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KBRAHIFF
r n 1 SI ^E#T.mWBPAFDl AN INDEPENDENT^-----0 ,,_-,------- Panama American "Lei the people know the truth and the country U tafe" Abraham linela. Seagrams V.O. 7 a*aa& WHISKY TWf!NTt-SIXTH YBAR PANAMA, R. P.. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 1J, 1951 f~&^*^~~~m*m*mm fit* cents _ UN Infantry Slaughters Red Enemies 8TH ARMY HQ., Sept. 13 (UP) United Nations in- fantrymen slaughtered Chinese and North. Korean Com- munists today and made gains of up to five miles in seme of the bloodiest fighting of the Korean war. United States Marines and infantryman. South Ko- reans and other Allied troops were in heavy action on wide sectors right across the 135-mile front. Marines and 8outh Koreans burned -ind blasted the Red from their deap entrenchments and bunkers on the Eastern front driving into murderous fire to take dominant peaks and hill*. Gains of one and a half miles AF Pllotless Bomber Group Set For Test WASHINGTON. Sept. 13 (UP> The United States Air Force disclosed today that it is put- ting a tactical guided mlsaile Into operation. The firat pllotless light bomb- er squadron will be establish- ed at-the missile test center. Coco.'. Florida, Oct. 1 to start training. The squadron's guided mis- sile, one of several new wea- pons being developed Is the B-61 Matador pllotless bomber. Mont details of the Matador's Site and performance are wjtlw for security reasons*. farwHis Mil season it Is th, wMU- cutded missile 1o be -pw -Into production for possible eorrrhat BSSk i Ik* The Matador is described as "something Jlk* a smaller edi- tion" of tha B-51 medium bomber. Buflt by Martin, It has swept- baek wings and a single Jet engine. It fias passed its night teats. Pllotless drones used for tar- gets or in missile experiments-} are usually conversions of con- ventional planes, but the B-61 has been designed from the ground up u a combat craft. It baa no provision for a pi- lot* even In emergencies. Unlike some missiles that are carried part of tha way to their target by a larger bomb- er, the B-fll w launched Irom tha ground and flies all the Way under its_pwn power. were made on the Central front, and-a five-mile gain was made on the Western front. , The United Nations all forces supported the drive with a war- long record number of night sor- ties. On the Central front tht Allies are menacing an important Com- munist supply base. In a bloody fight for flour stra- tegic peaks' in that area Allied fighter-bombers softened the ob- jectives with rockets, machine gun fire and burning napalm. Some 54 big Allied guns ham- mered at the rock bunkers and network of caves In which Chi- nese Reds were entrenched. Intermittent rain made the slopes muddy for the climbing Infantry. The Reds have made no move to resume the ceasefire talks. United Airlines Slralocruiser Crashes On Water AF Trainer Crashes Near Memphis; 4 Die MEMPHIS, Term.. Sept. 13 (UP A twin-engined Air Force trainer plane crashed and burned today near the Municipal Airport during a thunderstorm, killing four .oc- cupants. ..... '-----------------------------' SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 13 < UP) A United Airlines atrato- ^tm^f^y4wm ter on a penlnawla**e**h. *- ut 20 mites south of here, and there were no known aur.vivors among three crewmen aboard. A Coast.Guard helicopter ar- rived on the scene a few min- utes after the crash at 11:48 a.m. PDT. A chief petty officer was lowered by rope to the beach and he' reported he could find no survivors. The helicopter pilot said a "thick hace" blotted out the a- rea f rqm the air where the plane crashed at Redwood Point, near Redwood City. He reported wreckage was strewn over a wide area, but It did not appear that the craft had burned. United Airlines officials said one of their stratocrulsera was missing during a training flight. It was United' fourth crash this year. On April 28. 11 per- sons died in a DC-3 crash at Fort Wayne. Ind.; June 30, 90 per- sons died when a plane went down In the Rockies and on Aug. 24, near Decoto, Calif.. 50 were killed in the crash of a DC-6-B (U J. Army Photo by NBA Telephoto) SCOUTS AT WORK An advance scout of the 35th Infantry Division night-raiders signals for the rest of the patrol to cross a river during a mission near Kumhwa. Korea. As battlefront action increases, the raiders are seeking out enemy strong points. ------------------:------ f ----1 t ------------------------ Wood umbies From Plane Ov A heavy wooden block fell from an unidentified plane about 2:30 yester- day afternoon, hitting a garage on Barneby Street near the Prado in Balboa. Mrs. Oliver Bowen, who was walking in Barneby Street with her three- year-old granddaughter, Sandra Lee, heard a terrific noise, and saw the heavy object hit the top end of the garage and break into three parts almost at her feet. She told The Panam American today that four planes had just passed overhead, and she believes the block fell out of one of them. Mrs. Bowen called a worker in the vicinity to notify the Balboa police. They arrived on th* cene immediately. They removed the block, about 21 inches long, and eight inches in dia- meter, to the police station. (It is the type of wooden block that is put under the wheels of airplanes to prevent them from rolling while parked). The block has a piece of. rope attached to it. Air Force officials were notified and started an immediate investigation. So faV, however, they have been unable to ascertain if the block fell from an - Air Force plane. Mrs. Bowen ond her husband live in vacation quarters in Balboa. He is a retired Canal employe. Lana Turner Gashes Wrist; Denies Suicide HOLLYWOOD, Sept 13 (LB) Lana Turner, who gashed her wrist in a fall in her bathroom, scoffed today at suicide rumors and said she wanted to live "to be the oldest woman la America." Suicide rumors flashed through the film colony yesterday when the actress, who two days ago announced her marriage to mil- lionaire Bob Topping was on the rocks, was rushed to Hol- lywood Presbyterian Hospital for treatment of a Jagged lace- ration of her forearm. Her mother, Mrs. Mildred Tuner, quickly tried to quell the rumors by announcing that her daughter had thrust her hand through a glass shower door when she started to faint after taking a hot bath. Dr. Joan McDonald said he was summoned to the actress's home early in the morning and found hex mother attempting to stanch the flow of blood irom Lena's arm while the star's business agent, Benton Cole, applied a tourniquet. McDonald said two tendons in the-forearm had been cut, -'but only about halfway through" i - I Senate Pub Celling ; -,'i.v.u HI Ml* I OSOSA US, t> lV\^-0-D. I y . Man Chief Promises Senate-Passed Bill Ups Pay Bloodshed If Negro! n *~ c. A , Eniers white School But Cuts Sick, Annual Leave WASHINGTON, Sept. 13 (UP) Robert A. Lover*, (above) wos today un- animously approved by the Senate Armed Services Committee os successor to General George C. Mor- tnall, as Secretory of De- fense. GAFFNKY. South Carolina. Sept. IS (UP. Grand Dragon Thomas L. Hamilton declared last night that the South Caroli- na Ku Klux Klan "will shed blood to see that segregation is maintained In this state." The hooded Klan leader, ad- dressing a crowd of 1,000 near here, added: "Blood will flow In the streets the first time a NegrO goes Into a white school In South Carolina." The Ku Klux Klan invaded Cherokee County openly last night for the first time in more than 20 years, and field a giant rallv on the site of the historic ,Battle of cowpens. Hamilton called the meeting and was the principal speaker. He said he has another meet- ing lined up for near Mulllns Sa- turday night. The rally was held 10 miles from here near Cheapee. about one-half mile from the Cowpen Battle monument. The last time the Klan made a public appearance in Cherokee County, in the late 1030's. hood- ed Klanamen on horseback led the show. But State officers last night recorded the license numbers of ', most of the automobiles present and Go James P. Byrnes' office I In Columbia said a list would be -omoiled of the automobile own- - from -****}. f the ftalf highway rteoartment. The Postal Pay Bill carrying a Graduated Leave Amendment has passed the Senate, accord- ing to information given The Panama American today by Rufus Lovelady, President of the American Federation Of Government Employes' Local 14. The bill increases the salaries of all postal employes by 10%. But the amendment, which was added to the bill, provides a drastic reduction of leave which would apply to all Canal Zone civilian employes of the Army. Navy and Air Force. Canal Company employes are exempt- ed. A It would mean that employes of two years service or less would only be entitled to 13 days annual leave, tboae who have worked from two to 15 years would get SO days, and all em- ployes who have been in the service over IS years would be entitled to 3d days. , Sick leave would alee un- dergo a change, according te Lvela ay. Whereas present regulations permit IS days sick leave, and an accumulation of 90 days, the new amendment would cut the sick leave to 13 days, but would not place any limit on the amount of sick leave that may be accumulated. Tha House, which must new | pass n the Mil. reconvened | yesterday, an* >vel<>dy w. Jeve 1 w"' ake vftrn , than two Weeks te ease there, The* It would only need the President's signature to be- come law. The Army Civilian Personnel office which yesterday issued a statement that leave regula- tions for their employes were not subject to change, based their assumption on the Dou- glas Amendment to the Inde- pendent Offices Appropriation, which states that annual leave will be cut to 30 davs but that all civilian employes outside the continental United States are exempt. m ' . If the new Postal Pay Bill and Graduated Leave Amend- ment is passed in Congress, this would supercede the Doug- las Amendment, and civilian employes would then be aub- ject to the sharp leave cut. -------*-----,-----------------------------------Hi----- . Bed-Manners Tiff Drives Colonire To Take Poison A Panamanian w b at- tempted suicide last night be- r.anse fan argument with hi* wife was m Colon Hospital to- day far observation. Miawet Angel Zarata, !6. tried to kiH himself by drinking two ounces of wintergreen liniment. Peasea: His wife. Dorothy, >d ac-ii*ed h1- * aieeelnc n 't ten wartB> Meanwhile, Jerry Kluttt, who writes a daily column called The Federal Diary in the Wash- ington Post (considered a Bible for government employes) car- ried the story that the 20-day leave law is beaded for a court test of its constitutionality. He says "the only action that could atop it, apparently, is Its re- placement by .the graduated leave plan that has passed the Senate." t The M-day leave rider was guided through Congress by Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D, III). The President signed it into law Sept. I. and the rider was writ- ten to be effective back to July L Kluttz went on to explain that Douglas had no intention of making the rider retroactive. The retroactive feature was added In the committee. Douglas supported the graduated annual leave rider to the pastal rate blU in the Senate last week, explaining at the time the It was "desir- able" because it would knack out the retroactive feature of hit rider. With a leaJ cloud over the 20-day plan. Kluttz says the odds favor the graduated plan vhleh "V"l''d fix lep"e .from 13 to /lays. of ervlce. Completion Of Inter-American Unpredictable WASHINGTON, Sept. 13 (UP) Completion of the Inter-American highway between Mexico's southern bor- der and the Panam Canal faces indefinite delay dot to the failure of Guatemala and Honduras thus far to ap- prove diplomatic agreements on the terms of United States assistance in the protect. Work will go ahead according to plan in Panam, Costa Rica, El Salvador and Nicaragua. But till Guatemala and Honduras accept the condi- tions laid down by the United States Congress, the United States Bureau of Public Roads is powerless to start road building in those two countries. As a result the Bureau can- not fix a target date for com- pletion of the highway. Earlier hopes that through motor travel from the United States to Panama would be possible in five years are now merely speculation. The original intention was to speed up construction of the. Inter-American Highway in north Guatemala, to tie In with the already completed section which reaches to the south Mex- ican border. As this has proved impossible. emphasis has now in this section, but are sot yet in use. About is miles of new construction is provided for. and additional construction will be provided for later. Panama is reported eager to complete its section of the In- ter-American route. Costa Sic*: Highway camps and equipment are being as- sembled. Wmrihsirtg will be to northern Costa Rica with a concentrated effort te link with the Nlcaraguan section of tha t. srevri'" t" 'ergth A WASHINGTON, Sept. 18 (UP) The Senate voted today to clamp a 500,000-man celling on civilian employee of the Defense Department, a step that would slash 48,000 Jobs from President Truman's military program. It followed this by paring S3 - SS4.000 off the $6!.000,000,000 de- fense spending Mil. The money would be saved because of the re- duced number of employes. The victory for the economy loc, led by Sens. Harry F. Byrd, i., Va and Homer Ferguson, R.. Mich., came aa the Senate drove for final passage of the record peacetime military money bill. Passage was sot expected be- fore tomorrow at the earliest, however. The Senate agreed to limit debate tomorrow with a to- tal of SO minutes on each amend- ment and two hours on the over- all bin. ' The 500,000-man celling applies only to so-called "graded" civil- ian employes of the armed forcee and not to the Industrial work- ers employed on production of armaments and related military materials. Fer-de-lanee Victim Feeling In Pink' Due to Prompt Aid The snake-bite victim who was rushed yesterday by an Air Force mercy mission helicopter from Chico to Gorges Hospital, is "perfectly alright" today. Cornelius Pennycott, the 83- year-old observer at the Chegres River Hydrographic Station, was described as feeling in the best of health today, only 24 hours after a deadly fer-de-lance bit him in the right leg. Pennycott called the Madden Dam station early yesterday to rush emergency aid after he was bitten. An hour later 1st Air Res- cue Squadron at Albrbok sent a helicopter up with an Albrook surgeon and after landing on a sand bar, the men swam a deep stretch of river to get the strick- en man. Prompt attention, in the form of suction apparatus, lancing the bite, and an anti-venom shot, were probably responsible for Pennyeott's speedy recovery. Poles Raise Great German Battleship WARSAW, 8ept. 18 (UP) The press announced today that Polish salvage workers hsve succeeded in raising the mighty World War II German battleship "Onelsenau" from the entrance nr nydnla harbor wheip flef'nt ^rrman* scut- tled bet la 1045. The Department of State sub- mitted draft agreements con- cenanr Inter-American high- way aid to the five Central American repuWlcs and Pana- ma ilast January. Guatemala's non-acceptance cf this draft is attributed to a variety of political, labor and budgetary circumstances. Honduras non-action on the agreement has caused specila- tlon that Honduras is holding out for the re-routing of the highway through Tegucigalpa. The present route plan, adopt- ed IS years ago with the con- currence of Honduras, does not Include Tegucigalpa. The present Inter-American Highway outlook, country by country, is: Panama: The Republic of Pa- nama will open bids in Octo- ber for the building of the sec- tion of the highway between David and Remedios. Three bridges have been buEt v?&*SSf&K&- same. This includes work through a rugged mountain seo tor. But funds win probably bo available to complete a survey as far as the Panama frontier. Nicaragua: The southern sec- tion of the highway is present- ly being surfaced. Engineers aro preparing for bridge building on the northern section. Hondura: In abeyance till agreement is reached. El Salvador: No work present- ly, in progress, but engineers are planning new* projects. Guatemala: Is abeyance till agreement can be reacehd.- The United States House of Representatives recently ap- proved an additional appropria- tion of $4,000,000 for the Inter- American highway in tha the republics south of Mexico. (NEA Radlo-TelephoU TWO-WAT CHADWICK Florence Chadwlck of Sas Diego. Calif., waved as she entered the water in Dover, Bnglsno She swam from England to France this year. reversSsg her successful swim of fast year and becoming the first womaa to conquer the *;* <"*""' both wsjs. 2 SSBBa JM .ran pamama America* an independent daiiy jwwspapw (oigo and Freight-Ships and Planes-Arrivals and Departures rr- -* tsvBmj, jgrrpoot n. m UNITED FRUIT COMPANY Great White Fleet t (iriaas* Service .* Arrive! Cristbal II 2* cwriew ...................................sept. 1 S.B. Mayari ....................................Sept. 17 S.I. Manaqni .......................... .......get. t 1.1. rairiqui ........................... .......Sept. M tWmmm Mrinrf cum** ana Omni Cirpi ;* York Freight Service Arrives Cristbal 1 8.S. Tiviveg ....................................|cpt. II S.S. Cape Ced .................................a,pi u S.S. Hibu-rai ..................................%,pt |g S.S. Tape Ann .................................Sept. U MM) MUinr lo .New r.r. I.m Aagdea s.n Ftaaciaea. Seartl. nrrxlonal *ail>nr< l New Orlrn> and MnMI. (fa* Maataati m im. aartlr > ttaaitee t- rwrlt. mmimi raaIM rVatattl SaNtaa* h-an. Cntoahal M WeM CaaM Central Amerlra Arrives Cristbal ristoba I I New Orleans via i ....' - ? Tela, Honduras S.S. Chilian! (Passenger Service Only).....Sept. 1 8.S. Chiiiawi ...................................Oct. t TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL tm PANAMA -184 COLON 80 MAERSK UNE accepting passengers lor NEW YORK BY ma "CRETE MAERSK SAILING SEPTEMBER 16th. (Every reom with connecting bathroom) C. B. FENTON CO, Inc. Tal.: Cristbal 1781 Balboa 1065 Shipping & Airline News * * /V cCORMACK MOORE-McCORMACK LINES, INC. Special Announcement We regret to announce that due to certain conditions we must temporarily discon- tinue our carriage of cargo from Parifir feast Ports to the (anal Zone Ports, after the sailing of the KS ftfORMACREY from Los Angelea, September 14th. It is hoped p, that we may resume this service in the fu- *, ture, condition* permitting. ,*>/' ^ ( We wish to tahe this opportunity to express iinecre thanks to our freight clients for their past patronage. German Whaling Pleat Di ip Crietobal A big whaling fleet consisting or 1J whalers will trgnslt the Ca- nal Saturday, headed for the Pa- cific. This 1 the first German poet-war fleet to leave Hamburg. Crews have been carefully acreened. according to the local agent Fernie and Company. Each ship, (converted Canadian Cor- vettes) carries a arew ef nine, while the whale products facto- ry ship has 280 man aboard. One of the ships is a "catcher," which pick.-; up the whales that the others have harpooned and brings them for processing to the factory ship. They remain In the Pacific for about eight te 10 months. During the time two tankers from Germany meet the ships for refueling. Billion-Miir Passenger Mark Passed by Panagra The one-billion passenger mi|e marie has been passed bv pna on Panagra's airline officials 83rd anniversary. If ene single passenger were to f|y all ef these miles, the ! mythical traveler eeuld make | more than 48,000 flights around the earth. He eould also have ' made tn trips ta the aun. the star nearest the earth. The pioneer United States flag airline operating an the west coast of South America began it* career on September 31.1928 with a six-hundred mile flight from Lima to Talara. Peru. The tiny Fairchijd four-pas- senger monoplane teek If from a Lima race-track te land six hours and forty minutes ia- The airline aja aaaAa relief shipment, te victima j the El Salvador eartbtuake Bal the Eemeral.a, lira .. afc/aSer. In the more than two decades which have elapsed since it founding by Captain Harold Jlar- lnstallatlen of akporU. meteo- rological stations, radio net- works and even provided its own guaet houses where adequate ho- ler facilities were not available. The airline received its seventh annual Safety Award, conferred by the Inter American Safety Council. The citation for the year mo was bestowed "FOr fly- ing over its 7,4*1 mUe network a total of .041.451 fiying miles to- talling UUU,m^tnhTt miles, without n accident or fa- tality to passengers or erew" This safety record is all the more remarkable whan It u taken in- to consideration that Panagra's route includes some ef the world's moat difficult terrain froi T*i'.il w*s,a,nnouneed today by j ranging peaks and vast deaeru'toTropn rom high mountain cal jungle and great expanses of ocean. Panagrs has keen aspeei Hi active awing the past w hi 5Sff"t " rre a/ a?*5 *'iW#M *"" *" aejtfe Asaeriea. Mare than ras "<"' tba tea toaristg - geats ia the Ipita state, wage kreagbt te South America by Panagra ta sea tourist attrac- tions f*r themselves, and a rge number ef South Ameri1- S3.1?T,e.1 e*rrts want te the f nited Stales on the same plan. Continued improvements In schedules and services have been j-f ---'- " *r fffri - -.~-u.co no services nave been ter at the important 41 enter ; made by Panagra during the last in the north of Peru. ver Patugra. was the first air- I line in South. America ta utlliae The plane which made the the Douglas DC-J airplane with flight, now famous as the PI is " at Brssent igt the Smithsonian Institute In Washington. B.C. Panagra now operates over las DC-J girt ' of >2 pWni tad theiltat .? 5du,cM tn" Mter Ameri- cano dr luxe oveaight express service Thig wat'Uao the first fc^oaV&i/te Class^i b. "i- ,. "..* ,-.-. ..i^ wa aiso me nrat 7488 route miles and serves seven j time that berths ware available Soyth American countries. In- aboard aircraft In.this continent eluding Panama-Colombia. Ecna-1 ,_,____ dor. Pru, Bolivia. Chile and Ar- S. R. Cristobal gen tina. Arrives Monday ' Among the events taking place | The s.s. Crlatobsl Ls scheduled to arrive on the Isthmus Mon- day with 182 passengers. Among , Jg during Panagra's 2Srd year of operation wa.s its SO.OQflth cross- ing of the Equater. a record not equalled by any other airline. The year also saw the birth of a baby aboard its crack El Inter Americano flight. P a n a g r a crews and equipment teek part m the Korean airlift helping to transport United Nations troops apd supplies to that Pacific hot pat. ' .. ------K-~vM.p,i.io, nuiui those on the ship will-be Thomas E ougan. Chief f the Retail Stores Branch of the Commissa- 23 \ YEARS ----------- -M < ^riHinvia- ry Divisin: and Br. Horace w. 8hrecft. AssistantyChlef of the Eye. Ear. Nose and Throat Serv- ice at Gorgas Hospital. PIONEttlNG SAFETY SERVICE "WerW's Fricadliest Airkat1 *^^^?a^r^^^,rd A^fiWVERSASY of SERVICE fhf WT tOAST of SOITH AMERICA. The com Dieta advance passen- ger list follows: Mllford K. Bailey; Miss Nan- cy Batemani Bruce Bateman Jr.: WiilUm Black: Cpl.Chas.D-' Beetler: LoUi, a. Bpnz; Mr. and MIL, ntfl" .Baratan: Mrs. Mvrtle M. Blacli and son; Mrs Mildred A Berhaw and daugh- ter; civile W. Berham: and Mrs Virginia 8. Boney and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Thoa. t. Bou- ean: Mr. and Mrs. Paul w Bramlett and daughter; Mrs Gertrude E. Brown: Mr. Betty L. Carper; Jamie J. Carruth; Carl W. cettl; Col. Lester J Chase: Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Clancy and two chitaren; Mrs Virginia F Cohen and daughter; Dr. and Mrs. H. W. Comegys; Mrs. Mavis R. Compton and three children; and Mrs. Ora K. Compton. Mrs. Lola M. Derrick: George T. Droste: Mr. and Mrs. Elmsr! J Bgllnte-n and daughter: Mr. and Mrs Noel C Parnaworth and twa hildren: "Mrs Virginia O. Fishbough; Mr. and Mrs. Jo- seph E. Plynn and daughter: Mr. and Mrs Raymond E Forbes (CenttnaaS Page TaTKEE) * PANAMA * COLOHBIA * ECLADOR Salute the Republic of. . * PERL * BOLIVIA * CHILE * ARGENTINA This New Amazing Coufh Mixture Comes' From BKziardly Cold Canada Cpmpptindeo' tretn ror Co"Odin Una Balsam, Mnmc4. Glycerin. Irnh Mom ono oHw tplanali*: inoradianti, Buckley-, Conodv Mimurr Mt*>. eat rner # a teospoontui. let il lie on ypl" 'Onguc o momenf than swallow ilowly _ l*ti iti powerful tiectiv action ceftai !> right owey it stprtf to leeaan up thick choking phlegm end open up clcag.ee branchial tubes Now you'll knew why over St mil- lion bottles of fuel.lay's hove haan If In emi. wintry Canada Your own oYuggiyt hoi fhil great Conodian scovory THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER IS. 1*51 THE PANAMA AMKIICAIf AN INDWNDENT DAILY NKWgPAJNtfc iiiii i i PACK General Marshall Will Retire To His Home In Leesburg, Va. WASHINGTON, Sept. 13 (UP) Gentral George Catlttt Marshall, Hi* 70-year-old soldie.-statesman who helped guide the United States through some of its most trying years, and who President Trumaiffalls the great- est living American, will go into retirement at his Lees- burg, Va., home. Marshall's resignation as Secretary of Defense, an- nounced yesterday, had been expected. f His health has been none too good for years and it was at great personal risk that he bowed to President Tru- man's urgent call when United Nations fortunes were at low ebb and the Communists were threatening to conquer South .Korea. 'm \ ft was exactly o year ago that Marshall replaced Louis' Johnson in the nation's No, 1 defense post. ------- Oak Seed HORIZONTAL 1 Depicted nut 6 Indian* 13 Harmony 14 Tolerant 15 Writing fluid 16 Hurt 3 It ii the rrui' of the ----- 4 Red CroM (b.) 5 Bird'i home 6 Wing-shaped 7 Impudent 8 Poker itike IB Armed conflict jCalui Julius air. Traman bade a personal "goodDve" to Marshall yesterday. T|je general and hi successor, deputy Defense Secretary Robert A. Lvett, both called at the White House after the resigna- tion announcement. While cameramen bustled in front of Mr. Truman's desk he spoke to Lovett: "Yob are" supposed to smile when; they are making movies. biit f dont feel like smiling with thg'general going. "ver since I've been here he's beert my right arm." Marshall'a resignation came a- mld widespread reports that Se- cretary of State Dean Acheson will be the next to step out. President Truman's choice of '.overt for "one of the tough- Mt" poats in the Cabinet was halted in Congress by Republi- cans and Democrats alike. Marshall himself said Mr. Trtwnan could not have done baar." Lovett has been associated with Marshall for more than a de- cade. ' He served as assistant Secreta- ry of War for Air In World War II. when Marshall was Army Chief of Staff and returned as Undersecretary of State in 1947 when' the- general was Secretary of State. Lovett, who will be 58 Friday, was a naval aviator rn World War I*nd long, has been consid- ered an authority on air warfare and a strong advocate of long- ranoe heavy bombing. He is not affiliated with any political party. Mr. Truman named William C. Foster, head of the economic co- operation administration, to suc- ceed Lovett as deputy Defense, raehAid' M, Bissell. Jr.. Fos- ter's deputy, was appointed act- ing RCA administrator. The President accepted Mar- shall's resignation "With very great reluctance," effective! at the close of business yesterday, but recalled that the old soldier ori- ginally had agreed to serve only until last, June 30. The Korean War and pending. January, 1947. to tary of State. Shipping & Ai r Une News (Continued from Page t) legislation Influenced Marshall to stay until now. . "No man," Mr. Truman told the general, "has ever given his country more distinguished and patriotic service than have you." Marshall, who will be 71 on rec. 31, assured Mr. Truman that "I will always be available tor whatever temporary service yo may desire of me." But he added that he felt that "I must terminate my active dal- ly service in the government." In bidding goodbye to Penta- gon reporters, Marshall had high praise for Lovett and said that "no other man In the United States has his ability and com- petence to take complete charge." Much the same sentiments were echoed In Congress, where several members also expressed satisfaction at the fact that a ci- vilian once again will head the defense establishment. A special provision in the Service Unification Law had to be waived to let Marshall, a mili- tary man. take the post. . Marshall praised the entire defense organisation as an im- mensely competent group of men and women and said that Congress, in "this critical year," has given him "practl- callv everything we have asked for." i . He also expressed apprecia- tion for the cooperation from the press, radio and magazines. Marshall, who said he was completing 50 years and four") months of government service, was Army Chief of Staff throughout World War II and master-minded the victories over Japan and Germany. At the end of the war he made his first attempt at retirement. but had hardly reached Leeaburg before Mr. Truman drafted him for the unsuccessful mission to China designed to end the Com- munist-Nationalist Civil War. It was this mission that led to the first outspoken criticism of the general. Marshall retired again after that tour of duty, but was called back by the President again In become 8ecre- 19 Diminutive suffix' 20 Began 22 Exist 23 Coin 25 Unoccupied 27 Iroquoian Indian 2 Animal fat 9 Calcium (symbol) 30 Near 31 Type square 32 Two (prefix) 33 Sea eagle 35 Guide 38 Ogle 39 Domestic slave 40 Psyche part 41 Bead by letter 47 Giant king of Bashan 48 It grows In a scaly 50 Elude 51 Ventilate 52 Icy pendants 54 Goddess of. peace 56 Cloth stretchers 57 Sample VERTICAL lEach 2 Core ______- ' (ab.) 10 Cut 28 Obligations 11 Make possible M Draw forth 12 Thoroughfare 34 Make smaller 17 Parent 36 Oil 20 Ocean vessels 37 Stage 21 Maimed 42 Wan 24 Kind of creed 43 Always -----------------------_.-------,------ Answer to Pravioua Puzzle iJ>ll^r.',;liaai| !My:i sdlli:!'.'!-: Imrj.z\Z'Jh\-4to\ ULJ'J IIU7IKIIU lWG U'-i*: UMi-JnSi -t IB '*** pawaaBMa i-U iiii 11 hii rrSTaTTii /.;'-'< Wid ' I'TaMtl " '_VJ :'1MUB -"'-'<.*> -I ateta ilal iikv UUhl HKJSIIsJI H -I liW: HIT. I^i II"! I '..'l! UiZlBJEJiS.'BJ til J Mail-IBS' 44 Deprivation 48 Measure 48 Revise 49 Fasten 81 Roman bronzi 53 Peony (ab.) 55 Sun god Metal Shortages Cut Down On Automatic Gear Shifts and Mrs. and daughter; and Mr Archie W. French. Clement J. Genis; Dr. and Mrs. A. Earle Gerrans; Misa Stella I. Gilbert; Mr. and Mrs, John F. Greening; Mr. and Mrs wm. A. Gdbbons; Miss Margaret Guets- chow; Daniel F. Haggerty; Mr. and Mrs. Oscar L. HUnson and five children; Mrs. Mildred Hall; Mr. and Mrs. Leonard L. Hettzke and son; Paul W. Hen- derson; Mr. and Mrs. Clint M. Holcomb; and Mrs. Jane, B. Hull. Mr.-.and Mrs. Wm. M. Jensen and four children: Mr. and Mrs. Henry K. Johnstone and daugh- ter; Oliver A. Kemp!; Miss Jean- nette L. Kovel; Miss Elizabeth Levie; Mrs. Charlotte McDonald: Mrs. Helen D. Mekeown and sort; and Miss Lisa Maddoz. Mr., an dMrs. James G. Ma- gulre; Miss Mary F. Magulre: i*...*. Pauline D. Maltha: Mr. and . .. Conrsd Maner; Mr. and Mrs. John F. Meehan and two j cnlldran; Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Metzger and two children; Mrs. Corersne M. Mornhlnweg; Mrs. Irene A. O'Hearn; and Mrs. He- len H. Oster and son. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Paige and three children; Wm. J. Park; Miss Jeanne Marie Patter- son; Mrs. Vern Prler; Dr. How- Sri C. and Mrs. Prltham and ree children; Francis X. Quinn; SFC Walter E. Rahte; Misa Frances R. Rawhouser; Mr. and.Mrs. Muret C. Redman and son; and Miss Bernlce Reynolds. Mrs.. Dorothy Schneider and daughter; Mrs. Rose M. Scott: Mr. and Mrs. Robi. U, Schultz and two children; Mr. and Mrs. nor O. Sharp; Miss Ellen S. Shlrer; Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Shockey; Dr. and Mrs. Horace W. Shreck and two children; Mr. and M" Harold T. Smith; Charles R. Spragglns; and Miss Mattle S. Spragglns and two children. Fred R. Trout; Mrs. Bertha B. Tyrrell; Mrs. Irene S. Walling and daughter; Mrs. Charlotte J. Ward: Mrs. Anne I. Wlklngstad and son; Mr. and Mrs. Ray- mond R. Will and five children; Mr: and Mrs. Root. B. Williams; Mr. and Mrs. LaRoy B. Wilson, Jr. and three children: Mrs. Ma- rlon Tost; Mrs. Irene C. M. 21m- menhafi; James F. Ahearn; and Mrs. Mrle J. Hermann. that it would "fall victim to Soviet intrigue from within and to Russian military might from without." McCarthy had no immediate comment on Marshall's resigna- tion. But Senate. Republican leader Kenneth S. Wherry. Neb,, while praising Marshall as a soldier, said his diplomatic record "is not so lustrous." There was no question about Marshall's war record. At the end of World War'4, Gen. John J. Pershlng described him as the finest soldier in that conflict. In 1949. the late Secretary -Of. War Henry L. Stlmson referred to him as "the finest soldier ,14 have ever known." In the top defense post. Mar- shall's big job was to build up the armed forcea to .meet the commitment that fell to this nation in Its new role as the leading western power. As he said. Congress gave him pretty much what he asked tor- al though they were some disap- pointments. --------- CHICKEN BANQUET POMPEY. N. Y. (U.P.) Paul Owens Is waiting ruefully tor a bill for chicken for his dog. The dog. was locked accidentally In a neighbor* chicken house and made the most of Its opportunity by killing 113 white leghorns and injuring 12 mor. Keep Your Baby Free . From Irritations/ WASHINGTON. Sept. 13 (UP)The National Production Authority yesterday placed strict limitations on the num- ber of low and medium-priced automobiles which may be equipped with automatic gear shifts. In a drastic order designed to conserve vital metals for the defense program, the NPA also forbade use of top-grade (pri- mary) aluminum for engine pis- tons in passenger cars. The order is effective Oct. 1, and comes on top of previous metal conservation measures which will cut back total auto- mobile output by about 100,000 cars during the last three months of the vear. Under the directive, manu- facturers of cara with a fac- tory price of 81.800 or less may Install automatic transmissions In only 35 per cent of them. Manufacturers of cars with a factory price of $1,800 to 82,500 may install the special equipment in 85 per cent of their output. Cars wltli a factory price of 81,800 or less include Fords. Chevrolet!, Plymouths, Stude- baker Champions. Henry J's, Crosleys. Dodge business coupes. Nash business coupes, and some Pontiac models. Factory prices of between 81 .- 800 and $2.500 are borne t#/ most Nash. Dodge and Pontiac models, Studeback Commanders, Bulck super and special models. Chrysler Windsors, De Sotos. Kaisers. Frazers, M e r c u rys. Oldsmobiles. and some Packard and Hudson models. All higher-priced cars, with a f.o.b. tag of 82,500 and up. may have automatic transmis- sions. NPA officials said the order will not only save aluminum and alloy steel, but will help the auto industry meet a "com- petitive Imbalance" caused bv government controls on metal' use. They explained that General Motors Corp., is now equipping about 40 per cent of its Chev- roiets with automatic transmis- sions, and will have to cutback. The Ford Motor Co.. on the other hand, was putting auto- matic transmissions on much smaller percentage of its line when earlier metal controls tended to "freeze" the com- ' petltive situation. Under the new order. Ford Will be able to increase the number of its cars with auto- tnattc transmissions to 35 per , cent. Car-makers were given the option of using, "secondary" aluminum or cast iron for pas- senger engine pistons after Oct. 1. SPECIAL ARMOUR'S STAR BACON... SWIFT'S ORIOLE BACON... SWIFTS ORIOLE BACON... ...} IH.'pkf..... c. ....} lb. pkg.....3ftc. -----I lb. pkjr,..... 74c JUST ARRIVED FRESH A-l DANISH BUTTER Best by Taste ARMOUR'S READY TO EAT PICNICS Cellophane Wrapped READY TO EAT BROILED HALF CHICKENS ( BROILED VEAL SAUSAGE (Bratwurst) Pauls Market FRIDAY -SATURDAY LAST TWO DAYS OK OUR SUPER COLOSSAL SALE [ Don't Miss It! ZIG-ZAG 1*8 CENTRAL AVENUE Open from 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. and during noon hour. _________ _ WhyWuit Aiio.LW Day? He left that post just before a serious kidney operation In 1949. and was recalled as Defense Se- cretary a year ago. He was the nation's third De- fense Secretary. The late James Forrestal was the first to fill the post created by Congress, under the 1947 uni- fication act. Forrestal. who quit under fire, was succeeded by Johnson, who left under a cloud as members of Congress charged the nation's defenses were weak. Marshall might well be best remembered for fathering the foreign aid plan which bears his name. It generally is credited with stopping the Communist tide In Europe after World War II. About the only criticism that ever centered around his name grew out of his Ill-fated China mission. This reached Its height last June 14 when Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, R., Wis., accused Marshall of plotting with oth- ers to weaken the nation so SPARKLING Playtex* Guarantees 1001 effectiveness against Diaper Rash! Moihen.' Give year biby the dentine protection from diaper rail, that only Playtex Baby Oil. Powder and Cream will guarantee. . For Playlei contains a modern, miracle ntiotptM that destroys the bacteria that rime diaper rath. And only Playtex makes this guarantee.,. your money back if your baby ever develop* diaper rash while uaiag Playtex Baby Oil, ' Powder and Cream cona*eatly.' PUYTEX BABY OIL Large economy * 75e.,# All three, in large economy ize. in handy NURSERY-PAK* Mr* alwiw PLAYTEX BABY POWDER Large economy aise. 45c. BUY NOW AT OLD PRICES I THUE'S no reason under the sun why you should postpone the extra satis- faction of owning a Pontiac. Stop hi as soon as you can, we'll work out a dealand then you'll appreciate the extra satisfaction of a Pontiac! You'll notice It first in the pride you take in your Pontiac's distinctive beauty, for there's nothing else like it. You'll' notice it every mile you drive, for your Pontiac will perform brilliantly, year after year. You'll notice It, too, in the admiring glances of others, for Pontiac is always sought after, always valuable. But best of all you'll notice it on the price tagfor the extra satisfaction of a Pontiac costs nothing! If you can afford any new car you can afford a wonderful new Pontiac! E*m*mnt.. rinmtdlrm HliUrm*! *rt mtM* <*"I ** mjUmt Aaaorlea'a Loweat-Prlceo Straight Kijht Loweat-Prieoa Car Irk *M H.tra-Haiif rlv# (Oflitiut M txnt ml) Yoar Choi** ( Silver Streak Kaglnea- Stralght Elgin or Six Tfco Moot Beaatlfal Thing on Wheels Ualaieol Body hy Ft.her (r Dollar for Dollar you cait I beat a PLAYTEX BABY CREAM Larga coaoaty AVAILABLE AT LEADING STORES AND DRUG STORES IN THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA. Pontiac IMMEDIATE LOCAL and STATES DELIVERIES Vil T XJL ) ^^ -/V# Your CADILLAC GMC PONTIAC Dealer PANAMA COLON " PAGE FOUR THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAM NEWSPAPER ^rrtlantlc sJfi let '/ , W. Wilton Jm flask l5ox 195, (jalun JeltphoHt C*h 378 MISS CALONGE WEDS MR. HEILBRON Miss Josefa Calonge, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pedro Ca- lonse Garcia, of Colon, became the bride of Mr. Osvaldo Heilbron. son of Mrs. Antonia D. Heilbron and the late Mr. Osvaldo Heilbron, formerly of Colon, at an 8:80 a.m. nuptial mass at the Miraculous Medal Church in New Cristobal, Wed- nesday, September 12. The double ring; ceremony was performed by the Rev- erend Father Vincent J. Ryan, CM. in the presence of rela- tives and friends. and she used white accessories. Her picture hat was made of green organdy and white horse- hair. She carried a loose hand bouquet of white gardenias. Mr. Frank X. Zelmetz was best man for Mr. Heilbron and the groomsmen were Mr. James Cain and Mr. Alfred A. Nord- strom. A wedding breakfast for the members of the wedding party and relatives, with a few close friends, was held at the Hotel Washington following the cere- mony. The bride and groom cut the traditional wedding cake. It was three-tiered and topped with a miniature bride and groom. Later In the day Mr. and Mrs. Heilbrun left for the Pacific Side, where they enplaned for Mede- Mn. Colombia, to spend their honeymoon. The bride's going a- way costume was a pastel blue shantung suit, with which she used black accessories. Upon their return they will re- side In Bella Vista. Miss Calonge graduated from St. Mary's Academy and spent the past five years in Barcelo- na, Spain. Mr. Heilbron graduated from Cristobal High School in the Class of 1943 and Is employed with Terminales Panama, in Pa- nama City. Regal lilies were used to decor- ate the altar and chancel and were tied with ribbons to mark the pews. Mrs. Angela Castillo, organist, played the traditional wedding marches and accompanied Mrs. Ligia Pretto who sang an "Ave Maria" by Nlcolau and "Panls Angellcus" by Caesar Franck. The lovely bride entered upon the arm of her father, by whom she was given In marriage. She wore a wedding gown of white organza over taffeta. The bodice had a slight V-neckline finished With a scalloped collar of im- ported Swiss embroidered organ- dy. The long fitted sleeves were finished with a flattering bimd Of the embroidery at the wrist, and there was an Inset band of the embroidery at the waistline. The flared, floor-length skirt had a peplum of the embroidery which had a scalloped edge. A handmade white mantilla, from Granada, Spain, was worn over a hoop of orange blossoms as a Wll. She carried an ivory-and- gold rosary and a parchment cov- ered prayerbook, topped with a white orchid corsage and show- ered with ribbons. Miss Carmen Calonge, sister of the bride, was the maid of honor and only attendant. Her dress was of Nile Green Swiss organ- dy, embroidered In white, over green taffeta. A yoke of organza formed a high neckline to which the embroidery was appllqued In uch a way taht the scallops formed the sleeves. The full- gathered skirt was ankle-length Soap bubble pipes were given the young guests and they enjoyed using them. The birthday cake was very novel, as It was topped with a cowboy. The lighted candles caused him to twirl his lariat. The young guests were: Stuart Brown, John Wood, Ronnie Crump. Bee Coffey, Diane Sparks, Angela and Sandra Keane. Ter- ry Conley. Carol Flennlken, Dick Hottal, Eddie Whltlock, Bobby Weir and Frances Dlgnam. Also present were: Mr. and Mrs. Ernesto Jaramlllo of Pana- ma City, Mrs. David Coffey, Mrs. R. W. Crump, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hottal, Mr. and Mrs. V. C. Reed. Mrs. R. T. Conley and Mrs. John Wood. IN HOLLYWOOD BY ERSKINE JOHNSON NBA Staff Correspondent ------O - THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER IS, 1*51 BY OSWALD JACOBY Written for NEA Service HOLLYWOOD. (NEA) Betty Hutton, who makes $5000 a week, and song arranger Pete Ruglo, who makes less than $1000, are trying to work out the money angle for a marriage next Janu- ary. The fly in the ointment it Betty's notion that she may want to retire after two or three more pictures. The names of Lana Turner and Fernando Lamas, her lead- in; man In "The Merry Widow," arc being linked and it's not stu- dio-inspired, either. Set visitors who have peeked In on rehearsals of their love scenes are doing the talking. Hubby Bert Frledlob will ac- company Eleanor Parker to her hometown of Cleveland for the world premiere of "A Millionaire for Christy," but says he'll stay in the background. He told me: "I'm going along to make an im- personal appearance." Mrs. Gary Cooper has instruct- ed her legal-eagles to study the British divorce laws and may un- leash a bolt of lightning from London. Billy Wilder is till twirling that rope over his head to lasso Garbo for a movie comeback. It Is for the Yul Brynner starrer "A New Kind of Love." Something went wrong in clearing with the Nora Bayea fa- mily, so the famous lark Is now being called Nola Beach In Para- mount's "Somebody Loves Me," the musical biography of Benny Fields and Blossom Seeley. Hedy Lamarr has two story properties that she'll sell for $75,000. It's further proof that Hedy's design for living doesn't Include Hollywood. Radio Programs Your Community Station HOG-840 . Where 100.000 t>aeets Meet Presents Today, Thursday, Sept IS Monopolies Called Threat to US Economic Programs GENEVA. Sept. 13 (USIS) Business practices having mono- polistic effects, if unchecked, could become a major barrier to economic programs being pro- moted by the United Nations, according to Isador Lubln. U. 8. Delegate to the U. N. Econo- mic and Social Council. Lubln told the Council that an international campaign is needed to eliminate restrictive business methods obstructing economic and social progress. He spoke In support of a U. 8. resolution proposing coopera- tive U.N. action against such rertrsme business.' practices. The fifclutlon iJrftTIntroduced before the* Council Monday. Lubjj&toki the Council: "The most ptaslng problem before the world today is Increasing the standards of living of peo- ple everywhere. Yet Interna- tional cartels, which are now .In the process of increasing their power and the range of their Influence, can, should they so desire, frustrate the end we seek." He emphasized: "Interna- tional action Is needed to safe- guard the strength, the stability and the prosperity of the inter- national trade system, upon which the well-being of all participating nations largely de- pends. ... "The trade of every country suffers when the flow of world trade Is restricted. Any action by cartels that lowers European standards of living by curtailing production and trade in Europe does direct harm to the Western Hemisphere and to Asia. "By the same token any ac- tion by cartels that interferes with the standard of living In the United States and Latin Amreica automatically has de- trimental effects on both Asia and Europe. Hence, every coun- try has an Interest in contri- buting to the efforts of the others to thwart monopolistic restrictions, wherever they may be found, even though Its own exports and imports are not di- rectly Involved." Farewell Party for Miss Madison 8ergeant and Mrs. A. C. Brescn, of Fort Gullck, entertain- ed with a farewell party at their quarters for Miss Beverly Ann Madison, Mrs. Breach's sister, before her recent departure for the States. The friends who enjoyed an evening of games and dancing and buffet supper were: Misses Beverl" Lmdstrom, Barbara and Mary B. Sherry, Dorothy Rowley, Sergeant and Mrs. Henry Ged- wlck, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Shu- make, and Messrs Malcolm Els- worth. Don Bougan, Walter Wei- don. Louis Downs, Ralph Mal- "'m, W. Campok and Don Kln- sey. Miss Madison left for Valdesta, Georgia, where she will study while visiting relatives. Brownie Notices All Brownies of Troops 32, 36 and 23 and all girls between the ages of seven and 10 years, who are Interested in becoming Brow- nies, are asked to attend a meet- ing to be held on the ground floor of Mrs. Harry Seaman's re- sidence, House 67, New Cristo- bal, Tuesday. September 18 at 3:30 p.m. The leaders of these troops would like all mothers of Brow- nies to attend the meeting. Brownie Troops 45 and 8 will meet at 3:00 p.m. Friday at the Scout Building at Fort Gullck. The girls are requested to bring their dollar for registration. Any girls between the ages of seven and 10, who wish to become Brownies are Invited to attend the meeting. An invitation is also extended to the mothers of the girls to be present. Anyone desiring further information may call Mrs. Will- iam R. Llndstrom, 3788488. Let's alt behind a Canasta ex- pert and see how he plays a dif- ficult hand. Both sides need 120 for the first meld, and our hero makes his first draw from the stockpile. He then holds: A, K-K, Q-Q, 10-, 8-4-3, 2-2. He cannot meld, so his only problem at the moment is his dis- card. He doesn't dream of dis- carding the ace. He may need aces to get the count, and so may the enemy. One general principle to remember Is that you don't throw an ace except from a real- ly good hand. He doesn't throw the black three because he may need a safe discard later on but doesn't des- perately need one so early in the hand. The question is whether to throw a ten-point card or a five- point card. A high card Is slightly more dangerous than a low card and should be selected for Just that reason. Our expert decides to- throw the ten (the nine would have been Just as good, of course), and then awaits developments. As it happens, the left-hand opponent now draws from the stock and discards a nine, so our expert makes up his mind to throw his nine at his next turn. He will then be able to throw low cards for a few rounds by which time one side or the other will probably meld. We will come back to this hand In our next article, but will In- terrupt it at this point to answer a question or two. ,9"A Player wants to meld out with three black threes. May he discardor Is he forbidden to dis- card In this case? AWhenever you meld out you may discard or notas you please. This rule Is always true whether or not you meld black threes. Hollywood designer Taffy ex- pects the stork In February___ Don't tell me. Margaret O'Brien now has a strapless evening gown-----Bill Henry, actor hus- band of ui starlet Barbara Knud- sen. has been bedded m an over- seas military hospital. A nervous breakdown. Never trust a sound track. There's a big barbershop quartet scene in "Aaron Slick From Pun- kin' Crick." A chorus of ten men recorded the rich harmony. The big; hush-hush science-fic- tion project at Paramount is ti- tled "Los Alamos" and wW be produced with a east of un- knowns, Radio and movies are two dif- ferent worlds. After playing Ca- ry Grant's daughter six times on the airwaves, 12 year old Anne Whitfleld was turned down for the role of his daughter at War- ners. The studio's reason: Too tall." One of the nation's top news- papers offered Rosalind Russell a fancy fee to by-line a daily Hollywood column. Ros refused op the grounds that It might hurt her acting career. Movie censorship mast be re- laxing. Ann Dvorak vows that the censors have approved a film version of her stage hit, "The Respectful Prostitute." Title, toe. Despite Norma Shearer's de- nials of Interest In acting, at least three movletown agents have discussed TV deals with her in the past month. Usa Kirk bowed out of the Broadway revue. "Only Angels Have Money," but grabbed off $1000 for supplying the title___ Edward G. Robinson's return to the stage in "Darkness at Noon" Is with the understanding that he'll also do the film version. TROPICAL-TODAY Shews: 1:30 3:20 5:12 7:05 8:55 OMI GUN TO FIGHT VVITH..OMIGIPII TO FIGHT FOR! PJH. 3:30Let's Dance 4:00Music Without Words 4:15Negro Spirituals 4:30What's Your Favorite 8:00Panamuslca Story Time 8:15Evening Salon 7:00Make Believe Ballroom (VOA) 7:30Sports Review 7:45Jam Session 8:00World News (VOA) 8:15Cross Country, u. 8. A. (VOA) 8:45-Jam Session (VOA) O:00r-Meet Eleanor Roosevelt (VOA) 9:30Commentator's Digest (VOA) 9:45Sports Tune of Day and News (VOA) 10:00HOTEL EL PANAMA 10:15Musical Interlude 10:30Take It From Here (BBC) 11:00The Owl's Nest 12:00-8ignOff Tomorrow, Friday, Sept. 14 A.M. 6:00Sign On and Alarm dock 7:30Request Salon 8.15News (VOA) 8:30Morning Varieties 8:46Music Makers 8:00News 9:15Stand By For Adventure 9:30As I See It 10:00News and Off the Record 11:00News and Off the Record 11:30Meet the Band 12:00-News LONGER LASTING? Mtotyt Nor ma Mm mm expemlve Mil polish |-ft, I,,,,,, fhemCUTlx. Only Cutex contains the excluir, sew logredlent. Enamelon. The fine lastre will remain on yoar naili (or daya. No chipping, bo paellas, no fading. Chooie from tfa iay exquisita fashion abados. G** roar Use that Uvly, aura d*,ir.bU look uiith Cutex lipstick. Comes in the latest fashion shades that harmonist ** row fmvorif nail polish. Thu WorUf Mod Popular Nail Polish ant extra-plump, extra-tender chicken? pj*. Fishing Trip to Perlas Islands A group of Atlantic Side fish- ermen left with Mr. William Brooks of Margarita on his boat for a fishing trip to the Perlas Islands. The members of the party In- cluded Messrs Kenneth Brassell, Lee Kariger and Robert Douglas. Billy Acheson Celebrates Birthday Anniversary Billy Acheson, so nof Captain and Mrs. w. S. Acheson of Mar- garita, celebrated his fifth birth- day anniversary with a birthday party at the home of his parents 8unday afternoon. A color scheme of green and white was used on the birthday table and multi-colored balloons with green and white streamers were used In the decorations. Panama Canal Clubhouses Sgsfc^ Show/ng Tonight ^_^B WHY NOT ZNJOY Y0UH3W??? AND GO TO THE MOVHSIII BALBOA Atr-CiidlrlaaaS :U tat DIABLO HTS. IS S> :1| ________ Joel McCREA a Shelley WINTERS "FRENCHIE" (Technicolor) Taareay TOKYO TILS tit" COCOLI (:1S s.ae Robert MONTGOMERY a) Patricia WAYNE "EYE WITNESS" PrUay "AFFAIRS OF SALLY" PEDRO MIGUEL I* P.M. GAMBOA i-.t p.m. ___Lucille BALL o Eddie ALBERT 'THE AFFAIRS OF SALLY" Friday "glBBBA PASSAGE" G A T U N tn ---------* (FrMay) Red SKELTON a Sally FORREST "EXCUSE MY DUST" Academy Award Winner... Judy HOLUDAY "BORN YESTERDAY" Saturday AFFAMtS OP BALLY" (PrMay) ... ..S*** DA* O Gene NELSON 'LULLABY OF BROADWAY" MARGARITA OS S) T:M Donald WOODS Trudy MARSHALL "BARBARY PIRATE" Friday SlUfA" CRISTOBAL -Bfi!.DlYIS ""^ suluvan 'JSZ2Z "PAYMENT ON DEMAND" :IS a ae Miar "SNORT GRASS" QA player picks up the dis- card pile to make his Initial meld Is he allowe dto make other melds with the cards he has Just Ricked up or must he wait until is next tum before he can make further melds? .. AHe may make further melds "he wishes. This Is always true when s player takes the discard pile. LUX THEATRE Alr-Conditioned CSTARTS TODAY! 3:M,5:00,7:M,9:M_J SMASH HIT! The FLYINC mmrmnmnmt BU* ~TOECA ID LIM (kldmJfafiM mSms.% JIHJE LOHDOH WMY CALHOUW JACK Mi mm* -.wastaassa. COMING! Tender! Moving! "TERESA" Story of a bride with a new star Pier Angel COMINO! Great! "THE GREA1 CARUSO" In Technicolor! with Mario Lama BALBOA opening SATURDAY!- tot* It's NEW and .TECHNICOLOR, too! I M-Q-1 present the mighty musical of th* Mississippi | rWffce Moved Sosas by Jerome Kern end Oicar Hammorrtain, II I .'*'' II...1. w ^^ _s*^----- -*5^ fcTHIM^YSOr^ -JOtEjBKW-mRGlondf^RCUMnOH ROBERTSTERLING AGNESMOOREHEAD WUttsHMmBO 12:05Luncheon Music 12:30Popular Music 1:00News 1:15Personality Parade 1:45American Favoritos 2:00Songs of Prance (RDF/ 2:15It's Tim) to Dance 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00All star Concert Hall 3:15The Little Show 3:30Let's Dance 4:00Music Without Words 4:15David Rose Show 4:10What's Your Favorite 6:00Lean Back and Listen 6:15Request Salon 7:00Mayor of Caaterbrldge (BBC) 7:30Sports Review 7:45Here Comes Louis Jordan 8:00News and Commentary Raymond Swing (VOA) 8:15Musical Notebook (VOA) 8:45Salute to Brasil 8:00The Jan Chib (VOA) 9:30Commentator's Digest (VOA) 8:45Sports and News (VOA) : 00Cavalcade of America (VOA) 10:80Adventures o P.C. 40 11:00The Owl's Nest 1:00s-m. Sign Off Explanation of Symbols VOAVoice of America BBCBritish Broadcasting Corp. RDFRadlodlffuslon Francaise JUST SOAP SUDfl SULLIVAN. Ind. (.P.) Bar- bara Page washed her golf shoes with ordinary laundry soap, fine didn't get all the soap out When she played a round of golf over ! a wet course, she had to explain to her partner that she wasn't foaming at the feet... just soap suds. rryeri and roost ore, cleaned, cut, ready te cook. CENTRAL TODAY WEEK END RELEASE! Shows: 1:15, 2:55, 4:58, :49 TODAY TAUAM'S LATEST' ...fTMaPTOBI FWEB U AFVCA! You Must believe your tyot when you see: "JTIIT MnrMIBTsMr ASTOUNDING MUS OF CATHI FOREST MAIDENS TMrttD! 8ATTU Of KOOMU HOtMS! Hwncfrods of other Ihrlliri QMuMxtiu TODAY WEEK-END RELEASE! Showi: l.-M .8:80-8:58 5:80 fat :M pjn. BUD 4t'LOU are at their best! /few Mar -jcrfcaxt g \jaur ace V I THERCfc 5UMIYS )Room fOfcOr* MOW E2AJ POND'S new fo.ndatien and powder sll-ln-ono Not a cake moke-up. Not a greasy foundation. Goes on without water. Stays on- much longer than powder. Perfect to carry I Can't spl over handbag or dark dothe. .WW-UIK THTJMDAT, SKPTCMBBR 1>. 1951 inn PANAMA AMERICAN AN INOBPENBENT DAILT NEWSrAPM - * - i-i ' f PAQK FTV Pacific S^ocie I '} koum &,/94&tl,o.,Jl.i9ku~0.t.Pan, nama 3-0943 CHARGE D'AFFAIRES AND MRS. ALEXANDER HERMANN ENTERXAIN VISITING CANADIAN NAVY OFFICERS KnterUlDins for Captain E. F. Ttodel!. R.C.N., command- ing officer of the cruiser Ontario, Commander E. T. O. Madiwick, commander of the deatrover Huron, < f- fleers of both ihipi. Hi, Britanlc MBe.ty'a Charge d Affaires Alexander Henry Baxter Hermann and Mr. Hermann cavo a cocktail party last evening. V' About one hundred iruests were present at the party held at the Hermann residence In El Carmen. _ General and Mrs. Morris Return from Rio de Janeiro The Commander-ln-Cblef Ca- ribbean Command, Lt. General William H. H. Morris, Jr.. and Mm. Morris have returned from a trip to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where they were the personal fueata of General Newton Estll- ac Leal. Minister of War of Bra- ill, during the Brazilian Inde- pendence celebration. Accompanying General and Mr. Morris were MJor Warren H. Stutler and Lt. Commander J. K. Wills. Governor and Mrs. Newcomer to Visit In Washington, D.C. Governor of the Panama Ca- nal, Brigadier General Francis K. Newcomer left by plane yes- terday for an official visit to Washington. D.C. Mrs. Newcomer will sail on Friday aboard the 8.8. Panama for New York en route to Wash- ington to Join her husband. Mrs. Kiel Gives Tea for Albrook Women's Club Mrs. Emll C. Kiel, wife of the Commanding General,, Carib- bean Air Command, was hostess yesterday to the outgoing and lncomtnb board members of the Albrook Field Women's Club. Mrs. Philip D. Coates presided at the coffee urn and Mrs. Her- bert W. Ladd poured the tea. Despedida Card Party Aa a despedida to the Consul of Argentina in Panama. Mr. Luis A. Barsuldo. who Is leaving soon for Buenos Aires, Argentina), the Bcuadorean Ambassador to Pan- ama Sixto Duiein Bailen gave a card party last evening at Hotel El Panaaia^ Buffet for Mra. Wright In honor of Mrs. Andrew M. Wright, who returned last week- end from a several months visit with her brother-in-law and sis- ter. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Dud- ley of New York City, her mo- ther, Mrs. Maria Arias Smith and aunt. Miss Elida Arlas gave a buf- fet Monday evening- at their re- sidence in Bella Visto. Luncheon in Fern Room Ladles of personnel attached to .the 46th Reconnaissance Bat- talion met for their monthly ssa luncheon In the Fern Room of the Hotel Tlvoli, with Mrs. Will- iam Fitzgerald, Mra David Clan- ton and Mrs. William McCaffrey acting as hostesses. Attending the luncheon were Mrs. Leslie Wllcox, Mrs. Myron Johnston, Mrs. Dennis Wardell. Mrs. Floyd Bowen, Mrs. Neal Kent. Mrs. Alfred Cherry, Mrs. Robert McCllntock, Mrs. Harold Sackman. Mrs. Joe Daus, Mrs. William Byers,Mrs. Charles Hel- den. Mrs. Zene Morlatt, Mrs. Thomas Peyton, Mrs. James Morrison, Mrs. Rufus Daniel, Mrs. Joseph Pingitore, Mrs. Paul Calaghan, Mrs. John Danielly, Mrs. Ingram and a guest Capt. Drake. U.S.A.N.C. Miss Muriel Mykland Off for Havana, New York Miss Muriel L. Mykland of Panama City left this morning by Braniff Airways on business trip to Havana and New York City. She expects to return the ear- ly part of October. Woman's Club Lunchepn at Hotel El Panama Members of the Balboa Worn-, an's Club and their guests enjoy- ed luncheon In the Balboa din- ing room of Hotel El Panama yesterday. The affair was ar- ranged by Mrs. Wlllard Albright, who was assisted by Mrs. Pat Ryan. Mrs. Herbert Bathmann, and Mrs. Joseph Bourgeois. A short business meeting was held followed by a tour of the hotel. Card games were played in the south' patio of the Bal- boa Room. Mrs. R. W. Rubelli, President of the Cristobal Woman.'s Club, was guest of honor. Other guests and members Included Mrs. Roy Cur- rle, Mrs. Gordon Karlger, Mrs.- C. D. Eppley, Mrs. Earl A. Schilling. Mrs. Molly Johnson, Mrs. F. V. Thomason, Mrs. W. C. Merchant, Mrs. E. R. Balto- zer. Mrs. L* C. Haaemann, Mr. O. Jouatra, Mrs. H. F. Yarbor- ough, Mra! M. C. Hill. Mrs. E. L. Voss, Mrs. J. H. Clark. Mrs. H. Chapek. Mrs. E. W. Coffey, Mrs. Cecilia Lao, Mra. O. E. Michaelis, Mrs. Ruth Wilson, Mrs. W. C. Hearon, Mrs. H. J. Qulnlan. Mrs. Ralph Otten, Mrs. Blanche Wright. Mra F. F. Pierce, Mrs. L. T. Butz, Mr. C. C. Wertz. Mrs. Herbert Bath- mann, Mrs. Essla C. Henrlquez, Mrs. Irene Undo, Mrs. Vivian de Castro, Mra: G. H. Davis, Mrs. J. W. Hare. Mrs. H. B. Yard, Mrs. L. W, Cagley, Mrs. R. N. Barret, Mra. K. C. Heliums, Mrs. E. B. Stevens. Mrs. W. F. Allbrlght and Mrs. Joseph Bour- geois. I.A.W.C. Luncheon at Army-Navy Club At the autumn luncheon of the Inter-American Women's Club In the Army and Navy Club at Fort Amador yesterday noon, over one hundred member and Bjests were present. Mrs. Elisa eurtematte, Mra E. Z. Stephens and members of the Hospitality Committee were in charge of ar- rangements. A surprise floor show was held under the auspices of Mrs. Roge- lio Al fa ro. It consisted of an ac- cordlan recital accompanied by marracaa, with Mrs. Alfaro, Mrs. Jose Ehrman and Mrs. Mario Al- faro playing accordians and Mrs. Jorge Endara on the marracas. Mrs. Paul Duran and Mrs. Cata Trinquete did the tamborito. A piano recital by Mrs. Murray Wise and Mexican dances by Mrs. Rogelio Alfaro and Mrs. Enrique Molina Reyes, accompanied on the piano by Mrs. Mercedes Pa- redes de Garcia Correa, complet- ed the program. Bridge and canasta were play- ed by some of the members af- ter the luncheon. Illiteracy Is Prime Target Of Mexico Cultural Meeting Doctor Wives Hold Luncheon at Tivoli Members of the Doctors Wives Club gathered for their monthly luncheon meeting at the Hotel Tlvoli yesterday noon, with Mrs. I. J. Strumpf.Mrs. G. E. Zerne, Mrs. J. Mitchell and Mrs, Will- iam Ossenfort acting as hostess- es. Present at the luncheon were Mrs. Clifford G. Blitch. Mrs. E. C. Lowry, Mrs. G. M. Steven- son, Mrs. E. A. Reece.Mrs. Ree- nlck, Mrs. R. Sifagoos, Mrs. Thompson. Mrs. J. F. Lloyd, Mrs. S. P. Smith. Mrs. W. T. Bailey. Mrs. Deerlng. Mrs. W. F. Wemmer, Mrs. Blanchaft, Mrs. Dlstefano, Mrs. R. Boni- face. Mrs. A. Chartock, Mrs. Sidney Kay, Mrs. L. 8. Leland, Mrs. C. A.Zarzeckl. Mr. R. Arias, Mrs. E. Osterber. Mrs. Schroll, Mrs. L. E. Fontaine, Mrs. William Brown, Mrs. Cen- sor. Mrs. Olenlck. Mrs. StauffeV, Mrs. Day, Mrs. 8. J. Beaudry, Mrs. E. D. Erman. Mrs. Kopp, Mra. Shannon. Mrs. J. E. Mar- shall, Mrs. J. D. Summerlln, Mra. J. G. Sebren. Mrs. D. A. Jutsiy, Mrs; T. G. Bouland add Mrs. J. H. Drahelm. P.M. Woman' Club to Give Reception The Pedro Miguel Woman's Club will hold a reception for the teachers and new residents of Pedro Miguel on Monday at 7:30 p.m. ih the basement of the Pedro Miguel Union Church. The club extends an invitation to everyone interested In attend- ing the reception. Balboa Emblem Club To Meet on Friday The Balboa Emblem Club will meet on Friday In the Lodge Hall at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Katherine Trimble, pres- [ ident. Invites all members and ?respective members to attend his meeting. To be eligible for | this club, one must be a wife, sis- ter, or mother of an Elk. MEXICO CITY. September 13 (U8I8)Concerted action to overcome Illiteracy and other problems of education, the arts and science In the Americas is being taken here by Hemls- {here leaders organizing the nter-Amerlcan Cultural Coun- cil. Representatives of the Amer- ican Republic, the United Na- tions and aeveral Inter-Ameri- can Organizations are present at the conference. The Cultural Council Is ex- pected to give primary atten- tion at It meeting to national and Interamerlcan programs for spreading a knowledge of reading and writing and for strengthening human liebrtles. Technical cooperation in educa- tion is also to be considered. The Council was authoris- ed in the Bogot Charter of IMS as an organ of the Or- ganisation of American State, along with the Intor-Ameri- can Economic and Social Council and the Council of Jurists, both of which are al- ready functioning. In addressing the delegates. Torres Bodet noted that the aim of the Council Is "to put into practice principles which the states of the Western Hemis- phere so strikingly 1 based on respect for cultural value of the American countries and re- quires their close cooperation for the high purposes of civiliza- tion." Relating the purposes of the new Council to the aims of UNESCO, Torres Bodet said the n a 11 o n al commissions for UNESCO, which now exist in many of the American Repub- lics are the best group to coordinate affairs in their own region which would come within the scope of the cultural coun- cil. Gual Vidal told how the Mexican government has been reducing illiteracy through- out the country since IMS, and is now cooperating with UNESCO in a teacher-train- ing project at Fatoeuara. "Although the council alms al collective action in cultural matters, delegates here pointed out that it will not depreciate the characteristic culture of any j Individual nation. Instead, they said, lt will serve to invigorate national cultures and make evident their significance," said Dr. Lewis Hanke, U. 8. repre- sentative to the conference, who was formerly director of the Hispanic Foundation of the U. 8. Library of Congress: "Just as distinguished Amer- ican political, juridical and eco- nomic leaders have concerted their efforts to solve critical problems in their fields, so are cultural leaders of the hemis- phere now tackling major ob- stacles hindering advances in education, science, arts and drawing up positive plans for solutions." RUTH MILLETT Says After, years of reading letters from unhappy wives I've come to this conclusion: The middle years are hard on a woman because at the time when she needs the bol- stering effects of her husband's love the most, he usually needs hers the least. A young husband struggling to make a start needs his wife; to bolster his ego, to turn to for as- surance when iie wants to take a chance, to help him plan and dream. But by the time husband and wife reach the middle years of life, the husband Is usually well on His way. He is absorbed by his work. He is self-assured and pret- ty well pleased with what he has made of himself. He doesn't need his wife's sup- port the way he did as a young man. In fact, he may have be- come so used to her loving faith In him that he Is no loneer touch- ed by it. He takes It for granted. But at this same time, his wife desperately needs to feel that she is cherished and needed by the man she married. Because her life has been more restricted than his. she needs to feel a part of his world. At the time when he is likely to do the least sharing of his life, she needs that sharing the most. And so, feeling suddenly some- what unimportant in her hus- band' scheme of things, she be- comes unhappy. She knows she 1* growing older. She probably feels she Is In a rut. And she is a I little bit afraidafraid that the man she loves no longer needs her and Is growing away' from her. That is how middle-age* must be to thousands of women, judg- ing from their letter to me. If husbands were only as un- derstanding and generous about helping their *ives through the middle years as wives are about standing by their husbands through the early years and through old age, marriage would be a finer thing. . 'Cycle' Mag Runs Carrol Story On 2 Wheels to Panama The latest Issue of "Cycle," a motorcycle magazine, carries a pictorial article called 'Two Wheels to Panam" written by Bill Carroll/ This is the second in a series of Carroll's adventures while riding his motorcycle down to Panama. The last article will appear in October. During his trip he was well equipped with several cam- eras which recorded the journey. [ Carroll 1 now a civilian em- ploye In the Public Information Office at Hq. U8ARCARIB in Ft. Amador! WATCH FOR International TON I CASA FASTOCHExclusive representative in Panama *4> ^ your baby tnoit Comfortable these ways V V \y 1 Guard baby'a sensitive, delicate km ' with punt, bland Johnson's Baby Oil. It helps prevent skin chafing, dryncaa, /"'^ and irritation. At baby's bath time, be. sure to use gentle, fragrart Johnson's Baby Soap to keep baby's skin soft and smooth. Mt attar - rou JovW*OH*^OfUi*OH REX' Beauty Salon takes pride in announcing their new "coiffure" TON I Famous Italian hairstylist just arrived from Argen- tine! Specialized In Permanente o Halratyling Cut Tint Call for appointment 2-334S, Panam REX BEAUTY SALON No. S 4th of July Avenue Sewing Our COLD WAVES are SO GOOD for your hair ... they make lt softer, lovelier than ever! Cuts Sets Shampoos See our Experts. Balboa 3677 Armed Services YMCA Beauty Salon (YMCA Bid;.) Balboa Open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Dorothy Gray Cosmetics. J| FELIX I lew JJresses smart afternoon FROCKS......9.95 enchanting NYLON prints 17.95 * \ SPECIAL SALE- A collection of gay Cotton* * Rayons Nylon Sheer AT REDUCED PRICES AT BOTH STORES MAIN STORE Urn 21 Central Avenar Slor* Hours: 830 a.m. lo 12:30 Dm and from 2 cm to n m BRANCH STORE N TlvaH Avara* Store Hours: H :30 am in k pi Oaca duri.r mob tmrr. FELIX B. MADURO, S. A. Y Y V- W- JV October 1 to 6 Gorgeous Displays of Dresses, Lingerie, Embroidery, Decorat- ing, and expert demonstrations of the latest fashion aids! SEW WITH SINGER 100 YEARS Of Service Is Your Guarantee I Visit Singer Sewing Centers! SINGER SEWING MACHINE COMPANY ' S7 Central Avenue Tel. -156S Panam 75 Bolivar Avenue Tel. Ml Coln ' CASA FASTLICH ANSWERS YOUR DEMAND FOR A FINE SELF-WINDING WATCH, AT ONLY $36.50 Tou called for It ... a watch that needs no winding, no worrying ever. I.amont Aauamatie Is the answer . . certified waterproof, dust proof. shock-resistant, with a shatterproof crystal; the fine 21 jewel movement sealed In a beautifully designed case. See Lament Aquamatic today . . own lt for an amazing $38.50. AQUAMATIC '65* 21 jewels, non-magnerk, 1 4 kt. yellow gold case. a/a fa/t lie h wautv MADouA*ra*s PANAMA LAM O NT AQUAMATIC NOWKAyfe PeoPORANT ^^r 5 NEW MIMA NewfrnrMUM eweum diodM/unt MORE EFFECTIVE LONGER \ f AGE SIX THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSFAPEK TBUMDAY, SEPTEMBER It, ltsl MTU ASStncZ JS**5%* J**mtt\ Surgeon Wants Fatsos To Slim Ltavt your ad with one of our Agents or our Office* LEWIS SERVICE Ne. 4 Thrall Ae. tiene J-ttfl KIOSKO UB LESSEES Parana ee Paiuml MORRISON'S tn BOTICA CARLTON ie.ee* IWtal. A em. I^f^BSUMl AMERICANO If- WM lat Mlftl Hi ' fc -*- Minimum f#r II word* 3* each additional word. = FOR SALE Household FOR SALE:Wastlnohouse refriger- otor. 9 cu. ft. 25 cycle. $150.00. Phone 83-2195. FOR SALE:9 ft. Norge ol porce- lain 25 cycle refrigerator. Excel- lent condition. $100. 860 Mor- gn Ave. Bolboa. Tel. 2-3156. FOR SALE:25 cycle outomotic re- cord player. Also porch blinds. Navy 2231. FOR SALE:9 cu. ft. Coronado, re- frigerator. 60 Cyl. Like new. See at 233-B, Gatun. FOR SALE:Horton electric Ironer table model, used 6 months. Phone 84-6138, Fort Kobbe. FOR SALE:Refrigerator Frlgidaire, 60 cycles, Underwood typewriter, small desk, youth bed, baby crib. Phone 916, Colon. FOR SALE:Small Sllvertone table radio, Phllco portable, shoeskates (size 61, men's sport coat, brown & ton size 38) 3 single metal beds, 1 cotton mattress, 1 metal chiffonier. 0814 Piar* St., Bol- FOR SALE Automobile* IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IUICK NEW YORK OR DETROIT Smooth Paredes Panam 2-0600 FOR SALE:1949 Tudor Chevrolet. Cristobal 3-1900 after 4:00 p. m. FOR SALE:1949 Nosh Ambassa- dor with rodio, 4 new tires, plas- tic seat covers. 543 3 -C, Diablo between 3 p. m. 7 p. m. FOR SALE:1947 Frazer Monhot- ton, overdrive, new brakes, new battery, perfect condition. Phone 3-1467, Margarita 8020-A. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IUICK NEW YORK OR DETROIT Smooth Paredes Panam 2-0600 FOR SALE Motorcycle* FOR SALE:Light English motor- cycle, 3 speed, Vlllers engine. Speed up to 60, new tires. Phone 4-323. FOR SALE Boats & Motors FOR SALE:21 Ft. Boot with'1950 8-horse Champion outboard. Good for river or outside equipped and licensed for 7 in C. Z. First $300.00 gets it. 3-2408 or 378- 8748. FOR SALE Real Estate FOR SALE OR RENT: Farm in Casta Rica about 5 hectares, lo- cated 8 miles from the capital e* 4,200 feet obove sea level. Fine, healthy climate, regular rca, plenty of water. Excellent fer growing high priced flowers for Internal trade or export, corn, vegetables, potatoes, sugar cone and for dolrymg. For detailed in- formation: Arturo Schloger, opor- todo 1479, San Jos, Costa Ri- FOR SALE:1939 Bukk Convert- ible coupe, new paint, tires good, with all accessories. 2010-C, First St. Phone 83-3148, Curundu. MISCELLANEOUS Before Having Big Operations Writ, Akehellc. *.. * 2011 Am., C. X. SUMMER SPECIAL Cold Wove, $7.50. Why have o home permanent? ..with Inodequote facilities, no certain finished look, and no guar- antee when you can have o professional one complete for only $7.50! It will lost longer.. .and look better! These can be hod Monday thru rhursdoy. Moke your opporntmenf eorlyl T4. 2-2959. Balboa Beauty Shop. Open 9:00 a. m. to 6:00 p. m. Balboa Club- house, upstairs. RESORTS MOTIL PAN-AMIRICANO In El .Vo- ile. Special room rates for Septem- ber. $35 per month, $20 for 2 weeks. Meals a la corte. Telephone Panama 2-1112 for reservation. Houses ON BEACH at Sonto Clora. Phone SHRAPNEL Balboa 2820 or see Coretoker there. Gromlich'j Sonta Clora beach- cottoges. Electric ico boxee, gas stoves, moderate rates. Phone 6- 541. or 4-567. FOR SALE Miscellaneous FOR SALE Larga Quonset Hut complete ready for assembly $450 00. Phone Shrapnel, Bolboa 2820! FOR SALE:English Austin in per- fect condition, $900.00 cosh or terms. Phone 3-2506 offer 5:30 p. m. FOR SALE:1947 Plymouth coupe, radio, new tires. Excellent condi- tion. Tel. 3-1839 Ponomo. FOR SALE:1949 Buiek Roodmest- er, 4 door sedan, 5 new W/W tires and tubes. Excellent condi- tion. Con be financed. Coll Coro- zal 85-2145 after 5:00 p. m., $1,800.00. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IUICK NEW YORK OR DETROIT Smooth Paredes Penam 2-0600 FOR SALE: Plymouth 1949, ex- cellent condition, low mileage. Cla. Irving Zapp 67 "A" Ave. 8-10 a. m. BT OSWALD JACOB* Wrlttea tor NBA Service NOETH 47S3 854 ? KSJ ? AKJ WEST BAST A A 4 109 4 AKJ e/732 ? J74 4AQII QI7.3 *542 SOUTH fl 4KQJ883 VQ10I6 ? MB a>10 Both sides vul. B-W 40 part score Seesttt Weet Nafta Beat Baa* 1 e> Double 1 ? {* S4> Pass Pa * 4*> Pom Pasa 4* Double Pase Pass Baa Opening lead*/ K Our discusin o penalty doubles continues today with a ve:y delicate point. Wnen both sices bid energetically It Is often necessary to double the oppon- ent In order to shut your part- ner up. Sometimes such doubles go sour, but In the long run they pay high dividends. In today's hand North's origin- al double Is, of course, a takeout double. Mind you, it's a very poor takeout double because North htj practically no support for any suit that his partner can name. Nevertheless, many fine pleyers would make this miser- able double In the hope of eom- pe.lng with the opponents. I wc.ild probably do ao myself In spi.a of the tact that I cheerful- ly admit that the double Is mis- er; ble. Once North shows this sign of life. South can well afford to give th? enemy a run for their mo- ne.-. At three spadas. South is ouo on a limb, but the enemy fall to realise it. Hence they push on to four diamonds. night then and there North must double. He cannot be sure of beating four diamonds, but he should have a fair play for it, Mac Arthur to Speak At American Legion National Convention MIAMI, Fla., Sept. 1 (UP) Gen. Douglas MacArthur will speak at the 33rd National Conventlo not the American Legion here Oct. 15-18. He notified the Legion he would arrive here Oct. 10 in time to review the American Legion parade down Blscayne Boulevard at 4 p.m. He will speak to the conven- tion in Dinner Key Auditorium at noon Oct. 17. The Legion Auxiliary will adjourn Its ses- sions and Join the Legion to hear the general's address. President Truman has been invited to speak to the Legion but has not announced whether he will accept. FOR SALE:Nattonol HRO-7 Com- munications Receiver. Speaker, colls, 25-60 cycle power supply. Tel. 2-3341 0528 Ancon. FOR SALE:1 Worthington Aircom- pressor, 1 H. P. motor 60 cycle; i Dodge Truck 1 1-2 tons. A-l condition, dual wheels on reor, also two spare wheels ond tires; one 300 gallon tank with boon high pressure pump; one shore stock Ponamo Golf Club. 151 Wil- liomson St., Gamboa, C. Z. Williams Santa Clara Beech Cottages. Two bedrooms, Frigioairet, Rack- gas ranges. Bolboa 2-3050. Phillies. Oceonside cottages, Santa Clara. Box 435. Balboa. Phone Portme 3-1877, Cristobal 3-1673 FOSTER: Cottoges for rent by day, week or month between Santo Clara and Rio Hato. Tal. 2-3142 or see care taker. FOR RENT Houses FOR RENT:Furnished house, Lo Cresta, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, swim- ming pool, hot water, bar, cool. B.350.00. Call Panama 3-4630, between 12-2 P. M. FOR SALE:Full set Sears premium rayon 6:00 x 16 tires. Cristobal, 3-2408. MOTrfMf, for children's weor Infants to 4 years visit BABY- LANDIA No. 40. 44th Street, Bella Vista. Tel. 3-1259. FOR SALE: Assorted length used flexible rubber hose. 1" 1-2", 2" 2 1-2". Best offer. The Texos Co. (Ponamo) Inc. FOR SALE:1940 Ford Sedan with rodio. Porcelain gas range. Must sell, 2T9-D. Paroiso, C. Z. FOB IAL1: "Vkter" 16 se.. Saved projector. Excellent cendi- with few has $150. 00. Tel. Paaatae 2-2759. WANTED Miscellaneous WANTED:25 cycle woshing ma- chine. Phono 83-3278. Position Offered American business executive requires very capable, experienced, Span- ish-English secretary correspond- ent; able to take fast dictation In both languages and Write own letters also. Mole or female. Ex- cellent, permanent opportunity for able, willing worker. Write in de- tail, stating experience and start- ing salary desired to A. B., Box 134 Panama. Help Wanted 'Sick' Cow Cured By Sight Of Gun, Butcher's Knife RICHLAND CENTER, Wiscon- sin, Sept. 18, (UP) A prise Ay- ershlre cow listless with milk fe- ver suddenly recovered today when her owner approached with a gun and butcher knife. Wlllard 81pply said his cow apparently weakened by fever- fell over a cliff early this week and became lodged between trees. The animal failed to recover and Sipply decided to butcher. The 'sick" cow saw him com- ing and ran a half mile down- hill. Veterinarians said she was completely cured. and he knows that his hand Is valuable only for defense. If North doubles, good defense defeats the eonU-act. South opens the singleton club, and North overtakes and continues clubs. North wins three clubs and then the fourth club assures the de- fenders a trump trick. When this hand was actually played. North was too timid to double four diamonds. His part- ner never dreamed that the North hand was worthless in both hearts and spades. He went on to four spades and went for an 800-point ride. West led the king of hearts and then shifted to a low dia- mond. Bast took the queen of diamonds and returned a heart, whereupon West took two more heart tricks. Another diamond and eventually the ace of trumps gare the defenders six tricks. The double of four diamonds produces a plus of 200 rather than a minus of 800. The total train Is 1000 points. You can af- ford to Rive the opt cents a few point* occasionally by doubling a -ontraet that they tan make If -ou sometimes gain such large mounts. WANTED:Good cook, must sleep In. Excellent salary. Bring refer- ences. No. 11 Cuba Avenue, "Nes- tle" Building upstairs. Entrance on 28th Street. WANTED:Experienced cook. Must spook Spanish. House 1423-B. Carr street. Balboa. Wanted Position Bilingual secretory. Excellent refer- ences. Permanent or temporary. Appointment. Telephone Panama 3-2267. Survey Lists 10 Cities Making Top Business Gains ATLANTA, Sept. 1J (UP) Pour southeastern cities, two of them In Georgia, were among the nation's 10 cities making the greatest September busi- ness gains, according to a Rand-McNally survey. The cities are Albany and Savannah. Oa.. Chattanooga Term., and Raleigh, N. C. Savannah' business Jumped. 14 per cent over a like period last year while that In Albany advanced 12 per cent. The gain was IS per cent In Chattannoga and 12 in Raleigh. The six other top cities are Tucson, Arts.. 20 per cent; Akron. Ohio, 14 per cent; Phoe- nix. Arts., 14 per cent; Duluth, Minn., 10 per cent, and Reno Nev., and Seattle, Wash., 10 per cent each.______ Boyd's Memorial Baptist Church Plans 2 Services The Members of the Boyd's Memorial Baptist Church of La Boca will celebrate their an- nual missionary services on Sunday at 3:00 p. m. and Mon- day at 7: SO p. m. A cordial invitation is ex- tended to the public to attend these services. FOR RENT Apartment COMMERCIAL b PROFESSIONAL IF YOU THINK PRICSS Are High In Panama OET A LOAD OP THIS dvcrtieement we racalaatl as a foreign trade jouraal: CHLORDANE CONCNTIAT HOW Dt ONI OUNCE SOTTLXS ThU remarkable Chlordane Caneen. C5 ~k-.. T-T eflaSSt OUR HETATL PRICE for a 5% ounoe bottle That Makes ONE GALLON S5c (sorry, we dont pay shipping charges) GEO. F. N0VCY, INC. *Tt Caalral Ave. TeL l-tlet ALHAMBRA APARTMENTS Modem furnlshed-unfurnlihed eport ment. Contact office Mb. 8061. I Oh St. New Cristobal. Phone 1386. Co- lon. FOR RENT:2 bedroom apartment, livlng-dinlngroom, screened. $60. Key 85 Cuba Avenue, telephone 3-084). FOR RENT:Modern, well ventilot- ed, and screened apartments, fur- nished or unfurnished, fourth of July Ave. No. 61, phone 2-2446, Miguel Hive. FOR RENT Rooms FOR RENT:In Bella Vista, beau- tifully furnished rooms, all con- venience. Ave. Mexico 69 near 43rd Street. Phone 3-0553. FOR RENT:Furnished room with private bathroom and entrance. Kitchen privilege. 43rd Street No. 13- JWB-USO Planning Stag Parties For Puerto Ricans There Is good news for Puer- to Rican personnel of the 65th aaa Group as plans are being readied to revive an entertain- ment which existed in Balboa during World War IL Stag parties for Puerto Rican personnel are to be held at the Jewish Welfare Board USO in Balboa once or twice a month, according to an announcement by Samuel Friedman of Panama and Rabbi Nathan Wltkln, Aux- iliary, Chaplain and head of the USO in Balboa, who co-orgln- ated the idea. There will be no charge what- soever for any entertainment or food during the stag parties and It has been pointed out that the entire program is non-secta- rian. Friedman, will be the bi-lirrgual master of ceremonies Since the USO building can accommodate only some 300 persons, this number will be selected from these who wish to go, by a committee which will be appointed by Lt. Col. James D. Shearouse, 903d AAA Battalion Commander. Rabbi Wltkln has also invited all personnel of the group and the USAROARTB area to drop into the TJBO at any time to use the many facilities available there. Facilities available in- clude pool tables, ping pong tables, an extensive collection of records, and many other Items of Interest to soldiers who are away from home. 7th Day Church Plans Program To Raise Funds To Buy Pews The program to raise mo- ney for the purchasing of pews for the United Sabbath-Day Adventlst Church at No. 9-21 St. Guachapel is all set for Sunday, commencing at 3 p. m. The choir is now prepared to render the anthems: "I Will Extol Thee." "Send Out Thv Light" and Thou Wilt Keep Him in Perfect Peace " Local artists who will help with the evening's program of songs will be Mrs. Olga King and David Pollard. Elocutionary Items will be given by Myrtle Johnston. Mavis Springer. Ethe- lene Steele and others. A cordial invitation U extend - *d to all by the Pastor D. A Dunn. CHICAGO, Sept. 13 (UP) Fat persons should reduce before undergoing major operations because their excess weight makes them "poor risks, a surgeon said today. Dr. Willard Bartlett, Jr., assistant professor of clinical sur- gery at St. Louis Unrvefsity, said large deposits of fat within the abdomen make it difficult to close incisions'properly. LUX VENETIAN BLINDS Immediate Delivery, TeL 3-1713 .33 E. 39th St PANAMA BROKERS. INC. Wants to bay following Abattoir Nal. Ceca Cela Nat atewcar faena y Las Ciar Praoacta Paaaaai Caaaent Paaasa Insurance Company Taeaea: 3-471 i-ise Casa* a Taaaaa, naaMa for vaca- tasa ee fee fee*. I cae aes jrea te buy or rani hcuaca, pcaanrtr, orange grovee, chichea tanas, htela, te, al aU eneas aad tenas, at Interact- ed write te Hernn Klecfkrns, c/e Geera. W. Btaee., Reel ajute : en, let Viaaalaa Street, Tana* X, Flor Ha. The result, be said, -is a "weak soar" in which the deep- lylng muscles are separated leaving only fat and skin In- tact. As a result, he said, patients are likely to suffer ruptures. Bartlett, in a paper read be- fore the 16th annual meeting of the U. 8. and Canadian chapters of the International College of Surgeons, said fat deposits cause pressure against the scar and also compress the heart and lungs In the chest cavity. In cases of ruptured scars, he warned, abdominal organs such as the intestines may bulge through the defect. Some obese patients, he said, may bare to reduce for aa long as six weeks before un- dergoing surgery. Be acknowledged, however, that such delays are impos- sible in some cases such as oanosr and acute appendicitis. Dr. J. Stanley Cohan, obste- trician at Temple University medical school In Philadelphia, said the day has passed when women were supposed to suf- fer a "baptism of pain in childbirth" to appreciate and love their babies. "There comes a point beyond which we should not expect women to bear pain,'' he said. 'There is a great deal of psychology Involved in pain. Some women can stand more than others. Some women suffer in silence while others shout to the heavens. "It Is my experience that a woman can stand pain to a degree consistent with unim- peded labor but that she should not be expected to suffer past that point." " He said the worst thing that can happen to a woman in la- bor te to be left alone. "If someone with a humane spirit is present with the la- boring patient, who has been previously taught the physio- logy of labor, then three- fourths of the battle is won," he said. Dr. Roland M. Klemme of St. Louis University said mo- dern methods and treatments can bring relief from pain to virtually all suffering patients. Drugs, he said, will stop al- most all types of pain of short duration and surgery can be used for patients who suffer for long periods. The latter, he said, Is espe- cially useful to avoid drug ad- diction. ^ Railmen'j Strike Shuts Off Sleel For Atomic Plants BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept. IS (UP> A strike of conductors and switchmen on a belt Une railroad led today to a shut- down of a mill making steel plates for atomic energy and munitions plants. The Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Co., which oper- ates the plate mill, said that its entire operations, employ- ing 30,000 persons, might have to close down If the strike con- tinues. TCI. is a subsidiary of the U.S. Steel Corp. as is the strikebound railroad, the Bir- mingham Southern, which de- livers the big steel firm's goods to main-line railroads. About 160 B.S. switchmen and 66 conductors walked out 10 days ago, demanding a spe- cial 93 cents premium each time they had to couple or un- couple ears In addition to their regular pay. About 300 other railroad workers were Idled. The plate mill (at nearby Pairilfid) was working under National Production Adminis- tration directives and allot- ments producing materials for defense purposes,'' a T. C. I. statement said. "These include atomic ener- gy plants, munitions plants of various kinds, aluminum plants, plates for ships, railroad cars and in fact, plates for every sort of plant In this trade ter- ritory that Is working on or- ders under these classifica- tions. "Not only the plate mill has been closed, but other plants such as the Bessemer rolling mill are scheduled for almost Immediate closing because of the Impossibility of moving out of them products ready for shipment," the statement said. At Bessemer, Vice-President P. O. Reemer Of the big Pull- man-Standard rolling stock factory said ft also will have to close If the Birmingham Southern strike lasts another week. RECORD SPOILED NEBRASKA CITY, Neb. (UP.) Miss Ida Roberts, high school faculty member for SO years, missed her first commencement ixercises since she began teech- ng. The wadding of a relative nd her mother's birthday were "sponsible. American Sociely Party For WOeys Sel For Saturday final arrangements are now completed by the American So- ciety for the honoring of Am- bassador and Mrs, Wiley on Saturday evening; Members and their wives have been advised that the cocktail- buffet will be served at 7:80 p. m. In the Patio Of Hotel El Panam on Saturday. Musk will be provided for those who care to dance and the dress will be informal. It is anticipated that a large turnout will be on band to take advantage of this first op- portunity at which all members of the American community may meet their most distin- guished ambassador to the Re- public of Panama, While tickets will be avail- able at the door, it is suggest- ed that members and their wives secure their tickets from Bill Boyd, Bill Schmltt, Prits Humphreys, Prank Raymond, Jack McOrath, Elton Todd, Roy Mosher. Members of the Ameri- can community should secure their tickets in advance In or- der to allow the society to plan the function properly. MIT Prof. Indicted On Communist Conspiracy Charge CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Sept. 13 (UP) Prof. Dirk J. Strulk of Massachusetts Institute of .Technology, who had been la- beled a "secret" Communist in House testimony, was Indicted today for conspiracy to over- throw the U.S. Government. A Middlesex County grand jury indicted Harry winner of Maiden, Mass., on the same charge. Both men were named In a second Indictment on a charge of "conspiracy to overthrow the Commonwealth of Massa- chusetts." A third Indictment charged Strulk with "advocating the overthrow of the Common- wealth of Massachusetts by force and violence." Dlst.-Atty. Oeoree E. Thomp- son said Strulk and Winner probably will be arraigned this week. He said he did not plan to arrest them immediately. The Indictments climaxed a long Investigation of Commun- ist activities in Middlesex coun- ty, highlighted by testimony from Herbert A Phfrbriek, who posed as a Communist for nine years while feeding Informa- tion to the PBL PhUbrick had named Strulk as a secret member of the Communist Party in testimony before the House Un-American Activities Committee in Wash- ington in July. The former undercover agent also named Winner as a mem- ber of the Communist Party. Strulk and Winner refused to tell the Un-American Acti- vities Committee whether they were Communists, on grounds of teif-incrlmlnation. tauritz Melchior Gets His Ducks Ouf Of Line TALLAHASSEE, Fla., Sept. 13 (UP) "Southern hospitality" cost opera tenor Laurlts Mel- chior a $30 fine in Pederal court here today. Two of Melchlor's companions on a hunting trip last year tes- tified they each gave him their day's bag of two geese to add to the two he shot for a banquet when he returned north. Judge Dosier A. Devine reluc- tantly levied a $10 fine against Melchior o neaeh charge that he possessed more than the legal limit of geese and that he trans- ported the mout of Florida. The opera star was not present in eourt, pleading "no contest" through an attorney here. "These sotuhern gentlemen were being gracious to a north- em friend," the Judge said, "and they ended up embarrassing themselves, their friend and this court. It's a violation of south- ern hospitality. 12 CAirC Officers On Promotion List Twelve additional officer pro- motions at Caribbean Air Com- mand Headquarters and Albrook Air Force Base were confirmed late yesterday afternoon. The units and ranks concerned were: CAirC Headquarter: Promoted to Major-Captain Max Sensing, flying safety officer and Captain Truman P. Cad well, custodian of non-appropriated welfare funds. Headquarters 1st Rescue Squad- ron; To Major Captain Elmer H. Wolters, pilot and supply of- ficer; Captain James R. Wesley, plans an dtralning officer; Cap- am Heary H. Kleht, enginar- ing-officer. To Captain, 1st Lt. Carl M. TurbyfUl, chief control- ler. 1806th AAC8 Group: Promoted to MajorCapt. Edward E. Po- well, group operations officer. 1078 A ACS Squadron: To Major Capt. William J. Asiesen, air traffic control officer. lMeth AACS Squadron, based at Ramey Air Force Baae, Puerto Rico: Promoted to MajorCapt. Fred E. Stant, squadron operations officer. The Military Air Transport Service announced the promo- tion of Capt. James M. Rodgers to major. Major Rodgers is Al- brook MATS Liaison of fleer. Birmingham Joints Get Juke Back After 8 Years BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept. IS (UP) The City commission has voted to put the Juke back In "Juke joints" because cus- tomers have complained of "poor quality" string band mu- sic apd "annoying fifldlers." The commissioners agreed yesterday to a six-month re- laxation of their ban on muslo machines In establishments selling beer and whisky. The embargo was voted eight years ago when servicemen insisted on playing patriotic songs and then picking fights with pat- rons who refused to stand to, attention. COLONEL NORMAN WELTON, center, director of the Board of Health Laboratory In Ancon, departed from Albrook APB at 5:30 a.m. today In a CAirC C-47 for Costa Rica. He will visit In the yellow-fever-stricken area at the Invitation ef Dr. J. Cabezas, D., Minister of Public Health, who In his let- ter of request to Philip D. Williams, Charge d'Affalres of the U. 8. Embassy in San Jose, pointed out the technical assist- ance Col. Elton had already rendered to Costa Rica in the study of "Yellowjaek." Another "Elton," Major Elton J. Jennings, was pilot of the plane. (U.S. Air Force Pheto) five lsu faculty MEMBERS arrived at the Panama Air Depot last night to undertake the instruction of Louisiana State University Caribbean Program classes which get under wsy Monday at various military Installations in the Panama Area. Prom left to right: Cecil L. Munden, USARCARJB Education Adviser who, after spending a week consulting of- ficials at the Baton Rouge campus, accompanied the In- structors on their flight to Panama, Dr. Claude L. Shaver, Dr. Donald E. Stanford, Mr. Rafael Aran. Dr. Norman Rutt, Mr. Thso C. McCoy, and Professor Q. f. Matthes. who has handled the administration of the program here and served as a welcoming committee. (U.S. Army rhete THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER IS, 1031 TUB PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER THE PANAMA AMERICAN ownm Np >uhhio TH PANAMA AMBWPBAN PBBBBi (NO. -I.. mukmi or mUMMUNimU mi MM HAMMOOIO AMIAS. DITOK 87 H STRUT P. O. BO* ISA, PANAMA, ft. P >. TlLIPMONl PANAMA No Z-0740 IB UHI) CLI ADD..., PANAMBRICAN. PANAMA Colon orncti 12 17 cikiui vinui imnni let* ano isth STxirt PONimN RomtiiMTATivi. josmua . pcwm, inc. 148 MAMON Avm.. MM YoM. if H. V. fa, rrsAN, rtn mouth, in .- 1 I IT 1.90 re* on months, in 1-rr-y S-SO 13.00 ro* ONi TSAR, at r-T-l is.ao 14.00 Walter Winchell In New York MAN ABOUT TOWN Martha starwsrt ef. "0*9* Mi Delis" sal bar fleliyweed ha.- band Mfp OlulM have decide* te Mil. CirMr-tmMt... YW Bryaner f The King sad I" An. bis wife, actress Virginia Getaterc, bars reconciled.. .Jato Garland Bsavcd a stkkaa by r*sits, Her ehaaffear wu robbed at gun-peint en reate te pick her ...The George (sandy shops) tthrattW tratas win as rrtesily beeaase The Other Party Is a Bast Frten*.. rollee Cesase.George P. Magkaa ha* resigned fram tas N. jr. Bar Asa*. The high rest of Mring, he asm. Cut afford the fit asr aauraai dees...New By** Park brasMccas win wager Itt to 1 that sedante Ethel Csrhart Textor (was aaafed a $le,*** gem rettery) win aerer ts U tas link.. Ths allege* Margaren af OJM Capt. Helahan are ast subject ft the death paaalty vteted) In Italy, which has as casita! pantahateat.. Origin ef ths name "Pia" (Inrrid Bergman and Peter Uadetreea's daaghter) caws frssa Peter-Ingrid-Always. Eycbrew-Raicor for the Federal Jury that acquitted Serge Rubensteln on charges of fraud: The Jury (anotad by rsportsr after ths verdict) said they disregarded the Government's prevl- cus conviction on draft-dodging "to snow how fair Amerlcani can bs".. .Ths day before the acquittal Rubensteln tried to bar- fain with the prosecutors.. He offered to submit to deportation. plus contributing a million dollars to charity,' In return for a plea of Oullty! Labor Newt km Comment The Why of the Crip This Hand Has on the Russians Ths lido Set Is betting Anita Colby (one af America's love- llsst ads in Yurrsp) win blend with wealthy Egyptian Bsfsr Athlon after his abrogation. They're Inseparable T. S. Eliot's marts tstsIob of "Marder in the Cathedral" was hissed bsssd at the Venice plan Festival.. .Prlncsss Aanasla ,f Greece (mother * termer Qasan Alexandra af Tageeuvia) and widower Robert Oaslst (of ths VanderblK tribe) are a Venice "TXT".. Gloria Warner (ths Miami schoolteacher thrash) debuts at La VI En Boas la a fortnight.. Edwin James, the N. T. Times m. e. Is meadinr aftsr a rough lnesa... The new Cabreen carpet costs $15 as* jard. BiilingWy, however, gets 1 M par.....ate, ss as tsars.. .Theater Arts mac has ths asmes oa some sf ths drama critics' photos snafaad.. The Got. sf Calif, Isn't happy, they say, about drhtr Virginia steady-dating actor Buddy Dexter. These snag's "Jinx" for Its cover-subjects continues TennUtar Dick SsTltt, a Tima cover a few weeks ago (and the favorite to win at Forest Hills), got both a leg Infection and a defeat In ths eml-flnsU...Our yesr ago report that ths wife of Schenley's Mr. Btf would next marry Phllly Inquirer publisher Walter An- nenberg (which was vigorously nmfd) was confirmed ths other edition. She posted ths Renotlce, after agreeing to give him cus- tody of their child and return all gifts given during their mar- riage. .Jim NorrU, chlsf at Int'l Boxing Crab, donated 48 choice pews for ths Turpin-Sugar Ray brawl to help pay Runyon Fund expense. We averagsd $250 per ducat for a total of $10,700. Ths racehorse named Runyon Fund has been In-Ths-Money last I times. Cams In 3rd, then 2nd and Won at Aqueduct Pays Emerson Is back frent Tamp slimmer teas aad Left as Bight.. .M. Bar earned $15* weeks playing theatres .. Sereateen,- the ds playing theatees... "Seventeen/' the comedy, has analber heavy advance sals. fram Tap to Bat IMAM in th* last 3 .The sweetheart af Is an lS-year-eld Ti arwsh Leslie urey weds Tamer Blatr Shelton ef the teto Dept at Beverly HlDa an etae ZSrd. The glrl-shsw pra- daeer Wally Wangers bays parted. ..Bill Tabbert. ene ef the reasons "Sewth PaelfW Is terrific, sUIWd by rs< SannBinnAsmMB ea^aanai aaBaMahnaaaa Saaaalant BnannnnnnaBaBaBnaaniahanaBhnhntendhidMBa rsalter Ed MeNarty are aslese as ths Tanks Thaaks to Jack Lett, ys Mirrer ad, far again Watoh dartag ear f.weeks heshtey sa expertly Derethy KligsUea has giren ap space far IsrgneUss Lewis makes a "pase" at charmers by seeing: hewse?" Martin Lewis, ths tap eemles, demand these salaries far good massa: They Just signed their teavy writers for 7 years at fett.M*. Their movie aathera get $$5.sae per film and then? new radia serlas writers rate wages ef $M,o*s.. .Before he passed W. B. Hearst sent Gen. MaeArthar a $5M,M0 check fee hie memoirs. The General begged off, saving It weald take at least ate volames and ho planned ether things. "Please tear ap the check," wrote Mae retaining it..."No," replied Meerst, enclosing the check again, yew tear Ft ap".. .No ene kaawc If R ever was .. .The offer silk gees. General .Bert Lahr has snubbed ate toevy M per. Before his strant bit, "Two ea the Aisle," [god them far gaeat-ahote at ttjee-and no get abate a t Tf ,5M be segg epeaed bs begged thess for gaest The City BaO press eerps fee* with the Mayer tops aU beats staged between them and LaGuardla er O'Dwyer. While Hollywood and teevy producers scream for new material one New York book publisher has over 13,000 novel mis. gathering dust. Some of them have been waiting a reading for 3 years... Betty George, understudy to Dolores Gray at "Two on the Aisle." keeps spurning merger proposals "because I must marry a Greek." "" m>rents are. ..When Artie Shaw showe his guests around his Dutcheas County barn he says: "Meet my caws, Ava. Lana. Kath- leen and Betty.1' Named aftef his ex-wires...Tip to Newsreels: There's only, one WAF stationed at Goose Ah* BMC, Labrador. She's gorgeous Sgt. Ellen Bremmer, 24. She keeps the boys comb- ing her hair...Toast to Miss America: Here's hoping th* only thing that ever gets to your hair Is yaur Crown. THIS II YOU SQM)M TWt MAMM OWM COiUMM THE MAIL BOX My VUtor Rieul The old gray Man he ain't what he used to be. No longer can he give the unseen signal which will start paralysis seep- ing through the nation fog he no longer controls enough of the country's coal output to strangle It or brown out its lights. Not for a long time can he, with a cod* word or whistle blast, choke off enough of thai country's black fuel so that be ean head tor that ever-reserved corner table in the plush Hotel Carlton dlnlngroom and wait for ths White House Interme- diaries to come with deals to an always haughty John Lewis, sitting under the mirror in aus- tere solltuds. TMs country it being floodti uith non-union coat The fuel U being ripped off the earth' top in many a fate by oreuniisd minar running itrip "mina.'' Miman af ton of U are coming out of central renntylvenla. Over U par cent of all Ohio's tannage i from non-union itrip mine, and Ohio ti the nation' fourth largett toft coal producing otate. It all started some months back when John Lewis received reporte of the millions of tons of coal being hewed out of strip mines. These are work* at which power shovels are used to get at the veins from the top in contrast to the traditional deep mining shaft* and slopes. It was reported, for example, that In District 2, Pennsylva- nia, which, covers parts of a doaen countries, 14.000,000 tons of coal earn* off the non-union strips, compared with 45,000,000 tons minsd by union diggers in 1850. And there's more this year. At first, powsrshovels, bull- dosers and trucks are used. A* the market grow* for the cheaper (because labor cost* are lower) strip coal, enormous and more modern equipment Is moved In. iMBsHsat M eooea-t N |NM ssaMbae* eM*M deal as ImssMowI H drdry. !-* ** PMasawawpdJ BB tlMt 9fW$t* rewtrtM, Mease (ry te ago abo mMsm ssskas te IwWswBPTp' lefs**M Ws*Iw#Vbi BJ ea"*)M les IffpCIMi Tab asasssee M MH* BOQUETE BUGLE FINDS TEXAS HOT San Antonio, Texas, Mall Box 8e,* Dear Sir: On a short trip to the coast a week ago, after through miles of bumed up farms, we ran tato an Irrigated rice district and found as fine a crop as anyone could desire, pro- ducing better than 40 bushels to the acre. I had lust read of the rice crop failure in Panama and wondered why. with all the fine streams running from the mountains to the ocean, I never saw such a tMng there as Ir- rigated rice. I ean see no reason why It could not roctsia and solve ths food problem In Panama. X found an industrial boom, with new plants sprinting up sverywhere, and new sulphur aad oil fields that vl speed up the rearmament program and make Joe Stalin think before he strikes. I have given up my contemplated trip to Panama by auto- mobile over the Pan American Highway. ^^ I migh taccept Dave Sasso's Invitation to visit him In Bo- quet* ',nd help hlm wlUl tn,t Pte he has in his deep freese. nly 1*^$* mT *** * aattmg so bad I have to feel my way round with a stick. Of course, the daily oatpat is sharply Increased. Am Letoie von ratio aftar ratio for hit unionized man,- tho price of coal was hiked. There tba contortion toga and oil aero* the nation. That* toko couldn't eon' vert, Ugan to ase the cheap- ' or non-union itrip mtne coal It has John L. worried, furi- ous and sctlve. It ha* him spending millions of dollars on a new unionising drive to protect hie people a eampalgn scarcely noticed by th* public. This drir* Is much of ths answer to ths M.000,000 flues- Uon we all asked last year when he revealed he was taxing his 00,000 minara $20 a man for a nsw kitty. This Is wh*rs some of the money goes. And. In th* word* of one Xpert observer In the heart of Pennsylvania's new trip min- ing boom: "Lewis is pouring money into th* strip mine organisation Take, for inatenc*. th* TOO men on a picketing Job at Coal- port on a single day the other week. Ths union foots the gaao- line bUL" . For lunch the union buys. wholesale, eh*ase, meats and pickles. They give th* nun all ^Dey In and day out this goes on at doaen* of district are dispatched to unionise the unorganised. "Multiply these across the nation and you ha vs an Uteaof what th* United Mm* Work- en Is pouring out" PAOS 8EVEN ^mx WSIIINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND p IIW PIARSON Mcmly Fleischmann says: Traffic cops art never popular; Distributing tcarce materials is necessary; There is a bright side to the picture. (While Drew Pearson Is ea a brief vacation, the Washing, ten Merry-Go-Round is being written by dlstinruished sweat columnists, today's being by Manly Fleischmann, adminutra- fe'HHIBl"'"'"i Adsainlstratlen aad National Fredas- WASHINGTON.The traffic cop's role Is not an enviable or popular onethis Is true whether the particular officer appre- n?*1theJ.traf5 violator or whether, as in my own case, his Job Is to direct the flow of materials and equipment out of nor- mal peacetime channels Into mobilisation supporting Industry But by common consent the traffic cop's function Is a nee- essary one. h,,*11 te.my flrm conviction thst the Job of regulating the distri- bution of scerce materials is in fact Indispensable to our survival "v-Vu nation, and I welcome this opportunity to describe why the government has taken on that Job. and how going about it. we are NEW YORK. Hear tell the Senate Finance Committee has approved the idea of a 10 per- cent bite on some Illegal business, like making horse book and running lotteries, plus an "oc- cupational" tax of $50 per year on lawbreakers and their associates. Come cuddle in Father's lap, gentlemen of the Senate, whilst he wises you on a couple of facts of life. All this would do Is officially legalize gambling from a Federal standpoint, giving the lawbreak- ers and offlclal-perverters their first real dig- nity, while removing them from the clutches of the local enforcers. All the effort* toward swabbing out the cess- pool of crime and Its Impact on government would be wasted overnight. Last time I looked they were slapping a tax on bootleggers In Mississippi, in which drinking is strictly against the law. When I- was there. Mississippi was about the widest-open drfnking-gambllng state available, with th* Gold Coast roaring. The crooked cops and crooked sheriffs ware happily conspiring with the 'leegerg and the ardent dryg to keep it Just like that. Everybody was happy, including the tax-grab- bers who were finding heavy revenue in Illegal activity. And the citizens got Just a* sweetly loaded at open bars as if It weren't strictly against the law. Louisiana was a sink of governmental corrup- tion when gambling was legal down there. The gamblers owned the government; local, parish and stete, and sure as shooting Nevsds is no gift to civic cleanliness today. Mind you, I am no moralizar about the evils of gambling. I quit the horses only because I loved them so much, and was continually feeling the im- pact ef my love in the clvinlty of the Morris Plan. I still lore crap shooting and poker, and would shoot them and play it more often If I could afford It and Mama would let ma out nights. You will never be able to reform man's urge to violate certain restrictions on his personal lgnoblllty. Long as people are people they will gamble and generally raise ruckuae*. But you get nowhere in the general Improve- ment of public behavior by making the way of the transgressor easier. When you cloak man's inclination to orneri- ness with state approval, you debase the state and make it easier for the parasite to sneak Into power by control of public official. He be- comes a co-conspirator with his own govern- ment. I have known considerable loose-livers in my time In this business, and I never knew a gam- bler or a crooK who didn't admit frankly that even seml-legallzatlon of gambling was his heart's best hope. That way he has status; that way one more technicality which might trip him is removed: that way he has open sesame to bribery and control of his country's laws. He Just branches out, gets bigger, and shoves more tentacles Into the workings of his land. In my book the repeal of Prohibition was good for the country. but,4b never removed the crook from a big piece Of the legal business. Breweries and certain brand* of boose and accompanying beverages are still administrated by tho old mob, and bootlegging today is big- ger and better than ever. Worse even than a complete legalization of gambling Is this contemplated half-measure that would seml-dlKnlfy the gambling racketeer by making his Illegal earnings subject to legal taxation. Now the government owns a piece of the Joint, and is tacitly Interested In Its perpetua- tion. At the same time, while government agencies are trying to stamp out the evil that gambling breeds in corruption, another fleet of Federal employes is scuttling about trying to improve Its score on a tax take. Somebody has to get fixed real good In the process, and the legal taxpayer continues to pay for both ends of the operation, while re- maining in the middle. Legalized prostitution never cut down the ln- cldnece of venereal disease, for the simple fact that a dame with a steady place of business could bundle 20 times a* many clients as a tootsle who was constantly on the lam from the law. Any doctor will tell you that, and it applies to the other transgressions. Keep 'em off balance, and It's always easier to enforce for good. Matter Of Fact By JOSEPH ALS0P HARD PRESSED ALLIES "ti No rain here sine* June most of th* time, wonder I Want to go back to Boquete. I. Temperature 110 degrees and W. i. -tap- Wright With th* exception of DU trtet M 'West Virginia) Lewis b*ard that "A flooding stream of non-union coal I* reaching the market from all area*." That's when he got started. Into the wortt spot {for htm) h threvhit ace or- gantiar, MO* WUman. one- time loader of hti eatch- all District SS* and, earlier, the man whom Lewis count- ed on to crack the ford Motor Co. for the CIO book in the fr*o-luggtng litdoum rrtike day. Wldmsn. In a aman office in virtually unknown Bbensburg, Pa., site under a hug* canvas of "Th* Champ" a picture presented to han by th* Ford Local too after John Lewis spoke there this summer. Wldman. by the way. was at Lewis' side in Detroit. In Bbensborg, Wldman tace* the toughest problem his chief has had to contend with the smashing of a threat to th* United Mine Workers, sine* that area turn* out a half ton of non-union coal now for every ton Lewis' men ean dlg- If this became nationwide, Lewi* would have to stop dig- ging into th* affslra of other unions and worry about hi* own union's diggings. HU tribe might decrease after all that* year*. WASHINGTON. The storm on the horizon Is a major financial crisis within th* Western alliance. Britain'* Chancellor of the Exchequer Hugh Oaltekell and France's Finance Minister Rene Mayer have come to Washington to announce that their countries cannot bear the full burden of rearmament without additional aid. Meanwhile, Congressional cuts in the foreign aid program have deprived our policy makers of any easy means of helping our allies. Hence this as yet obscure financial crisis can quite easily merge Into a full-scale political cri- sis. Jeopardizing the effort of Oen. Dwight D. Elsenhower and even undermining Western uni- ty. The cause of the trouble-is simple enough. With heavy commitments' to contribute to Western European defense, with a war on their hand* In Indochina, with a feeble government and a weak fiscal system, the French have in effect undertaken to pay more bills than they have money to meet. France's requirement of economic aid this year was originally estimated at Just under $300,000,000. Congress has cut the sum avail- able in half. It la now clear thst the French need, not $300,000,000. but between $400,000,000 and $500,- 000,000. And they want us also to share part of the heavy cost of the Indochlnese war, which In effect defends all of Southeast Asia from Communist imperialism. Th* British case is even more serious. The Iranian oil crisis and the changes in the world economic situation wrought by Western rearma- ment have both been cruelly unkind to the British trade balance. After nearly two years of rebuilding their gold and hard currency reserve, the British were some time ago confronted with a change In the money flow. This quarter the flow has suddenly become a flood. In fact, it can now be disclosed that London's losses of gold and hard currency this ISSS HI be to the neighborhood of M0.- 000,000. , At its post-war peak, the British hard money reserve was only Just under $4.000,000,000. Hence this quarter's outflow from the reserve te a supremely dangerous phenomenon. The position Is somewhat optimistically ex- pected to Improve during the winter: but the British none the less cannot possibly get over the hump without financial help from us. Just to complicate matters, besides needing financial help, Oaltskell must also ask for sup- plies of short raw materials, with which to make the exports on which Britain lives. If the raw materials cannot be allocated, the need for financial help will be proportionately magnified. In Britain, particularly, the crisis has the widest political Implications. 8ome months ago, Aneurin Bevan raised the flag of anti-Americanism, declared that Britain would run Into trouble with the rearmament, and rebelled against the Labor party leader- ship. Failure to help the Britteh ov*r the hump will be tantamount to throwing all the wiser, more moderate and more far-sighted leaders of the Labor party, such as GaltekeU himself, to the Bevanlte wolves. There could be no quicker way of helping the enemies of the United States in Britain. The Icing te put on this crisis cake, so to speak, by the further fact that Oen. Elsen- hower's SHAPE planners, after the most careful pruning and paring, are still convinced that there is a gap between present rearmament plans and the forces the West really needs. This gap te on the order of twenty divisions, and almost twice as many air groups. Hence, American negotiators have actually been pressing the French and British to extend their rearmament programs, at the very mo- ment when it has become plain they could not sustain the programs already launched. All this sounds very desperate, and so far as covering the famous gap is concerned, It no doubt will be desperate. (Copyright. Mat. New Yerk Herald Tribane lac.) The subject is peculiarly appropriate at this particular tinto in fact, painfully so. Last week it was the unpleasant duty of the National Pro- duction Authority to announce the distribution of steel, copper and aluminum for the fourth quarter of 1951 More particularly, we had to grant or deny allocations of these materials for use In construction and In the production of so-called consumers' goodssuch thing as automobiles, refri- gerators and television sets which we aU tend to identify with our unequaled American standard of living. I am sure that the figures when released came as a distinct shock to many businessmen, and to many other citizens having an interest In the subject as workers and consumers. Generally speaking, fewer than one of every two construction projects which Industrial and commercial concerns wished to start during the last part of the year could be granted metal* for this purpose. Generally speaking again, the production of consumer goods for the rest of the year mu*t be limited to something lile M per cent of the rate attained only a year ago. All of this means substantial loss of profits, some severe eco- nomic hardship for individual Arms, and some temporary unem- ployment in particular industries. Is this drastic action really necessary? .. ??****-* happened to our matchless American productive facilities that they can no longer turn out the volume of goods which our economy ordinarily demands? The answers to these questions I think are clear: First, such control actions are certainly necessary; Second, nothing whatsoever has happened to our industrial machine except that It te gearing up to produce more important lines than automobiles, radios and home freezers to make the tanks, guns and planes that must come first, at least until the nation becomes strong enough to deter aggression or to win any war into which we may be forced. . Tbe conviction of the President, the Congress and the people of the United States that we are today In a moment of great national perila peril that threatens our very existence as a fre* nationhas dictated the drastic, unpleasant but essential steps that are now being taken. *^ In this particular case I think it can be said with some assurance that the harsher the medicine the faster and more certain the cure. The basic facts are fairly simple. It te not generally appre- ciated, but It is none the less true, that we have less of the Cri- tical materials available for production in 1961 and 1952 than in Ivdv. The reasons for this an also clear. At the beginning of l5A m*nu*actur*rs' stocks of raw materials were very high. They were used up In the greatest peacetime burst el pro- 8a&ttSga^ in "* **Z , I5L%t 0*,.**ttoJ ***** on handWbeen used -upy-and w* mutt bow live on current production and our importsrirom other parts of the world. Here, too, the story te not a pleasant one. Due to International political and market conditions prevail- ing In 1951, Including the disruption of Par Eastern supplies and the difference between world commodity prices and domestio price ceilings, our importation of many of the most important metals such as copper, lead, sine and tungsten te far leas than In recent years. In some cases, such as steel and aluminum, we will have new production facilities coming In, late in 1952. in other cases, such a* copper and tungsten, no substantial relief of any kind seems to be in sight. Now let us look at the demands on this reduced supply. We are preparing for a war which we hope can be avoided. Whether we are successful or not, such preparation means mar* guns, more tanks, more planas in a hurry. These all take metal and unfortunately they make their heaviest demand on the metals we must Import In quantity- copper, tungsten, zinc, cobalt and columblum. In till* respect, it te th* Inescapable fact that we have changed In a short spec* of time from a "have" to a "have-not" nation, and we must cut the cloth accordingly. One law that cannot be repealed by the government te th* law of mathematics. Unfortunately, two and two cannot make more than four. Moreover, the direct military items are not th* largest part of the rearmament Jobthey represent In fact the one-seventh of the Iceberg visible above the water. No nation can produce guns and tanks alonabefore shea* must com* th* Industrial facilities and the machine tools which today are our single greatest bottleneck. And at the same time we must be investing vast amounts of steel In providing new plant* to turn out Increased quantities not only of steel out ateo of aluminum, chemicals, synthetic rub- ber and so on. This we must do unless the shortages are to continue forever. That te why the demand for steel for building for the next several months Is more than twice the available supply. So great te this excess that about half of the highly Import- ant steel expansion projects, and even more of the essential chemical plant construction program will have to be deferred for at least three months. Under these circumstances, would It not be criminal folly $0 continue our record production of automobiles and radios? Would It make sense to build new theatres, restaurante, schools and courthouse* In unlimited amount before we had seen to the security of our country? The answers, I think, are obvious. Every pound of metal must be, and Is being, allocated and fabricated into essential products, with a small portion of the scarcest materials going Into our national stockpile against a rainy day when we might be eut off from present sources. Every piece of equipment that Is needed to build our de- fenses must be, and is being, used for that purpose. Over all, however, there is a brighter aids to the pictureat least In the longer view. We face no great period of austerity__ at last In comparison to the circumstances in which the rest of the free world exists. Because of rapid conversion to defense work, national unem- ployment te now at a record low, and declines almost every week the clearest possible proof that all of the nation's resources are being effectively employed In this vast mobilization effort. A tried and tested systemthe controlled materials plan of World War II originhas been reactivated and te presently in- suring a fair and equitable'distribution of material* among de- fense snd civilian producers, a dstribution which could not other- wse be maintained under present abnormal conditions. And finally, we have every reason to believe that the cur- rent expansion program to steel and aluminum will ease the metal shortage* in the foreseeable future and permit resumption of substantial production of peacetime goodsunices Russia de- cides otherwise. We are not putting an economic halrshlrt on the American people or restricting the use we make of our resources merely to Impose controls. we need certain controls now. If all goes well during our period of defense build-up, we can remove controlsand we wllL . It te my conviction thst this is truly a time for greatness for the American people. This year and next will, In fact, be fateful years of "decision. What we do now with our limited resources will decido whether we will have the strength to preserve our freedom la a world where few things can be taken for grantedand parti- cularly, not even our survival as a fr** nation. (Copyright, 1951, By The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) PAGE RIGRT " TUB PANAMA AMBBICAN AW INDBPWWWl' DAPLT WWiFAMBr^** ___ THTTRBDAY, SEPTEMBER IS. 1151 Red Sox Edge Tigers 2-1 In Ten Inning Battle --------------- I------------------------------------------------------------------------'-----------------------------------------:-------------------------------------------------i--------u--------.__________ "_____________ k :y . Boston Gains Half Game On Idle Indians, Yankees By United Press NEW YORK, Sept. 13 The Red Sox picked up a big half-game yesterday by going out and winning a tight 2-1 decision over the Tigers in ten innings and they now trail the league leading Indians by four-and-one half games and the runner-up Yankees by thrce-and-one-half. The New York Giants didn't even have ;o flex one muscle to pick up a half-game on ihe Na- tional League leading Brooklyn Dodgers. They were rained out In St. Louis while the sixth place Cincinnati Reds defeated ihe a four-hit 7-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs. In the only American League game, the Ch.cago While Sox blanked the Washington Sena- tors 3-0 behind the six-hit hurl- Dodgers 8-3 on Lloyd Merriman's i ing of Billy Pierce who notched three-run triple in inning. That left Brooklyn five and one-half games to the good and kept their magic number at ele- ven-meaning that any combin- ation of eleven Dodger victories and Giant defeats clinches the flag. The Giants have io make up ' the rained out game today hi the first half of an unprece- dented three-team twinbill at St. Louis. As soon as the Giants pull out after the afternoon (ame, the Boaton Braves come in for the regularly scheduled night contest. That has never happened before. The Boston Red Sox have to be rated with more respect than the Giants because they still have eight games to play with the New York Yankees and two with the Cleveland Indians. Moreover. In their past two triumphs they won the kind of games they generally lose, cashing in on tight pitch- ing. Yesterday, lefty Bill Wight hurled four-hitter to top lefty Ted Gray in a ten-inning battle decided when old pro Johnny Pesky tripled and came home on Clyde (dutch Vollmer's run coring fly. The day before they had won another tight decision when Ted Williams blasted a two-run sin- gle for a 4-3 finish. In other National League game* yesterday the Pittsburgh Pirate* defeated the Philadel- phia Phillies 8-C as Ralph Kiner blasted hi* 39th homer and d"ov in four runs while Max S-irkont pitched the Braves to the seventh! his 13th Iriumph against 14 set- backs. Faces In The Majors Panama Stars Beat Local Raters 4-1 To Even Little League Series THUMPING TRIOBattling right down to the wire for the American League home run and runs- batted-in championships, Gus Zernial of the Athletics, left, the Red Sox" Ted Williams, center, and Eddie Robinson of the White Sox match in intensity the furious pennant race. (NEA) George Munger I 'm* Michaels Bow-And-Arrow Hunters Bag Game Safely So Archery Gains New Fans Every Year By HANK ANDREWS NEA Special Correspondent CLEVELAND. O., Sept. 13 (NEA* Russ Reynolds, United States archery target champion, spurns a gun for huntingJust as thou- sands of other bow-and-arrow enthusiasts do. "A bow and arrow is good enough for me," says Reynolds, a Clevelander who captured the na- tional target ar- chery cham- pionship in Los Angeles. "I've bagged everything from running, rabbits and pheasants on the wing to Run Reynold. deer with bow and arrow. So have many other archers. "Archery la becoming more popular every year.." Wisconsin Is the No. 1 bow- and-arrow state. Upwards of 20,000 archers compete in sum- mer tournaments in the Dairy State and many of them hunt during fall and winter. National League 13,747 deer licenses to bow-and-arrow Michigan, in 1940, archers bought 11- DERBY DISHGloria Clairbeaut, elected Roller Derby Queen in poll of fans, suns herself on a rock near her Nutley, N. J., home The lf-year-old former model skates for the Jersey Jotters. (NEA) tKtA, FUL-Q-PEP ^B m M '- *-*. *-..~ C. O. MASON. S.A. P.O. Baa MS Paaasa City k Cola* r/'e^p your hens at a high ** rate ofegg production, and maintain the-m in good physical condition. The oatmeal in Ful-O-Pep Feeds and Mashes for starting, growing and egg production contributes toward more profitable results. Moda by TK Ouakar 0 Last year, were sold hunters !n about 1000 censes. Archers did all right last year In Michigan, shooting a total of 1848 deer. About one in every 10 was successful. Dean Loveless of Detroit shot the biggest bear in Michigan's history when he killed a 632- pound black bear with a feath- ered shaft at 40 yards last sea- son. The arrow struck the bear behind the shoulder Wade, pierc- ed its heart and came out two inches on the other side. "One reason archers like a spe- cial season such as we have in many states," says Reynolds, "is that we really practice safety. "We have to get close to our target. Thus, we know what we are shooting at. "I don't know of a single fa- tality that occurred while hunt- ing with a bow and arrow. "Another thing about archery is that you rarely hear of self- inflicted wounds. In Pennsyl- vania last year, 16 per cent of the injuries suffered by gun hunters were self-inflicted. Four were fatal." Pennsylvania is the latest state to Join the parade In setting up special seasoas for bow hunters. The bow-and-arrow season run Oct. 15-27. Archers give game a break, ac- cording to Reynolds. They are more sportsmanlike than shoot- ers who can kill at 100 yards or more. The archer has to stalk. He and wait, and usually get within 30 yards of his prey for effective shooting. Although he has held several national titles and many state honors, Reynolds, now 40, did not become interested in archery un- til 1940. He saw a demonstration of bow-and-arrow shooting at a sportsmen's show and that gave him the urge. "I started going to the public library to learn arxnit archery and how to make my own equip- ment," he explains. He joined the Cleveland Arch- ery Club and was just a pleasant fellow named Russ until 1948 when he finished third In a na- tional tourney. In the past two years he has won both the U.S. field and the national target championships. There is great camaraderie among archers. At many clubs experts will teach novices with- out charge. ' It isn't like taking up a game where the pro wants $8 a lesson," says champion Russ Reynolds. TEAMS Brooklyn New Tort. . St. Louis . Boston . . Philadelphia Cincinnati . Chicago. . Pittsburgh . Won Lost Pet. 68 49 .42 H 51 ,8M 72 4 .529 69 61 .504 8 74 .471 61 I .433 M 2 .414 51 S3 .411 G.B. It'/, II Uh M sm 32 American League TEAMS Cleveland. New York. Boston , Chicago . Detroit . Philadelphia H Washington 14 Today's Games New York at St. Loo is. Boston at St. Louis (Nj. Only Games Scheduled. Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 010 400 0016 12 2 Pittsburgh 203 200 lOx8 11 1 Drews (0-J. Hansen, Helntael- man. Konstamy and Semlnick; Pollet, Law (6-9),.WUks and Ga- ragjola. Won Lost Pet. 89 52 .631 M SI .629 tt 54 .843 78 84 .543 63 76 .453 SI .426 82 Jft St. Laait 63 93 .318 G.B. 1 Sw 12W 25 29 MM 43M National Little League Championship Series TEAMS Won Lost Pet. Local Rate All Stars 1 1 .500 Lick Infanta Stars.. 1 1 .508 The Panam City Liga. Infantil Stars threw the National Little League Championship Series in- to a 1-1 deadlock by scoring an impressive 4-1 victory over the Local Rate Little Leaguers, at Santa Rita Park, yesterday. Lanky Carlos Danar, right- hand pitcher of the Liga Infan- til, burned over fast pitches that limited the Lo,".aI Rates to four safeties, one'of which was a hom- er by.first baseman Ricardo In- niss. Danar truck out seven and showed marvelous control by.not Issuing a walk. Fireballer Ramn Jimnez went the distance for. the losers. He yielded eight hits, of which left- fielder C. Agullar had a homer, double and single in three trips to the plate. Jimenez struck out three an dwalked one. Sparkling fielding gems were flashed by A. Barrett, first Back- er of the Panam City team, and Ivan Lord, third baseman of the Local Raters, Each team com- mitted one error. The third game of the five- game series will be played at San- ta Rita' Park, Sunday, at 4 p.m. The box score follows: Liga Infantil Stars AB R A. Barrett, lb...... 4 0 C. Agullar, If. .... .. 3 1 R. Hoo, 2b........ 2 P. Salas, as........ 3 V. Urrlola, rf........ 1 F. Jlmenes, rf........ 2 J. Olivares, cf....... 1 F. Rivera, cf ........ 2 Today's Games Chicago at Philadelphia iN). St. Louis at Boston. Detroit at New fork.. Cleveland at Washington (N). Boston 010 000 0337 12 2 Chleago 201 000 0003 4 1 Sur com 111-13) and Cooper; Hatten (3-5), Kelly and Burgess. - . NIGHT GAME Brooklyn 020 010 0003 4 2 Cincinnati 300 000 30x6 7 1 Newcombe, Brsklne (2) (15-101 and Campanella; Raffensberger, Blackwell (2) (15-14), Wehmeler Yesterday' Results (Ten Innings) Detroit 100 000 000 01 4 1 Boston 010 000 000 12 5 3 Gray <-15i and Swift; Wight '7-5) and Moss. NIGHT GAME Chicago 101 001 000-3 9 o Waahlngfn 000 000 0000 6 0 Pierce (13-14) and Nlkrho; Hudson (4-11) and Guerra. P Castillo, c Valds, c. . C. Danar, p. A. Lasso, 3b Totals .... Local Rate All-Stars R. Bro*n, 2b.. .... .. H. Warren, rf. .... .. E Beit, sa.......... R. Pate, cf........ .. R: Jimnez, p...... I. Lord, 3b:.......... H. Holder, If........ L Blades, c. R. Innl**, lb Total .... ARMY S HOPECandidates for West Point's football squad leave iKrT#\KnM^onHle,r W,y t0 th* Poetice field under the scrutiny of ieilow cadets Fifty-two of them, half the normal num- 5Lm1&& 2f fu*Ced Wit^ the njd *"< ot replarinTthe powerful team wluch was wiped outoy wave of expu&ion following the recent cribbing scandal (NEA) *j~ Balboa Intersquad Grid Game Season Opener Saturday Night 26 4 8 ' ' AB 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 22 1 4 Score By Innings Liga Infantil Stars 100 034 Local Rate All Stars 001 0001 Umpires: M. Perec;-L. Roberts, F. Aldrete. F. Roberts. Only Games Scheduled. (() and Howe. NIGHT GAME NEW TORK at ST. LOUIS (Postponed, Inclement Weather) Dove Of Peace Kept In Tough Spot On The Wrestling Front By NED BROWN NEA Special Correspondent NEW YORK, Sept. 13 (NEA) When the cat's away the mice will play. Not that Toots Mondt, Paul Bowser, Ed Don George, Al Haft, Sam Muchnlck, et al, are cats. And young Bill Johnston is far if r o m being a mouse. These are wrestling people, you understand. Bui while' Mondt, Bowser, George and some 30 other mat moguls, comprising the conclave, convi- viality and con- Bill Johnston 'nivance at their **mi~i third meeting at Tulsa, Okla., for a three-day ses- sion to agree on Lou These, of St. be recalled Jimmy battled the "monopoly" of Madison Square Garden so successfully that the directors of the corporation de- cided they couldn't lick him, so they'd-Join up with him. They made him general manager. ONE WAR AFTER ANOTHER Young Bill Inherits many of his. daddy's fortright fighting char- acteristics and his hustling at- tributes. In declaring war on the NWA, Johnston announced his group will recognize Abe Colman as heavyweight champion of the SEW.Unte "oriTandcnanCng*edPZ3hS wefeiaVhereVln6 ?fs5 **-" * "* he dares I It Is not likely that Lou will "dare." The National Wrestling Alliance will see to that. It Just seems nowadays that we V&JSWnXQte *K WA ofnd uTtheiTcon': BACK FOR MORE Champaign, nols has four backers. Ill 1111- llne York and formed his own "alli- ance'' with a gToup of disgrun- tled mat promoters who resent being snubbed by the NWA. The nucleus of Johnston's combine consists of himself, Abe Colman, a five by five heavy- weight rassler who has been cam- paigning in these parta for lo, these many years, and Mike Kll- onls, Greek strong man and pro- tege of Jim Londos, whom the former champion chose to suc- ceed him "at the proper time." "We'll not only take in all ter- ritory throughout the United States," clarioned Bill Johnston, "but we'll send our wrestlers to any spot in the whole wide world.'' A*k for 'ul-O-* Poultry Poodlnf OviWo li'a rras| BALANCED I.INE East Lansing. Mich.< NEA Bob and Bill Carey, Michigan SUte ends, are twins. Young Bill sounds off just like his late Illustrious sire. James J. Johnston a firebrand promoter of sports who made them all sit up and take notice throughout the last generation. James J., who reveled in the nicknames "The Boy Bandit" and "James Joy Johnston." never was one to do things by halves. It may ventlon with peace and harmony reigning supreme. But wrestling is .merely following the pattern of boxing in this respect. The Na- tional Boxing Association hasn't the cooperation of the New York State Athletic Commission, and a few other states. JER8EY JOE AIRS HIS VIEWS Speaking on the American Fo- rum radio program, debating the question "Should Congress Inves- tigate Boxing?" heavyweight champ Jersey Joe Walcott drew the laugh of the evening by de- fending Ilght-heavyweight cham- pion Joey Maxim's by-passing Archie Moore in favor of Bob Murphy for a title defense by saying: "It's not fair to ask the champion to fight a fellow like Archie Moorehe's too danger- ous I- Jersey Joe also chided Senator Harry P. Cain for his tardiness In suggesting the investigation. "You shudda done it after my first fight with Joe Louts." said the current champ. With the annual Inter-squad football game slated to get the local football season under way this Saturday night, the Balboa High School Dlayers wound up their last day of hard work yes- terday. The squad has been di- vided into the Red team and the White team, with everything even when they try to figure the final outcome. p In the forward wall the Red squad has a slight edge in that they have four returning letter- men to bolster their attack and defense. This group is headed by Clalr Godby, tackle and Dick Dill- man and Frank Bryan at guards. These boys are all two-year let- Jfrnjen. nd will be playing their third and last year for the Bull-, S8.,1^ other letter winner is Bill Underwood, end. "^ &'T!?nt ln Cari Metssner and "' Rl,ev al tackles, and 7x- vln Frank at guard. They also have the only experienced center on the squad In Frtd Cotton, Al- lh0UBh. Cottn Isn't a letterfnan football at the Pacific side school In the backflelda the White team not only has .the edge In letter winners, but they also have the only experienced quarterback I?. *?*? Nicklsher. Along with Nicklsher the othe rletter win- ners are Jim May, half, and Bob Morris, fullback. The Red back- neid has Bob Feacher and Sam Maphia, both lettermen, to spearhead the offense. Bill Alt- man, fast developing quarter- back, will do most of the signal calling for this group. Xickoff time Is 7 o'clock Saturday night, at the Stadium. This game will give the tana a tihance to see what thai Bulldogs will-have for the com- ing strenuous campaign. The adi mission charge will be 26 cents.J An onnouncement of special interest to the follower*>of the. Balboa High School football team) is that Saturday mornthg;, Sent. 15, at s o'clock will be picture dav for the Bulldogs. Any and all fans who. would like to get pictures of their favorite players can take them at this time. Remember the time and date: Saturday, Sept. 15. 9 a.m. PA. CLASSIFIEDS Vis Jaswwies REPEATER?Ohio 8tate's Vic Janowici won about every hon- or around last year Including All-America and the Hela-Tro- phy for his peiformance as sin- gle-wing left halfback. As a senior, he figures to top the nation's T formation ouarter- backs under the tutelage of Woody Hayes. (NEA TAGAROPULOS INDUSTRIES, S,A. Phones: 1002 1003 4041PCO Boyd AT*. Coln R P FRESH MILK FRESH BUTTER RICH ICE CREAM Everything Inspected by the Health Department HOME DELIVERY New ads appear Old ads disappear!!! Reason..Quick Results! i wwbioat mrnmtM h mi v. WAtJA w A" bajli *rw*fhrn -=- pagr inson +< MiTER-SKRVICE lOOf TOl'RNEY OPENER It ws "Play Ball" at in Coo Sola ymrailum MondHv evening. Sept. 16, as the Army and Navy met In the first of a series of Basket- ball nameR in the Panama Area Intar-Servle Tournament. Jim the Army cameraman Pte. R. A. Shlrllng caught the initial juma off. Center for the Haw vac L. Heffner and Mr the Army. Luft*. The Navy won the game, SO to a, in aa feed a basketball name as ha* bean played hereabouts in a Ion time. (Official U.S. Army Photo > To Give Sensational Battle Ends Unexpectedly W TOEK, Sept. 13-Sagr Rav BSafM, aid It wm do or-dle" la the Mead y tenth roes* .ha. he reuptewed the mid dleweicht ream aeaea Raa4v Terpaa ea a technical kaeekeat M \?SMiSBt'Jni of |JJ7t at th. Pato Graei inaaa. 41. kettle fiercely fa be tccttb rep* toot a: fleer Tarpia. t, far a aa.t of pjr>. and than sock halplfaaRaas en the rP0 that Referee laky pad the beat at HAS tf the round. Return Russians Aim For 2 German Olympic Teams Next Year FRANKFURT. Sept. 11 (UPl-v- If the Russiaac have, their way there will he two Germanys rer- reeeated ia aeat year' (Nvaapie Soviet Zaaa Olympic utheri- tiegu ebriouSly on Russian orders Have started an all ont drive to aaaar with an Fast Germaa "Wiener athletic squad of their o op in next year's Haliiwki 'Rto. t 4s the fleet st*p toward ti*, gel the East Getwiae Olyeipie Caatmitife hn again applied for **pbership of th* I teraationai Oh/aayie Orgapleatioh (I.O.C.) several daya ago1, it was learned. According ta a report bv the Saviet licensed ADN News Agen- cy, rbc German' Olympic Com- mitte* will no longer coopers,!* With the Bonn Repablle's Olvaa- Pto group. ';. Th ADN declared that the Cast German Olympic body has can- reMed an agreement reached with the Weaf Germaa Olympic Cagawittee at Umih, Switaer I.ad. an May 12 ef this year. The agreement, which wag Republics Olympic feaunlttte after the Saviet Zea Olympic body's application for IOC mem- bership had been lamed dewa. Seaargieg West (armaay ' tarpedeetag" the Uaaaaae agreement, the Soviet Zope Olympic Cea eiitttr apparently was referriag to the dec jalee mads by the eat Gersaap Olim Pi* vaap early thi* earner flat maetiags with last Gersapp ath- letes wfi only be allowed if Wast l Germaa eta, I to an Rat subject to petttieal arepagaade ' Watt Germaa Olympic Com- mute official here, gpaanwhlle, pratotag that the Soviet Zeno Olympic Committo' application for IOC membership will he deemed to fallare sine* the East- era seas has so far aot f alfaVed the mast important reaatogte for aartiaipatlei la > ot>a membership of the atterapt trratgtienal sperta auaeiatieas West O.rsaaey oa the othpr hand, has beea r-admitted p most of the international sports i fi?*** Wth *ly '** *"*" STILL SMILING Maureen Connolly beams brightly as she strolls onto the eoart at Forest Hills. N. Y. far a worlcout. Lt'l Mo, If, startled the tennis world by becoming the youngeot women's national champion ia Although Turpjn was aUejgtly behind in the general scoring, he had come on to win the eighth and ninth rounds and had re- opened a deep ajh In Robinson's lft brow eartar ia th tgmth. The ten stitch cut which had been suffered originally in July at London was blapdloi f PrP- ftl*ly that th igcrn afTaoTh Ne- gregg were mearse wtth blood whaa the somewhat tad Reb- Ineon opened his terrific attack. When last eight retara beat boat was signed, Premeter Jam Harria anticipated a erawd Of *.? aad a graes gate pf MM to a}t it drew 1,17 aad 77..I The rewd wa, the largest for aay gat aaywhere ta. law when Jae lamia apd Mac Rehmellng attracted 7eY ( to their saeoad beat. In the tenth lay stASgere Turpui with straight right to the ohm. H draw hi lato the rose* with a barrage of hopks t* the haad. Ray continuad hie rl*t- Igta attapk and dropped Turpin flat an hie back with a terrific history. INRA s* signad by lfDE officials and a Other officials and the tint detogatf ef loth the Eastern and Western German Olympic Cem- mitteas. stipulated. "The Germaa Olympic team for the till Oryas- pie flames will ha cempeaed ef th heat. Germap amateare re- grteles of their place ef raai- depec, in aompltepec with th mice of the IOC." Through this sifJMtar, Gr- mana east of the Irea furnia Tirtaally reeagniaet aha lana newapaper eommeat aa tba So- viet tape's attempt te appear with aa athletic "aationai" team of their ewa at 1'Uiaht aeit year. declared that the Raseiaas ata bohiad the Soviet Zone Ofympic Ceaamittae step Fwahfarl Ak.ndpasr said that Saviet Rpaaia will try ta ceavert aaat year's fJatoinhl eve.le inte a moasiar poHaieal demenstratieo Nine Boul Btiifig JffffiOltfJl J'aTtvfl lOl Coco Solo Sahirday NINE BOi;T~Sports HOT .... 14 FORT OULICK, C.Z.. Sept. IS On Saturday, Sept. IS, th Coco Sola Gymnasium will be the scene Of a nthe-bout boxtns awaksr. sponsored by the Sptn AAA Group. Tit firat bout Will begin at :S0 p.m. sharp. The Group team this year Is divided into two squads. The bfx- ers stationed on the Atlantic aide will fight for the 784th AAA Oun Battalion, and the Pacifica will fight for th 903rd AAA AW In. The card will have one boxer from Coco Solo, Don Baaoh, heavyweight. 4 The card is as follows: Bantamweight Richard Killian ,764th v. Je- sus Rodriguez. 784th. Lightweight Jesus Caldern. SfSrd vs. To- ms Rodrguez, SOSiil. Featherweight Gilberto Mortis, 784th a. Arfan Parriah. f5rd. , Mtddlcw.ght Rodriga Mndeg, 764th va. Luis i Brado, 903 rd. Lightweight Otte Caiseda, 74th vs. Richard Rarahard 603rd. Welterweight Jaime Sainz, 764th vs. Richard Pltafarald, 903rd. Lightweight Santiago David. 764th vs Ig- naaia Rodriguez. 903rd. Welterweight Falig velaaqaaz. 7a4th vs Wil- liam Rruscomo. 903rd Heavyweight Oaa Razon. Coco Solo vs. Lance Chavis, 903rd. Sports Briefs If UWT rtM Is across the Hudson lions!. liver from a AMP DRIVEChuck Klein, attempts ta drrVe s hall 265 yard . gomalTfthft^' *k\Kl" f.ito7MTn^SSa. foiaf to f^tahaaaa Andy^Anderwa. wh|t.t om>ipto (h. buhe Dog Tind Davt! Vanderbilt Coach Defines Freshman NASH VILLS. Sept. 13' 'NEA - "Freshmen are at best, an unpre- dictable grasp" says Bill Ed- wards, football coach at Vander- bih Onivorstty. "They are th youth, blind ana illogical, but still the future hop of the varsity. Theirs la" the raw spirit that wMl charge flaming wallaand occa- sionally break through unsing- ed. One may cause a coach to die a thousand depth in a single af- ternoon, yet tht verv day reveal ability that will kaep the coach looking to th future, all the par desiroiw of Working with hi and. developing bis talents." RACING PETER Atlantic OKy, N. J. iNEAi Attendance and mutuel figures at the Atlantic City Race Course ara higher than ever before.. The Montreal Royal* dominate the International League all- star baseball team just as they did play during the aasn. A poll of Jl leafuf writer* shows the Rpyal* won faur Of the IS spots. The Montreal winnarg ara seeand baseman Jamar Oll- Usun. third aacser Rector Rodri- gues sttprtatap Bobby Mrjtyi and southpaw pitcher Chru Van Oayk. Tita thrae But Sale pipyers ea tha aguad ara ouUllldari Ar- uhi* Wiiaon and Wall Pant and rightrhandr Rudy Mtpatein. Rounding oui th alUgtar team re first basemaa Bddle Shogas of Syracus. outHelder Mrv Bifikart af Baltimore and cat*h- er Johnny/ Bucha of Roe heater The all-star manager la Specs Taparear of Buffalo Tha *-yeer?old Wiiaan, who will report to ha Ma* York. Yankee* n**lapring, led with riret place vote. ' Second baseman Bobby Bean of th Boston Red Sox has been ordered;ta\ "take ft easy" for g*r- erat weeks Tiie order come from Lahey Clinie spelall*t* who have beep treating Doerr Mr a hack ailsnent Doctore aay an operation la not necessary, but advise the veter- an econd baseman to rest. It ia believed jorr may be able to ap- pear in a few bey games during th pennant stretch. Hall Of Fame Cops Featured Special' At Narragansefi NEW TOPJC. 8ept. IS UP) The favored Hall Of Fame laid claim to three-year-old chant BVL LS TIN gar Ray Rabias**, who re gaMsad the .ddtoweight obam pianahip !, guapy Tnrpta bMBt night, .aaeaacad taday he ala need his at trite defease m Beseaaber far charity. The aew ehempjea. wearing a whit, patch aa hi left braw. said he had ae idea who his 7'-' will a bat gpapaad the bat to be staged in the united States for the Start Faad. Whea asked if the challenger might be es-ohasnpiea Rockv Sragiaae. lagar Ray said. "No. wea't b kirn thia tiaae." Major League Bowling Season Starts With A Scoring Spree Th UK Panam Canal Bowl- ing Association Majar Leegu tams got away ta a fast start on th Diablo Height bowling alleys Tuesday evening, with all team splitting four points with on *- eptlon. Th ltii champions x. j. Me- nu and Company split with th new Martini team, with Earl Rest lsadof f fo,-1he former, sear- ing Ml. followed by Payn. a saw member, with SM. and Jo Pll- hark. who. with Bast Js the onlj remaining member af the eenly a pi aggregation, fol- J. Por th Martins ht to the jaw for the count of When Rgndy rea FOJajUy. Su- gar tare inte Sum wRh a aavag* booming attach to the head that agin drev him into the rones. ifr Robinson Igadad at least 20 blow, with s 11 his power ta the head and body until the helping* Briton lurched forward Into the arms of Referee Ooldstein. It was a dramatic ending ta on of the mast remarkable matcheg in ring Wateryan international fight that said out every seat from which the action could b .,..j .^^ ^,,,., ,i_ ajroa 10,000. Many of th rejected British Flghl Fans CrWclit folds!* In Fw$to^Boul LONDON. Seat. It (Vf)-M*lr r. Baby GeMatela wa aat a a vHiaia by maay British ftffbt tana today as the aatl.a al (let decUred a day af etoaraiag ares' championship aggregation. lowing with Sto/per the Ma_- five Pepe Damin was high with a smart Ml. followed by Lao Pres- tid of last year' stempel team, with H4. No othr member of either tam hit 00. Th Angelinl quintet split with the T46ist AU Signal team when Andrews, a newcomer to the league, starred th fireworks with the high series of the evening, with games of 285, 193 and 179 for 137. followed by Walker with 128. Jenner with SO* aad Bata* with 07. For th Army group Say Ion was high with 862. follow- ed by Nelp with M2, Herb Coelay with Ue. Neither Madeline nor Hudak hit aM. In the third match of th eve- ning, the newly-formed National Federation of Federal Employes t*m (hreaftr to be called the NTFE pllt with the Royd Bro- thers quintet For the former, only Body with games of 1SS. IIS and If 1 for Ml. and Dillon with Ml hit over U0, while for th Boyd team. Menaen had Mi, Da i ley with MC, Schneider with Mi and Zebrock with 501. The Max R. Stempel team had trouble with the Fuerza y La quintet and came up on the short end of the scaring. The Oashoua- crs took three point from th ltil second-parers with Thom- as doing most of the damage with 5S2, followed by Howard Engel- ke's 5g7 and Stephen*' be, while League Prexy Wllber Norria scor- ed a 615 Per tn Stempel insur- er cemn Bud Balear, new leader ef the team and high arns* howler of lMr. had Ml. followed S anchorman Ted Wllber with 1. Marabella with Hi, and Bil- ly Coffey with iOf The individual bowling aver- age* established Tuesday night were generally high.The 10 high- est bowler of the eventng, with averages were a* listed: First inter Service Fights Of Year At Kobbe Saturday TORT KOBBE C1 JtPt II fsturday night Pert Kobb wl tsfc th wraps from its basing teem for th first time this sea- son. The scheduled eleven-fight eard will feature tighten from th Mrd Infantry, post ef Cero- *al, 4ith Cavalry and Albrook Air force Base This mecer will mark th first nter-servlce fights of the current season. Lt. Joseph MeCraln. head coach, assisted by Sergeant Parks and Sergeant Baea are the trainers for th? JJrd. Twelve of the Blue and White men will fight. Ouerrera Ramn, a civilian, is trainer for the Coroaal squad, and will bring three of his men to the fight*. The 4ith. trained by Warrant Officer William Larn, will have ; Thornton. Coroaal two fighters on hand. Heavyweight Albrook will have five fighters, Vernon Hughes, 33rd v. present Bank Barrow, of past Fluellen, Albrook boxing tame is coaching the Fly- ers' squad and hopes to make a good showing against th Army The bell for the first round will sound at 7:30 p.m. la Hangar Three. There will be plenty of eat* and th public 1* invited to see some good fight*. Th fight card: Bantamweight 'Exhibittenl Hilario Chapa. 33rd vs. Earnest Wright, llrd. Parran Hernandez, Mrd va. Noel Parkerapn, 4Kh. John Sheffield, Mrd vs. Ray- mond Vaehen,4Mh. Welterweight Jos Duke. 33rd vs. Vega; Cres- po, coronal. LouU Wright. Mrd v. Johnny Chalk, Albrook Frank McUug-hun. Mrd va, Richard Cobum. Coroaal. Middleweight Ue Wljson, JJrd v. Dairy Ed- munds. Albrook. Arthur Collins, Mrd va. Jim Jones, Albrook Welterweight Lorenzo Haca, llrd vs. Rex Ligfct-Beary Don Tatro, Mrd va. Joe Albrook. Chrip OauL DONFI LI'S DEAL BOSTON (NBA) Buff Donelly's four-year record as Boston University'* football coach is 20 victories and 12 de feat*. .olonship honor* with an easy win in the SU.0001 Harragansstt Spe- cial at Pawturket, Jthod Island. Th Orepntro aHphie olt tee* the lead at the break in th mile and hree-aixtcentha test and never wa* headed to win going away. ? Jockey Ted Atkinson steered Ball Of Pant ta th front at the break with Abstract a close sec- ond The two ran almost even through the firat'ill. whan At- kinson made hia move with Mail Of Fame. The Oreentree catt pad away from the pack and breezed acto*s the finish 11a* three aad three-quarter lengths to front ef Abstract. Tllanav rap third. The time wa I H-l and Hal) Of Pama paid MM. 140, an! $2.20 aereas the heard. ^Willa. Bi a aide story from Tnrpia'g heane tapa ef Leawiiagtea th r report*. "There were plea- ef eritiekwa af the referaa- . did he step the fight with epfy few second* ef tf to go? -Ready weald sureiy hawe boatan BaMnsea after eattiag hu eye ia the Lath reaad-werc typical riapaMt remmeats." Ret th riagsid eerreapead- n* f tie Eveaint taadarf d th. Ir.aiag New. beliavtd th. when he did. I eeaider that the referee aeted 'rasa in <,. v raatives,'' aaid Geargo WhMiag af the Staadard. He added that Robinsea aaatched a swift and gleriepe vie tety fraa what laeked ilk. cer- tain impeadiag defaat. Bill McGawaa af the Evenias News wrote. "I think the referee was aha.l.t.1. jastlfied in step pang the right ia Bebiasea's fav hepofaBy'Vf ."'ntbb*".t.h- to feniaa neat amasaer. BaBLSSS BtWMBN Ntw Tart -IffAj- Breokiya St Jahn* hasnt. fielded a toot- AY5ff- ill team sin* mi. Upvid was a bne feRew. shopping never left hipa mellow' Vera eat, weary, tired aad brave. WhT eat read ear Waal 4a*. Baa? aV-l Name Andrew .. .. ..... P Dassfaa........ Thoma.......... Engelk* .. .1...... B*............ Balear.......... Melanson.......... ayion .......... Wllber........... Eady ,............ Fight Fans Smash Plate Glass Doors For TV Pictures CHICAGO, Sept. II (UP) _ Theneaed* ef faas saaashed torapah plaU (Us deem ef the tat. Lpke Theater last night ia a riot to eo the Ray Robiasaa Raady Tur pin mid- dleweight fight aa television. Tha fight Wasn't available to televsaiea viewers in homes. It waa sen only over a closed elr- eait ta S theaters ia eleven eltiea where fans paid their way toet a* theagh they were la New Tora far the boat. A Called Presa aervcy dl- eteoed that at least 33.MO per- seas watches the fight via paid ?Mee at the II theatcra la ele- ven cities threagh the nation. Every theater tnraed away erawd, a the tetal eaald have beea aaaeh greater. HfVff flaafgaf |gpjbaAJS/4^SiaslwaJ wwlam PwBvt 1 Bw covTee SHSi nn BelmgiE...ri9^yoor HEADACHES wb3e theyVe sight! Wbni headache arr da* * worry, overwork, over-iadaigeac -a (naut, take Atk Seltaer t the am apa of diKomWrt. Re- peat if aeedad far caaaiaoed reli.f. Sparkling eServcKsac* aaaka Alka-Siar ptaaauu-taM- m, aelpi m pain-killia aaal- pesic go to work fait. Haraaioai, set a laxativa-you caa.cake it aw !' _, Drop oac or taro aablew jato a pa of waser. Watch i baa into a reffaabiag aiutiaa then driak it Keep supply of qekk-actiag. A1W..Seiner on hand-.lway! Alka-Siltzir helps HUMS ilttf v, I 4 I* wP*sopTfiOMg| mpmtwmm MlCAUSt It If IOOX pukc eofnt ate MA&C QNtilBCM. *vnsmwwaPPW^nspFS*aj> Ht>fOl-HO0*OUnK tEADr IN AN INJTaBT 3.tNfWiy 1M5 UBS SKI. HOtl Cm TMAN A VOUUV OF eitXIatf tfffrtl'.Aatf fwffjsj eO WASTt mift oMi itmti m ees! j tOO?, 9MM JNSTAMT COFFEE /Uka-Seltzei t^llBf Fmt$. . Arm Ymm "lsgi" Jp Our *ECO*D CLUB r* to littlt J |m to 2 W VVssklv Tou oaa be th$ proud owner o/ the ftft "*.. er iMM- * flrpa */ must you onfop mpef! Cil. (ymas Cymes GKl Shop B. I J. P. d. ta aaa No. lt TivaU Ave . HELD OVER IY INSISTENT DEMAND THE AMERICAN CLUB 1$ Happy tp announce th* CONTINUED ENGAGEMENT OF DON fir LOYAL RAYMOND i The Musical Comedy Favorite nsj The Town's Current Sensation CHARLES BOURNE The Wixard of the Piano INTCRTAINMENT EVERY NICbTT m tha ZEBRA LOUNGE and BAMBOO ROOM e apiM- --.-.....i. H ,. -, .axw.w THE GAYIfT tPOT IN PANAMA The American Club Facing D* Leaseps Park Down by the Tivoli Hotel t pp^pr^ ROBINSON TURPIN RETURN GO LOOMS British Writers Criticize Referee Cards Face Two Foes in 1 Day The League's Best (Include I .Ml Night"* Game*) NATIONAL LEAGUE Stan Musial. Cardinal*.....36" Richie Ashbnrn. Phillies.....339 Jackie Robinson. Dodger* .. .338 Rot Campanrlla. Dodgers . .326 Ralph Kiner, Pirate*.......315 AMERICAN LEAGUB Fern* Fain. 4thletir* .....33) Ted William*. Red Sox.....322 George Kef!. Tiger*.......321 Orestes Mioso. White Sot .321 OH Coan. Senators ......317 (SPORTS PAGES: 8 & 9) The Fleets In Two Of Them 27 Czechs Get Asylum In US Zone FRANKFURT. Sept. 13 lUP)- The Western allies today banned all flights of Czechoslovak air- craft over Western Germany, and ranted political asylum to 27 zechs who fled by train into the United States zone of Germany Tuesday. Thp air traffic ban appeared to be an open reprisal for Czech- oslovakia's Imprisonment of A- merican newspaperman William N. Oatis on spv charges. The United'States authorities here will ship back to Czechoslo- vakia the 87 otner Czechs aboard the train which fled across the border, and the train Is itself will', be released shortly. Tnere was speculation at one time that, the 87 might be held as ' houages for Oatis. THE COMBINED .S Army and U.S. Air Force bands paraded Pier 16 yesterday as His Maies- tys Canadian Ship ONTARIO docked at Balboa. Warrant Officer Eugene A Deiter USAF lead- -r PJ "?.ivr Force band- marching front center with baton. Warrant Officer Thomas E. voider, USA. leader of the 71st U.S. Army band, is on the right flank of the column <#%jf (U.S. Nay Photo) 1&ESEE2?. W S,Ln?.AR,ITT and the feel|n* oI ** neighborllness existing In the Wait- W00Dl0N^8SAla7u^0k."SH^JoS* ^^ "* * '"'^ C8CrU US8 ----------------------i--------------- (U.S. Nary Pheto) 82 (anal Positions Open ior Transfer There are 82 vacant positions In the Canal organization to which eligible qualified employes may transfer, according to the latest transfer-vacancy bulletin from the Personnel Bureau. Forty are classified and re- lated positions and 42 are In the craft group. , Vacant classified and related positions are: probationary ad- measurer; clerk; clerk steno- grapher; clerk-typist; electrical desijrner: engineering drafts- man: civil engineer: civil en- gineer design; electrical engi- neer: mechanical engineer; en- gineering aid; fireman; card punch operator; physical science and policeman; position classi- fier; and storekeeper. Vacant positions in the cralt group are: bollrmaker; yard and road conductor; battery and ignition electrician: e!ec- troplater: chief 'towboat en- gineer; floating crane steam engineer: gauger; machinist in- cide, outside, machine erection, electrical, fleet, locomotive, and refrigeration; towboat master; dipper dredge mate; construc- tion equipment operator: lock operator-unqualified, qualified wireman, cablesplicer; body re- pairman painter planing mill hand: shipfitter and; wireman. Democrats Would Declare Election Days As Holidays WASHINGTON. Sept. 13 Democratic National Chair- man William M. Boyle. .7r. pro- posed in Congress today that i every general election day be made a national holiday. Boyle also asked Congress to study ways, such as Induct- mwits or penalties, that would encourage voting and outlaw thp "defamatory" campaign tactic*. Out-Patient Clinics Consolidate In New Consultant Service A new Consultant Service at ; Gorgas Hospital, which, will consolidate several out-patient clinics now In different parts of the hospital, will be opened' next Monday, it has been an- nounced by Major General George W. Rice, Health Direc- , tor. The new service will be lor cated in Wards 3 and 5 on the first floor of Section B, facing the Hospital Adminis- tration Building on the Balboa Heights side of the Adminis- tration Building circle. This service is entirely separate from the district medical clinics wplch in the , near future will be transfer- red from Balboa. Ancon, and Pedro Miguel to the first floor of Section A of Gorgas Hospital. The Consultant Service will | include these clinics: allergy, dermatology, pediatrics, car-, diac, diabetic, blood bank, sur-! gical, neuropsychiatric, hospi-' tal-dental, orthopedic, and uro-' logy. Establishment of the Con- sultant Service is part of a! i consolidation and moderniza-1 tion program at the Hospital : which has been In progress for i several months and will con- [ tinue for some time In the future. Some of the clinics to be moved to the new Service have been located in Building 273, and in the Hospital Adminis- tration Building. Building 273 will be demol- ', ished following the transfer oil the facilities there to the new Service. Transfer of out-patient clinics from the Hospital Ad-! ministration Building will pro-i vide additional space for a! recovery ward near the oper- King rooms on the third floor' of the building. Ward 8 was vacated in the,' transfer of women medical pa- tients to the new Obstetrical and Gynecological Building and Ward S had been vacant for some time. Both have been renovated in preparation for occupancy by the new Consult- ant Service. T?.f ROyAL CANADIAN NAVY put a Jeep over the side while the vessel is being warped Into the dock and before the gangplank is In place. Note sailor and petty officer rid- ing in jeep. They lose no time and are ready to" go as soon as the wheels touch the dock. (U.S. Navy Photo) Pistol-Packing: Beauty Demands Love or Ufe; Seaman Cries Rape ------ o------ ,H...A*LAND- k Sepl U ,,"M-An o-traged mer- vnl SS" Z22& D0.,ic* toiay *' > "raetive h. f'ELE? .* l2 t'.d ?v,ckt* at>,h CS3S LwgiT rttaB* '"" " I '.,h.~ IOT ' "" Pks told police. Go pick on someone else.' I aid. ! have a wife" Then she pulled a pistol and forced me he kept the un in n, rib* all the time." Park, reported kia tadJZtL"?' 'Hi pvsiona" **** b*nnit "red ..^ ', H!' J"/'0 '"'nlown street corner where he fined > of hi* auto and v,,,i ,,i ii martter.'n*de b*",D' "" """" ,^ion ' r,'ori AN INDEPEND NDEiVT^fjfjg^DAILY NEWSPAPER Panama American "Let the people know the truth and the country is gafm" Abraham Lincoln.. TWENTY-SIXTH YEAR PANAMA, R. P.. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1MI nVK CENTS Bookie King Back In After Discovery At NEW YORK. Sept. IS (UP) Harry Gross, kingpin bookmaker alleged to have paid graft to the police of Mayor William OTJwy- er's administration at the rate of millions of dollars a year, was back in custody and back in Brooklyn today to the vast relief of authorities faced with a city- shaking scandal. 8mlllng happily, District At- torney Miles McDonald announc- ed that his star witness against 18 former and present New York policemen who are on trial for taking graft "will be kept under heavy guard in a secret place." When Grass disappeared Tues- day night two Implications were blinding both to the public and o the authorities either the underworld had kidnapped him Dry Stale Senator Urges Liquor Ban At Atomic Plants WASHINGTON, Sept. 13 CUP) Sen. Robert S. Kerr, D., Okla , said today he is asking the Ato- mic Energy Commission to close liquor stores at Oak Ridge. Tenn.. and cancel plans for opening another one in one of. Its build- ings at Los Alamos, N. M. "The Atomic Energy Commis- sion has no business in the li- quor business," Kerr said in a letter to his constituents in dry Oklahoma. "A mixture of alco- hol and atom* won't produce tht kind of explosions we need to deter or halt the enemy ag- gressor." i He said ABC aireadv has re- ceived 104 bids for the, liquor concession at Los Alamos, indi- cating "a whopping business is expected." ABC would be guar- anteed a minimum of $750 a month for the concession, he said. , He said the policy of leasing space in a government building, ao that liquor will be available to employes for off-duty drink- ing, is "loaded with contradic- tions and filled with foolish- ness." He said it encourages viola- tion of AEC's own rule against drinking on the job. "Furthermore, AEC becomes a party to that violation by re- ceiving a percentage of the cross sales, with a minimum of $750 a month required at Los Alamos. This rental, incidental- ly. Is to be collected through a private agent so the AEC won't have to return the money to the U. S. Treasury. CAPTAIN E. P. TISDAI.I.. RCN. Commanding Officer, His Majesty s Canadian Ship ONTARIO being greeted on the ouarterdrclc bv First. Secretary and Public Information Officer ,________o_thj British Legation Jasper Leadbitter. 20 Nations. Certify They Do No Business Behind Iron Curtain WASHINGTON. Sept. IS (UP) Twenty nations including Pa- nama have certified to the United States that they are do- ing no business behind the Iron Curtain. ' The nations are: Costa Rica, Cuba. Dominican Republic, Ecuador. Ethiopia. Greece, Haiti, Indochina, Libe- ria, Nationalist China. Nepal, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, the Philippines. South Korea. Saudi Arabia. Thailand, Trieste and Yugoslavia. Their reports were necessary in connection with the law ban- ning economic or financial as- sistance to any country permit- ting the export of specified Items to the Soviet and its sa- tellites. The National Security Council is authorized to make interim exceptions to the ban In cases when where nations continue some form of trade with Russia and the Soviet Bloc. Dr. Masteilori Goes To Denver For Lung Study Dr. Amadeo V. Mastellarl, Chief of the Tuberculosis Sec- tion at Gorgas Hospital, will attend a .lecture series on tu- berculosis and chronic pulmon- ary diseases at Fltulntons Ar- my Hospital In Denver from Sept. 24 to M. He will leave the Isthmus about September 20th by air. to keep him quiet, or he was run- ning away to avoid testifying a- galnst policemen alleged to have made his $20.000,000 yearly book- making business possible. But Gross was found betting at a racetrack near Atlantic City. Without Gross as the key pro- secution witness. Brooklyn's cur- rent police bribery trial was threatened with collapse. The disappearance of the bookie baron momentarily, gave the drive on alleged police cor- ruption a setback which was comparable to the mysterious death of Ab Rels In the midst of the Murder, Inc., investiga- tion a decade ago. Gross was the third person connected with the case to dis- appear. The first was James F. Reardon, a former policeman, who took over Gross' duties with the syndicate when he was away. Gross' brother, Jack Gross, also is missing. The disappearance of Gross marked the second interruption of the trial. The first one came when one of the original 19 po- liceman defendants, Charles N. Panarella, 44. Jumped through a window In the Brooklyn court- house June 4. The defendants then won a three-month ad- journment. Gross faces a possible sentence of 8 years In jail and fines to- talling $33,500 on guilty pleas to 85 charges of bookmakipg and one of conspiracy. Gross, 35, gave the slip Tues- day night to two detectives as- signed to guard him In a down- town hotel while he was free in $23,000 bail, a concession he won in exchange for "singing" about alleged corruption on the Brook- lyn police force when William O'Dwyer was Mayor of New York City. The detectives allegedly viola- ted orders during a trip they made with Gross to see his wife and two young children at At- lantic Beach, Long, Island.' There, Gross got some clothes, kissed his wife, went to the kit- chen to wash his hands, sneaked out a back door and sped away in a black Cadillac. McDonald said that one of the two detectives had gone out for some food. The other apparent- ly wasn't looking when Grow drove away in the car his wife had borrowed from Gross' bro- ther. She said she got the ear so she could flee from the persons threatening her and the children. McDonald. Mrs. Gross and Gross' attorney, Michael Kern, said there had been threats a- gain.it the entire family because of Gross' part In. the 18nmonth Investigation of police bribery. Sheridan To Speak Monday In Court On Constitution J Constitution Day will be ob- served by members of the Canal Zone Bar Association Monday at 9;oo a. m. in the U. S. IDos- trict Court at Aneon. William J. Sheridan will speak on the Constitution of the United States. ampbejH't Vegetable Soup is a great family favorite. Into a rich, invigorating beef stock go luscious tomatoes, green peat, lima beans, crisp carrots, sweet golden corn, and many more garden-fresh vegetables, each one contributing its own special, tempting flavor. That's why Campbell's Vegetable Soup is so deeply nourishing...grand eating for all the family at any meal... BECAUSE IT 15 /%iasi'a meal in rfeelf see ONOfNsl., FOR CrATER VAtUE IOUK (OH f H E *D AND WHITE i ig^rtfc |
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| MILLISECOND | CLASS.METHOD | MESSAGE |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Application State validated or built |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Navigation Object created from URI query string |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.display_item | Retrieving item or group information |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | Retrieving hierarchy information |
| 0 | sobekcm_assistant.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | Found item aggregation on local cache |
| 0 | item_aggregation_builder.get_item_aggregation | Found 'all' item aggregation in cache |
| 0 | system.web.ui.page.page_load (ufdc.page_load) | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_style_references | Adding style references to HTML |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
| 46 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |