949. Nuzum ajuwkfield jtar with ihe Pittsburgh Steeler, is ac- cused of killing Ovida 'Crick- it" Coogler, whose battered body wa lound burled in the sands near here than two years go. Witness W. A. Abernathy, a rancher, said he saw the girl and Nuzum together in the early morning hours of March 31. the day she disappeared. POR SALE IN W. PACKAGE 8TORE8 AND BARS DUtTibUtOr; DURAN Tel. MtH THE SAVINGS BANK Institution Guaranteed by the State Pays 2% Interest Annually on Savirifs Accounts INITIAL DEPOSIT $5.00 W. make loan* with guarantee! on first mortage* or other securities. CHRISTMAS SAVINGS 25c. 50c. $1-00 and $5.00 deposits are accepted thru a period of 48 weeks. Individual safety deposit boxes, for jewelry and documenta, in 4 different eizee,. OFFICE IN PANAMA: 199 Central Ae. at corner of "I" Street. COLON BRANCH: Fren I St. at cerner ef 7th St. CARLOS MOUYNES V. Sab-Manager. Q. R. De ROUX Manager. 10(111 i Prom 99* sun. t. .!. em. SATURDAYS: from S:M asm. to tt:M tas. THE PIBST GIANT KHLKR To give you an Idea of how Dillon stood professionally there was talk of ending him against Jess WlUard for the heavyweight championship, though the weight difference would have been fan- tastic. Fellows like Billy McCarney. Marty Forklns and Billy Roche said he would have won sure pop. And maybe he woi Beating the.big guys wat one of the best and most spectacular things Dillon did- Perhaps the greatest tight he ever turned In was against Frank Moran, who had gone 30 rounds with Jack Johwun. .wire stopped Jim Coffey and was fresh from i close, bruising effort against Willard in old Madison Square Garden, Tex Rlc'kard's first New York promotion, bv the way. Moran could knock your brains out with a right hand and in the third round he had Dillon on the floor at the result of a clean hit but the little fellow got up and at the end the Pittsburgh heavy- weight was badly cut' and bleeding all over like a seven-time loser at the track, and that was the night the Press Row started calling him the Giant Killer, the first time his expressive, If no too origin- al, tag was ever hung on an American fighter. One night Jim Corbett introduced Dillon to Bid Mercer, the sports writer. In the old Friar's Club. "This Is the fellow who made a bum of me." Dillon, of course, was too young to have fought the man who knocked out the mighty John L., but he had demolished Tom Oowl- er, an Egllah heavyweight Corbett was touting as a world beater. Dillon knocked Cowier out in the second round with one punch, a left hook counter to the chin, much to corbett'a red-faced em- barrassment as he sat at the ring side In company with a group of pals from the theater. TIE BID'S LAST FIGHT Some of our greatest, fighters never held a title. Packey Mc- Farland, for one. Dillon belonged to the uncrowned chamolon set, too. One week he'd be fighting middle weights like Mike Gibbons, the next llghtheavies like Battling Levinsky, then heavyweights like Fireman Jim Flynn. He was clever enough to hold the flashy Gib- bons even on points, powerful enough to stop Flynn In four. Take my wo I for It. he Was an authentic great- ' Kay Bronson also fought out of this town and was better than a green hand, though he lacked the matchless skills of the great Dillon. As a welterweight he ranked with the topnotchers. His best fights around her. were with McFarland and Wildcat Ferns. Fred- die Welsh stopped him In the only fight he lost by a kavo. Bronson retired in 1914 and came back six years later to fight Jack Britton for the championship in a little Ohio resort town, called Cedar Point. He had outpointed Britton 10 years before. It was on the strength of this the rematch was made and the bally- hoo, erected. I covered the fight. It was a sad affair. Bronson was broke and this was a desperation move to make a buck. He ran the thing himself, helped set up the tent in which It was held, distributed advertising cards, sold tickets. Installed th. ring. On the day of the fight a violent storm broke. And you know what a storm can do to a resort town's business. Only a few scattered hundred showed up. Bronson. out six yean, was as bad as he figured to be. Britton simply toyed with him. But Bronson. his promotion wrecked, his talents faded tried with an earnest, heartsick futility. Dumb Dan Morgan, Button's manager, made good the losses and staked him to $1000. The old- timeis were great in more ways than one. Colpan Motors Inc. Tel. Z-193S GIRLS.' TAKF A MAN S ADVICF AR0UT YOUR WX**t yeur akia cle.r and smooth with Cuticura Soap end Ointment. Thie femou. combtnauoa eeeet eat Nsckhearfc, KeiuvM pfaapUt Buy! rtAeiAHT, Miietr MepiCAree \fl AU UIM1MI NT CUTICURA Distributora: CIA. UYRNOS. S. A. WITH AN xi&e BATTERY Distributors: GUARDIA CIA, 8. A. YOU GIT INSTANT STARTING AND LONG LIFE NMMAMf aUTTI MIS *f* e I YIAtfl ------ Jas to Areeemena A*.. 99th St., Panam, R P. fATVRDAY. MAY If. lHt tm Camama American an iwderenpent daily newspaper .1CE FIVE Atlantic ^5o$ty & 195, fa* 3>lpU* '" *7* OR. AND MRS. MORRIS ENTERTAIN Dr. and Mr. VeeUl Morris, of Gatan. entertalnee with a dinner party at their residence last vMf M .*_ M Their meets included Dr. ad Mrs. Claud Roddy, of Mo- eW. CX"i. who are Ylsltln* Dr. and Mr. Morriswlttt Mr. and Mr. Uland locum ^J^*^!"^*.?; n R. mtin, Washington. D. C. Mr. EUaakalh gw*J. *" WiUlaro A. VM elan. Jr.. Mr. id Mr. Wallaee Rwhlng, Mr. aad Mm. Hunter Dart and Mr. Robert Oe. , ? V#yajt Coffee fwMn.IhiVall Mrs. R. A. PuVall. who U lea>- lni soon for a States vacation wat complimented with a liver dol- lar shower and morning coffee liven by Mrs. John Brown t her Margarita horn* yesterday. The coffee table was decorated with a cool ureen and white co- lor scheme. The friends who participated tn the party were: Mrs. Earl Mui- llns. Mrs. Bill Waldron. Mrs. Richard Pennlngton. Mrs. Arthur Corbett.Mrs. Erwln Ramsey. Mrs. J. M. Reed. Mrs. M. L. McCuHougn. Mrs. Henry Harts, Mrs. Louis Da- mlaml. Mrs. L. I. MacFherson and Mrs. A. R. Barber. Rer. and Mrs. La Font Leaving for States .______ Rev. and Mrs. Ernest La Font and children, Jeanlne and Leland of Oatun. are sailing Monday on the Chlrlqul for New Orleans, for nine-month furlough, after a flvs-vear tour of duty In the mis- sion field. The whole family has partici- pated In the activities of the com- munity and Union Church, out- side of their mission work and will be missed by Atlantic Side residents. . __ Rev. LaFont has a full schedule of lectures, with pictures of Pan- ama, to be given In the States. Thev will report to Anderson, In- diana, where they will meet Rev. La Font's brother. Rev. and Mrs. Frank La Font, who arrived In New York on May 10. after being itatloned In the Kenya Colony In British East Africa for the past five years. Alter visiting their families In California, they will attend the Pacific Bible College In Portland. Oregon, for the 1981-52 session. Miss Pretto Honored by Friend Mrs. James Coffey entertained a group of friends for canasta at her Coco Solo residence. They took this opportunity to present Julieta Pretto a gift as a shower present. _. Miss Pretto will wed Mr. Tho- mas Lara on May IS. The girls who participated in the gift were: Misses Rosarlo La- ra. Muriel Jordan. Jllma Lara. Jean Dough. Leneve Dough. Jean- nie Lawson and Sarah Mizrachl. Coco Solo Officers Wives Luncheon The members of the "Coco Solo Oflcers' Wives Club held their monthly meeting and luncheon at the Officers Club yesterday with Mrs. W. E. Sands and Mrs. Rov Nlelson as hostesses. Mrs. P. L. Balay, president, pre- sided at the meeting and Intro- duced the following new arrivals on the station: Mrs. T O White. Jr., Mrs. W. D. King. Mrs. W. W. Bemls. Mr*. W A. Williams, Mrs. I. D. Schrsder, Mrs. V. A. Rohweltier. Mrs. I. M. Rowell. Mrs. J. F. Crlder. Mrs. W. w. Stevens. Mr*. F. B. Moore. Mrs. J. E. Loner. Mrs. M.L. Ltlleboe, Mrs. W. E. Simpson, Mrs. J. C. Novak. Mr. J. D. Rives and Mrs. j, j. Humes. Slumber Party Miss Barbara Egolf had a slum- ber party at the home of her sis- ter and brother-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Clement of Oatun last night. Her guests were: Misses Mar- tha Graham, Coletta Bttebrita, jeanlne LaFont, Robert Williams and Ruth Daniels. the Church of the Holy Family in Margarita. Beginning Sunflay the Sunday Mases will be held at 7: SO and 9:90 a.m. Registration for Camp Harriet Morrow Hegistratlon for the Brownie and Qiri Scout Day Camp tn Oatun may be made every after- noon from Monday, May 14 through May II. from 1:00 to 5j00 p.m. at the Margarita Office. The registration application must be acompanled by a 3.00 deposit. The parents, girls or headers may bring In the applications. Girl Scout Leaders Meeting The Atlantic Side Brownie and Girl Scout leaders will met/at 7:- 30 p.m. Wednesday. May It at the Margarita office. At this time they will discuss the Day Camps. All leaders are. requested to at- tend In order td take Information back to their troops. Hoepltal Note Mrs. Henry Harti of Margarita was admitted to colon Hospital Thursday for an emergency op- eration. THE CHORUS LINE of the "CartrCan, Direct From The Folie Bergere," one of the between- the-act entertainment feature of the melodrama, "Dirty Work At The Cross Roads," presented Thuraaay at Comingsi Hall. Fifteenth Naval District by th Navy Officers Wives' Club. All proceeds realised from the play are to be donated to charity. The chorus line la composed of .left to right): "LeM" McOrall. "Lulu" Olson. "Flfl" Billings, "Tootsle" Torbett. "Dolly'' Kirk, "Oertte17 MeLernore, "Badle" Rezner and "Boots" SprlegeL The hoofing lieutenants and the three-act melodrama wUl go on the boards again tonight._____________________________ ISTHMIAN DATA Marriage Licenses WILLIS, Francis James. 51. of Curundu Hts to ROWELL. -Teen Francis, 33, of Cleveland. Ohio. Births QUI.NN.Mr. and Mrs Lnther J.. of Coco Solo, daughter, May 8. Colon Hospital. HARDING. Mr. and Mrs. Bf- vester E.. of 8ilver City, daugh- ter. May 9. Colon Ilosnltal. BERMUDEZ. Mr. and Mrs. Is- aac, of Pueblo Nuevo, daughter, Mav 11, Oorgas Hospital. CHAMORRO, Mr. anJ Mrs. Jo- se, of Panama, daughter. May 11, Gorgas Hospital. LINDSAY. Mr. and Mrs. R.U.. of Panama, boy twins, May 11, Oorgas Hospital. ROMANCE. Mr. and Mrs. P. J.. of Curundu. son. May 11, Oorgas Hospital. LIONTI. Dr. and Mrs. J.N.. ol Balboa, daughter. May 11. Oorgas Hospital, Family Sunday at the Cristobal Union Church Mother's Day Sunday will again be observed as Family Sunday at the Cristobal Union Church. Par- ents are asked to attend Sunday School with their children at 9:S0 am. At 10:00 a.m.. light re- freshments will be served by the children. The parents will have an opportunity to visit with the teacher. Corsages will be provid- ed for the mother. At 10:48 a.m., there will be the morning worship service with Don Smith. Jr., and Andrew Bleaklev Jr., assisting. Each child will receive a potted plant following the service. This is the third year that Mo- ther's Day has been observed in this manner. It is hoped that this Sunday will be as successful as the previous FamUy Sundays. Spring Music Festival The Spring Music Festival, which was planned for last Wed- nesday night at the Cristobal High School will bs given Wed- nesday. May 16. The tickets sold for the proposed performance will be honored at the door. Mr. Orr Leaves for Vacation Mrs. Earl C Orr and children, Mary Olive and Earl, of Crlsto- bsl saUed yesterdav for New York where thev will Join Mr. Orr. Mrs, Orr and the children will spend the summer with re- latives in New Jersev. Mr. Orr was called to the Stales because of the death of his father In San Diego. Califor- nia. He will return to the Isth- mus on June 4. His mother, Mrs. E. F. Orr wlH accompany her daughter. Mrs. Russell Jones to Panama later in June. Maeees at Church of the Holy Family The First Holy Communion will be held tomorrow at 7:30 a.m. at Attending Balboa R.O.T.C. Dance Miss Sheila McNamee of Oa- tun. Is the weekend guest of Mils AlUon Hope of gamboa and at- tended the R.O.T.C. Dance In Balboa last evening. Bachelor Dinner for Mr. La Porta ,. . Last evening a group of irlenfl entertained with a stag dinner party at the Cristobal Club for Mr. Robert La Porta, whose wed- ding to Miss Melba Florea takes place this evening. The honoree was confined to stocks and driven in a t.uck to his party. The friends who cele- brated the occasion with him were: Captain John Fahnestock, TROPICAL TODAY! IIANIOM SilB KAMI! ,AVY IN SOUTH ATLANTIC! New Books Deaths RICHARDS Howard. Br.. 64. of New Cristobal, May 8. Colon Hos- pital. Appropriations Committee Official To Visit Isthmus George Harvey. Clerk of the House Appropriations Commit- tee, will arrive Monday on the Panama liner Cristobal for a four-day visit to the Canal Zone. Mr. Harvey Is making the trip officially to acquaint himself with the Canal and conditions generally in the Canal Zone. Plans are being made to afford him ample opportunity to visit the various Canal-Railroad Ins- tallations. Mr. Harvey plans to return to New York on the same ship next Friday. BALLERINAS PROM THE NATIONAL SCHOOL BALLET highlighted the celebration of the first anniversary of the Fort Kobbe Service Club recently. Above are Mary Hebert, who Interpreted Dellbes' Piaxlcatti, Marilyn Bevlngton, Ann Stubblefield, 6hlrlev Van der DUs and Joyce Gardner. Cho- pin's Valse Romantlque, and Karen Magnuson, who gave her Interpretation of TschaikowskVs Swan Lake. Miss Van der Dljs won much applause for her performance of the life span Of a butterfly In her presentation of Krelsler's L'Ephemere. Miss Rugh Fabrega was pianist for the performance. Ouests were served a buffet supper prepared by Lt. Donald Du- charme, assisted by 8FC. Theus, 8FC. Levern Brlndemore and SFC. Robert W. Rayburne, of Fort Kobbe. M/Sgt. Ralph O. Herbert and Mrs. Doris O CaldweU, of the Service Club staff, were official host and hostess for the occasion. (US Army Photo) Dr. F. B. Relfkohl and Messrs. Gaddls Wall, Walter Hunnlcutt, W. H. Munyon, William Hughes, Leonard Heltzke. Charles Smith, Ma* Finley, Joseph White. John Flores, George Flores, Frank Day, Ruben Robertson. Leonard Mun- yon. Floyd Robinson. C. D. Rob- inson. Oeorgo Tully. Cyril de Lapp. Paul Stewart, D- A. Wad- dell, Henry de Rapp, R. Blllson, Charles Green, waiter Peterson, Harry Dowell. Herbert Peterson, Ralph Dugan. Orady Hardlson, Jim Hatcher. Rex Knight, A. B. Cooper, W. R. Dunn and A. E. Sut- ton. Know What They Want MEMPHIS. Tenn., May 12. (UP.). When the Treadwell High School Eagle quizzed stud- ents about their ambition, sev- eral girls said they wanted and "MRS* degree." Nursing Class All Men CZ School Art Show Is Touring Isthmus More than 600 drawings, paint- ings and special projects by boys and girls in Canal Zone elemen- tary schools are traveling around the Isthmus. Parents and friends will find this exhibit lnteredstlng and in- spiring. The exhibit will show as fol- lows: Margarita School. May 14 to 17; Cristobal Elementary School, May 18 to 23; Diablo Heights School. May 23 to 25: Balboa Ele- mentary School. May 28 to June 6. The art exhibit at Balboa Ele- mentary School will be open to. the public Saturday morning, June 2. "The Paris We Love," edited by Dore Ogrizck, is one of the new books placed in circulation during the past week by the Panama Canal Library. The book has decorative maps, fine old prints and line sketches to show you Paris, in all Its facets, and Andre Mau- rols, Jean Cocteau, Jules Ro- malns and many other writers as guides and narrators. The complete list of new books at the Library follows: Life of Christ God so loved the world. Goudge. Genetics Genetics and the races of man, Boyd. Useful artAutomatic trans- missions simplified, Purvis: How to help your child In school, Frank. Fine Arts Symbols, signs and signets, Lehner. Biography & Travel . The Paris We Love, Ogrlzek; In my mind's eye, Marion. Fiction Old Herbaceous. Arkell; Stopover, Brink; They came to Baghdad. Christie; Tuc stories, Fitzgerald; The angry mountain, Inpes; Fort Ever- glades, Slaughter; A little night music, Ward. New editions and replace- mentsTunnel from Calais, Di- vine; Tender is the night, ntzgerald; Salambo, Flaubert; The days of the king, Frank; Captain Blood, his odyssey. Sa- batlni; Ruggles of Red Gap, Wilson; Lover's alibi. Widdem- er; The man nobody knows. Barton: The life and teaching of Jesus, Bosworth; My world and welcome to It, thurber; The aspirin age, 1919-1941, Lelghton; Rio Grande to Cape Horn, Beals; Such Interesting people. Casey; Andrew Jackson, Marquis. Sherman, fighting pro- phet, Lewis; Jeb Stuart, Tho- ma8on. M Rl I) ( I IINU WESTCLOX-treWftif alone cfedr fQUALITY RiUASIUTY 3> completed the home nursing BLANFORD, Miss. (UP.)All course of the American Red eight members of a class that Cros here were men. (Panama Canal C/uihouses ~ Showing Tonight BALBOA "rfiri** STIIIIIC RONALD DIANA NM( h acrtl MMI * Hi nvrwu.il uwiw REAGAN LYNN -mJ^ WALTER SLEZAK JESSE WHITE ALSO SHOWINO SUNDAY AND MONDAVI r\iABir\ utc t*trnr williams Howard nm. f,f.t0 ,JS "THE PAGAN LOVE SONG' I iS ui 111 TRAVAIARM Trc-vc-le-rm, made by the makers of world ternou "Big ben", fit eatily into a comer of a padted tuitcaie. Sliding front shutter and hinged easel bach give complete protection for travelling. Ha lumlnou dial, non-breakable crystal. Every minute count while you're on a trip and for the right time all the time, be sure to take along the dependable, attractive Travalarm. See it and the other fine clock and watche by WetdoK at your retailer' nowl WESTCLOX roinoJs'/uiTiily NamO of Fine Jimr Representative: I'M VERSAL EXPORT CORP. Jos Francisco de la Oesa Are. it #31 "Q" St. Panam City, R. P. (Technicolor l Sunrfiy "IN A LONELY PLACE" r n r Ct i I Jerome COURTLAND Beverly TYLER ?. "THE PALOMINO" (technicolor) ^ Sunday "BAWHIDE" I ttse LIFEBUOY TOILET SOAP fffAMO MIGUtL **" GHANT',n t ... . ...,*h.<: "DESTINATION TOKYO" GAMBOA Ml You'll feel so fresh and full of vigour sfter you've washed with Lifebuoy Toilet Sosp. Its deep-cleansing lather frees you of weari- ness, and keeps you fresh the whole day through. Keep a tablet of Lifebuoy Toilet Soap handy and use it regularlyfor all day freshness I FOR PERSONAL FRESHNESS ALWAYS **! U|/>||M G A 1 U N s.-es Pal O'BRIEN e Dolores MORAN "JOHNNY ONE-EYE" Sunday "UNION gTATlOW ii incinif a John LUND e Diana LYNN ^ffaGii'TA "Mv Friend Irma Goes West" Sunday "THE PAC.AN LOVE ONO" ra,crn.., Frd ASTAIRE O Jane POWELL :' :S AUo Showing- Sunday and Monday I UrOnneva Ida LUPINO e Howard DUTT "WOMAN IN HIDING' Sunday "THE PALOMINO" SAGE SIX \ THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER SATURDAY. MAT 18. 1951 The More You Tell... The Quicker You Sell! USE PANAMA AMERICAN CLASSIFIEDS Leave your ad with one of our Agents or our Offices Minimum tor 15 words 3* each additional word. LEWIS SERVICE No. 4 Tlvoll Ar. Poeoe I-25| KIUSKO DE LESSEPS Parque * l.awrsa Panaaub MORRISONS N*. 4 r'eurin of July Ata. raas. 2-S44I BOTICA CARLTON IS.Me McMadM Avt. PlMBt >M COLON SALON DE BELLEZA AMERICANO No It Waal 121* Itrrai THE PANAMA AMERICAN No. 17 "H" luri ru.au No Hi; casual Ava. Calos COMMERCIAL & PROFESSIONAL FOR SALE Automobiles We carry the largest assortment of fine METAL MOULDINGS and TRIM SHAPES for NEVAMAR table, sink or bar tops, CORALITE fell board and NATCOR tore fronts. EO. F. NOVEY, INC. 279 Central Ave. Tel. .1-0140 I FOR SALE:Oldsmobile 98 rocket Hydramotic convertible 1949, in perfect condition. Mutt sacrifice. Phone Balboo 2766 or Ponoma 3- 1025. FOR SALE:1949 GMC Panel, holf ton, perfect condition. Phone Bal- boo 2766. Panema 3-1025. FOR SALE:'41 Chevrolet Club, motor just worked on new clutch, transmission, leaving for States. Balboa 3518. Mr. & Mrs. Canal Zone: *? CUSHIONS, SLIP-COVERS and RE-UPHOLSTERING) rail us or visit our .how-room Custom bull tumi- ture our speciality. See our Deco- Mbr'a Fabrica. Free Eatirnatea. NA- TIONAL UPHOLSTERY (A. Heres) J. f. ale la Oisa No. 77 (Auto. Row) New Telephone 3-4628. LEICA CAMERAS Model IIIF Synchronised LENSES ft ACCESSORIES AT BELOW 0.8. PRICES. Direct C.Z. Shipments At Factory Prices. Porras PIrsr S de Mayo Panam. R. P. FOR SALE: 194 7 Studeboker Chompion, four-door sedan, black, original owner. Ne wtires, $975. Can be financed. Balboa 3243. MISCELLANEOUS De you hove Visaing problem? Write Alcoholics Anonymous o. 20 JI A neon. C. Z. FOR SALE Miscellaneous FOR SALE:High gloss oil paints and enamels. Mildew-proof. $3.25 gallon. Tropidura Stores. VENETIAN BLINDS: Mode to to ordei repaired and refinished, estimates given. COLON WOOD SERVICE, Tel. 543-L, 2003 ,7th. street, Colon, R. P. FOR RENT Houses FOR RENT: Spacious, completely furnished residence built on 1600 meter lot,, with 1000 meters of lawn and garden. Three bedrooms . .with twe bathrooms, two servants , quarters with servants 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 Poitilla ond Panama Golf Club. Avollable for one year. Telephone RESORTS Phillips. Beach cottoges. Sonto Clora Bex number 435, Bolboo. Phone Panama 3-1877 or Cristobal 3- 1673. FOR SALE:1941 Ford Pick-up, 5 speeds. Very good condition, $400. 00. Houte 142 Pedro Miguel. FOR SALE:Renault. Excellent con- dition. Low mileage. Sacrifice ot original owner. New tires. $975 during office hours or 3-2503. FOR SALE: 1951 Hudson Pace- maker, two door. 1.800 miles, perfect condition, $2,050. This week only. Phone 2-6312. FOR SALE:Chevrolet 1950 De Luxe 4-door sedan. Owner driven 10.- 300 miles, seat covers, phone 2- 2321. FOR SALE:1950 Oldsmobile "98" four door Sedon, fully equipped, less hydramatic. 7,000 miles, plas- tic seatc overs, undercoated, rea- sonobly priced. Coll 86-3289. MOTHERS, protect baby's feet in the best and safest woy you can! JUMPING JACK Shoes ore rec- commended by specialists. Sold ex- clusively at BABYLANDIA. No. "3rd Street. ("If It's for the Baby, we nove it"). FOR SALE:35 mm photo eplorger, Biautyrest mattress, spring ond six legs, work bench, 4 shelf day locker, dropes, cushions, cushiort covers, lamp shade, lomp and b .shade, misc. items. Qtrs. 253-B. Nbrook A. F. Base. FOR SALE: Two Ext. telephone, $5.00, 1 -4 H. P. motor, 25 cycle, $7.00. 8-D wooden desk, $15.00. 718-C. Cocoli. CANAL ZONE RESIDENTS Last Chance to Order ELECTR0LUX CLEANERS DIRECT (For Duration of the Emergency i Orders will be talcen only un- til May 24th. We'll continue the service. Price Remains at $85.00 to Canal Zone Time Payments Available. CRAWFORD AGENCIES No. 18 "J" Street Tels. 2-2386 2-3285 FOR SALE:1950 Mercury Convert- ible, 6 passenger coupe, spotless yellow paint with matching leath- er interior, loaded with extras, in- cluding radio, o'drive, fog lights WSW and electrically operated windows ond front seat adjust- ment. Leaving for States ond must sell. Will finonce, house 5437-G Endicott St. Diablo Hgts. Bendixen. FOR SALE:1951 Kaiser De Luxe, four door sedan. Hydramatic, ra- dio. Will consider older car in trode. Tel. 6-217 or house 156- B, Gamboa. FOR SALE:Diningroom set, Royal typewriter with toble, 9 tube RCA console radio with records, new 3- speed pick-up, tools, 600 x 16 auto tires, household furnishings. Margarita 8225-A. FOR RENT:Modern chalet, three bedroom;, i spacious yard, view overlooking golf club at La Carrasquilla rental $100.00 Mi- guel Hive. Phone 3-2145. FOR RENT :-Foster's furnished cdf- tages, between Santo Clot ond Rio Hoto. Phone 2-3142 Panarra or see caretaker. Gromlich'i Santa Clara beach- cottages. Electric Ice boxes, gas stoves, moderate rates. Phone 6- 541 or 4-567. Retired Americons: For only $35.00 we lease house ond land on Trans- Isthmion Highway, 20 minutes from city, with river, light run- ning water. Inquire personally II, 36th St. near Lux Theater, Por- terson's. FOR RENT Apartments OR RENT:ALHAMBRA APAP.T- MINTS. Modern furnished-unfun- Ished apartment. Contact office No. 8061. 10th St.. New Crlstobol. Phone 1386, Coln. Retired Americons: For only $35.00 we lease house and land on Trans- Isthmion Highwoy, 20 minutes from city, with river, light, run- ning woter. Inquire personally I I. 36th St. near Lux Theater, Par- terson's. FOR RENT:Ideal vocation spot ir the hills of Vermont, all modem convenience, furnished oportmenl suitobl for four people, no ob- jection to children rent $70 per month can inquire locolly Hatch 2- 1855 on write Ed. Mooney, Pitts- ford Vermont. X THE DAMAGE IN THE HEART OF JUCOAPA Is shown In this Air Force photo, talcen from an Albrook V-47 Thursday morning as it flew over the earthquake- town 20 miles north of tn 8alvadorian c2ast.- J.ni .2* the tower m lhe church was leveled completely, the other badly.damaged. Buried In the wreckage were several oeonle who were praying in the church. Also buried were six sacred images which had been brought to Jucuapa by the Archbishop of San Salvador. Easily seen from the air, members of the Canal Zone mercy mission salo: were the powdered remains of crumbled adobe houses. FOR SALE1949 Ford Custom Se- dan. Excellent condition. Duty Paid. $1,200.00.. Tel. 3-0728. FOR SALE:Late '49 Ford Con- vertible. W^W tire, overdrive, radio, drive indicator, spotlight, plastic seat covers and other ac- cessories. Low mileage. New car appearance. Tel. 3-2402, Cris- tobal. Freighter Slips From Singapore Before Deadline SINOAPORE, May 12 (UP) _ The freighter Nancy Moller beat the deadline today and sailed for Communist China with 3,700 tons of rubber. J* The vessel steamed out with Jier $2.800.000 cargo before the Malayan Government formally "received the British Govern- *nerit's request to revoke all ex- Tiort licenses for .shipments of libber to the Reds. Malayan rubber producers con- tinue to criticize the embargo as Ineffective and unfair. European planters said the ban *eJrr British colonial exports would do little to cut down Red sup- filles. since their production is ess than half of the world's rub- iXhey also said the embargo would be ineffective unless In- donesia and Slam cut off their supplies to China. FOR SALE:1940 Nash Ambassa- dor, 4 door. Good condition, $400. 00, $200.00 down. Phone 2- 1774. FOR SALE:1941 Pontiac (81 Club Coupe in excellent condition. $200.00 overhaul work recently completed, tires excellent, radio ond heater. Price $500.00. 5444- L, Endicott St. Diablo. Bids will be received in the office of the General Manager of the Com- missary Division, Mt. Hope, C. Z., until 3:00 p. m., Tuesday, Moy 29, 1951. for furnishing 620,000 pounds, or alternatively 310,000 pounds of Fine Granulated Sugar. Forms of proposal, with full parti- culars, moy be obtained from the office of the Supply & Service Di- rector ot Brlboa Heights, or from the office of the General Manager, Commissary Division, Mt. Hope, C. FOR RENT:Cool bright apartment, furnished-unfurnished. Only one bedroom. References required. Co- lon phones I19I-J or 599-L. FOR RENT:Apartment in private home. Also furnished room with private bath and privte entronce. 89 Peru Ave. Villiams Santa Clara Beach Cottoges Two bedrooms, electric refrigera tion Rockgos ranges. Phone Bol- boo 2-3050. Except weekends. FOR SALE Household :OR SALE:1 single bed. complete, I library table, I refrigerator, 4 Venetian blinds for 12 family house, I HP. 25 Cycle motor, 0426 Apt. A, Frangipani St. FOR RENT:Quiet, well ventiloted 2 bedroom oparfment, each with bath, living-diningrpom, servant's quarters, hot woter installation. Good locotion, Bella Visto. No. 32, 44th Street. Telephone 3-0815. Wanted Position Leaving Cristobal, Want position fo my excellent cook. Highest re- commendations. Cleonlmess. Hon- esty. Phone Cristobol 3-1849. WANTED Miscellaneous WANTED:Smoll piono, reasonable priced. Phone 4-567. FOR RENT:Apartment for rent, 279 Central Avenue. Telephone 3-0140, Panomi. * FOR RENT:Apartment for rent. 43rd Street East ond Ave. Mexi- co. Coll 3-0140. FOR RENT:For six weeks, beauti- ful apartment in Bella Vis. Completely furnished, dishes, sil- ver ond linen. Coll 3-2026. after 5 p. m. FOR RENT Rooms :OR SALE:Coldspot Refrigerator, 9 cu. ft., with across-the-top freezer chest. 25 cycle; Apex washing machine, 25 cycle; maple dinette set; Davenport; metal porch or lown chairs; child's table ond chairs; ond misc. items. After 4:30 p. m. or Saturday and Sun- day. 603-B Ancon Blvd. KOREA GIs FIGHTING FOR SALE:Automatic refrigerator, Defroster and 25 cycle Apex wash- ing machine, one yeor old. Cell call Navy 3569 Qtrs. 40-A Far- fon. FOR SALE: Frigidaire. 7 Ft. 25 Cycle 3 year old unit, $75.00. Phone Cristobal 3-2480. FOR SALE:Dodge Kinswoy Custom 4-door sedan, duty paid, leather trim, radio, only 16,000 miles. Phone Colon 594-L or Cristobol 2476. FOR SALE Real Estate , mm* POLAROID &t CAMERA Vos asap the ahattar ih.n lut oat rajsr aaianad. permanent PKtura a oat. User. Y"ea. ,f, M 23?a! hat to aa. th. aaaaa_ n.w PouTroul tmara. No liquids, no dark room so fuee . the rilai satas ih. piriurs oatooialiraliy you advance It for the seat .hot. 800 it is acboa at INTERNATIONAL JEWELERY IJoinin* International Hotel MAYBE YOU'VE GOT ME WRONG. I'm entirely willing to toke less than the morket price for those two well-ploced lots ot Los Cum- bres. In a growing area, with all utilities availoble. ond purchased below the prevailing prices, what could be o better investment? I leove for the Stotes ot the end of this month, so get in touch with me now at 2-3649 during the day or at 2-1293 offer office hours. P. J. Runkel. WANTED:Couples for the Couples Class, Bolboo Heights Baptist Church, meeting at 9:30 Sundoy morning for Christian fellowship. WANTED: Cor model 194 For 1942, Ford or Mercury. Coll tele- phone 2-1107. Panomi. FOR SALE Roais & Motors FOR SALE:Motor boot twenty foot, overhouled. equipped for fishing, new condition, sacrifice. Inquire house 752-C. Bolboa Road. rae irnvm raav Phase 2-3JM LOTS FOR SALI Down Payment SIM Monihl. Payaaesl Sir. \* LOTS on Paved Street from II 00 00. atetar 1 Por Rant. Heavy Cojnlpeaeat to round levelln I We b>i i^,. _, yjanf rorrao Lo^UsbaaJ^naljWoa* l> RUST-OLEUM Stop4 "Jtf- Y. con aa rt atony woy on rh. fans far the prefactieii of -.1.1 rood, aiding, boiWinft, echmery and .-.pi. a-ats. Adi f.r M fermoaiee-TOOAYl AGENTS ROBERT WILC0X CO. Coln Dealers Panam City GE0. F. NOVEY In Boqcete DAVIS & REMON WANTED:British auxiliory yacht of 72-feet sailing very shortly for Austrolia viq the Marquesas Is- lands, Tahiti and mony other In- teresting islands en route to Samoa. Fiji and Brisbane, ot any of which crewman may debark by prior arrongement. The owner, a retired Navy Captain and ex- perienced ocean yachtsman, re- quires two more men to com- plete all-amoteur crew on share- expense bosis. Applicants must be more than ten dollars per week each, and t3) either able to sa- tisfy immigration authorities on debarkation, or arrange own re- turn passoge. An able cook who will turn out three simple meols o day in lieu of financial shore will be considered. Only those keen on the odventure ond ready to pull weight with the others need apply. Applicants should come on board Yacht PALMOSA at Bolboa Yacht Club for an in- terview where further particulars cn be supplied Total cruise ap- proximately 3 V2 months. FOR RENT:Furnished rooms with porch, kitchen if desired. Apply over Chose Bank corner 1 I th. and Bohvor. Only entronce Bolivar House 10.123, phone 233, Colon. FOR RENT:Room, furnished, priv- ate entronce, garoge. 4th of July Ave. No. 49. Tel. 2-1107. LESSONS Leorn poise, grace, balance ond self confidence in bollroom doncing. Leove nome, address, phone at desk Bolboa YMCA or' Box 106, Bolboa. Harnett & Dunn. You need to leorn Spanish by Indi- viduo! conversational system; from 6 p. m. Phone 3-2979. -.....----------r---------' FOR SALE:Wesfinghouse refriger- ator, 9 foot, 25 cycle, oil porce- lain, kitchen dry locker for 12 family kitchen. Plastic drapes for 12 family apartment, miscella- neous articles. 0775-L, Williom- son Place, Balboa. - FOR SALE:25 cycle, Coldspot Re- frigerator, 9 cu. ft. $50.00. 20 Venetian Blinds. $25.00. Call 2- 2281 758-B Bornebey St., Bal- boa. FOR SALE:Norge porcelain refri- gerator; maple bedroom 'set, pia- no, mople chair, 2 maple tables, porch glider, 2 metal chairs, Ve- netian blinds, beds, tools, girl's bicycle, kitchen cupboard and breakfast set with 4 chairs. Cris- tobol 3-1739. FOR SALE:25 cycle 1947 Frigi- daire. bargain. Owner leaving. Call Cristobal 3-1562. WANTED :_Smoll house furnished for one person. PMIa Visto or Lo Cresto. preferred. Call Mr. Mc Donald El Panama Hotel Help Wanted WANTED: Housekeeper, experi- TcV' 0^ S0l0fV- Apply house U582-B. Ancon, C. 2. - Fists Fly As Reds Arrive In Vienna VIENNA. May 12 (UP) __ Flying fists marked the arrival of 300 8ovlet-zone Austrian communists here today when a crowd of socialists mec them at the railway station. For nearly an hour the So- cialists maintained a siege round the station, not allowing hf. .R,ed* -here for Whitsun activities to leave. Finally the visitors rushed out and were bombarded with Jeer As Tornado Sweeps Through East Bengal CALCUTTA, May 12 (UP). A tornado today ripped through East Bengal, Pakistn, lifting men, cattle and houses in its path and crashing them to the ground hundreds of yards away. At least 25 persons were killed and 850 injured, 50 milking cows were killed and 3,500 buildings smashed to splinters. Villagers told of the terrifying spectacle of the tornado picking up human beings and carrying them several hundred yards. Emergency hospitals have been set up in the fields to care for the injured and bewildered vic- tims. FOR SALE:9 cu. ft. Wesfinghouse oil porcelain refrigerator, five Ve- netian blinds, porch screens', two 6x9 Chinese grass rugs, other items. Dixon I4I7-D. Carr St. Bolboa. phone 2-2719. FOR SALE: 9 cu. ft. Westing- house refrigerator, 25 cycle, 2 1 -2 yr. \>\d. Excellent condition. New Cristobol 94-B. Its Hot, Too Over In Calcutta i, ?nIUTTA' May 12 (UP> K is no degrees in the blinding sun here today, and rickshaw driv- ers are walking slowly. One of them dropped dead In nis tracks when he tried to trot yesterday. This is the ninth day of an al- most unprecedented heat wave. The temperature has been o\er 100 degrees all that time, and the humidity has been, unbearably high. At least three people have died of sunstroke, while a tiger cub nd 12 birds died of heat exhaus- ion in the zoo. St. Peter's Church, La Boca, Lists Whitsun Services In observance of Pentecost or Whitsunday tomorrow, marking the birthday of the Christian Church, holy communion will be celebrated at St. Peter's Church, La Boca 6 a.m., with sung eucharlst following 7 a.m. Morning prayer and church school are scheduled for 10 a.m., officiant and preacher at the services for the day being the Rev. Lemuel B, Shirley, priest In charge. Evensong at 7:30 will take form of a thanksgiving service com- memorating the 22nd anniver- sary of 8t. Peter's Church Mu- tual Benefit Society. Members are especially invited to attend the service, also a social to be held in the parish hall 7:30 Mon- day evening. Admission to the social will be by contribution cards. KING-QUEEN STANDINGS Present standings in the con- test for king of the May Fete be- ing sponsored in aid of the church are: William Myrle, Jr., 3.450 votes; Lloyd Bell, 3.283, Marcus Grannum Jr.. 2,751; Er- nesto Robertson 2,672; Victor Smith. Jr., 2,215; Christopher Greaves. Jr., 774. Order of the candidates for queen is: Bette Davis. 4.079; Lin- neth Hinds. 3.510; Marola Bu- sheH. 3.285; Donzella Clunls 2,- 717; Lorna Mitchell, 1,464: Sybil Beat, 1,255. ' (Continued from Page 1) the most difficult circum- stances." Release of the President's message, paraphrased to protect- the military code, apparently was aimed at an- swering charges that Mac- Arthur was not kept thor- oughly informed of official thinking In Washington. MacArthur's spokesman. Ma]. Gen. Courtney Whitney, said in New York yesterday that Mr. Truman's letter was the first Intimation MacArthur had that Washington wanted him to hold In Korea. Prior to that. Whit- ney said, the general thought the Administration might want him to evacuate his forces for international political" rea- sons. For himself, Marshall told the Senators he did not, as Mac- Arthur charged, overrule a Joint Chiefs of Staff recommendation against giving the Chinese Com- munists Formosa and a UN seat. He said the Defense Department did rule that the.two- issues might be discussed between De- fense and State" Department of- ficials in connection with any final Korean peace settlement. But Marshall said the Chiefs never advised aealnst that and only Insisted that the issues "have no part in the terms" of any cease-fire order. Under questioning bv Sen. William F. Knowland, R.. Cal.. Marshall reiterated that the United States should never yield to Chinese Red demands for Formosa, and a UN seat. He add- ed that he understands the State Department shares his views. Marshall has said the Govern - ment. has made a firm decision on. this score and that Com- munist China will not be given her demands. 8en. Bourke B. Hickerlooper. R., la., asked Marshall whether he still would favor MacArthur's dismissal If he had It to do over again. After protesting that the Question was not a "fair" One. Marsha said he would and that the Administration realized there would be a national clamor. He said Administration of- ficials thought that "after the height of the emotional wave had passed, there would be some sober thinking." 8en. Brlen McMahon. D Conn., assured him that such thinking Is now "going on." Knowland, reading from Joint Chiefs of staff documents, brought out that MacArthur's original instructions for repell- ing the Communist aggression in Korea forbade him from using his air and naval power above the 38thparallel. Marshall noted that these or- ders were rescinded four days later and had been issued by the Joint Chiefs to avoid "any fur- ther involvements" while they "caught their breath" and fig- ured out what the beat move was. Then he disclosed that UN forces were ordered to fight hack if Russian soldiers ap- peared on the Korean bat- tlefield, but were not to re- gard such Soviet Interven- tion Is meaning that the United States was at war with Russia. As for the possibility of Rus- sia starting a world war in Asia. Marshall said heavy Chinese Communist losses In Korea al- ready have put a serious strain on the Slno-Russlan Mutual De- fense Pact. Any more pressure o nthe Redsby following Mac- n the Redsbv following Mac- Russia to Intervene, he said. By contrast. Marshall said, Russia Is under no such strain In Western Europe. She knows she Is In no Immediate danger of losing territory or a satellite there, he said. A RADIO JEEP begins to inch 1U way down the two-rail ramp from an Albrook Field C-47 to the airfield at San Sal- vww /atch,nJc are members of the Army Signal team which wi.ll operate it In relief efforts for Lhe earthquake area! Mr.?.^ par ot H16 lar shipment of relief supplies sent in four planes from Albrook Thursday morning ______,__________________________(Caribbean Command photo) Thousands Turn Out To Serve In German Border Police Force BONN, May 12 (UP). More than 12.000 men have volunteer- ed to serve In the gray-green uniform of the West German border police since recruiting opened four weeks ago, according to the Interior Ministry. But the 10,000 man frontier force the only federal police outfit In the Bonn republic is far from full. Only about one-third of the would-be policemen met the age and physical requirements. The volunteers are also top heavy with rank. About 4,000 of them held either police or army rank as generals, colonels or majors, and expect tq retain their status. The border police, under the command of ex-army general Anton Grasser, is not a customs unit or controller of border traf- fic. It Is a regular federal police organization whose operations Mustangs To Bomb* Ice Jam In Yukon FAIRBANKS, Alaska, May 12 (UP Five Twin- Mustangs , took off from here at dawn this) morning to bomb an ice Jam h the Yukon River that threatens to back up flood waters Into Forb Yukon. / Attempts to bomb ice jams at Kuskokwim failed yesterday, but previous such bombing attempts have been effective. Two Hour Strike Makes Rome Pedestrian City , . ROME. May 12. (UP) Ro- mans were stranded a/oot today by a two-hour strike called by. two out of the three city's trans- port unions demanding wage In* creases. will be confined to points with- in 30 kilometers of West Ger man's 2,625 miles of borders. It Is assumed most of the bor- der police will be placed around the potentially dangerous fron- tier of the Russian zone. Hungary Rations Food VIENNA. May 12. (UP) The Hungarian Government has started rationing rice, some ve- getables and shaving soap. _ What are Ihey talking about? No. they're not Hiking about lhe Sales. They're discussing Burrougk'i Gin. People who know jurt how good really good gin \ alwava try for Burrough'a because it ia triple distilled. It ia this extra refuwmeol that makes Burrougn'i Gin mil. smooth and clean to the palate. Delirious taken plain,. Burrough'a Gin always kerp its place" in even the moat delicate cocktails. INJ0YI0 IINCI IS10 BURROUGHS W IT IS TRIPLE / DISTILLED f JAMBI BVaiOUCe. LTD., 0$, CALI DIIIILLtBT, BUTTON IOAI, |,|,|f SATURDAY. MAT It. 1M1 Till: TANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAIL NEWSPAPER PAGE SEVEN THE PANAMA AMERICAN INC. 'UNOU T Hirr- "OUNLL IN II!) NtlMMm MM. 6n 7 H (TINT >. MS 14. FANA. AVe P TIIIMWI MMUM NO S-074O B tlHMl Ca*u MMMi mNf lUHJSil PANAMA C*(.N ewoa. la eaHvuk AtHut set**" JJ" *J '"I" " rmim mmiKtivW' JOSHUA MBWUW. Inc. 34* MteiMx Ava.. Nw Vean. 17 N. V > ie*M * "Mi m, 1.70 S.S m Atv.H- <> '!5 * Si r m AtrAN hut li TOW HWM -a THI WAMM WW C1MMW THI MAIL BOX tt raadeft Tkt hMM AawUS TIM MaM EM a Ml MM IMW tn MWi * IM raMfM " LMM^VmSI MO OT. MM1M k, M, OMTMMIW I r.u MMTlkM* m* MU M lajs*MeA II H MWi MMI IM it* 4M. tOtMM m mMMm4 In Hi* * '(. *N... try I kN> IM Wfart rMtd te W iMffc. hi PIOOLY-WIOCLY, HERE WE COME! Balboa, Canal Zone. Editor MWI Bot 3ec;lon Tbt Panama American panajneClfc.R. da P. ""in* bis classic ot EnfUah llUratura. "TheMerchant of Ventee the Barn o Avon, make a pithy comment, the burden of which Is Sat^niccess la the ladder by which man rise" ad that, having at&nedlheirgoal he majority immediately forget the process StM?aton d kick the ladder from beneath them. Looklnover therSuStS a* regards the amployeoa-jatcutiTes hook-up In the Canal Zone, It would appear to the intelligent observer that Shak- espeare's little ambit applies to present-day tactics u tellingly as It did to U.e past. From the lofty pinnacle o a OS-12 and upward aalary. it no doubt become difficult to understand *e financial situation and aspirations of an employe earning lew than sw per month. However, unless the high-salaried executive has suf- fered a total low of memory in the process, the financial problems attendant upon bla rung-by-rung climb to the ratobow-hued Heights should be sufficient to Incite in him a more sympathetic attitude toward the problem of his iess-favored confrere. uch comprehenaloa appear to be the exception that proves th rule Insolar as the arbiters of the Zone employe's financial destiny is concerned. Even the payment of Income tax does not seriously curtail the buying capacity of a high-bracket salary as regards the necessities of every day living. While it may mean the aschewment of certain luxuriM. an appreciable balance neverthe- 1ms remata to cover so many quarts of milk, so many pounds of good red meat, adequate clothing, and a substantial and com- fortable rout-tree. Por that matter, even frequent medical and dental attention 1 not-going to caue the high-salaried executive to puS in hi belt any tlihter. Unfortunately this Is not true of the low-salaried employee. Nowadav an employee supporting a family on 14800 per annum and less can barely manage to ttiake both ends meet and a lot of them don't. Lamb at $1.23 per pound may not appear with fre- quency on the table of the high-salaried man. At present prices nowever, even beef is a luxury to the low-salaried employe, and many a wife works nowadays to fill in the chinks that a work- woman's salary sitmply will not cover any longer. In view of all this and bearing in mind his own struggle In the lean-r year, one would think that the high-salaried executive woulu entertain a more charitable attitude toward the-setting of prices and fee covering necessities of livelihood, but such is not the case. Apparently the executive considers that the low-salaried employe' standard of living is lower (or should be), and that his wife and children should not cultivate the tastes or covet the lux- uries enjoyed by the executive. Bo, safely encased In the shell- like confine of his comfortable existence, he sets a rental rate u- pon desirable quarters that places them beyond the reach of the low-alarled employ; decree that medical, dental, educational, and similar service will be furnished the employM's family at figures that make such vital enrices virtual luxuries; and fixe Commissary price at a level that place plain hamburger within the epicurean range. , Many of u are of the opinion that it would be no great lou to the Zone generally if the commissaries were forced to cease op- eration provided the market wa thrown open to ome healthy competition uch u the A. it P. tores. Plggly-Wlggly. etc. Possibly we would thus be able to ave enough to pay an increased tran- portatloa coat when taking vacations, and the Income tax would cease to be the bug-bear that It is now. ..,_ t Also, w would like to be able to live in ome of those all-tile and concrete quarters now only within the reach of the G6-12'. Some ot us are getting mighty tired of spending our leisure hours washing thinly-mixed paint in an attempt to maintain normal cleanliness. Frankly, we would like to see the hlgh-aalarled ex- ecutive Initiate democracy in practice as well as In theory by plac- ing come of their own privileges within the reach of the OB-4'i and 9*8 and $4800 per annum employew. Maybe if there was a trifle more practical democracy and a trifle less sanctified privilege put into feet on the Zone, there would be considerably less turn-over due to dlssatlsfaction among the employe. In short, the price set for commodities and services furnished on the Zone are within the reach of those authorised to do such price-setting, but are at the tu time beyond the reach of the average-salaried individual. If the prevent upward trend In prices continues it won't be long before the Zone will become a aort of Valhalla occupied only by thoe who can afford uch high living. 1 e. the high-aalarled executives. Maybe this Is what they are work- ing toward anyway, in which case more power to them Yours In "the puriult of happiness"! E PLURIBS r.Nl'M. Cinema Ptrfermtr NBSONs |M Narrow IbM IIAmMtK iSMM USoaUer IS Written term Mrtar 24 From 1 AM 4 Reach stood AMutis satos* i Mkwen 7 For fMr Ml 5 Tardy SHypoeaetkal arurtural unit (Over (contr.) 11 Decorate 11 Tenner Roseta rutar 17 Frenen MltaoUta 32 Deputy 24 Autocrat MlMtMfhter 27 Hideous Answer to Pteviou Puzzle if i t'.ipj n ') V "Ml <'-'n ' .. ill My; ;.is .-: -u -r-rt-i-' \ i ji> . m j f i < 4SM*onlag 47 0ratted (her.) 4S Sounds' disapproval J Mount in (*.) 5? Onager SSstasjuaet 35 Right (ab.) 7Reuajh lava M Remain 39 Ceremony llPtemsntcry- 4* Snare 41 Contase of 43 Russian city 44 Judicious 45 Thoroughfare Germans Take Labor Into Board Room y PETEREDtON , WASHINGTON, (NRA).-^alf- way toatween U. S. capitalism and rtUah Socialism, a new econo- mic system It emerging in West Germany. The German name for It is "mitbestlmmung." Trans- lated. It means, "co-determlna- tlon." What It involve 1 equal representation of union labor and management on the boards of directors of German corpora- tion. Although U. S. newspapers are Just beginning to show Interest In co-determlnatlon, State De- partment and Marshall Plan of- ficials dealing with Germany have been aware of It and have watched it closely. Mor recently, repreMntatlves o U..8. labor unions and management groups have begun to tudy It. ' CHnto* Golden, retired CIO StMlwMfcers' official and a former Marshall Plan labor advtaer In Europe, has Jost e- tumed from an examination ef this new industrial manage- ment machinery In Germany. He declares that the equal share In reaeesenUttan by German worker carries with It an equal responsibility for im- provement in all aspeis of in- dustry. National Association of Manu- facturers is also concerned over the possible spread of co-deter- mlnatlon from Germany to the rest of the world. Eldrldge Hay- nes, publisher of "Modem In- dustry" and president of the Na- tional Management Council, is now In Germany for N. A. M. His mission is to study co-determi- natlon,-find the reasons behind it, what it's trying to achieve and if possible help find wh"t other solutions might be possible. Immediate Importance of co- determlnatlon to the United States Is that this Is more or less what the United Labor Policy Committee Is trying to obtain in the American defense program, instead of seeking co-determlna- tlon at the Individual corpora- tion management level, however, the U. S. union officials want it In government. They want to be co-managers of the Anterlcan rearmament program with De- fense Mobillzer C. E. Wilson. Up to now, U. S. unions have made no move for an equal share in the responsibilities of Industrial management. In defenic of co-determlna- tlon, Germans my It is an an- swer te the threat of Com- munism. It Is also claimed te be a better answer te Com- munism and Socialism than nationalization of industry, M under the Labor government of England. It would still leave some vestiges of private enter- prise systems. Students of the history of the co-determlnatlon movement say It Is not new. It first appeared under the Weimar Republic of Germany after World War I. At that time, some German Indus- tries put one or two represen- tatives of the unions on their boards of directors. But they were concerned only with work- ing conditions. On larger ques- tions of sales policy or financial management, the union p,nn called. Hitler also killed off the unions themselves. After World War II Oerman labor union movements were reorganized. In 1948, the British, who controlled the Ruhr in- dustrial area, granted the unions equal representation with man- agement on the boards of di- rectors of the 24 new steel com- panies they were trying to form outside the old cartels. Each board was given a neutral chair- man. Gradually this type of or- ganization was extended to coal. When the AUtad High Com- mission for Western Germany was farmed last year, it passed a Isw authorising reorganiza- tion ef these temporary com- panies. Then the fun began. German labor unions Insisted that their co-determlnatlon rights be extended te the new management. In January they threatened a strike if they didn't get it. German Chancellor Adenauer astumed the role of mediator and avoided the strike. But a new law, authorizing co-determina- tion, was Introduced In the Bundestag the west German parliament at Bonn. This law was passed on first reading and referred to commit- tee. Here It has met opposition and several effort to get the bill out of committee have failed. A showdown will come soon. The U. S. government has kept Its hands out of the fight, be- lieving that this is a problem the Germans must solve for them- selves. American industrialists agree that any interference bv U. 8. High Commissioner John J. McCloy would be regarded as American imperialism. U. 8. businessmen as Indi- viduals, however, tried to per- suade the Germans to go slow on this new economic policy. As Leo Teplow of N. A. M. head- quarters in New York explains, they are convinced that the sys- tem won't work. They say it will discourage American investment In German enterprises. It Sure Gets Around Matter Of Fact By Stewart Alsop EISENHOWER PORTRAIT PARI8. In Europe these day, you do not hear much love or admiration wasted on Amer- ica or Americans. Gratitude is an unknown in- ternational commodity. Goodwill between na- tions is fleeting at best. A great power can only hope to inspire among its allies a sort of solid respect and confidence a sense that this nation's leadership is reliable and sagacious, mingled inevitably with envy and irritation. These were the most common European feel- ings about the United States as short a time ago as 1949. Then the Amsrican reputation was still Kllded with the afterglow of the brilliant period of American policy making that ended with the 1948 election. Now, however, the American stock stands low. Of course great things have also been done in these last two yaers. The wisdom of the American insistence on Western rearma- ment is gloomily admitted; the huge American contribution Is grudgingly acknowledged. The American decision to Intervene In Korea at the time provoked a deep surge of relief and ad- miration on this side of the Atlantic. But the burden of rearmament is annoyingly heavy. It has been forgotten here, as It is whol- ly forgotten at home, that the bold Korean in- tervention saved the Western world from poli- tical disintegration. Our failures and follies abroad, the recurring paroxysms of squalor In American Internal politics, have transformed the earlier feelings of respect and confidence into .suspicion and alarm. The reliance on the lead- ership of the United States, that had been built uo before 1948, has been transmuted into dismay that circumstances unavoidably impose our lead- ership upon the West. All this Is the necessary background against which to pose the figure of one of the few Americans who still commands genuine, almost unlimited confidence and respect among our allies General of the Army Dwlght D. Elsen- hower. It 111 curious but rewarding experience to visit the Eisenhower headquarters at the rather dreary old Hotel Astoria. You want an answer to the question: "Why Is this man so univer- sally liked and trusted?" The place Itself con- trasts violently with the vast establishment over which Elsenhower presided in wartime, with the Dalchl building in Tokyo in the days when it was impregnated with the atmosphere of dlety, and. Indeed with any other known higher head- ouarters m high a this. The Hotel Astoria Is shabby, busy, workmanlike and unpretentious. Elsenhower' own office, although comfortable, would hardly atlsfy a Brigadier General In the Pentagon. A for the man hlmaelf, the incredible diffi- culty of his alignment and Its Incalculable Im- portance for the future of the free world seems to have affected him not at all. The familiar Elsenhower Jacket sits rather more smartly, for he Is a bit thinner hard work and heavy problems are evidently his substitutes for the exercise he ha no time to take. But the young- old face, the easy smile, the easy, homely speech, are still the same. His talk leaves a lingering Impression that he had not altogether realized, at first, how dlf- ierent organizing the peacetime defenses of an uneasy coalition would prove to be, from leading the wartime armies of a grand alliance. He does not exude any facile optimism, at any rate. But perhaps this Impression 1 In part mis- leading, for Gen. Elsenhower is equally certain- ly the opposite of pessimistic. His mode of dis- cussion in itself Is curious, for he has the habit, fo med during years of high command of leav- ing detail to his staff. He paints issues broad- ly, dealing In generalities that seem at first to be perilously close to cliches. But then the cen- tral fact comes through, that these near cliches are really deep, fundamental truths, a little tritely put bv a man who has no MacArthurlan interest in style, but no less significant for all that. You grasp another fact, that nothing Is more necessary for a leader In these weary, dlslllu- slonec". times, than to believe deeply In the deep, fundamental truths, and to govern his conduct accordingly. Too many leaders of the free world secretly think that the cause of freedom Is dead, privately assume that free men cannot Join to defend their freedom, are inwardly committed to the game of the devil-take-the-hlndmost. The free world is in danger of the fate of the congregation whose priest does not believe In God. But Elsenhower is a leader who believes. This strong belief combines with energy, wise hopefulness and a strong grasp of the realities of his problems. And this would seem to be the secret of Dwlght D. Eisenhower, a General who make no pretense of mllitarv panache, a public man who makes no proud pan tie of omnis- cience, but a taader whom almost all will follow ladlv. Perhaps the best way to describe his approach to the vast task of the defense of the free world Is in three brief sentences: "It must be done. It can be done. It will be We in America can be thankful that we have uch a man to represent us in this weak ana troubled Europe. ,M ,. .__. (Copyrlcht. 1*51, New Yerk Herald Tribune Inc.) Korean War By Bruce Biossit While the Communists' spaing offensive in Korea rages on, some new ideas are emerging from Washington and other western capitals on the future of that conflict. The first of these, recorded without fanfare bv a number of reliable correspondents. U that the United States and its UN allies are actually seeking some kind of mllitarv stalemate on the peninsula. No high official has come right out and Mid so. but that is reported to be the gen- eral trend of their thinking. It is the piesent policy of this government and of the UN to prosecute a limited war in Korea. Though the fact Is not advertised, that decision almost Inevitably mnna achievement of a limited objective. Complete victory, the liber- ation of all Korea, these things seem beyond the raach of a war fought partly under wraps. Thus the unofficial but solid talk of stalemate is a realistic mcMure of what we might really accomplish in Korea, barring, of course, a wnoi- lv unexpected fold-up of the enemy. Both our political and our military leaders make It clear they hope the basis for a stale- mate and a political settlement may be at- tained If UN forces can successfully crush the current Red offensive before It wins really Im- portant goals. Obviously the whole picture would be altered If we failed to he'd. There is still another side, and here s where more new ideas enter. The U. 8. snd virtually all Its active partners In Kores sre agreed that any real air offensive by the Communists would mean retaliatory bombardment of Red air bases in Manchuria. Whether a further taking or or wrap would follow isn't settled, but the bomb- ing decision in itself is a significant step. Par- irnlarW since it Is now reported that Britain, a hold-out. is swinging to support of the Plan. Consequently, the Korean war Is sure to re- main a limited conflict only if the existing ruana tules" for Red and UN air forces con- tinue in effect. No one can know what might follow if both sides unleashed wider air war A Washington reporter for the Christian sci- ence Monitor tosses still another notion into the hopper. He savs the element of time Is begin- ning to be a factor in the minds of some offi- cials concerned with Korea. What he means is that these men believe we can't stand bv and permit- the Communists to mount offensive after offensive without even- tually striking back hard. To blunt endless ene- my attacks costs too much In men and materiel. The view of these men. says the Monitor cor- respondent, U that the current Red offensive ought to be the last we should try to absorb without dealing stiff offensive blows of our men. If R falls, then anv signs of a new build-up later should be taken as the signal for a big UN move. % Thus far this Uet has not been widely talked of In WMhlneton. And there Is no Indication whether the United States has tried to convince other UN countries that we cannot Indefinitely maintain a defensive posture in the face of re- peated asMults. It U the account o a single reporter, who happens to be extremely reliable. But It mav be an important straw in the wind. If this idea should gain broad currency in western capitals, then the present Red attacks and their aftermath mav provide the really cri- tical test of our limited war policy. In the event a failure of their offensive does not convince the Communists they should seek a stalemate the U. 8. and Its allies might well conclude that the limited war plan Is unworkable and should be abandoned for broader alms. ^he WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND y DRIW PEAItSON Drew Pearson says: Carttrs of two American military heroes, Generals Douglas MacArthur and George Mc- Lellan, similar; Voters rejected McClellan when he ran for President against Lincoln. WASHINGTONOf the long list of American military heroes s'nee 1776, the two whose lives are most Identical are Oen. Douglas MacArthur and Civil War Gen. Oeorg B. McOlellan. Both had famous father, both ranked high In their classes at West Point, both were official observers of Russian warj, both rcwed with the President of the United States and both had the President pay them the honor of making long trips to confer with them near the field of battle. Unlike MacArthur, McClellan never differed with Lincoln In public. Also, McClellan was criticized by Lincoln for being oeerly cautious and refusing to take the offensive, whereas Truman's criticism of MacArthur Is over his aggressiveness. However, both McClellan and MacArthur were candidates, for the Presidency, and in both cases the real conflict was one ot civilian government versus military rule. McClellan, son of a famous surgeon and grandson of alRe- volutlonary War general, graduated from West Point second in his class which compares with MacArthur's record average ot more than 90. McClellan served as an observer of Russian tactics dur- ing the Crimean War In 1855, while MacArthur accompanied- his father, Lt. Gen. Arthur MacArthur, who was an observer of, the Russo-Japanese War in 1905. McClellan left the army to become chief engineer of the 1111.' r.ols Central Railroad, returning via the Ohio National Ouard after Jumping to the rank of major general. It was in the summer of 1881 that McClellan, barely past 30, was given command of the demoralized Union forces when- re- treating almost Into Washington. A few months later Lincoln, John Hay and Secretary of State Seward walked to General Mc- Clellan s house In Washington for a conference and were spubbed by him. , Five months passed, and as the public became Impatient with the length of the war (as the public is today with the length of the Korean war) Lincoln, In March "1882, relieved McClellan a commander-In-chlef but retained him as commander of the Army of the Potomac. LINCOLN BIDED HIS TIME Continuing to thumb hi nose at Washington, McClellan tele- graphed Secretary of War Stanton on June 28: "If I save this army now I tell you plainly that I owe no thanks to you or any other person In Washington. You have done your best to sacrifice this army." No ordinary subordinate would have dared insult the Seere- lury of War and get away with lt. However, Lincoln took ltfor the time being. Just as Truman for some time took MacArthur's many public statements going over the President's head on for- eign policy. Lincoln even took a carriage drive out to see McClellan at his headquarters on the James River, at which time McClellan handed him a letter caustically criticizing the political and mil- itary policy ot the Lincoln administration. It was shortly after this visit, however, in the summer of 1862, that Lincoln abruptly relieved McClellan even of his com- mand of the Army of the Potomac, only to reinstate him later in the same summer. "Pope is licked and McClellan has the diarrhoea," Lincoln wrote at that Jlme Aug. 31, 1862. "What shall I do. The bottom Is out of the tub. The bottom is out of the tub." Yet two days later Lincoln called on McClellan personally and asked him a a special favor to resume command. McClellan at that time was riding the crest of the wa\/-\ was deluged with mall not unlike MacArthur's today asking him to take over the Government and save the nation. He did an ex- t client job of reorganizing Union forces, but rowed constantly with Washington over failure to get supplies, Just as MacArthur demanded more reinforcements in Korea. After many protests McClellan, then at Harpers Ferry, refused to move until he got more supplies, and, to try to patch matters up, Lincoln took another long trip to visit him In the field. Later McClellan's oon- btant nagging got on Lincoln's nerves, for he sent McClellan a caustic telegram. "I have Just received your dispatch about sore tongued and fatigued horses," Lincoln wired. "Will you pardon me for asking what the horses of your army have done since the Battle of Antietam that fatigue anything?" McClellan's final dismissal also came late at night. Just as did MacArthur's. His army had moved across the Potomac when, around midnight Nov. 7, 1862, a message arrived from Washing- ton. McClellan opened the message and passed it to Oeneral Burnslde with the comment: "Well, Bunwlde, you are tl com- mand the army." POLITICAL DEFEAT The war still had more than two years to go. and McClellan, reduced to civilian life, entered politics. In August 1864, he was unanimously nominated Democratic candidate for President which forced Lincoln, an astute politician, to overrule his party leaders and pick Andrew Johnson, a Democrat, as his vice-presidential running mate. The country was tired of war, Just as today. The Union army had won no victories, and the conflict had seesawed baek and forth not far from the Mason-Dlxon line, somewhat as the Korean war has see-sawed across the 38th parallel. The Democrats, therefore, were confident of victory. How- ever, Sherman's and Sheridan's victories in the South turned th tide, and McClellan got only 21 electoral votes against Lin- coln's 212. NOTEMcClellan's views on Secretary of State Seward might also be compared with MacArthur's reported views on Secreter? of State Acheson. Writing to his wife in October 1861. McClellan said: "I can't tell you how disgusted I am becoming with these wretched politicians. ... I think Seward is the meanest of them all. He has done more than any other one man to bring all th! misery upon the country. .. The President Is nothing more than a well-meaning baboon.'' (Copyright, 1*51. by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) at a 30% saving! (R5R f KTIKIP DUTa-FREE flLVER (ENTER! [PANAMA rrrr-t iiiiiiiiu tM*************** fAOE EIGHT THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER ISTHMIAN CHURCH NOTICES TXBKY 8ATURDAY, MAT 11, 1951 THE OUTLAW Lutheran RAOEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH "Tta* Church ( the Lutheran Hour'' H. T. Bernthal. Pastor St* Balbo* Road. Balboa. Sunday School and Bible Clase a.m.. Worthip service 10:1S a.m., "Coma Thou With Us and We will Do Thte Good." A friendly welcome awalta all visitors Pot- luck 'upper second Sunday each month Vm.. ggun* night fourth Sunday 10 p.m. The Service Center, open Wed- ""y through Sunday, extend a cor- dial welcome to all military personnel. UMARITA LUTHERAN SERVIC1 Margarita HoapiUl Thursday 7:00 p.m. H. T. Bcrnthal. Pastor. J Cordial Welcome To All Methodist * XHE METHODIST CHURCH (British Conference) Mlritnet Rev. Q. Herbert Moon 0 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon. 3:00 p.m. Sunday School. :a Men'a Meeting. T03 o.m. evening Pray a and Sermon TRINITY METHODIST CHURCH Tth Street and Melndei Avenue, Coln. R Rare. Norman Pratt, Minister Sunday Sarrieta at 8:30 a.m. and 7:15 p.m.; Sunday School for ill agen at I jjjondajr 7:30 Dm. Weekly Prayer KBENEZER METHODIST CHURCH Slver aty. CZ. Rev. Norman Pratt. Minister JSf^. ?*^v.lc., "< *: PJO-. undsy School for all ages at 1:30 p.m "*dy 7:30 p.m., Prayer MeeUng. ^m^mmf i ^ Salvation Army Panama dry. Calla 1 do rebrero ""? t 11 m. and 7 JO p.m. (Mal- ar Wllaan); Sunday School at 3 pro. p.m. Sunday School at 3:30 p.m. Red Tank: Service at 7 JO D.m Sunday School at 3:00 p.m. A. CMon. lath Street f"^8* ',.....Ua.m.*7:S0pjn. Sunday School at ........... 3:00 pm Coln, 3rd Street Service at ..... n ,m. ;;jo ., Churches or the many faiths in rhe Canal Zone, ana* the terminal cities af Panama anal Calan. Republic of Panama tend welcome at all times to man and women af the armed services, and fe civilian neifhbori, friends and stranger!. At public service, the Panama American lists below, by deneminefieni, notices af hours af worship and other regular ac- tivities. Listings af larger denominotions ata in alphabetical order, which is rotated from tima to tima. Denominations having only ana ar two congregations ara lilted indar "Other Churches And Service." A special listing ii included for services at Army potts. Air 'area bases and Naval stations. Miniaran, church secretorios and chaplains ara asked ta in- form the news desk by Wednesdey noon at tha latest af any change far the earning Saturday'! church gaga. Weekday Meases. Tuesday and Friday :00 a.m. Holy Day Mas 6:00 ajn. Miraculous Medal Novena service Fri- day 7:15 p.m. Confession* Saturday 7 to 8 o.m. CHURCH Or THE ASSUMPTION Pedro Miguel. C.Z. Sunday Mass .............. 8:00 am Catechism Class ........... 10:00 a.m. Red Tank Catechism Class .. 11:00 am Benediction ............... 7:00 p.m. UK.si HAP I is l CHURCH Balboa Heights, C.Z 827 Ancon Boulevard Drawer "B" Balboa Heights Phone Balboa 1727 Tour Church away from ho___ with a welcome lust as friendly" William a. Beeby. Pasta* Sunday School............. :30 a.m. Morning Worship .......... io:5 a.m. Baptist Training Onion .... 0:30 p.m. Evangelistic Service........ 7:30 p.m. W.M.S Bible Study [tvtP y******]........ 1:30 o.m Men's Brotherhood (Last Monday In month) .. 7:30 p.m ATLANTIC BAPTIST CHURCH Bolivar Avenue at 12th Street Cristobal. C.Z. Rev. Fred L. Jones. Pastor "Your Invitation To Worship- Bible School ............... 8:45 a.m. Worship ................... H:oo a.m. Training Union ............' 5:30 p.m. Worship .................... g:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting (Thure.) ... 7:30 pm. Catholic Service at Silver .aty "vice at .............., 1:jo p.m. Sunday School at...........J:J0 p.m. Seventh Day Adventist Pacific Sida Cabo Verde. Panam City. No. 1 J. A ef^Sf^i. ."0** CM No. 2 Jamaica Maty Hall (Sabbath Services only); AdolDhus Lawes. Chorrillo. P. A. Henry: ?l0*.n,,J0' c- D- Abraham; G.mboa. A A. Brlszle. and Spanl.h City Church. E- duardo Rulloba ' ,, Atlantic Side Coln Third Street, Joseph Bryp; Crl. Ipbal English New Church. E. A. Cruck- hank: Cristobal Spanish Church. B J.. ursant) '*" "T*"*, "**' **rvlc *' Sabbath aecioal one ianurcn Saturday :30 a.m. Divine worship 11 am. Sunday (Listed below are the Catholic Churches n the Canal Zone and those In the ter- minal cities of Panama and Coln whose congregations are primarily English- speaking Besides these, the Cathedral in Panama City, the Cathedral of the Im- maculate Conception in Coln, and num- erous parish churches in both cltlee, wel- come English speaking visitors, though their congregation are orimarlly Span- ish-speaklng.) PARASO C.Z. (Lodge Hall) Sunday Mass .............. 6:15 a.m. Catechism Class Sunday .. 10:30 am ST. THERESA'S CHURCH Cocoli. CZ. Sunday Mass ............... 9 00 s.m Holy Day Mass ............. g:go a.m. CATHOLIC CHURCH. Curando, CJS. Sunday Mass ............... 8:00 a jn. Catechism Clam Thursday .. 3:30 p.m. ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST DE LA SALLE __ Rio Abajo, Panama Sunday Mam .............. 6:30 a.m Holy Day Mam ............ 7:30 a.m. Ion Sunday........ 7:00 pm. Benediction Sunday Christian Scientist CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES rirst Church of Christ, Scientist. Ancon 580 Ancon Boulevard. Sunday 11:00; Wednesday 8:00 pm Sunday School 8:30 .a.m. tint Church of Christ, Scientist, Cristobal 13th Street A Bolivar Highway Sunday 11:00 a.m. Wednesday 7.30 p.m Sunday School 8:30 am Christian Science Society, (lambe* Civic Center Building Sunday 11:30 a.m. First & Third Wed oesdsy 7 J0 p.m. Sunday School 10:15. SATURDAYS: 7V !;C!ldr"'n,' Confirmation Clam. 'JO pm. Compline and Meditation. Gatun, C.Z. Rev. Solomon N. Jacobs. ... Sundays: 3:45 am Church School. -O a.m. Morning Prayer 10:00 am. Holy Cuchariat and Sermon Tuesdays- n.v?0.!.,-.H.o,'' Communion (Aleo Holy oay and Saints Days.) i.no Wedneaday*: 7.00 pm Evening Prayer. 3:00 pm. St Vlncant'a Guild ,,. Thuradaya: 730 pm. Choir Rehearsal. Church af St Man Tha Virgin Rev. Solomon N. Jacob. . .. Sundaya: 6:45 am. Morning Prayer. 35 S- 50lv icharlst and Sermon. 3.00 p.m. Church School. 6:oo pm. Evening Song. Thursdays. 7.-00 a.m. Holy Communion (Also Holy ys and Saint Days.) rS 111: Evening Prayer, Fridays a:00 p.m. Prayer Guild. 7:30 p.m Choir Rehearsal. 8:30 p.m. St. Vincents Guild Holy Communion st 10:45 am on the cao p.m. Solemn Evensong. SLChr*^,?.0""0 the Rev. Antonio Ochoa 7:30 am. Choral'Eucharist ">*? m. Church School. J-00 p.m. .Solemn Evensong Thursday and Holy Day B.C. 7:00 ajgk Wednesday and Holy Day* 8 JO a.m. Holy Communion. (First Sunday of every month.) PUNNO HOW TH AIR FOKC6 ' Ftrfil-6 AIOUT PILOT* WBA0IH6 ' WaUglMS /IIP*, SUT I'M 6BTTIN5 ' OHi. I COUUP-v rVORM VO MIP VOUE HAMB WAV"ftUJar UP'i, >bmtL UNHV...ONC* AW A \VANTSP POSTS* rVrrH A NAM* UK* THAT ON IT IN A rV6T6RN M&SUM. r mwt say you look Barn*. MMTACHE FRKi BI.ES AHD BIS ntlENI Make It Good By nlaTmnit BLOfitaTB Da Jewish Jewish Welfare Board. Bldg. 7M-X. La gf, Ro*CI- Balboa. C.Z Rabbi Nathan nit kin director. Services on Friday. 7 30 p m, J?J,t? 'J?""* o' Jewish schvlces under Posta, Baaas and Stations.) iCo,y,*,0*l Ko1 Shearlth Israel. Ave- nida Cuba and 38th Street. Bella Vista. Panam City. Rabbi Harry A Merfeld. Services on Friday. 8 pm. Union Churches Where all Protestaau cuvaerale with sully In saoealUls, likens In nan- essential and charity In all thing THE ATLANTIC SIDI Cristobal The Rev Phillip Havener. Pastor. Phone 3-1463. 10:45 Worship service and Church-time amrsery. 8:00 Young People's Meeting Harn The Rev. J. William L Graham. Putar I Phone 5-355. i V.J'M Brodw on HOK: HP5K nd HON. 8^5 Sunday School 11:00 Worship Service. 5:00 Christian Endeavor Margarita The Rev Henry Bell. Pastor Phone 3-14*8. 8:30 Bible School. 10:45 Worship aervice and Church-time nursery. 8 JO Youth Fellowship. TOE PACIFIC SIDI albos Balboa Road at San Pablo Street Rev. Alexander Shaw, Pastor Phone 2-1488. Ofc. Phone 2-3238 8:30 Church School Free ous service. 10 JO Worship aervice and Church-time nursery 10:30 Youth Congregations (:00 Chi Rho Senior HI Fellowship. 8:00 Post HI Fellowship. 7:10 Service "Cantered On Song." Caaall Bniia .Road and St. Thomas Ave. 8:0* am. Sunday School. Free bus. In Rousseau and Cocoli. tlaaaasay All services In Gsmboa Civic Canter. The Rev. Raymond A. Gray, Minister. Phone 8-130. t:oo Sunday School. 7:30 Worship earvlee. Mtre Miguel :30 Church School. ST. MARY'S CHURCH Balboa, C.Z. Sunday Masaas: 8:00. 8:00. 8:00, 10:00 nd 11:00 a.m. Benediction Sunday: 5:00 o.m SACRED HEART CHAPEL, Anean, C.Z Ancon Boulevard, Phone 2-6343 Sunday Masses: 6:00. 7:30 It :30 a.m Dally Masa: 6:00 a.m. Holyday Mum: 8:00. 1:30 .m and 12:10 p.m Benediction: Friday: 7:30 p.m Confessions: Thursdays before the 1st. Frldsy. 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Every Saturday: 3:30 to 5:00 pm.: 7.-00 to 8:00 pm. Cathechiam Class: Grade School Child ren: Friday 3:13 p in. Study Club High School Student* Wedneaday 6:30 p.in Sodality Meeting: Tuesday 6:30 p.m. Canal Zone Council of Catholic Nurses. every 2nd and 4th Thursday 7:30 p.m Episcopal MIRACULOUS MEDAL CHURCH New Cristobal, 4th and G St Pastor. Rev Vincent Ryan, CM. Sunday Masses: 7. 8 and 10:30 am Weekday Mass: 6:30 a.m. Sunday School after Ihe 8 o'clock Maw Miraculous Medal Novena services. Holiday Masses: 6 and 8 am. Confessions. Rosary, nightly 7:00 p.m Munclav 5 and 7 p.m. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION CHURCH Bolivar Highway, Gatun Pastor Rev. John Tumelty. CM. Miraculous Medal Novena service. First Fridays, Confessions. Communion Sunday Mass 8:00 am Weekday Masses. Thursday and Satur- day 7:00 a m. Holiday Mass 1:00 a.m. Monday 7:00 p.m. Sunday Mass 7:00 am. Confessions Saturday 6:30 to 7:00 o.m. CHURCH OF ST. VINCENT DE PAUL (Vlncentlan Fathers) "K" Street Panama City Masses. Sunday 6 a.m. (high masa); * 8:30 a.m ISunday school conducted by Maryknotl Sisters, after the second Maaa: Weekdays 6 a.m.: Holldav 6 and 8:30 a.m. Confessions. Saturday. 3:30 to 6 p.m at 7 p.m Evening Devotions. Rossry each day at 7 pm.; Miraculous Medal Novena at 7 p.m. Friday: convert classes 7:30 o m Mondsy and Thursday Catheclam Class 10:45 to 11:45 a.m Sunday Benediction 7:00 p.m Holy Day Mas 6:00 a.m. MS Divine Worship. :S0 Evening Vespers Unitarian I'Ht UNITARIAN SOCIETi 10 JO a.m. JWB Armed Force Service Center Library Balboa. C.Z. Vour Invitation to liberal -Melon Baptist MAttONAI. SSAITIfel CHLKCHES ."'.* B*pti?t- l*r5' Meeung 5:30 m. Divine Service. :30 am. Divine Ser- vice 7:15 pm. and Servin lugper at both Service g of The Lord Sunday School eS^'ilt^p-m1^8-'1-^ aaE3LM<,FCh'-CJ,i"' Cx- vine piao^ 11 00 am Sunday School at Gsunooe. CZ.. Divine Service, at 11M "npm:S' Wm Sun<1" ^ COCO SLITO PLAYSHED Paitor. Rev Wm. J. Finn. CM. Sunday Mass ............... 7:45 am Holy Day Mass............ 6:00 am. Sundsy School ............ 8:45 a.m. Services Thursday nights .. 7:45 om Confession before Mass CHURCH OF THE HOLY FAMILY . MsrgariU. C.Z. Rev William J. Finn. CM. ............................8:15 ST. JOSEPH'S CHURCH Coln, loth and Broadway Pastor, Rev. J. Rsymon Mschate. CM Assistant. Rev. George Browne, CM Sunday Masses .....5:45 A 8:00 am Weekly Masses ...... 5:45 A 6:30 a.m. First Frldsy aluaaa .. 1:45 A 8:00 a.m. Baptisms Sunday ........... 4:00 pm. Miraculous Medal Novena service every Wedneaday at 6:15 and 7 no m Novena of the Sacred Heart Friday 7:15 p.m. Confession- Saturday: 4 to 5: 7 to 8 ojn Sunday School. 3*00 pm. Instruction for adults seeking know- ledge of the Catholic Church, every Mon- day and Thursday at 7:15 p.m Sunday. 8 JO am.Church School with classes for all Ages 10:45 a.m.Regulas Morning Worship Sermon Topic "You Can't Uve With- out It." Special Music by the Junior Choir. 00 p.m.Youth Fellowship Subject for comlderstion: "The Captain of The Came.'' Installation of Newly Selected Officer ANCN, CZ _THE CATHEDRAL OF SI LUKE The Rt. Rev. R. Heber Gooden. Bishop rhe Very Rev Raymond T. Ferris. Dean 7:30 a.m. Holy Communion. *:30 a m. Cathedral School. 10:45 Morning Prayer and Sermon. (First Sunday of the month Holy Com- munion and Sermon.) 7:00 p.mEvening Prayer and Sermon _ CRISTOBAL. R.P. CHURCH OF OUR SAVIOUR 3rd St. near G. Navy Rev. Milton A. Cookaon, Pastoi Holy Communion 7:30 a.m Church School 8:30 am. Morning Prayer-Sermon 11:00 am (H.C first Sunday in the month.) Young People's Vesper Service 4:30 o.m. Wednesday. Holy Communion 8 JO pm. Choir Rehearsal 7:30 am. A House of .Prayer for all people. COCOLI Church ef St. Aadrew The Rev Gideon C Montgomery. Rev. M. A. Cookson, Chap. USNR Holy Communion 7:30 a.m Sunday School :30 am. Public Worship 10:45 a.m (H.C first Sunday In the month.) Young People's Fellowship 4:00 pm. Choir rehearsal Wednesday evenings st 6:30 p.m. Women's Auxiliary 2nd and 4th Thurs- days at 7:30 p.m. House of Prayer and Fellowship for all oeople COROZAL Ooed Shepherd The Ven. A F. Nightengale 7:30 am. Every Friday: Morning Pray- (H.C lt FTlday.) GAMBOA St. Simon's Church: Rav. DA. Osbornr 10:30 a.m 2nd. and 4th Sundays Holy Communion A Sermon. 10:30 am. 1st. and 3rd Sundays Morn- ing Prayer A address. 3:00 pm Sunday School. 5:00 and 6-00 p.m. Youth Organizations 7:30 pm. Evening Prayer and address 2:00 p.m. Service at Penitentiary Every tth Sunday. 7:30 p.m. Tuesday Girls Friendly So- ciety. 7:30 p.m. 2nd. and 4th. Thursdays Woman' Auxiliary. Gsmboa Penitentiary Holy Communion 4th Sunday Ii p.m. LA BOCA St Peter's Church Rav. Lemuel B Shirley. Priest 6 a.m.Holy Communion. 7 a.m.Choral Eucharist and Sermon 10 a.m.Morning Prayer and Church School. 5 p.m.Holy Baptism. 7:30 p m.Vespers and Sermon Communion Tuesdays and Thursdays, i a.m.. Wednesdays and Fridays a.m.: Girls Friendly 6 and 7 pm. Monday. * p.m. Tuesday; Vesper nightly at 7. ex cept Saturday Complin* 7 JO p.m. MAKOARITA St Margaret' Chapel. Margarita Hospital The Rev. M A. Cookaon Sunday School t am Evening Prayet t:80 ii in PALO SECO Church af Tha Holy Comforter The Ven A. F. Nightengale Every Mondap 8 JO am. Holy Com- munion. Posts, Bases And Stations PACIFIC SIDE FORT AMADORrM"U'" Sunday School........,........ ai< rol.TcLA'Y................* Sunday School. Bldg. 154 .. ..^SI"}6! Worship........... FORTKOBBE Sunday School........... , Morning Worship ........... ALBROOR AIR FORCE BASE Bible School ................ Morning Worship ............... i0;5 YoutliGroup ..".........., on Servicemen's Hour.............. 700 U.S. NAVAL STATION. RODMAN Morning Worship ........... 10*5 HOTRS. 15th NAVAL DISTRICT Morning Worship ............... g:on FORT CLAYTON0*5""' Dally Maaa............ Sunday Mas* ............!."! 12TH STATION HOSPITAL Sundsy Mas................ COROZAL CHAPEL ...... Sunday Maaa.............. FORTKOBBE .............."" Daily Masa .................. Sunday Masses ....rv,,.. *:6o A 15TH NAVAL DISTRICT Sunday Maaa ............. U.S. NAVAL STATION, RODMAN" Sunday Ma"............... |<*a ALBROOK AIR FORCE BASE Dally Mass ............ g30 Sunday Masses ........'..7:45 A 8:45 Jewish ALBROOK AIR FORCE BASE Saturday............. fort clayton " fortkSbbe................. Thursday..........,,.,...... JWB. Balboa, C.Z. Friday....................... ATLANTIC SIDE FORT DAVIS r",mUn' Episcopal Holy Communion .... Sunday School................. 30 FORT GULICK Sunday School ............. Morning Worship......... COCO SOLO NAVAL STATION'. Sunday School ............... afornlng Worship ............. TORT DAVIS C*,hU Sunday Mass ................. FORT GULICK Sunday Mas* .............. COCO SOLO Sunday .Has. ......*..........., FORT GULICK Tuesday........................ 7:00 T _ Rio Abale ** om RJ. Sunday School COCOLI BAPTIST CHURCH S"1""^ ,*' ") I Rav. Paul C Bell Paator Every Sunday 'fchpol............ 8-45 am -*r*iem ........ 1045 am cf"........... 8:00 pm ling Sarvlce ------ 7oopm **Jd 7-00 pm every Monda, Mtomttk Prayer Service ... 7:(m every atlnay evening. VINCENTS CHURCH Silver City. CZ. Pastor. Rev Raymond Lewis, C M. Sunday Masse .. 5:45 and 00 am Weekday Mass ........... 6 00 a.m Holy Day Mas a .. I JO and 8:30 a m. Sunday School.......... 11*0 am Miraculous Medal Novena service Tuesday 7:00 pm Baptism Sunday .......... 440pm Confession Saturday 3 JO to 5:80: 7 00 to 8:00 pm. Instructions los adult Tuesdays Frt- day- 7 30 D.n OUR LADY OF GOOD COUNSEL Gamboa. C.Z. Pastor. Rev Charles Jacobs. CM Sunday Maaaes 7D* and 830 am Weekday Maesa. Wednesday etc 6 00 em. . 8:45 A 6:30 a m Novena service Holy Day _ Miraculous Medal rueaday 7:00 p.m- S?"*1 H#,r1 Novrne service. Fridays t'w p m Confesslnn Saturday 00 01 ST. THOMAS' CHURCH Oatun (near Locks) i, J: "*"*. "'v ,,oho Tunselty CM. Sunday Macs 6 45 am. PARASO Rev D. A Osbome 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion 2nd Sunday 8:30 am Sunday School. 5:30 pm Evening Prsver 2nd and 4th Sundays Mondsy. 7:00 p.m Youth Meeting Wedneaday: 6:30 p.m. Girls' Friendly Society. RED TANK Rev. D.A. Osbome A Rev C A Crag-well 11:00 am Holy Communion and Ser mon In. and 3rd Sunday 11*0 a.m Homing Prayei end edd- re' 2nd end 4th Sunday. 3 00 p.m Sunday School and Baptism 7:30 pm Evening Prsver and address end. and 4th Sundays. PANAMA CITY ST. PAUL'S CHURCH A. F Nightengale. B D M BE nd The Rev Rltr Reginald Atwell Venerable Archdeacon 4 00 am Holy Communion 840 am 7:00 o m Evensong snd Sermon CHRIST CHURCH Y-TUB-SEA Coln. R d* P (Opposite Hotel Washington 1 The Rev Mslnert J Peterson S T.B Rector SUNDAYS. ^^ 6 a.m Holy Communion am. Choral Eucharist ana Sermon I0 3O am Church School 7J8 p.m. Solemn Evensong A Sermon WEDNESDAYS. 6am Holy Communion 7:30 pm Evensong and Sermon. 8:30 o,m Adult Confirmation Claa rHURSDAYS: * p.m. Prayer Guild (FRIDAYS: * p m Children's Eucharist IJ6 p.m. Choir Practico. A_ Other Churches And Services BAHA'I CENTER Apartment 1 Lux Building. 34th Street Panam Monday; Lectura and Dl- cussiorvs 8:00 p.m. Church ot Jeans Christ ol Latter Day Saint (Mormon) Balboa. C.Z. Sunday School 10:00 a m Services 10:30 a.m. At JWB Armed Forces Services Center on La Boca Road. CHURCH OF CHRIST 0851 Balboa Road. Balboa W Harlnnd Dilbeck. Evangelist Telephone 2-3*02 SUNDAY SERVICES: Bible Clases for all ago* .... 100 a.m. Preaching and Communion ... 10:45 a.m. Preaching and Communion___7:00 om MIDWEEK SERVICES: Bible Study ...... Wedneaday 7:00 p.m. Ladle.' Bible Class Thursday 1:45 p.m CHURCH OF CHRISTOld Cristo**) SUNDAYS: Wo meet in the American Legion Hall In front of the Clubhouse. Homing Worship 10:45 am Visitors welcome Ladie Blhle Study at Gatun Phone Gatun 416 or Ft Gullck 30* CURUNDU PROTESTANT COMMUNITY CHURCH Chsplsln William H. Blalr Sunday School................. Morning Worship............... Young People's Service ......... Evening Worship ............... Prayer Meeting Thursday ....... Choir Practice, Wedneaday at 7:00 pm and Saturday 8JO am OLD CATHOLIC CHURCH St Raphael The Archangel 13th St West No 1 Holy Eucharist: Sunday at /JO a.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays 6:30 a.m. Sacrament ol Unction (Healing Ser- vice! First Sunday of each month at 7:30 n.m team Ballbeta Christian Charrb _ Panam. R.P Rt Rev T James. D. D Bishop offlclantlng. Morning Worship at ....... I*u Holy Communion at........ IX ero E*'1*! Worship at..... 11:80 am Bible Reading at ......... 3:00 pm Divine Service et ........ 740 p.m 5;mo" ' ............. HOdis Holv Communion at ..... |SJD* Baloaa-Aniaslor atoa* USO Crab _ "ss-Demsalnatu Veapor Service at 6:14 p.m. Suosttya. Stcuc* Todo los das i las 8:30 de la maana Hablan los Astros A earo de "Antinea". H O A J PanamaAmrca DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE DIVULGAMOS LA VERDAD QDE LOS DEMS OCULTAN TUMM GALVANIZADA r r i" ir r AGENCIAS GLOBALES Via Eip.fi ltl TeL t-UV 1*0 VIGSIMO SEXTO PANAMA, R. r, ABADO, MATO 12, 1951 En grandes CINCO CENTESIMOS en grupos sern puestos libertad los presos polticos Ya lo han sido todos los del Interior del pas Han restablecido los ser- vicios de Correos y Telgrafos Todos los detenidos po- lticos en el interior de la Repblica ser npues- toB en libertad inmedia- tamente y en Panam, se- rn libertados los presos de la misma condicin en grandes grupos, segn anunci' esta maana el doctor Miguel ngel Or- donez, Ministro de Go- bierno y Justicia. Solamente quedarn de- tenidos aquellos que es- tn indiciados por delitos comunes, los que sern puestos a rdenes de las autoridades judiciales co- rrespondientes. Todos los servicios de correos y telgrafos estn funcionando ya normal- mente, Ib mismo que el servicio en general del ae- ropuerto de Tocumen. 1 Ministro Ordez ...,.,. ,.j__i- . Atentamente presentamos a manifesto que Lft*. I 4 nuestro saludo y le augu- retornado a la normali- r" nuestro saludo y le au- guramos una brillante actuacin SE RENE EL GABINETE. En el Palacio de Relaciones Exteriores se reuna ayer el Presi- dente Arosemena con sa Conseje de Gabinete, para considerar los asuntos mis argentes. La separacin de Francisco Daz solicitada dad. La Federacin de Damas de la Asociacin Catlica de Pana- m ha enviado la siguiente carta de saludo al Ministro de Educacin, Prof. Ricardo Ber- mdez. Panam, Mayo 12 de 1951. Sr. Prof. Ricardo Bermdez Ministro de Educacin Nacional E.S.D. Sr. Ministro: Violenta manifestacin anti- americana realiza en Tehern muchedumbre de 50.000 almas CIRCULACIN PAGADA AYER MAS 0E 28,100 en el elevado cargo que desem- pea. Consideramos que con la nue- va era que se inicia, ha despun- tado una aurora de progreso pa- ra la Patria, y particularmente para la educacin nacional que es una de las fuerte bases de nuestra nacionalidad. Por lo tanto, ya que se trata de recti- ficaciones, solicitamos a d. que atienda el clamor de nn pueblo PMa la Pagina .Coi z> En cualquier momento ser lanzado un nuevo ataque de los rojos Se espera que enven unos quinientos mil hombres en este su segundo gran empuje TOKIO, mayo 13. (UP). La invasin comunista de Co- rea ae encuentra lista para ser lanzada "en cualquier momen- to". Se espera que los> comu- nistas lancen unos 500,000 hom- bres contra lu Naciones .Uni- das en un intento supremo de destruir sus fuerzas o sacar- las de Corea. El So. Ejercito se encuentra listo para hacerle frente al ata- que. Los grandes caones de los aliados te encuentran con- centrados detrs de barricadas de alambre de pas, sacos de arena y otras trincheras, a todo lo largo del frente de cien mi- llas en Corea y las tropas se encuentran confiadas. Los aliados se encuentran en un adesventaja de dos a uno, pero se muestran confiados de que matarn diez soldados co- munistas por cada soldados a- liado. Los aliados lograron detener la primera fase de la ofensi- va de primavera comunista ha- ce dos semanas, despus de ha- berle causado a stos 76,000 ba- jas. Es posible que loa comu- nistas desaten su esperada o- enslva area en unin con el asalto terrestre. A fin de hacerle frente a es- ta amenaza, los aliados han a- doptado medidas adicionales de defensa en las gases areas de avanzada y en el Cuartel del So. Ejrcito. Se han erigido barricadas de bolsas de arena, las tropas que manejan los caones antiareos estn alertas, y se han insta- lado cartelones explicando las seales areas y fotografas de los aviones comunistas. Otra cortina de humo ha es- condido la concen racin co- munista al sureste de Munsan y ras* a la Pat.na . Coi II TEHERAN, mayo 12. mil personas, instigadas por los comunistas, realiz anoche una manifestacin viole ntamente antl-amerlcana y exigi el "pro- cesamiento Inmediato" del Ge- neral Douglas MacArthur como criminal en Corea. Los vocJ/MsyKi manifestan- te* demandar* tambin la ex- pulsion de Irn de los aseso- rae militares norteamericanos. Ultima Hora 1 Consejo Municipal de Panam, en sesin ce- lebrada esta maana de- sign al seor Digenes Alberto Pino, como Teso- rero Municipal. El seor Pino se encar- g inmediatamente de su cargo, y al momento de entrar en prensa este dia- rio, era muy felicitado por los concejales y ami- gos polticos y persona- les que organizaron un agasajo en el Jardn Bal- boa. "Vengo sin odio ni rencores", dice el Alcalde Navarro El doctor Alberto Navarro, al tomar posesin de la Alcalda de Panam, hizo a la prensa las siguientes declaraciones: "Vengo a ocupar nuevamen- te el cargo de Alcalde, para el cual fui elegido por el pue- blo panameo. "Quiero manifestar de la ma- nera ms sincera que vengo sin odios ni rencores, y dispuesto a desarrollar una fecunda la- bor de beneficio social. "Asimismo, deseo declarar que nd har destituciones en ma- sa, pero si tendr en cuenta para ocupar cargos de impor- tancia a todos los Jvenes que constituyeron el Comit Pro- Autonomia Municipal, quienes gallardamente me acompaaron cuando fui despojado injusta- mente del cargo para el cual ful elegido por el pueblo pa- nameo. "Como dije antes, pienso des- arrollar una gran labor, y pa- ra ello me rodear del personal capacitado, y proceder a nom- brar en los cargos de Corre- gidores de Barrio a aquellas personas que por sus cualida- des personales considere que estn capacitadas para actuar en beneficio de las clases hu- mildes y todos los asociados". El seor don Agustn Mndez Aponte ha sido nombrado Se- cretarlo de la Alcalda, en re- emplazo del seor Jos M. So- to, quien se encuentra deteni- do por los sucesos de ayer. La Caja de Ahorros restableci hoy sus operaciones normalmente .*~*!?JZ?j tA~t,l0ltttttti%?' y' **I*'* "a. en nn movimiento normal, cuando muchos depositante, urgidos por cuatro das de acumulacin de trabajo, se presen? taran a las ventanillas de la Caja a efectuar sos depsitos corrientes y a hacer retiros par- cales ae sus depsitos. A las once de la maana de hoy sbado muy pocas personas quedaban en loa pasillos ae u isla y ios empleados se dedicaban a poner al dim el inmenso trabaje acumulad*. Entrevistado esta maana don Guillermo de Roux, Gerente de la Caja de Ahorres, per,-? un representante de este diario, dijo que consideraba la Jornada de hoy. come una Jornada normal de trabajo. Aadi que el promedio de depositante en das normales es de tF personas y que con cuatro das de acumulacin de trabajo el movimiento de la Caja es ms intenso, pero que considera que se debe exclu stvamente a las necesidades por las que har* pasado muchas persona, que tienen cuenta, abiertas en la Caja. ^^ Ser reconocido el unes a los 5 p.m. el Los manifestantes se concen- traron primero y desfilaron an- te la Embajada de Estados U- nldos gritando "abajo los im- perialistas norteamericanos" y "mueran los lmperalisto". Despus se dirigieron a la plaza del Parlamento, dando gritos antl-amerlcanos, agitan do. banderas taiAt y- vocean V,. consignas emWtiMta*. Tambin' fl- ai A f\rAA~~~ acusaron a Estados Unido di'>' "VI. M. \jrOOttCZ armar a Alemania y Japn. Pidieron que el Gobierno de; Irn acte inmediatamente re- conociendo al Gobierno de la China comunista y establecien- do las relaciones diplomticas! y econmicas con China. Tambin atacaron a Francia' por prohibir la celebracin del1 "Congreso Mundial de la Paz". Piden a Gromyko que "reestudie" las propuestas PARS, Mayo 13 (UP)El De- legado norte-americano. Philip Jessup pidi al Ruso Andrei Gromyko que "reestudie" las pro puestas de las potencias occi- dentales del programa para la conferencia de los cuatro Minis- tros do Relaciones Exteriores. "01 tanto el Este como al Oeste hacen un estudio concien- zudo d los problemas presentes, estoy seguro que tendremos la conferencia de los Cuatro Orandes", dijo Jessup. El Gobierno Federal Alemn prohibe la partida de 3259 vagones llenos hacia Hungra Observa as rpidamente la advertencia de evitar que vayan materiales hacia los rojos FRANCFORT, Mayo 12 El Gobierno Federal Alemn Tambin se dijo en el anun- prohlbi anoche la salida nula ci de la oficina que los far- io explic que el "Occi- ha presentado un pro- Jessu dente grama completo Justa y objeti- vamente. Si no hemos logrado explicarnos claramente, poda el seor Gromyko explicarnos en qu parte? Nos seria grato estu- diar susd eclaraclones". Parece que nadie en Bolivia logr mayora absoluta Est complacido MacArthur de la orientacin oficial hacia "sus puntos de vista" NUEVA YORK, mayo 12. (UP) B General de Divisin Court- ney Whitney, dijo que el Ge- neral Douglas MacArthur est may complacido "con la apa- rente orientacin del Gobierno hada sus fundamentales pun- tos de vista en cuanto a Ex- tremo Oriento". El portavoz de MacArthur di- Jo a los periodistas que ste cree "que se est delineando una poltica de realismo sobre la direccin de la guerra co- reana bajo la presin de la in- vestigacin del Congreso y de la opinin pblica". Whitney, quien fue secretarle militar de MaoArthur, dijo al contestar preguntas de los pe- riodistas que habia hablado con el General y que est "especial- mente complacido" con la ac- titud "adoptada ahora" por el Secretario de Defensa George C. Marshall en contra de "ce- der Formosa y el escao de la China en las Naciones Uni- das". Whitney dijo que MacArthur tambin est complacido con la "noticia de que Oran Bretaa (Pasa a la Pgina $, Col. J) Sin recargo ser aceptado el pago de los impuestos COMUNICADO DE PRENSA A consecuencia de los lamen- tables sucesos que han tenido lugar en la Repblica y espe- cialmente en la ciudad de Fa- :.ain en estos ltimos das, los contribuyentes se han visto en la imposibilidad de pagar sus impuestos sin recargo dentro de ios plazos legales. >or ello el Ministro de Ha- cienda y Tesoro, de acuerdo se-n el rgano Ejecutivo, ha dispues- to que se acepten sin recargo los pagos de los mencionados un puestos hasta el prximo Jueves dia 17 de los corien-.es inclusive. Panam, Mayo 12 de 1951. Victo Navas Ministro de Hacienda y Tesoro No hay oportunidad de reconciliacin de Rita y Aly Khan OLENBROOK Nevada, mayo 12. (UP). Rita Hayworth di- Jo hoy que "definitivamente no habia" oportunidad de recon- ciliacin entre ella y su princi- pe musulmn, Aly Khan. La estrella del cinema dijo que "no se habia decidido an" si ella iba a radicar la de- manda de divorcio o mera- mente la separacin legal. Rita quien lleg ayer ac Nevadl rt fCer,8wre8lde^?fen B!anc C*nal" Trresela Nevada, dijo a los periodistas en el patio La Polica Nacional recono- cer el lunes a las cinco de la tarde, en ceremonia especial, al doctor Miguel ngel Ord- nes, Ministro de Gobierno r Justicia. Toda la oficlaUdad y la tropa tomar parte en este acto que se llevar a cabo, como es costumbre, en el pa- lio principal del Cuartel Cen- tral de la PoUefa. En Puerto Rico han declarado culpables a 24 Nacionalistas de la casa que alquil en Lakefort que "nada se ha decidido sobre nada". Dijo que todava se estn llevando a cabo las negociacio- nes entre los abogados de las partes en relacin con tales co- sas como las propiedades y el mantenimiento de sus hijos. Rita dijo que una cosa era definitiva y es que ella tiene intenciones de criar sus hijas ella misma. Yasmin, que tie- ne 18 meses, hija del prncipe, ser criada en la fe musulma- na, porgue "ella es musulma- na". SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico. Mr,- yo 12 (UP) Un Jurado de:la- i a 21 nacionalistas puertorri- queos culpables de asesinato en primer grado y a tres cul- pables de intento de asesinato con relacin a los levantamien- tos nacionalistas en Jayuya du- rante el mes de Octubre ltimo. Entre los convictos estn y E- lio Torreada, familiares de Gri- sello Torresola, quien intent a- sesinar al Presidente Truman en la Casa Blalr durante el lo. de Noviembre ltimo. El Juez Rafael Pardo de la Corte del district de Arecibo fij la fecha del 23 de Mayo para dictar sentencia a los na- cionalistas. Estos convictos se enfrentan con una pena mxima en Puer- to Rico. El grupo fu acusado de ha- ber matado al polica Virgji o Camacho y atacar a otros tree grupos con Intencin de matjr LA PAZ, Bolivia, Mayo 13 tUP) Las cmputos casi com- p.stos de las elecciones presi- denciales celebradas el Domin- go pasado Indican que el nuevo Presidente de Bolivia quizs tenga que ser elegido por el Congreso, ya que probablemen- te ninguno de los seis candida- tos han obtenido la mayora ab- soluta que la Constlturin re- quiere. A Vctor Paz Estenssoro, del Movimiento Nacional Revolu- cionario, candidato que est en primer lugar en los computes, le faltan an 7,889 votos para obtener la necesaria mayora absoluta que consiste en la mi- tad ms uno del total de votos. Los ltimos cmputos oficia- les arrojan 51,180 votos para Paz Estenssoro; 37,780 para el candidato del Goblenro, Gabriel Gonsalve; 12,71* para Bernar- dino Bilbao; "6,388 para Guiller- mo Gutierres; 5,502. para Ti- mas Ello y 4,924 para Jos M. Arce. Hungra de 325 vagones le- os de "rieles" de acero, ob- servando asi rpidamente la advertencia de la alta Comisin norteamericana de que suspen- da el envo de materiales de guerra a los pases tras la cor- tina de hierro. La oficina de asuntos econ- micos de la Alta Comisin a- nuncl que el Gobierno alemn habia expedido rdenes cance- lando la exportacin a Hungra de 1,080 toneladas de "rieles" ae acero que en 75 vagones U- ii-ovlarlos estn en Furtnum Wald. villa en la frontera Cue- ca, desde el 23 de Abril. La orden se expidi despus de revelar la Prensa Unida ,ue los vagones estn detenidos "ti la frontera esperando decisin del Departamento de Estado de Panam adquiri 152 naves a medio precio Se har rifa de un viaje a Europa pro las bibliotecas El 5 de agosto del presente ao se sabr quin es la per- sona afortunada que puede via- jar a Europa, con pasaje de ida y vuelta en primera clase, permanencia en ese continen- te durante 9 meses, a razn de B. 100 mensuales, B. 300.00 pa- ra gastos de preparacin y B. 500.00 para otros gastos. Para Sue sea usted el feliz viajero ebe comprar un tquete por solo B. 1.00 de la rifa que aus- picia el Comit Nacional pro- Bibliotecas, con el propsito de incrementar la cultura en el pas por medio de las biblio- tecas. clonarlos alemanes detuvieron la salida de 300 toneladas do "rieles" ae acero de la mma orden, que en otros 250 va- gones estn en Nuremberg, Os- nubruek y que ste cargamento se devolver al exportador- Loa "rieles" de entrevias del tipo uniforme en los 75 vago- nes fueron fabricados por la empresa alemana "Kloclcner Werke Dulsburg" y consignauoa d la firma de 8zob den Hungric Las unidades de aduanas del Ejrcito de Estados Unidos tuvieron la salida de los vago- nes con los "rieles". No se hsil dado ms detalles sobre la ci- tencin de los otros 250 vagones. Hoy a las 6 y 45 hablar por radio Jos Isaac Fbrega a Licenciado Jos Isaac i'a- orega se dirigir esta tarde a Us 6 y 45 por radio a la Nacin por los micrfonos de la Asocia- cin Nacional de Radiodilalun El Licenciado Fbrega acor- dar temas de trascendental importancia para la vida de la trpbiica. enfocando desde su I tradicional posicin civilista. Las emisoras que entrarn en- cadena, son las mismas que hi- | dieron la Cadena de Asociacin Nacional de Radiodifusin, J- rente los aciagos das que vivi la Repblica: Radio Nacional iHOQi, Rado Continental, Red Panamericana, Radio Miramar, Radio Selecta, Onda Popular, Radio Progeso y Ondas del Caribe. Jorge lllueca ha sido trasladado a San Fernando El HD. Jorge lllueca, quien result herido de bala en un hombro el sbado pasado, ha si- do trasladado a la Clnica San Fernando, cuarto No. 25. El Diputado mueca estuvo hospitalizado de emergencia en el Hospital Gorgas en la Zona del Canal, en donde fu dado de alta por razones de espacio. Podemos Informar al pblico que el Diputado lllueca. aunque algo dbil por la prdida de sangre sufrida cuando fu he- rido, se encuentra en estado de 'franca mejora y recuperacin. Editorial del Washington Post WASHINGTON, Mayo 12 (UP) El "Washington Post" en sin editorial comentando los sucesos ocurridos recientemente en Is ciudad de Panam, se expresa de la siguiente manera: "El derrocamiento del Dr. Arnulfo Arias como Presi- dente de la Repblica de Panam, es alentador para el imperio del gobierno civil en la Amrica Latina. "Lo ms alentador de todo es el apoyo qne el pueblo le di a la decisin de la Corte Suprema de Justicia de- clarando inobjetable la actuacin de la Asamblea. "El aspecto peculiar de la situacin es el papel del Coronel Remn. "Despus que la Asamblea Nacional, en un acto de valar cvico, destituy al Presidente Arias y le dl pose- sin ai Vlce-Presidente, don Alclbades Arosemena, Re- men aleg que sta habia actuado ilegalmente porque se encontraba en reoeso. "Todo Indicaba que Remn le habia vuelto a dar sa apoyo al Dr. Arias despus que ste desisti de sos hiten- toa de derogar la Constitucin. % "Pero la protesta del pblico continu, culminando con una batalla en el Palacio Presidencial, y ahora Re- men tiene a Arias encarcelado y apoya la decisin de la Corte Suprema de Justicia. "Todo esto demuestra que an en nn pas gobernado entre bastidores por el hombre que controla la nica fuersa armada, existe un respeto baela el sentimiento popular v a la forma constitucional de Gobierno. "La victoria del pueblo de Panam es nn recuerdo a tlosnpo a los presentes Gobiernos de ese tarde o tem- prano habr una erupcin en todo Latino-Amrica". WASHINGTON, Mayo 12 (8E) Los Estados Unidos vendieron 248 "buques excedentes" a las em presas martimas de 11 Rep- blicas latinoamericanas a un precio menor de la mitad del costo de construccin, segn li- na informacin no dada previa- mente a la publicidad y que fu enviada al Senado por la Comi- sin Martima del Gobierno. Los pases compradores de los buques, segn su bandera de re- gistro, fueron: Argentina 24 bu- ques; Brasil, 12; Chile, 6: Co- lombia, 8; Cuba, 4; Honduras, 23; Nicaragua. 2; Panam, 152; Per, 8; Uruguay, 8; y Venezuela En algunos casos las ventas se hicieron a lineas del Gobierno y en otros a empresas privadas. El costo original de construc- cin de los 248 buques fue de a- proxlmadamente 571 millones de dlares y el precio neto de venta alcanz a un total aproximado de 240 millones de dlares. Chile adquiri los seis barcos, del total antes mencionado, a un costo de 5.218.838 dlares. El costo original de estas naves fu de 17.683.249 dlares. Los barcos vendidos por Esta- dos Unidos fueron de diversos ti- pos, tales como ios llamados "Victory", mercantes de carga y pasajeros y buques cisternas y todos eran de no menos 1.500 to- nelada. Se revela el contenido un mensaje que dio origen para destituir a MacArthur El Secretario de Defensa Marshall lo hizo al ha- blar ante Comisin del Senado WASHINGTON, Mayo 12 (UP) El Secretarlo de Defensa, George Marshall al declarar an- te la Comisin del Senado ril a conocer un mensaje enviado el 13 de Enero por el Presiden- te Truman al General Douslas MarArthur y al rededor del cual parecen girar la mayora dp los motivos que sirvieron ce tas para la destitucin de Mac- Arthur. El mensaje dice textualmente: "Deseo que sepa que la situa- cin de Corea est recibiendo la mayor atencin ac y >ue nuestros esfuerzos se concen- tran en encontrar lina decision apropiada en ste asunto Je mxima Importancia para el futuro de Norte-Amrica y pa- ra la supervivencia de los pue- blos libres de todas partes" "Deseo en este telegrama ex- ponerle mis opiniones respecto a nuestros propsitos bsicos racionales e internaclonaleo al continuar resistiendo la agre- sin en Corea. Nosotros nece- sitamos sus Juicios en cuanto al esfuerzo mximo que puede esperarse rezonablemente de las fuerzas de las Naciones Unidas a su mando para secundar la resistencia, que estamos tratan- do de organizar sobre una oasc mundial contra la agresin" "Este telegrama no debe -to- marse en forma como una or- den. Cu propsito es darle a cjnocer algo de lo que pensa- mos respecto a los factores pol- ticos". "1) El xito en la resis- tencia en Corea lograra los si- guientes propsitos. a) Demostrar que la agresin n. sera aceptada por nosowos w las Naciones Unidas jr pro- porcionar un punto de partida desde el cual podran movilizar- se el espritu y energas del mundo libra para hacer frtnto a la amenaza mundial que pie- senta ahora la Unin Sovitica, b) Desinflar el prestigio po- ltico y militar peligrosamente exagerado de la China Coi.v- .ista. que ahora amenaza so- cavar la resistencia de Asia v.9 comunista y consolidar el asien- to del comunismo en la propia China. c) Dar ms tiempo y mas a- yuda directa a la organizacin de la resistencia no comunista en Asia, tanto dentro como fue- ra de China di Cumplir nuestros compro- misos de honor con los surco- reanos y demostrar al mundo que la amistad de Estados Uiat- dos es de Inestimable valor Ol momentos de adversidad. e) Hacer posible un traalo de paz satisfactorio para el Ja-. pon y contribuir grandemente a la situacin del Japn resc- (Pasa a la Pgina S, Col. 3) CITACIN A solicitud de numeroso grnpo de periodistas se cita a todos los miembros activos el Sindicato de Periodistas a ana reunin urgente que so celebrar esta tarde a las seis en el Jardn Balboa. Se so. licita especialmente la pre- sencia de los periodistas per- teneciente a las re<*acc!0',-s de La Estrella de Panama, La Hern, U Nacin, EL PA- NAMA AMERICA, El Pas y Mundo Grfico. Ricardo A. Lince. Viee-Presidente del Sindical* de Periodistas da Panam. . PAtUNA DOS EL PANAMA AMEKICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE SBADO, MATO 12. 1911 Panamalmmca MAIM WOSrSMBttNT* HANMOOIO HUA*. DKU1W / TfWIFON t-0740 :2tNT*L *RIV0> APARTADO POSTAL NO. IJ4 N US TALLIM* SITAS IN III CIUDAD. CALLS H. N. B" MAGNIFICA LABOR CVICA DE LA ASOCIA- CIN NACIONAL l)K RADIODIFUSORAS No es posible dejar de comentar editorialincn- te la actitud asumida por la Asociacin Nacional de Radiodifusoras frente a los acontecimientos acae- cidos en esta semana en el pas. Dejar de reconocer esa labor magnfica de civismo realizada por la cadena de emisoras que funcion tan eficazmente en esta ocasin suprema .implicara una injusticia, porque, sin lugar a dudas, la Asociacin Nacional de Radiodifusoras contribuy muchsimo a darle Tida al movimiento cvico que determin el triunfo de la opinin pblica. Es la primera vez en la historia del pas que la Radio adopta una posicin de tal naturaleza. Y este hecho es sumamente significativo por cuanto demuestra que en Panam ya hay una conciencia nacional de slida estructura. Las Radiodifusoras han comprendido que por encima de intereses co- merciales estn los de la Patria, por los cuales hay que luchar denodadamente sin ms compromisos que los que dictan los principios republicanos que rigen la vida poltica del pueblo panameo. La comunidad entera manifiesta en diversas formas sus simpatas hacia la Asociacin Nacio- nal de Radiodifusoras porque sta supo poner al servicio de la causa republicana todo su entusias- mo, toda su capacidad y todo su patriotismo. En esta jornada se ha puesto a prueba el po- der colectivo del pueblo panameo cuya potencia- lidad dl la nota suprema en pro de la restaura- cin del orden constitucional. Y esto ha sido suma- mente saludable para que se sepa bien claro que cuando se quiere vulnerar la voluntad soberana del pueblo ste dispone de grandes recursos cvicos para defender sus derechos con coraje y eficacia. Es evidente que el triunfo obtenido no se pue- de adjudicar a determinados elementos exclusiva- mente porque fueron todos los panameos los que intervinieron en l mediante una accin conjunta de vastas proporciones. Sin embargo, justo es recono- cer, repetimos, la magnfica labor rendida por la Asociacin Nacional de Radiodifusoras en benefi- cio de la causa sagrada de la Repblica.________ Red Panamericana I tiene los mejores programas AHORA SI: EL CENSO! Por ALDOR MM! El tmpadronader penetra al mar: Su proferid. seorlU? En Coln lamentan la muerte de los dos militares Fue expUda la siguiente re- solucin; RESOLUCIN (de 11 ds mayo Je 1961) II Comit Organizador de ja Feria Agropecuaria y Comer- cial de Colon. CONSIDERANDO: Que en la gesta heroica rea- lizada por el pueblo de Pana- m con decisin y orden ad- mirable*, en defensa del don preciada de la "libertad", re- sultaron victima varios ciuda- danos que ofrendaron sus vidas por la patria. ._. . Que entre estas vctimas, y en el cumplimiento de su de- ber se cuentan dos miembros del Cuerpo de Polica Nacional que. secund al pueblo en iu movimiento de noble rebelda: el Mayor Lezcano Omez y el Teniente Juan B. Flores. RESUELVE: lo.Hacer pblico su testi- monio de admiracin y sus sen- timientos de condolencia, por la muerta de estos mrtires de la democracia. 2o.Comunicar a la Coman-, dancia, Oficialidad y miembros del Cuerpo de la Polica Na- cional la condolencia por la muerte de] glorioso jefe de la Guardia Presidencial, Mayor Al- fredo Lezcano Gomes y del Te- niente Juan B. Flores. So.Asistir una comisin del Comit Organizador al sepelio del Mayor Lezcano Gome/, y dems victimas de la dictadura. 4o.Proponer a la ciudadana como ejemplos dignos de Imi- tar, el heroico comportamiento del Mayor Lezcano Gmez y de los otros ciudadanos que sacri- ficaron su vida por tan nobles Ideales humanos. Dada en Coln, a los 11 das del mes de mayo de 1951. los Mara Gonzeles C, pre- sidente; Antonio Tsgarpulos, Flota ballenera se repone en Chile para seguir viaje ANTOFOGASTA, Chile. (Es- pecial). Ochenta arpones destinados a una expedicin ba- llenera fueron despachados con urgencia desde Aemanla, lle- gando a esta ciudad rpida- mente en un avin de Pana- gra para permitir a la flota partir de nuevo y proseguir su fenomenalmente afortunada ca- cera. En el embarque areo de 11 toneladas habla Incluidos, ade- ms de los arpones, repuestos para su helicptero, la ltima palabra en materia de pesca de ballenas. Llegada hace poco, despus de operar durante seis meses en aguas antarticas, la expe- dicin ha obtenido como 21,000 toneladas de aceite de ballena refinado, avaluadas en ms de nueve millones de lares, lo1 ?ue demuestra sus Intensos es- uerzos. Durante ese tiempo l. resistente tripulacin trabajo sin tener casi un dia de des- canso, generalmente ms de 20 horas diarlas. Su flota consiste en un buqu" madrina, el "Olympic Challen- ger", dos buques de abasteci- mientos, dos buques tanques y doce naves pesqueras. El heli- cptero es utilizado para loca- lizar las manadas de ballenas y sealrselas a las embarca- ciones pesqueras. Se dice que el costo de la expedicin lle- ;a a veinte mil dlares diarlos, a mitad de los cuales son pa- ra pagar los jornales a los 650 tripulantes de la flota. Saldr para San Marcos rector de una universidad El muy Reverendo Laurence J. McGlnley, S. J., Presidente de la Universidad de Fordham, saldr de la ciudad de Nueva York el 9 de mayo para asis- tir a la celebracin del 4o. Centenario de la Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos en Lima. Per. El Padre Me Ginley ser husped de honor de la Universidad de San Mar- cos y va al Per acompaado por los cancilleres de la Uni- versidad de Texas y de la Uni- versidad de Vanderbilt. Tam- bin habr delegados de las Universidades de Carolina del director general: Federico Alba, director tcnico; Benito Pabn, secretario. Buen Whisky Escocs JOHNNIE WALKER NACI IN 1120- UGU TAN CAMPANTl l> WAm S.w IX, S<* rk.tliv Bitltmi. KUmmnotk, S-Otmd. Caja de Ahorros Institucin Garantizada por el E$tado. Paga 2% He inters anual en depsitos de ahorros DEPOSITO INICIAL: B. 5.00 Efectuamos eperacUnes de prstamo con garanta de primeras hipotecas y prendas comerciales. AHORROS DE NAVID \D Depsitos semanales de B/.0.25; B/.0.50; B/.1.00 y B/.5.0O. por un parado de cuarentiocho (48) amanas. Oficinas en Panam: Ave. Central esquina con Calle "I" Oficinas en Cel: Calle el Freate equina een Calle 7a. HORAS: t a.m. a 12:30 p.m. Sbados: 8 a.m. t 12 m. G. A. De ROUX, Administrador CARLOS M0UYNES V. Sab-Admlnlstrador. Sucursal en Coln The Chase National Bank Llantas para Camiones y Autobuses of the City of New York Total de recargos: ms de B/. 5,283,0004)0000 Transacciones Bancarias en General DUNLOP BUCUfttAL IN PANAMA BUCUftSAL EN COLON SUCURSAL Ele CRISTOBAL SUCURSAL EN BALBOA DISTRIBUIDORES AGENCIAS W. H. DOEL, S.A. Ave. ( entra! No. 14 Tei. t-2744 SUCURSAL EN DAVID Va* E$prcil"mos am ai FinonrmmianSa da Importaran* y Exportaran* Norte, Harvard y Yale. La celebracin del 400o. Ani- versario de la fundacin de la Universidad de San Marcos ten- dr lugar del 10 al 17 de mayo. Despus de la celebracin en Lima, el Padre McGlnley ha- r una jira por ciudades sur- americanas importantes para regresar el 17 de mayo. Mien- tras realice su 'Jira el Padre McGlnley viajar utilizando el servllco de Pan American-Gra- ce Airways. Durante la celebracin del 400o. Aniversario el Padre Me Oinley presentar a nombre de la Universidad de Fordham, el Grado Honorario de Doctor en Leyes al Presidente del Per, seor General don Manuel A. Odria, y al Ministro de Rela- ciones Exteriores, Sr. don Ma- nuel C. Gallagher. El Rector de la Universidad de San Marcos seor doctor don Pedro Du- lanto recibir la distincin de miembro honorario de la Fa- cultad de la Universidad de Fordham. IV Centenario de la Universidad Mayor de San Marcos de Lima. Prrafos del discurso que hoy, al celebrarse el IT Centenario de la Universidad Mayer de San Marcos, proyectaba pronunciar en Lima, el dee* tor Octavio Mndez Pfreir, Rector de la Unrrer. sidad de Panam. Quisiera repetir hoy las palabras de entusiasta ternura* cen que esta venerable Universidad de San Marcos, ver medio de su Ilustre representante el doctor Vctor M. Martua, apadrin baca dies y seis aos la Universidad de Panam, que naca en U tierra donde "an estn las huellas de nuestros grandes descubridores y conquistadores", donde "el gran libertador Bolivar aneo sn mi- rada desde Lima para sealarla come el Centro de una organisa- tion universal de unin, de libertad de armenia y de justicia". lo traigo en correspondencia, a este pas cuyo segundo go- bernante fue un panameo, el mismo sentimiento de solidaridad, el mismo abraso espiritual que hace tres lustros quisisteis en- viarnos al aceptar que vuestra Universidad, precursora y difun- dadora de la cultura en el NuCv Mundo, fuera a apdrinar 1 nuestra con la seguridad, expresada asi por Martua, de que "cuando las culturas asciendan paralelamente en los tuertes y en los dbiles la convivencia de las Naciones se asentar defini- tivamente en el reinado de la igualdad": No s por qu yo veo an smbolo muy significativo en el aecho de que U Universidad Mayor de San Marcee eelebre en. cuarto centenario precisamente cuando revienta la era atmica y eon ella revientan tambin la geografa, la economa y loa regimen's polticos nacionales e internacionales. Es, al mismo tiempo, cuando eetoe viejos claustros llenos de tradicin, que incubaren en Amrica la concepcin medioeval y contribuyeron a retardar para sus hombree el mensaje renacentista, ven sacudir Us togas doctorales y endilgar y ensanchar sus caminos hacia una ciudad universitaria abierta a todos los vientos de las ideas y la cultura nuevas, quisas volviendo asi otra ves a la olvidada leccin de loa incas astrales que pusieron frente al'aol y al cielo sas temples, sus teatros, sus observatorios, confundidos con la vida y een ka realidad que vivan. Comprendiendo como nunca, les dirigentes. y profesores modernos de esta oasa de estudios, que no es posible ya volverles las espaldas al pueblo y sus problemas, ni que lee sabios se refugien en sus gabinetes ajenos la aplicacin y tras- cendencia de sus descubrimientos, ni que las universidades se hagan cmplices de los gobiernos que atentan centra la libertad de pensamiento y de Investigacin, contra la efectiva autonoma para Us disciplinas superiores y los postulados de Justicia sedal y convivencia democrtica Las Universidades, es oportuno decirle en esta prestigiosa tribuna del Continente y'en un acto Un solemne oemo el que ee- lebramos, no pueden seguir siendo responsables de Us menta- dades que fomentan el odio, el miedo, U persecucin y las altera- ciones de la paa para la conquista, y Us exacerbaciones del peder, el mando y la hegemona por U fuersa. NI pueden seguir apega- das a su mera funcin profesional y de investigacin, refugiadas sin compromisos en un mundo acadmico da alma disecada y egosta. Yo no caben las fuentes y los camines de U cultura en el trlvium y el quadrivium medioevales; ahora les problemas de la cultura son los problemas de U nacin y los del mundo; son, en ltima sntesis, los problemas del hombre. No el hombre desor- bitado que se ha quedado atrs de sus propios inventos mecni- cos y cientficos, sino el hombre integrado a su mundo een teda su dignidad de ente libre, sin inhlbictones y sin grillos, en un me- dio donde impere la Justicia que da la aeguridad social, U segu- ridad econmica y la seguridsd politics, fuentes a su ves, de toda independencia y de toda liberacin. *<""/"'' >' i ision Lea en este nmero bs reportajes de palpitante inters Las; discrepancias entre Tito y SUhn son mayores que nunca. Como U actual es'la estacin ideal para las invasiones, los peritos Uttim de TIBOT relatan cmo es pasible que Stalin ataque a Yugoslavia en los pr^m.?,rm/V? ... y qu probabilidades de xito tiene. Lea los hechos polticos y miliUres en el ltimo nmero de VISION. __*_. _i.t>, a. La bomba atmica ataca al cncer. Descbrese nuevo y auda * atacar el cncer, usado ya con xito en la extirpacin de tumores"*' El secreto consiste en una pequea explosion atmica. Lea eete sensacional in- forme mdico en la ltima edicin de VISION. lt*i.___ Truman Turbulencia en Washington ... La lucha de MacArthur contra Traman tendr repercusiones mundiales. VISION muestra los entablonas ^"Jgf cmo el resultado de esta pugna afectara al mundo entero ... *.;* cambiar el curso de U historia del mundo. Lea VISION y entrese de tedes les detslles. Indican Us huelgas de Espaa el principio de un alxemiento centra Franco? Vindose de* sus agentes po"/^'*' "/??"*/,,.r0S V* estrateicos VISION trae la verdad de los hechos sobre las huelgas . lue riain lasi impulsa . Qu resultado tendrn sobre el gobierno de Franco y U ponti di su administracin. Lea en VISION un aniusls completo de esta explosiva situacin. CONFIDENCIALMENTE Ta seccin ms famoaa dej"W^ rraaa- tkos muy acertados de futuros sucesos, basados en informes d ^e"?Nl\r gicas qul VISION tiene confidencialmente establecidas ... ^ ^^PJ^: CI AUMENTE v entrese del futuro de los negocios. U glssHcij, s> jsgossssissb a* economa, los negocios del mundo. VISION le da hechos, no fiecionen, r/isines * Una revista de noticias para La America Latina * Editada en Nueva York, Centro Mundial de Noticias. * Rpida y directa distribucin...por Avin Les quincenalmente tambin estos srtculos especiles acerca de: Naciones Unidal, Mundo Econmico, Deportes. Personslidsdes, Teatro, Gencias, Artes y Cultura. t*nva rvr linio vhv vumlvn nvvvsilii swn De venta, en todas partes* hoy mismo por slo B/. 0.25 RASADO, MATO II. 1*51 Et PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE (PAGINA TRE* Editorial Patritico Debido t mltiples solicitud recibidas, publicamos a conti- nuacin el editorial de ayer de 1. Asociacin Panamea de Radiodlfisln: Panameos: Despus de cuarenta- y ocho oras de zozobra constant.s, despus de cuarenta y ocho fco- ras en Que la vida dudada.; estuvo en constante peligro, po- cemos alzar nuestra voz una v para decir con el eorazn hen- chido de emocin patritica: HEMOS TRIUNFADO! Un pv.-o a costa de cruentos sacrificios, un poco a costa de lgrimas y sangre derramada, un poco a costa de vidas..Pero PANAMA HA SALVADO EL HONOR, EL DECORO Y LA DIGNIDAD CIUDADANA. Nuestra Historia tiene sus pginas gloriosas, pero ninguna como la que acaba de esenoir- se; pon caracteres indelebles, los malos hijos de la Pat un. saben ya que nuestro concepto oe libertad no es simple pale- bra que se pierde en el vacio; no es el flamear sistemtico de nuestra Bandera; ni es un g.i- tar VTVA LA PATRIA! con.o quien repite una leccin apren- dida en las aulas de las escue- las! NO! Todo panameo sabe el valor exacto de sus debe.es, porque conoce como pocos pue- blos, sus derechos. El hombre es libre cuando comprende la Libertad. Y la demostracin ms evidente de que el panameo lo es y le sabe, es la ltima cruzada 4ue ucaba de vivir y padecer. Nadie que fu elegido para regir tos destinos de un pueblo, puede "someter" despus a ese pue.j.0, a titulo de dios mitolgico, o de hombre excecrable. Y menos qu "someterlo", herirlo pro- fundamente en la propia entra- a, de su libetrad: La Carta Constitucional que le dio el De- lecho escrito HEMOS TRIUNFADO! Y el nico orgullo que nos acompa- a al repetir esta verdad, alen- tadora de nuevas luchas a) ne- cesario fueran, es el de haber cumplido con nuestro deber. Frente al ejemplo de todo un pueblo; frente l ejemplo de nuestras mujeres, "matro.iss dignas de los Gracos de toda la Amrica", qu menos que alzar nuestra voz y pregonar a todos los vientos, que HEMOS TRIUNFADO!? Hay quien pue- da discutirnos esa verdad? Hay quien se atreva a negarnos la profunda satisfaccin que nos cabe en esta frase: HEMOS TRIUNFADO!? La intensa labor desarrollada en las ltimas horas, tenia que culminar en la caida del t;.an No TftWa tuerza capaz de o,x> verte a la avalancha que s.l'- niCica "un pueblo con razn de existir", y los que 'a han vUto tomar 'por el camino de la ven- dad, aben que Jams!... U> rr.*! podrn guiarlo con la ial- sia, la mentira y el engao. LA ASOCIACIN PANAMEA DE RADIODIFUSORES, qne no c.lencl un Instante su voz a- lenta&ora, y expuso cuanto te- nia que perder, sabe hasta don- de ha costado el sacrificio ce llamarnos todava "un pueblo Ubre". Y sabemos que sin in- terferencias extraas, podemos resolver nuestros conflictos, que esta vez. alcanzaron la magni- tud de la tragedla. Que este e- jemplo no se pierda! Que sta remilla fructificadora de bien- andanzas futuras! Con ms razn que a nadie, nos corresponde la ->alabra de cordura, si tuvimos m la mis- ma voz, la fuerza que ::vant los nimos, que alent los esp- ritus, que sostuvo los pies fir- mes sobre- la tierra, para re- sistir el ataque de las hordas asesinas. No ms sangre que la ya tristemente derramada! No ms rencores que los que ha sembrado el tirano, en su fu- nesto paso por la Alta Magis- tratura de la Nacin! Ninguna venganza debe manchar nues- tras dignas manas de hombres libres. Fuerza es detener los errores y los malvados Instin- tos! Hay que "Echar Margaritas a los Cerdos", para ;ue apren- dan "los malos hijos de la pa- trla", del bien, el bien mismo. El Hogar, la Familia, la Pa- tria eat salvada. No pongamos ms luto en su regazo acoge- dor. Defenderla es mantener la paz y la cordura. Salvarla es sostener el pabelln de la dig- nidad. Slo con el gesto altiVo podemos indicar a los que la mancharon, que toda intentona de herirla, contribuye nada ms a hacerla invulnerable. "Codo con codo" es la palabra de or- den... "Corazn con corazn", es la fibra redentora de todos loa errores. Pueblo panameo: A ti no podemos darte las gracias por- que tu conquista slo es tuya! Al cuerpo de la Polica Nacio- nal, con sus dignos dirigentes, que hicieron posible que la fuer- za del mal no triunfara, cree- mos ofenderlo al le damos las gracias, porque ese digno cuer- po es tambin el pueblo mis- mo. A los diputados de la A- samblea Nacional, que valien- temente afrontaron el peligro de oponerse al Mandatario que crey atemorizarles, despojn- doles de la investidura que les daba personalidad j u r idica, tampoco creemos poder darles las gracias. Todos, todos son el pueblo panameo. Todos, todos, dieron parte de si mismos en esta prueba que acabamos de vencer, y cada uno dio lo que poda perder. Pero si nos corresponde repe- tir, como colofn de esta lu- cha fratricida, las palabras del Honorable seor Presidente de la Repblica, don Alcibiades A- rosemena, en el Acto de Jura- mentar el carg para el que fue designado jurdicamente. Dijo asi: La voluntad ma es cumplir fielmente la Constitu- cin Nacional. Prometo un Go- bierno de concordia. Tomare medida* para que los prximos comicios sean honrados com nunca ae ha visto en Panam El Honorable Presidente de la Repblica, don Alcibiades Aro- semena, resumi en tres partes su cometido: Respeto a la Ley Escrita. Honradez y Buen Go- bierno. Que Dios guie vuestros pasos en la Magistratura que vals a ocupar, seor Presiden- te! Que el Altsimo .o os haga olvidar esas palabras que en el momento ms culminante de nuestra historia, habis pro- nunciado! Y para cerrar nuestro Edito- rial de esta tarde,, permtasenos la palabras que ms elocuen- cia pueden tener en esta hora definitiva para toda la Am- rica; las palabras que deben ser nuestro credo las palabra.- del Hijo de Dios, en la hora del sacrificio y del perdn: "Paz. en la tierra a los hom- bres de buena voluntad". SE INVIERTEN LOS PAPELES EN LUGAR DE ESTADOS UNIDOS CHARLESTON, mayo 12 (UP) Tres bellas Jvenes fueron acusadas por un comerciante de 25 aos de edad de obligar- lo, a punta de cuchillo, a man- tener relaciones sexuales con una de ellas. Las tres jvenes fueron a- rrestadas y sern Juzgadas a- cusadas de rapto y fueron iden- tificadas como dos hermanas y una amiga. La polica dijo que el comer- ciante haba recogido a las tres jvenes en la carretera y una de ellas que se encontraba en el asiento delantero sac una cuchilla, obligando al joven a sentarse en el asiento trasero, mientras una de ellas se apo- der del timn. El carro se detuvo en un ca- mino solitario. El loven dijo que la Joven que se encontra- ba en el asiento trasero lo obli- g a tener relaciones sexuales con l, mientras las otras dos que se encontraban en el asien- to delantero lo nm'enazaban con la cuchilla en el cuello. A la victima le. robaron 10 dlares, llevndolo luego a una farmacia ordenndole qde com- prara perxido. En lugar de ha- cer la compra, el joven llam a la polica. PANAM DEPOSITA VN INSTRUMENTO WASHINGTON El Encargado de Negocios de Panam, seor Guillermo Endara, deposita en la Unin Panamericana los instrumentos de ratificacin del Tratado Americano de Soluciones Pacfcas (Pacto de Bogot) y del Convenio Econmico de Bogot. Aparecen en la fotografa con el seor Endara, de izquierda a derecha: el Dr. William Manger, Secretario General Ad- junto de la OEA, el Dr. Manuel Can ves, del Departamento Jurdico de la Unin Panamericana y el Dr. Alberto Lleras, Secretarlo General de la Organizacin de los Estados Americanos. La destitucin de MacArthur fue una excusa, dice Taft WASHINGTON, Mayo 12 (UP) El Senador Roben A. Ta.'t dijo- que la administracin el Presidente Truman est usan- do l pacto de defensa comu- nista entre China y Rusia como excusa para distltur al Gene- ral Douglas MacArthur. El Secretarlo de Defensa. declarado en repetidas ocasio- nes que la poltica de MacAr- t'.iur slngnlfIcaria una gusira con Rusia, para la cual el mundo Ubre no est preparado todava. Taft., 3lnembargo, dijo a un periodista que ei testimonio te Marshall no lo hara camoiur de parecer. Dijo que l todava creo que Batatas nidos debe escoger entre "e^^rpaciguamler.- to' en Corea o la adopcin tjcl plan de MacArthur de llevrr '.i. guerra a la China Comunista. \ Estado obtenga nuevos ingresos y pueda prestar todos tos ser- El edificio para el primer ciclo que hay en Penonom Por el Lie. Ricardo Jan Jr. se puede manifestar que la pri- maria es ms importante que la Sociales de Coln Por JUDITH BEETONCINI Tel 431 Aptdo ltM Felicitaciones El da ocho de los corrientes celebr sus natales la seora doa Raquel W. de Ducruet. Nos complacemos en hacerle llegar, aunque algo tarde, nues- tras felicitaciones. Sum el da ocho, un ao ms de vida la nia Amlnta I. Lombardo. Con tal motivo la felicitamos y le deseamos muchos aos ms de vida. A nadie escapa la situacin decreciente de las rentas fisca- les. Reilejo Inmediato del estado de la economa nacional e Inter- nacional. Esto lo advierte desde el profano en asuntos econmi- cos, hasta el cotidiano Investi- gador en esas modernas disci- plinas. Pero tambin es comunmente aceptado, que el Estado con- temporneo tiene como fin pri- mordial servir a la comunidad. Nivelar lo ms posible la convi- vencia socla. Hacerle ms lle- vadera, para ser viable el pro- greso de toda la Nacin. Y es por eso, que los dirigentes, a medida que avanzamos hacia el porvenir, tandrn que agudizar tar progresivamente sus capaci- dades de trabajo para que el secundarla, o universitaria o vi- ceversa, y preocuparse por una, ms que por las otras. Cierto fu, que Sarmiento, el Maestro de Amrica se preocupar por la primarla, secundaria y uni- versitaria. Cuidar yp reocupar- se por una sola, seria a la larga, contribuir al derrumbe de toda la construccin. Algunos manifiestan, que hay comunidades que todo lo esperan del Estado y que no laboran in- dividualmente para conseguir su propio bienestar. Esto est bien en lo referente a otras ac- tividades, pero en lo que se re- fiere a Educacin, Higiene y Sa- lubridad, el Estado tiene que crecerse en esas direcciones por ms su Inteligencias, aquil- que-aai no lo se obtiene el pro- greso de ciertas secciones del pais sino a toda la Repblica. Sin embargo Penonom a pesar de que comprende la obligacin ms apartadas comunidades de- manden. En estos tiempos ser- vicios como educacin higiene y salubridad no se pueden sos- layar. La poblacin aumenta. Y | los estadistas no deben cru- zarse de brazos. NI encogerse de hombros porque las rentas pblicas no se estiran. Quedan- do as sin educarse y sin cu- rarse gran parte de la pobla- I clon. Cuando se habla de educa- cjn debe pensarse tanto en 11- ! bros. ltimos alumnos, maestros I y profesores como en edificios. Estos se completan. Es con to- dos estos elementos juntos que puede lograrse lo que llamamos , educacin. Penonom tiene a- lumnos secundarlos suficientes y profesores competentes. Le hace falta nicamente, el edifi- , co apropiado para conseguir que aquella Importante seccin de la Repblica adquiera com- pleto el equipo necesario, para ! la preparacin de esos jvenes. Aparte de la comodidad e hi- giene, que un edificio moderno brindara, se obtendra el aho- rro, que significa el pago men- sual de alquileres ne los varios NO SE RINDE.El refugiado v dselmlnados edificios, que son Pavel A. Savich, un raso blanco ahora nelesarlos para dar ilu- de 64 aos de edad, se pone su jamlento a centenares de j- uniforme de coronel de la Rusia venes en plena adolescencia. zarista, al llegar a San Francisco,! No hay que olvidar, aue en procedente de Filipinas. Dijo Sa-' poca, cuando se trata de edu- vich: "Quiero pelear e nel ejerc- cacln no se le puede dar ms to que derrocar e rgimen Co- preferencia a una parte aue a munista". otra. O dicho de otro modo, no vicios sociales, que hasta las del Estado en esos menesteres ha aquilatado de bloques, lo he- hemos visto brindar el terreno necesario para la construccin de ese urgente edificio. Gesto ste, que debe tomarse muy en cuenta y verse la manera por sobre toda circunstancia, de que se Inicie cuanto antes la cons- truccin dell ocal, que ha ds servir para alojar rA Primer Ciclo Secundarlo, hoy disemina- do de una maner, inconvenien- te en toda la ciudad. Ricardo Jan Jr. mF m siquier mmmtm** j ea is^ss shms i LECHE CONDENSAD* NESTL Cgawg, OTOS OGWPAS y CAIARR05 lome \ ******* MARAA APARECE! HABLEMOS del HOGAR y de la MODA HIESTM VA f OrUUU SUPLEMENTO FEMENINO ksrvio noy LKTOU pectoml son M1DRE5 LABORATORIOS ZOILO RUIZ A. S CA. Aunque algo tarde, hacemos llegar nuestras felicitaciones al nio Sebastin Qulrs F., hijo del hogar de don Sergio Qui- ros y seora Lastenla de Qul- rs, quien festej sus natales el da ocho de los corrientes. Tambin cumpli un ao ms de vida el da A del presente mes, el nio Rubn Catano Jr., a quien congratulamos con tal motivo. Cumpleaos de ayer En medio del aprecio y esti- ma de los suyos, celebr ayer la grata fecha de su cumple- aos la seora doa Lucila de Calvlo. Sea ello motivo para enviarle un cordial saludo de felicitacin. Cumpleaos de hoy Hoy sbado celebra su cum- pleaos la joven seora Ligia Simons de Dearmas. Formula- mos votos porque disfrute de todo gnero de felicidades. Hacemos llegar nuestras ron gratulaciones a la seorita Vll- ba lira Rosana, quien hoy s- bado celebra su cumpleaos. Baile en la "Unin Israelita" La colonia Israelita en esta ciudad ofrece en los salones del "Unin Israelita" hoy sba- do para celebra el tercer ani- versario del Estado de Israel, un gran baile comenzando a las 10 p.m. La entrada ser com- pletamente gratis y habr gran- des sorpresas. AyudeasusAlmorranal Ki tiene almorrana* nue oinmi romeiOn, hemorragia, almorrana* gBfl tfirnaa o externan, no nufra un da m; ain probar I Chinaroid. Kn pocoi mini - toa al Chinaroid principia a combat e aua almorranaa de tres manarais 1. Calma el dolor y la oomein. I. Ajn - da a encoger los tejldoa dolorido * Inflamado. 1. Avuda a clcatrlaar la membranaa Irritadas. Solicita attMBom kCtntaMNIti ESTAMOS ABIERTOS de 8 a 12:30 y de 2 a 6 (Mo le gustaran me/or ^ ios tiernos pollos BIRDS EYE? R. P. M. LA POSTAL Ave. Central 68 No hjy desperdicios Usted paga aolamer* por lo qua ci misal Sabe mejor fct LEUCHE EN POLVO WHLE MILK POWDfR _V"AA.,N D foailFICD "lli C^1** II lilil me, ITKtWlftt """" CMPRELA HOY MISMO ! al-4 PREGUNTE ammtUw > Si cierto qua nuestro clima tropical exige una dieta pobre en grasas ds origen animal; y que para mantener nuestro cuerpo en mejor estado ds salud ss dabs cocinar con grasas vegetales? Hflnorffl ES PURA GRASA VEGETAL VAGINA CUATRO T .- AN AM A AMERICA DIARIO WPKWNPHKT1 SBADO, MATO II, 1HI t d < 4 - CRUCIGRAMA - 10 HORIZONTALES: 1rbol de madera ireelosa. 4Sal de recepciones. 9-JVdverblo de cantidad. 12Plantigrade. 13Nombre de mujer. 14Demostrativo. 15Natural de Lorena. 17Desmenuzar con el molino. 19Nombre de varios empera- dores alemanes. 20Conjuncin. 11Del verbo caber. 31Lineas trigonomtricas. 16Decir oraciones. 27Proyectil. 28Letra castellana. 29Caso de pronombre. 30Machetes de Filipinas. 31Preposicin. 32Preposicin inseparable. 33Bahas pequeas. 34Quito la vida. 35Haoer saludos. 37Puntos geogrlicos. 38Agarraderas. 39Cuadrumano. 40Romano clebre por su austeridad. 42Meteoros. 45Del verbo asar. 48Fertilizo. 48Afresis de ahora. 49Artculo, Pl. 60Uno de ios siete sabios de Orela. IIHoja purgante. VERTICALES: 1Tasa sin asa. 2Plantigrade 3Corcovas. 4Destinos. 8Del verbo arar 6Caso de pronombre. 7Negacin. Inv. 8Diosa de la venganza. 9Sandia. 10Cocine en seco. 11Hermana, religiosa. 18Fluido imponderable. 18Recen. 20Extremidades de la tierra. 21Rabos. 22Trampa o embuste. 23Traspasar el agua. 24Defuncin. 25Lneas trigonomtricas. 27Casamientos. 30Piel curtida de camero u oveja, Pl 31Dias de la semana. 33Natural de Rusia. 34Cacahuete. 38Hojas de lata. 37Descubridor de Amrica. 39Simio. 40Oxido de cal. 41Agarradera. 42Igual al 1 vertical. 43Apcope de santo. 47Smbolo del Boro. km ition O ATE UUUUUfcJ UUtaUETJ ubbu'ju uaauati MU LilU Hl'ILI MU HUUH tiUH UUH rhr uau aaa?i raciuauHa iHiau LSUULJUiJ UNI'ini 'iHTJMia.a-'I IJMHU MrJJ UU'.l HMU LILI!.! UillJIr*. IIM 'VIH >JUU J!i WI'JUU'-IJ LSTlUU'J'l umhm'jh HOGJan DETENIDOS POR LA PRIMAVERA^Bstee camiones del ejrcito norteamericano ae encuentran paralados por el deshielo del Ro Han en Crea. El Cuerpo de Ingenieros hiso un puente bajo el agna para legrar el cruce del rio. LA SIESTA DEL SARGENTOtele ear-gento fue sorprendido mientras dorqnia la siesta, sin sapatoi y hasta sin medias, durante un mo ment de receeo de la lucha en Corea. La loto- grafa fue tomada a "vista de gusano". * K EG RES A JOSEFINALa cantante y bailarina Josefina Baker, que cautiv a Paris hace 15 aos usando una falda de gul- neos, y casi ms nada, ba regresado a su hogar para aparecer en Broadway por primera ves en II aos. Aqu vemos a la cantante, de 47 aos de edad, -ms o menos", con su esposo, el franci Jos Bouillon. COREA ESTA LEJOS.Estes soldados acaban de regresar del frente coreano y, por supuesto, se divierte en un cabaret de Cali- fornia. Coa esas chicas y esas piernas, ni Se acuerdan que existe Crea. REFUGIO ATMICODiseado para ser Instalado en el jar- dn de ana caaa corriente, este refugio prefabricado de acere es ueste a la venta por una fbrica de San Francisco. El refugio tiene alacenas para alimente* y medicinas y tiene capacidad para Minee personas. I EL PRESIDENTE IE PREPARATres nias guias, miembros de la tropa de Mujeres Guias de Washington, le entregan al Pre- sidente Truman un libro en donde estn todas las instrucciones en ease de bombardeo atmoco. Por lo visto, a| Presidente no lo sorprendern dormido. El "Aviso Oportuno" Es Barat y Efectivo CARTAS AL DIRECTOR NO El POLTICA HILDA DE SANDOVAL Mayo 12 de 1951. Sr. Director de EL PANAMA AMERICA Presente. Ir. Director: Como en el diarlo de su di- reccin, fecha de ayer U de mayo, le entre la lista "de las personas detenidas de ma- or relieve politico" ml nom- re incluido all, quiero hacer la siguiente aclaracin: como en el diarlo "La Estrella de Pa- nam" de feoha 10 ali a dos columnas y en primera pgina que: "La polica pide a la ciu- dadana respalde al Presidente doctor Arnulfe Arlas" y luego entre otras cosas dlee: "Asi- mismo pide a la ciudadana su respaldo al actual Presidente de la Repblica doctor Arnul- fo Arias Madrid por -er l per- sona a quien corresponde el le- gtimo ejercicio de la primera Siagistratura, en la seguridad e que renacer en el pals, la paz y la tranquilidad". Con todas estas cosas y no- ticias de un peridico de pres- tigio como "La Estrella de Pa- nam" resolv Ir a la Presi- dencia, a tomar datos perio- dsticos para "La Nacin.", dia- rlo ecuatoriano del cual soy corresponsal. Para ral, como para todos los de all presentes, fue una sorpresa or decir al doctor Arlas que bajaran las mujeres porque la polica venia a la Presidencia. Lo inesperado de todo, y el seguido 'iroteo fue cosa tan K,>ida que >-esolvi que- darme en compaa de mis a- migos personales dofu Ana Ma- tilde de Arlas, doa Carmen de MacKllven. dofla Manuellta de Salamin doa Maria Miranda, del Licenciado Jos Clemente de Obaldia y otras personas ms. Creo por haberme encontra- do all en el momento lst- rlco que .vivi Panam y como amiga personal de las distin- guidas personas mencionadas arriba, no debe confundirse nunca: periodismo con polti- ca, porque mi calidad de ex- tranjera no me lo permite. A pesar de que manos arriba, pa- labras soeces, y ametralladoras Sn el pecho se nos intim a- resto y salida de Palacio. De esto no me quejo seor Direc- tor porque cada pais acta se- gn su modo de vivir. agradecindole infinito la pu- blicacin de esta carta, quedo de Ud. como siempre amiga y S. I., Hylda Pino d* Sandoval, Corresponsal, ecuatoriana. DANZA DE LAS HORAS El triunfe de Pas Estensoro en las elecciones presidenciales de Bolivia, al ae confirma, ser nueva demostracin de las velei- dades democrticas. No hace un lustre el gobierno que presidia el coronel Villarrcel y de que Paz Estensoro era la segunda figu- ra, caa en medio de una da las ms horrendas tragedlas quo Amrica ha presenciado. El presidente Villarreel. varies minis- true, el jefe de la polica y otros funcionarios fueron ahorcados. Por muchas horas el cadaver del desventurado presidente colg de un farol en la plaaa principal. El partido del Movimiento Nacional Revolucionarlo ee haba presentado como reaccin ante los fracasos de las anteriores administraciones. Ofreci na pro- grama nuevo y muchas cosas, que no realiz. En realidad, al r- gimen lo diriga una camarilla militar do tipo nasi, ano de cu- vos directores bebi el veneno en el propio Berlin. Pero si ad- ministrativa y nacionalmente el M. N. R. no pudo cumplir porte siquiera de su programa, en cambio, ofreci al pueblo boliviano el espectculo de una ferocidad no conocida antes, a pesar do que en las pginas de la historia de aquel pais abundan lee epi- sodios sangrientos. El actual ministre de relaciones citeriores, doctor Xilvettl Arce, denunci en un libro clebre las atrocidades cometidas por el M. N. R. en numerosas personalidades notables, asesinadas sin frmula de juicio, despus de haberlas sometido a torturas increbles El pueblo de La Paz, que ahora ha dado sus totes a Esteneero, se arroj a las calles, hombres, mujeres y ni* os, resuelto a perecer e a acabar con la sanguinaria dictadura. Fue un episodio, al brbaro, llene tambin de herosmo. Ahora vuelven al podar les hombres del M. N. R. Los mismos que, ayu- dados por elementos comunistas, mantuvieron al pas en cons- tante agitacin en los ltimos anea. Los ciudadanos ene rodea ron al ilustre presidente Herteog. una de las victimas de las atro- cidades del M. N. R., y a su sucesor, el doctor Urrlolagoitla. re- presentan cuanto tiene Bolivia de mejor v ms sane. Verdade- ros patriotas, empeados en mantener en su patria el Ideal de- mocrtico. Lo que han demostrado dejndose sanar las eleccio- nes, a pesar t.e que en el debate no jugaban slo sus posiciones, sino sus propina vidas. Tal vez Pas Estensoro baya modificado sus procedimientos. Tal ves no quiera sumir otra vos a Bllelo en los horrores de donde la sacaron los varanes vencidos hoy. Seria un milagro, que no es de esperar del victorioso lder, cargado de edloe y de- seos de vnganse. Ahora sube gracias a todas las malas artes de la demagogia, aliado o loa comunistas v a teda la pandilla de Izquierda. No Podr resolver el mximo problema boliviano: la la dependencia en que vive el Estado de la produccin minera, de la que Bolivia no obtiene sino nfimo producto. Y ah es en donde a oort< piase. Paz Entensoro v sus amigos se vern de nuevo abocados a una realidad implacable. ' Del punto de vista internacional, el triunfo de Paz Estenso- ro es para la Amrica libre grave amenaza. Como es sabido, el M. N. R. es partido fascista, v su mximo Inspirador el seor Paz Estensoro. Ahora queda el sur del continente dominado per tres dictadores: Pern en la Argentina, Odria an el Per y Pas Eaten- toro en Bolivia. Por una Irona singular, la democracia derroto a la democracia en Bolivia. Las elecciones puras que presidi el gobierne aetual, le abren la puerta a una dictadura sangrienta v sombra. Sobre las libertades, cada dio ms precarias, de que disfrutan los puebles de este hemisferio, so extiende otra nube negra. Profeso a Bolivia y a su pueble el ms sincero y profundo afecto, v por esto veo con pena v temor el resultado imprevisto de las elecciones libres, que culminarn on una catstrofe, al loe hadoe no lo remedian. Na reatan en la Amriea del lur sino dos atalayas d la 11- bzertadi Ecuador en el norte. Chile en el sur. Dos faros cuya luz no puede apagarse. (Tomado de EL TIEMPO, de Bogot, Colombia)________ 1 equipo de Panam sobresali en el fildeo colectivo del VIII Campeonato de Baseball PILDEO COLECTIVO POR EQUIPO EN EL VIII CAMPEONATO DE Aha Pre sin Songu me o 8i la ana PrMies Sansutma i* ma nsreee, toleres el eorna. soiert. ce estse. 4ISeult*4 eer alivie eeji laaUsuaee fi eajat ?fa- HTKOXea i farmacia f aver ti* a.v Panam ............ Coln .............. Herrera ............ Bocas del Toro ..... Chirlqu .......... Darln ........... Cocl ............ Lo Santos ....... Veraguas......... San Blas ......... a a BASEBALL EN t'HITRE P.O. A. E. J.. T.CH. Ave. ..... 234 106 10 3 349 .97L \l 6 5 361 S19 .953 ..... an 91 .962 ..... 199 W -20 B 301 .933 ::::: $ 36 S 3 1 S49 327 !P02 ..... 314 133 45 11 401 w ..... 237 114 46 6 S91 Seo ..... 3)2 IOS 44 t 369 .381 ..... 114 135 65 6 424 .147 ABREVIATURAS: P.O. Put Outs; A. Asistencias: E. Erro- res: J.D. Jugadas Dobles: T.CH. Total de Chances: AVE. - Average. J. de las Mercedes Muoz, Compilador Oficial. 4i . # . vende Ud. cigarrillos o ropo sport, EL PANAMA AMERICA It proporciona ms clienres porque tiene mil lectores. vende Ud1. batidores o artculos da ceso no hay medio majar da obtener compradoras. se dedica Ud. o la venta da licores. o cosmticos, o si par el contrario quiere proporcionar entretenimiento ya sea por Jas ondas radalas. Clubes nocturnas a cines,EL PANAMA AMERICA la suministra mayor nmero da cuantas. vende Ud. frjoles... o caviar . EL PANAMA AMERICA sabe dar lo majar publicidad y a ms lectores qu ningn atro paridica. su ramo comercial san los bienes rafees o los automviles, cualquier coso en que una familia sa Interese, EL PANAMA AMERICA sa Iti mes y par madia da l mes compras se hacen. su presupuesto da publicidad tiene que ser pequeo; nuestro presupuesta de resultados siempre es mayor qua cualquiera previsin. SBADO, MAYO It, 1151 EL PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE 'Ufan* S-1118 Informes par esta seccin te reciben en la r\eaaccin Jbocial de EL PANAMA-AMERICA HORAS: |:M lllf* A A.artado 1M Advenimiento Nuestras congratulaciones pa- ra al seor Lorenso Hincapi y enera Olga V. de Hincapi, por 1 feliz arribo da un varonclto ocurrido el mircoles 9, en la Clnica fian Fernando. Enfennoi Pronta mejora le desame* al seor Jorge Zarak, quien se en- cuentra recluido an la Clinlca San Fernando. Abandonan el Hospital Acompaada de su recin na- cido se encuentra de nuevo en su residencia la seora Mara Isabel I. de Brln. 8Z M.CrUaNAdd.eoM.?eyn SsL** *0*n0 C,,rl" /florlU Manongulta da Obal- NioJuan B. Arla, Jr. Dofla Manuellta O. de Eapaner "El Ave del Paraso" ofrece el espectculo grandioso de la Naturaleza bella y bravia La seora Elvlrlta V. de Arias abandon la clinlca acompaa- da de su recin nacida. Anotamos complacidos la me- jora del seor Anastasio Ruiz, quien abandon ayer al hospi- tal Panam, Cumpleaos de Hoy Seorita Berta Alicia Corro Seor Pedro Altamlranda Seor Frank H. Morrice Seor Clarence O. Boyd Seora Clementina de Moreno Levantadas Nocturnas SI ufre Vi. de levantada! noc- turna, dolor d cipalda, dolor Blaraa, perdida de view, nervloal- dad o debilidad, debe ayudar Inme- ''U51S5.U '* 9'Sndula Pretala eon ROORNA. Rata maravllloaa nedlolna le haca antlr ma Joven, V*f tvuto dornflr aln Interrup- cin. Compre RQOKNA en au boilca. Un espectculo maravilloso, un espectculo lleno de esplendor, se dijera una paleta de pintor por su riqueaa de colores, es la magistral superproduccin de la "20th Century Fox", titulada: 'El Ave del Paraso". Balo al bri- llante direccin de Dalmar Daves, quien es a la vez. el li- bretista y realizada por 1 pro- ductor Harmon Jones, los estu- dios de la aclamada productora pusieron para producir esta pe- lcula todos sus recursos v ar- maron, al efecto, una expedicin en un lujoso barco en el cual se constituy todo el elenco arts- tico v todos los expertos respon- sables en la produccin de esta pelcula, llamada ,por su rique- za artstica, por su maravilloso colorido/por el esplendor de sus espectculos, a figurar entre las obras clsicas de su gnero en el sptimo arte. Para Debra Paget. estrella en el rol femenino de esta pelcula por mil conceptos encantadora, la hondura del amor que alia tiene que representar en la pan- talla, as lo asegura, est fuera del alcance y de la comprensin v de los sentimientos de nuestro mundo civilizado. Manos litera- rio, menos revestido de los en- cajes de la literatura y del arte. es, sin embargo, mucho ms honda y ma Intensamente hu- mana. Sostiene que ella Jams habra podido Interpretar los sentimientos de Kalua, la mu- chacha protagonista de la obra, sin antes haber pernoctado, co- mo lo hizo, una larga temporada entre los Ingenuos y sinceros ha- bitantes de los mares del Sur. Louis Jourdan, quien realiza a la perfeccin el papel de Andre Laurence, asegura, por su parte, que l no tuvo mucho que es- forzarse para desempear el pa- pel de hombre occidental que se enamora de una mujer de loe mares del Sur, pero que le fue ?rT,\T.nle. d,ic11 comprender los celos y las pasiones gigantas durante toda la poca en que En maravilloso tecnicolor "El Ave del Parao" ofrece el pec- taculo grandioso de una natura- rinrt 'iX18, d0nde lR grandiosi- dad de los panoraamsfcorre pa- 5J5, oon '<} majestuosidad de lo, elemntos desencadenados a por- ?.'. Que ,lmn de fondo a sus moolM Inefables v a su vida pa- esU n^ffi1110'01 WuMloa de esta pelcula que va ha Impues- to, moada obligando a losmo- a. ,3.a i*nz*/ modelos estilo "El do, nn S". '""on disefla- feWor %%' m0dUt V dl- ESTA COMPLACIDO_________ ha vigorizado su, actitud" en contra de continuar enviando **!2 u Chln* ">J* HvT^n,y .luc, hy traJ * civil por primera vez desde que 5,r?d^a ''dos Unidos con MacArthur, y dijo que el Ge- neral no se ha puesto an ro- pa de paisano y rehus hacer conjeturas sobre cundo lo ha- r, aunque ya los srstres que lo visitaron en el Hotel Waldorf Astoria han hecho loa trajes de civil que orden. PAUINA CINCO- TELEFUNKEN. SE REVELA to a ese continente en el subsi- guiente tratado de seguridad. l> Inspirar la resolucin de muchos pases no slo de Ajic. aino tambin de Europa y el Cercano Oriente que viven :*- hora a la sombra re la pote.icla comunista y hacerle saber que io necesitan apresurarse a po- .erse de acuerdo con el comu- nismo en las condiciones que pueden lograr qua signifiquen completa sumisin g) Inspirar a quienes putda tener que llamarse a luchar t-m grandes desventajas en caso de encontrarse frente a un sbito ataque violento de la Unin Ui- vltica o la China Comunista. h) Subrayar y urgir la rpi- da creacin de las defensas del mundo occidental. 1) Hacer que las Naciones U- nldas logren su primer gran e- f.ierro en la seguridad colectiva y producir la coalicin del mun- do libre, de valor incalculable - los Intereses de seguridad na- cional de Estados Unidos. EL SEPELIO DEL MAYOR OOMEZ. Una Inmensa concu- rrencia rindi tributo postumo a los dos militares murria en la lucha que ocurri en la Presidencia de la Repblica, el jueves en la tarde. Tanto el sepelio del Mayor Lezcano G- mez, como el del Teniente Juan Flores constituyeron una sen- tida demostracin de condolencia. En la foto aparece el en- cabeamiento del cortejo del Mayor Gomes, al que asisti el _________Presidente Arosemena con todo su Gabinete. "EL FANTASMA DEL MAR" Desfile zoolgico Parece que los anmalas que- ran presentar un gran desfile y para ello citaron a todo el reino para que enviaran sus re- presentaciones. El acto se llev a efecto de la manera siguiente: "Abran la marcha las extra- as vrgenes de la Quebrada y el Jardn: la Babaleta y el Pul- gn. 8u estandarte era un spa- lo de lirio. Detrs iba un grupo que representaba la Educacin Pblica, formado por el Cocuvo y la fblgora laternaria. Llevaban como ensea una violeta. Des- pus seguan las siguientes en- tidades: Sociedad Cientfica: El Buho, el Pavonla v la Rana. Sociedad de Ingenieros: El Castor, la Homila, la Abeja y la Araa. Esta ltima especia- lista en puentes colgantes. Sociedad de Beneficencia v Caridad: El Perro, condecora- do ron la Cruz o Sociedad de Ai-tistes: El Armi- o, el Turpial. el Cucarachero, el Azulejo, la Mariposa v la O- ruga. Sociedad de Comercio: El Mur- cilago, el Gato, la Zorra y e Caimn. Soeledad de Temperancia: La Brema v el Gorgojo: eran los ms ouerldos. Sociedad de Industrias t Prn- vedores de Viveros: La Liebre, el Conejo, el Cerdo, el Buey, la O- veja, la Cabra, el Ciervo, el Can- grejo y la Madre-perle. La Alta Nobleza: El Len, el Caballo v el Elefante. El Ejrcito: Bandadas de go- londrinas. Langostas, Patos v Mariposas. El Populacho: Compuesto de bohemios bullangueros e inti- les, como el Mono, el Mico, el Escarabalo. la Chicharra, la Ra- ta, el Saltn, la Chinche, el Gri- llo y la Mosca, las Culebras ve- nenosas, el Tiburn, el Escor- pin, etc., etc. El esnectculo no oodia ser mas pintoresco, ms intenciona- do, mes edificante. No oas el "Rey de la Creacin", el Hombre. No pens que todos eran su sher- manos y muchos, sus compae- ros y amigos". Tomado del Diccionario del Pensamiento, de Ello Fablo E- cheverrl). Rogelio Garca Ortla. SA&P' GBAD0S EN LA UNIVERSIDAD MAYOR DE SAN MARCOS. -, La vista muestra un detalle lateral del techo del Saln de Grado* de la Facultad de Letras en la Universidad Mayor de San Marcos de Lima, que fu en la poca Virrevnal la Capilla de Nrettra Seora de Loreto erigida por los Jesu- tas en su Noviciado v que despus perteneci al Convictorio de San Carlos. La ms antlrua Universidad del Nuevo Mun- do celebrar* el 18 de Mayo su 400 Aniversario de fundacin debiendo conducir los aviones de Panagra a muchos invitados especiales que concurrirn a 1. celebraeln. EN EL DA DE LA ENFERMERA La oportuna llegada de Macdonald Carey libra a Marta Toren de los atrevimientos de Carl Esmond, en una tensa escena de la pelcula "El Fantasma del Mar", de Universal-Internatio- nal, con Robert Douglas en otro de los paple* principales. ^^^^ Hoy en el Teatro Tropical. J) Prevenir a ios pueblos tras ti teln de hierro que sus diri- gentes estn empeados en gue- rras de agresin y que el mun- do Ubre resistir* ste delito. S> Nuestra actuaein en - tos momentos deeb ser de con- solidacin de la gran mayor'? ci las Naciones Unidas. HU. mayora no es meramente de parte de esa organizacin, sino UPTON tambin de las naciones con as cuales podramos tener necesa- riamente que contar como alia- dos en caso que la Unin ou- vltlca sobre nosotros. "Adems, a raserva de crear la potencia de nuestra seguridad nacional, debemos actual cui gran prudencia en lo que res- pecta ampliar la zona de hosti- lidades. Los pasos que podriun Justificarse y que podran Jar alguna ayuda a la campaa de Corea podran no ser benefi- ciosos si envolvieran a Jaun o Europa Occidental en hostili- dades en gran escala. Reconocemos, por supuesto, que podra no ser posible mili- tarmente una resistencia con- tinuada con las fuerzas lirriTia- Gas con que usted tiene que en- frentarse a los grahdes eJfcl- tos chinos. Adems, en la uc- tual situacin mundial, sus juerzas deben conservarse con* o Instrumento de defensa en el Japn y otras partes". "Blnembargo, algunos de los importantes propsitos mencio- nados arriba podran ser apo- yados si usted pensara que mo- ran prcticos y aconsejables en la resistencia continuada desde las Islas adyacentes a Corea, particularmente dede Cheju-Do si resultara imprcti- to retener una parte importan- te de la propia Corea"- No Asma En2 Pollo y Fideo yv Tomate y Vegetle Sabrosa Econmica Nutritiva PRODUCTO NUEVO Helados Concentrados "Upton Frostee U VERDAD ES... que a mi familia le gusta comer (Han y euano,eirvo alga de au agrado no vacilan an prodi- garme alabanzas. Por ejemplo, la sopa d ventalla qua lea Serv rteienlamante... Qu sabrosa!-exclamaron a coro. Me halag muchsima, POro demoa al Clear lo qua ai del Csar. Le verdad a que se deba a qua aquella opa era opa de Vegetales Campbell's, lal se lo dije, rapt estaba asombrado. Esi ue Campbell' nace esta deliolos* y nutritiva sepeles expliqu cocinando muchos vegetales distintos, en plena madures, en un rico y substan- cioso caldo de carne de rea. Y todo lo que tengo que hacer es agregar Igual cantidad de agua, calentarlo y a la mesa! Pap gulA un ojo y>tBjo Casi una coeaide completa. Estudia usted modistera? Se gana la vida como modista? ADQUIERA HOY MISMO UNA MAQUINA DE COSER DE FABRICACIND C A C C I ALEMANA INSUPERABLE TAIT ! PAGUE SOLO Bl. 25 00 y llvela a tu casa HOY MISMO! Puede adquirirla por CLUB o a PLAZOS /SIRIA "la Vida Es Sueo" en el Nacional hoy No es frecuente ver represen- tada "La, Vida es Sueo", Joya del teatro universal; ni mucho menos con el decoro y fervor artstico con que lo hace la Compaa Lope de Vega. Queda de su versin la calidad prodi- giosa del Segismundo de Carlos Lemos, la elevada tarea de sus compaeros de escena, los ex- celentes decorados del notabi- simo Burman, el acierto de los figurines de Vicente Viudes y la gran labor de la direccin ar- tstica de Jos Tamayo. "La Vida es Sueo" ofrece al lector cada vez que pasa su mi- rada por sus versos, y al espec- tador en los raros momentos que tiene la fortuna de verla re- presentada, un nuevo motivo de atraccin y sugestin. Mgico poder de lo clsico es esta pe- renne vitalidad siempre, reno- vada y sorprendente. La come- dia fu escrita en tiempos del arte barroco, el ms discutido dt todos y acaso tambin el ms Injustamente tratado por las gentes posteriores a su poca. "La Vida es Sueo" sin embar- go, se salv del Juicio severo que suscit el barroquismo lite- rario en los dos siglos ltimos, sustituido hoy por una actitud critica ms sagaz y comprensiva. Tan Indiscutibles son sus mri- tos que, vestidos con el ropaje barroco, se sostuvieron en pie, fcilmente perceptible/ por los pblicos ms diversos. Carlos Lemos nos har sentir los matices complejos y profun- dos de este formidable carcter Los dos monlogos: "Ay msero de m. ay infelices", y ef de Es verdad, pues reprimamos esta fiera condicin... Compartiendo el duelo na- cional, la directiva de la Soc. Nacional de Enfermeras sus- pendi todos los homenajea q' siempre tributa a las enfer- meras del pas. Aprovechamos este grandio- so da, para reconocer una vez ms. la Importancia de sue labores; las euales de- CASP Para limplir la etapa y calmar la picazn! Uve a cabeea y la de toa nioe coi la w j . >. M" "'"01 cop ia pe maijachinip PioJIna. Picaione en la cabci 7 al cuerpo; erupcloaia lerei en la old.Y relie, y rajaaora. lo. pie.. Pioji; liria, n.iiro, parluioi en la callea irte, vflloiai. Compre PIOJIN. ' muestran que los Ideales de Florence Nigthingale, son una realidad en nuestro ambiente. Que nuestro salado y feli- citacin llegue, a cada una, significando fraternidad, en- grandeciendo as, la solidari- dad sincera que siempre debe acompaarnos. La Directiva. Mayo 11 de 1951. La Gripe, a menudo, viene tras de un resfriado Alivie las molestia* de ste, fro ando pecho, cuello, V es- palda ton VapoRub. Ayuda a despejar la nariz, aflojar la Asms, calmar la tos. v,ckVapoRub 101 wutvot polvos "RICRONIZADOS* de CTY . Distribuidores: ca. cyni, s. a. Tls. 3-1701 2-1712 Bfa Mam anuncia AVE.CENTRAL vCALLf 21 g.]TELS. 2-1830 _______ v Z-1933 BAILES INFORMALES TODOS LOS DOMINGOS POR LA TARDE Y POR LA NOCHE Despus de las Carreras o del Golf Antes o despus del cine... EN EL PATIO 5:00 p.m. BAILE y COCTELES ESPECIAL Bebidos con Renes Nacionales I 0.35 6:00 p.m. COMIDA BUFFET B/.3.00 por persona. Nios menores de 12 aos medio-precio. Baile desde las S de la tarde todos los domingos con la orquesta de Ken Delaney v su cantante. Hal Edwards. Informal. Vestido de sport. El Saln Bella Vista permanecer cerrado los domingos. pagina seis ii n i L PANAMA AMERICA DIARIO INDEPENDIENTE -- ' f SBADO, MATO 12. 1951 t d c < i 1 < == NO hay mejor Va para VENDER ALQUILAR COMPRAR etc que la ruta al Departamento de los CLASIFICADOS DEL P Nutstros Agtntei o Nuestras Oficinas lo atenderen: Mnimo por 15 palabras. 3* por cada palabra adkionei. i, i -~~ J SE VENDE Miseelneae SERVICIO LEWII AT*. TivMI No 4 ToL s-mi KJOSKO DE LESSEPt r>rn a rana ata NOVEDADES MORRISON Art 4 oo 'ulU Tfi MU BOTICA CARLTON Avo. Malaoiaaa HJo Tai. **Culaa. SALON DE BELLEZA AMBRH ANO Calk ii Omu Ko. EL PANAMA AMERICA Calla "" Na 17 PaaaaM Ava. Casual 11-17 Calar APROVECHE:Pinturas y esmaltes xtra brillantes a pruebo de mcho. B 3.25 goln. Almacenes Tropidu- ra. SI VINOIN:Cleros, tubtna tare, cara canalada, Fls-Te I carton talador pero calo* roaos) made- ras, lavamanos, oacusodos. ate. loa aracioa mis kajaa aa laca. AGINCIAS OLOIALIS. Vi. i.oe- **. Ilatando o Juon Frooce. tota 3-1503. SE VENDE.: __ Incubadora elctrica. Tel. 3-0255.____________________ Acabamos de recibir cemento blonco. rmica de color y vi'drio verde contro calor. Co Culcidio Gonz- lez, Fabrica da Moscicos. Ave. Cu- bt'Ng. 8.__________________j_ SE VENDE: Sonido Reproductor (Wire Recorder I poro radiodifu- sora, oficina. entretenimientos. Telfono 3-2979. desde 6 p. m. se vend: Bienes Raicea Ofrecemos CHALET de 2 racimaros con 2 baos y PISCINA, a precio y condiciones de pago nunca, vis- tos. S.10.SU0.00. Wolff y Ci. Udo., Cali 5o., 22, Tel. 2-2388. Un anuncio poouefto con grandes ofertas. Lotes de todos tmanos en todas los Urbonliociones a pre- cios realmente bajos. Visitenos personalmente y convenios* de lo asombroso de nutttro oferta. Wolff y Co. Ltdo., Colle 5a.. 22, Tel. 2-2388.__________________. SE VENDE:-----Atractivo chalet dos recimoros en Santo Clora, sola, dinette, cocina y cuarto pora uti- lidades en 1663 M2 de terreno con jardn y rboles frutales. Caso completamente amoblada. Pregun- tar por Ross a'c Casino Santa Cla- ro. Paro informes llame a las 6 p. m. Tal. 3-3212. SE VENDEN: Cachorros de perro lobo legtimos. Informes Comisaria- to El Coco, Son Francisco No. 181. SE VENDE:Motor y toda clase ac- cesorios jeep. Tombin accesorios para cria aves. Carretera Juan Daz 5170.____________ SE VENDE:Meso grande modera. 14 pies por 5. paro taller, ebo- nistero, sastrera, colchonero, ta- picera, B.35.00. Patterson, 36 Este No. II.___________________ MISCELNEA- SE VENDE Automvilea SE VENDE:Renault 1949. En perfectas condiciones. Sacrificio B.500.00: Llame 3-1235 horas d* oficina o 3-2503. PERSIANAS VENECIANAS. Se ha- cen a la medida y se refaccionan^ Se dan presupuestos. "Colon Wood Sorvico". telfono 543-L. Calle 7a. No. 2003. Coln, R. P- Hio sober por este medio que tengo el tiquete No. 0758 de lo rifa del carro Chrysler que se jug el da 6. Virgilio Santos. ^^^____ SE VENDE:GANGA, Pontiac 1950 Streamliner azul. 4 puertas, llan- tos nuevas, hidramitico. Para .ver- lo Home de 8 a 12 p., m. y de 1 :30 a 5 p. m. Tel. 2-0860. De 5 en adelante. Tel. 3-2458. i SE VENDE Botes v Motores SE VENDE;Bote-motor, 20 pies. revisado, equipado para pesco, nuevas condiciones. sacrificio. Averige coso 752-C Corretero Balboa. La separacin S aceptaren propuestas en la oficino del Gerente General del Deporta- ment de Comisariatos, situado en mient0 ha sido fuente de lntran- de tradiciones cristianas y sepa- re del cargo de Director de En- seanza Secundaria, al sr. Francisco Daz, cuyo nombra- SE NECESITA General Excelante oportunidad vendedor entra 21 y 30 de edad que habla ingls y espocl con educacin secunda- rio. Sueldo y comisin 8.150.00 mensual garantizo. Exigimos refe- rencias. Bazar Americano, Central No. 25. Ponama. SE NECESITA:Tubera de .4 pulga- dos barata y buenas condiciones. Carretera Juan Dial 5170. PERDIDO PERDIDO:Durante los sucesos de ayer 10 de Mayo en la Plaza de Herrera un par de anteojos negros en un estuche. Buena gratificacin quien lo devuelva a la Ca. Le- fevre. Colle A No. 5.__________ SE ALQUILA Cuartos SE ALQUILA:Cuorro independien- te pora dos personas sin hijos.' Co- lle Estudente 105 panadera Ancn. arribo de la SE ALQUILA:-Cuorto amoblado, en- trada reparado, pora soltero, calle del Estudiante 73 Apto. 6. SE ALQUILAN:Magnficos cuartos frente ol mar, toda comodidod pa- re matrimonio o jvenes honora- bles. No. 5 primero escolera Ploia 2 de Enero. SF. ALQUILA:Cuarto independiente paro honbre solo o parejo sin ni- os. 14 Oeste No. 51. B.'15.00. 3- 1001. SE ALQUILA:En Avenido Per 68- B. Cuarto grande, cocina, comedor. entrado y servicio independiente, lu y gas. Linda visto, mucho aire, po- tio odelante y atrs. Telfono 3- 0276. Mt. Hope, Zona del Conol, hasta las 3:00 de la tarde del martes, <29 d* mavo de 1951. para suplir ,.620.000 libros, o alternativamente 3I0000 libros de Aicar Fina Gra- quillad para los hogares cris- tianos de nuestra patria. El tiempo ha demostrado, que la protesta elevada por el pue- blo catlico, por el nombra- pormenor oficina del Supply & Service Direc- tor en Balboa Heights, o en la ofi- cina del Gerente General de Comi- sariatos en Mount Hope. Zona oel Conal. nuloda. Los formularios para ha- i miento del Sr. Diaz, se ha justi- cer dichas propuestas, con todos ios. ficado, plenamente, ya que el pormenores, podrn obtenerseen lo Sr. Daz no satisfizo las aspira - racionei del magisterio, y su permanencia en ese elevado cargo es un reto a las tradicio- nes democrticas y cristianas de la Nacin, poroue l u la cau- sa ocasional, de la expulsin inesperada de dos ilustrados sa- cerdotes. Apelamos a su ecuanimidad y al sentimiento cristiano de sus piadosos progenitores, para ser atendidos en nuestra justa as- piracin Con sentimiento de nuestra SE ALQUILA Casas El onceno Sao Paulo jugar el Martes en Madrid MADRID. Mayo 12 iUP> El equipo 8aopaulo Jugar el pr- ximo martes en la festividad de San Isidro Patrono de Madrid frente al equipo Atltico Madri- leo, ganador del campeonato de la Liga, diputndose una co- pa ofrecida por el Avuntamlen- to de la Capital de Espaa. El partido ha sido organizado por la Asociacin de la Prensa de Madrid. Los directivos del Club Brasileo se alojaron en Madrid, y los jugadores se con- cretaron en el planto en un lugar de las afueras de la capi- tal alejndose asi del bullicio de las fiestas que actualmente se esta celebrando. SE ALQUILA:Espacioso residencia, completamente amoblada, en lote de 1,600 metros, alrededor de 1. 000 metros de csped y jordin. 3 recmaras con dos baos, 2 ha- bitociones poro el servicio, con su correspondiente b a o; cocino grande. desayunador; vestibulo; comedor, sola, oficina; garage y dos terroias, situada entre Poitillo y el Club de Golf. Puede ocupar- se por un ao o mis tiempo y es- tar listo el lo. de Junio. Tel. 3- 0255.___________________________ SE VENDE Artculo He Caaa SE ALQUILA Apartamentos SE ALQUILA:Apartamento moder- no, solo, comedor, recmara, coci- na, bao y patio. Ave. Jos de Fbrega 14, Pasadeno. SE ALQUILA:Apartamento: dos re- cmaras, porch, comedor, cocina, servicio. B.50.00. Via Aeropuerto Poitillo No. 15. Telfono 3-1352. i ALQUILA: Apartamento en Avenida Mxico final y calle 43 Este, llame 3-0140. SE ALQUILA: Apartamento en Avenido Central 279. Tel. 3- 0140. SE ALQUILA:Aportomento moder- no. Calle 47 No. 3, sola, comedor, 2 recmaras, cuarto, servicio, ga- rage, te. Tel. 3-3338. En cualquier consideracin y aprecio, nos suscribimos de S.S. Affas y ob- SE VENDE:Por motivo viaje. secuentes servidores. geradoro Westinghouse y Federacin de Damas de Accin muebles. Calle 8o., y Melendez, co- Catlica de anan. so 8067 Apto. 11. Colon. Refrl- Otros al Norte de Sel en el frente central. Los aviones aliados arcaron los cielos de Corea buscando las concentraciones comunistas. Estos aviones lograron bajar en medio del intenso fuego anti- areo sobre Munsan y otras reas del frente central que se encontraban cubiertas de humo. La 5a. Fuerza Area logr ms de 300 incursiones hasta el medioda de hoy, y alegan haber dado muerte .. ms de 220 rojos. Los escuadrones de combate T bombardeo aliados estn pre- parados para cualquier ofensi- va area de los comunistas. Durante la noche atacaron a otros siete campos de tterri- zale en Core*a del Norte. Uno de les aviones de reco- nocimiento aliado, el cual lo- , ir pasar por entre la corti- , na de fuego de los comunistas , en el frente central, inform que las fuerzas comunistas se estaban movilizando hacia ei Sur desde la represa de Hwa- chon hasta el sector al Norte y noreste de Chunchon en il- las continuas. Los rojos rechazaron a las patrullas de las Naciones Uni- das en los frentes central y i occidental ayer y libraron una ' enconada batalla en el frente oriental. Sin embargo, una de las pun- tas de lanza aliada penetr hasta milla y media de Ka- ' pyong, 12 millas al Sur del Pa- ralelo 38 en el frente occidental i sin encontrar resistencia algu- IP? L-J Hi i Jja. T- / [ = ^.%yi f -^SWIt"^ te "*" a " L R f f ^ PRIMAVERA EN PARIS.Cuando los botes se limpian, es se- al de que la primavera ya lleg en Pars. Estos nios franceses contemplan la tarea y esperan pasear por el lago de los Bosques de Bologne. llama n El Panam Amrica? 2-0740 SE ALQUILA: Aportomento, solo, comedor, recmaro y garage. Colle 46 No. 27. Infrmese la mismo ca- sa,.oportamtnto 8. GUIA COMERCIAL SE ALQUILA:Por seis semanas apar- tamento de 2 recmaros, comple- tamente omoblado. Llame el 3- 2026 despus de las 5 p. m. SE NECESITA Domsticos SE NECESITA:Cocinera personas. Referencios. Ecuador No. 16. para dos Avenido SE NECESITA:Empleodo para tra- bajo domstico en Chitr. Acudo Calle 48 No. 26. SE NECESITA:Carguera pora cui- dar nio, debe dormir en el tra- bajo. Colle 46 caso 45. SE NECESITA:Carguero para nia de 2 aos y medio. Debe dormir en la cosa. Calle 52 finol casa 22 Compo Alegre. SE NECESITA:Una empleoda en lo calle 46 No. 19, Apto. 3, Bella Visto. SE NECESITA:Empleado paro ser- viejo que duermo en el trabajo, Avenido Manuel lecza 18, po Alegre. SE NECESITA:Empleoda que sepa cocinar bien y hacer el servicio. Fa- milia pequea, calle 52 final con colle Ricardo Arias, Compo Alegre No. 22. SE NECESITA:Empleodo poro co- cinor y osear la caso. Preferible que duerma en empleo. Colle la. No. 12. SE NECESITA:Empleoda paro cui- dar nio de 3 oos, debe dormir en el empleo. Ocurra colle 44 No. 9, apartamento 12. SE ALQUILA Locales ifc ALQUILAN:Exclus.vomonte po- ro otemos tocles cntricos er> loa altos do Avenido Control 44 o precios mdicos Solicitan tnto- mocion en Almacenas 5 y 10 con- tuvo!. Locles comerciales en Mariano Aro- semeno y Super Mercado Colido- nio; tambin en Rio Abo|o, B/. 12.00. Dirigirse A. do Boutoud. Tel. 3-0338. SE ALQUILA:Local paro oficina, arriba del Teatro Central. SE ALQUILA:Local. Paro infor- mes llame Tal. 2-3143. calle Co- de No. 4. SE ALQUILA.-^-Planto baja en colle Carlos A. Mendoza para dep- sito u oficina. Llama 2-3437 Piden en EL UU. fijar precios en lugares visibles WASHINGTON, Mayo 12 (UP) El Gobierno orden a ms de un milln de establecimientos de servicios, tales como barbe- ras, estaciones de gasolina, tre- nes de lavado, solares para esta- cionamiento de automviles, fi- jar en parte visible sus precios mximos de manera que el p- blico pueda informarse debida- mente. Dicha orden ha de quedar cumplida para el 16 de Junio. Simultneamente, la divisin de estadstica de trabajo infor- m que el promedio de precios al por mayor ha descendido a 0.3 por ciento en la semana que termin el martes ltimo, en parte debido al descenso en los precios de ganado y carnes. El Montezuma jugar maana en Catn, Z. C. El equipo "Montezuma" Juga- r maana en Qatn Zona del Canal, por lo cual el director de este conjunto cita a todos loa Jugadores a las 7 am. en la f- rica de Licores. Este choque es importante por lo cual se notifica a todos loa jugadores para que asistan pun- i lualment*. RINDE MAS... ES EL MEJOR! 4 ACEITE ELDORADO SE VENDE EN GALONES Y EN TAMAOS CHICOS Da venta en U BYZKAYNA Tenemoa ti surtido ms grandq y ma fino de Mol- duras de Metal para, el NEVAMAR para uso sobre mesas, fregadores o canti- nas. CORALITE para pare- dea y NACTOR para el frente de las tiendas. GEO. F. NOVEY, INC. Ave. Central 179 Tel. 3-014 Ciudad de Panam Alarrtbre de Puerco y de Gallinero... Champas... Coas... n todoa loa tamaos. Ricardo A. Mir, S.A. Calle 16 Este No. 4 Tel. 2-3335 y 2-2988 Tenemos exacta- mente el VIDRIO que Ud. necesita! FABRICA DE ESPEJOS EL DIABLO Calle 16 Este #4 Tel. 2-2(00 LAMPARAS FLUORECENTES "Duro-Test" 10,000 horas de garanta. K!^ir^!hBrJ ' Tel. 2-2847 FABRICA DE ESPEJOS LA GARANTA o La ms antigua, o La ms acreditada, o La da mayor stock. SIEMPRE A SUS ORDENES. Re Abajo #2154 Tel. 3-0424. Almacn Calle "I" #4 Tel 2-1751 PINTURA BLANCA Y GRIS en envases de S galones B 2.50 galn RICARDO A. MIRO. S. A. Tel. 2-3335Calle 18 Este #4 Ganadores de los "Oseares" estn muy emocionados EHMI LAS EMOCIONES DE LOS GANADORES DE LOS "SCARES"Considerados como la mejor actri n el mejor actor de cine de 1950 por la Academia de Artes y Ciencias Cinematogrficas, Judy Holli- day y Jos Ferrer, actualmente en Nueva York, reciben la noticia de haber ganado los dos "Osea- res" mximos. Judy estrella de "Nacida Ayer", alegremente le retuerce la nariz a Jos Ferrer, que recibi el premio por su actuacin en "Cyrano de Bergerac". A la derecha: Judy rompe a llorar da emocin cuando intilmente trat de decir unas palabras ante un micrfono, ai recibir la noticia del premio. (International) GANAN "SCARES" POR SUS PAPELES COMPLEMENTARIOS. En Hollywood, Josephine Hull (derecha) sonre llena de orgu- llo cuando Dean Jagger le en- trega el premio de la Academia do Artes y Ciencias Cinematogr- ficas por su actuacin como me- jor actriz complementaria de 1950. Su Osear se debe a so re- presentacin en "Harvey". Geor- ge Sanders (abaje) fu honrado como el mejor actor complemen- tario por sn papel en "La Malva- da" (All About Eve) declarada eomo la mejor pelcula nortea- mericana de 1950. (Internatio- nal). Por la Salud Popular Protjase contra las epidemias En qu consisten las epidemias. Cules son las personas ms sensibles a ellas.Costumbre que va siempre contra lt> sa- lud infantil. Conocimientos que el pblico debe tener so- bre la presencia y propagan- da de las epidemias.La ne- cesidad de colaboracin genr ral. Se entiende por epidemia el incremento, en nmero de in- tensidad, de una enfermedad. Una de sus principales caracte- rsticas es la de afectar por pa- rejo a la mayora, o por lo me- nos un nmero crecido, de In- dividuos, sin respetar edades, sexos, ni condiciones, haciendo particulares estragos en los me- nos defendidos, como son los ancianos, los nios y los debili- tados generales por diversas causas. El organismo Infantil es. por razn de su breve contacto con la vida, el ms frgil v de ah la importancia de las me- didas tomadas por su defensa en casos de epidemias. Esta situacin particular nos trae a la memoria, para criticar- la, una costumbre muy nuestra, de psimas reptrcuslones para la salud infantil; se trata de.la tan Tenemos en existencia: HIERRO DE REFUERZO CLAVOS de toda clase ZINC ACANALADO T x 6 y 2" x 8 Calibre 26 Agencias Globales Via Espaa No. 121 Tel. 3-1503 comn, de llevar a reuniones de adultos, tales como cines, desfi- les, bazares, procesiones, misas, etc., nios de brazoB. cuyo pe- queo organismo es receptculo indefenso de todos los microbios que abundan en esos sitios de ambiente confinado, carentes de toda circulacin de aire. El nio en los primeros meses de la vida se comporta como una planta, ms que como un animal, y ex- poner sus nacientes defensas a una lucha prematura en reunio- nes donde se codean Individuos sanos Con enfermos de toda cla- se, revela por lo menos una Ig- norancia lamentable. be ordinario se vive en un am- biente cargado ei peligro de las enfermedades; por todas partes se encuentran esputos de tuber- culosos, llenos de bacilos, que pueden llegar a la nariz con el impulso de una simple corriente de aire: deposiciones de disen- tricos que infectan el agua aue luego se bebe sin hervir, etc. To- dos estos demritos de destruc- cin slo esperan la chispa para iniciar el incendio de grandes proporciones que constituye las epidemias. Entonces, puede pre- guntarse, cules condiciones son necesarias para producirlas? En primer lugar, la presencia de. germen causante (bacilo tuber- culoso, de la fiebre tifoidea, vi- rus de la grippe, etc.). y su con- servacin en condiciones que les permitan reproducir la enfer- medad: en segundo, la transmi- sin por las diversas vias: v. en tercero, circunstancias de los in- dividuos que lo reclebn. Y sobre estos aspectos el grueso pblico debe conocer el mayor nmero de conocimientos prcticos. La presencia del germen se descubre por la produccin en el organismo de los diversos sin- , tomas de la enfermedad, para : cuya identificacin precisa es indispensable acudir o llamar al mdico, cuando, por ejemplo, al- gn miembro de la familia se queje de escalofri presente lie- bre alta y de aparicin brusca, i acompaada de quebrantamlen- 1 to general, dolores lumbares v catarro nasal, y simultneamen- te se est desarrollando una e- Dldemla de grippe en la regln. lo ms Indicado es llamar al fa- cultativo y evitar el avance so- lapado de la enfermedad hasta complicaciones graves. Con esto ya hav base segura para aten- der a las diversas,vias de trans- misin del mal. Si se trata de las enfermedades llamada* "a- blertas". tales como las locali- dades en la boca, nariz y vias respiratorias o pulmn, como su- cede con la tuberculosis, el cata- 1 rro comn v la grippe, o las lo- , causadas en el tubo digestivo. I en las cuales el enfermo es un foco permanente que Irradia ba- ' ellos y virus en sus esputos, en su toa, en tus deposiciones, el aislamiento de la comunidad f las medidas de desinfeccin da las persones que lo atienden y de los eleemntos de aseo y da ropa v mesa, se hacen Indispen- sables. Y si se trata de enfer- medades1 "cerradas", para cuya transmisin es necesario la me- diacin de un agente, como su cede con el zancudo del paludis- mo, los piojos en el tifo exantf- mtico. las ratas con la peste, etc.. el conocimiento de las m-a eras de destruir esa cadena hombre-animal-hombre, es da suma importancia. Y queda por analizar el asunto de la forma como los individuos van a recibir los embates del contagio. Hay varios tipos de de- fensa personal frente a una en- fermedad, pero grosso modo sa puede decir que los ms fuer- tes, los mejor nutridos, son me- nos atacados que los debilitado y mal nutridos y es a stos a quienes mayores precauciones defensivas deben rodear. Por otra parte, existe la resistencia de ciertas' razas ante algunas enfermedades y la de ciertos In- dividuos, y la inmunidad, consis- tente en la produccin dentro del organismo de defensa para dominar la invasin, por haber? tenido antes contacto con ella, ya en forma de enfermedad co-^, mo sucede con los que han siN' trido viruela o fiebre amarii'a1 ya en forma de contacto lentdr V progresivo, va por la vacuna- cin, uno de los ms maravillo- sos medios modernos de preven- cin. En caso de epidemias, la base del xito estriba en la colabora- cin inteligente del pblico con las autoridades sanitarias v con el cuerpo mdico. c. v. a. Ftbol en Espaa' Resultados de los Cuartos da Final de Copa de Espaa. Real Sociedad de San Sebas- tin 3; Santander 0. Real Madrid 1; Atltico de Ma- drid 1. Barcelona 4; Atltico de Te. tun t. Atltico de Bilbao 2; Sporting de Gijn 1. Como consecuencia de estos resultados teca jugar las Semi- finales de la Copa de Espaa a los equipos: Real Sociedad m San Sebastin y Real Madrid; Barcelona y Atltico de Bilbao, Red Panamericana tiene los mejores Programas SBADO. MATO It. 1M1 D. PANAMA AMERICA OIASIO INDEPENDIENTE PAGINA SIETE El Ftbol Tiene Para Maana Un Extenso Programa De Juegos En Todos Los Circuitos En la la. juegan Durad v$. Pacfico y Aneen vs. Huracn La* actividades deportiva* reanudan hoy con partida* de Softball y Baseball y continua- rn maana con Interesante* en , cuentres de Ftbol. BaaebaU y un programa de Carreras cuyo vento principal ser el Claaleo -Sociedad de Dueos de Caba- llos de Carrera". Para hoy tenemos juego de Softball de los Bomberos entre 10* equipos Compaa No. 6 vs Banda de Cornetas. El baaeball infantil de Santa Rita ofrece juegos en los circuitos Infantiles Seml-InfantUes e Intermedia, rutbol Menor en Barraza y ca- rreras en Juan Franco. Para maana el Ftbol ofrece- r la mayor parte de loe eventos con juego* de la. entre Pacifico vs Dtranl y Ancn vs Huracn en las horas de la tarde en el latadlo Olmpico; partidos da a*, entre Hispano Jr. vs Ancn Jr. y Amrica vs Santander en las horas de la maana; el Ora- torio Festivo tiene un progra- ms de seis partidos; Igualmente el Chorrillo presentara atrac- k tivo* cotejos de sus dos circui- tos. La Liga de Baseball de San Felipe continuar con el juego Veteranos vs ptica Sosa; la Li- ga de Celidonia tiene anuncia- dos tambin interesantes juegos. En La Chorrera se seguir el Campeonato invernal con los jue os Balboa vs Chin y Unin vs uente. Atleta Argentino competir hoy en importante prueba PRENSO, California 12 de Mayo (UP) El argentino Al- heno Trlulzi se enfrtntar hoy al campen olmpico Dick A- ttlesey y a otros destacado* a- tleta* de los Estados Unido* en la carrera de 100 yarda* con valla* alta* del torneo entre las Universidades y cole glos ci) Oeste de lo* Estados Unidos que se celebrar en esta ciudad por iu vigsima quinta ve*. Alesey estableci marca de 13 segundos y medio para esn competencias en este torneo el ao pasado. En la misma par- ticiparn adems Cralg Dixon cstaella olmpica que represen- tar al club atltlco de loa An- gele* y Art Barnard de la U- veraidad de California Meri- dional. Trlulri representar al colegio de Santa Brbara. MUNDO DEPORTIVO For BE1C rCJJtOA Vor cause, que ya todos deben conocer, esta columna que debi aparecer en la edicin de ayer sale a la luz hoy. tCuevaoiente estn de plce- . me* los deportistas, con el nom- bramiento del Ing. Norberto Na- varro quien ha vuelto a ocupar la cartera del Ministerio de Obras Pblicas. No hay duda que el Ingeniero Navarro trata- ra, tan pronto se Instale en su despacho, de adelantar las Obras Deportiva* que desde su .atilda de ese Mtefctert, se quedaron estancada*. Adems es necesa- rio Ingeniero Navarro, que usted como buen deportista haga rea- lidad la* promesa* que su colega Celso Carbonell hiciera a una Comisin de la Liga Provincial de Basketball, como fu la de reparar cuanto antes #1 Gimna- sio Nacional, y* que la nueva temporada se Inaugurar el 19 del me* en curso, y es lamen- table el estado de abandono en que se encuentra dicho coliseo. El techo es una coladera, el piso sucio lo mismo que las gra- deras y esos remiendos que es- tan all desde hace ya ms de un ao es necesario que sufran reparacin Inmediata. No duda- mos que usted, como todo un gran deportista, sabr como or- aenar las reparaciones y ade- lantar nuestras obras deportl- , vas. Ofrecemos aunque un poco, tarde nuestros pronsticos para las carreras de hoy Sbado: 1 oROMNTICO... por su anterior no* gusta. ..Risita.. .a ,, lo mejor se re; 2aARQUIME- 1 DES, es de lote superior...Tap Girl.. enemigo de cuidado; 3a CONTRABANDO.. .busca su pri- mer xito. Pon la Olla...el tuerto va a coslnar; 4aPOLI - 3CO.. .esta en su temporada... nely Molly...por su anterior puede; 5aCAMARU puede ca- minar aqui. Rathllng Light... hueso duro de roer; 8aALLI- NOMAS...a dnde ...Don Toto .. contreras lo har volar; 7a CURACA... el ms fiJo...Dai- ' quiri.. .no creo que sorprende al nuestro; 8*STELLA... gan fcil su anterio...Manolete... enemigod e cuidado; 9aMOS- QUETON el mejor del lote... Welsh Fox...puede como no puede loaANWEE N...Bolvar retorna con triunfo.. .Opex (e) au place fijo: HMILROS... su anterior perdi por jinete... lanchopaja.. .peligroso. * Con las tutordades de Obras Pblicas Se hace Imprescindible la ConatnrcdB se aa Sertlei* Sanitario en el Campe Se Jseges ia 8ANTA RITA Egipto pas a la segunda vuelta de la Copa Davis OSLO, Mayo 12 (UP) Eip- il pas a la segunda vuelta ae ias eliminaciones de la zona europea por la Copa Davis al vencer a Noruega en tenis por 3 partido* a 2. Adly Shafel venci a Joahn Haanes por 8-1, 8-4, 7-5 y este partido asegur al triunfo egipcio. En el ltimo partido el no- ruego Jan Staubo derrot a Mrcel Coen por 4-8, 8-S, 8-3 y 8-1, CITACIONES Uga Provincial de Basketball Pide a todos sus directores y representantes de equipos de la categora mayor la asistencia a una importante reunin el pr- ximo Lunes a las 7:30 de la noche en el Saln de Recreo os la Planta de la Cervecera Balboa. Se ruega la puntual a- sutencia. Basketball Meoor Se cita "a Wdor'tos fepres?n- tante* de equipo* de la *egun- da categora inscrito* para la prxima temporada Provincial, a una reunin el prximo mar- tes a las 5:00 de la tarde en el Gimnasio Nacional. Se encarece ia asistencia de todos. Los Medias Blancas Empataron El Tercer Lugar Al Derrotar a Los Indios T Carreras a 1 Servicio de la Prensa UaMa i Dizzy Trout permiti cuatro incoglbles y los Tigres derrota- ron a lo* Carmelita* por ano-1 tacln de 7 carrera* a 1. Vic Wert* conect un jonrn. Trout no permiti carreras deade 1 se- gundo episodio y solamente con- cedi do* incoglbles ms. Loo Media* Blanca* se movie- ron hacia el tercer lugar cuando Joe Dobsou permiti un solo in- comible para vencer a los Indios por anotacin de 12 carrera* a 1, en su mejor presentacin en to- da su carrera en la* Grandes Liga*. Dobson estuvo a punto de propinar el segundo no hit no run de esta temporada cuan- do con dos outs en el octavo episodio el emergente Beto Avi- la conecto un doble. La nica carrera do los Indio* entr en el noveno episodio. Orestes Ml- lso a quien los Indios vendie- ron fu el mejor bateador de los Medias Blancas con un tri- ple, dos sencillo* y empuj dos carreras. Alfonso Carrasquel tambin conect un triple y do* sencillos Los Medias Blanca* tu- vieren una racha de siete carre- ra en el sptimo episodio. ro habla ms juegos seala- do* _____ En la Liga Nacional Cliff Chambers quien lanz de "no hit no run" para los Pirata* el domingo pasado descubri 3ue la fama es pasajera cuando esde el primer episodio recibi un sencillo y perdi finalmente por anotacin de 10 carrera* a 4 con los Cachorros de Chicago. Chambers recibi cuatro hits ms en el segundo episodio por lo cual fu removido. Andy Paf- ko conect dos cuardangulares en el partido. Bob Ru*h obtuvo u segundo triunfo de este ao. Todos los otros partidos de la Liga Nacional fueron pos- puestos por lluvia. El Hispano Jr. Debuta Mna. En El Campeonato De Ftbol Menor Frente Al Ancn Jr. LIGA PBOV. DE BASKETBALL Informa a todos los miembros directores e interesados que se reunir el prximo lunes a la misma hora y lugar de siempre y que ltimamente no ha podi- do reunirse por los sucesos de todos conocido*. ESTADO DE LA JUSTA FTBOL MENOR PBOV. DE PANAMA G. E. P. l'ts. Alemn ..........t I Ancn Jr.........1 8 0 2 Santander .......0 1 1 Ambato ..........*1 1 1 Pacifico Jt....... 1 Hispano Jr- ...... - El onceno Hispano Jr. debu- tar maana en el Campeonato de Ftbol de Segunda Calci- lla de la Liga Provincial de Fanam con el juego que ws- tendr frente al aguerrido e- quIpo Ancn Jr.. en el egun- 00 encuentro del Programa ae Maana en el Estadio-Olmpi- co En el primer encuentro el'.! dia se medirn Amrica y San- tander comentando a las 8:16 a.m. En el segundo juego que prin- cipiar a las 10:15 a.m. los an- conlatas menores defendern Mi Invicto a la vez que lucharn para empatar el comando de ios acciones; en este cotejo actua- r de arbitro Alfredo Harrison En el otro partido servir Ue arbitro Jimnez. La justa fwnercial de softball se reanudar el lunes con dos partidos Social Deportiva EL CLUB SOCIAL-DEPORTTVO "LA MINA DE ORO" OFRECE BAILE BOY X MARAA Para obtener fondos para la compra de tiles y dems ac- cesorios para sus equipos de Ba- se y Ftbol, el Club Deportivo "La Mina de Oro" ofrece esta noche y maana domingo un gran baile que ser amenizado por la popular Orquesta de Emi- lio Reales y su cantante el Toti Colonense. .Los muchachos de Arraljn In- vitan por este medio a todos sus amigos y simpatizadores para estos actos bailables que tendrn lugar en el pintoresco pueblo de Arraljn, al lado de la Telegra- fa. DEF. QUINTO PATIO Informa a bus simpatizadores. aficionado* y deportista* en ge- neral que el gran baile que et organizando, se realizar el 2 de JUNIO, y no esta noche como errneamente se public ayer. La Serie final por el Cam- peonato de la Liga Comercial de Softball se reanudar el pit- xlmo lunes con los partidor. CERRUD vs. DURAN 7 p.m. PATCO vs, CONTROL 8:45 p.m. Como de costumbre eeto dos encuentros e desarrollarn en el cuadro de Santa Rita. La Serle final que se esin Muchacho de 15 haber amenazado hpico Alfred G. NUEVA YORK, Mayo 12 (UP) Las autoridades federales ?- nunclaron que han arreatado a un muchacho de 15 aos al cual se ha acusado de haber amena- zado al acaudalado deportuta i.ipico Alfred O. VanderbUt con matarlo si no le daba 10 Uf dlares. Los Agentes de la Oficina Fe- deral de Investigaciones detu- vieron al muchacho que porta- oa un juguetft en forma de pis- tola en el Hipdromo Belinuiit donde habla dicho a Vander- bilt por carta que le llevara el dinero. Loa. agentes que no qui- sieron revelar el nombre del muchacho dijeron que la carta de este a VanderbUt dice en disputando esos cuatro conjun- tos, se inici- el pasado lunes con dos juegos cuyos resultado fueron: Cernid 13 Control 12 Pateo 28 Duran 13 Los juego* del martes para decidir el Torneo son Duran v*. Control y Pateo vs Cerrud. En caso de empate en los pri- meros puestos, los partidos ar- chivos se efectuar entonce el mircoles. aos acusado de al acaudalado Vanderbilt parte asi: "81 Ud. cuenta uto a alguien lo matar y mature a quien lo quente y si no tiene el dinero lo matar. P.D. Esto no es una broma". El muchacho admiti haber escrito la carta a VanderbUt en esta que llevara el dinero a la puerta principal de entrada al hipdromo el 10 de Mayo a las 8 pm. Dijo que a el se le ocurri la idea de hacer eco c'espus de ver el retrato de Vanderbilt en una revista hpi- ca hace dos semanas. ILtviitidis it Moche! Ayude i sus Moms mpn> haauuM m totiu dal Miel . -J 4cMN 7 auava mlllanaa a ttalimtM tukoe M riflMMC SI MM _ nar- vlaaida*. 4t\nm 4a atara**, ajara*, laa oan 1 Tajan k> hae ntadu aatwna*. na _* * (I do a 1 l'jrtlaa. aufrlr a*a loalda, ar! a ardor an loa eoMueToaTilY- aaoasMad da aatlmulaatt naba Cyst. __* ai ieMU re T le* Wmm cea la racat m*W llamada tanta da loa rifanaa y pejtattra aara la Irrita*** faadenaJ iaja ,|lT" vlaa tirtnarlaa an aatada da aaitaa. Oyatax aatlafacar* a uta* computa- Cyst ex SJ/E Don Cockell y Nick Barone se enfrentarn el 5 LONDRES, Mayo 12 (UP) El promotor Jack Salomon a- nuncl que el campen britni- co y europeo peso semipesado Don Cockell se enfrentar a diez asaltos el 5 de Junio ac al norteamericano Nick Baiune El encuentro ser uno de los principales en el programa carnaval de campeones" en que el argentino Csar Biln se enfrentar en pelea estelar ai campen britnico y euroueo peso pesado Jack Gardner. Equipo de Golf de E. U. aventaja en un Torneo BIRKDALE, Inglaterra Mayo 12 (UP) El equipo de gol! de los Estados Unidos logro una ventaja de dos a cero sobre el de Oran'Bretaa en la prime- ra vuelta del torneo por la Co- pa Walker gracia* a su capitn Willie Turnesa y al campen a- mateur de lo* Estados Unido* Sin Urzetta. Los norteamericanos termi- naron el primer dia de lucha ganando do* de lo* cuatro par- tido* en parejas y ae dividieron lo* otros do*. Bato dio a ellos do* del mximo posible de cuc- tro punto* pues no ae anotan punto* en caso da dividirse ho- nores en partido* en parejas. Turneas y Urzetta vencieron a loe veterano* Jim Brueh y John Morgan por S a 4 mien- tras que Dick C'napman y Bob Knowless vendan a Alex Kyle c Jan Caldwell por un golpe. Frank Stranahan y Bill Camp- cell de loe Estaos Unidos se di- vidieron honores con Rounl White y Jo* Carr y Charles Coe y Jim Mlchale hicieron lo mie- nto con Cecil Ewlng y John Lnagley' La Liga de Baseball de Santa Rila cierra Inscripciones el 20 Por S. B. IVALDI J._ El da 20 del presente mes cierra sus inscripciones la Liga de Baseball para aficionados de Santa Rita que preside el entu- siasta deportista Toms Muoz. Hasta la fecha solamente se har ecibldo solicitud de Inscrip- cin de los Clubes Azteca Gra- nillo, (Campeones y sub-Cam- peones de la pasada temporada) A.P.C. y Panamefilstas (Campeo- nes de la Menor). Para la cate- gora Mayor, Azteca Jr. y Gra- nillo Jr. para la Menor. El seor Muoz Presidente de la Liga nos inform que tiene contratos para todas aquellas personas que deseen lncrlblr equipos y que pueden solicitar los mismos en su residencia Ca- lle 17 frente al Campo de Jue- gos de Santa Rita, a la mayoh brevedad posible. Tambin informa a los Inte- resados que el dia de Inaugura- cin de la nueva Temporada en- tregar los Trofeos y Medallas a los equipos y personas que ten gan derecho a ello* siempre y cuando no estn en mora con la Liga. Red Panamericana llene les "leiores programas COURVOISIER Trie BRANDY OP NAPOLEON XXX V.S.O.P. NAPOLEON N**S*fi** PANAMA Distribuidores: ca. cyrnos. s. a colon "El genial muletazo" Presentamos en esta ocasin esta mule tazo que fu creacin del diestro mexicano Lorenzo Garza, uno de los ms destaca- dos mulatero* de todo* los tiempo*. * El pase que hoy ofrceme* a nuestros lectores es el llamado "El genial muletazo" y en et>U aguafuerte de nuestro aprecia- ble colaborador, el dibujante taurino Alberto Restrepo pode- mos darnos perfecta cuenta de la vistosidad y la elegancia u contiene. Este como algunos otros pa- ses del repertorio ae Lorenzo 'El Magnfico", son utilizados con frecuencia por su creador y siempre son recibidos con gran- des ovaciones por su contenido y magnifica ejecucin- Su realizacin es de desen- volvimiento lento, pero est De- no de vistosidad y colorido co- mo los lances que ejecutar en sus tiempos el "Orfebre Tapa- to" Pepe Ortiz, de muy grata recordacin en los principales centros taurinos del mundo. PICADOR Comunicado sobre la licitacin de los juegos de basket ..La Liga Provincial de Basket- ball ha dado a conocer el si- guiente Comunicado en relacin con la Licitacin de la Trans- misin de los partidos de Pri- mera Categora para la prxi- ma Temporada que se inaugu- rar el prximo sbado 19 de Mayo. COMUNICADO De la Liga Provincial de Basket ball de Panam. Por medio de la cual lnlor- ma a los interesadas, que el Ar- ticulo 9 de la Licitacin para la Transmisin de los Juegos do basketball de la primera Cate- gora de la Temporada de 1951, donde se pide a los que entren en la licitacin, la Inclusin de i los locutores que van a traba- jar en dichas transmisiones, que dicha parte ha sido excluida y, por lo tanto loa interesados no estn en la obligacin de Incluir en su propuesta, lo* nombres de los narradores que actuarn durante esos juegos. Humberto Tejada, Secretarlo. Gaviln y Bratton estn en magnficas condiciones El Deportivo Pacfico suspende una funcin El Club Deportivo Pacfico in- forma que la funcin matinal que se llevara a cabo maana en el Teatro Cecilia ha sido pospuesta para el prximo do- mingo, 20 de mayo de 1951. (.avilan demuestra vern velocidad en sus ejercicios NUEVA JERSEY, Mayo 13 (UP) El campen welter cu- bano Kld Gaviln boxe seis asaltos, tres con el mediano Ben Jones y tres contra el wel- ter Richie Anderson. En sus e- jerciclos demostr gran velo- cidad y potencia Segn declar a los periois- tas trabajar hoy con dos nue- vos auxiliares y descansar el domingo. Gaviln que se enfrentara a Johnny Bratton el dia 18 de Mayo por el campeonato mun- dial peso welter dijo que se en- cuentra en magnificas condi- ciones. Su peso es de 149 libras, Bratton practica con el cubano O. Zulueta 5 asaltos NUEVA YORK, Mayo 12 (UP) Johnny Bratton campen mundial peso welter segn 1* A ocla clon Nacional de boxea hizo ocho asaltos de guantes t- yer como parte de su prepaia- cin por la discusin de la co- rona mundial de loa welU.a contra el cubano Kld Gaviiun. Dijo que se sentia "muy sael- to. rpido y dispuesto" despus de haber hecho tres aia.tos contra el mediado Al Wilson y 5 contra el liviano cubano Cr- iando Zulueta que tiene un.gui- pe bolo parecido al de Gaviln. Bratton est pesando 4t libras. llama n El Panam Amrica? 2-0740 Escuche ESTA NOCHE a las nueve en la Zarzuela del Sbado... LA VERBENA DE LA PALOMA, con las estrellas del Teatro Lrico Espaol CORA RAGA y EMILIO VENDRELL Coordinacin de Emilio Daz. Narrador: Ramn Levy Un programa estelar en la radio favorita' la [Red Panamericana PACroA t *L PANAMA AMERICA MAMO WOWENMENtB RABABO. MATO 12, IMS RADIO PANAMERICANA presenta HOY SABAI'O P.M. 'S:S0 3:45 4:00 4:15 4:30 4:45 5:00 5:15 5:30 Ritmos del Norte ('urrcrL Panchlto Rlset y su conjunto Carrera Msica variada Carrera Xavier Cugat y Orquesta Carrera Ritmos populares ID 6:30 Canciones favoritas 7:00 La Orquesta de Hoy 7:15 Msica variada 7:30 Cantares de Espaa 7:45 Los trovadores de Cuyo 8:00 Msica exquisita 8:15 Boleros 8:30 Ritmos tropicales 9:90 La Verbena de la Paloma Zarzuela 10:30 Variedad musical 11:00 Cancionero nocturnal 11:30 Msica sin palabras 12:00 Buenas noches TROPICAL HOY! ArumtMo y Guita ta CE0KGE W. GE0R6E y GC0KE F. SLAVIN MUM Pr DOUGLAS SIM 1 Producid. oor RALPH DIETRICH PELCULA U-WRSAL.INTtRNAT.OHAL MAANA CENTRAL MAANA DOMINGO! 6ilH!*1' DOMINGO! UNA NUEVA Y GRAN MATINAL! VENGAN TODOS, CHICOS Y GRANDES a ver a TIM HOLT -- en -- AGENTE INDIO - Adems: - CORTOS en Colores de DONALD GOOFY MICKEY PLUTO PRECIO NICO 25* y GRAN RIFA!... Con Premios Cortesa de ANTONIO INNOVACIN DOMINGO A.M. 8:00 Buenos das 8:03 Almanaque de Panamericana 8:30 Valses favoritos la 8:45 Ritmos norteamericanos 9:00 Delicias tropicales 9:30 Concierto Matinal 10:00 Boleros 10:15 Msica venezolana 10:30 Cancionero de la maana 11:00 Sorteo de Hoy Loteria Nacional 11:15 Acordes porteos TEATRO NACIONAL Compaa "LOPE DE VEGA" Premios Nacionales de Teatro 1947-1941 PRESENTA A CARLOS LEMOS Premio Nacional de Interpretacin 1941 eon Conchita MONTIJANO Alfonso MUOZ y Pilar BIENERT Director: JOSE TAMAYO HOY SBADO 12 DE MAYO 8:30 P. M. SEXTA DE ABONO "LA VIDA ES SUEO" La ms famosa obra de Don Pedro Caldern de la Barca, en la nueva versin en tres actos de Francisco Roca Lo- zade Gran creacin de CARLOS LEMOS. PRECIOS: Luneta, Anfiteatro y Palco............ 2.50 Galena ........................... 10 DOMINGO n DE MAYO HAMLET (Prncipe de Dinamarca) De William Shakespeare, versin de Jos Ma. Pemn. Funcin extraordinaria a beneficio del Santuario del Corazn de Maria. _ DOS LTIMOS DAS! 11:30 Trio Los Panchos 11:45 Msica tiplea 12:00 Grandes maestros P.M. 12:30 Intermedio variado 12:50 La Fiesta Hpica de Roy Por Eduardo Molino 1:00 Cantares de Mxico 1:15 Carrera 1:30 Espaoleras -, 1:45 Carrera 2:00 Cancionero de la tarde 2:45 Carrera 3:00 Acordes porteos 3:15 Carrera paeMmte CON AIRE ACONDICIONADO El ESTRENO SORPRESIVO HOY! NUNCA HUBO UNA PASIN IGUAL!... Un amor que slo supo de sus caricias... sus besos y que tuvo 3ue aduearse de su lealtad isputndoeslo contra todo y contra todos!... mapy cortes tomas perrin Miguel arenas en "AMOR DE UNA VIDA' HOY UNA HISTORIA TRGICA Y TIERNA A LA VEZ!. Una gran pasin romntica que culmin en... BODAS DE FUEGO con PEDRO ARMENDARIZ ALICIA CARO Una Pelcula Distinta Con Un Tema Diferente!... // Muri esta maana Sara viuda de Diez Dej de existir en esta ca- pital la seora Sara viuda de Diez, tronco de'honorable fami- lia panamea. Su sepelio tendr lugar hoy 11 de mayo a las 5 de la tarde, saliendo el cortejo fnebre des- DOS ESTRENOS EN 1 SOLO, PROGRAMA! Un huracn de pasiones, In- trigas y aventuras en el c- lido y extico Marruecos! CECILIA I----- HOY! -----1 W M HERBERT LOM rff JACQUES SERNAS Pelcula de Formidable Accin! Dos nueva Pe- lculas al Pre- cio de Una! 0.60 y 0.30 ADEMAS: Frmula infalible para gozar de la vida la obtendr VIENDO: de la Iglesia de Cristo Rey a AMERICA enva su ms sen* las 9 pm. I bido psame a sus innmera* Por este medio EL PANAMA bles deudos. ELDORADO HOY y DOMINGO Desde Las 10:00 a.m. LA PELCULA SOCLAL! "LOS HIJOS Chachita Tusita Andrs Soler , Domingo Soler de la CALLE" Angeles del arroyo al servicio del mal... POR QUE HAY NIOS LADRONES! LO VERA UD. MISMO TEATRO LUX-HOY! 1:15 3:10 5:05 7:00 8:55 p.m. Una mujer lleva el p- nico a 8 millones de per- sonas!... Mientras ELLA busca venganza del amor que la traicion!... "MENSAJERA DE LA MUERTE" (Frightened City) .,.' -coa- EVELYN KEYES CHARLES KORVIN WILLIAM BISHOP EXTRAS: CARTON en Colores MARAA MATINAL para Nios (10 a.m.) Johnny Weissmuller, en "Jim de la Selva" Adems: "El Super-Hombre" (Episodios 12 y 13) MARTES! Mares de carcajadas! Ac- cin a punta de espada!.. "Pitos, Flautas y Pirata" (Double Crossbones) En Tecnicolor! con DONALD O'CONNOR DESDE JUEVES! (Simultneo con el TEATRO CECILIA) AVENTURAS Y ROMANCE QUE TOMARAN SU CORAZN Y SUS SENTIDOS POR ASALTOI... "EL TEMIBLE ROBIN HOOD' 1 Sherwood Forest KKIhwLTM A COLUMBIA nciuitc m mm maim m mu-sow n m ?..oncM weomon ooutus.rrdk* na it nam QiSuMjJm "LAS DE X'hZi fOYH5'9^ MII LA T A S FUEGO" LAS AUTENTICAS CREADORAS DEL MAMBO UN MAGNIFICO ESPECTCULO PLENO de RITMO y COLORIDO! Secundadas por: GLORIA HELM clebre cantante internacional. VILMA VALLE cancionera criolla. ALEXANDER y PABLO primerislmos bailarines del Ballet Negro de Rodney.. TAKIHA^- Mtoofci 2:30, :M, 7:10, 10 p.m. I Anl/nJ Espectculo: 5:H y t:M p.m. Adems: Una pelcula de gran emo- cin y suspenso... Basada en una ex- traa y sorprendente Ley Penal! RICHARD CONT, AUDREY TOTTER, en "SENTENCIA DE MUERTE" (rfl-NDER THE GUN) PRECIOS:................B 1.00 |
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| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
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| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.display_item | Retrieving item or group information |
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| 0 | sobekcm_assistant.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
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| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
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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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