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- ' # * BRANIFF - - r TO: BALTIMORE OKI WAY...... $142.95 ROUND Tgl... $261 15 -i------ Let the people know the truth and the country is safe" Abraham Lincoln. TWENTY-SEVENTH TEAR i PANAMA, R. P., SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 4, 1M1 * StagramsVO. : < IXADI \\ WHISh. 77ft Mow... 6 Years Old! TIN CENTS Combat Paratroopers Who Saw Atom Blast Don't Share Congressmen's Enthusiasm Elizabeth IN Washington President Truman and his family geet Prlnc^K^th IhL^X'T&fS"* Php.U IJ**' Mrlve ta WartlnSSr TrmRoy* pate" ef short visit to Washington as a side trip on their Canadian tour. Prom left to rleht aw Mar rhE wEe_ SK^r^ &' Pr2Knt:_John mrnon* the" 8tarparLent'spotort fw!. A-^SmSJSS01 a-d P?Ce P5_p- ** they leit Washington Friday afternoon after h_?_ 2L^,?tltms *?d ubb^eckln,f' Mr" Tnuflan lnvlted Royal couple to "come h_ SSl,1i*,.btlng y^uLi0Vely chdr?n- A RoyBl cnadlan Air Force transport flew them back through a snowstorm from Washington to Montreal. The storm thwarted Elizabeth's wish to see the skyscrapers of New York. This weekend EllzabethandPWllp tntStt In the Lauren tlan Mountains. ; '------------------------------------- Frankie And Ava Near Nuptials PHlLApELPgu Nov. 3 (UPj Judge's chambers described Miss ,. A "vety nervous" .frank ata- Gardner as at anTTba act- '>ra and,luscious Ava n~- -yt --yr 1T gTrrsw j AN ATTEMPT by members of the Panama Students' Federa- tion to break up yesterday's Independence Day parade, and to stop parading students from passing by the Presidencia, was frustrated by the police. A parading teacher identified only as Rlos is shown resisting as Federation students try uo wrest the flag he was carrying. Police shooed the students away soon after. * * Cops Too Fast For Students In Solitary ]$ov. 3 Scuffle Pearson Tells Evitas Trouble IToo Much Gin By DREW PEARSON ' WA8HINGTO~ov 3 Here are the facts behind the sudden summoning of Dr George Pack, New York cancer specialist, to Buenos Aires to diagnose Se- la Pern. About a year ago. Seora Pe- rn began losing blood Internally LAS VEGAS Nev. Nov. 3 (UP) Paratrooper, who rook part in the first atomic war games said today that the bomb blast was a fearful thing, but some doubted that it would do much good on a real battlefield. Fighting men of the 11th Airborne Division and other who observed Thursday's atom bomb drop gave their opi- nions at a press conference called by the Army and the Atomic Energy Commission. Members of the joint Congressional Atomic Energy Committee, who also witnessed the maneuvers, said ftatly that the bomb proved its worth as a battle weapon. But the troops could not agreed entirely. Some thought it would be worthless under real battle conditions. Others agreed with the A EC viewpoint. marriage license at City Hall to- day, 24 hours after his divorce from NanCy Sinatra. phonograph record executive Manny Sacks and Dr. Isaac Levy, a long-time friend of Sin- atra and a member of the Co- lumbia Broadcasting System board of directors. "Sinatra was very nervous," said WUlard MacDonnell. first assistant marriage license clerk. who filled in the application for Levy's wife said she hoped the the couple in the chambers of marriage would be held at her Orphans Cdurt Judge Charles home. In Oermantown. She said taSt' tfi wedding probably will be Th 28-year-old curvaceous held next Wednesday but that Miss Gardner, twice a bride, the 34-year-old crooner's plans took the application routlut in are "very Indefinite" because of stride. A woman clerk in the his television commitments. The henna-haired Misa Gard- %8VsCUttt brief Philadelphia appearance. She wae hatless and had on high-heeled shoes. The Voice was dressed in a blue topcoat, brown sports coat, brown shoes and was hatless. Frank and Ava made their move toward the marriage aisle about 34 hours after he had zoomed into Las Vegas. Nev., to pick up a Nevada divorce from ex-wife Nancy, mother of his three children. Miss Gardner had remained In New Tork while Sinatra flew to Nevada for final shedding of bis first wife. An attempt by a group at. students to divert yesterday's Third of November parado from passing by the Presidencia prov- ed unsuccessful. Alert policemen nipped the plan in the bud when the student* triad ip wrest * flag a way ; '~im*Wa*f towever. no serious tfcldents occurred during the rest of the day. Unlike last year, rain failed to mar the traditional Indepen- dence Day parade of students' death in Panama City. Thousands of down people thronged the street* to watch dr to take part. No major incidents were re- and bull fight*, will continue to- day with the Flag Day parade along Central Avenue. , While Panamanians celebrat- ed, however, three Canal Zone homes were wrapped to gloom resulting from three accidental' ** r^Sy Penan Indepen- dence Day hoMday. Announcement of the acci- dental drowning of policeman Elmer L. Middlebrook, Cristobal traffic officer, was followed by a report that Joseph Barret, 54. a stevedore, plunged to his earlier Friday morning a hatch of the 88 Pan- ama at Pier 8, Cristobal. Later came the announcement that Capt. Louis Nelp III, adju- other things that she give up all alcohol. This included foregoing Evita's favorite drink the San Martin, the Argentine version of a Martini, made by pouring four ounces of sweet Vermouth Into a Jigger of gin and drunk with- out ice. Seora Pern, who has always been a periodic drinker, laying off for months at time, then making up for lost time, scru- R. .y beyed her doctors un- til last June. Then, on the fifth anniversary of her husbund's inauguration she yielded to the San Martin urge rather heavily, later went to a resort In near-by Crdoba for a week of even more serious drinking. This started her intestinal troubles all over again and it St. William Roberts, 23, of Oxnard, Calif., who served al- .1 explosion "the biggest thing I ever saw." Would it be effecUve In Korea, Sergeant? "I don't think it would do much good,'1 Roberts replied. "Korea is too mountainous the Chinese and the North Kor- eans and the way they fight would make use of the atomic bomb suitable." The atom bomb, compared to artillery fire he had heard, was like "a stick of dynamite as against a firecracker," he ad- ded. First Lt. Ethan A. Platt, Ber- keley, Calif., platoon leader, took the opposite view. "The test showed that lt* use on the battlefield to support troops la quite feasible," he saW. n biea that the man called It a typical bomb drop. Four thousand troops witness- ed the blast in a reverse man- ner. That is, they sat with their backs to the Durst area. They were permitted to tur around three seconds after the blinding flash. Cpt. William L. Colson Qrwn. andl^ttlnnk^the^Uctlcsoi.wood, Miss., saw^conldnot say, for security reasons, whe- ther the troops were able to go immediately into the bombed area. "We went Just- about as far as we wanted to go," he parried. Cm*. Dubois to ves I Naval Districf owe* awe* Unto.'before tfc* <"J -baaeaa-ftlaa* the egos, fcemorthages could be stopped. A 'lessen We learned was a feeling fissure m the membrane of the lower intestine has now been dis- covered, which Is the reason for consultation with the famed New York cancer specialist. Dr Pack (Copyright, 1951, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc ). Po^jed by the Panama police | tant of the 7461st AU a* Clay- and in the Canal Zone all was' ton accidentally shot and killed V5 H Qul8t- I himself. Local Army headquar- Yesteroay s patriotic exercises, | ters gave no details of the ac- whlch Included athletic events I cident Combat Experience With Jgts In Korea Sparks Big Change In Air Force Tactics SABRES MAKE AN AERIAL UMBRELLA By DOPGLAS LARSKN * NEA Staff Correspondent erf .'., . WASHINGTON. Nov. 3 (EA).-The combat experience the Air Force Is getting in Korea against Russian-made Jet fighters Is causing some major changes in planning for possible future air wars., Tactics are being revised. Major modifications in the pre- sent Jets are being rushed. This new warfare boils down to the fact that Jets are ex- tremely hard to destroy in the air. Day after day the commu- niques from Korea tell of J00 or more Red Mlgs attacking 40 or 80 . 8. Saberjets. with maybe one or two of the enemy destroy- ed or damaged, and seldom of one of the U. 8. planes being hit Statistics prove the problem. Since the Mlgs began attacking U. 8. Jets In great number last summer,. slightly more than 100 of the speedy Red planes have been (not down. Only about 20 Sabers have been destroyed In the thousands of combat engage- ments that have taken place. If all the planes Involved had been propeller-drtren. the sky battle would long since have been de- cisive. Reasons for this indecisive air fighting are fairly obvious. The planeado so fast the phot seldom get* more than one shot B' an enemy plane. And at best it's a very difficult shot. In addition, the lets can take a lot of enemy bullet's and still stay m the air. They are built stronger throught. The kerosene they Use Unless Ifltelgr to catch fire than high octane gasoline And they fly tt such great heights they dont catch fire be- cause of the lack of oxygen up there. Result Is that air-to-air com- bat has now become the most ex- pensive ldatf of fighting UN forces are engaged in, m terms of destruction against the enemy. But what can U. 8. military ex- pers do about it? If the Air Torce doesn't put large fleets of Jets into the air the Red Jets could begin attack- ing UN troops and bitting snp- Ely lines. Vet all the aerial com- itocostly in men, planes and ground support unitsdoes re- latively little in reducing enemy Jet fighter strength. The present Korean situation isn't typical of what the Air Force could expect of Jet fight- ing In an all-out war. The fact that Red pilots can zoom back to safety across the Yalu River any- time without bemg chased makes this difference. Nevertheless. AF commanders have altered their thinking about air combat on the basis of the new experience with Jets. The major change it has re- quired in. the planes is Improved fire-control equipmentIn other words, better ways to shoot a plane's guns. Systems of locating an enemy plane, and firing on lt at exactly the proper Instant by radar, with the pilot Just point- ing his plane at the enemy plane. Is the solution they're seeking. It's a complicated one. Tactically, the Jet has increas- ed the need for destroying planes on the ground In order to get control of the skies. With all Jets in the air neither side could ever get control of the skies merely through air-to-air combat. To this extent the peculiar Ko- rean situation is an extra bur- den on the Air Force. It's In- herently more difficult to destroy the enemy in the air. Yet UN C" U are not permitted to seek out on the ground by at- tacking his home bases. The advantage the Air Force does have right now because of Jets, according to the experts. 1s In the business of escorting of respect for the bomb and it* effect. It was tremendously Im- pressive." Pvt. Reymond J. Coffin. 18. of Bryantvllle. Mass., said be was 'plenty scared." On the other hand. Pfc. Ro- bert E. Meadows, 19, Philadel- phia, felt "perfectly safe." "I felt we could have been closer," he said. "Just the same, Im glad we, weren't." The ABC said officially that the weapon used in the games was an aerial bomb' dropped from a B-29. An Army spokes- Leprechauns Win In IrelandThey Keep Their Mound DUBLIN. Nov. 3 (UP)_The city of Limerick, Ireland, has decided to let Its lephechauns li"" the ^y decision to, Bothering Moving make. The little fairies Just I-, *.",-,.. wouldn't budge. CorS Nets GlN City officials wanted to lay V"U VMI the foundation of a housing project right on an old earth mound. And legend has lt that the "ttle men" lived in lt. But then workmenwho tore down the mound one day__re- ported the next morning that the leprechauns had built it up again. Some laborers even said they could see the little men hard at work. A new group of workmen was called in. They too cleared the mound. They too reported that it was back again the next day. The workmen refused to put an- other shovel to the mound The city fathers recognized a stalemate when they saw one. "We will give in to the fairies." said one, "Leave the mound alone and build houses around 15 Days In Jail A Panamanian girl was sen- tenced to IS days in jail during yesterday's session at the Balboa Magistrate's Court for disorderly conduct. Alicia Martines, 25, was ap- prehended while Jumping in front of cars on Tlvoll Avenue at 3 a.m. Alicia had recently been re- leased from Jail where she had been serving a 10-day sentence for vagrancy. it." 9,070 Pennies For 1 DEADWOOO, Sooth Dakota, Nov. I (UP) Emory Roakarg, a grocer here, paM the hos- pital bill for his new little girl with 9,970 pennies. Her name Penny Lou. cmdr. feaDciaL-.DsjBols^far- !5L2?*W- *mar "* tn* Ulllterfy Sea Transportation Service at Headquarters, letb. Naval District, lift the Canal Zone by plane Priday after com- pletion of a normal, tour of duty on the Isthmus. He will join his wife, Alice and his young daughter. Helen, at Mobile. Alabama and after a 4e- day leave m the Bast .will go to the naval shipyard at Bremer- ton, Washington, where he will take over the duty of operation* officer of the USS Quincy, a hea- vy cruiser. While here DuBois owned one of the two private Piper Cub Br- coupes on the Isthmus. The oth- er one wa* owned by the ill-fated Dwlght M. Kersh, a Zonlan. Who lost his life when his plane crashed at the headwaters of the Bayano River on Oct 1. Kersh had two Panamanian passengers aboard. The fate of Kersh and the others also struck a blow at Du- Bois. who Joined in the search. . On Oct. 4, he took off for a point ! east of San Miguel Bay In hopes I of finding some trace of the | missing plane or its passengers. After two hours and forty min- nt es of flying, DuBois' plane de- veloped engine trouble and ha was forced to make a crash land- ing Into the sea one mile off Cheplllo Island DuBois and his passenger Vi- cente Alba, reached safety after a long trip, by foot and canoe, down the coast and through the Jungle. The DuBois were active both In and about the Zone. Mrs. Du- Bois directed the smash Naval play, "Dirty Work at the Crass- roads/' LITTLE FRIEND: Framed by the idle propeller of a B-t wnleh lost an engine daring a bombing mistin over Korea, an F-8t Jet escorts the crippled plane heme. Jet escorts have given the Saperforts a big helping hand over. North Korean targets. pattern I-ACTICS IN THE SKY over Korea, where the birds on the wing, F-U SabreJoU make their own -1 they've had is revising tactics of the Air Fore*, bombers to their targets. The U.S. has more know-how and ability in this vital mission than Russia. And the Jets enhance that advantage. As long as the Jet fighter es- cort* can stay In the air they can accomplish their rnisslon of pro- tecting the bomber whether they shoot down enemy interceptors or not. All they have to do la keep the enemy from shooting down the bomber. And this. Ko- rea has shown, jets can do. inability to knock Jet fighters out of the air U the same for Jet bombers. Even with present- ly outmoded bombers the enemy can always get a few through to any target. Gen. Van den berg. Air Chief of Staff, points out. Thus, using jet bombers the chances of getting more planes . through to a target become even greater. The fact that the Jet plane Is able to deliver a high percentage of bombs right to a target certainly Increases the value of America's stockpile of tfwif bomba *v HONEYMOONING MARION DA VIES Marlon Davles a rio friend anri nriJt5f2S?^ Hora^G* owT Tn-. ss^'SM! SS^rS? Sffi ttSflSS?gg. nr? nt m^ wWiJ^S?1 the4[?ort ,riend From teft to right are Brown, press agent Alary Pool, Miss Davles. and Vlrgi nia FarreU, wife of actor Chartos FaneJLJ A A4 fMGETWO - if < . TU SUNDAY AMERICAN i ....... 1 ! JUNDAY, NOVEMBER I, 1951 NEITHER FROM QUARRY HEIGHTS NOR EVEN THE PENTAGON CAME tHIS 1URB DISCLOSURE OF pOW.^ CanaVs Most Secret Defenses Were Smoked Out As man who may once hive saved the Panama t dan*! from destruction I was interested to read Mine tune ago that President Truman had issued new and strict regulations for safeguarding the de- feats of the Canal. With all respect to the Presi- dent and his military adviser, I would say that pro- veering that witerway may involve more than- he quite realizes, and I feel it is only my duty to sug- tVgest one practical step he might take drawn from Why own experience in keeping the garrison on its toes - ;,h* South Qakota wa* making its way toward Pe-aircraft batteriM engaged in getting on target in The New Yorker recently earned this o Miguel. 'ii **" own inimitable way. Sixty million dojjar delayed combat report from EDMUND G. LOVE of stirring times alone the Panam Canal. Among the items stirred are one brigadier general, and several smoke pots full of Gl laundry. I had come up horn *ient 3 feeling very discour- worth of batdeahip and sixteen million dollars' aged, rhad-found only one man there, snoring on worth of aubmarinei had also been endangered, his cot. When I got 0 the siren, I stopped, as I Approiymasely 64,000 gallons of oil literally went have said, and looked: round: Then, without really up in moke, and 9,437 rounds of ammunition of thinking, I reached out -anil gave the handle of various types and sites were expended. Approxim- the a. turn, and a mdufhfuf rose slowly over ately three hundred A.W.O.L. soldiers were reduced the area. The sound died, and I turned] the to private, if they were noncoms, or otherwise had apparently been imparted by the San Bias handle again, a second and a third time. As heavily disciplined, if they were privates already. Indians to certain selected pfes. As time went on, ^t wuing ft(jed to its last low moan, I ran A considerable number of officers lost their chances u... <..A 1 heard rumors that the occupants of some of the ^ hilL It waln-, a^ j was raitd M what of early promotion, and several of them spoke to My Official posuion at the time 1 may have saved ^ hd .^^ liundresse$ or m.id$ itom JV. ^ | mtnnd m w g m whwe me tbwit ^ i,,^ was said, Tem 5 had a line of pots, and from which I I am not certain whether any serious attempt knew I could see most of my platoon area and was ever made to court-martial me. If ao, I didn't the Canal was that of platoon sergeant in an orga- ns mat or putoon sergeant n an orga- iyM_ hMi wh t ^^ZtttLSPS also performed extracurnculaf duties . nixation 1 (SG>. The SG" stands for Smoke Generator. "m/'position as platoon sergeant plainly required ^ up"o""hw fast" the" men rrVpondeT~Ha bear of k It seemed to me that my reprimands m- 776th Chemical Company arrived ,n Panama toward ^ ^ Qn ^ ^ -^ ^ ^ the end o 1942. and was assigned to positions at made ^ ^ becie of the general one end of the Gadlard Cut, near the Pedro Miguel ^ fc ^ ^ cou,d mm KRty locks. Its headquarters were at the little military K (q e had dfM(J of post of Paraso, which is perched on a steep slope | ^ l^cktir found myieIf about two miles Atlanticward from the Pedro M.- tJ guel Locks. The companys mission was simple. In the event of an air raid, we smokies, as we were called, were to blanket the area assigned to us with smoke and bewilder enemy pilots. Our device for accomplishing this was a smoke pot developed from the kind commonly used in the California citrus groves; I suppose some Chemical Warfare colonel had been awarded the Legion of Merit for dressing the familiar port up in military guise. It was of- way there, an impulse made me turn and look at grew ks severe the higher the officer admin- Pfc. Willie GDonnelL It must have been at least istering them. 'Eventually, a brigadier general 1 two minutes .since the first note of the alarm had hadn't seen before came to my platoon area one floated out, but O'Donncll was just standing there afternoon, and we sat together for a long time on in front of his potful of laundry, taring into space. culvert, talking about the whole business. 1 told volved in a bad situation that hardly anyone else very aom tnj ^n, be would give the clothes him that I hadn't meant to alert the Canal Zone involved gave a damn about. Even the officers jitf|e aim with his stick. I decided he was in that I had just wanted to wake up my platoon. seemed to have accepted the view that the Canal stupor or tta gone deaf, but my observation of He asked me why, and I told him, and that led to was safe. him tu brief. Other sights distracted me. High a discussion of the whole defense setup He didn't The defense of the Panama Canal against air above, smoke bad begun issuing from the pots on exactly say so, but he gave me the impression there attack was predicated, as I understood it, on the the hillside. Off toward Paraso, another of my was a feeling in some quarters that I might have assumption that there would be fifteen minutes' pitr00n's sirens had taken up the alarm. The men done the Canal Department a service outweighing warning in the event of a raid. Lookout stations were tctuaUy getting to work I turned again and my crime. Before he left, he said, with wink, were located to the north and south along the scrambled up to the edge of the road I had been hat the next time I decided to sound an alert on coasts, and picket boats patrolled both the Carib- heading for. The pots close by were still unlit, but my own, I ought at least to let the Department i- u j.iJL^j ,w cn,nupni Ml Al nH , to"li "1,u !"* "" cuu""' "" "~ *- ncaaini ror. ine pots cioac oy were still unnr, out / -, y . ~ ficiaUy designated the Smoke-Pot Ml Al and it of ptnun^ g, whole ttate ^ Commander hear about it EAtfZJttlEiiJkl&Jtl f0rce ***** "t[ned ,"* COmplTlT 2T .ight-Twa a anXwiry P*. who hailed One thing I do know. During most of the te ES SLSL aE Ir\tif Ae bodv of "^ fifreen """K^ *fter *" ***"* WM Ktode from Kentucky. Ordinarily, he could hold hi. own two months, the Panama CuttT was as read)-foe wlh ni ffi mdeed it waf made bv a Io *' cue of ** 776,h Qmk ^^ 5 7 ioup with hi, srorie, k! chatter, but he an enemy attack as .y puse in the workL I a washing machine, indeed^ ** bv wu 8xpeeted te every la pot would be lit and h.d been hard put to it to stand up to the old liked to think of the Axis high command sitting washing-machine company. This contained oil which ^ ^ ^ rf ^ tiffle To pJ^ T f ^^ y,, ^ ovef ,* pom from P.. was burned to make smoke, and it had a vent *'vl was burned *o make smoke ana it naa a vent or ke weK biaTsTsuch He had de- nama. I could see them reading the report for through which it was filled and through which th o('about ^ weekl Siftfl$ wou]d waU ^7^ ^ wpek |fc|| j ^ of{ ^ ^^ leun oil was sgmted. The stack, from whsch the smoke ^ ^ hih brMi would st.nd ^nd with watches "c^"-, hat, andT had bought one in Pa every, outfit on the Canal was at full strtngth, ^^n^^ftoTfiZVl ,n theif & nodding in approval as every nun m, $% g, ^"Jf ^ hl$ rent tndj sober, vl loaded for bear. I could m enemy r- fwl w^ It nn so 5' shielded P^otmtd his task within the time limit. ,fter ju7mping , ^-^ it ^ ^ tJJ ens tearing up their blueprints of the Onal and f ", the S o Sfe The Sw of Theoretically, ** P" "ithout it out in a couple of downpours, had turned 5 filing out of their headc^Mter,. theit shoulder. ,rn?n^n.Lmenemv armen WMnin8- but actuiU7 **> watai frecMt,n brim up fore aid aft, ud puT ii on his head to drooping in defeat Durning oil trom enemy airmen. alm wa$ ( ^ JorK ^j fIfhef ^ g^ 0M ^^ j ^ ^ ^ ^^^ ^^^ ^.^ ^ j wppo$e it wu ,, much w ^p^ dm mar,. My platoon, composed of forty-four men, was Suddenly, all the company officers would begin Reg^ Army. At this moment, he was zigzagging vellous preparedness to last indefinitely. About six responsible for the care and operation of approxim- appearing at the orderly room every morning at j^g me ^^ rofch n hand, lighting the pots on weeks after the alert, I was wit 00 orders to re- ately seventeen, hundred of these smoke pots. This seven-thirty. The captain, his jaw set, would stalk j^, jne> wearing the campaign hat and absolutely turn to the States to go to O.C.S. The orders re- was only a small fraction of those in the Canal around the area business-like and polished to the noting' else. eved me from duty, and I pent my days either Zone, and some engineer officers had undoubtedly hilt He would make a series of inspections and Witched him for a moment and then looked waiting at Fort Clayton for my travel orders or spent considerable time planning how all of them order me to restrict all pass priveleges. By check- wound ^ .pUtoon area again There were now shopping in Panama Gty, returning to the com- snould be placed. The pots tended by each unit ing with the barrage-balloon boys, who had al- jbout two hundred pots putting out smoke, but I P"y * on the last bus at night Aj result, I were set out in long lines thst radiated from a ways received equivalent instructions, and by put- n-t have a Chance to calculate whether the men wu almost completely out of touch With the life central position like spokes from a hub. the lines ting together rumors from all over the area, every- were n^ng good * m b^ because all at the smoke-pot tenders. I glimpsed it only once wherever possible following a road, a railway track, one was able to predict exactly when the sirens once j begin ro see and hear things that frighten- n**. briefly, the night before I finally shipped or an Indian path. The entire serup was supposed would begin to wail. ed me to death. Across the Canal, smoke was o*11- . to be able to throw a thick smoke screen over the Thus, when the sien came, the men would be rismg fjom ^ p^ maintained by another platoon, 1 wu awakened at a little before midnight by Canal no matter what way the wind blew. The crouched in their tents like sprinters at the start of Worse than that, every siren I could hear wu the charge of quarters. There's a general in the 776th Chemical Company had charge of the pots a hundred-yard duh. Sometimes they would even waiiu,g. *, the big airen in Pedro Miguel wu derly room wants to see you," be Said, in an area roughly sixty miles square, on either have their torches blazing. The 776th Chemical j fyj] mfo The barrage balloon* were rising ra- I" pulled on some clothe and made for the side of the waterway, and my platoon wu respon- Company never failed to have all its pots lit in- pjjy toward the cumulus clouds, and in the vi- orderly room, where a sawedoff brigadier was sible for sn area of about nine square miles, which side of nine minutes aftet the first Siren opened ^ ^ Miraflores Lake a couple of anti-aircraft P*"* * &**> looking at his watch. When he j included the Pedro Miguel Locks, the village of up. This, being six minutes less than the time batteries began firing for range. It had never oc- ttW "* ** niled, "You the matt who set off the Pedro Miguel, Paraso, and a large group of storage allotted, never failed to bring down a commenda- curred to me that I might do anything more than ,lett couple of months ago?" be uked. , X yards that occupied one bank of the Canal along tion from the Department Chemical Officer* to the .or up my own platoon area, I started dcBrn the Sues. I am," I told bun. , X the Cut Tie meo lived; four to tent, in eleven company commander, who, naturally, never failed hiU u fast aa I could go so soUnd an alklear. "I*,-* shake your hand," he said. "I wu selling tents scattered over the sectoralong the locks, to ruck it away in his 101 file,! against the time j^y, ^jy 4^ recollection of the rest of ** Commanding General the other day thai you I in PedrJ Miguel village, in the storage yards, and when he would be up for promotion. thtt morning, but two impressions do stand out bad done more ro wake up this command than on the hillsides in the fringe of the jungle. The men were quite aware, of course, that once When I got back ra the platform, I looked down hythihg since the big yellow-fever epidemic" Our method of operation wu relatively simple, the alert wu over, there wouldn't be another for at the Jpot where 1 had seen O'DonnelL He wu That isn't exactly what the Commanding Gen* Outside each tent wu a rack holding several gaso- six weeks, and by nightfall A.W.O.Ls would have j-jh, lttnding there stirring his laundry, not paying eral told me when I was in his office," I Mid. line ttrches, which looked like the long-necked oil- reached thirty per cent, and the laundresses would ^ ji^-est bit of artenrion to what wu going "J"* he same, Sergeant, you did wake them caps used by locomotive engineers. Upon the sound- have moved back to the tents and would be help- on j^e other thing I saw when I happened ro UP>' he Mld' tnd t^tet ,hi$ they're going ro /My ing of an alert, each man ran out of his tent, grab- ing to consume the jungle juice that had been re- q^ up ^^^ ^ jungle. It wu a San Bias *wake. Right now, I'm down here stage a sur* bed up a torch, lit it, and sped through the country- moved from the pots to facilitate the exercise. Indian squaw, a papoose on her back, running pt*6 **". I thought maybe you'd like to go out aide setting fire to the oil in his pots. Between In making my daily rounds, I took a short cut ^^ a |JM f u^^ po(S lighting them. ***& to nil 'Own pots, keeping them filled, inspecting Tent 3, in Pedro Miguel, to Tent 5, which wu in coulun-, Kt tu that were recounted to me later Tes, sir," 1 said. I duL like the idea. I thought them, swabbing them daily with oil to keep the a jungle clearing on a hillside. Midway between W1,h feeling. Pilots stationed at Albrook Field '< WM *" appropriate farewell, and I wu pleased tropic rust from eating them up, and practicing these tents wu an air-raid siren mounted on a plat- jcmmbled for their planes and took off. Soldiers with the thought of seeing how fast the 776th the technique of managing his torch. form. It wu one of hundreds installed throughout cime tumbling from bars and bedrooms all over rfallv c""'1' rnakc it from bed* to the smoke pots. As I have said, the 776th Chemical Company the Canal Zone (in our area there wu a siren the Canal Zone. Jeeps careened wildly down the went to get my steel helmet and rifle. (SG) arrived in Panama late in 1942a good for every two tents), snd one of the men in Tent highways. Everyone wu trying to get from some On the way back to the orderly room, I had marry months after: Pearl Harbor. As far as is known, 3 wu supposed to precede his pot-lighting by sound- piace he wasn't supposed to be to some place where to pus the day room. A dim light cast shadows n* Japanese or Germans had come close to the ing this particular instrument whenever the big, his presence would be legitimate, or more or less over the tables and chairs, and I could see the Canal, except the trews of prowling submarines, central siren in Pedro Miguel set off a general alert. ,,, jhe infantry convoy on the main highway rum- company officers sitting there in the gloom, their who were, of. course, not the concern of the air- As things grew worse and worse, I found myself ed around and headed back ro it. base, the men helmets on and their pistols lying handy on the defense people. This apparent indifference to the seized by a private devil every time I passed this eventually losing two' full davs of maneuver time tsbles. Off in a corner, the company jeep drivers Canal on the part of the enemy wu heavily dis- siren. 1 knew perfectly well that in the event of an in ^ jungle,. Orderlies at Headquarters, in Quarry cauraging ro most of th soldiers who had been enemy attack the blame for any failure in my pla- Heights, broke out new steel helmets. Halfway signed to the- Panama Canal Department before toon area would rest on me. After all, I had long tcxou Miraflores Lake, the South Dakota dropped we arrived. In pre-Pearl Harbor days, the Csnal known of the violations that were going on and I .achot tnd sounded general quarters. It wu ru- had been considxed the most likely target for a had not reported a single man. Consequendy, I felt mott mat one of the submarines took evuive sneak attack, and every trigger-happy old soldier in more and more strongly that I had to prove to the ^^ n th, i^fc chamber, with only six feet of out helmeted figures sitting beside the guns. I the service had tried to wangle an assignment there, men that-their deviations could really have serious WMef undet B keeL Reports later showed that ked the general to let me stop in at Tent 3, by The it*** on the fleet at Pearl Harbor was thus consequences. The siren, of course, presented a the defensive system of the entire Panama Canal the Pedro Miguel railroad station, for just min- eonsidered doubly sneaky by the Panama garrison, simple solution If I used it to spring a lurpriM jont reached full alert status twenty-eight min- ute. He obliged, and when I walked into the tent, Not o^y had the Japanese struck without warning, alert on my platoon, and if the men didn't carry um t(m j int Dit0 , .j^, handle. I found all four men helmeted and armed, sitting were Squatting, watchful and ready. Ten minutes later, u the general and I drove to Pedro Miguel, I peered at the wharves of the storage yards. The cruiser Boise, completely black- ed out wu tied up. On the decks, I could make TO con had cheated the reddest-blooded men in the their assignment out properly snd on time, I could States Army, who had been sitting in the come down hard on them and there wouldn't be two years waiting for an attack on them, any argument as to why. I figured that on a nor A number of people were awfully mad at me on their bunks, smoking One of them Mid they M a result nf that alert. It didn't take the Army had ten minutes to go. long to track me down u the man who had Mart- Al I walked up the hill toward the siten with compound the outrage, naval vessels soon began mal day twenty per cent of my men would be ^j ^ whole mng I had to stand u attention the general I hadn't the heart to tell him whet putinj; through the Canal on their way to or from wandering wound the hills looking for bananu, before every officer in the chain of command all had become of his surprise alen, but I had the Mure war one*, and their crews took delight m fifteen net-cent would be doing laundry or tend- ^ w|_ fa^ Ptni|0 n , Commanding Gen- consolation of knowing that I had probably saved on deck and jeering at the sentries who ing still fifteen pet cent would be A.W.O.L, in tnl u pj,,,- Hejgho. Some of the smtisrics of the Canal once, and that if I ever had the chance, back and forth guarding the locks. "Hows Panama City, and twenty per cent would be legally what I had accomplished were impressive; for the I would know how to Mve It again I gueu maybe $*. 1,?V*',Uo, wouW J"'01 * Pt* The other thirty per cent might, |ust ^j, oi mm$at, they were awesome. Seventy the time hu come. If the President wants me ro > classed you 4-P, Jpe? possibly get the pan-lit in something like fot forty p.30 piIot. -^ ,,. p.39 pUnes, climbed ro show him the wsy to that siren, I'll do it. but vThar wasn't all the garrison had to put up with, minutes. The mere I thought about it, the surer I twtn thousand feet, where they were endangered it's got to be between him and me. SI* months after Pearl Harbor, the Canal ZotW wu that I would sound that Siren someday, and A]h fmn ^^^^ ^ fo^.^,, Md. BDMUND G. LOVE bats garden* were beerleu and the PXs had no I told myself that 1 should stay strictly away from candy bars. Inquiry always brought the same-mad- it But I kept right-on taking the short oat - ijaning antwtt: The items in question were sil be- I clearly remember the morning temptation over- ing tent to the "war sones." By the time the 776th canse me. Overhead, huge cumulus clouds wandered ny**^*1 Company arrived, disillusionment wu gen- aimlessly back tnd forth, building up the customary ml morale wu at rock bottom, and every ad- afternoon shower. I stopped at the tiren platform jurant't desk wu coveted with applications for and looked at the scene below me. Io one of the craatfer. No one could persuade the mes any longer storage yards, three or four trucks wee parked, their that the Canal wu in danger. drive leaning against the fenders or lounging en The soldiers of the 77th Chemical Company the hoods, ftgsfd in the inevitable bull attsion. watt lick so fall in with the universal dissatisrac- At th* Canal's edge, io th* same yard, a hag* float- tjea. Mate a fortnight had passed, my platoon had ing crane wit lifting long sections of steel tubing tscsMittsd tU the habits of the test of the garrison, from pife* on 0 then and twinging them onto I* wu rny k* to an out from company head- a barge. Atoned the Pedro Miguel Locks, a doten turren in Paiaiso every morning and visit all the or, so barrage baboon* stood stolidly at treetop petition* ih my platoons area. Thit involved a height The mtin rrans-Isrhmian highway wu coo- aeven- 0* eight-mile walk Very often, I entered one geared with in infantry convoy en maneuver, moving of the Mars to find it absolutely vacantall four toward the Atlantic end of th* Canal la my own snen beck ia the bush on a banana-hunting ex- platoon anta, thing* were normal. 1 anditiaa, down at th* Pedro Miguel Club, a stood, I could see a pdcI'll call him Willie C ] dviliaa lekimuruty house for Canal Department em- nell clad only, la shorts, eadtilg la dtmriaf ploras ad their families, when one aeuld still get and (tiffing dothM 14 th* smoke pat that he and cakes for breakfast snd Tom Collinses set uide for hi* laundering t with real, .lime juice. One or another of the men village, four men, probably mine, wat* goini WM* likely to be in Panama Gty, where he had th* raps to the dubhouM. I didn't pay mm jone a day or so before on a twelve-hour pass. I tention ro the Canal itself, but, m I learned later also discovered that near each tent certain smoke there were thtt* snbflHriiwt hut enterif Crs were always empty having been set uide for dm Miguel Locks from the Cut, tad 1 ling laundry or for concocting a very potent had been let oat of the low* end & drink known as jungle juice, the recipe for which or seven miles away, ia Muaflotes lake, The Chase National Bank of the City of N*w York Total resources over $5,174000flOQJOO General Banking PANAMA HANCH COLN BRANCH CftltTOwAL MANCM BAltOA MANCM DAVID MANCM W SsmsUUst in financing Import* end tnporU ftememt* THE BOSTON BAR NAVY CIVILIANS PUKE from S i.m. Io 12 pan. UNITED FRUIT COMPANY Great White Fleet New Orleans Service Arrives Cristbal mBOf * * tlftY. 19 a.%. l*|1119*|a*yA nana* ** eaee a .NOT. 18 B.a. Cnln^tli .iMti(siMs(*tiiniMi(*(itiMMW#Ta %% * fata, Us aatasts, a earns* s* ** ostanw tea (ffSM tui annual t Mat Cast CssMal Cristbal to New Orleans via Tila, Honderas Sails fron Cristobal 8.S. Chlrlfni...................................NaT. St TtXKFHONBSi CBIRTOBAL 11*1 PANAMA I-tSM COLON M The Pacific Steam Navigation Company INCORPOaATID BT ROYAL CHARTER ISM Royal Malls Unes Lid. FAST FREIGHT AND PASSENGER SERVICES BETWEEN EUROPE AND WEST COASTS OF NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA TO COLOMBIA, ECUADOR, PERU AND CHILE *. "KSNUTA" ...'...............................Not. 8th LV. XAOONA" .t..,.,.........................k.N#v. I sthO TO UNITED KINGDOM VIA CARTAGENA, HAVANA, NASSAU, BERMUDA, CORUAA, SANTANDER and LA PALLICE M.V. "SSINA-DB. PACOTCO"...................Ns?. 17th TO UNITED KINGDOM DIRECT M.V.'XOBOe- ....... .............................No*. S TO UK/CONTINENT Be. THJTV1NDTK" .Nov. Stfe 'Accepting passenger. In First. Cabin and Third Clan* Superior accommodation available for passengers All sailin.s anbject to change without notice. PACIFIC STSAM NAT. CO, CrUtebal. Tel. 16M -168* FORD COMPANY Inc., Panam TeL 3-1157/1158: Balboa lfM PACIFIC ARGENTINE-BRAZIL UNE POri A TAIBOT, INC. ANNOUNCE SlS'P&T TRADiK' ON BERTH AT BALBOA NOVEMBER 5TH, 1951 arce-pting cargo for LOS ANGELES SAN FRANOSGO PORTLAND SEATTLE . VANCOUVER tim^7$*kp&fr6 / BOMBAY, NOVEMBER I, 1S1 ' i THE SNDAT AMERICAN t> :'. Radio Programs I I our Community Radio Station HOG-840 Wkm 100,000 People Meet ' m t. Sanday, Not. 4 Presents ..* i 8:00-Slgn On Musical Inter- lude 8:15Newsreel U&Jl Hour 9:00BIBLE AUDITORIUM OF THE AIR 9:15-Good Neighbors 9:30London Studio Melodies (BBC) 10:00In the tempo of Jut 10:30Your American Music 11:00NATIONAL LOTTERY li:15-The Sacred Heart Pro- gram 11:30Meet the Band 12:00Invitation to Learning (VOA) Wednesday, Not. 7 12:30-Salt Lake Tabernacle Choir 1:00The Jo Stafford Show 1:15The Chorallers 1:30Rev. Albert Steer 2:00Drama and Symphony Hour 4:30 What's Your Favorite 6:00The Heritage of Britain (BBC) 6:30Mus*c of Donald Voorhees (VOA) 7:00American Round table (VOA) 7:30Living to an Atomic Age (BBC) 7:45Radio Varieties U.S.A. : 00Sports Roundup and News (VOA) 1:15Report from Congress (VOA) 8:30Show Time (VOA) 8:45The Letter Box (VOA) 9:00United Nations Review (VOA) 9:30The Blng Crosby Show (VOA) 10:00BBC Concert Hall 11:00Sign Off Monday, Nor. 5 ' 8:00Alarm Clock Club 7:J0Morning Salon t;16NEWS (VOA) 8:30Morning Varieties 8:49Music Makers 8:00News . 9:15Stand By For Adventure 9:10^-A* I See It 10:00News 10:05Off the Record 11:00News 11:05Off the Record (Cont'd) 11:30Meet the Band 13:00News ML 12:06Luncheon Music 13:30Popular Music 1:60News 1:15Personality Parade 1:45American Favorites 2:00American Journal (VOA1 2:15It's Time To Dance 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00All Star Concert Hall 3:15The Little Show 3:30Music for Monday 4:00Music Without Words 4:15David Rose Show 4:30What's Your Favorite 6:00As I Knew Him (BBC) 6:15Evening Salon 7:00Kellog Program 7:30Sports Review 7:45Here Cones Louis Jordan 8:00News and Commentary. Raymond Swing (VOA) 8:15Platter Parade (VOA) 8:45Youth Talks It Over (VOA) 9:00Story USA. (VOA) 9:30Commentator's Digest (VOA) 9:45Sports and News (VOA) 10:00The World At Your Win- dow (BBC) 11:00The Owl's Nest MidnightSign Off. 6:00Sign On 6:00Alarm Clock Club 7:30Morning Salon 8:15-NEWS (VOA) 8:30Morning Varieties 8:45Music Makers 9:00News 9:16Stand By For Adventure 9:30As I See It 10:00News and Off the Record 10:05Off the Record 11:00News and off the Record 11:05Off the Record (Contd.) 11:30Meet the Band 12:00News and Luncheon Mu- sic PJH. 12:30Popular Music l:00-Newa 1:15Personality Parade 1:45American Favorites 2:00American Journal (VOA) 2:15It's Time to Dance 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Notes on Jan 3:00All Star Concert Hall 3:15The Little Show J: 30Music for Wednesday 4:00Music Without Words 4:15French in the Air (RDF) 4:30Whafa Your Favorite 5:J0-NEWS 5:35What's Your Favorite (Contd.) 6:00As I Knek Him (BBC) 6:15Evening Salon 7:00Paul Temple (BBC) 7:30BLUB RIBBON SPORTS REVIEW 7:45Here Comes Louis Jordan 8:00NEWS and Commentary- Raymond Swkig (VOA) : 15Twenty Questions (VOA) :45Arts and Letters (VOA) 9:00Jo Stafford (VOA) 9:15Radio Forum (VOA) 9:30Commentator's Digest (VOA) 9:45Sports and Tune of Day 10:00BBC Playhouse 11:00The Owl's Nest 12:00-SlgnOff dock ' Tuesday, Nwf. 6 AM. 6:00Sign On Alarm Club 7:30Morning Salon 8:15News (VOA) 8:80Crasy Quilt 8:45Hawaiian Harmonies 9:00News 9:15Sacred Heart Program 9:30As I See It 10:00News 10:6-Off the Record ll:00-News 11:05Off the Record (Contd.) 11:30-Meet the Band 12:00Newa 18:05Luncheon Musk 12:30Popular Music 1:00News 1:16Personality Parade 1:45Rhythm and Reason 3:09A Call From Lea Paul 3:10Sate for Dancing 2:30-flplrlt of the Vikings 3:45Battle of the Bands 3:00All Star Concert Hall 3:11The Little Show 3:30Music for Tuesday 4:80Radio University 4:16Promenade Concert 4:30 What's Your Favorite 6:00PANA MSICA STORY TIME 6:15Evening Salon 7:00The Christian Science Program 7:15Musical Interlude 7:80-PAB8T SPORTS REVIEW 7:45Jam Session 8:00-NEWS (VOA) 8:15What's On Your Mind 8:46 Time for Business (VOA) 9:00-Syraphony Hall 9:30Commentator's Digest (VOA) 9:46 ports World and Tune of Day (VOA) 10:00HOTEL EL PANAMA 10:15Masleal Interlude 10:30Variety Bandbox (BBC) 12:0J-sjriOff 11:09The Owl'i Nest Thursday, Ner. 8 AM. 6:00Alarm Clock Club 7:30Morning Salon 8:15-NEWS (VOA) 8:30Crasy Quilt 8:45Jerry Sears Presents 9:00NEWS 9:15SACRED HEART PRO- GRAM 9:30-^As I See It 10:00NEW8 10:05Off the Record 11:00NEWS 11:05Off the Record (Contd.* 11:30Meet the Band NoonNEWS MI. 12:05 Luncheon Music - 12:30Popular Music 1:00NEWS 1:15Personality Parade 1:45EXCURSIONS IN SCI- ENCE 2:00Call For Les Paul 2:15Date for Dancing 2:3uAiternoon Melodies 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00American Debut 3:15The Little Show 3;30Music for Thursday 4:00Music Without Words 4:1ftNegro Spirituals 4:30What's Your Favorite 6:00PANAMUSICA STORY TIME 6:10Evening Salon 7:00Make Beliere Ballroom (VOA) 7:30BLUE RIBBON SPORTS REVIEW 7:45Jam Session 8:00World News (VOA) 8:12Cross Country, U.8.A. (VOA) 8:45Jam Session (VOA) * 9:00Meet 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) Friday, Not. 9 6:00Sign On and Alarm Clock 7:30Request Salon 8:15-News(VOA) 8:30Morning Varieties 8:45Music Makers 9:00News 8:15Stand By For Adventure 9:30As I See It 10.00News and Off the Record 10:86Off the Record 11:00News and Off the Record 11:05Off the Record (Contd.) 11:30Meet the Band 12:00News PJt, 12:05Luncheon Music 12:30popular Music 1:00News 1:15Personality Parade 1:45American Favorites 2jO0American Journal (VOA) 2:15-Songs of France (RDF) 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45^-Battle of the Bands 3:00All Star Concert Hall 3:15The Little 8how 3:30Music for Friday 4:00Tyger's Heart (BBC) 4:30What's Your Favorite 6:00As I Knek Him (BBC) 6:15Request Salon 7:00Mayor of Caster bridge (BBC) 7:30Sports Review 7:45Here Comes Louis Jordan 8:00News and Commentary Raymond Swing (VOA) 8:15Musical Notebook (VOA) 8:45Radio In Review.(VOA) 9:00The Perry Como 8how (VOA) 9:30Commentator's Digest (VOA) 9:45-SporU and News (VOA) 10:00Cavalcade of America (VOA) 10:30Adventures of PC 49 (BBC) PAGE m m ,< ! 11 f i i i. in. 111, ->------- ! i - I m TRAVELING UNDER THE SPONSORSHIP of the Joint Brazil United sutes Military Commission, six Brazilian Army Officeri arrived recently morning at Albrook Field after a four-week tour of mapping agencies In the UB. They are here to study mapping faculties of the USARCARIB includ- ing the Inter American Geodetic Survey, which organisation is presently elaborating with the Conselho Nacional and the Servicio Geogrfico de Exercito (Brazil's army mapping ser- vice) in the cartographic program being executed in that country. Left to right are Col. Lannes Jose Bernarda, Jr., Major Antonio Da Silva Araujo, Col. Jacinto Dulcardo Morelra Lo- bato, Lt. Col. Darlo Cesar, Col. Lulz Agaplto da Veiga, Major Arthur T. Surkamp (Chief. Operations Div. IAOS), Com- mander Edward B. Brown (Technical Consultant, IAOS) and Lt. Col. Carlos de Morals. The (Iritic'g Corner 11:00The Owl's Nest 1:00 a.m. Sign Off Saturday, Nov. 16 New Books "Mathematical Snapshots," by 5u,?<^8te.tah*^8 distinguished Polish mathematician, is one of the new books placed in circula- tion during the past week by the Panam Canal Library T*!,,000* "Plato" with text end illustrations many mathe- matical phenomena, of Interest to the layman as well as the scientist Among the unexpected variety of things elementary mathematics explained in the book, are the crawling of an In- sect seeking the shortest course, the rolling of o wheel, the growth of a plant, the shadow of a disc and many other tramples. The complete list of new books at the Library follows: APPLIED SCIENCE I took lt lying down, Spltaer; Know your teeth, Gallagher: Guided missi- les: Ross: and Reducer's cook book. WUanu-Heller. DANCING Dance a while, Harris. BIOGRAPHYBerilos and the romantic century, Barsun: Char- lie Chaplin, Huff; Editor to kuthor. Perklrs- FICTIONThere's one in every town. Aswsll: With all my heart, Barnes; Strange gift, Bushnell; Never look back. Eberhart; The newshoe,UpLld; GIFT REPLACEMENTSFight- In' fool. Faust; Brinkley Manor, Wodehouse; Gentlemen of the jury, Wellmer.: 100.000,000 guinea pigs, Kallet; From Pirjy to Pearl Harbor. Falk * AM. 6:00Sign OnThe Alarm Clock Club 7:30Jaxe-Salon , 8:15News (VOA) 8:30Peking (BBC) 8:46The Duke Steps Out 9:00News 9:15Women's World 9:30Highwayman's Hill (BBC) 10:0R-Newf 10:05Off the Record 11:00New 11:05Off the Record (Contd.) 11:30Meet The Band 12:05NEW TUNE TIME (PAN- AMUSICA) PM. 12:05 New Tune Time 12:30The Football Prophet l:00-News 1:16personality Parade 1:45Tour De France (RDF) 2:00Latin American Serenade 2:15Date For Dancing 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00March Time 3:15The Little Show 3:30McLean's Program 3:45Musical Interlude 4:00Music for Saturday 4:30What's Your Favorite 6:00Guest Stai 6:15Master works from France (RDF) 6:45American Folk Songs 7:00Gay Paris Music Bail (RDF) 7:30Sports Review 7:45Jam Session 8:00Newsreel .S.A. (VGA) 8:15Opera Concert (VOA) 8:45Battle Report (VOA) 9:00Radio University (VOA) 9:15Stamp Club (VOA) 9:30Radio Amateurs Program (VOA) 9:46Sports. Tune of Day and News (TOA) 10:00HOTEL EL PANAMA 10:30The HOG Hit Parade 11:00The Owl's Nest 1:00 a.mSign Off Explanation of Symbols: VOAVoice of America BBCBritish Broadcasting By IRENE CHAN PAULDING This is American Art Week. Throughout the United States as well as the Isthmus, activity has begun in observance of the celebration. Local painters will collectively show their work and libraries are displaying prints and reproductions and offering literature on art. The painting exhibit of the year will be of- ficially open to the public today at the Balboa YMCA on Fort Amador Road and will extend till the following Sunday. Awards will be presented to the best picture in each media. Judging from past shows, there will be a good size exhibit this year. Canal Zone and Army libraries have an art schedule avail- able to the public. Mrs. Eleanor D. Burnham, Librarian of the Canal Zone libraries has organized an art program in the Bal- boa Heights Central Library, and the branch Cristobal and La Boca libraries. In the central library there Is now on display 24 reproductions of 19th and 20th century paintings (Dega, Ce- zanne, Manet, De Chlrico, etc.) donated to the library by Mr. Christopher C. Bennett. During the month of November, a changing display of books on art will be on a table in promi- nent view to encourage and facltate reading. On November 10, special art literature will be exhibited In the lighted case on the 1st floor of the building. The Staff Librarian, Mrs. Hallle Moran, of the United States Army Caribbean Library Service has also scheduled art week observance In all the post libraries. There is a display of art |-books and its related subjects made available to all Army pa- trons. The Fort Kobbe library also has on view some small prints. It is Interesting to realize the why, how and wherefore of Art Week. In the late 19th century when fabulous money like Diamond Jim Brady was restlessly wanting to be extravagant and "cultured," no painting was considered worth buying unless it was painted in Europe. Consequently, much money and In- fluence was sadly being misdirected on poor European "art" be- cause the buyers were uninformed and easily impressed by worthless or inferior work. Let' us examine the.European art situation as it was then. The late .19th century was the struggle era for the now famed painters such m Dega, Cezanne, Manet, Van Gogh, Gaugaln and a host of others. If the works of these painters sold only to a few discrlmmlnating buyers then. It is easy to imagine what did1 sell Instead. The paintings that went like hot cakes were academic, and static in nature. They were romantic, neo-claasic and degenerately sentimental In content. They were technically highly skilled and "finished" perform- ances but dead, cold and-most important, unimaginative and uncreatlve. Now then, at home there were also a few struggling good painters who were being unjustly Ignored because their, work was'not painted In Europe. To combat this, a small group of these painters in New York banded together to fight this thing they considered a handicap. They appealed to organ- ized women's clubs to promote American art and educate the public that American painting was good. As a result, the 1st week of November was put aside as American Art Week to ex- hibit art work for critical view and parchase. The American Federation of Women's Clubs originally conducted and celebrat- ed the observance. However, the little band of painters grew and expanded till they became known as the Amrican Artist Professional League. They to turn took over Art Week. Chapters of the League are presently located all over the United States, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Virgin'Islands, Canal Zone and another is being organised by American painters in Lima, Peru. To cul- minate Art Week, a banquet Is held to New York and an award presented to the state that offers the best report on art ac- tivity for the week. With so much being offered by the painters and the libraries, lt la ad opportunity to discover pleasurable food for thought and visual delights and it has all been carefully arranged professionally too so what more can we want? ftwryMy fed* Classified* RDF Corp -i*adl lodlffuslon Francalse UNGUENTfrt' for BURNS. turns MM "TSMMCnO* twssoif Meat**' tioi/al J/etherlands Steamship Qompany K N S M TO EUROPE: * BAABN...........,........,,.......Nov. 16 HELENA........... ..... .......Nov. 26 ORAN/ESTAD......................Not. M -----------------;---------'- - ro THE CARIBBEAN: BAABN .............................Nov. 16 HELENA ...:.....................Nov. M ORANJESTAD ........ .............Nov. M TO COLOMBIA and ECUADOR: HERA ..."...........................Not. N TO PERU and CHILE: OLE BULL ...... Not. 17 Not. 83 "sUUJa. CERVEZA L" CRISTOBAL, J-lJlt, I-IUI 8-U19 (Passenger Aad Freight) BO YD BROS. PANAMA CITY l-MN SLOE AGE*TIES BALBOA:' 1-871 (Freight) K^Eau^!!!Ilfcl!1!!H.BRCJEJS::T<,W*, fr<*' ** to Settle.'We*: to p Uvtog quartersi toi; a Seattl Coast Guard port security unit was this APL (Auxiliary -------- UyingLjThe 260-foot barge offers seryjeemen most of the comfort of ho..,' ~| WHAT TO BUY FOR CHRISTMAS? 4ie toe bring us io hi? home -for* dll suggestions* regarding f honoe furnishings CORNER %" and Darlen Street Phone- 8-2181 Also to COLON: Front Street to "Arena de Coln" Building TeL 1118 CASA FASTLICH ANSWERS YOUR DEMAND FOR A FINE SELF-WINDING WATCH AT ONLY $36-50 You called for lt ... a watch that needs no winding, no worrylne ever. Lament Aquammtlc is the answer .. . certified waterproof, dustproof. shock-resistant, with a shatterproof crystal; the fine 21 Jewel movement sealed in a beautifully designed case. See Lament Aqaamatie today . . own lt for an amazing 8M.56. AQUAMATIC "T" 21 jewels, non-magneitc, stainless steel back $36.50 AQUAMATIC '65' 21 jewels, non-magnetic, 14 let. yellow gold case. $ 9g.00 iKCa/ar/tteh LAMONT *tBLsrYH6MOUMrT8JBi 9WW ^^ W " AQUAMATIC I Jillip ,i mm. ' *: f ocr XtOt SUNDAY AMERICAN 1 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4. IWI FOOD NEWS by /ncuwCAA fSsKfcZ a, wMy mH el i 1 omen s World I IrUT MEAT PIE ON YOLK MENU OCCASIONALLY If you like to Istrve meals thai are economical, delicious, convenient to make. Meat pic stretches portion of leftover meat to several generous Kerviig.c. or make.-- a small amount from the butchers counter llook like a lot And vou're not limited to one or two kinds of . TL. Beef, veal, pork, mutton and lamb arc all good-so are ; ^ l) / / O // / waScen and fish. Anv of these, combined with a hearty medley of J> / -and- Fohih ^/or <=LadicS KSecables, topped with a flaky brown crust, MtallWIC |dlsh dinner. Since the choice of meat and vegetables ,s up to you. ire'll concentrate on all-important crust in today s recipe For to mak the mos* "I vour budget-wise meat pie. you must insure it Kith a beautiful appetizing crust. Swans Down Cake Flour helps rou turn this trick very neatly. Noted for its fine-textured cakes and cookie, swam Down also produces a biscuit crust that is KSuaiSSv Tnder, light, and flaky. Makes your econmica meat pie tat e like an expensive production! Use crescents, strips, or blanket crust as you prefer All variations are covered In the Recipe. SPECIAL BISCUIT CRUST (For chicken, ftih. or meat pie) - cups sifted Sirens Doten Cake Flour 2 teaspoons Calumet Baking Powder *4 teaspoon salt 3t teaspoon curry ponder* 4 :ablespoons shortening ': cup milk flour once, measure, add baking powder salt and curry pow- nd sift again Cut in shortening. Add milk and stir with mitil soft dough Is formed .20 strokes'. Turn out on lightly iVd oard and roll into rectangle to fit 10 x 6-Inch pan. Cut .2 dSih fo allow escape of steam. Fit over meat pie. press- iinueh aealnst edge of pan to seal. I Brush with cream, if de- -ed for broking 'Bke in Hot oven t450T. 15 to 20 minutes. Jakes topping for 10 x 8-inch meal pie. (Other seasonings may be used. Instead of curry, add one of the ollowing to the sifted flour mixture: Parsley 2 tablespoons, chopped Pimento 2 tablespoons, inely cut Celeru seed 2 teaspoons Chives -- 2 tablespoons, chopped ntoe: Dough mav be rolled >2 inch thick, cut with floured cutter I tato diamonds, crescents, or strips, and placed on hot meat pie Kure Bake n hot oven 450F.i 20 to 25 minutes. Willie of Seventeen Is Lady Lucks Protege WJVC&aulu 3, fL, (XL- n0t ,uu aaic - warn Itsi te AN EXCELLENT WAY TO Bl\ CEREALS, particularly if you like an assortment, is the Post- iTens carton. Ten individual packages of cereal, each con- fining enough for one serving, even different kinds to choose from. A cereal for every day in ihe week, or a favorite .'or ev- ry member of your family, ine Post-Tens assortment includes 3 box-s of Post Toasties, 2 Grape- Nuts Flakes, and one each ol -")* Bran Flakes, Shredded .leat, Grape Nuts, Raisin Bran, 4nd Sugar Crisp. >W DO YOl* LIKE YOUR Jtht Mild, or strong? If you Kperiment with the strength sex time you drink a cup, you hay discover that you enjoy it ore one way or the other. But m't make the mistake of judg- g the strength by the eolor- (cause some teas brew light, ome brew dark. The caffeln is imoved from the leaves in the _frst minute C* two of brewing. fbt, the arom and flavor are not fullv brought out in less I than four or five minutes. Stronger tea results if you leave the bag in the water beyond Lthat period. But strength and fLAVOR are two separate con- llderatlons; however you prefer i Brink it. you always want tea t have a really fine taste and ouquet. That's why we recom- Eand Maxwell House Tea. You leant go wrong on that unique. [vivid flavor. Even if you like [your tea verv mild you'll get inore enjoyment from Maxwell f House because its clear, satisfy- ting tea -bouquet'' is lar super- S lor to ordinary teas. [LOOKING FOR A TASTY SA- LLAD? Here it Is! Tender, chilled [broccoli cuts garnished with hard- cooked egg slices and French dressing. All ready lo do [the honors at your fussiest dui- ker. For extra-fresh and extra- | tender broccoli 'plus easier. Slicker cooking i. be sure to use Irds Eye quick-frozen Broccoli. [Comes in clean as a whistle. I ready-to-cook cuts or spears [that you drop right from the package into boiling salted wa- ter. Now for the salad recipe: You need 1 box (10 ounces i Birds Eye Broccoli Cuts; salt and pepper, salad greens: French dressing: and 3 hard-cooked eggs, sliced. Cook the broccoli as directed on the package. Drain and season with salt and pep- per. Chill. Arrange on salad greens and sprinkle with French dressing. Garnish with egg slices and serve with additional dress- ing. Makes 3 servings. HAVE YOl* DISCOVERED THE EASIEST WAY to make pie fill- ings? Wonderful Jell-O Puddings and Pie Fillings give you a choice of four flavors: vanilla, chocolate, lemon and butter- scotch. They also Rive you rare, incomparable smoothness and 1 richness! There just aren't any | other fillings that are so easy ; to make and so good to eat. i That's why we know you'll want a pie pan that's exactly the right size for them. A pan that will cradle the crust until it turns brown in the oven, then mold the luscious filling until it's chilled in the refrigerator. 1 A pan that will make the pie ' just deep enough to slice per- \ fectly. We have a supply of I these pans, which are yours for less than retail priceJust 15c. ' They're aluminum Ovenex. 8 inches In diameter, and suitable for any kind of filling. You'll use them for other pies too. of course. They're such a bargain you Just can't afford to pass them upso hurry and mail the coupon, with 15c. In cash for each pan ordered. The alert vibrant beauty of this young WAVE officer is no accident, but rather the recult of a careful program of grooming. Hair, cut to regulation above-collar length, (left) is carefully set at night to avoid straggles. Shoe shining, too, (center right) is part of evening-before preparation that include thorough uniform sprucing. In the morning, only hasty brush-up (center,left) and a quick check ef stocking seams is necessary before setting out, spic and span, for duty (right). BY ALICIA HART, NEA Beauty Editor Frances Barton Box 893 1 Panam, R. de P. Enclosed is .......c. cash. Please send me . PIE PANS. Name .................. Address ................. In There's something about al- most every WAVE you meet, striding- briskly along In her Im- maculate uniform, that's as crisp and vibrant as a fresh autumn breeze. Envious civilians wonder how they do it. To the average woman, it seems almost as if there's a Cin- derella magic in donning the garb of the Navy. Some good fairy, it would appear, wards off such plagues as straggling curls, crooked stocking seams and dus- ty shoes. It's not quite as simple as that, however, according to Ensign Faith Walters, who Is more In- clined to credit Navy regulations than hocus-pocus for her band- box appearance. The same rules that for generations have endow- ed men In this branch of the service with spit-and-polish per- fection are now working, with a few modifications, lor lady sail- ors. The backbone of the whole routine is simple Rrooming. Navy grooming Is not a matter of hasty llcks-and-promlses five seconds before dashing from the house. It's a well-thought-out plan for keeping appearance continually at top peak. This includes leisurely atten- tion, the night before, to such vital chores a polishing shoes and going painstakingly over a uniform to remove all spots and lint. For the latter task. Miss Walters rolls a length of tran- sparent tapesticky side out around her finger. With this she brushes" her uniform, until all fuzz and foreign matter is ad- ihering to the tape rather than to her dress blues. Her hair, too. receives advance care. She is allowed to choose her own hair style, provided her There's a tip here for the aver- age woman who wishes to look well-turned-out in tailored clothes. A tailored hair-do Is Its best complement. There's a lesson also In the trim cut of the Navy uniform. Here is proof of what clean lines and good tailoring can do to em- phasize a good figure and play down the defects of a poor one. The civilian woman whose taste in suits usually runs to frillier ef- fects may find that her war- drobe, too. can profit from.adop- ting the uncluttered look. A good appearance, it's empha- sized in Navy training,.Is not simply a matter of symmetrical features and a well-shaped form. Women in the WAVES are taught to wear their uniforms pride- fully, depending upon erect car- riage to give them an alert and vibrant look. This is emphasized not only in their lifted chins and well-held shoulders, but in the fluid movement of their en- tire bodies as they step smartly along in the way they've been instructed. Vivacity of expression is im- portant, too. Any woman appears more attractive if her face re- fleets the happiness and satis- faction that she derives from her lobwhether her most reward- big accomplishment is a well- cooked dinner, home-grown ger- i aniums. or like Mise Walters, that of being a part of the Navy's fighting force. The least of the things that add up to a WAVE'S good ap- pearance are not the last in lm- | Dortance. Gloves are a small item; so. too. is a WAVE'S gar- rison cap. Yet the former, fresh j-^aid sor Uropc Ctnate NEW YORK (NEA) Ken- 4 neth Nelson la a young man with a healthy respeet for Lady tuck., Without the smiling company of this capricious female he could never, he feels, have walked in two short years the long .road from stage-struck adolescence in Texas to stardom in New York. "This only happens In Class B movies, you know, the thing that happened to,me." In his voice was genuine awe that fate had tapped him. so early In his care- er, for that one big break that keeps voung hopefuls hoping. As he began retracting his Journey from Texas to Broadway, from college dramatics to the leading rote in "Seventeen," it became clearer what he meant. The plot Is indeed a corny one: Horatio Alger. 1951. The story begins In western United States,, with a shock- headed, gangling-limbed Ken doing all the things youngsters do when they grow up in the cow. country. He waa cast-typed for his success story from the begin- ning; he looked like an average American boy engaged in average Doylah purauiU. The plot thickens, however, when our hero decides that he will become, when he grows up, an actor rather than the usual policeman, fireman or cowboy. Although the theater beckoned at an early age. he still managed to pursue the traditional norm' through high school and one year of college. Then, the pace quickens. Ken set out for New York to seek his fortune, armed with meager par- ental approval for this wild project. There was the promise of a ticket homenot If, but whenhe needed It. Aside from that he waa on his own. According' to formula, Ken found the big city precisely what the folks back- home had warned him It would be: cold and hard and Infinitely treacherous. He learned about the lack of warmth when he informed Broadway he had arrived. Broad- way was not Impressed. He learned about the treachery when his landlady stole $100 from his room. It was all the money he owned. The moment he discovered he was broke, dead broke, was a high point In Ken Nelson's story. It takes intestinal fortitude for a young man not yet twenty to face what happened next. Chief- ly it was that stubborn determi- nation, almost universally com- mon in youth, not to to home a failure that prevented his board- ing a train for Texas. Ken stayed on in New York, and the breaks besan rolling In. Bad ones, mostly. He got a job as NEW YORK (NEA) The place of plaid in fashion Is as- sured the year around. This year, it takes its rightful place in a wardrobe in the form of a sheer. Sheer cottons are strong hot weather favorites: In plaid, they're doubly acceptable this year. A fabric designed by Hope Skillman is used for a junior A GIFT FOR YOU THE SCOn SPOON Mad* of Durable Plastic in Beautiful Colors (iumtr TH6SI rS*6HT SPOONS MAWYUSeS MO IXTRA COSTI Ask for the large Scott's Emulsion package containing a beautiful tablespoon. Obtainable in six attractive colors. Then give your family this scien- tific, vitamin-rich food-tonic every day, as many doctors recommend. Vu U soon have a stronger and healthier family. and actuallv wornnot carried _ tresses are kept at collar-height and the latter, well-brushed and cotton (left) that has the re- or above. However, the Navy cocked at a becoming anglecan, peated pattern of a man's hand- frowns, from a standpoint of make the difference between an kerchief. This is an opaque sheer envy-inspiring uniform and an | jn Dhie overplaided with brown. uninteresting assemblage of re- gulation clothes. , of both tidiness and suitability, upon elaborate, over-done coif- fures. Sleeves are brief, neckline Is round, a narrow belt in brown carries out the feeling of the fabric design. The skirt falls Into soft, unpressed pleats. The American designer, Mc- Kettrick, has done up dotted swlss (right) In a summer plaid for city wear. In shades of tobac- co brown, it' has tiny sleeves that just cap the shoulders, a narrow collar and neat front closing. A full skirt is gathered onto a trim waist that's encircled by a brown velvet belt. T^SCOTTS EMULSION High Encrw food tonic Leg Beaufy Important In New Fashions Now, with skirts still relatively short, stockings growing more and more sheer, and low-cut Dumps still holding their prom- inence, the onset Is no time to luck away leg care tools. Regular de-fuzzing is still Im- portant. If you wish to maintain a smooth sheen that glows at- tractively beneath your hose. After removing excess hair with a depilatory or a razor, make a practice of smoothing on a gen- erous application of hand lotion to add a satiny look. If sloppy play shoes have caus- ed the appearance of rusty-look- ing rough spots on your heels, insteps or toes, try a treatment with a stiff-bristled nail brush. Then cream well with a lanolin- rich hand cream. For bumps and callouses that detract from the beauty of your feet, try a relaxing pine foot bath. Begin by scrubbing your feet well with a stiff-bristled brush well lathered with pine bath soap. Then soak your feet for ten Ruth Milleft Says: care i friendships alive and to keep 1 on making new ones. Any grown son or daughter whose parents have many good friends could tell this woman how Important friendships are to the older person. Kenneth Nebs*, lacky yeasgi star f Broadway lay utTi3 Cas* B saaviatv* ^* a kitchen wares demonstrator Is a dime-store basement. This took. care of his hunger, but did noth- ing for his ambition. Casting ag- ents rarely browse through store basements In search of talent. Later, there was a chance at summer stock in Maine. The the- ater bumed.. and *h* east was catapulted, jobless, back to New York. Throughout this period. Ken kept answering calls for audit- ions. He didn't get a role in "Where's Charles?"; but out of 300 aspirants who tried out for the play, he managed to stick un- til the group had been boiled down to 20. That sort of thing, Ken Insists, Is encouraging. He kept trying, and thought his chance had come when he was accepted for "Flahooley." It wasn't until he went to sign his contract that it was discovered he couldn't dance a major omission. He gain joined the ranks of those "at lib- erty.". - It was at this blackest moment In true Hollywood stylethat Lady Luck proved she'd bees merely testing his determination. There came another audition, this time tor "Seventeen," and at the end of his try-out Sally Ben- son, adapter of the book, mur- mured. "There's our Willie." Ken's.been Willie ever since, and It's a role he's suited to. Those who remember with af- fection Booth TarkiBgton's hook can see with gratification that their hero's come to life. Helpful Hints Women who use razor blades In slitting seams and for other sewing tasks may find this a helpful hint; rescue an old. used match folder from the waste- basket, tear off the cardboard flap, and use the thick stub ends and abrasive strip to slip over one edge of the razor blade. Sim- ply Insert one edge of the blade between the stubs to make this handy holder for protecting fin- gertips. ' Many parents find they have made a sizable investment in in- flatable plastic toys, beach balls. Idea, in order to Insure lous use. to observe a few precautions he- fore storing these plastic Items away. Deflate them, wash them carefully with soap and water, rinse and dry thoroughly. Sprin- kle them generously, then, with talcum powder to prevent their sticking together and tearing, and store In a cool, dark, dry spot. If you find your clothes closet has acquired a slight musty door, treat the walls and ceiling to a light spray of toilet water. It will and wading pools. It's a good freshen the air immediately. What do older people about making new friends? 1 asks a woman who disagrees 1 with a column advising a mother to let a married daugh- er live her own life and to fill her own with new Interests %^-JSSf-mn > Qg I * W J* JSS lS " i children not the one whose ! life is filled with new Interests and good friendo. leaves Hjnd cream, legs after de-fozxinf, skia satiny and seft. attrac- tive when aeen through autumn stockings. minutes in a tepid tub of water to which several drops of pine bath oil have been added. Pat your feet dry; and finish this luxurious routine with a generous dusting of bath powder. fterybody Bead1* Classifieds deal. For the person who does not continue to make new friends through the years is likely to end up with very few. Things often happen to the. friends we make when we are' young. They move away from us, or we from them. Their Interests change or ours do. They get too busy for us, or they drift away gradually. A middle-aged man once told me that as he watched older men lose their friends one by one through death he made , up his mind that it was lm- portant to keep "replacing" : friends all through life. He has ( done that and though he has ' out-lived many of the friends of his younger days, his Ufe : Is still enriched by many , friendships. The middle-aged or older people care about making new friend?" and settles back to let his grown children become the only really important thing in life is making a grave mis- take. Children can't take the place of friends. It Is wrong to try to make them do wo. For It i limiting to the parent, and a burden to the son or daught- er. At every ate people need friends And the nty way to be sore of having friends at every age If to keep old SCRATCHES SMALL 20* "WORDS mi DESCRIBE THIILL OF fiETTINfiSiontllni/ s>*/v siivEiwwr SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1951 i - pack rm *=j.._'_____r--------- &. 17, &&. 3/? &2* 352/ held Wednesday, November 14th t 8:00 s.m. at the Jewish Wel- fare Board Center In Balboa. Elks To Held Party For Balboa Hifh School Students The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elk will sponsor aparty for the students of the. Balboa High School on November 9th. The Balboa sr*immlng pool will be reserved for the students from 5:30 to 7:30 \ m Dancing will be held at the Piks home from 7:80 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. Refreshments will be served. MISS BOBBIE ANN ROBINSON ROBINSON-BRENTNER ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED Mr. and Mrs. Albert Edward Robinson of Gamboa have announced the encasement and approaching -marriage of their daughter. Bobbie Ann Robinson, to Lowel Miller Brent- ner, Second officer of the S. S. Michaels and son of Mrs. Grace B. Lindberg of Balboa. The wedding will be solemnised on "Monday at the Fort Amador Chapel at 8:00 p.m. All friends of the young couple and of their parents are invited to attend. Bishop and Mrs. Gooden Honor Visitors with Buffet-Supper The Right Reverend Reginald Heber Gooden and Mrs. Gooden were hosts at a buffet-supper given Friday a*. 7:00 p.m. In the Fdrn Room of the Hotel Tlvoli in honor of th Right Reverend Charles Alfred Voegeli. the Bi- shop of the Missionary Districts of Haiti and Santo Domingo, who is a house guests of Bishop and Mrs. Gooden anl Mrs. Harry Beal, wife of the late Right Reverend Harry Beal, D.D., who Is visiting Dean and Mis. Raymond T. Per- ils. Those attending included the clergy and their wives and the ' strict churchmen and their ives. . Son of Swedish Consul-General Celebrates Second Birthday Mrs. Carl Axel-Janson, wife of the Cnsul General of Sweden in Panam, entertained Wednesday at their residence in Bella Vista with a birthday party for her young son, Tommy, who is now two years ojd. Commander Charles Becker Entertained At Dinner Commander Charles Becker, the Executive Officer of the USS Wisconsin, was the guest Tues- day evening of his former class- mate at the Naval Academy at Anapolls. Commander Charles B. Farwell and Mrs. Farwell who entertained at dinner for him at El Ranch Garden. Engaged Couple Guests Of Honor At Dinner 1 Miss Julia Alemn ad Mr. Jo- s E. Core, whose marriage will be solemnized November eighth at Cristo Rey Church, were tha honor guests Wednesday evening at a dinner giv.m by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Escofiery at their resid- ence. Bishop Voegeli And Mrs. Beal Honored At Luncheon Bishop Alfrtd C. Voegeli, of Haiti, and Mis. Harry Beal, of Los Angeles, California, who are visiting the Isthmus, where the guests of honor at a luncheon Liven Wednesday by Mrs. John k. McLavy and Mrs. W. C. Fritz at the McLavy residence on Bal- boa Heights. Buffet-Cocktaii Party Entertains 15 Guests Mr. George Barry. Mrs. Albert Burllngham,Mr Ffranfc Krug. Mr. Paul Pina. Mr Rolland Glock- man and Mr Jerry Arteud were hosts for an open house at their residence on Lu Cresta Saturday evening at 8:00 p.m. Swimming and dancing provided entertain- ment for the one hundred and fifty guests. ' College Club Hold Fall Luncheon The annual fall luncheon of the Canal Zone College Club was held yesterdpy at the Hotel" Tl- voli at 12:30 p m. in the ballroom. The more than seventy five at- tending guests Included members of the club, their guests and col- lege women from all over the Isthmus. Mr. Victor H< rr, the Director of Music of the Balboa Schools was In charge of the program. He presented Miss Vivian Simmonds as, vocalist with her accompanist Miss Judy McKay, Miss Glenda Kahler. trumpet and Miss Mil- dred Bamerau, piano. Women's Auxiliary Express Thanks To Friends The members of the St. An- drew's Women's Auxiliary in Co- col!, wish to express their thanks and appreciation to all their friends who helped to make their "Bake 8ale," held on October 25th, a big success. Balboa Woman's Club To Hold Benefit Luncheon And Card Party The Balboa Woman's Club will hold a buffet luncheon and be- nefit card party for members and their guests on Thursday, November 15th at 12:30 p.m. at the Jewish Welfare Board in Balboa. Proceeds will go to charity. For reservations to the party telephone Mis. J. B. Devore, Bal- boa 3226, or Mrs. Mary Klipper, Balboa 3096. The public Is cordially Invited to attend. Tickets may be pur- chased for $1.00 from club mem- bers Or at the door. Players are requested to bring their own cards. Bingo Tsnight At Legion Club Bingo will be played tonight at the American Legion Club at Fort Amador at 7:30 p.m. Prijes will be awarded. (Bes, SelL fev Cocktail Buffet Honors Mr. and Mrs. Rheatan Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rheutan, of Richmond, yirglnia, who ar- rived on the Isthmus recently for a visit were guests of honor Wednesday at a cocktail buffet given by Mrs Rheutan's brother- in-law and Sister, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce H. Carponter in the ball- room of the Hotel Tivoll. One hundred guests were present at the affair. (Compiled bv Publishers' Weekly) FICTION THE CAINE MUTINY Herman Wouk. THE CRUEL SEA Nicholas Monsarrat. FROM HERE TO ETERNITY James Jones. THE CATCHER IN THE RYE J. D. Salinger. THE TRON MI8TRES8 Paul I. Wellman. RETURN TO PARADISE James A. Mlchener. NON-FICTION THE SEA AROUND US Rachel L. Carson. KON-TTKI Tbor TSeyerdahl. WHITE MAN RETURNS Agnes Newton Keith. WASHINGTON CONFIDENTIAL Jack Lalt and Lee Mortimer. CRIME IN AMERICA Estes Kefauver. A SOLDIER'S STORY Omar N. Bradley. El Panam To Feature Orchestra With Luncheon And Buffet Avellno Muoz and his Phythm Makers will provide mu- sical entertainment during lunchon today from 12:00 noon to 3:00 p.m. Ir. the Balboa Dining Room of El Panam Hotel. Buffet supper will be served in the.Bella Vista Room of El Panam Ho'ei today from 7:00 pm. to 10:00 p.m Elks Sponsor Movie Night Movies will be shown to Elks snd their gu^ts and friends on Tuesday, November sixth at 7:00 p.m. at the Elks Club in Balboa. All Star Circle To Meet For Luncheon and Business Meeting The All Star Circle will meet for luncheon and a business meeting on Wednesday, Novem- ber seventh, at 1:00 p.m. at the Scottish Rite Temple in Balboa. Balboa Woman's Club To Hold Regular Meeting The regular meeting of the Balboa Woman's Club will be T" COLD WAVE Special 7-50 Yaa've probably admired eur HiimtwU an Mhtr rtj-IUh ohm-VOtaS will bt lavc- ly taa! CaU for APPOINTMENT Today! 2-1322 Ancon Beauty Shop LOUISE HARTMAN. Manager Old Ancon Theatre Bldg. Wife Elected, Husband Reelected To Mississippi State Legislature ASHLAND, Miss. Nov. (UP) If Mr. and Mrs. John Farese have any squabbles during the next four years, they're liable to" have quite an audience. Farese and his attractive wife make up Mississippi's first hus- band-wife legislative team. In .this year's elections, Farese, a retiring state senator, was elected to represent Benton and Tlppah Counties In the House of Representatives and his wife was elected a Benton County repre- sentative. The 36-year-old Farese already was known a a vote-getter, hav- ing been elected prosecuting at- torney and state senator. His 35- year-bld wife made her first ven- ture Into politics this year. NEW YORK. Nov. 3 (UJP.) The Kootz Gallery shows a mur- al, a curtain and a sculpture done for a synagogue by Robert Moth- erwell. Adolph Gottieb and Her- bert Ferber respectively. The congregation that commissioned the works asked that Jewish symbols be incorporated into them. The three artists belong to the same vanguard group. Its mem- bers differ widely from each oth- er In style and technlc. What unites them is their subject mat- ter. ._, Every one of them paints shapes and celen that have for him an intimate, strong and at the same time extreme^ vague meaning. The subject might be a glare, a half open door or a face or fig- ure, the way children draw them. It might or might not resemble something seen or dreamt by any observer. If it does, it Is apt to mislead him. The half open doof is neither the imitation of a real door, nor the generalization of the idea of the door. It la the shape and the color with which the artist, for some reason probably un- known even to himself, associat- es some of his deep, basic emo- tional experiences. The vision is mostly blurred, or chaotic, or "primitive" and any- way, very' far from, the conven- tional way we adults see the world. It can therefore be as- sumed that It refer to visual experiences of early youth. To ask such an artist to use religious symbols that have not been heretofore catalyst of his emotional Ufe, Is to pose a nearly solvable problem. Ferber made one of bis typical soulpturseVHe gave IWJsawevar. a spherical shape that can. by * stretch of the imagination, be identified with the Jewish sym- bol of the burning bush. Gottlieb Incorporated the Jew- ish symbols Into a typical "Gott- lieta.".He did it. h-iwever. so un- conspicuously that -their pre- sence hardlv can be recognized. Motherwell tried to work him- self Into a state of mind and feeling In which these Jewish symbols were supposed to mean something important to him. Whether or not he succeeded in his task psychologically is not this reviewer's concern. It can be stated, however, that he nainied a handsome "Motherwell" with the conspicuous Jewish symbols. It Is much discussed in New York whether the artistic the- -eries of the vanguard gronp could be applied to these new works. Artists, great and small, often : concoct naive theories to explain j their art. To which one can say In psraohrasln* a word of Goe- i the that "all theories are gray. and green alone Art's golden tree." Pan! Mocsanyl. Farese said people who first thought his wife was "running on his coat-tails" changed their tune after hearing her speak. They decided maybe he was run- ning on her "skirt-tails." For Mrs. Farese, a. formsr school teacher, turned out to be quite a speaker. , The Fareses say each will vote as he or she thinks right, regard- less of how the other votes. How- ever, they expect to agree on ma- jor issues since "our ideas are a good bit alike." Farese already had announced for representative when his wife told him she wanted to talk to him. "Having been married some 14 years." he said, "I had no choice but to sit and listen.". She told him she had always thought of running for office and wanted to run for representa- tive. He told her to go ahead and they began campaigning. Farese won out in the first pri- mary, his wife in a runoff. The Fareses have three chil- dren and they'll present a prob- lem, when the legislature meets In January in Jackson. They'll have to decide whether to leave them home or take them along. Their biggest problem may come from other representatives Who might try to get the husband and wife lined up on opposite sides of an Issueand watch the fireworks. (Bool (BrUfi J By United Presa A long-time political associate of David LloyC George ha* writ- ten an instructive biography of the "New Dealer" who was Brit- ain's prime minister in World War I. In Lloyd George (Harvard University Press) George Jones depicts the noted Welshman as both a "great executive" and a petty politician who made "des- potic and arbitrary" use of party funds. Jones, admires Lloyd George.as toe man mainly res- ponsible for "the greatest mea- sures of social reform ever placed upon the statute book... (He) anticipated and prevented re- volution by successfully attack- ing the privileged classes and comforting the poor." The autor criticises, the late prime minister's frequent vln- dlctiveness, and recalls Lloyd George was ar. admirer of Adolf Hitler after many other states- men had recognized the Nazi danger. ^/ttlantic *DocUtt nu L 195, Qedn . DJ^kem* (mlmm 379 _ V ' 4TH MsYSTEAK DINNER CELEBRATES INDEPENDENCE DAT For the 4*th time the prominent men of the Republic and Canal Zone gathered at the Strangers Club to celebrate the Independence Day of the Republic of Panama. The traditional dinner was hold at the Strangers Club Friday evening. The flowers of the country, With the flags f the 21 American Republic were nsed to decorate the beiMing. Ofjam for a Nan, by Wil- liam Faulkner (Random House) Is the latest title in the mo- saic of life In mythical Yokna- patawpha County. The hew work carries forward the somber story of Temple Drake from the au- thor's earlier novel Sanctuary. Temple In this curloua combi- nation of narrative and play dialogue Is engaged In defend- ing a Negro woman who has been condemned for the murd- er of Temple's child. Faulkner's power emerges through his dif- ficult in some places opaque) Srose to set a mood rather than 11 a story, His exposition of the evolution of the county court- house from the wilderness. In the beginning of the book, is as moving as it is symbolic... Thomas Merton completed his newest, book, The Aseen To Truth (Hsrcourt, Brace), on the anniversay of his ninth year In the Cistercian Order. 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Equipped with its own superb amplifying system, the tri-o-matic - 970 plugs in any, AC outlet, affords top listening pleasure from M your records all sizes, all speeds, sll labels. Shuts itself off completely and mtomst$felly, after the last record has played.. 7110 Bolivar RADIO CENTER Ut. 40 Colonel Jarr.es Pumpelly was toastmaster and introduced, not only the guests of honor, but also other leading cltlsens. Major Jo- seph A. Katannas assisted Colon- el Pumpelly. The toastmaster explained the origin of tne Panamanian flag and their Kal -mal Anthem, and recounted var'ous legends of the country. Mr Walter Hunnlcutt. president of the Strangers Club, made a few remarks. Music was iurnlshed by the suth Armv Band, under the di- rection of W.O. (Jgi Saturnino Rodrguez and by the Rhythm Boys. Jimmy Brown served as master of ceremonies and pres- ented the floor show which was put on by ti"e various night clubs In the Repuolic The prominent Panamanians who were present for the celebra- tion were: The President of the Republic-of Panam, The Honor- able Alclbiades Arosemena with the President of the National As- sembly, Jos Manuel Mndez M- rlda, The Minister of Govern- ment and Jurtlce, Miguel Angel Ordonez, Tin Minister of the Treasury. Galileo Solis.The Min- ister of Social Welfare. Arco Ga- findo. The Minister' of Education, Rubn de Carles; The Minister of Agriculture ard Commerce, Jos Maria Vrela. The Minister of Public Works, Csar A. Guillen; The Comptroller Oeneral, Henri- que de Obaino; Vctor Navas, Vctor M. de Len. Colonel Bol- vir Vallarino Luis M. Tovar, Ca- milo Levy Salcedo, and Rodolfo U. CastreJlon. The guests from the Canal Zone were: The Honorable John C. Wiley, American Ambassador to Panama; Lt. Oeneral W. H. H. Morris, Jr., Commander-in-Chief Caribbean Command; Brig. Gen. F. K. Newcomer. Governor of the Canal Zone Government;. Rear Admiral A. M. Bledsoe. Com- mander Pacific Sector. Caribbean Sea Frontier; Brig, Gen. Robert L Howie, Chief o Staff Carib- bean; Colons Robert J. McBride, Assistant USA. Caribbean; Col- onel Henry F. Taylor, Command- ing) Officer Atlantic Sector; Cap- tato, L. L. Kocpke, S.N., Com- manding Officer United States Naval Station,.CocoSolo: Butane C, Lombard. Executive Secretary. Canal Organization; Lt. colonel R. C. Williams. Colonel Herbert D. Vofol, Colonel Richardson Se- lee, Cofonel v-'eorge K. Withers, and the Honorable Charles H. Whitaker. daughter's wedding a cocktail ' dress of aoua celanese crepe. It I was .fashioned with a flared skirt and cap sleeves, and the only trimming wa the cutwork em- broidery around the neckline and on the front of the bodice. Her flowers were orchids. The silver and white, four-tier- ed wedding cake was topped with a bride, and groom under an archway with triple wedding bells. After last bride and groom cut the first lice it was served by Mrs. Ea'l Dyer. The bufit-t table was centered with double welding- rings out- lined with gardenias. Mrs. Arn- old HudglM nad charge of the bride's book. Later In the evening the bride and groom lert for a short, local honeymoon. She chose for the I occasion a metallic blue faille taffeta suit, with which she used white accessories and wore a white orchid. Upon their return they will re- side with Mr. and Mrs. Dough at 8020-Second Street in Margarita, until quarters are available. Mrs. judge is well-known on the Atlantic side of the Isthmus. She graduated from Cristobal High School it. the Class of 1949 and has beet: employed by the U. 8. Army at Fort Davis and) Fort Gulirk. She Is a member of the Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. . Corporal Judge completed his schooling in ci rdele, Ga.. and en- listed :n the Army In 1945. He has peen stationed on the Isthmus for the past two years, being as- signed to Fort Clayton and Fort Davis. ^ M/s. Kroch. cf Blalr, Nebraska.'. .Je Is employed as a supervisor of Industrial Arts with the Canal' Zone Schoois. No cards are being issued for the wedding. All friends of the family and the young couple are Invited to the wedding and the reception which will lollow In the Church parlors. American Society of Civil Engineers Meeting The American Society of Civil Engineers will meet tomorrow evening at the Army-Navy Club at Fort Amadcr at 7:60. Mr. Truman H. Hoenke^d intendent Pacific Branr*~ Division, w'll speak on "1 anee Problem*. Locks ai tenance Structures." Dinner will cost $1.00 per mem- ber and $1.75 per guest. Miss Smith Chooses Wedding Dste Miss Judith Anne Smith, daughter ol Mi and Mrs. David S. Smith, o; Margarita, has chos- en Tuesday. November 20, as the date of her marriage to Mr. Ken- neth Carl Krofh. The ceremony wiH take plac at the First Bap- tist Church at Balboa Heights. Mr. Kro*h ir the son of Mr. Harvey U. K'ogh, and the late sil LAY AWAY YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFT TODAY We have at your disposal beautiful solid gold rings for men and women at unbelievable low prices. Visit us and see for yourself. Ladies Onyx Ring with Center Diamend $22.- USE OUR EAST BUDGET TERMS. HAWAII JEWELRY THE RELIABLE STORE 56 CENTRAL AVE. 5S Did you already get yoar Xmas Dollar? Claim it TO- DAY at our store and use it for your Xmas shopping. Jean Dough Boceases Me e( CpL Charles Judge In a candlelight ceremonv at the Fort Davis chape!. Miss Jean Dough, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn C. Dough, of Margarita. plighted her troth to Corporal Charles. Olynn Judge, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Judge of Cordele, Georgia. _ Chaplain (Captain James E. Hemknn performed the ceremo- ny, which took place Friday eve- ning. November 2, at seven o'clock, ih tne presence of a large gathering of friends and rela- tlves. Palms and ferns formed background fo> the decorations on the altar. A large fan of white gladioli centered tha altar and was flanked oy lighted tapers in, (told holdels. Matching fans of | flowers stood on either side with standing cande labras, shaped as - srrows, tied with clusters of gar- denias and white satin ribbons. Jasmine and wnlte tapers were used on the chancei rail, which was marked at the entrance with standing baskets Of white calla lilies. Other baskets o the flow- ers were used within the chancel. A garland of gardenias and greenery outllred the door to the chapel and clusters of white gar- denias and tulle we*e tied on al- ternate pews from the door to the chancel. Mrs. Hugn Cossibry played the traditional welding marches and incidental music during the wed- ding. The lovely, voung bride enter- ed upon the arm of her father by whom she was given In marri- age. She wore S. ballerina dress of white ChantUlv lace over white satin. The gown was fashioned with a deep nylon yoke to which the lace was appllqued In natur- al scallops. The long fitted sleeves were of lace, and the skirt was very full. Her fingertip, tulle veil was heid in place by a low coronet of late over satin, trim- med with seed oearls. She csrried a white Raintow Bible topped with an orchid corsage with rib- bon streamers. Miss Leneve Dough, sister of the bride, was the mstd of honor. She wore b.ue dress dt nylon marquisette over matching taffe- ta. The strapifss bodice had an overjacket of matching lace with cap sleeves ai.d a small Chinese collar. The niaroulsette skirt was very bouffant She wore hydran- geas and vei.ow rosebuds in her hair, and carried a fan tied with yellow ribbons Mrs. Jerry Whyte was the brid- al attendant. Her dress mstched the msid of honor, but was In yellow. 8he also wore a headdress of blue and yellow flowers and carried a fan tied with blue rib- bons. Sergesrit Jerry Wbyte served as best man for tne groom and the ushers wsrc: sergeant Malcolm L. ElUworf and Corporal John- ny Comeaux. A reception was held at the Elks' Home at Brazos Heights, following the ceremtny. The wed- ding party, with the bride's par- ents, recehed tne guests In the foyer of th* club. Palms and bas- kets of white calla lilies decorat- ed tne foyer. Mrs. Dough chose for her fS "Quiet! There's only one tops in Radios and Consoles ...that's RCA VICTOR! EASY CREDIT TERMS Nipper knows; An RCA VICTOR RADIO makes the best Christmas present in the world! PANAMA RADIO CORPORATION Tels.: 2-3M4 S-tSM 89 Central Avenue Don't risk your charm with old-fashioned ineffective deodorants ONLY NEW ODO-RO-NO CREAM GIVES YOU ALL THESE ADVANTAGES: 1Stops perspirationquickly and safely. 1Banishes odour instantly. SGives full protection for osm to (Ems days. 4Never irritases normal skinuse it daily. SAbsolutely harmless so all fabrics. New, exclusive formula. Merer dries an, never gets gritty or cakes in the jar ss ordinary deodorants often do. Millions of Hlitfud women MM ODO-RO-NO CRIAN The deeeWenf nrrraeef mmt T a mu . i k. r rACt SIX THE SUNDAY AMERICAN *t* SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1951 ft 0 You Sell em... When You Tell em thru P.A. Classifieds! Leave your Ad with one of our Agents or our Offices i hW'ls SERVICE >. 4 T1v.ll Av rhoiw l-l KIOSK t> DE LESSEP8 rH de Up MURK I SON'h N., 4 F oarOi / J.lj 41 BOTICA ARLTON mfUKT AMERICANO SN Minimum for 12 word* 3c. each additional word FOR SALE Household FOR SALE G. M. 25 eycl refri- geralcr, Halllcrefter SX 28 radio, 8 mm. camera. Sunbeam cotlte maker, kitchen tob<* ond ttool*, dishes, child's table ond chairs. Balboa 2.2901. FOR SALE Automobiles FOR SALE:1948 Pontlec convert- ible, hvdr#matic, radio. $1,000- 00. duty paid. 2-63)9. POR SALEOn account of voyage livingroom et, diningroom tt, bed- room, piano ond kitchen set also of lice equipments almost new. Vie Porros 131. Tel. 1-3553. From I 1 a. m. unti. 4 p. m. FOR SALE:Steel bedprlnt double, like new, beautiful Igrge mirror with gold leaf frame, two bracket shelves to moteh. Albrook 5223. FOrTsALECos rtove, Modern Maid, four burner*. Good condition, $35. 00, No. 17. 10th itreet. Son Francisco, oftemoon. POR SALE:Easy "Spindrler" wo*h- er, one yeor old, perfect condi- tion. 62 Cycle, $150.00. 313-D, Coco Solo. Phone 343. FOR SALE:1950 Chevrolet, four door, undercoat, visor. Informotion coll Panama 3-4436, ofter 5 p. m. MISCELLANEOUS I RESORTS re* aovo eVUkU. iitkW Write AteeheUee IkllllllllM es 2011 Akn. . X. FOR SALE:1941 Buick 4 door sedan, plastic sect covert, good 6 ply tire*, radio, mutt sell, leaving Isthmus. $375.00. Context Wo- ion, Auto Service. Panama. FOR SALE Miscellaneous Gromlich'i . Sonto Cloro beoch- cottages Electric let boxes, got rove, moderte rates. Phono 6> 41 or 4-567. FOR SALE.-^aioek cocker mole, 2 yrs. old A. K. C. registered, beou- tlful dog. ideal for breeding. Al brook 6223. WANTED Miscellaneous WANTED: Clean *ft rogs. Job Depf. Panamo American FOR SALE: 1941 .Studebaker Commander Sedan. Engine a nd tires in excellent condition. House 5360 Davis St., Cteblo, Bolboo 2918. FOR. SALE.AKC registered cocker puppies. I mole, 1 female, excel- lent pedigree. 316-0, Curundu Hjti,, phone 3-4109. FOR SALE:1950 Chevrolet For- door St-don. Telephone Balboa 1385. FOR SALE:1939 Chevrolet Panel. 1939 4 door Blilek. 1941 Pontioc Coupe. No. 27 Q Street, Ponamotort. .WANTED;Furnished or unfurnish- ed oportment or house for British couple. Tel. 3-1388. WANTED:Plono, prefer Baldwin. " Good condition necessary. Write Bo* 381. Ancon. H. H. ummor- M ford. Safe-Driving Awards Giren To 50 Drivers Of 764I A.A.A. Bn. FORT DAVIS, Nor. 8At a ce- remony held Tnuriday morning, U- Col. WUiiam J. Bennett, Com- manding Officer, 764th AAA Gun Battalion. Fort Davis, presented certificates of mrnendatlon for ale driving to 50 soldiers of the ittallon. Col. Bennett waa assisted by WOJG Ovidio Peres, Battalion Motor Offioer. \ The awards were given to all rivers who have driven for a Biriod of one year without an ae- dent. During the one-year pe~ rtod these 50 men drove a total of 232,450 miles or nearly 9'/a times the circumference of the earth without a single accident, for an average- of exactly 4.649 inlles per man. Recipient of the awards were: at. Orlando Irtzarry, 8FC Flix Ortiz, Sgt. Briifldo Cordero, Cpl. RalSotelo Cpl. M A. Sayas, Cpl. Jorge Lalotiia Cpl. Ceferino R. Diaz, Cpl. Enrique Martinez, Cpl. Jos A. Santauo, Cpl. Jaime Pa- tan, Cpl. Jesus Rodriguez, Cpl. 'ladlo Ortiz, Cpl. Jos A. Torres, E Teodoro ro res, Cpl. Modesto irez, Cpl Julio Martinez .Pfc ublio Hernii-dez. Pic Angel Ne- rrn, Pfc Modc Oastn Buen, Cpl. Diego Alicea, ml. Raul Vieques, Cpl. Olimpio Yera, Pfc Angel Guerrero, Pfc Rodolfo Gutirrez, at. Trinidad Otero, Cpl. Jua! Maldonado, Cpl. Carmelo Cruz, Pfc Carmelo Vllla- fane, Pfc Victor Flgueroa, Pfc Osvaldo Quiones, pfc Carmelo Huertas, Pfc Florentino Vega.Pfo gugenlo Rlverr., Cpl Luis Veles, pi. Luis Diaz, Cpl. William R. ynch, Cpl. Robert L. McKlnnon, : pi. William K Mitchell, Cpl. ichard H. Smith, Pfc Richard [ Williams act charles Borden. tit. Noah L. Hardtn. Cpl. Victor hns, Pfc Blv D. Bledsoe, Pfc lem O. Hume. Pfc Richard T. .uddoclc, and Cpl. Coy A. Stew- rt. t. Peter's Church o Have Rt. Rev. 'oegeli As Guest rThe Rt. Rev. Charles A. ell. a.T.D.. bishop of Haiti nd Santo Domingo, will be uest preacher for evensong at Jti Peter's Church for tonight 1:30 p. m.. closing the obeerv- ce of Homecoming Sunday. Bishop Voegell, who came e on a short visit in eon- tlon with the dedication of Columbarium chapo) of the Bthedral of St. Luke. Aneon, ved a good friend of St. r's while serving u dean of Cathedral some years ago. [roe Woman's Auxiliary will ake a corporate communion the second celebration, like- JBJ the Girls' friendly Society i honor of G.F.8 week. TOe loose offerings on Sun- ay have been earmarked for Kg scholarship fund, started at me first Homecoming Sunday pot year______________ gAYTONA BBACH. Fia. (DP) rThe Day tona loach civil ser- Be board ha amended its rules I permit men with false teeth work In the city police and re departments. The change proposed by board number arge Unchurch, who wears an plate himself. FOR SALE:1936 Chryl*r Sedan $150.00. Good condition, new paint, battery, etc. r*one 8-198. 171 -A, Gamboa. Mother, child oeeiollit recommend JUMFINO-MCK Shoot for correct walking habit* from cradle to 4 yean. Exclusively of BABYLAN- DIA. No. 40. 44th itreet, Bella Viito. Tel 3-1259. FOR SALE:7-room metal doll house, completely furnished with plastic furniture, Doll's high chair, doll'* large crib, fountain, set, cooking utensils, children'* books, miscellaneous toy* and.gome* ell in good condition $15.00. 604-B. Cocoli, phone 2-1008. FOR RENT Apartment ALHAMBBA APArTMINT Modem turnltfwd-unfumlshed sport men}. Contact office No. 1061, lONi St. New Crietebol Phon. 1386, Co- FOR RENT Rooms ROOMS AVAILABLI Ugfct, eee4 es*** reewvsted aws weN for. Mod. Rota* WMseeile. Boche. i* oaly. Is*ee of The Ame. Heet) Clab ferfc. Fire-Fighting Teams Being Formed On Most Armed Forces Base* Volunteer fire-fighting teams are now being formed On moat Armed Force* installation, at A past of the TJSARCARZB Disas- ter Control program. All members of the volunteer teams will be given professional type training, both In the elass- ness, and with lire-fighting equipment. The teams will be provided with the latest type extinguish- ers, axes, crowbars, hose, and a hosecart. Instruction will be complete, and pertinent to the problem of keeping military installa- tions safe should disaster occur in the Panama area. FOR SALE Real Estate FOR SALE:House No. 13, Puerto filn and No., 7031. 6th St. Co- lon. Phone 6, Colon. LESSONS Loom Ballroom dancing at If* belt, Professional Instructors. Balboa YMCA. Homett t> Dunn. Populor or classical piano playing taught home or studio. Phone 2- 1282 Panama. FOR SALE Boats & Motors FOR SALE-Johnson see horse 5 H. P., run peroximetely 50 Hrs. Albrook 6223. President Wants Tax Jobs Civil Service Appointments WASHINGTON, NOV. S (UP) President Truman will, ask Con- gress In January to take the Internal Revenue Bureau out of poltics by putting the nation's 94 tag collectors under Civil Service, the White House an- nounced yesterday. The action was proposed by new Democratic chairman Frank B. McKlnney and prompt- ly Indorsed by Secretary of the Treasury John W. Snyder who has overall supervision of the scandal-rocked tax collection system. internal Revenue Commis- sioner John B. Dunlap, who re- cently took over the bureau with Presidential orders to do a elean-up job, said he is 'da- lighted beyond words." McKlnney, concerned over possible political implications of tha spreading tax inquiry, advanced the Civil Service pro- posal during his first official visit to the Whits House since taking over the party reins Wednesday from William U. Boyle Jr. McKlnney, who predicted that Mr. Truman will be a "sure winner" if ht runs for reelec- tion in 1853, said he does not believe the tax scandals are a serious threat to Democratic changes next year. But he want- ed to erase any doubts or fears about It Mr. Truman previously had said he was not sure that hav- ing tax collector! under Civil Service would be a good thing. He noted at the time that it often u very hard to fire m- ployai who bate Civil Service status. At present, collectors aro ap- pointed by the President and approved by the Senate. The proposed change would destroy 64 choice political pat- ronage plums. Since the tax ln- aulry bogan, six $10,000-a year collectors have been fired, sus- Sended or forced to resign. Two ave bean lndlstcd on bribery charges. A House Ways and Means aubeommlttee Investigating tax scandal* has broadened its in- quiry to Include almost every part-of the internal Revenue Bureau. Dunlap has also started t noueooleanlng program to make the tax collective system the "cleanest and moat efficient service humanly possible." McKlnney g suggestion was contained In a letter which he delivered personnahr when be galled on the president yester- day morning. The House subcommittee Is expected to advance the same proposal, and Ben. Betas Kefau- ver (D-Tenn.) has said ho will introduce a bill in January to accomplish the same thing. . AlMT,r -PPfcuded the Pres- ident's decision and predicted that hi* bill will be approved without difficulty. He slo the legislation is "very necessary" and "until do much to correct conditions" In the bureau. R. Cecil R. King (D-CaUf.), chairman ef the House inveatl- {atora, called the recommenda- lon "most eneouraglni/' w^"1; .Dennl Cnavws (D-N. Ml. informed of tha White House announcement, aid "It's about time,' Sen. Harry p. caln (R-Waah.) observed that "I'm glad to sec that (Mr. Truman) u heeding some good advice." . Jfn. Ouy M. Gillette (D-Ia.) indicated he will support the proposal. Or. J. G. Conley, Noted Specialist, Visits Isthmus Dr John O Conley. Director o the Head and Neck Service of the famous Pack Medical Group, and Director of the Head and Neck Division of SL Vincent's Hospi- tal .New York* Ctty. left Fri- day after a two-day. stay In Panama. He Is one of the leading cancerologisU of the world. Dr. Conley nad come from a Medical Congress In Bogota, Col- ombia. After a rhort stay in Cos- ta Rica, he will headfor the A- merlcan Congrasa of Surgeons meeting in San francisco. On Thursday Dr. conley gave a talk at the Instituto Ra- diolgico o Santo Tomas, and performed an operaUon there, re- moving a tumor of the Jaw. In the evening he spoke before Isthmian insleos at the Gorges Memorial Laboratory. Strike Shuts Soulh's Biggest Steel Works BIRMINGHAM. Ala. Nov. 3 road Co., tha South'* largest pro- ducer of steal, were halted today because of a strike by 100 coke oven tenders. All work' at the U. S. Steel sub- sidiary's ninf blast furnaces, IB open hearth furnaces and huge coke, rail, tin plate, sheet steel, wire and structural steel mills ceased as 36.000 employes stayed away from their jobs this morn- Company officials said the COMMERCIAL b PROFESSIONAL DpNVT STARVE YOUR LAWN AND EXPECT IT TO BE BEAUTIFUL VERTAGREEN 3-Way Plant Food IB cheaper than water tbi it CEO. F. NOVEY, INC 379 Central Avo. .Tel. 1-0140 I LUX r-ENETIAN BLINDS Immediate Delivery. Tel. 3-1713 -22 I. Stth St tional Guard are en trying SX SeWc?. ^STSSS&JSSF* "S?" 0f UF* *- Chains, m>ktn carrTer^r^'AS BESS. V'SSrTS ammunition, supplies and equipment. crewmen, ANAMA BROKERS, INC. Sheet ss f.m. Has for Sale Stocks Preferred or Common of r*n*m/?r*rt *** and Nat Abattoir Tela,: 1-471*. 1-1660 I MODERN FURNITURE CUSTOM BUILT Slipcover RewpboUtery VISIT OtTU SHOW-BOOM) Albert. Here. iw^2S.' "_i*"WWe Oew) &arrarttTaf,ws are ^-as^ aaagS^y ttnnfi PET HOSPITAL 3B& fiSTi &%&" The Hrltish Legation has fr- firm was "completely out of the ^'i*?*!"' f Pnk draft for steel business" and estimated JlIr?-*7* l?e tot*1 mount col- Washmgton's apple crop repre- sents approximately one-seventh of the yield of the United States. A Are breaks out in the United State* every I) seconds. FOR SALE: ACCORDION eeaaaRi lie Baye, Pheae t-JlTB Psaasai. steel business" and estimated that 8,000 to 6.600 tons of steel would be lost to the defense ef- fort every day the plants aro idle. TCI operations had been threatened since last week when 100 coke workers walked off their jobs in protest to the laying off of temporary summer help on "hot" jobs. They were Joined yesterday by 4.BO0 coal and ore miners whose wildcat strike paralysed all TCI mining operations. A full-fledged strike was voted yesterday by all operating unions who met and agreed to back the coke mill workers. The step, taken on the eve of the beginning of big steel's nego- tiation for a new contract, waa decided upon against the advice of officials of the United Steel- workers of America (CIO). District Director R C. Parr saw no chance for a quick settle- ment of the dispute. He said un- ion and company officials met all day yesterday and reached "no conclusions." Vilenos almost flared as one of the striking union locals charged that J. J. phlfer. gen- eral superintendent of TCI fa- cilities in suburban Palrfield, Ala., ran down a picket. Jamaica Relief fund Pacific Sfde Money Dispatched To Island ,-;---. -~- .. wiuuiii col- lected on the Pacific side of the Isthmus for victims of the last "troua hurricane In Jamai- This sum represents B2.067.64 raised through the activities of the Jamaica Hurricane Relief r^Sml.tU?i.*n^'7M-82 contri- buted to the British Legation Fund, less expenses of draft Following U the final state- ment o fthe fond: Previously aeknowledg- La Boca Mutual Benefit Society ............. American Legion Auxi- liary (balance after H.OXO Prayer Band . Jamaica Hurricane Re- lief Committee ..... 2,057.84 Total ......... Loss expenses Of bank draft ............ $2,080.02 11.00 26.8S 7.7B $4,792.40 1190 RIDE RETURNS TO MOTHER Hubby 'VS didn't Amolin ^(1 I Bee tlosirf-i^r U.p.w.aa.fc- I Amolin Forwarded to Oovern- or's Fund, Jamaica $4,780.47 Silver Belli Chib IniUlIi Officers The Silver Bells Sporting and Ef^ieS1? mrtaUe1 'leers for the 1982 term last Tuesday at Club Tropical with Kenneth in- Ifjf t the Unity Dance Clubof Port Limn, Costa Rica, as In- stalling offioer. Officers installed were: A Baptist, president; B. Blackwood! vies president; lilas M Brown chalriady; Miss R. Thorne assis- tant chalrlady; A. Cross, secre- tary, re-elected; c Lewis, asals- ant secretary; Miss X. Bougie, geasursr. re-elected; Mrs. I. Howell, chaplain, re-elected; j. Monroe, business manager; R. Gabriel, director and M. Blalr, assUtant director, both re-elect- After the eeremorly there was dancing until :0 a.m. with re- freshments at Intervals . Murphy's band supplied the music for the occasion. recuiremenis to balance mZ^lZ^*2&, T2Sn? F^r of ffSSHsSSSffi J X^tr^^'^i Ilnf-oline shortage grow* out of the expanded autmMmSSSmA No More Leaf-Raking On Illinois Campas URBANA. HI. (UP.) They've) quit raking leaves on the 480- acre University o HUboIs cam- pus. Instead. R. 8. Chamberlln. physical plant superintendent of operations, has a combination vacuum cleaner-hammer mill and composing machine which picks up the leaves that come off the 4,000 trees. Alabama Anti-Trumanites Ask More Authority For Congress New Zealand soldiers call U S Marines "Cobbers." meaning "pal" or "buddy." 8ELMA, Ala., Nov. 3 (UP) Anti-Truman leaders took the name of "Alabama Democrats" here today and selected former Rep. Sam Hobbs (D-Aaa.) as their chairman. But Hobbs emphastaed the group was not trying to organize a "splinter party," About 850 persons, all but 12 of them Alabamians, held a 'strategy meeting" after hear- ing Ben. Harry F. Byrd (D-Va.) urge Southern Democrats to unite to defeat President Tru- man at the 1952 Democratic convention. The group adopted a resolu- tion calling for the election of a President who will "not take over congressional powers and who believes in the supremacy of the Constitution." The document resolved that "Congress shall reassert its con- stitutional power aa an Inde- pendent department of the gov- ernment and should not dele- gate its lawmaklng powers to the executive department." The resolution also would re- serve for Congress the power to decan war and affirm the principles of home rule and local self-government as "foun- dation stones upon which our freedom rests." Horace Wilkinson of Blrm- ,nbam, one of the Alabama *etors who Toted for States' sugater J. Strom Thurmond ia 1MB. objected that the re- ^ta wealed an attempt to "deedoriae" President Tro- man Instead ef get rid of him. Wilkinson proposed that a paragraph be included that Alabama electors would be pledged to vote against Mr. Truman if he were nominated but his idea was beaten down after Hobbs said "we're not ready for anything like that yet." "None In the group backing 'hU solution really behoves that Alabama's attitude should be any different than in 1048" Hobbs said. However, he added, at present as- exer- "we are exercising the right of our fore-fathers for free sembly and the right to else our opinion." Hobbs cited the efforts of former Rep. Vito Marcantonlo of New York who was backed by 300,000 popular votes but no electoral votes in his opposition to major legislation in Con- gress. By contrast, he said ."the South has a total of 127 elec- toral votes with which It can do much more." Hobbs said that his group,is making no effort to form a splinter party and Bruce Hen- derson, one of the authors of the resolution, explained the, alms further: "We are trying to lay down broad basic- principles for a movement toward constitutional fovernment. We want to lav a ramework we can adhere to and have drawn up and passed a resolution toward that end." He added that the movement has not even reached the or- ganizational stage as yet and first must attain unity among those "who believe in constitu- tional government." "The Truman program is Just one of the obataotaftn the path of constitutional government," Henderson added. "We realizo though, that it Is a major one." Tennessee had two represen- tatives at the meeting, Missis- sippi nine. Louisiana two and Florida one. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, ISM THE SUNDAT AMERICAN PAGE SEVEN Betty Singing, Dancirtg at Balboa, heading "Meet Me After the Show With Betty arable, America's favorite msica! star, leading the entertainment parade, Twen- tieth Century-Fox's Technicolor musical romance "Meet Me After the Snow" now showing at the Balboa Thealie. Co-starring Macdonald Carey and produced by the veteran showman George Jessel, the film is the story ot a Broadway musi- cal comepy siar and her pro- ducer-director husband who rock the Great White Way and the city o Miami with a host of hil- arious romantic complications. Following such notable suc- cesses as "My Blue Heaven" and "Call Me Mlsiei." luaclou Betty returns to p.'ay the talented Broadway star. Jessel has sur- rounded her with a lilting new musical score by Leo Robtn and Jule etyne including such de- stined hite as "A Daytime in Maytime," "It's a Hot Night in Alaska," ".No Talent Joe," "Let Oo of My Heart" and the title song. In addition, Betty U team- ed with the fast stepping dance duo of Steve Xondos and Jerry Brandow end ravorts with Owy- neth Verdn, the Jaek Cole dan- cer who won acclaim In "On the Riviera." Macdonald Carey, appearing in ,hl first musical production since be plavod with Gertrude Lawrence in the stage version of "Lady in the Dark," U the lov- ing husbana who can't keep his yes from roving, even though it's Betty. Featured In top supporting roles are rugned Rory Calhoun, the handsome he-man who gain- ed prominence in "I'd Climb the Highest Mountain," and Eddie Albert, who generated gobs of laughter as the coUegebred en- sign In "You'r in the Navy Now'' Others In the cast are' Fred WALT DISNEY FAMILY IN VENICE on the Grand Canal. Following world premiere of "Alice In Wonderland" In London, the Disney visited Italy where Walt was highly honored. His "Nature's Hall Acre" war. awarded the "Lion of St. Mack" at the Venice Film Festival, and as a gesture of welcome, every theatre In the cltv of canals nl"ed ,""* i-nv-. "w-rc shows Mr. and Mrs. Disney with daughters Diane and Sharon. it' JAPAN'S HIOHEST FILM AWARD, the Elga Sekal-Sha placque. Is presented to jBamuel Qoldwyn for his RKO Radio release "The Secret Life of Walter Mltty," adjudge the most popular and entertaining foreign film shown In Japan during 1951. Presentation was mad by M. Nagato, Industry leader here shown being greeted by Robert Keith and Dorothy MoGulre, stare of Ooldwyn'a forthcoming RKO release, "I Want You." HOW TO KEEP FRESH AND COMFORTABLE nRnuTiummn< !..... a Ar **#-* *H**u *as w^w, m MMi O p. kwn MI.MIXHNMH S> M ClJTiCURA TAICUM * Clark, Lois Andrews, and Irene Ryan. Richard Sale directed the film as well as collaborating on the screen play with Mary Loos sug- gested by a storv by Erna La- zarus and W. Scott Darling. Fury of El Alamein Recreated On Sel For 'Desert Fox' Veteran director Henry Hath- away, during his 30 years as an Important film-maker, has brought to the screen many spectacular and memorable mo- ments from history. In the mid- dle thirties, he recreated the famous charge of the Bengal Lancers as they fought the In- dian revolutionists. A few years later, he retraced the tedious jo*mey of Brigham Young, the Mormon pioneer, aa he led his people across the vast frontier to the Great Salt Lake. More re- cently, in "The Black Rose," he made is possible for movie audi- ences to see the Mongol armies of Kublal Khan as they wrought havoc on Cathay and the gran- deur of ancient China. Now, at the age of SI, Hath- away has completed probably his most difficult assignment, that of recreating the battle of El Alameln for Twentieth Cen- tury-Fox's "The Desert Fox," the dramatic story of Field Mar- shal Erwin Rommel which opens n'ext Saturday in the Balboa Theater. Faced with the task of bring- ing contemporary history to Ufe. Hathaway agreed with Produ- cer-Writer Nunnally Johnson that every detail would have to be considered in showlne the bat- tle that stopped the Afrtka Korp* and is. agreed upon by military authorities to be the turning point of World War H In Europe. The director set up his loca- tion site on the California desert at Borrego Springs. He Instituted an airplane shuttle service to ferry his actors In and out of the burning desert in order to gain complete mobility for so vast a project. With his cast all set, headed by James Mason as Rommel, Hathaway proceeded to direct the greatest local movement of military equipment since the late General George Patton con- ducted deeert maneuvers in the same locale. Ironically, it was Patton's army which was in- strumental in eventually driving Rommel out of North Africa. 'Fourteen Hours' Due At Lux Theater. Soon Filmtown Shoptalk sffoicV! By BEN COOK HOLLYWOOD. (UP) Kirk Douglas will take his "wide open spaces" in the comfortable eon- fines of a Hollywood sound stage from now on, if he has hi way. The husky leading man -Just got back from a two-month lo- cation trip to the Jackson Hole country of Wyoming for filming o "The Big Sky." He still Is per- forming the role of a Kentucky frontiersman for the Winchester Pictures production, but with a difference. "Feel that wind sighing through the pines?" he asked on the RKO Studio sound stage, now trans- formed Into a wilderness. "It's heated. Peel that water by the river bank. It's heated, too. When It comes to the wide open spaces, I'm taking mine Indoors and thermostatically controlled for awhile." Douglas found the going rough on location. He lived In an im- provised camp with 105 studio technicians and 100 Crow Indians at the foot of the Grand Teton Mountains, an area.noted for Its high altitude and low tempera- tures. ......Rough Oolng........ For six weeks he worked waist- deep in water, slogged through forests and marshes, helped ma- neuver a 10th-century keel boat up the treacherous Snake River and came to grips with heavy weather of every description. He gained a new respect for the men who won the west. "Those old-timers must have been made of iron," he said. "Af- ter a few days of that punish- ment and sleeping in a canvas shelter under three blankets- two of wool and one of frost I was ready to toss In the towel," The work lastill hard In Holly- wood, but Che conditions are more to Douglas' liking. The 61- foot kaelboat float* on an Indoor river. Giant wind machines blow pleasant breeses through a ptoe- and-aspen forest pog machines create river mist without chill- ing the actors to the marrow. AT THE ROOF OF A SKYSCRAPER, at the edge Of his world, man heard the cry of the crowd as they stood froaen In suspense. That's the theme of "Fourteen Houre" starring Paul Douglas, Richard Basehart. Barbara Bel Geddes and Debra Paget. It's the JOth-Century-Fox film "Life" Magaslne feat- ured on its cover, "Coronet' called "a gripping story with all the tense reality of life and death; and "Variety" termed "a bang up Job well done," It's coming Thursday to the Lux Theater. IN HOLLYWOOD BY ERSKIKE JOHNSON NBA Staff Correspondent HOLLYWOOD (NEA)Movies Without Popcorn: It's a hot, sweltering day In Hollywood, but it's as cold as a movie producer's heart when his top star asks for permission to do a TV show. It's the set-of "Fixed Bayonets" at Fox. Ice machines spew real snow to simulate winter on the Korean bsttlefront and the actors shiver In their white combat uniforms. As far as the eye can mo on the mammoth sound stage, plaster mountains rise to meet painted backdrops. Suddenly Director Sammy Ful- ler i pets a flaw la the scenery. Camera crew, actors, extras, electricians and special effects men stop' working to watch a studio painter ascend one of the prop mountains and meticulous- ly touch up a peak with a brush dipped In white wash. "The mountain is now, made up." roars Fuller. "On with the battle." It's Bob Hope's old west the old west you'd expect if Cecil B- DeMllle, Kathleen Wlnsor and the Aka Khan's Interior decorat- or put their noggins together on he swt of "Son et Palefgce." There's Jane Russell strolling around ia Mack an! green tight, a saloon set that's as opulent as Mae West's boudoir, leggy chorus girls and fancy spittoons. Gloria 8wanaon is queening It as though a quarter of a century hadn't passed in the Edward Al- person-MUton Bren production of "Three for Bedroom C" on the Republic lot. The interior of a Union Pacific streamlined, train has been, as- sembled on the sound stage and Gloria Is emoting with Fred. Clark and newcomer James War- ren in a compartment. The publicity man guides me to the wardrobe department to see the duds that Gloria has whipped up.for herself, rve no doubt that women will'swoon over Gloria's glad rags, but my eyes stay glued to a dressmaker's dummy. On It is lettered: "Gloria Swanson1951 Model.'1 oOo Francis, the braver frith, the most glamorous ears since Clark Gable flashed across the screen,. Is the center of attention on UI's courtroom set for "Francis Covers the Big Town." Director Arthur Lubin patient- ly direct the hee-haw. star m a scene with Donald O'Connor and Yvette Dugay. I nota that a radio- actor named Kd Mas is reading the (fiiloi that' win Issue from the mule's mouth snd I ask-hat has happened to Chill WillS.Hhe real voice of Francis. "Oh. he's in his1 dressing room renting," the area man explains. "Ed Max's voice is the stand-in for Chill Wills' Tolce." [Panama Canal Gluohouses Showing Today DIABLO HEIGHTS l.M 1:15 8:M e Bop hope Marilyn MAXWELL The Lemon Drop Kid' coco/./ a :i* tr O Jant POWELL Vlr DAMONE Rich, Young and Pretty"! Technicolor I PEDRO MIGUEL 7:*S P.M. Gctrf MONTGOMEHY Audrey LONG "Th Sword of Montecrisro" ilor) TBETTY" GAMBOA tie Cary GRANT a Jtaan* CHAIN irtOPLE WILL TALK" Francis Goes To The Races' Due At Bella Vista Playhouse Thursday New laurels were won by Francis when the talking mule comedy star was voted "the most outstanding animal actor of 150" at a spectacular ceremony held early this year at the Cart- hay Circle Theatre In Hollywood. The event, the first in the hls,- tory of Hollywood, was sponsor- ed by the American Humane As- sociation. FrsncU, now starring with Donald O'Connor and Piper Lau- rie to Universal-International's "Francis Ooes to the Races," opening Thursday at the Bella vista Theatre, was presented with a "Patsy." the animal equiv- alent of the "Oscar," for his out- standing performance In "Fran- ela," released last year. Ronald Reagan, president of the Screen Actor Guild, served as master of ceremonies at the Kresentatlons and was assisted V Diana Lynn. Chill Wills. Jim- my Stewart, William Demarest and other top name stars. Chill Wills, the voice of Fran- cis, accepted the trophy for the four-legged winner. The American Humane Asso- ciation announced that the "PATSY" Awards will become an annual event in Hollywood. Runner-ups to Francis includ- ed Columbia Studio's golden Palomino, "California," "Lassis," "Flame," "Black Diamond." "Jackie." the lion which,fought Vletor Mature in "Samson and Delilah" and a falling horse named "Jerry Brown." Francis, in addition to being voted "the outstanding animal star of 1950,'' is also considered one of the most popular "actors" at his home studio. Universal- International. Arthur Lubin, who directed both of the "Francis" comedies, chiematographer Irving Glass- berg and animal supervisor Jim- my Phillips, all claim that the mule comedy star is one of the most cooperative performers in films today. "Francis Goes to the Races" features Jesse White and Cecil Kellaway. Leonard Goldstein oroduced and Arthur Lubin dir- scted. On The Records B A L B O Aj.M^r.^. 1 O CWTLJIY-K>X 1ST! TM1 THAI AND MAC! FOI AMIIrCAt Me) MUSICAL DAT! I rr Wtv [ABI ty ..US e&sttst. W.11H. aa* t* M mm tw ALSO SHOW MOKDAYI GATUN tM.TM KiTj^iio9rGSSSSYv MARGARITA l:M S:IS Ult :Eslo PINZA Jinn LEIGH 'Strictly Dishonorable' Miirll "I '*** Pasean CRISTOBAL l^rr-CaMMiaaM t:M, :, |:. e Jen? Linra "THAT'S MY IOY* Gene Autry is in early with four entries in the Chrigfana record sweepstakes; my- five- year-old daughter liked" best ''He'll Be Coming Down the Chimney Like He Always Did Be- fore." The others ar "Peppy the Fuppy, "The Three Little Dwarfs." and "Thirty-Two Feet Right Little Tails" (Columbia). A new number by hit compos- er Charles Grean, "Meenderin'." ought to find Its way up onto the hit lis* with Jhe assist of sing- ing by' Vaughn Monroe. It is back by, "They Call The Wind Maria" from the new musical "Paint Your Wagon" (RCA Vic- tor ... Ray Noble also has a pair with a. strong; beat In "Loretta" and "I Want to Be Near You" (RCA Victor*... ;. Louis Jordan sings with his, band on "Please Don't Leave Me" and "Three Banded Wo- man" (Deoea). The Four Knights harmonise well on "It's No Sin" and "The Glory of Love" (Cap- itn... Bos Bberly and-Helen O'Oonnell revive "In a Little Spanish Town" (Capitol)... Singer Monica Lewis changes pace from a Letm-aayle "La Bo- ta" n- one side of htr newest record to the ballad-"A Kiss to Build a Dream On" on the other both from the M-Q-M film "The Strip" (1I-0-). __ Davie* c. Whitney. Joan Just "Jone" To Her Young Son ' Probably 10,000,000 people ean sped her name correctly, but Joan Crawford's 8-year-old son Christopher refuses to spell his mother s name any other way than J-O-N-B, Actress received dally postcards from Christopher while he was at boy's camp this summer, and on each one he wrote to "Miss Jone Crawford." 'Tve corrected hint hundreds of times," sairi the star on the set of her cujrent Warner Bros, film, "This Woman I Danger- ous." "but he insists that he likes hlsf version better. What ean I do?" Star Beats Bongo, Then Terps Mom bo Oena Neison may not be able to give.out with a number on the piano or violto, but he can serve a sexy patter of rhythmic beats on the Bongo drums. Star learned to play this parti- cular type of arum no easy task, either for the Mambo sequence in Warner Bros.' Tech- nicolor musics1, "Painting The Clouds With Sunshine." When not Denting the Bongo drum. Nelson ill be teem giving his flashy teipaichorean Inter- pretation ef the Cuban daftce. BALBOA SOON CainSL MASON FRANCIS, THE TALKING MULE, gets Inside information, from race horses snd passe. the winners on to Donald O'Con- nor In Universal-International's hilarious new comedy, "Francis Ooes to the Races," also starring Piper Laurie. Donald and Francis are shown above cheering home a winner. "Francis Ooes to the Races" was directed by Arthur Lubin and produced by Leonard Goldstein. Cecil Kellaways and Jesse White head the comedy's large supporting cut. It's due at Bella Vista Thurday. Tribal Dance Scalped For Film Two Navajo Indian dancers are being brought from Gallup, Near Mexico, oy Warner Bros, for the Technicolor musical "About Face" but they won't appear In the picture Indians wl'l perform, a tribal war dance io<- dance director La- Rep Prina so that the dance can later be burlesqued for a se- quence to the military school musical Redmen dancers are Chief Korsepool and Bill Yellowmoon. Slim. Trim Morgn Dennis Morgan Is tired of be- ing pestered about his new slim- ness on the set of "This Woman Is Dangerous"' at Warner Bro. 'Everybody keeps asking me how I lost poundage as though I had some seeret formula." the star said. Slow Boat Due For Cary Grants To Euro;c oy freighter is the travel program ahead for Cary Grant and Bets, Drake, the stars this week revealed on the ?et. of Warner Bros.' "Room For one More." "In all. thie will give us six wonderful weeks on the water, coming and going, and that means a rea' holiday of rest," * said Grant. Once the Grants dock at Le- Havre, they'll make the Soutl. ef France their base. They don't plan to sali before next Spring. No 'Rirhmericr* Read and Wright are the last names of the two Marine officers who are actlni-, as technical ad- visors on "Retreat. Hell!!'' being produced bv Milton Sperling for Warner Bros, release. I I : les & Pastimes 1 '"................ - . ..... ., :;-:-: . / A w / I * / \4> l> HOW MANY DOMINO POINTS CAN BE SCORED? ! AUTUMN brings the time * hen many devotees of golf must put away their irons and drivers and putters for the season and enjoy the game indoors; that is, talking about it around the "19th hole." However, there is another way to enjoy some of the excitement of golf indoors. You do not have to belong to a club to play it. Here [above] is a course all ready for you; it has four links. Your pencil is your driver and putter. Cross-Figures "Tee Off" at the spot so marked on each link and try to get around each one, avoiding all the hazard and traps, in as low a score as possible. When you - come to a dead end, you lose one stroke and have to start anew. If you land in a lake vr trap you lose two strokes. Play all four links and see which one permita your smallest score. WHO STOLE IT? Am the departure of their six guests, Mr. and * Mrs. Rowan. Mr. and Mrs. Iron. Mr. and Mrs. Brown, the Gotta discovered 'that a prized jade statuette waa missing from its place in the hallway. From the following fact can you discover which of the guesta waa the kleptomaniac that carried It off? (1.) Mr. Brown, a cripple, bad arrived alona early in the evening. (2.) Whan Mrs. Iron waa Introduced to Mr. Rowan, she commented on the excellenca of the statuette's colorn;. (3.) Ths thief spouse lost 820 at gin rummy during the evening. (4.) Mrs. Rowan and one of the other women did not play rummy. (5.) Mr. Rowan had beaten the thief the previous day at tennis. (6.) Mr. Brown gave to his wife all the money he had won at rummy so that she could pay up her losses. noa -un nami iiur (c> jim in loo ., .q. o. - A|d ioo pinoo otddiJO IBSSSfS final loo om uOm 'jr -(e) llinl ioo ii omojb -UH on (ti oo pnqroo i.oMoja -ill -';;) onmiMiin ti aoi 'jw po (> oon tun m tiia iou PIP oqa nona cno oqi o*qi (> oi Soipjoo poxiitf un unm oatta -ua loi pmraiem i luov in :.|j.|.g CRYPTIC REMARK Is a famous remark attributed to' Mark Twain actually made by Twain's friend. Charles Dudley Warner, that Is appropriate any season of the year. To read it, decipher the crypt below: LNLGXODSX IRAPH RODKI [ML ZUUMIO, OKI CDODSX 8DLH RCXMYCJ RODKI TI. The last word provides a leading clue to the identity of two letters. What two-letter word is most likely to be found at the end of a sentence? rwt i 'urtjnon pjonjvn tn i HLnr&\ o "D "> luo)|p> n moj .,-ji moq Sonata nop ipoooo wo Maima woo f,.i ipiaoui.. :a.|M|f>s LOCATE ANOTHER lillllllr'^^^Trr^l^ see e see 4 . e see e THERJC 1 Twain e a....... a see* * - .a. ,. ae... ...,.,.,. eaaa.eeea # a '-'? a*' i a sssa.saaa.aeaa a a a a aae.eaa.a.ae...... a.a.............. ?aa........-####### **...... a a . . , saa....,...#### sea............... *> aa m a a ' a . e> a a a aoaaaaea aaaasa i aaaeee.J ..aa...e*a. aeeeaeee. ,,., ##.### # a a a a a> a,a a a a a a a a a a>a a-a ' a.........,##. '........ e.e.e.. . *....... , a....,..a##,# a.aa...,#,..# e......a.....#-- ^f-a a a aaa a aaa a a am aee.e.,,., e.s.ae........ *i|Ml*M4IMlMM,V(|jI| a.....ae.......' a 0 M See* 1 a 12 e II e-M el* .14 a- II r a see a e e e e e e II a m a *.................... ......*......... .... J ... . ... a i ii e i. . . *tc di taH i j k i^uirtri t i T U V W K V f JC By Jessie R. Smith ACROSS 1. "The Spirit of ," and the number of musicians In the pic- ture. . 4. How many bones in your skull, Bonehead? 6. Riddle: Twelve hare hanging high, Twelve men passing by; If each took a hare How many were left hang- ing there? 7. How many days in Feb.. 1952? 8. The word "Dionne" suggests what number? 9. If a soldier marched all day long at the rate of 114 miles an hour, how many feet would he move? 10. How many muscles are at- tached to a trombone? IL Name of a creeping vine la the Roman numeral for what number? 12. The man who said that he had too much upholstery around the middle would make you think of which number: 14, 31, 54? 14. The picture of the White House is on U. S. paper money of what denomination only? 16. " could save him so he died as every must, too." ' 17. The draft age has been raised to years and months. DOWN 1. Number of letters In capital of State In which you would find Grand Coulee Dam. 2. The area of a square is 122. What is the area of a square formed by connecting Its mid points? 8. This rhymes with -dirty pun." 4. Awakening a patient give him sleeping pills, is carrying medical science far. 5. Write down 189. Reverse the digits. Turn your numbers up- side down. Multiply It by 4 and add 200. 8. An even chance. 18. If a knapsack is a sleeping bag write 31; if not, write 41. 14. Alimony: When people make a mistake and continue to pay for It 15. "Why was all of the food left on the table?" inquired the cook What was the waiter' reply ? 18. How many different num- bers can you make from the Ba- ures 8 and 9? THE DOPEY AT mi By Samuel Vaughan OHNNY XYLE waa very dead on the floor of his dingy walk-up flat. His sobbing girl friend, Delores. had wilted into a chair and buried her face in a handkerchief to avoid the searching eyes of Inspector Anderson. The Inspector rasped: "Xyle was a dope peddler, small time, but still a disgrace to civilization. Murder Is always unpleasant but in this case, there's little lost. Persona who sell dope deserve capital punishment." Delores sobbed. . but I loved him . ." "How long had you know Xyle?" the Inspector asked About three weeks, she told him. "Repeat your story for the police stenographer here," the Inspector said. "I've told you. I waa In the other room. Johnny told me to wait In there. He was supposed to sell some marijuana to a guy. Didn't tell me his name I never even got a look at the guy. There waa some loud talking and I beard them lighting. Then there was a shot The addict must have run out immediately without even taking the injection he came for. He left his hypodermic, as you can see Then, in a lower voice, she added: 'Sometimes, when a fellow really got hooked by the stuff, couldn't .?TVVlth0Ut marlJuan- Johnny would up the price." "That's nice," Anderson said sarcastically I know it's not nice!" the girl shouted'at him hysterically. "But that was Johnny's business " The Inspector looked at the atenographer. "Got that?" he asked. He nodded. P "Okay. Delores. get your tings. You lied. That ' makes me think there was no addict and nobody ran away. Come along." y What lie did Anderson spot In Delores* story? -oux Ma p.^STtiS gggg -".aggfrt*j*m -M.U. ..m SS o, n^pp.^a^n%\'noSDoo,'o*S trs A TOTH animal will appear in the picture If you connect the dots -. .eon*ct ordw "r,th continuous Una Junior readers ara la. >** to try U. It can then be colored with crayons. A Picture You Can Draw ILLUSTRATION for a popular Mother Goose Nur- sery rhyme appears magically from beneath your pencil through this easy-to-do drawing lesson. Note that the vertical and horizontal rowa of the dots are identified by letters and numbers. Simply draw Unas from dot to dot in accordance with the keys (ivan^balow. A Indicates the start of a new lina Start at 1-B, draw to 2-C, 2-B, 4-A, o-A. 7-C 7-D, 8-K. U-D. 3-D. 1 7-D, 0-C. 11-A, 11-D. '1 8-H, 7-G, 8-F, X2-D. 14-A, 14-H. U-H. 1 l-B. t-D, 1-B. 2-E, 3-r. -*T. W. 10-K. 9-L. 12-K. 13-J. 12-J. 1-G. 17-C. 17-A, I4-D. 1 3-D to 4-C, 4-D. 3-D. | 1-1, l-H, 3-G, 2-J, 3-J, 3-1. 3-1. 1 B-L 2-K. -L. 1-N. 2-0. 4-P. I 4-4 to 6-K. 1 3-K to 4-L 1 1-L to 8-L. 1 3-M. 1-M 2-N. -P. 6-N. 7-M. 9-M. ll-O. 13-N. 15-N. | -P. 4-P. 6-Q 5-R, 24-R. 1 7-P to 8-0, 8-P to 7-P. I 1-Q to 4-T. 1 1-R to 4-U. 12-Q to 2-T. 13-R to 3-U. 13-X. 4-X, 4-, 8-. 3-V. ft-W.-C-Z. 6-Z. -T. 6-Y. 111-0, 1I-N. 12-L 13-N. 1 17:G 19-R 22-B, 25-C. I 20-C. 18-E, 19-E. 20-C 1 21-C. 21-F. 22-F. 21^D. 1 22-C. 24-E. 26-B, 22-C. 1 9-R to 11-Q to 28-Q 1 14-Q. 14-0, 18-J, 18-L. 18-Q. | 24-N to 26-M. 28-N I 29-D. 26-A. 26-C. 23-A. 29-G. 29-H. 32-J. 30-J. 3-J 39-D. 40-. 39-C. 40-B. 40-A. 39-B. J8-A. 3-A. 30-B S5-D. 31-D. 28-B, 30-E. 33-G. 3B-G 36-F. 1 37-B to 37-C. 37-C. 37-B 1 20-Q. 21-O. 20-N 19-N. 20-M. 19-K. 20-L. 20-J. 22-1, 24-J. 2B-L 24-N 2fl-P. | 21-L 22-L. 22-K. 21-L. Start at 2-0. -U. 9,-W, 14.X. | 25-Q. 39.M, 34-L, 8S-N. 31-N, 330, 29-Q. 30-Q. 33-P. 87-N. 40-L. 88-J. 88-L 34-K, 31-J. 29-J. 28-1, 29-G. 1 33-J to 84-K. 1 2ft-R to 28-R. 1 30-R. 3o-P 40-M, 40-L. 1 39-N to 38-P. | 32-6 to 34-S. 1 29-T 23-Q. 28-8. 22-T. 28-U. 28-X 31-2, 34-2, 86-Y. 37-U, 39-S. 40-a 39-R 40-Q. 89-Q. 38-P. 36-P, SB-0, 83-T. 184-V. 82-8, 28-P. 28-R. 30-V. 32-W.i 137-Q 37-R, 38-Q. 87-a 1 38-Y. 88-X, 89-V. SsVZ. 40-Z. 40-Y.39-Y. 137-Lto38-M. 137-K to nut The completed picture is an Illustration for -aing a song of six penca" Color It appropriately. vocdBOIary builder QU Z CROSSWORD By Eugene Sheffer -Ws^sssF THOUGH no longer as popular 1 as It used to be when every parlor had a set of the "stones" for family pleasure, dominoes offer as Interesting a pastime as ever. 4 You do not need to know the 7 One points of the game or to have an opponent to enjoy solving an old domino puzzle of Sam Loyd. What is the greatest possible number of points that can be acorad by both players In th regular gams of dominoes where- in the two ends are counted whenever thay add up Ove. ten. Of teen or twenty? I For the benefit of puzzlist who may not have a set of dominoes conveniently at" hand, the sketch ahows a complete set of twenty- eight stones, which may be util- ized to solve the puzzle. Just figuratively lay them down one at a time and count both ends whenever they add up B. 10. IB or 20. and see how much you cap make The history of dominoes Is traced back to two monk who were committed to lengthy se- clusion. They contrived to horten their confinement without breaking the/ rules of Hence which had been Imposed upon them, by building up magic squares with small s flat stones, upon which they had black dot Ilka "dice." The amusement grad- ually advanced into a species of s game of skill, and by a precon- certed arrangement between th players the winner would inform the other of his victory by re- peating In an undertone the first line of the vesper prayer. In the process of me the two monk so far completed the set of stones as to represent every pos- sible combination of two figures from double blank to double alx and perfected the rules. It soon spread from town to town and became popular throughout Italy, and the first line of the vespers was reduced to ths Ingle word Domino. M n* noiod puposa oa latffsJt^P WITS TESTER VV/HAT number diminished by "* 4 3/6 leaves 21? Can you answer correctly within 30 sec- onds? OHI-WJin Nl .A0-*!U**U 0||.io For Fishermen THERE art three boat on a. * lake fishing for wslleyed pike, for large-mouthed basa, and for perch. . The men in the Pinta and the Santa Maria are using minnow for bait. The Santa Maria is an- chored. The men in the Nina are basting. They have an out- board motor on the Pinta and are trolling. The fisherman la the Nina are fighting a terrific battle with a fish. You have to know something about fish to figure out from this which boatman are fishing for each kind of fish. Do you? ejajta turn iu.p It's. Your Move By Eugene Sheffer HORIZONTAL L5%B Sity dld Ju Per- form his first miracle? (John 5Whp followed Abijam a Una of Judah? (i KL 15:8) .;or' l0, tne "inter is ___ 9A&T' Md gone'' 12Commotions. 13River islands. 14~^ho was Bath-sheba's first ,, husband? (2 Sam. 11:26) i&One of the believers and bis household to whom Paul sent greetings (Rom 16:11) 18In what plains did the Lord appear to Abraham to foretell ^destruction of Sodom? 19Bitter vetch. 20In what plain did Nebuchad- gggrjw "P a golden image? 22Greek letter. 23"Nevertheless not my will, but 26-Po7Lbe dn?" tel hot be burned?'' i o-i -ai n- -t wz tz~ Itt I :uoo -Mi-u >_,, _; ta -i 'rzt CSII :wojjv -%A*mtmy osov 1-1 I 27-With what did on. of the ser- aphims in Isaiah's vision touch nia Up? (Isa 6:6) 28~"A S*1?, to i nd a time to sew" (Ecci |:7\ ura* M -Ti?*u,tMitn. "n"1 nr. Woman what have I to do with thee? l~SSh ve*sel * refuge 33Pouch. 34Annoys pettily. 36-Whom did Deborah serve as . n.ureeT ,Gen :> 41An herb. 42Personality. 43"Except the Lord -------- the house, they labour in vain 46-& " OT:" 47-"Th. gjn nan tka mm by tn . and th. robber shall prevail against him" (Job 48Whst daughter of Phanuel 4^5ss^oropErtsss? iLuk 2:36) "-J0 whst did Asnaas suffer curad htm? (Ad 913) ~ VERTICAL 1" one go and his feat (Pr 6:28) 2Feminine nama 8Correlativa of neither. 4-IWh,.,n*1J_.T- tato " nUl m the Lord? or who shall stand in hU holy placa? r-On. who closely examinas. ~ VfJ*^' J? toow tht w. are of tbe truth, and hall SStafciK* be,0P' hto" u JMounUin lion lftZ?SB.-0, J?ber > au- 1**> ~ 'nor- WM th* Ho1' glory la ths Christ Jesus 88 "Unto him be c b u r c b by throughout all ----, world ^ without end" ple: let all the earth keep Am lance before him" (Hab. 210) 41What were Mary and Marthi .. to relation to Lazarus? 48Who was king of the Moabites when the Israelites encamped tathe olslns of Moab? (Num }*Join together. 45Chant 46South American monkey (var.i 47Injured 49French article 50-Edlble green seed. 52 Repair 53Luzon Negrito. 95Girl's nickname. 57'To" him that overcometb will I grant to with me in say throne- (Rev. 811) ", 58Note la Guido seal*. 59In no manner. 60"Bind them continually upon thine heart and their about thy neck" (Pr 6:21) pr Ghost 51Ignited. ff-Come tofeether. 53Air comb in for < KtiNsMoan n zzt.g aoLi'TiuN 4-.&;lst^",omL 56This cup I the new my blood, which is had 61-On. of the desceadsats i 62-8AlS^ormChr ,:2> ^;M7rkl534{"B--bMh-1 64Dispatch 65Establishment (abbr.) 6Soecifled tima. - say that bs should "*f* teth, before be bad seen th Lord1. Christ? (Luke ;;^ete.,,,2nK,t,%1n^,d,,,th, l3-T>.what ^n^*i. <"* Jb iS-MakVweu"7 (*n- 4*:14) I7-Wrath 21-Not In tha scale. ?^li?*1? "> Wd tar him in te ground, sad s-----for him ,. iS tnswsy" (Job 11:10) 24This place 25-Wrltlng fiuld,. vwfz vsffva^ .o re their nouses fuO of deceit us*:*" ,uu "~" r Jsithe wicked no t-Z (Pr a V 1014) *0-*Ya shan find th wwejl la swsidWtlothas, ^^ to a manaer (Luke 88 "Thou than not ----- upon u>S to ** brothar- (Diut ^^ Za:19) ^rr-^ha soa of Pui U:li 86-Knocka 37-p.rt of veis.li fnuaewt Caerrisaa. ism. ai.< -irm.. "|fun. VF/ORK1NG out the problem contributed to this pas; by Milla rd Hopper and other is s good way td> Improve your play in checkers. Ths one diagrammed above provides a good lesson At ths stage of the game dia- grammed, things are fairly even Black has one more king, but if. White's move next and White, moving up ths board, can win.' HowT jl ins Mita SC oa SMSJ.It-at *U9M aoN ti-i oata mm t-Ci wu IF you add one-quarter or the I time from noon till now to halt ths time from, now till noon to. morrow, yoo will have tbe anac time. Can you figure out the time? m -4 xs-Suiai Mm ijtawr I ^ 1 M r ^^ sV 1 -I 1 j ^1 1 1 SBBBJ ' ' aj I' BJSJH fr I JIMI*J*f*fsaMlJP9 ' CHALLENGING PUZZLES AND PASTIMES This'll Stretch Figures To The Limit Name Their Wives MR. DOAKES' fortune shrank away almost to nothing in hi last year, due to taxes and bad Investments. When he died there was just 11,000. He had directed in his will that his estate >e divided among three relatives and their wives, and so it was. The three wives together received $396. Jane got $10 mora -han Catherine, and Mary received $10 more than Jane. John Smith was given just as much as his wife, Henry Samuels got half as much again as his wife, and Tom Carter received twice as much as his wife. What was the Christian name of each man's wife ? oooit noq tin JO| piiuno33 .\n po **(Snoj ttjqi tin PW ntsuoo SSSBJ ut om 'tnn m* no aanu *>! .i i an 'sett inr it-* >im n ml qtnai Jiu itnai*B m uiimg nor ji o maim nun n joj sect tain* 'tnt pa* sets 'ettt i*pjo ai 'p*aiiosj fJtn in *u*r 'teutino iqi Aimieaoo it it :tll*l8 World Series3 Of Baseball Bra in Busters Puzzling Out A Nursery Rhyme IN ONE small Eastern country, camel's hair, which is in demand for export for man- ufacture of rugs, expensive shawls and artists' brushes, is gathered In small quan- tities by what sometimes are called ordinary folk. They sell it to traveling brokers who' dispose of it in larger lots to merchants or exporters. It is the custom for the brokers to operate on a commission basis. That is, upon receiving an order from a merchant to buy camel's----------------------------------------------- hair, they find someone who wishes to sell, and Riolif At Ilmnr charge two per cent commission to each of the #Ms*w ** """ principals, thereby making four per cent on the transaction. ,. Naturally, some are "shady." All, by juggling his scales, managed to add to his profit by cheating. The drawing shows All at work. Upon receiving a consignment of camel's hair he placed it on the short arm of his scales, so as to make the goods weigh one ounce light to the pound. When he came to sell it, he reversed the scales so as to give one ounce to 'the pound. He thus made $26 by cheating. That being the case, can you deduce how much he paid for the goods ? Of course, his transactions were not in dollars. We're using dollars in presenting the puzzle in order to make your calculations simpler. Naturally, camel's hair usually is sold in larger quantities than the picture suggests. 'SDI1MIP X 10 JO BOOO" m POO sts wn| via ni" tq mil oi JSIf l "Uinp n Sauq m q.uq ijici utos ni mi 0"; si nnpoj uno. . 'fliiEocet f we qiios in Aiuivi *| tiutt *:Z * 'MOM *CSt inr oi lanobjo him fSaiitona umi *iq ivqi ot aoud oc'dit oui tdnpu innj im *tai ii|j i tzt iiiimx pai >a mn w uw tin t SuiiBtq.i Xq tiuta "ig ivuomppt ui tpvuj t*u tq ob '8Wt tq Xiao MOJtJtql Pino tunit put SulAnq joj ttutaaia tin c*iei;mi ultq tjvva ppioM 'pur* tq 01 'ii>iqi 'totano i\ 401 i>i'i iAq pint* tq 'ftittaoq i|**p ptu tq ji 'mos' Sini**qo Aa flts 01 uonipp ui tsutaiuq St fujirtal itnaune tqi uiojj ci'M out 0; ct 'untt tai ICJ1 lata t r. pt.UtOtJ tq MIAtMOH \ -tpooS tui 4oj Rf*d tq itqt tq pino* 'uoitijuiujoo jo aoiittnb oa ** tiMji Ji 'uoim" OBitlt ta pin"" 't|oqx tqi jc 'tqiuttuB-uttija OO'ZIt quo. Sana qiottijg-tuo tt >uno 01 mi joj ptSmp pa* tioq* tqi 40] I Hit tq llq* JO *incI/( lUKJdtl tijuno o.l tqi atul 'Sui -ivtqo 0*1 tttqi 11 jfiD t*4un,o o*M P** font "punud 40j ttauvt 1 tA*S' tq luiii 001 touno to* iqSit* Aq wtqi piot tq utqM 'ponod 40j ttoun* 1 i*S tq 'aii 001 tovno tuo iuSim ponod quo poot tqi ptaSita jhoju tqi ji oiiammn tldan aodn ptnq p-Ao^ ui*t uul 'tin tqi imh) * o* 'jta* AMoiotKint oai 01 un X|SaraM 0011 joaojd pa* oiiw jo uatsi* A Quaker once, ice understand, For three ton laid off hi land. And made-three .equal square to meet So a to bound an acre neat. In center of the squares around, A dwelling for each ton xoas found; And in Ae center of the acre* [see above] Woe found the dwelling of the Quaker. Sow can you tell by ikm or art. Hoto far from suns he lived apart T UMsut tqi 'tpo4 s h 40 {ft *n|d )> tt tj*nb* jo 4tioto 01 *ita*fji jo 4t>ato UI04J Bju*iia ipoiiti jo mi jo ', 1 tpn'm 01 tjmDt.'jo jtiuto aiojj aati -tia tpar ' * 40 j f/t *i tpit ill m tisavin I 4*10*0 oioji ttavinp 'ijojMtqj: *po4 t i| tpniins tqi pq* po4 i| n t|Sa|4i OJBM jo ippj tuj, *J9* a Xliolxi lUKiaoj 11 twin '1*04 tjinM oti il t|Saui 10 *4V !Jnt*rf Thil Make You Make A Scene X ' */ A <** o - s, ^ *.^ *~.m * zwv SS22 2 *Z* ~ KB**** ******* X****1: v1<, T .i-.t. ., 1 ... .. .f ,n .., f-t-i 'i 'i t 1 1 1 1 1 -r T- 1 - r r- ' a** I . a 1.^ ,i 1 ,JI IiJ---> ,1 -a, $ .tU I ..L-A.,i,.J---1----l.A.-tf.k---s i. .1 -i a 1 l s- I .1 i i I . 1 n t > 1 t miiiuiiinT u it 30 31 -n n** t% v n n 30 ii m m js u v n w t o YDU ENJOY making a scene through this easy-to-do draw- ing method. If you take a pencil. start at the first key given ant) draw lines according to the suc- ceeding keys, a scene to be found around many homes will appear. When you have completad mak- ing the necessary lines, ootar it appropriately. - Start at intersection 2-B, pro- ceed to 3-A 7-A. 8-B, 7-C, fl-C, 2-B, S-B, BeC, 7-D, 3-D, 1-QtJI-B. Start gain from t-Q to 2->I, -E, 0-P, 9-E. 20-G, aO'Q, IVY. 15-a, 10-P, 1-Q. 6X, 15-Z, 21^. 20-Q. Draw a short line fron'1-S to 2-S. Now begin from 12-K to 18-H, 12-Q. 12-P, 14-Q, 17-Q, 18-P. 18-H. Next start from 26-F, 27-G, 27-K, 26-L, 28-0, 26-L, 24-L, 24-0, ,23-L, 22-L, 21-K. 22-K. 10-H. 23-D. 24-D, afi-F. 27-F, 28-G. 28-K. 27-K. Now 23-J to 24-J, 23-1. 23-J. Start over from 21-B to 20-1$. 1-D. 19-C, 23-D, 27-B, 26-D. 28-E. 26-D, 22-B. 22-A, 27-A. 2S-C. 31-C, 33-E, 32-C, 35-C. 38-H. 38-K. 40-N, 40-P. 37-L. 34-L. 31-J, 28-J Continua from 19-U to 21-V. 22-V. 27-T, $1-V. 32-V. 32-P, 31-0, 32-N. 33-0, 36-0, 34-0. 34-V. 87-X, 3T-W, 38-W, 3-V, 40-V. 40-U. 87-T. 34-U. 34-8, 40-S. Draw a line from fO-S to 32-S Oraw another from 27-N to 37-M Start again from 34-Z to 27-X, 28-W 30-X. SO-Y. 32-V 30-1 3i-y. -x. $a-y. 34-w, 3-y. 37-X. 38-X. 40-Z finally 1-V to, T^KS-W to 4-V. POSSIBLY there's enough of the drawing to en- able you. to guess what nursery rhyme the artist had in mind when, he started drawing Jt In any case, you'll want to complete it and see what's missing. To do so, 'start with ft'pencil at dot one and draw a continuous Una from dot to dot' until you reach 48. Where two numbers are beside a single dot, use It twice. ..'otiiioi iitiii ltoiiAiq *iira rW ttJtu.. !lf"rl TRANSPOSITIONS AS a test of your vocabulary, see how quickly you -can identify the words Indicated by the first definitions below, and than affect the desired trans- positions of the letters to spell out other words. For example, to transposa joined and get separated, you turn "united" into untied. 1. Transpose CAVE and get COWARD. 2. Transpose BRUTAL and get MONEY. 3. Transpose to CONFUSE and get DISPLEASED. 4. Transposa a CHIEF and get a CURRENT. 5. Transpose a LANGUAGE and get an EATING trough. itsmj* -ovmwo o :rt*JiS 'Jtific - fessBsv '4la*4ta C iMSni 'i*uo 1 :o**43 '0Jl0 'X |JS!*J YOU CAN WIN MONEY AS A party Ice-breaker, challenge friends to name the common American coin that has a picture of the President's house, and another common American coin that haa a picture of a .parch. You don't have to be a. fisherman to identify the latter. What are the coins? 11 oodn ill* o* qi|M qniM *'*4U>qt qtiq* totld tt tqi uoiitar lo*p -IM44 jo tatoo 'outtnaon IV ot|u 'tjtid S >U :w**sv WORLD SERIES time naturally makes us think of the Brooklyn Dodgers. It's traditional that whan the Dodgers play baseball, anything can hap- penand often does. On Flag Day, 1981, the Dodgers played a game with the St. Louis Cardinals that was In accordance with this Dodger tradition. A catcher may pick a man off second once a month. In just one inning of this game, the fifth, the Dodger catcher, Campanella, picked two men off second t The first five Cardinals got on base with three hits, a walk, and an error, but none scored! The Cardinals made IB hits and only one run. So don't look askance at these baseball brain busters--they may happen! L How can a team get six consecutive hits in one inning without scoring a run? 2. A batter is facing the pitcher. Under what conditions could ten pitches be thrown to him, with- out putting him out, without walking him, and with- out having him foul off any of the pitches ? 3. The home team la up in the ninth inning with one out, the bases loaded, and the score 4 to 2 against them. The batter hits a grounder to first; the first baseman touches first and throws to sec- ond; the second baseman touches second, then runs to the dugout with the, ball. The runners keep go- ing around the bases. What is the final score ? 4. A batter swings at a strike, and foul tipa it; it hits his shoulder and rolls to the pitcher's box. The pitcher picks up the ball, and throws to first ahead of the batter. Is the batter out when hit, or is he out at first? % What Are The 10 States? k. Mev isatis- by Nash ark (Ark.) Vender I. "Mishtler than the .word" 2. "As feed tt a ails" 3. Ta study diligtntly 4. Fellews "fa.sol- 4. "Chinee"-AMerlean industry f. Self-seeker's in eoneern 8. Miners', yield 9. Letter aifnifying ntught 10. We're this hen ailing ' litvtr, luckty*. Evsrgrsen, Ksystens, Magnolia, Nutaeg. rtlictn. fine Treet Prairie, Velunteer. PROM the clue Unes, 1 to 10. you are asked to figure out the abbreviations for certain states of the Union. A completed example Is In top line A. Try and match their nicknames from the other ten listed under the chart. ti4iuj mi) ni di itxtaonn CO) O ' UiAMfl ( i qi*Mi "qi*Ai -p :4**ian|0A <*uo*xi al c :u*oii*j (**n) *l '? :S*onnN (aoooi aoa t :noaSin mini ni t uoilt I1*M) 0*4 I :lJtlV CR YPTARITHM DIVIDE 80XX by 3, multiply quotient by 7. and get for the answer. XX7X2. Hint: To be divisible by 3, the sum of digits in 50XX must be divisible by 3. therefore X plus X must equal 1, 4. 7. 10. 13. etc. glOS il putpwip tqi pa* f mia g rtnbt id x mid x iwqi 'aran p xioo 81 aioi ttoS c ni pa* f ai pa* i*qi unpojd ttiS in* -aiuo * ttaiii i )*qi SaiMoaa :*o|i*|*s ie vocabulary builder QUIZ CROSSWORD By Bugene tSheffer ACROSS 1What kins ruled over Israel In Samaria for 22 years? (1 Ki- 16:29) 5"I sought the Lord, and he heard me, and delivered me from all my -----" (Ps. 34:4) 10" man will proclaim every one his own goodness: but a faithful man who can And?" (Pr. 20:6) 14What Is the last book of the Bible? 16Oil: comb. form. 17Sharp mountain spur. 18Who was a great man among the Anakims? (Josh. 14:18) 19"The harvest of the earth is -----" (Rev. 14:15> 20Parsonages. 22"But God commendeth his love toward us. in that, while we went ----- sinners. Christ EFiaf,#NHaaH%i-i,nrira r\a\i\imiw:\v.r,>]i'Y'.f\uui\ C')KaiiB%atnr;t-].nnn ?IIWH%HDERp]%FPf PI ^u^^n^inDn^.r.irT-jik-i HiiGi^a-HiiRiiiiiirn 0BBBi?nHEG%BFS P U HUBB'^ClHDPinElF^i'[') DBBC^HCJDRP.^I-Cia ISIMSWUbD PtISILB ftULUTlON died for us" (Rom. 5:8) 23Topaz humming-birds 24What did Moses command to be used as s burnt offering' (Lev 9:2) 26 Surmounter bv climbing. 28-What Is the 18th book of the New Testament? 33"Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all bene- fits" (Pa. 103:2) 34-A-"----- of Moab" (Num. 21:28) 36 Assisted. 37-Fathers. 39"I no pleasant bread" (Dan. 10:3) 40 With what did the soldiers smite Jesus on his h e a d" Mark 15:19) 41French painter. 42Charles Lamb. 43A descendant of Asber (1 Chr. 738) 44"Let us lay asida every weight and the sin which doth so easily - us" (Heh 12:1) 45What did God cause to destroy the earth, with the exception of those in the Ark? (Gen 7:10) 46Symbol tor sodium. 47Prefix: under. 48Government* SORaccoon-like carnvora. S3"My house shall be called the house of prayer; but ye have made It a of thieves' (Mat 81:13) 54Roman garment 55Unit of heavyweight 57In what month was Esther taken into the house of Aha- suerus? (Esta. 2:16) 62Wing-shaped. 63Goddess of discord.' 65Bristles 6"Surely the serpent wlD without enchantment; and a babbler is no batter" iEccI 10:11) 67"I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to " (Mat 8:13) 69Employs. 70Fist-bodied ray. 71-Oriental weight DOWN 1Fifth son of Shem (Gen. 10:22) 2Queen of the gods. 3 "The plain of -----" (Amos 1:5) 4Wagers. INote in the scale. 6Greek letter 7Ethereal. 8"These are they which came oat of great tribulation, and have washed their . and made them white in the blood of the Lamb" (Rev. 7:14) 9Seises hastily 10Ethics. 11From what tree did the dove pluck a leaf to take back to the Ark? (Gen. 8:11) 12Division. 13Pedsl digits 15Looked slyly. 21Msn's nickname. 25-i-Who led the Israelites out ol Egypt? (Ex. 14:31 27Three-toed sloths 28In what wilderness did Ish- mael dweU? (Gen. 21:21) 29 A city In which Bpaphras, s servant of Christ took s great Interest (Cat 4:13) 30Mental concept 31"He was as s sheas to the slaughter" (Acts 8:32) 33What was another name for Simeon, the teacher? (Acts 13:1) 33 Pernees. 38-Classlfled 39Plant of the lily family. 41Arguere. 42Shads tree. 44The -----shsll yield no meal" (Hoe. 8:7) 45"He msketh peace in thy bor- den, and fillets thee with the -----of the wheat" (Ps. 147:14) 47Thorns and are in the way of the froward" (Pr.22:5) 49" wldom. understand- ing, forget it not" (Pr. 4:5> 51 -Marble. 53In what valley did Delilah live? (Judg. 16:4) 54Forbidden (vsr.) 56Genus of palms. 58What did the Greeks do to Sosthanea chief ruler of the synagogue, before the judg- ment seat? (Acts 18:17) 59 Apparatus for heating water. 60Metal plates attached To a cui- rass (var.) Bi-Back of foot 64" your affection on things above, not on things on the earth'1 (Cot 3:2) 68Symbol for neon. 'jailiq tqi pnni n inn pnp tcraotq nq tJ o* 'tioimti inoj o) ti ma i.4tn*q *oj, -jaqjltN t oi 0 tut. oji.il toioq tqi pn woo* titaoiM tttqi uv *p*ss*i l.a**a tq t3U|t 'Puodm oi.floloS Jtucnj tqi m04j ptAOOltJ * iojoj tui 'lug ptataei miittw lun tqi a*qM z -ltq i* un* ii *q pa* 'ipit era oo 4tu*q Saia*ju*i ut to) jnuqiiAA t*|t| oi OMiaj avtq *A*q ttqdiid a*x *atn po* tuqi jo itmot 41010 -n *i*S 4>n*q tat** tqi Suiaai mi m imh oj Sui-Cii Jo ***q jjo iqSn** ntqi I itajnu tnq mx *oji pa* Miqi j lanot joj Matlid tuvs itftoi ttqtlid tqi 'tito ao ana pn mo i mi. *c 'MO* oa ti tttqi i-io lur) qiiM jnq "lia joj nmnu *t*t iiu 4tu*t i**s tqx 'tfitq qi us M|Satt tJtm ojaj, ino ojti joj jjo pupi* t4* pi^i pn puoom ao an *>u iuh iqi lis tusan twmx n :**n*lt YOUR MOVE "I OOK before you lamp" is a '-' good proverb for checker players, if you consider leap synonymous with move. If you look before you move here, you can maks white win in four moves. White is going up the board and move* first. siat m :ntt ot m :ft 8 si-ee m -u tl sa*m -U YOU'RE supposed to be able to answer these in a minute. 1. Tha ages of two brothers. Tom and Tim, total 11 years. Tim was born ten years later than Tom. What ia Tom'a age. 2. Mra. Bouef bought a roast for Sunday dinner. It weighed 4/5 of its weight and 4/5 of a 'pound, so you know it cost a lot at present prices. How much did it weigh? 3. If a yogi stands on his head with his face to tha south, arms stretched out straight, in what direction will his right hand be? nnai t ipooos jneji x titti Jiq pa* sax 1 :*H*1S ENIGMA Firet in mouse, not in rat. Second in dog, not in cat. Third in houi, not in lot. Fourth in cow, not in pot. Fifth in owl, not in hawk. Sixth in flower, not in stalk. A despot's city mm I You'U guess me if you try. ooton 'iiido .aims :nasa*- TRIOGRAMS THIS puszle la not a difficult MATter once you understand how it works. Just complete the words below with the help of tha given definitions. For example, what's a seven-latter word that means "riper"? Since you al- ready know it begins with MAT, It must be MATURER. Try tha rest and see how you make out. MAT.... Riper .MAT... Non- professional ..MAT.. Pair again ...MAT. Bishop ....MAT Slot machine eatery ....MAT Portal rug ...MAT. Weather ..MAT.. Hair oil .MAT... Piecemeal learning MAT.... Afternoon show 'Man*** Mm* 'nnira -od titatii* imuoop 'i**a*tn* 'tittuS u.-iianj 4iui*j* 'aann :*n|t J t-S4> Cepyrigkt. IM1. kltt reatara* Sr*atu. lac. What He Dug Up OSE is excited. His archelogl- csi research has led him to tha grave of a prehistoric animal, a dinosaur perhaps. Ha haa measured the remains. He Onda that tha head Is six feat long, tha tail Is sui long as his head and half his body, or torso, and his body is half ate whole length. How long la Jose's find? tot* tl mSit-iuoj :*ii*w* / r\GF TEN i THE SUNDAY AMERICAN SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1151 Cuddy Says Joe Louis Has Fought For Last Tim Princeton Is Most Explosive Major Team; Bright Leads Ground Gainers NEW YOKK Nov. 2 est figures from the NCAA show that Princeton is the most ex- plosive of inn country's major :ol!cglate looiball teams. The Tigers have clawed out 204 points In live games, or almost 41 per game. Tulsa ranks second witn almost 40 per game. Holy Cross rank:, tnird In the team- scoring dei'oy with an even 39 points per garr"> Loyola of C& lfornia still leads in passing, moving 1.074 yards through the sir in five games. Oklahoma A Hnd M. is second, Colgate third. Cornel fourth and Cincinnati fifth. Even though h broken law kept him out of action on Saturday, the Drake sta- Johnny Bright- leads ground gainers. Bright has gained 1,349 yards in seven games. However, a half dozen players are cir.'ing in on Bright. Don Babers oi Oklahoma A. and M. has .jumped from eighth to second with 1.168 yards. Other contenders for individual honors are Oene Rossi of Cincinnati. Ol- lie Matson of Zeke Bratkow i Klosterman of Loyo)a and Harry Geldien of Wyoming. When it comes to defense, the Bargers fro.n Wisconsin rate the bows. Wisconsin leads the nation defensively by allowing an aver- age of only 161 and six-tenth yards per game. San Francisco Is second best defensively. Then come Denv.r in third place and Wake Forest in fourth. Bob Goode ol the Washington Redskins has limped from eighth place in the rushing Western Horse Seems To Mature Later to second race. Goode yards. Norm Van Erocklin of the Los Angeles Ranis contines to lead pro passers with a 9.29 average on completions. Roocie Bob Cel- en of the New York Yanks is closing in on Van Brocklin. Cel- eri has an b.34 average. Apparently horses are raised in the West a little differently than they are handled in Ken- tucky and Virginia and other horse centers. The tale was told San Francisco, I at Keeneland this month of an of Georgia, Don owner from Wyoming who show- ed up at a race meeting with an eight-year-old non-starter, and put him In a moderately good race. Since an eight-year-old mai- den is hardly a betting attrac- tion, he was off at $135.69, most of his backing coming from the owner. He had his field beaten in one swift quarter-mile, and then galloped In by ten lengths. The stewards naturally scent- ed something, and even though the owner had a good reputation they sent for him. "Is this horse unsound?" one of them asked. Only Three Phillies rom. Dea Is ALL AVAILABLE EXCEPT ASH- BURN, ROBERTS AND ENNIS; CLUB HOPES TO HAVE SIM- MONS RACK BY NEXT TIME (Reprinted from The Sporting News). BY STAN BAUMGARTNER has gained 3231 Casey's '51 Flag Convinced Missus He Should Continue (Reprinted from The Sporting News). BY II AM; HOFFMAN Of the Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES, Calif. Calif- ornia may be a great place for some folks to retire, but not Casey Stengel. Take it from The Boss herselfEdna Stengelthe manager of the New York Yan- kees will be back In baseball big- ger and better than ever in 1952 to try to make it four world's championships in a row. find you. Casey hasn't con- "No, sir," said the owner. "Soundest horse you ever saw. He's got ankles like iron, and there ain't never been a pimple on him." "Well then," asked the stew- ard, "why haven't you raced him before this?" "Well, mister," said the owner sheepishly, "to tell you the truth, we couldn't ketch him till he was seven." movie, autobiographical and TV offersthe Stengels are hoping to escape to South America. "I deserves to rank "as the great- tell Casey we're going to South cst manager of all time.' I America for a rest and I don't "For the last ten years I ve : want t0 walt untli x nave t0 malce urged Casey, even threatened lt ln a wheel chalr_ grinned him. to quit baseball,' she re- j Edna vealed. "He has everything he she" could use a Test In td_ wants and baseball can never aition to fretting Mrs. S. takes bring him the financial satlsfac- care of the Stengels' real estate tion he can realize in other, less J and 0n business, handles all cor- demanding fields. But now I think he owes it to baseball to go on. Baseball needs him more than I do." Casey, who stopped off in Okla- homa on business before return- ing home, was 80 last July, but Mrs. Stengel confessed that the fer: ed with the Yankee officials loll of the pennant race account- ed fcj less gray hairs ln Casey's dome than in hers. "Casey said all along he'd win the hard way, but win," she shook her head ad- miringly. "That man! He's a physical marvel. He'd come home after a hard game, eat a big meal, entertain a gang of people. yet about his future plans, but I feel that he wants to continue in baseball and this is the first time I agree with him." said sparkling-eyed vivacious Mrs. te -el. who preceded her hus- band back to their Glendale hone. "He thinks the Yanks have grert young players coming up ?nd can win again. That he won hi' year with the material he .had convinced me he can do an; 'hing. If Casey wants to go on in baseball I'm all for it. * 0O0 "ARGUED FOR TEN YEARS" , )'rs. Stengel, who is frank to adrilt she "honestly didn't think the Yanks could do lt this year," han't always been ln favor of , Ca; ey's staying in baseball. But his achievement in bringing the 'Yanks home with only one .300 hitter and no 100 RBI man has con kiced the missus that Casey respondence and finances and files back for conferences with her brother, Glendale Council- man John Lawson, who han- dles the family real estate busi- ness. YANK MAGIC* ITS CASEY S!'.e has kept ln the back- ground where baseball Is con- cerned, but baseball men know that Casey makes few vital de- cisions without her. And she has her own definition of that "Yan- kee magic." "There's no magic connected with the Yankees, un- PHILADELPHIA. Pa. Robert R. M. Carpenter, president of the Phillies, and his aides have been busy since the World's Series working on the details of the farm system promoting some players, demoting others, shuf- fling men about on the vast board to prepare for the 1952 season. When an organization has be- tween 300 and 350 men jumping from one team to another, as well as hopping in and out of the service, lt takes a lot of book- work to keep things in order. As a result, such Important things as (1) the signing of Ed- die Sawyer. (2) the second-base situation. (3) first base. (4) the catching department. (5) pitch- ing and (6) trades, all have been tabled for the moment. However, lt is expected that Carpenter will go Into a huddle with his manager soon .and talk things over. Sawyer will be reap- pointed and possibly for two or more years. Once the pilot Is signed, he and the president will go Into the business of trades. Various swaps that will bring Earl Torgeson or Ted Kluszewskl, Johnny Wy- rostek, Duke Snider and others to the team have been mention- ed. They have also been discus- sed with the other clubs. During the World's Series, there was a lot of trade talk among the own- ers, but nothing definite was started. "We havent anything on the fire at the moment," said Car- penter, "out we are willing to make any deals worth while." go to bed and be snoring in ten i less it's the spark provided by minutes." As to rumors that Ol' Case will receive a $25,000 bonus to bring hi3 1951 salary to around $85,000, Mrs. Stengel was noncommital. "Casey's contract has another year to run. Any adjustment* he makes with the Yankees regard- ing salary is something I'm not at liberty to comment on," she said. "I know he'd have to have one person at the right moment," she affirmed. "For the last three years the real magic has been Santa Cruz Sports By GILBERTO THORNE Santa Cruz' Table Tennis Eli- mination Tournament got under way on Wednesday, Oct. 24. The Casey's managerial touch. I'm 1 students are very enthusiastic not going to be modest about how I nd willingly put out their best I feel because I think Casey's 'forts to insure the qualification achievement this year was his I RfJJ *"* ?lave, ""ESE* greatest ln the 27 years- we've th'Ir fcncol in the nan I schools' tournament on Nov. 17. Results of the games already been married. Mrs. Stengel also put the Id- i, bosh on "feud" rumors between ptaS!E Any one of the Phillies, except Richie Ashburn, Robin Roberts and Del Ennis, is available for deals. Second base remains a prob- lem. Carpenter hopes to make a deal for a veteran keystone guardian. He doesn't feel that Dick Young, brought up from Schenectady late in 1951,1s ready for a major league job. The "p-*ster, he believes, should go out for a year to learn the fine points of playing second base. Much of his minor league career has been spent at third. If Ralph Could Hit Only .264 Many of the officials still have hopes that Ralph Caballero will fill the bill at second. There Is no better fielding second sacker ln the National League. If he could bat only .260, he would be the answer. Shortstop, with Gran Hamner, Is in good hands. The only prob- lem with Third Baseman Willie Jones Is to get him to hit in July as he does in June and Sept- ember. If the big North Caro- linian could solve his mid-sum- mer slump, he would bat over .300 every year. First base is a question mark. Judging by their actions, neith- er Ed Waltkus nor Eddie Saw- yer Is happy ln the present set- up. For this reason, Carpenter Is angling for an Initial sacker. Torgeson Is expected to be avail- able because the Boston Braves are believed to be counting on George Crowe, up from Milwau- kee, to fill the bill. The Phils could deal Waltkus for Torgeson and each team would be be- nefited. Waltkus would be great protection for the Braves in case Crowe fell down, and a home- towner as well. Kluszewkl of the Reds Is a pos- sibility at first base, because there are many who believe the big first sacker would do much better ln another environment. Shortly after Oabe Paul be- came general manager of the Reds he said he thought a change of scenery helps many playersand he did not list Klus- zewskl as an exception. 1st Race "F-r NativesW Fgs. Purse: 275.00Pool Closes 12:45 First Race of the Doubles 1El Indio 2Pesadilla) 3Fonseca) 4Mona Lisa 5La Negra 6Eclipse J 7Little Lul. 8Hercules 9Callejera J. Cadogen 120 V. Castillo 120 J. Phillips 114 C. Iglesias 112 E. Gugnot 112 Samaniego 120 G. Sanche 117 B. Agulrre 118 C. Chavez lllx Ex-Champ Will Announce Retirement This Month By UNITED PRESS NEW YORK, Nov. 3. United Frew boxing- editor Jack Cuddy says former Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis has pulled on the gloves in a regular bout for the last time. 2nd Race "F-l" Natives4W Fgs. Purse: $275.00 Poo! Closes 1:15 Second Race of the Doubles 1Campesino V. Castillo 113 2Risita F. Rose 120 3Caaveral C. Chong 108x 4Romantic j J. Saman'go 118 5Embustero J. Cadogen 115 6Rio Mar R. Vsquez 120 7Luck Ahead E. Sllvera 110 3rd Race '1-1 ImportedKYi Fgs. Purse: $375.00 Pool Closes 1:45 One-Two 1Alabarda R. Vsquez 107 2B. Bound B. Moreno 1-15 3Cyc. Maione B. Agulrre 115 4Vermont O. Chanis 110 5Choice Brand K. Flores 115 6Delhi G. Cruz 108 7Gale Force F. Rose 120 4th Race '1-2' Imported0*4 Fgs. Purse: (37.V00 Pool Closes 2:2* Quiniela 1Antecede B. Agulrre 120 2Nantago J. Chuna 112x 3Forzado K. Flores 115 4Lim Lass J. Baeza, Jr. 112x 5Gay Ariel A. Mena 115 6Tartufo E. Alfaro 112x 7Terry J. R. Vsquez 118 8Islero G. Snchez 115 9Qulbian J. Cadogen 115 5th Race "E" Imported 7 Fgi. Purse: $550.00 Pool Closes 2:55 1- Mil ros A. Vsquez 112x 2Sun Cheer V. Ortega 112 3Roadmaster A. Mena 113 4Alto Alegre B. Agulrre 120 5Mimo K. Flores 120 Sth Race "H" Imported7 Fgi. Purse: $400.00 Pool Closes 3:35 First Raee of the Doubles 1Jepperin J. Baeza Jr. 105x 1Scotch Chum A. Mena 120 3Belfarset K. Flores 112 4Piragua V. CastUlo 120 5Rlnty J. Samaniego 115 8Mon Etolie C. Chavez 105x 7Picon A. Valdivia 120 8Porter's Star M. Hurley 115 Such a swap could lead to one of the biggest deals of the sea- son with Wyrostek. Kluszewskl, Dick Slsler and Waltkus all in- volved. On the whole, Carpenter Is 7th Race "D" Imported7 Fgs. quite optimisticand doubly so rurse: $60*00 Pool Closes 4.05 Cuddy has learned that Louis will announce his retirement when he returns from this month's exhibition tour in Jap- an. Louis and his handlers, as they left New York Thursday, still insisted Joe hasn't made up his mind about retiring. But, says Cuddy, Louis Is delaying his retirement announcement for commendable reasons which cannot be disclosed now. When Louis returns from his tour, says Cuddy, he will go back to work for the Interna- tional Boxing dub at a salary of $15,000 a year. It Is uncer- tain whether the Brown Bomber will return to his old Job as director of boxing or act as a good will ambassador for the I-B-C. In Montreal, Heavyweight King Joe Walcott says he will never fight Louis again no mat- ter what the ex-Champ decides. Says Walcott: "Louis was a great champion. I admired him as much as the fans. But, then the present Champ adds: "He's one of those who age quickly slow-down overnight and lose punching power. I'm afraid I'd hurt Joe." As Walcott puts it, "It's Jujt that the public would never for- give a man who physically dam- aged Louis at this stage of his career. "Joe was too great a champion to suffer a serious injury now. He shouldn't fight again." The record book tells of double-knockouts in the past but fans ln Miami Beach saw an unusual one Wednesday night. It was in the fourth round of a bout between Harry Brae- low and Art Davis when referee Eddie Coachman stepped be- tween them. Blood was flowing from the left eye of Braelow when Coachman stopped the fight and awarded Davis a T-K-O victory. Braelow didn't think he was out, by any means. He swung six punches at the arbitratorand all of them landed. So referee Coachman was the second victim of the night. He went out cold. "I Just lost my head," was Braelow's excuse. Dayton Quarter Fakes To Right Half As Tailback Carries Ball Off Tackle working conditions 100 per cent, Casey and Joe DiMaggio. "They satisfatcory to stay on." Reports are that Casey wUl hit he $90,- 000 mark for 1952. have different temperaments, but they get along fine and all this talk just makes them hit it At the momentdeluged with off better," she said. j "Be sure they are White Horse" 2n nil?Z Y i' SC?tCh WhW* "* n * Scotch than White Horse, It ,s distilled amidst the highland, of its native Scotland; aged, matured and watched over with unceasing care by men who have the inherited instinct of generations to guide them. At the club, at home, wherever you may be, you show wisdom by ordering Scotch whiskv ... and prove vour envrir-* k ..lj.TZ.. vm... . ' by name. prove your experience by asking for White Horse WHITE HORSE Scotch Whisky A pleasure to rtntmbr a joy to J again ------------" *'**" CQMMJ9/A CYRMOS. SM. COLON & PANAMA. Junior High School Boys Alson Guiliette defeated C11- 1 ton King by scores of 12-15,15-12, 15-12. Orlando Scott defeated Alex- ander Glbbs by scores ef 15-13, 13-15. 15-10. Sidney Richards won from Cla- rence Small, 15-0, 15-0 (forfeit). Robert Miliette defeated Le- land Truick, 15-0, 15-0 (forfeit). Richard Grand defeated Eric Salnten by scores of 15-6, 15-8. Norman Griffith defeated Fed- erico James, by scores of 15-1C, 15-8. Alson Guillette defeated Or- lando Scott by scores of-15-10, 13-15. 15-7. Clifton King defeated Sidney Richards by scores of 159, 17-15, 15-4. Alexander Oibbs defeated Cla- rence Small by scores of 15-12, 15-6. Eric Sainten defeated Leland Truick by acores of 15-0, 15-0 (forfeit). Robert Miliette defeated Fede- rico James 15-0,15-0 (forfeit). Richard Grunt defeated Nor- man Griffith, 15-0, 15-0 (for- feit). Junior High School Girls Una 8mith downed Glendora Woods by score? of 15-10, 15-13. Delicia Orant won from Thel- ma Henry 15-0.15-0 (forfeit). J. McFarlane downed J. Cham- bers "by scores of 15-6,15-8. A Amantine defeated Olga Jo- seph by scores of 15-10,15-12. Delicia Grant downed Thelma Henry 15-0. 15-3 (forfeit). Olga Joseph downed J. McFar- lane by scores of 15-10, 15-13. A Amantine- defeated Una Smith by scores of 16-5, 16-11. Delicia Grant won from J. Chambers by scores Of 15-11, 15-8. Olga Joseph downed Una Smith by scores of 15-11, 15-6. A Amantine defeated Thelma Henry. 15-'). 16-0 (forfeit). Elementary Grade, Class "A" H Grant defeated L. Morales by scores of 10-15, 15-12. 15-0. H. Warren downed L. Fardln by scores 01 12-16, 15-10, 15-13. H. Grant defeated H. Warren by scores 0/ 1-.16. 16-4. 15-4. L. Morales won from Jr. ran- nell by scores ol 15-i4, 16-6. H. Warren defeated Jr. Fennell by scores oi 18-1 19-7. Jr. Fennell defeated F. Walthe 15-0, 16-0 (forfeit). _ L. Fardln downed F. Walthe, 15-0, 19-0 (foifeit). L. Morales defeated F Walthe, 16-0.19-0 (forfeit). OMMRUrr Grade. Class "B" A. Jones defeated V. Thousand by scores of l-4, 18-10. C. Baxter defeated H. Blake by scores of 19-5.16-12. O. Town**nd downed J. An by scores of io-14, 18-16,16-9. A. Jones downed H. Blake by acoras of 164,19-10. V. Thousana defeated J. Allen by acores o 15-8, 17-16. 16-13. Roberto Joseph has volunteer- ed to referee tr ji nament matches on Nov. 17. We need some more- how about youV when he says confidently, "If we don't have-war with Russia and If the Korean affair does not get worse, regulations will permit Curt Simmons to be released by June 1. We should be set when he comes back." Philly Puffs: Emory (Bubba) Church is spending the winter ln Philadelphia. He Is said to be practicing to trim Ben Hogan on 1Ml Bace 1-z the links... Richie Ashburn Is Second Race of the Doubles 1Rid. East) C. Iglesias 120 2The Dauber) B. Moreno 111 3Microbio A. Mena 108 4Rondinellc J. Contreraa 112 5Mosqutton E. Daro 104 6Pampeio II C. Rula 115 7Revlal R. Vsquez 115 8Fair Char.ce G. Cruz 116 Another of a series of key plays diagramed and written by fam- ous coaches for NEA Service. BT JOE GAVIN Dayton Coach DAYTON, O., Nov. 3 (NEA). Dayton's most-successful scor- ing play is our 26-H. This bread-and-butter maneu- ver sent Danny O'Brien on touch- down runs of 51 yards against Youn gs t o w n and 73 yards busy building his new home... Robin Roberts is wintering ln Philadelphia, but occasionally takes time out to visit his folks in Illinois...Eddie Waltkus Is honeymooning ln Clearwater, Fla... Russ Meyer is recuperat- ing ln great style after his late- season spike wound. He takes Frank Wlechec's training exer- cises dally and says he Is a good as ever...Gran Hamner rented his bouse and Is spending the winter in Richmond. Va... Del Ennis plans to do a lot of swim- ming to strengthen his back muscles for 1952... Andy Seml- nlek Is doing well with his tap room. Playground Sports PLAYGROUND Sports Sports Interschool Girls' Volleyball La Boca Hi and Junior College girls' Volleyball teams bowed to defeat when they met Silver City Hi lassies at the Mt. Hope Sta- dium. 8ilver City Parrots chalked the first point and scored four be- fore a SideOut. La Boca HI School retaliated and tied the score. Teams rallied for ten min- utes before another SideOut. Sil- ver City moved from four to nine Klnts before La Boca Hi got the 11. La Boca fought dxterously, but the Silver Clt yelght gained confidence and coordination to finish the match at 15-9. 5-15, and 15-13. In the second and final match, the Junior College lasses opposed the Silver City High Both teams started with the jitters put the Silver City Parrots chalked the first point to gain determlnalon, scoring nine pons before he SdeOut. Coach Matthews called the squad to a pop up but that dd not change the situation. Sil- ver City again emerged victor- iously at the score of 16-12 and 15-1. Standing: Wen Lest PU. Silver Clt, 2 0 1.800 La Boca J .0 l .000 La Boca High......0 1 .000 Names of the winning team are: H. Thomas, A. Dudley. P. Tlmm, T. Qulnlan. S. Oyles, C. Baynes, O Layne; captain. R. Sandlford, U. Stewart, J. and D. Warner, 8. Webster. V. Young and D. Endone. Children ln many homes of merle were not allow- able, but Ire meat Purse: 9376.00 ool Closes 4:49 Quiniela 1Walrus 2Arabe LT 3Bosforo 4Beach Sun 5Cobrador 6Danesoourt ,7Bien Hecho 8Flamenco 9Atason B. Pulido 119 R. Vasquez 120 G. Snchez 120 E. Guerra 119 C. Ruiz 120 M. Hurley 118 A. Vsquez 113x C. Iglesias 120 O. Cruz 120 9th Race '1-2' Imported6V4 Fgs. Purse: $375.00 Pool Closes 5:15 One-Two 1Armeno 2Apprise 3Bendigo 4Caonazo 5Hurlecano 6 Allinoma* J. Cadogen 114 K. Flores 116 G. Cruz 114 J. Phillips 120 E. Gugnot 115 V. Ortega 112 7Incomparable A. Valdiv. 120 aOuarina M. Hurley 120 19th Race "E" Natives 1 Mile Parse: 1275.90 Pool Closes 5:40 2J. Hulncho G. Sanchez 110 1Mueco B. Pulido 114 3Proton A. Valdivia 120 4Politico) C. Chaves 107x 5Mr. Espinosa) M. Hurley 114 6BIJagual V. Castillo 114 7Duque) R. Ycaza 105x 8Volador) C. Chong 103x 9Torease) R. Vasquez 108 10Domino V. Ortega 112 Juan Franco Tip? BY CLOCKER (e) 1resadilla 2Risita 3Choice Brand 4Antecede 5Roadmaster *Belfarset 7Rondinella 8Cobrador 9Hurlecano laMueco Little Lulu Luck Ahead Brese Bound Ulero Alto Alegre Porter's Star Riding East (e) Walrus Armeno Juan Hulncho ONE BEST Maee* TAGAROPULOS , INDUSTRIES. S.A. Phono*: 1002 1003 Boyd Are. R P MILK #4041 Feo Coln e FRESH FRESH BUTTER RICH ICE CREAM Everything tsasete* by the Health Department HOME DELIVERY ..against Toledo. From an or- dinary T, Quar- terback Frank Slgglns does a spin counter clockwise, fakes to Right Half- back Bobby side the hole in order to get la SANGWAY! Left Batfkask aaay O'Brien hits threat* a bole opened by the rlkt tackle Recker, who smashes be- t w e e n right- guard and tackle. Left Halfback O'Brien takes a hand-off fro mthe quarterback, hits through the hole opened by the right end and tackle. From there he can go outside or cut back toward the center of the field. The fake by the quarterback Is the key to throwing the defense off stride. The No. 3 back must stay ln- position for a block on the line- backer. If he hits the hole to the center or outside.,the linebacker may slip Inside him. The block by No. 3 should be a shoulder block from a colled po- sition, striking a blpw under- neath and coming up. He can take the linebacker the easiest way possible. It is up to the ball-carrier to go either right or left. NEXT: Paul Bixier of Colgate MONARCH m FAMILY FAVORITE FOR ALMOST WO YEARS .SZ Monarch finer foods re today the stand ard of quality all over the world. They are pre- pared in the moat modern "manner... but retain all the real old-fashioned flavor. Five generations have proved Monarch finer foods... the BEST by TEST. There are over 500 Monarch finer foods. Ask for them in your grocery store. If your dealer doe not stock Monarch finer food, inquire of: MO\ \l,< II World't Largotf Family of tin* Hoe* Distributora In the Republic: COLON Tigiropiiloa, S. A. Tol. 10*tt PANAMACm. PanamericaJii do Oraagf Cratt HOME DELIVERY Tel. -321 w^w^^ ISJIISJ l| pi _|l till . XNDAY, NOVEMBER 7 1951 JUS" 8TJNDAT AMERICA i PAO* Khlk Up 22 Straight For Princeton And Start Thinking Of Next Year 1 I <> Fort Davis Post Handicap Bowling League Schedule FORT DAVIS, Captain Leo J. Pock, WA & R Officer for the oil of Tort Davis thU morning released the first half of the schedule for the Post Handicap Bowling League. The League win begin on Tuesday evening, Nov- ember 8, and will and JO weeks hence. Appropriate awards wui be presented at the proper time. The schedule Is as foltow: November 6,1951 6:00 p.m. . Offleer Team. 764th AAA Oun Bn vs. Atlantic Supply Det (AStaial). _ , Hq Btry. 764th AAA Oun Bn t. 'V' Co 370th Engr Shore Bn (Team No. 2). 2 _ . "B" Btry 764th AAA Gun Bn vl. K" Co 370th Engr Shore Bn (T*DBtry 003rd AAA AW Bn vs. Hq Co 870th Engr Shore Bn. 8:00 p.m. "A" Btry 764th vs. "F" Co 370th. "O" Btry 003rd v. "D" Co "SS'v Trng Btry 764th vs. QM Det S70th. _,. nt 536th F.re Fighters Pit vi. Of- ficers. 370th. November 13, 1151 6:00 p.m. B" Btry 764th vs. QM Det "D" Btry 003rd vs "D" Co 370th. prov Tmg 764th vs. Officers, SthFF vs. "F" Co 370th (Team NO. 1). 8:M p.m. v. "C" Btry 903rd vs. Hq 370th. A" BtrJ 34th vs. "B" Co Officers. 764th vs. "F" Co 370th (Team No. 3). Hq 764th vs. Atl Sup Det. November 20, 1951 8:09 p.m. -- ' ' 'S-atl Sup Det vs. T Co 370th (Team No. 3). Officers. 764th vs. H 1" Co 370th vs. Hq Co 370th. 1:00 p.m. Prov Trne Det vs. 536th FT. ' "A" Btry 764th v. "C" Btry "F" Co 370th (Team No. 3) vs. "D" Co 370th. ... QM Det 370th va. Officers, Vtt^' November 81.1981 6:00 p.m. "g" Co >70.th v. Hq Btry "ffi'iup Det v. "D" Btry 003th. *F" CO 370th (Team No. 3) v. "Vc?3oVhv. Officers. 764th. 8:09 P-m. 586 FF vs. QM Det 70th. Officer 370th vs. "C" Btry *?; Btry 764th v. "D" Co ,7'* Co 370th (Team No. 1) v. Prov Trng Btry 7Mtn December 4, ltSl g:M p.m. "D" Btry 003rd va. Officers "prov Trng Btry 764th v. Hq KJDetv. 536thFF- ro *B Btry 764th vs. "D" Co 170th. f.N.m QM Det '370th" vs. "D" 00 **$ Btry 903rd v. Officers ^A Btry 764th vs. Hq Co STOth. * co 370th (Team No.1) vs. "F"Co 870th (Team No 3). ^ December 11.1951 6:00 p.m. D" Co 370th vs. Officers 870th. _ _an. t _ TVI flit flit Ft Atl Sup Det v. "C" Btry 903rd. December 18,1951 <:0 n.m. "P" Co 370th (Team No. 1) v. Officers. 370th. Prov. Trng, 764th vs. "D" Co 870th. QM Det 870th vs. Hq Btry 764th. Hq Co 370th vs. 536 FF. 1:00 p.m. "F" Co 370th (Team No. 3) va. "D" Btry 903rd. Officers 764th v. "A" Btry 764th. "O" Btry 903rd vs. "B" Btry 764th. Atl Sup Det vs. "E" Co 370th. January *. 1953 0:00 p.m. Officers, 370th v. Hq Btry 764th. "D" Co 370th vs. 536th FF. Prov Trng, 764th vs; Atl Sup Det. "F" Co 870th (Team No. n v. QM Det 370th. 8:9 p.m. Hq Co 370Vi vs F" Co 370th (Team No. 3). "D" Btry 908rd v. "A" Btry 764th. Officers 764th VS. "B" Btry 764th. "C" Btry 908rd v. "*" Co 370th. January 15, 1959 6:00 p.m. "B" Btry 764th v. "F" Co 870th (Team No. 1). "F" Co 370th vs. 536th FF. Prov Trng. 764th v. Officers 764th. ' QM Det 370th vs. "D" Co 370th. 8:99 p.m. "A" Btry 784th vs. Officers 370th. _ "K" CO 370th VS. "D" Btry 903rd. "C" Btry 903rd vs. Hq Btry 764 th. Atl Sup Det vs. Hq Co 370th. January 88. 1913 6:00 p.m. "I" Co 370th vs. Officers 370th. "f" Co 870th (Team No. 1) vs. "D" Btrv 903rd. "D" Co 370th vs. "F" Co 870th (Team No. 2). Officers 764th vs. 836th FF. 1:99 p.m. Hq Btry 764th vs. "A" Btry 764th. "B" Btry 764th vs. Hq Co 370th. QM Det 370th vs. Atl 8up Det. "C" Btry 903rd vs. Prov Trng, 764th. January 99,1968 tfr p.m. .____. "D" CO 370th v. Hq Co 370th. Prov- Trng, 764th v. "B" Co 370th. QM Det 370th vs. "F" Co 870th (Team No. 3). mMMtl 536th FF va. Hq Btry 764 th. 8:00 p.m. "F" Co 370th (Team No 1) va. "C" Btry 903rd. "A" Btrv 764th vs. Atl Sup Det. Officers 764th vs. "D" Btry 903rd. Officers 370th vs. "B" Btry 764th. PC'--*v 6. 1952 6:00 p.m. Hq Co 31 > v.i. Officer 370th. "B" Btry 764th v. Atl Sup Det. "E" Co 370th v*. "F" Co 370th (Team No. 1). QM Det 870th vs. Officer 764th. 8:99 p.m. 636th FF v. "A" Btrv 764th. Marcianos KO Of Louis Puts Jr. Heavyweights In Business -F" Co 370th vs. "D" Co 370th QM Det 370th vs. Hq Co 370th Officer 764th v. "F" Co 870th 1:00 p.m. Hq Btry 764th v. "D" Btry "SUV Tmg. 764th vt, "A" Btry 784th /TT Btry 764th vl. 53th FT. BT HARRY ORATSON NBA Sport Editor MARCIANOS KO SPORTS SUNDAY NEW YORK, Nov. 3 (NBA) Rocky Marciano did boxing and Joe Louis a tremendous fa- vor by belting out the Old Brown Bomber In the eighth round the other night. , A omeone expressed It so well, Louis In hi 38th year ex- posed the poverty of the heavy- weight division. Seasoned observers were fright- ened as Marclano's final right through the ropes and laid him out on the apron of the Madison Square Oarden ring. They were afraid he would have to be car- ried outfor keeps. The dramatic kayo tressed the danger of matching a shop- worn old pappy Kuy with a swat- ter like Marciano. ThU hould be taken Into con- sideration if Jersey Joe Walcott again gets over Ezzard Charles to become a Marciano target In what admittedly will be his 39th year. Marciano keeping after and pounding Louie until the long- time champion ran out of pe- trol put the Junior heavyweights In business, yet Jim Norria he- sitates about going along with the new deal. WHY BRING BACK SAVOLD AND MURPHY? Included among a half-dozen opponents promoter Norrls sug- gets for Marciano are Lee Savold and Irish Murphy. HI flattening the one-track Savold. who 1 In his S6th year, encouraged Louis to go on. Harry Matthews and Joey Maxim clearly demonstrad ed that Murphy 1 little more than an exceedingly clumsy, left- handed punching bag. So why bring them back? Norrls also list Walcott, Charle, Matthews and Roland LaStarn, but if Al Welll can't get Walcott or Charles after the first of the year, when It Is time for Marciano to return to the war, whom do vou suspect he 11 pair with the Brockton Block Buster? Why. the antiquated Sa- vold. who never could fight, of That' hardly the 864 queatlon, for Matchmaker Welll. you see. also Is the unofficial manager of Marciano, and Norrls leaves the door wide open for another "tune-up." _____ "D" Co 870th vs. Hq 764th. "C" Btry 903i (Team No. 2). "C" Btry 903rd v. "P" Co 370th Prov Tmg, 764th v. "D" Btry 903rd. February 12, 1982 6:99 p.m. Prov Trng, 764th v. Hq Co 370th. "A" Btry 784th v. "B" Btry 764th. _ "D" Btry 908rd v. QM Det 370th. "" Co 870th y. Offleer 764th. 8:00 past. Atl Sup Dot va "D" 00 970th. Oirtrlbutor.: ClA. CYRNOS, S. A. Reeky Manias* Jee Loul LASTARZA TOO CUTE, MATTHEWS IN EXILE Welll Is taking dead aim at the championship, and you can't blame him. If he were going to give La- Starza another opportunity, he would have granted the request as Marciano was on the way up. The Bronx youth proved a bit too cute dropping a divided and debatable decision to hi tiger Mar. 24 of last year. The capable Matthews no doubt will be kept In compara- tive exile In the Pacific north- west. The excuse will be that the Idaho grown Seattle syllst Is a llght^heavywelght and a such would not draw commensurate with Marclano's newly-acquired tature. Meanwhile, Welll hope to move the fourth edition between Walcott and Charlea up to Feb- ruary In Miami, where they would play to as much money as anywhere. Thai could leave the winner free to engage Marciano In June. Either this, or to land Mar- ciano a crack at one of them before they tangle again. WALCOTT-CHARLE8 SERIES GOES ON AND ON Charles has a SO-per-cent con- tract with Walcott for June, and the Great Father of Camden nrobably Insisted on the earne deal for what would be his sixth whack at the crown In the event he loses. This series could go on and on. Perhaps the only hope Is lor Al Weill to get Rocky Marciano in the battleplt with the two In between time, and have him give them tre treatment he dealt Joe ^The Junior heavyweight would do f^?"* {?*&! them the treatment he dealt Joe, give them ticket to the lodge. Navy Names Five For Olympic_Field Trials Five Navy track and field stars have boon chosen to carry the blue and gold colors in tryout for thTheWC.t.ni. all distinguish- ed by previous performances, are Richard H. Attlesey. eearnan; Jame F. Blown, saman; Robert D. Chamber, radarman, nrst class; Ronald k. Haynes, aviation electronlcsmar, aecond class, and Cyrus J. Taylor disbursing clerk, second clasa. Attleeey, holder of the outdoor record far 130-yard high hurdle. u a graduate ot the University of Southern California His 13.6 seconds tied the world mark for "T* Oo 270th (Team No. 2) v. Hq Btry 764th. IMth FF Y. "C" Btry 909rd Officers 376th v. "F" Co 370th (Team No. 8). February 89, 1969 00 pm. "0" Btry 908rd va "D" Btry Atl'sup Det va Officer 370th. Hq Btry 764th v. "B" Btry W*tn. _. -, "F" Co 370th (Team No. 8) v. Prov Trng 764th. ' 8:00 p.m. QM Det 370th vs. "A" Btry "B" Co 370th vs. 538th FF. "D" Co 370th v. Officers 764th. Hq Co 370th v "P" Co 370th (Team No. 1). February, 87 1952 00 pm. T" Co 370th (Team No. 3) v. "A" Btry 764th. Prbv Trng. 764th v. "B" Btry 764th. i 820th-FF vs. "D" Btry 903rd. "I" 00 370th (Team NO. 1) V. Atl Sup Det. Offleer 764th va Officer 370th. "D" Co 370th v. "I" Co 370th. "C- Btry 903rd vs. QM Det 370th. Hq Btry 764th vs. Hq Co 370th. Note: Team marked with an asterisk Will furnish "foul Judge" for matches bowled at shirt they are not scheduled to bowl. Exam- ple: "A" Btry 764th AAA Oun Bn will furnish "foul Judge" for Same bowled at 6:00 p.m. 6 ovember 1981 and Officer Team 764th AAA Oun Bn wlll- furntoh "fool judge" for gamer bowled at 8:00 p.m. 6 November 1151). ---------l the 110-meter outdoor high hur- dle. Brown, while at the University of Arkansas, held the Southeast Conference record for the two- mile event and placed in several National AAU meets last summer. Chamber, a former runner for the University of Southern Cali- fornia, esUbllsned the best col- legiate time in 1900 for the 800- meter run. His time was 1:60.3. Haynes also was entered In the AAU last ummer. He ran the 1600-meter run in 8:58.8 and wa a place winner In. the Senior 3000-meter run. Taylor ha done the 400-meter huidles In 62 *conda Th record la 81.1 and AAU official state there Is a strona chance of Tay- lor' breaking the record with proper training. The men wll be trained under the supervision of the US. Naval Academy varsity track coach, Earl Thomson They will compete St Indoor meet? this winter and ion In the All-Armed Force Track and Field Championship which will determine the partici- pant In the Olympic tryout. _.lh. Athlt'i Pom (AllpuHtm) Mhr Uml.h. dlflar r* a* Sit la vtiT Him,irm M < KfuT. OvtVilxeetrm 1 s*J8Jbw tM tsMM tsBBsBsBFTV^Pa Kazmaier Is Genius Of A Great Squad BY LAWRENCE ROBINSON NBA Special Correspondent NEW YORK. Nov. 3 (NBA) He might be slightly biased, but Charlie CaAdwell had Just viewed what was to the Prince- ton coach the finest movie ever fUmed a quintuple A with 17 atara. It wa lx reel t vivid action and melodrama featuring the greatest atar Galdwll ever had seen on the silver screen a youngster named Richard Kaz- maier. For that matter, few peo- ple in gridiron annals ever have seen another better enact the role of tailback than did Kas- maler against Cornell In the truly-astonlshlng" 63-16 victory scored by Princeton In a suppo- sedly plck-'em game. It was one of the stellar performance of football history. In an yother sector, but the east, Kasmanler's 15 completions out of 17 attempts, for 236 yards and three touchdowns, would evoke paroxysms of ecstatic praise. Of the 57 Princeton plays which started with a paa from center, Kasmanler handled the ball 43 time, either running himself, passing, handing off or punting once. He was the genius of this mag- nificent victory and It complete inspiration. No one, not even CaldweU, ex- pected the Tigers to explode as they did. But, then, no one could expect Kazmunler to rise to such height*. Princeton hould move on to easy Ivy League triumph. Brown wa next, and there Is nothing it three remaining opponent* Harvard. Yale and Dartmouth can do against Princeton's effi- cient precision. You can chalk up 22 straight for the Tigers In late November, and start thinking of next year. Also notch this team among the beat In the nation. Caldwell noted exceptional play by Cowls Herr, the pull- out attacking guard who never missed his difficult trap play on the tackles. Run McNeil, the fullback, blocked beautifully on either end, the men supposed to bother Kaamaler pn passes. They never did get near Dlek. Oeorge Stevens, the quarterback, rose to blocking peakr Brad Glass did not have his best day. Last year the Cornell none was Brad's ticket to fame. This time. Vlo Blhl, the other defensive guard, wa the man Glass wa last year. Cornell's special defenses were orthodox but for one deviation. Obviously trying to catch Tiger blocks off beat, Cornell dsvlsed a quldk shift on defense Just be- fore Princeton snapped back the ball. Thus Cornell would under- shirt, then try to slide Into an overshlft Just before the ball was napped. Princeton croaeed thl up by fplng on a quick count, frequent- y caught the defenders in the middle of their lateral shift when they should have been charging forward. That can snarl up a defense pretty completely tigging when they should have been sagging. The Cornell secondary dldnt cover Tiger receivers overly well. Thl, plus some great catches, particularly End Ln Lyons' fielding of the sixth touchdown out of the hand of two Cornell defenders, proved eoetly to th Cornell cause. Caldwell say the team reach- ed Its physical peak against Cor- nell, and his principal lob from here In will be to avoid atale- neaa. "But there kid wont get fat- headed, not with a level-headed boy like Kaamaler and three other seniora In the backfield," declares Charlies. "We.11 be fair game from here In. I know, and Dartmouth will be aiming at us particularly. "But until we are beaten, m string along with these kids." Sportsjhorties Chicago.The Chicago Cardi- nals have ltned quarterback Joe Gasparella for the rOtt ot th National Football League season The former Notre Dame player wae rlea*d by the mtsburgh Steelers last week and will be ready for the Cardinals game with Cleveland thl Sunday. A's Have Plenty Of Lefties,. But On The Other Hand.,,. (Reprinted from The Sporting Newt), BY ART MORROW PHILADELPHIA, Pa. Evolu- tion may be wonderful, but If you ask the Athletics, baseball moves In convolutions cycles or circles. The A's consider themselves a case in point. "You'll have an era of great first basemen, and perhaps poor catchers," Oeneral Manager Ar- thur Ehlers Illustrates. "So what happens? Everybody concent- rates so much on finding and developing catchers that soon there's an abundance of receiv- ersand some other position goes down." Four years ago the A's were wondering where all the good lefthanded pitching prospects were hiding. They had a ten- man staff, and an effective' one, but not a southpaw in the lot. Connie Mack was beginning to suspect that all the likely left- handers had gone searching for either the place where elephanU K0 to die or where drivers go to ide on rainy nights. Now Jlmmie Dykes, Connie's successor, Is commencing to feel the same way about orthodox antera. 'In spring training last sea- son," he points out, "all Indica- tion were that our staff would be predominantly right-handed, with Alex Keilner and Bobby Shantz available for starting assignments just by way of var- iety. And how did we wmd up? Just the opposite of what we'd expected! "We've got to dig up some righthanders somewhere, but darned If I know where'." oOo SOUTHPAWS WON 44 GAMES Glance over the records, and you'll "know exactly what Jlmmie means: The A's wound up with a crew of five righthanders and four lefties, and at one stage they had seven-starboard hurl- en. Yet the four southpaws who finished the yearShants (18- 10), Morris Martin (11-4.) Keil- ner (11-14) and Sam Zoldak (6- 10)accounted for 46 of the team's 70 victories. Even including the two deci- sions Lou Brissle dropped be- fore being traded to Cleveland, the A' southpaws compiled an over-all log of 46-40 as compared with a record of 22-44 by the righthanders. Bob Hooper (12-10) and Re- liever Johnny Kueab (4-8) were the only righthanded pitching artists over the .500 mark. The outlook grew no brighter with word that Arnold Porto- carrero, the 19-year-old former New York schoolboy sensation has received a call from Uncle 8am. The young giant worked his way up from West Palm Beach in 1949 to Savannah in '60, and Ehlers had Just placed him on the list for Florida train- ing next spring when he learned that the youth was to report on October 30 for his Army physical examination. Roland (Tex) Hoyle, right- hander who hurled two one-hit- ters for Lincoln after undergoing some back surgery by the A's Dr. Illarlon Oopadze here, began re- ceiving mention as the club's pos- sible rookie-of-the-sprttig, now that Portocarrero seems lost. Even If no brilliant new talent appeared on the Immediate hor- izonor, at least, no Insufficient quantity of itto promise quick relief for the A's, Dykes was not discouraged. He predicted that in 1952 at least one member of the old tal- ent would stage a comeback. oOo BELIEVES COLEMAN wn,I, MAKE COMEBACK "I think Joe Coleman's going to be all right," Dykes said of the fastball pitcher who won 27 games in 1948-49, and just one In 1950-51. "Toward the end of the season he wa firing a hard as he ever did. Futhermore, he felt his old confidence returning, and wanted to pitch. " 'Look. Joe,' I told him, 'you're looking great, but there's no use taking chance at thl stage of the season. I'll use you In relief spots, but u for starting, I'd rather save you until neat year. You should be a good a ever by then, maybe better.' "I want handing him t line. I really feel that way because he's serious about a eomebaek. When he headed home after the season, he took a couple desea baseballs with him and he aid that about November 1 he fig- ured on heading for Weet Palm Beach. "He's going to use those base- balls, he said, to keep the kinks from returning to his armand If he does, hell be a far different guy. I'm convinced there's noth- ing wrong now with either his arm or his shoulder. "With Hooper back, Carl Schelb coming along and Dick Fowler available for at least oc- casional assignments, Coleman may take up all of our alack la the righthanded department." Dykes Divots: For the pay! couple of winters. Joe Coleman has sold automobilesnew and usedIn his home town, Arling- ton, Mass... Dykes has been so busy playing golf since the World's Series that he has yet te> see a football game. "Except," he amends, "on television"... Where does he play golf? "Any- where I'm Invited," and that could be almost anywhere. Friends find the Inevitable cigar a smudge-pot against the au-> tumn frost... Coleman probably will not lack company when he- reaches West Palm Beach. Third- Baseman Hank Majeski usually, winters there... Art Ehlers en- tertains high hopes for Jack Llt- trell, a rookie shortstop who Jumped 30 points in his bsttlng average after being promoted from Class B to Savannah. Greased Groundhog Cleans Gun JOPLIN. Mo., Nov. 8 (NBA) -^ An Oaark hunter was asked what gauge shotgun he used. 1 caln't exactly call the num- ber of It, but it's a pretty big gun." he said. "Whenever it needs clean in', we just grease a Mag )*- i ------- groundhog and cha through the barrl." Clarence Sharp, a resourceful duck shooter from Kentucky, ha a gun. he says, that kills so far up he has to put salt on the pellets to keep the birds from; spoiling before they hit th* ground. ..... you on POWER YOU CAN TRUST! DEPENDA1LE lATTERIES FOR fl YEARS! Distributors: GUARDIA CIA, 8. A. Jasto Areeemena Avenue 29 Street Panama, B. P. Anybody tan label his warn at jamaica rum. But Mly tht Wind of Jamaica can product it real and genuino Jamaica Rum. For your protection, make ture that when you buy a bottle of Jamaica Rum it Is dearly labelled as a product op jauaica. Without these marks It It not genuine. Be on your gutrd. \ Tiny Chapel Beckons to Quiet Shore Hidden Beyond Fort Kobbes Sentries VALUING FROM THE RIVER with a pail of water on her head this woman is oblivious of the photog rapher. Her thoughts are probably on a son or dauehter who has left almost-isolated Camarn to seek a better living in Panama City, located five m lies away as the crow files. FORDING THE CREEK leading nto Camarn, this automobile Is hub-deep In water. During the rainy season, when rains fall continuously, sometimes for two days and two nights, the creek swells and Camarn is completely cut off by land. Several flat cars have been earmarked for use as a bridge across this creek but all have ended up somewhere else. t'-n A tiny white chapel on a hill will be one of the first things to trlke your eye If ever you go to Camarn, an Isolated little vll- 'age eight miles from Panama City. The chapel sparkles and beck- ons. As you come near the odor of wax fills your nostrils. But even the images there seem dis- pirited and weary. From the chapel you can look over the village. The same air of neglect and sadness Is every- where Houses hang together, a few i have rose bushes and vines around them, in a half-hearted attempt to them look like home. Women wash the family's clothes in the clear stream that flows by the village. The men repair nets or hack out new boats. The sea is Camaron's principal road to the outside world, for communication by land can be difficult and hazardous. The fact that Camarn (which means shrimp) exists at all to- day is due to the doggedness. the patience and perhaps, the faith of the villagers. To reach Camarn, you must pass through Howard Field, now peopled by Army personnel and known as Fort Kobbe. This military Installation is one of the main difficulties en- countered by the 343 residents of Camarn. To get into the-post they must have a pass which they must procure, not at Kobbe but at the Army Pass Section in Corozal. Yet another difficulty con- fronts the people of Camuron . Groves of coconut trees stretch- ing down to the beach, practical- ly untended. Waves lap invitingly on a clean .sandy shore, ideal for relaxing and swimming. Jungle thrives on rich loam that could support heavy crops. But this fruitful spot is practi- cally lost to Panama because the village is so inaccessible by road. The one road to the village is a winding trail not big enough far two cars to pass each other. This trail, more or less along the route of road built 13 years ago. is the result of the efforts lof a couple of American citizens with property in Camarn. These Americans persuaded some friends to come over on weekends and help hack out the trail now used by the villagers, and by the enlisted men who visit the village on weekends. Projects have been discussed to have a road circling Fort Kob- be, to have a road that would go through Fort Kobbe but circum- vent strategic points, to have a road only partly on Fort Kobbe. All seem to have been pigeon- holed. Petitions have been signed by the villagers; money has been appropriated by the Army to build a road along one of the suggested routes. But the money is still laying unused. Old flat-cars bought by the Pa- namanian government to use as bridges, have been destined for use along the existing road, but somehow never have reached Camarn. " Villagers who use the road from Camarn into Fort Kobbe at night risk being shot by some nervous or suspicious sentry, who might mistake them for an- imals. Even In the daytime peril ex- ists when the Fort Kobbe soldiers indulge in firing practice. Firing is always done toward the beach, over the road to the village. Villagers believe that the dan- ger of beln? shot would be mini- mized If the shooting would be done toward the uninhabited and impassable Jungle, rather than over the beach. Camarn could support a population twice its present size and could well become a beach resort. The village, however, needs new blood. The artery for transfusion will have to be a passable road. .. ,*_U* : ! :-v" GAZING MEDITATIVELY down at the chapel. Charles Q. Peters, an American settler at Camarn, hopes the little Tillage will one day have a road that is passable at all times. He got permission to build the trail now used by the villagers. >TV Set Ownership Issue In Divorces COLUMBUS, O Nov. 3 UP> television set ownership has be- come an issue in divorce squab- 1 bles in Columous Judge ClaM >n W. Rose of the MiOJneeUc relations court said Mail Dies used to arirue about cus- HpBy of autos, furniture, or the fidlo. bat now the TV set is a I point The judge cited one ease where [the woman took the set to her other's home The husband I claimed it because he said he [paid for it FWbere children are involved, [indue Rose sa.t1, the TV set goes Lto the one who Is awarded cus- rtody of the youngsters. BEAUTIFUL VENADO BEACH with its clean, hard packed sands would make an excellent weekend resort and bring new life to Camarn If the village was easily accessible. To get to Venado Beach one must go through Ft. Kobbe, and to get through the gate a pass, issued by the Army, Is necessary. SO^-Gassed Dog Saved With Oxygen CHICAGO. Nov. 3 (UP)Boots, a furry four-month-old puppy,I may be the only dog in the coun-J try that owes Its life to oxygen.' Sulphur dioxide fumes from a' (oaky refrigerator in the Schae- ier kitchen threatened to t,nd j Boots' young life almost before i it started. Wnen a veterinarian told Mrs. Schaefer that oxygen was the' only thing ti:ut would save the og's life, a tank was rushed to the Schaefer home. Boots was placed in a quickly- improvised oxygen tent and the gas was filtered Into the com- partment. After two days of this treat- ment. Boots was romping hap- pily with the three Schaefer children. *HE FIRST THANKSGIVING LOOKING DOWN from above, Camarn presents a beautiful but almost isolated sight. Here 343 residents live in Panamanian territory just eight miles from Panama City in virtual isola- tion because to get In and out they must pass through and Army post and use an improvised road just big enough for one car. Illustrated by Walt Scott Realizing that they could keep their English culture and their religious beliett only when isolated from other groups, the leaders of the Pi I Srims, among them o soldier named liles Standish, voted to go to Eng- lish territory in the New World. Two of the Pilgrims were dispatched to London to negotiate with the Virgin Company, which held large land grants in America. *rwiv ir* They succeeded in getting a potent giv- ing them settlement rights in Amento.; Now the problem was how to get there. |J mil - i-# PANAMA, R. r., SUNDAT, NOVEMBER 4, 1M1 1 J i ......i i.i i Anti-Bombing Dispersal PJan For US Factories Dubbed Myth BY RICHARD KLEINER NEW YORK, Nov. 3 (NBA). A leading authority on plant dispersal calls America's war plant dispersal program a com- plete myth. "It simply isnt happening," says Leonard Yasseen. New York partner of the Fantus Factory Locating Service, plant location government-issued of Necessity. Those an a recent. device which permits companies, build- ing new plants or expanding existing ones, to write off taxes quickly. Virtually no war plant has been built, since they went into effect, without the manage- ment taking' advantage of the consultants. "The nation is now money-saving certification plan. far more vulnerable to enemy Up to the middle of Jury, the attack than ever before." Defense Production Authority He quotes government statis- had approved 2889 such certlflc- tlcs to back up his opinion. ates. His firm conducted a survey, Of these, 480 were for certain which shows that new war plants facilitiessuch as transporta- are being built In the same areas tion, storage and public utilities already industrially overcrowded. which, by their nature, must There are 19 such area, in be built in the heavily-populated which over half of America's m- centers. dustrial capacity was jammed But, of the remaining 2189 cer- before the Korean War. tiflcmtes, 7.2 per cent 1473 were approved for new facilities sued. Today, says Yaseen. these same in cities of over 100,000 popula- "Seventy-two per cent of our areas account for an even great- tion. e total steel ingot capacity is con- er percentage of VS. industrial And these included a whop- centrated in four states. output than they did in 1940. ping 925 which went for new or "Our aircraft production is More and more war plants are expanded plants in the hyper- concentrated in five large areas, Solng up. or being expanded m critical 19. V and our oil refineries are cettttf le critical 19: Baltimore, Bos- For example, the DRA ap- ed to several major districts.^ ton, Buffalo, Chicago. Clncinna- proved the building of a $18.500.- ''Three-quarters of our n tl, Cleveland, Dayton, Detroit, 000 plant making film In Roches- chine tool Industry the hfar Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Mln- ter, N. Y.; a $5,000.000 plant mak- to our entire mass produe neapolis-St. Paul, New York- lng aircraft .components in St. northeastem-New Jersey, Phil a- Louis; a $$,000,080 airplane mo- delphia. Pittsburgh. Providence, tor plant in Los Angeles; and Rochester, N. Y St. Louis, San several huge tank plants in the Francisco-Oakland, and Youngs- Detroit area. town. state-by-state, Yaseeq's fig- think they'd never heard of the Yaseen's survey was based on ures show the same thing. Of atom bomb." Certificates plants certified in the value ol $1,088,000,000 for Pennsylvania, $877,000,000 were to be spent for construction in the Pittsburgh and Philadelphia areas; In Michigan, 70 per cent of tht dollar volume was going for new plant facilities in Detroit, which Yaseen calls "the most vulnera- ble air target in the UJ5." These, he emphasises, were passed on by the Defense Pro- duction Authority. Yaseen points put that there are many locations, which fit those qualifications, whera these new plants could be built. "If we are to prevent atomic or even conventional bombing from virtually paralyzing our war machine," says Yaseen, "ire- mediate steps should be taken to check area vulnerability before Certificates of Necessity are fr- > economy is located in commu- nities in highly-concentrated vulnerable areas. "And they keep building plants in the same old areas. You'd / Our Men In Korea Need Blood Yours! Our wounded fighters in Korea and those of our Allies are facing a critical shortage of life-saving blood. Plenty more is need and needed quickly. Our wounded gave their blood the hard way. You can replace it the easy way by simply going to your Red Cross blood bank. The pictures below illustrate how and why of the urgent appeal the Defense Department is making to you. 1 The speed and efflelmey wtth which bleed to batee _ the battlefield today hu iliskH the Werld War II deatha-freea- wounds rate of 4.* to .S (> record law) for the Korean eearUct. Bat stockpile* f whole Meed, which, can be preserved for only tl dare, sad plums, goad far aw ymn. ara shock In 1, inadequate. . y OtrUaae ate te cent *f the gaaL er . __st be healthy area W If sod a. IIS 1 PTS. Yifin *WT whou etooo *"' - GOAL coaEcno DURING LAST 12 MONTHS Oraph abre year-, coal with leetad dssriac awl rear of Ka- ne How ach Meed win be te plasta* U > secret. T : wUI be amavlta by _ i WW he available to crvtnaas 1st I that aarvtvan ef aa A-heoah attoak at least Ut.efte aalta af Used la = eg twh saat t the rat al a <* ; PAGE (S) MISSING NOT AVAILABLE LM 2/6bd |
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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 |
| 53 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |