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m " M l * BRANIFF AN DDPENDE1 TO MIAMI ONI WAY...... $ MOO ROUND ra..... '50.SO BjJJLY N1WBPAFB Panama Atrancan ML* tfcf i>eop{ know the truth and the country U tufe** * Abraham Lincoln. SeagraiirsY CANADIAN WH1S I rWENTY-SEVENTH IEAR PANAMA, R. 1\ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1M1 five CENTS " Crimes Prober Raises Prisoners Slaughtered By Of UN BONNIE CHARLES IS THREE Prince Charles, son of Prin- cess Elisabeth of England and the Duke of Edinburgh, sits for his third birthday portrait by official photographer Marcus Adams. ------------.---------'T Egypt Delegate Flays British In UN Speech PARIS, Nov. 1 Foreign Minister Mohamed Salah el Din angrily accused Britain today of waging "real war against Egypt, and of perpetrat- ing atrocities against the Egyp- tian people. , A British degelation spokesman immediately denounced the speech as a frenzied harangue. Laying Egypt's case against Britain before the UBRed Na- tions General Assembly, Salan el Din Joined Syria's Faria el Khou- rl in categorically rejecting the big Western powers' proposal for a Middle East Command, and in- "WITH ALL HUMILITY" California's Republican Governor Earl Warren sita at his desk at his office in Sacrljnonto, Calif., during presa conference at which he announced that "with all humility, I have concluded to become a candidate" for President in 1962. He was Thomas pewey's running mate in 1948. British Skipper Tells Of Mutiny Aboard RP Ship HC#JQ KONG, Nov. 1 (DP) A British skipper discharged the crew of a Panamanian ship Cgpella becsjuse of the mutiny lsjtt August when the sallad inWNatlanalii The Cnpella had bl- ed for tha R*d*eld porfcWt%gV cargo of soar) and fertlapter.. Oapt. James Hood lSue Formosa which Indicated that he concurred with the croW members' action. Instead. Hood said that the Chinese crew forced him off the bridge at pistol point, and confined him under armed guard. .' He said that after reaching Formosa the Nationalists kepf him under guard for another fortnight without permitting him to see the British Consul. Later he reported the matter fully to the British Consulate at Tapei. The leading British paper of South China, the Morning Post, which published the original story, also published Hood's statement, and apologized embarrassing: him. tenitoiional defense of Hie Sues He described the Middle East plan as "the broken doll o Im- perialism outwardly paia-ted in another color." Salah el Din read his 26-page address with tremendous emo- tion. His voice broke many times, and rose to a high pitch time and * He accused the West id gener- al and Britain in particular, of trying to pursue a policy1 In the Middle East which might not have had a place even In the Middle Ages. His speech brought the Egyp- tian crisis to the forefront of the United Nations, though he did not ask the United Nations to take any action. But for the West it created a second Cold Warbetween Brit- ain and Egyptthat is getting hotter and hotter and is second only to the bigger Cold War be- tween Russia and the West. '$ New License Case Of Negro Accused Of Assault At Long Range Ends In Mistrial Y^NCEVn-LK. North Carolina, Nov. 16 (UP) A mistrial was ceclared in the assault trial here of Negro sharperopper Mack Di- gram. He was accused of assaulting a buxom, blondr whRe girl, but both the prosecution and the de- fensa agreed the 44-year-old Vegro came nc closer than 75 feet to Willie Jean Boswell, 17. as she walked along a road near here June 4. The Jury, which Included four Negroes, seceied the case yes- terday and wa night. Foreman C. J Long said the jury stood 10-2 for conviction, with two Negroes holding out for acquittal. Judge J. A Rousseau excused the Jury after Long reported the panel was hopelessly deadlocked in trying to reach a verdict. Ingram will be retried, pro- bably in January. Ingram was aceuaod of-aasamt after Willie Jean, now Mrs Ed- ward Webster, complained that Ingram chased her across a corn- field "leering at me so.it fright- ened me." District solVItor Ralph Scott told an aJJ-male Jury Of elaht whites and four Negroes that "no one by show of violence ^has the right to put another in tear." But superior court Judge J. A. Rousseau Instructed the J u ry "that it, this gentleman didn't show intentional 'violence even if sfa (Mia* BnweJl) did become frightened, it will be your duty to return a verdict of not euilty* By its unusua* nature, the case on a m'dmeanor charge attracted international atten- tion and became a cause celebre of the Comm'T.lst press Among the secregated crowd of 4M Jammed Into the court- roam were newsmen fram New York and London and this town of 1,500 took on a car- nival air. The defense, including a bat- tery of four Negro attorneys re- tained by the National Associa- tion for the Acvancement of Co- lored People, did not call a single witness in the two-day hearing It confined i's efforts to gruel- ling cross-examination of the state's six wi'.nesses. Mrs. Webs- ter was the star prosecution wit- ness. Cool and composed, she testi- fied that she wus dressed in dun- garees, a checkered shirt and straw hat wh'n Ingram drove by in a battered. 1936 car. "He had his head out of the car, driving aoout five miles an hour, not watching where he was going, but watching me. He drove all over the road." she said. She said she entered a patch of woods at tne side of the road and beaah running when she heard the car rtop. She said Imrram began walk- ing across a corn field, between her and a field where her father and brothers Tere working. "It looked like he was trying to cut me off" she said. The defense claimed Ingram did not chaa the girl, bat thinking tke was a boy wanted to ask where he might borrow a trailer to haul some tobceo. P e f e n s >ttorhey Ered Up- church", Jr.. a local lawyer, said the "law U th* there must hgve been intention on the part of the def endagt end he must have reasonably eused her to be ap- prehensive " Snott chided the defense claim that Ingram did not know Miss Boswell was a gl "You've ob*rved her in the courtroom and going on the wit- ness strand, I submit that the fact she had on dungarees did not hide her femininity and that she looked like a girl nonethe- less." he said. Mrs Websur has wom a dark dress with lumper and prim white blouse -Tiring the trial. Rousseau, a lanky veteran Jur- ist froom North Wilkesboro, N.C., sprawled In the witness chair while instructing the Jury. He read a special prayer for ins- truction handed him by the d- tense, reading' "to arrJvinn at your verdict, you cannot allow yourselves to be influenced by the fact that the defendant is a colored man and the pro*ncuting witness is a white girl" He added: "Of coarse, gentlemen, that's true. We have but one set of laws In this state for every- body The court charges yon that it is yonr worn duty to give a colored man the same charge that yoa wonld a white man." Ingram, who was sentenced*} two years on fhe roads on ffe same offense in a lower eoert, faces the same punishment if found gulltv in the superior ceairt. A more erlous charge of intent to commit rape was re- duced bv court order yesterday. Outside the two-story court - house, pitchmen set up their wares and did a brisk business. Farm work was at a standstill in this section and parking space was at a premium in the town. Once this morning court was in- terrupted to ark that, two cars be moved from in front of the fire house. Church ladlr* served a special lunch nearby to raise funds. Congressman Thurmond Chat- ham (D-N.C arrived in town and took the ooportunity to ad- dress his constituent* during the lunch recess Plata Are ; W' Wsfv^Pslow**^^^^* Go On Sale Dec. 1 Hew Panama license plates for 1952 will be received by the Panama Municipal Treasury early next week, it was an- nounced today by Panama au- thorities. The new plates are now in the government ware- house in Colon. The new license plates will have white letters on a green background for private cars; red numerals on a blue back- ground for commercial vehicles, and yellow numerals on a green background for vehicles of Ca- nal Zone employes residing In Panama. _ Distribution of the new Pa- nama plates is now scheduled to begin Dec. 1.__________ Government Lawyers To Postpone Reply In CZ Tax Case January 16 has been set as the new deadline for the Govern- ment's attorneys to answer the complaint seeking a court ruling that the Canal Zone income tax is unconstitutional. A stipulation to thU effect was file yesterday tn the" U.8. District Court at Annon by the counsel for both the defendants and plPlntlffs _-, A copy of the complaint, which was filed Nov 7, was sent by the District Attorney's Office to the Attorney Genral's Office in Washington and it is not expect- ed that there will be any fur- ther action until the tax ex- perts of the Attorney General's Office file their answer to the complaint. u The plaintiffs in the tax suit are 74 Federal employes In the Canal Zone. Highway Sinks Killing Fifteen In Buenaventura CALI. Colombia. Nov. 16 ported killed, and an unspeci- fied number injured when a stretch of highway between here and the Pacific port of Buena- ventura sank while four cars, filled with passengers, were travelling over it. Rescue crews were sent out last night from Buenaventura and reports reaching here said it was believed that the Ameri- can engineer of the Raymond Concrete Pile of New York was among the dead. He had been working on a paving Job on the highway. It was feared that the death toll may be as high as 21. Salah el Din outlined Egypt's complaints against the British for their aDefced violation of Egypt's sovereignty since the Suez Canal crisis started and their alleged atrocities against Egyptian civilians"not even sparing women and children."' He said: "This is only a brief account of British atrocities and British aggression in Egypt. If this is not war I do no know what war is!" He then referred to United States Secretary of state Dean Acheson's comments on the de- nial of human rights in Hungary and Czechoslovakia. "I wonder what description Acheson would give to the atro- cities committed in the Sues Ca- nal Zone by his British friends and allies. "I for one have no hesitancy In calling them shameful, treach- erous aggression by the United Kingdom which constitutes not only a menace but also a breach of International peace and sec- urity. "They are Indeed a complete repudiation by the United King- dom of tke prthcdple and df cencletof the charter, of the-on- lted Nations." Mid-Air Rescue Saves Trooper As Chute Falls FOBT BINNING, Ga., Nov. 16 TOP)A td-year-eld para- trooper plunging 5e0 feet earthward when his parachute collapsed, was Jerked to safety by an alert buddy. Private James R. Fernande* plummeted to earth head first when his chute failed to open, but Private Frank Elliott reached oat as he passed by, grabbed the parachute's ras- Srnslon lines, and the pair oated safely to the ground. Fernndez had pulled the ripcord en the military chote, but this did not open until he was about 44 feet from the ground. Election of Coffee Queen To End 3-Day Casino Al Atlas The Panama Junior Chamber of Commerce will wind up a three night casino Saturday night at the new Atlas Garden with the election of a National Coffee, Queen to represent Pa- nama in the Central American and Caribbean coffee queen finals. The casino will get underway at the Atms tonight. Provincial coffee queens, chos- en by the Junior Chambers of Panama, Colon, P.enonome, Las Tablas, Chitre and Arraijan. will compete for the honor of repre- senting Panama Saturday. The Latin American Carib- bean finals will be held In con- nection with the Latin American Congress of the Junior Cham- bers of Commerce to be held in the Hotel El Panama on Nov. 28. . UN Warns Reds Only Armistice Can End Battle PANMUNJOM, Nov. 16 (UP) Maj. Gen. Henry Hodes, United Nations truce negotiator, warn- ed the Communists today that the fighting In Korea will con- tinue until an armistice actually Is signed, whether It be days, weeks or months. to a confused and quarrel- some meeting in the Panmun- jom truce tent, Communist Gen- eral Lee Sang Cho asked Hodes to redefine the Allied objective in Insisting that the fighting be continued during the negotia- tions. Hodes said, "You know what that objective is." "We are after an armistice and not a gain on the ground. If the delay lasts four or five months, the fighting will con- tinue until the armistice is sign- ed. "Or If the negotiation* con- tinue for two days, three days Utg WMI cmrttaup a ffie ar- mistice Is achieved. You might as well know this now. If you have not known ft before." Today's meeting ended up in no progress in five hours and 15 minutes of talking the long- eat session yet. But truce dele- gates wilt meet again tomorrow at 11 a.m. (9 p.m. todayi; On the Korean battlefront Allied warplanes stepped up the air" war m the clearing skies this morning and ground forces patrolled over the muddy no man'* land across the front. PUSAN, Korea, Nov. 16 (UP) Col. James M. Han- lev, chief 8th Army war crimes investigator, today raised the total of United States war prisoners murdered by the Communists in Korea. Hanley said that altogether the Redi have slaughter- ed 13,400 United Nations prisoners of war since the out- break of the Korean war June 25, 1950. Of these, 7,000. were South Koreans. far from retracting his disputed earlier statement that the Chinese alone had killed 2,513 United States prisoners, Hanley repeated it and enlarged his report to include 3,757 United States prisoners slain by North Koreans. Hanley said the Information was gathered by 8th Army in- vestigators, survivors of execu- tions. South Korean police and other sources. Hanley today gave these max- imum- numbers of United States prisoners murdered by the Reds: By Chinese: 2,513. By North Koreans since the Chinese -joined the war Novem- ber 1950: 147. By North Koreans before the Chinese entered the war: 3,610. Col. George Patrick Welch, public information officer for United Nations supreme com- mander Gen. Matthew Rldgway, and Ciol. Kenneth L. Booth, pub- lic information officer for the 8th Army, talked with Hanley in bis Pusan office for several Ifttoura today. Rldgway has postponed a a|ate- tag have been reported fearful of the repercussions of Hanley's re- lease on the Panmanjom peace 3 Malayan Constables Killed In Ambush Try SINGAPORE. NOV. 16 A British police lieutenant and a Malayan special constable killed three Malayan constables, and an Indian was wounded when terrorists ambus ted a pel- Ice car in Perak State. Communist terrorists took the weapons from the dead and wounded before retiring. talks, and on the parents of United btates soldiers missing m action in Korea, Asked today whether he waa aware of the furore resulting from his disclosure, Hanley saio: "I haa ol course authorization from superior oiucers to publisa the recoids." Httwever there appeared to be some question as te> whether the clearance Ban- ley claimed to have received from the 8th Army's public information office was for releasing the information to the prese er for using it in % speech before army officers. Hidgway was reported angered over the release of the state ment on Red atrocities wltnout advance notitication, and to be* lleve the ligurea In it are exag- gerated. Hanley sold attftho Mtt ppswr conference whlcla/toucBeV i off the edgy reaction within too Both Tokyo and Washington United Nations Command thai 2-Tour Contestant Had Best Answer to Braniff Question A retired American school- teacher seems to have found the answer to boredom. Charles K. Ransom of Los Angeles, who retired last June after 25 years of teaching voca- tional kuto-shop repairs, has al- ready won himself two trips, last year to Honolulu and now. a one-month Jaunt to South America. He and his wife Clara are in Panama courtesy of Deal Arnar' Colombia Broadcasting radio show "Your Tropical Trip" a quiz program that according to Ransom, is "very hard to get on." Small wonder... For identify- ing two songs that were play- ed "I Get Ideas" and "I Dont' Get Around Much Any More" the ex-schoolteacher won him- self and his wife beautiful wrist watches. But the real plum a free trip to Santiago, Chile and stop overs in other countries on the way came to the contestant who could answer the Jackpot question. Braniff Airways spon- sored this prize. "They asked us to write, in 10 seconds, how many tons of sodium nitrate Chile exports every year. I guessed a million, the figures were gathered by that command In the first place. The word early today waa that Ridgway's headquarters was pre- paring to revise downward the statistics of the report which frayed tempera in the UN com- mand. . The sudden release of the fig- ures wa said to have shocked everybooy from Rldgway down. In Pusan, Hanley said: "X have wanted to have a story publicized since last Septemoer. X made a trip to the States and only returned to Japan Nov. 1. "The front line Gl'a should know what is happening to their buddies who get captured. Peo- ple generally don't know what is going on." Hanley denied that the release of liia report was timed to coin- cide with a crisis in the Korean truce talks at Panmunjom. Contrary to the reported impression of Ridgway that the figares were exaggerat- ed, Hanley aaid they would go up as more information ii received. Welch suggested that Hanley's and came nearest to the right answer which was 1,000.690." By paying a little extra the winner will detour through Rio. ures was based on maximum advantage of the free week's stay at Hotel Crillon In Santia- go, Chile. The prize only covers Ransom's trip, his wife came along "for the ride." Last year the couple toured Honolulu, courtesy of United Airlines and a program called "Earn Your Vacation." This quiz show tested the general knowledge of the contestants. Ransom still remembers the four questions that made him the winder. They had to be an- swered exactly right. is the motto of the Boy Scouts? (Be tPrepared). <2> to wha country of South America do they speak Portuguese? (Bra- zil), (3) What does BTU stand, for? (An engineering term.'Booth to September, about th British Thermal Unit and (4) If advisability of releasing the re- you followed Dow Jones aver- port. ages, what would you be in- At that time Welch said ho terested in? (Financial stock gave Booth an okay In prln- market) ciple. but told him to keep hint approximations. "For Instance," Welch said, "A report may come in of 'about* 20u prisoners being killed. This may be anywhere from five to 10 per cent off. If you add a lot of these approximations toge- ther your final figure will be way off." Hanley said he got permission from the judge advocate gen- eral's office to release the fig- ures in September, and passed them on for clearance with tjie public information officer of th* 8th Army and presumably gen- eral headquarters. Welch said he was asked kv The two-time winner had this to say about contests "It they happen to ask you questions you know. It's easy to win." (Welch) Informed on the mat- ter. That was the last he heard of it until the report showed up in the newspapers. OFFICIAL GROUP a* the recant Inter-American Press conference in Montevideo Is pictured on the dais. Left to right are, J. A. Cova.bf Ultimas Noticias, Caracas; Or. Harmodio Arias of The Panam Amer- ican; Luis Franzini, of El Da, Montevideo, the new president of the group; Tom Wallace of the Louis- ville Times, honorary president; Julio Garzn, of La Prensa, New York, ond Leslie Higlev, IAPA Secretary. PAGE TWO THE PANAMA AMERICAN *. AN INDEPENDENT DAD.* NEWSPAPER FRIDAY. NOVEMBER la, INI -arMWliV ft rf THE PANAMA AMERICAN WMir MO ruaukHID > THE KANAKA AMMICAN *9t- '" rounoir. it NbKI. MMNMVMI IN * MAHMODIO AMIAS. IOITOH 7 H tttl O >4 r*M * TlLIPHON Panama NO S 0740 I.ini1 CA pn.l.i PANAMMICAN. NAM ....,. M 0IC. It 17 CtNTH.l AvNUt !"'! TH ANB lTH I'"" KKIHH RltrxaiNKTIVia JOHUA WWII INO S4H mapiaom av Haw vwk. * y "*? ""is ____________ I 70 t.90 ____________ t 0 I __________ 1* bO t* M MONTH IN 40VNCB--------- rO aiM M1NTM, IN AOVANCl O* dl TIAA IN DVANCI iss Labor Newg And Comment bj victor tmm Dr. Peter I.inditrom, DETROIT A bunch of the muscle boys whose padrone rates high in the Mafia social set have been having them- selves quite a knuckle-bruising, knife-slashing time here for months, kicking the daylights and the unionism out of some of Walter Reuther's followers. The padrone is Santa (Sam) Perrone, an old fashioned pa- troon. good to his family, but wants enthusiastically rough with decency threatens came up the [There's But One Choice, Why the Hesitation? Incrld Bergman's ex-husband, . Calaste Holm (now being melted) for his next bride. The star pre- those whose dec Mrs her career, as of now.. .The Jerry Colonnas are alg-sagging.. nig domain. He Gary Cooper hopes to reconcile with his wife. Pat Neal. the cause ntrd way which actually Was Sthe iplituation, is back in circ. .Betty Batten ha producer Nor- eMy lor santa, for he s all tan Krasna tossing all night again... Helmut Dantine and Dolo- ,,uscle I Gray of "Two on the Aisle7 are baby-staring. Disc Jockey This was a procett which Irtin Block and hi wife are reported estranged /The Billy IS (Eleanor Holm) have reached the wiretap vtsga. Wirstapper _ iy of last year', front pages has the job- --Ufes*'"*'-Mar Ellen Murphv served separation papers on Mark MUrprn or inr New Yorker. Model Betty Dew of the Stork- Mwoeeo set has switched from sugar baron Emilio Smnchjn,Jr.^o^ot..Shtr- aan BlUingslev has been cleared by the Police Dep t en that rrau- talent letter allegedly signed by him. Detective J. P. McNally of Police laboratory certified it wa not written oa any of hi fin, If"* kept him illiterate, the Kt- fauver committee said in chose television days. Per- rone, according to the com- mittee, has difficulty read- ing even street siqns, but this doesn't keep him from finding his way home to his mansion In swank Qrosse Point, via chauffeured li- mousine, a luxury made possible because his manual labor brings over 965,000 a year. Some of the padrones boys have been travelling through- Prom Saturday's front page of the N. Y. Tinte Gen Elsen- hower Is definitely available for the Republican nomination for President J. Russel Sprague, Republican National Comm tteeman Irom New York, declared yesterday In a copyrighted story In News- day Nassau County dally newspaper. Mr. Sprague predicted that Osij Elsenhower would be nominated and elected Informed of uvw "-;""!. rZTfZ. Or Spragues statement, Oovcrnoi Dewey. one of Eisenhowers cut the State as " lnJ* fading supporters, said: "Mr. Sprague usually knows what he Is trot .knuckling workers who, taking about"...Like W.W., who tipped It 2 days earlier. jwatned to Join the CIO Auto^ Rita Hajworth and Anita Urronde (who was an Inspiration to To the surprise of the Rover | Aly Kahn list Summer) are trading icy glaresi li. H'wood .-War- ^yg, the padrone UMW ren Hull of the "Strike It Rich" program and Mr Susan P. May- |Auto union, the police sudden- Metopera star Patrice Munsel and Ro- ly cracked down the other " morning arresting seven re-1 latlves, fi lends and employes of Padrone Perrone. Taking Armistice Day serious- ens of Ssarsdale merged.....-----,---------- bert Sehuler, the candy heir, are sugary..Pattl Page irantathe field to know her heart Is still free.. Judy Gershwin wishes Robert Taylor wasn't so serious about Barbara Stanwyck. Appellate Dlvi- sion Presiding Justice Peck (who soon quits the bench) will be eucceeded by Judge Van Voorhis. Peck join the Wall St. firm of j the locai gendarmerie let Sullivan A Cromwell ..The biggest howl among Sapciety folk was JJ M peacefully nd then the costume party at which Arline Judge's ex-groom band-aids. ______ lopen a succulent protection Gilbert Miller, who parent, the Olivier, In'>'d "SSawhlle. at least, the hor- mSFtfClmpM.*'W^^*L^JSJ&'i&&\5t beatings and bribery have Orei Mew Business By BOB RUARK r noodle which wears a 2-inch black velvet collar tod- tire on their cars anainreaien- realflamonds. The Wm. Bart.es of the Social Register ed their familles which, geU ing for babv bartle. (Oh. Walter!).. Lorna Lynn of the real lOWMJ* totem Caae and socialite Hugh McGill, 3rd. won't surprise intl-' pole, because that throws eatlf the* Mend?torewY ear'... Brian bonlevy and socialite muscle against frightened wives Ktt Wartf hi script girl, are uh-huhney.. Will Morrisry. thf huddling their tousled-haired Showman, wed Glngere, a concert pianist, soon. Hi th. The Cables: The King of Albania's real romance involves a Btetty airline receptionist In Paris. .Capt. O. P. Jones, who piloted $31 and Philip saiely. will be up'd to a Lordship. Diana Wyn- ward, the star, and Dr. Tibor Csato wed in London this wk Rita Pandit, dghtr of the Ambassador from India, is in love. He is RAF Officer Herbert O'Malley of London...Tip to British Intelligence: An Investigation of the background of the Prime Minister of Egypt mipht pAvlde-ihe real clue to the disturbances in the Sumi zone. U. S. agents uspec&Red alms. What wa the Premier's link to a Communist newspaper there? writer's ha .To$raTnceT.Pt * NEW YORK.A new corporation was born here Lhe other dayan advertising agency. The gold letters are on the door of the Chunln BIdg. now, the telephones are In, the typewriters are install- ed, and the sole proprietor is undergoing all the birth pangs of any young boss of a new business. Which is to say he's sweating, and will continue to sweat. All his Ufe he will sweat, no matter how suc- cessful he become. Sweat Is getting to be a fairly acaree com- modity. In a time which is obsessea with gimme, a union, and the nailon shouMgl of honest perspiration is getting rarer ana know of it for thta is what rarer. So is the inclination to gamble on your- happens when a local police self. Preocppation is with stcurity, especially .hop move, in fast | ^..^ ^ ^ ^ % ^ WokerSh(CIO,nlhd. S^rutmmTSL In Ttnca. when he was an ffi.'lS'wMto'ttc "A! coon executive for the bustling firm of Rutb arrested torpe-, f Jg .{^ dlsUnce out of the mail - oLim mmm m *, w t MERRY-00-ROUND ly DIIW PfAISON________ five-year-olds into the kitchen until poppa come home- I know. I've seen it. Police action has gratified the fee for just a song name.. ."Quo \ ad is" ha he Astor. The Burning of Rome spectacular is Broadway' No. 1 eye-arrester... Bill Veeck, the St. Loui Brown's prexy. Is trying to Set Mlckev Vernon, the Senator's star 1st acker Henry Morgan ana Eve Hunter, the teevy looker, are a new Thing.. Elaine Muel- ler and James Ward, who Is studying for the ministry, are seeing preacher on the 25th... Joyce Mat hew Is busy taking drama, TOlce, language and dancing lessons. A gift from Romeo...ABC Mbllclst Lee Silvian leaves the network to take over Mary Scott Welch' Entertainment Editor desk at Look. Mary' Imaging. Dolores Fairbanks, ex-wlfe of producer Jerry Fairbanks, is ecretly married on the coast to Mator McKlnley the mortician... sAChes DeMille's p.utobiog will be the Jan. Literary Guild choice ^Baroness Helene de Grandcourts engagement to Canadian mil- lionaire Olen Case ha been cancelled... The gendarme padlock- de S East Side spots last week. The Lavender Set is in agony... Arthur Loew, Jr., flies nightly In his private flivver from H'wood to Las Vega. Reason: Arlene DeMarco of that quintet.. .Sales of all racing sheets are off half. One dropped one-third of its staff IriThe day Ike left for Paris a nag named "Man of the Hour" tqmped in 1st at Pimllco In the 8th.. .Terrific brawl on E. 98th I other Runyon Fund's safety slogan Awiteri ends Dec. loth. helse $i to fight cancer, please). The priae la a $15,000 Buick The reason attractive Dr. Eugenie Clark's swlm-ault photo' (ibowlng a rare fish she trapped in the Red 8ea for the Museum Of Natural History disappeared from the final edition of the Trio va. that her husband called up and gave the editor a headache. THI IS YOUR rORUM THt MADIRS OWN COLUMN : THE MAIL BOX Tht Mail Baa M aa forum te> rassart af The Panamo Amanean. latir ara ractivad fruitfully mi ara handlad m a whally cenfieaetUI sjasmat. If yau conttibutt a letter eea't b impatient if k doesn't oitan twa at day. Lattani ara pualrihed m the arder reaeivad. Pleeaa try I keep rite letten limited t ewe sees lanath. Idantity ef lattai writarf h kald m trlctaat cenfieanea. Thai aewasap*' wamaa ae raaolbllrry ter atetaaaaata m eeMiam In letter Heat leader. , o ----- t m KUDOS FOR "CRITICS CORNER" Panama City Pear Sir: What an excellent Job Irene Chan Paulding did in explaln- ipt cubism in "Critic's Corner" last Sunday. Some people have an instinctive understanding of forms, lanes and masses which makes It easy for them to receive the Baet of a picture painted in the cubist manner. For those Sa have no such primitive grasp of what cubism is all about, lira. Paulding's analysis is one of the simplest and best I've seen. Anyone who ponders It for a while and take a long look at , reproduction of the works of Breque, Picasso and the other HOdCrn masters will find the key to a new visual world both i in art and nature. _ Gallery Hound. ANXIETY ON THE TELEPHONE SQDAD Mail Bos Editor, panam American. Jfcar Sir: I am asking your kindself to publish this letter so that the : higher-ups can take note concerning the great dissension which I caused by an Individual at the telephone maintenance section, Uval Station, Canal Zone. This individual Is so incompetent that It's causing great an- lety to all concerned In that section. When he gives an order be is 75% wrong at times, the cable splicer are always wrong in their work. The storekeeper has a tough time for not ticking his neck out releasing material without an authorize reauisltlon from his auparvisor. Roping that this letter brings some action from the hlgher- I remain. TJaooatenteS. It has been ascertained that there Is an organised plan of operation on the par^ of cer- tain persons to prevent em- ployes in some plants from ei- ther joining a union or form- ing a union of their choice. The organized plan follows a pattern of outright threats, In- timidation and the use of co- ercive mesures " What the police know U that the plants they won't name are the kind of "re- spectable investments" which certain elements hove gone into secretly. To "protect" that investment, the work- ing stiffs have been mug- ged, slugged, knifed and bribed. As a business Investment, the Syndicate has. actually thrown "very mtae funds" Into union elections In major locals here In the hope it might be able to put over labor officials Who would tolerate W-phtnt gam- bling. That hasn't worked. Which accounts for the kind of vio- lence seeping quietly across some of this city's streets. But failure to elect friendly union officials has about as mueh effect in wiping out sin as revival tent shows. The sys- tem Is hard to smash. In many a giant plant there are special tool rooms and clo- sets used as gambling alcoves. There are tool and spare part distributors In some factories who issue their stuff over coun- ters. There's a special pla- toon syrtem. One squad ot working men eager to pick up a few extra bucks from the syndicate picks up the bets and then relays the slips to a second band of men who carry them out of the plant. A third group takes the money past the gates. Thus, if picked up by the oolice, the final platoon has nothing but currency. The mid- dle men have no money la their pockets and legal pro- secution is difficult. The first echelon is made up of working Joes who are not criminals. Tf picked tip they "cop a pisa" (guilty) and tht combine pays their fines Just a business expense. But without the lower squads the operation limps. Aim the union can and tries to smash gambling by oressurint that bottom groun That accounts for mueh of the mob's sneer here. Only he police ean win this fight The eountrv should keer its eye on this strugtl In De- troit It ean set a national pre- cedent. days,' while he was commuting to Philadelphia to finish out an education that had been in- terrupted by four years of wur/ He did all his studying on the trata, to and from New York and Phifly. He didn't stay in the mall room very long. He busted out, and It wasn't long before he was handling about four million bucks' worth Of oth- er people's advertising money That was when he got made a vice-president of R. and R., before he was a7. You would think that young David J. Maho- ney, ex-Infantry captain recent vice-president, would have been content with vp's pay and a stout expense account and a little hunk of stock and a bonus, and a very fat future with tneTinrr. He had already hit it good, when most young- sters are still striving to crack the outer edge* of a cateer. " But there Is a curious itch In some people, an ltCae t^^thafl^he'coSd work po.ltlr.ly> an Injun, andls presafag westward, hoi for somebody else he could work positively for himself, so he laid himself on the line. You only make one mistake In the tricky ad- vertising business; Dave was willing to bet ha wouldn't make that mistake. One of his best accounts was willing to go along on the same kind of faith. Others he accumulat- ed. Now here Is one of the funny things about big, tough business. When he quit his old firm nobody was sore, which would usually be the case. His former em- ployers pitched him a party, gave him a resound- ing sendoff with good wishes, and contributed che unexpected, handsome present. It was as If, all of a sudden, vast R. and R. remembered how everybody gets started. So now the new gold letter are on the door, the boy is beginning fa roll. I hope he rolls it and far, JX only as t*n object lesson that it i&a still be'dbhe If you've got the heart and the glt-up-and-fo. You hearan awful jot of low taoans from the youth of today, who see no future for themselves, and you also hear a lot of louder moans from the elders who are frightened of losing what they've gained. The success story is downpu'yed; we are build- ing up to another Scott FlUgerald age, where the men grow long hair, drink warm gin and pity themselves In bad prose and worse poetry. The success story used to be the big story. The success story was hi the progress of pioneers from one coast to another, in the building of big .ndustry from a standing start The element of security never entered Into it security was a minor nuisance for women and weaklings to consider. The fabulous people who made us great were all heavy bettors, gamblers on themselves. There are not so many horizon to look at how, and not eo.tnann frontier, but there are Ull chances to be taken,and jackpots to be hit. - Which Is why I take a sort ot personal pride in the gold letters on Dave Mahoney' new door. In a way, the young man has *ust slain himself w The Real Eisenhower Story By JOSEPH ALS0P WASHINGTON.Now that the argument about who said what to whom Is beginning to die away, the real Eisenhower story perhaps deserve attention. It U a very simple story The Incidents of Oen. Eisenhower's brief visit told by his friends of the damage done by his first remarks. And when he lett the country, he then gave a second Interview clearly Intended to repair that damage. Oen. Elsenhower said that thL friends knew how he would "act and react"which plainly * Cl ,i h> vtrtuai'v awent awav the how he would act and react wnicn piainry mata doubt? t^atwe^^S implle. that Sen. Duff ta not talking nonsenaa backers io? the Republl^Pr Jidential noml- Flrst among these was the basic doubt about whether Oen. Elsenhower was. after all, a Re- publican. This one Is being actively fostered by the friends of Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio, for rea- sons that are almost excessively obvious. Until rather recently, moreover, certain lead- ing Democrats close to President Truman have also rather desperately hoped that the General might be Induced to take their party's 1982 no- mination, again for reason ttiat are obvious. Indeed this Democratic group is known to have sent emissaries to the General, reportedly Including former Secretary of tht Army Kenneth Royall, to sound him out. And It Is also known that Oen. Eisenhower answered these political ambassador by thanking them for the compli- ment, but confessing that he could not possibly see his way to running on the Democratic ticket. Thus Oen. Elsenhower haa effectively taken his stand as a Republican considerably prior to his famous White House luncheon with, the Fre- The report that the subject was again raised by President Truman at this luncheon has now been denied by both Preside"' and General. In any case, it Is surely more significant to know whom the General talked politics to. than to kiww who talked politic to the General. The group of people who have talked politics to Gen. Elsenhower cannot be called select, even if it include the President himself. The group ot people the General has volun- tarily talked polities to. on the other hand, Is very select indeed. And its chief members are precisely Oen. Elsenhower's chief Republican supporters Oov. Thomas E. Dtwey of New York and Sen. James Duff of Pennsylvania. Thereafter, the General talr.ed long and seri- ously by telephone with Se-.j Duff and cuss the organization and tr.egy of the Eisen- hower movement. There U no doubt at all that the General was Die to run if called upon. And Oen. Elsenhower also said that that be would say "the word" when and If the time jame which plainly implies that he will an- swer his friends' call to declare himself a can- didate, when and if the circumstances are right. These remarks of Gen. Elsenhower's do not constitute a flat commitment; and until he has iven a flat commitment a man can always Jhange his mind. But these remark of the General' certain- ly go a far as the General can possibly go, so .ong as he holds a great non-pollUcal place which forbid an open declaration. The Eisenhower backers may now assume that the General will be available and will declare himself It there is a real call. To these major doubts now removed in this manner, must also be added a third, leaser, but 3 till significant doubt. It has always been ta the President's power to use his own position as Commander ta Chief in order to sabotage Gen. Elsenhower's candidacy on the Republican ticket. There are the strong- est reasons for believing that this third doubt has also been killed. For whatever may have been said at the fa- mous White House luncheon, It can now be taken for granted the President haa Indicated to Gen. Elsenhower that he is free to make his own political choice ta his own good tima. Thus all now depends on two remaining ques- tions: whatever the Elsenhower backers can really organise their movement; and whether the decline In the Presidents popularity will not encourage the Republicans to name Sen. Taft None the less, despite the surface turmoil, the Eisenhower movement is far ahead of where it was a fortnight ago. (Copyright, 1951, New York Herald Tribune Inc.) DREW PEARSON SAYS: Military saw chance to eaie out Gen. Clark through Vatican appointment; Frank Mc- Hale engineered Frank McKinney's new job; Secret China Record shows how Acheson supported Chiang. WASHINGTON.It's been kept under cover, but the President'i military advisers lobbied even harder than catholic leader to get Gen. Mark Clark appointed Ambassador to the Vatican. Official reason was that the Joint Chiefs of Staff consider the Vatican the beat listening post in Europe. Unofficial reason was that they saw an opportunity to ease General Clark gracefully out of the army. <3en. J. Lawton Coffins, the Army Chief of Staff, has been par- ticularly solicitous about getting General Clark a new job. Mean- while, Clark has been equally concerned about Collins' future, haa been quietly booming him to replace General Elsenhower ta Eu- rope. The truth about this unusual Interest In each other's wel- fare Is that each would like to get rid of the other. The two men are West Point classmates, but it is no secret inside the Army that they have been rivals for years. During the war. General Clark shot up rapidly, got into the headlines when he went ashore ta North Africa by submarine, later became TJ. S. Commander ta Italy; and after the war, Commander of U. S. forcea In Austria. General Collins did not get Into the limelight until be led the capture of Cherbourg. After the war, Collins returned to master- mind General Elsenhower's and the Army Public Relations, then, became Deputy Chief of Staff, now Army Chief of Staff. As such he is superior to General Clark, who commands the army field forces, but both would like to run the army their own way. As a result, Collins would be delighted to see Clark ta the Vat- ican or as far away as possible, and Clark would be delighted to see Collins move into Elsenhower's shoes. As a soldier, Clark could not turn down the President's ap- pointment. However, he asked to stay on active duty. Thus no can still be ta the running for Collins' job. Thus he also outfoxed Collins, who had hoped to see Clark go out of the army when ha went to the Vatican. Another member of the Joint Chiefs, who would be delighted to call General Clark "Ambassador" Clark, la Oen Hoyt Vanden- berg, the Air Force Chief of Staff. Clark Is the one who raised the outcry about air force failure to support ground troops In Ko- reathough he has been overruled by the ground commander, General Van Fleet, who said he would rather have the air force attacking supply lines and bases, It a choice had to be made. Now Senator Connelly of Texas says he Isn't going to let the Vatican appointment get out of his committee, so it looks a if the generals would have to get along with each other after all BACKSTAGE BOSS Democrat Frank McHale, towering boss of the onetime Indiana a per cent club machine, makes no bones about the fact that he Sut hoosler banker Frank McKinney across as Democratic National halrman, coached him at bis first press conference, dictated let- ters for him to sign, and arranged his appointments. McHale nabbed the committee chairmanship for his protege by the old adage of "being thar fustest with the moetest." Jake Arvey, the Chicago democratic boas, t'pped McHale off that bill Boyle was on the skids anctsuggested that the big hoosler might like the job himself. Whereupon McHnle put ta a long- distance call for his friend and fellow Irishman, kingmaker Matt Connelly of Mr. Truman's staff. "I know just the type person you need to restore the prestige of the Natfonal Committee," he said. "He should be young, a suc- cessful business executive, clean as a hound's tooth, ana a loyal Democrat." "If you know that kind of a guy, you've bought yourself a national chairman," Connelly said. McHale Ifien recommended Frank McKinney who both fita the description and did a bang-up job In the Pentagon. Kingmaker Connelly saw to It the door was bolted, refused to let other demo- crats with candidates of their own see the President. NOTEMcHale saya he Is bringing Louis Johnson and other deserving democrats into the Washington picture. Prank McKin- ney says he will use a new broom, will sweep out democratic dead- wood. SECRET CHINA RECORD Republican senators were emphatic. Just before Congress ad- journed, that they did not want the secret hearings on China be- fore the Senate Foreign Relations Committee made public. And when you read the secret transcript of those hearings, you can understand why. From the testimony of Secretary of State Acheson before the Senate Committee proves just the opposite of what GOP Senators have been contendingnamely, that the State Department want- ed to dump Chiang Kai-shek and turn China over to the Com- munists. On the contrary, Acheson tried to support China right down the line. This column has now obtained a secret transcript of the Sen- ate record of Oct. 12,1M9 which Republicans still don't want pub- lished. On that date, Chiang' armies were already on the run, and some observers thought we should abandon the staking National- ists and make friends with the new Chinese rulers by helping to overthrow Chiang. However, Acheson's secret advice to the Sen- ate Foreign Relations Committee was: "We should NOT take the view, which has been advocated by some, of -aylng the united States will equip, arm and lead Chinese to fight the Chinese (Na- tionalist) government." Instead, Acheson was doing his best to find someone who would stand up and fight: Even the fierce Mohammedan Ma bro- thers, expected to battle the Communists to the death, chose this time to leave for Mecca. i "We are Investigating every possibility of giving some sort of support as quick as possible to any group whj really wanted to stand firm and maintain their position," Acheson reported to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. "But as t said, by the time we had just about concluded that our friends, the Masthey are the favorites of everybody, Including General Chennaultthe two brothers had decided to go to Mecca on a pilgrimage. "The great difficulty Is that by the time you have made up your mind that somebody la a pretty 'stout fellow' and Is going to stay with you," continued Acheson. "he la over on the other side." CRITIC HICKENIOOPER "Yes, I understand the difficulties of that kind," agreed Sea. Bourke Hlckenlooper, Iowa Republican, now an outspoken Ache- son critic who wouldn't want the public to know ho ever agreed with Acheson on China. "It seems to be adding up rapidly, dap by day, we are completely withdrawing from China, and a few desultory gestures here and there are about all we will be able to do." "What else can you do but withdraw?" ahruggad Chairman Tom Connelly of Texas. '1 am not quarreling about It one way or the other." agreed Hlckenlooper again. "About the only foothold we would have at this time, as I see Itthat Is, that we propose to keep any contacta withmight be Formosa.'* "Formosa. Chungking and Western China at the present tune," interrupted Acheson, Indicating that he still hoped to keep the Nationalist on the mainland. "Also Kwangsl and Yunnan at the present time and as a point of penetration Hong Kong Is valuable," added Philip Jessup, wtjS has been called pro-Communist by Senators McCarthy and Hlcken- looper, but who seemed more optimistic than Hlekealooper himself about helping Chiang to hang on. (Copyright, 1951, By The Bell Syndicate, Inc.). 'Mr.P.A.W|}fcwj., attract a follewlf#i- Of prospecta mighty fine! What' more ... he signs them quickly On the dotted line! You- classified sd wBl st- tract a parade of food pros- pect* bocaoM everyone to Panam sod the Canal Zone read P.A. Wist Ad regnlarly. Try them bow ... the results win gttfprise yon! I . FRIDAT, NOTEMBER 18, 1951 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER . PAGE THRO ^m W L_JACOtV ON BRIPflt HY OSWALD JACOB! Written for NBA Servir 4.AKQ 100742 ? KQt 52 WEST (D) .41 AS ?A s + AQJ108S SOUTH AJI02 VKQJI ? 71017 *K< Both ildM vul. Wet* N.rth EMt 1* DoubU Pn, i* * P.M Put Pau Piu Opening laid* A a* Lift For CZ Union Churches Is Loyalty Sunday Slogan THE NEW BUILDING of the Gamboa Union Church la locat- ed at Galllard Highway and Sibert Street. The structure was completed and occupied last month. "South made his contract in this hand," writes a Montreal correspondent, "but he could have been beaten. I don't say that he should have been beat- en, because that's really what I'm writing to you about. "West opened the ace of dia- monds, and dummy played the queen. West thought this over for a second or two and then laid down the ace of clubs, continu- ing with the eight of clubs. He hoped that East would produce the king of clubs or a trump, but he was disappointed on both counts. "South took the king of clubs and ted a trump at once. West could take his ace of hearts, but nothing else. "When the pay of the hand had ended. West confessed that he could have defeated the con- tract. He could have led the queen of clubs (instead of the ace) at the second trick, forcing out South's king. South would lead a trump, and West would hop up with the ace to lead the six of dubs. This would put East Special Music To Be Featured At Harvest Service In La Boca Observance of the annual har- vest thanksgiving at St. Peter's church. La Boca, on Sunday will be enhanced with special music by the choir. Services- listed for the occasion re holy communion at 5:30 a.m., choral eucharlst 7 a.m., children service 3 p.m., and evensong 7:30 p.m. At choral eucharlst the choir will sing a new communion serv- ice in E flat, written by H. H. Woodward. The offertory an- them for evensong is J. Chrlsto- CORNERSTONE WILL BE LAID on Sunday, Jan. 13. for the new Margarita Union Church shown architects' scale model. Next Sunday has been designa- ted Loyalty Sunday by the Ca- nal Zone Union Churches. The entire membership of the six congregations has been urged to attend the morning worship ser- vice and make their pledge of support. The combined budgets of the six churches are slightly over 140.000. The year 1951 has been marked by active advance In facilities. Two of the six congregations have completed major capital In with the seven of clubs to re-1 improvements while a third has turn a diamond. plans completed for laying the "Would a real expert make this corner stone of a new church play, or Is it strictly a pipe sanctuary early in January, dream?" It's a hard question to answer. ? The play is very logical, but dif- ficult to see. I can think of a few experts who might find the play in a very Important match, but they'd probably overlook the play in a casual game. West can see that he heeds a diamond ruff to beat the con- tract. He can give the lsad to his partner only with a high club or a club ruff. When he1 leads the queen of clubs, West Is asking East to overtake with the king if he can. After that play loses to South's king. West leads the six of clubs to allow East to win if he has the seven or if he can ruff. What if East has a singleton club, and a singleton trump? That is impossible. East would have six or more cards in either spades or diamonds and would bid his long suit over the double of one club. What If South has a singleton /king of clubs or the douoleton king-seven? That would be hard luck for Westbut in either of those cases the situation would be hopeless unless East had a trump trick. That would be far too much to hope for. An important feature m the expansion program has been the new worship and educational unit of the Gamboa Church re- cently completed and now being used. This new unit represents an expenditure of $35.000 with- out, equipment. The dedication ceremony will be held in the next four weeks. Early in 1951 the Balboa Union Church completed its new resi- dence for the minister's family. This three-bedroom-o.ie-story- Callfornia type house adjoins the Church on San Pablo St., Balboa. It occupies an attractive position also overlooking Balboa Road. The Pastor's study with separate street entrance also Is located in the new residence. This new unit represents an expenditure, including furnishings, of $18.000. To accommodate the growing Sunday School enrollment, the Balboa Church soon will begin extensive alterations of the ground floor area to provide more departmental and class room space. The Union Church of Marga- rita has completed plans for the construction of the first Unit of a new church edifice to accom- modate this rapidly growing con- f* SECOND FLOOR INVEHIDA ^* WE ARC UNPACKIh Rosewood Salad Bowls.. 3.50 Individual Bowls........ 1.11 Fork A Spoon Sets...... J5 Chrome-Plated Garlic Press ................. %M Potato Mashers......... J5 Metal Porch Lamps ............35.00 Metal Reading Lamps, with flex- ible shade ....................19.50 Nest of 3 Tables with Glass Top and Lamp ....................20.00 Porch Lamps with Plant Holder.. 15.50 Metal Bridge Lamps............10.50 i Bedroom ft Livingroom Pictures...... 2J5 Bedroom Lampa ..................... 7.95 Book-Ends. Oriental Design........... 5.95 Plastic Floral Centerpiece*........... j.51 Metal Rocking Chairs................ljjja Wall Mirrors........... jt M 2f*in*u,L"imp*-wlfa ** B*ck '" M Plastic Wading Pool*.................if .5* Metal Ironing Board*...........I'll 1 Cotton Ironing Board Caver*........'. lju Buy NOW Second Floor 5a Avenida gregatlon. At present this con- gregation meets m the Margari- ta gymnasium. The corner stone of this .new church will be laid on Sunday. January 13. This new plant represents a capital ex- pense of $60,000. With the completion of the Margarita Church, every Union Church of the Canal Zone will be housed in its own permanent building. All but the Gamboa Church also have their own resi- dences for the minister and his family. During the coming year the Cristobal Church has plans fot extensive repairs to its Church. These include redecorating of the Church Sanctuary and Sun- day school rooms, as well as ma- jor repair of the roof. The Cris- tobal Church is the oldest Union Church and serves the commun- ities of Cristobal, New Cristobal, Colon and adjacent military units. The Gatun Church has insti- tuted a unique service to mili- tary personnel at scattered de- fense batteries in that area. Not only are these men served where ' they are stationed but a special Sunday evening service featuring movies and a social program helps provide a much-needed service to these met) In uniform. A community family night is al- so held regularly by the Gatun Church and Includes both mem- ber* of the church and non members as Well. The Union Church at Pedro Miguel Is the only one currently without a resident minister, but it is actively raising its budget and seeking the services of a full- time minister. During the past several months this church has been served by the minister of the Gamboa Church in the capa- city of supply minister. The Union Churches accept in membership members from any of the Protestant denominations. They operate under a congrega- tional type of Church govern- ment and extend a cordial Invi- tation to all residents of the Ca- nal Zone and Panama, not other- wise affiliated, to worship with one of the six congregations. Sunday Schools meet at 9:30 and the morning worship services fol- low at 10:30 a.m. each Sunday. The slogan for Loyalty Sunday this year is "We're giving our Church the lift it needsPledg- ing more this year!" Elks Dance Postponed Prom Nov. 24 To Dec. 15 Postponement of an Elks dance scheduled for Nov. 24 was an- nounced today by the sponsor, Mount Olympus Lodge No. 559, IBPOEW. The dance has been reschedul- ed for Dec. 15 at the Club Arcos to music by Marcelino Alvarez and his "Reyes del Mambo." pher Marks' "I will Give Thanks." Rev. Lemuel B. Shirley, priest in charge, will be,offlclant and preacher at the amices. ***eaac**nEssa**esa*MB*aa(s**i Atlantic Sector To Mark Fourth Year With Dinner PORT GULICK. Nov. 16 Sa- turday, December 1. will mark the fourth anniversary of the ac- tivation of the Atlantic Sector. To celebrate the occasion all officers and men assigned to Sector Headquarters are having a dinner tomorrow at the Cristobal Gun Club. Essential military duties on December 1 preclude having the dinner on that date. Thanksgiving Decorations! LEWIS SERVICE 4 Tivoli Avenue Opposite Ancon P. 0. Mr. MwT" 'ml pl.H. Can plat one hallad clear: "Ll .tMift itKt in- .ii laaV Ya'll profit r-r-r' '--r h-r- (yurs ah one MABS....of California A Repelation in BATHING SUITS No Stays No Zippers Invisible Inner Bra One and two piece suits Nylon... Rayon... Laxtex... and Cotton Sizes 32-38 AT BOTH STORES . PECI/Us REMEMBER OUR CHRISTMAS RAFFLE You will receive a numbered ticket FREE with each $5.00 cash, paid charge, or lay-away purchase you make during November and through December 22nd or as long as the tickets last. You may also accumulate your purchase slips until they total $5.00 for a ticket. If any ticket you hold plays in accordance with the Panam National Lottery drawing of December 23, 1951, you will win a valu- able prize! 'r( SATURDAY j SUNDAY :g _________ j^NDAY^ HEINZ SOUPS FELIX B. MADURO, S. A 21 Central Avenue ... ST*AND $A Nf7*r~R7l WA # ifh/pptie Jtafttti fit m fu Fe CORNER "H" and Darin Street Phone: 2-2181 Abo in COLON: Front Street in "Arena de Cotn" Building Tel. 1212 DON'T FORGET TO USE YOUR CHRISTMAS DOLLAR LISTEN IN SUNDAY I to X:U n.m. f(* SAS SYMPHONY IMS Ex. > KfMH PANAMA'S riNEST . ON y -STOP *' SHOPPING CENTER f 15th Beltsario Porrea Are, (Golf C'lnb Road) St KM HOME DELIVERY Tel. 3-MJ4 - 'V - plIPIWPPIPPPi ' **' PAUfc FOITR . ' THE PANAMA AMKRICAN rr AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER *9*< _ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER IS. IS51 fflttl eiVplat B. .ana HacArlhur Speech rr-'s Congressman 5 .TTLE. Wash.. Nov. 16 (UP) -:*,*:n. Douglas MacArthur, ig- nfc.iti* charges he offered hlm- 1. as a GOP Presidential can- dk..ue at what was supposed to be ,a i.on-partisan celebration, wr'it ahead with plans today to prrt 1.291 returning veterans of th-' Korean war. i the general on the speak- atiorm will be Gov. Arthur ...agile of Washington. Mayor Willrm B Devln and other dig- nitaries. Eut at least one invited guest counted himself outCongress- fHuah B. Mitchell last night y rejected an Invitation to pprt after hearins MacAr- charr-c this nation's leader- ship with -diplomatic blunders abroad and reckless spendthrift aims al home." The Washington Democrat, a staunch supporter of President Trvman'.s Administration, accus- ' ed MacArthur of subverting" Wattle's 100th birthday celebra- tion with -gross partisan poli- tic.' In my time. I recall of no more demagogic speech," Mitch- ell said. "I have.long suspected that MavcArthur fancied himself In the role as the Republican Presiden- tial nominee. I am more firmly of that opinion after listening to him last night." MacArthur had told a loudly applauding audience of 12.000 persons, in addition to hundreds of thousands of television and radio networks, that U.S. "diplo- matic blunders" have helped build up Russian military strength. MacArthur also lashed out at immorality in government, high- er taxes, threats to freedom of the press, and U.S. aid to Yugo- slavia. Without specifically naming Yugoslavia, he said there is no way to reconcile a declared aim of defeating Communism while providing arms to a Communist nation. Georgia Sheriff Convicted OfMoonshiningOperations ACOB CANASTA $i Volunteer Referee Wonts Presidency BALHART. Tex.. Nov. 16 lUPi Furniture dealer N. D. Allen- der announced yesterday he would run for President on a j "referee"tlcket. i Alexander said he planned to i referee politicians in Washing- ton "back Into the field of i orno the straight and narrow i path." i "AH politicians are poison." f he said. "Including Mr. (Robert A.) Taft. ""General Elsenhower Is exact- ly sphere he belongs, and Gen- eral MacArthur has served His purpose." NEWNAN. Ga., Nov. 18 (UP> Spalding County Sheriff J. D. i posey was convicted today of I conspiracy to defraud the gov- ernment of taxes through oper- ation of a vast moonshine busi- ness while he was in office. A. U.S. District Court jury re- turned a verdict of guilty against Posey and four co-defendants after deliberating one hour and 36 minutes. Convicted with Posey for what the government called an "un- holy" conspiracy were William J. Burks. Collie Eubanks. his bro- ther. Roger and Douglas Stewart. Judge Boyd Sloan told defense counsel Hal-Tlndsay to have the five convicted men. return to the ' courthouse TuesdaVy"-to hear their sentence. The maximum penalty for the offense would be five years im- prisonment. $10,000 fine or both. The government charged that Posey was chief of "an unholy al- liance" of bootleggers during which time he violated the trust i placed in him by the electorate 'of Spalding County. The defense contehded that I the sheriff was the victim of a Iframeup, designed to put him ! safely behind bars and thus pre- vent his efforts to clean moon- 'shiners out of Spalding County. As lawyers on both sides sum- med up their cases, Posey's de- fense for-the first time during I the trial produced the sheriff's I family as courtroom spectators. "Don't send this innocent man to prison." defense counsel W. H. i Beck begged the jury. "Send him home to that fine family: give him a chance to recoverif he canfrom this frame-up by the rats who squealed when they got Into a corner." But U.S. District Attorney J. Ellis Muddy demanded that Po- sey and his co-defendants be , sent to prison. I He said the defense was com- I plainine because the three wit- nesses "violated the code of the bootleg profession" by telling i what they knew. "I'm not in the milk toast busi- ness." Mundy said. "When some- one tells me about a violation of 'the law I'm going to give it to ;the Grand Jury." Posey. who had appeared jolly and confident during the first davs of the trial, eame to court today with a haggard face. He studied the floor and the defense table as lawyeYs stood before the jury and.alternately argued that he was a villain and a victim of a frame-up by men who once claimed him as a irlend.* "* BHS Students Present "Life Of The Party" At Diablo Theater Thirty students of the Balboa High School are cast In the forthcoming production of "Life of the Party." the family com- edy by Hayes and Hayes, it was announced from the office of the Superintendent of Schools today. The comedy will be given at the Diablo Clubhouse Theater on Tuesday. Dec. 4 and Wednes- day. Dec. 5, with all seats re- I served. Tickets are now on sale bv members of the high school Student Association. "Life of the Party" is a live- ly, understanding study of modern youth and the modern family Warm and funny, brisk and tender, and full of : hilarious situations and dia- logue. A large number of stu- dents are taking part, one rea- ! son being that this will be the only all-school play for the pre- i sent school year. Duplicate performances will I be given on both nights, so that j theater patrons of the Isthmus may choose the more convenient 1 time. Revitalize Your Kidneys Fight Backache Rheumatism If vou are feeling run-down, Git UP Nighti, or auffer from Backache, Iron* cloudy urine, Burning PUMfMi Rheu- matism, Leg Pain, Swollen Ankle-, Nervouenee, ttficlnee, and feel old before your llmV kidney trouble may be I he cauae. Wrong food and drfnka, wofry, rolda or overwork placa a heavy atratn on your kidliej > that they function poorly and often may need help to Eroperly purlfjr your blood and maintain eaith and energy. Revrtallie Yae* KI-MVf A fat acting; internal medicina called Cyetex. devalopad by tha Knox Control lthoratorr of Loa Amele, California., la now helping thouaand to revitaltee kidney action in tbaaa 1 positiva waya: 1. Help* kldaars clean nut noUonoua acid and purify tha blood, t. Combata rerms tal tha urinary aystera. I. 6oothaa and calina Irritated tleauea. Cyetax la now Imported by leading rirufglati, ao there la no need of any- one eiufering from Backache, flatting ITp Nlghi and tha other aymptoma mentioned abova without tha beneflta of thta great medicine. Gat Cyetex from your drugglat today and ee hew qulektr It help put yen on tha read to better health. BV OSWALD JACOBY Written for NEA Service A good many readers seem to be puzzled about the correct pro- cedure when a hand dies a na- tural death. We can probably i settle it best by taking a concrete example. Nobody has melded out The ; player at your right draw*' the la.si card of the stock and dis- cards a king. What happens .now? You are allowed to pick up that king to start a Hew meld. For example, you may" take it if yon have a pair of kings in your hand. Provided that the deck is not frozen, you may take the king with one king and a wild card. Of course tin means that Jyou pick up the rest of the dis- card pile with it. Notice particularly that you are allowed to pick up the pile; you are not compelled to do so. I If you prefer not to pick it up, the hand comes to an end then and there. Nobody melds any . more. Nobody does anything. All . you do Is count up. Each player must deduct for the cards still in ;his hand. Neither side gets the bonus for going out. What happens if you already had a meld of kings on the ta- ble? Provided that the deck la not frozen, you are now compell- ed to pick up that king and add it. to your meld. If the deck is frozen, however, nobody can compel you to take two kings out of your hand and add them to the meld. If you do pick up the king un- der this rule, you must meld at once, as usual. You may meld anything else at the.same time, for this is just like any other le- gal turn to play. Then, if you have not melded out, you must discard. If you discard, the next player must treat your discard exactly as you treated the king. He must pick it up If he can do so by means of cards that are In his hand. Q In a game of Samba our op- Donents put, down three red threes but did not complete two canastas. How do thev score for those red threes. Do they merely throw them back Into the deck, or are they actually penalized for them? AThey are penalised 100 points for each of them. The scorekeeper subtracts 30 points from their previous score. BEAVERS TOO EAGER MEREDITH, N. H. (UJM Beavers were toe/ eager here. Po- lice had to destroy several dams they built, to prevent the flood- ing'of a main highway. TERRY- BEGGAR'S CHOICE ^ ^ ^ m N fTH* AMtWCAN JaTT YPU WaWUr yUH,Hl...ANP UpPO* ' ALLOW* TO ** WA* fctfcUUT J I ** A VT-POM Toe eWerST* ILeWJC* MPICATeK THAT MJ t/ U* ApTaW MWN HOT POWN 4vnJleaw Mil? etW4* IMS POS* NOT CLAiM OPPICIAL VTATUS V \V 6B01HD FIM IN NQHTH KCaM.ir--^rO pLY ITT rAPMlTTlM* THAT H I* A XarJKeaer OPrWCS* \ IT I* IN aaVCaWXaVNrTCfiNPmOfJ, ...ntoCtMP with TH ntmriH, **muwt, |ZOUNPOfr 7s 0BL. war* :M "'iSs; frf.cki.es and his friends _________________________________________ WcOLOrJeK. POINT OUT THAT ROMAN *>, LAPIATOH* BaCSVP WITH CSSTAIW PBMAT 6T1U. PQUOHTOrU PaVaTH IN ON HOUK I4> PRSF*RALB) TO PaWVTH AT ONC*).)- I Sometmi'mg Terrible Happcmco, lardsy Hilda Relents i ____ _______ _____ _ m, BY MERRILL BLOSSER I MBAMT Tb PETURW ALU YOURTWIRP TAGS THIS MORNING- | but rye tOSi one/ , This is simply frightful! \ .JT BUT l 'WAVE AN IDEA MOW OETJER TO PUT YOU AHEAD Of I /_5^_ / MORBID MORTON ,' J OUOQ. '---------------------. .-------1r^lif- SO FA*. Y BBHINU, EVEN THE 8- MU- IS, OUT O SaSMT/ ALLEY OOP , Fooiy Softens Up . BY V. T. HAMLITf CHRIS WELKIN, Planeteer Not a Meteor BY Rl'SS WINTEBBOTHAM BY MICHAEL O'MALLEX ^w*7* r^v^^mr FRIDAY. NOVEMBER IS, 1951 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE PTfl pacific Society nu enroll JCJm &.l7..&Am tU&Am 352 REAR ADMIRAL BLEDSOE WILL HONOR VISITING COLOMBIAN CADETS fa) addition to the Informational tears of Installations and fadlltlei of the Naval District in anama, Vaa^Jm the 75 Colombian Naya! Cadete from the destroyer Antioqula Caldes and the transport Ciudad de Perol, ^ J5tn_NT*J District will honor Colombia's future Naval Officers with a formaf dance to be held at the Naral Officers Club at the Coco Solo Naval Station. t 8:00 p.m. today. Invitation* hate been 'extend- ed to the younger set of Panama and the Canal Zone. Mr. Lyle l. Koepke. the Pres- ident of the Inter American Woman's Club, Is chairman of the dance committee. A Navy bus foV the accommo- dation of the young ladles and their chaperones on the Pacific Side, will depart from the Bal- boa Railroad station, for the Na- val Station at Coco Solo, at 6:00 am. Friday and will return to e same point after the dance. Music for the dance will be fur- nished by the United States Ar- my Band of Fort Qullck. Mr*. Murray Wise Returns to Isthmus Mrs. Murray M. Wise, wife of the First Counselor of the Uni- ted 8tates Embassy, returned Tuesday from a visit with friends in Lima. Peru. MrsT. Wise and Mrs. Albert M. Bledsoe, wife of the commandant of the 15th Na- val District, were travelling com- panions to and from Lima. Mr. LeadBitter Addresses Rotary Club The First Secretary of the Brit- ish Legation in Panama City, Mr. Jasper Ms Leadbltter, was the guest speaker, yesterday at the Strangers Club, at the Rotary Club Luncheon of Cristobal and Colon. "Anglo-American Co-Op- eration" was the topic on which Mr. Leadbltter spoke. Army-Navy Club to Hold Thanksgiving Dance The Army-Navy Club of Fort Amador, will hold a Formal Thanksgiving Dance on Saturday at 8:00 p.m. There will be danc- ing on the esplanade, weather permitting. Reservations for members and their guests are now available. Clark Celebradle Silver Wedding Anniversary In celebration of their silver * * tn wedding anniversary, and *n i^,* -' Mr- Harold Otrta ertained at J-J. "*^ "S^J"*. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Gramllch.Mr. and Mrs. Joe Farr. Mr. and Mr. Francis Lenow, Mr. and Mrs. John Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Alberga, Mrs. Maud Da vies. Mrs. May Da vies, Mrs. Elsie Standlsh. Mrs. Aminta Heurlgney, Mrs. Ruth Verner, Mrs. Harriet Kee- nan, Mrs. Michelle Poling, Mrs. Schmidt, Mr. M. A. Wler and Mrs. Betty Webster. Doctors Wives Luncheon Club Meets The Doctors Wives Luncheon Club met at 12:30 p.m. Wednes- ATmy-Navy Club R. Carriker. Mrs. a dinner in the Bella Vista Room of the Hotel El Panama on Wed- nesday evening. Attending the dinner were Mr and Mrs. Frank Chollar and Mr and Mrs. Nick Ellch. Baby Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Brown.Christened Teresa Ann Brown, the baby daughter ef Mr. and Mrs. Chas. W. Brown of Locona, was chris- tened last Sunday afternoon at four o'clock in Saint Mary's Church in Balboa. Rev. Father Rutledge officiated at the cere- mony. The godparents were Miss Bet- ty Jane Kenealy and Mr. Albert J. Joyce, brother of Mrs. Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Warren Schultz. of Margarita, stood proxy in the ab- sence of Miss Kenealy and Mr. Joyce. After the ceremony, close friends and relatives were enter- tamed at a buffet supper held at the home of the baby's grand- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Joyce of. Balboa. Briscoes Honored on 34th Wedding Anniversary Miss Betty Telfer and Miss jeanette Cristison gave a sur- prise party * 1 Santa Clara Casino m honor of the 34th wed- ding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Brlscoe, of Santa Clara. THIS IS YOUR INVITATION TO THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Balboa Heights, C. Z. ' SUNDAY November 18, 1951 10:45-Morning Worship. "AN URGENT REQUEST FOR AN IMMEDIATE AN8WER." , Combined Choirs . \ 7:30Evangelistic Service. .,_ "THE 80NG THAT JESU8 SANG." Ladles Trio Youth Gospelaires. EVERYONE WELCOME (bySpeaking. HOXO780Radio Outlet Crucified Rise Coming Again. Past VTe W GREATEST PRE- CHRISTMAS SALE! BUY NOW! ruT* i ture STORE -ENTRALAVE..t21"E.ST. PHONES; 2-183C * 21633 venport, "Mrs. Senzer and Mrs. Kopp were co-hostesses for the occasion. Guests attending the luncheon included Mrs. Matilda Johnston, Mrs. Ida Mykland, Miss Peggy Smith and Mrs. T. 8. Spencer. The members present were Mrs. W. T. Bailey, Mrs. S. J. Beaudry, Mrs. C. G. Blitch. Mrs. R. W. Bonlfacl, Mrs. R. H. Boon, Mrs. J. H. Draheim, Mrs. 8. A. Kay. Mrs. C. H. Lasley. Mrs. L. S. Leland, Mrs. J. N. Llontl, Mrs. A. V. Mastellari, Mrs. J. R. Mitchell. Mrs. Lea, Mrs. 3. G. Sebren, Mrs. J. Shrager, Mrs. H. W. Shreck. Mrs. F. P. Smith, Mrs. M. J. Smith, Mrs. A. N. Springall. Mrs. G. M. Stevenson, Mrs. I. J. Strumpf, Mrs. J. D. 8ummer- lin, Mrs. C. A. Zarzekl. Mrs. G. E. Zerne, Mrs. de Alba, Mrs. Blanshaft, Mrs. Kelvan, Mrs. Ja- cobs. Mrs. M. Christlanson, Mrs. Schroll, Mrs. Remlck, Mrs. Har- vey Robbing. Mrs. B. Olnick, Mrs. Gerald 8hannon, Mrs. Ro- bert Thompson, Mrs. Ossenfort, Mrs. Wemraer, Mrs. L. G. Brad- bury. Mrs. Paul Davis. Mrs. J. Lyon, Mrs. Bradford, Mrs. W, Brown, Mrs. Deering. Mrs. Fon- taine and Mrs. Matheny. Benefit Buffet and Card Party Is Success Many members and guests of the Balboa Woman's Club at- tended the benefit buffet and card party held at the Jewish Welfare Board Center In Balboa. Mrs. Harry cranfleld was the chairman of the party and serv- ing as hostesses were Mrs. A. H. Plumer, Mrs. Oliver Culp. Mrs. Ruth Wilson, Mrs. O. R. Ml- chaelis, Mrs. Patsy Ryan. Mrs. Ira Wright. Mrs. Murray Klipper, Mrs. Elisabeth Zlrkman*nd Mrs. Rose Casey. The "dark horse" prize In charge of Mrs. L. D. Boney and Mrs. Joe Bourgeois and donated by Paul Ketaier, was won by Mrs. E. J. Ellington. The door < prizes, donated by Shaws. the Philippine Rattan Company and Tahiti Jewelers, were won by Mrs. C. M. Weeks, Mrs. Ohapek and Mrs. Ruth Mummaw. Girl Scout Troops Handle Pacific Side Xmas Seal Sales GIRL SCOUT Inside Christmas seals, now. being "old In the Canal Zone to raise i funds to fight tuberculosis, are During the business_ meeting _.rB sold In Canal Commissar- ies, at the Administration Build- ing at Balboa Heights and at Gorgas Hospital and are being of the club Mrs. G. H. Davis was elected Corresponding Secretary, Mrs. Mary Rupper Is the new Assistant Corresponding Secre- tary; Mrs. Joseph Casey is the Assistant Treasurer; Mrs. A. H. Plumer is Parliamentarian; Mrs. Walter Dryfti as Assistant of the Garden Group and Mr*. Ira Wright is the new Assistant Re- ception Chairman. "Fly Up" Ceremony Held by Girl Scouts Girl Scout Troop No. 10 held a "fly up" ceremony on Tuesday afternoon In the Cocoll Gymnas- ium. Brownies from troop 37 and troop committee members of both troops were present. The following Brownies receiv- ed their wings from their leader, Mrs. G. H. Davis: Maebelle Walke;-^U^WhTMrisnoeS nama c,tv- Colon- ch,trc- 8an" ollnJ^r^brta^tSe?ltla80- Arijsn an Penonom. andk"c handled bv Pacific side Girl Scout troops. The sale is under the general direction of Mr. H. J. Million, chairman of the annual sale and Mrs. A. G. Turner, who is gen- eral chairman for the Atlantic side of the Isthmus. On the Atlantic side, the sales are being handled by Mrs. Will- iam L. Brooks at Margarita; Mrs. Freida Boydston at Cristo- bal; and Mrs. H. E. Plhlgren at Gatun. The seals are being sold by these representatives on the Pa- cific side of the Isthmus: Miss Margaret Wiggins, Finance Bu- reau, Administration Building, Brownie troop 37. was "flown up" with her daughter Maebelle. She will serve as Assistant leader to troop 10. Mrs. Gordon Balbernie, assis- tant leader of Girl 8cout troop 10 received the Brownies and Mrs. Walker and awarded them their Girl Scout pins. Plans were made for a shell hunt and weiner roast to be held Saturday at 9:00 a.m. at Farfan Beach for the Brownies of troop 37. Girl Scout Troop 10 will go on a conducted tour of Mlraflores Locks, on November 24 at 9:00 am., in preparation for transit- ing the Canal during the Christ- mas holidays. All Girl Scouts of the troop and all girls Interested In girl scouting are urged to at- tend this trip. Meet at house 811-A in Cocoll. Mrs. Davis presented Mrs. Balbernie with the World Pin for her assistance in the Girl Scout troop, after which refreshments were served by the Girl Scouts. Panama's Candidate for "Coffee Queen" to be Selected Tomorrow The Junior Chamber of Com- merce of Panama will sponsor a dance at the Atlas Gardens at night. At 11:00 compete with other Latin Amer- ican Queens for the title of "Cof- fee Queen" of the International Junior Chamber of Commerce. Miss Graciela Campanlagni Is Panama City's Queen and en- trant in the contest and Miss Nancy Sasso will represent Co- lon. Rebekah Lodge to Meet The Isthmian Canal Rebekah Lodge No. 1, LOOF, will meet Tuesday at the Wire Memorial. 806 Balboa Road, for a covered dish supper to begin at 6:00 p.m. Members are requested to come and bring a covered dish for a 100% "get-together" In the new building. Tower Club to Meet The Tower Club of the Cathe- dral of St. Luke will hold their monthly meeting on Monday at 6:30 p.m. in Bishop Morris Hall. Elks to Sponsor "Turkey Dance" Tonight The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks will sponsor a "Turkey dance" for Elks and their guests tonight at seven thirty o'clock at the Elks club. Those attending are requested to wear old clothes. All prizes in- 7:00 tomorrow _ p.m. a candidate to JffifT^ldtog door prises wtf be" tur- Panama wdlll be selected irom!kevs six contestants who are from Pa- ' Just unpacked ,.. C QrfJONS, AND COCKTAIL FROCKS I0DA 62 Justo Arosemena Telephone 3-1477 - and - - Branch - No. 8 TIVOLI AVENUE Telephone 2-3)21 Opposite Anco Post Office LARGE SELECTION OF Zrrenck Cryitat SAINT KH IS TNI fINIIT CITSTAl AM All Patterns In Open Stock w Easy Terms Available BOUND IN RED SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UP.) The report of the California senate's committee on un-Amer- ican activities is bound in red cloth. FOR BABY'S TENDER SKIN! Ute JohnsonS Baby Powder after bstha, at diaper change*, ind in be- tween time, too. It soolbesprotecul ssr rot sAir... ssrratrou nnu , On iMiiiBHingasfrawat,tt,m i At bath ttoee, waah baby with gentle, I fragrant Johoaon'i Baby Soap. Alk far* today! Balboa Heights; Mrs. O. B. directed by these troop leaders: Baldwin, Gorgas Hospital; Mrs. Joe Bourgeois at Curundu and Mrs. Norma Wemmer at Gam- boa. Sales b ythe Girl Scouts are Mrs. A. E. Gerrans. Troop 16. Balboa; Mrs. W. N. Pence, Troops 11, 3 and 17 at Balboa; and Mrs. G. H. Davis, Troop 10, Cocoll. SCHOLL'S SERVICES Panama No 58 Justo Arosemena Ave Foot Treatments. Corns, Callouses, Ingrown Toe Nails, Arch Supports. REDUCING Treatments Massages, Slenderising Machines, Turkish Baths Male and female operators. Por Information call: 3-2217 Panam. ____________ ig a-m.: 2< p.m._________________ m& $175.- $100.- $125.- Prism-Lite Perfection* Diamonds the only 100% fully polished diamonds in the market. 10-Diamond duet, a n r. Choice of UK gold \ A SI I _ mounting. * 'Vv* LAY AWAY YOUR XMAS GIFTS TODAY. PAY AS LITTLE AS $5.00 A MONTH /Trade Mark i" TAHITI THE JEWELRY STORE 1J7 t M For fanny but. H'i 8.A.S.! Here, by thr MacTHRIFTT riarn, A customer CAN ret more for lev: y? *-n bet he can! ,( SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY^ Ta n i fd n iT"s oaF o MILK /ge. tin "is ...u i'lIO RICE lbs. DANISH BUTTER], INGREDIENTS FOR A WONDERFUL EVENING I Tike Chef Douthe's culinary creations, mix ?11 with sparkling company, topped by the melodic music of KEN DEIANEY and his orchestra, with a dash of organ tunes by AVLUNO MUNOZ , and what do you have?... THE SUNDAY EVENING BUFFET at 6:30 p.m in the Bella Vista Room. Ib. WILSON OATS CHUCK STEAK*
BRISKETM CORBINA WHOLE :.. . --. lb. I < --------4- SWIFTS FLORECITA BUTTER ;; FILET OF BASS TOILER'S REWARD .." ...It's not the name of a new cocktail, but it Is what awaits anyone who drops into the Balboa star at 5:M p.m. dally when the Cocktail Hour finds weary workers savoring our canapes to soothing rhythms by AVELINO MUNOZ at the organ. BB flama A Ktrktby Hotel LISTEN IN SUNDAY , g to >:ie p.m. - SAS SxMPHONY "*T MM Kc. ^ __ HPMW PANAMA'S PTNEST ONE-STOP SHOPPING CENTER . 15th 4k Belisarlo Poms (Golf Club Road) HOME DELIVERY Tel. 3-HS4 -------r . bHHHHHBHHHHHHBM MMHHHMQBMBBUUBH&flHAli PAGE SIX *HE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER i "i PRIDAT, NOVEMBER 11. 1S1 You Sell em... When You Tell em thru P.A. Classifieds i Leave your Ad with one of our Agents or our Offices LEWIS EBVICE NO. Tlvoll *v Pbone i-ttli * B KIOSK (I DK LRSSEPt i rr*iif e> Lottoae Nil MORRISON'S N. 4 fatuta l Jiy At*. Fade I-M4I BOTICA CARLTON Ilota Mcleadet Ave. Phone W> CllH SALON DE BELLEZA AMERICANO Re. IS Wt lltk Street THE PANAMA AMERICAN No. 57 "H" StrtetMM No. 12.171 Centra) Ave Colon. Minimum for 12 words 3c. each additional word. 2 SALE: Rtfriflirotor Servel. frir.idod Street No. 1055, Apt. A. Bocu Worth B.I 20.00 cosh. FOR SALE Household SALE:Porceloin 8 footFrigi- ire. good condition S250.00, rs! Per.c* 33rd. Street, Amooro kiildmg, opartment 26. FOR SALE Automobile* For the buying or sclimg of your automobile consult: Agencias Cos- moi, S. A., Automobie Row No. 29. Telephone 2-4721, Ponomi. MISCELLANEOUS Be u taav m drinking arablem? Writ* Alcohelki Aneiiymeue o 2011 Anee. C. Z. r SALE:Excellent condition, re- [igerotor stove, washing machine itr heater. Panama 3-0346. 1"rSALE:One Kenmcre 60 Cycle '^jtomoti: v-ash.ng machine. One I $22 Ceep Freeze. Home Freezer, e*d two menths. Phone 86-3205. FOR SALI:1947 Ponti.c Si< few daar leWen. eoed joint and Mrl. This car ii an excellent buy. On- ly $320 own. COLPAN MOTORS. Mf FORD, MIRCURY, LINCOLN dealer, an automobile raw. Tele- ahene 2-103 J 2-1036, Pan- ama. r FOR SALE Real Estate FOR SALECottoge with oil modern Convenience at 1800 ft. high with FOR SALE:I94G Tudor Ford, one set (41 camphor chests, telephone 2-4429 after 4:30 p. m. h splendid view, at Cerro information Panama 3-1567. Azul FOR SALE At Sonta Cloro, three edjoin.ng lots of 1.000 meten och. shode trees, right by the eoch. Best location at Santo da- rn. Completely furnished house idady to occupy, eight beds ond Bnottrasses. tiled floors. modem bathroom. Eelectrolux refrigerator end even electric fans! Also in- eluded is a small house which needs a little work, sleeps four or six and has both. All for $9- 00. Can be seen by oppomtment. Phone Ralph Skinner ot Bolboa $748 or write to Box 221. Bol- ftoa Heights. FOR SALE:Cowes made livingroom and porch furniture as new, boby Stroller, Venetian blinds, pans, farden tobies, etc. Justo Aroseme- na Avenue 88. | ^ST b FOUND I am on eight months old Airedale , Terrier, black, brown and whit*, lost November 1 st from neighbor- . food Bolboa YMCA. If you know " where I om pleose call my owners -Jt Balboa 3085 or return me to |96 Union Place. Hal boa. Reward. FOR SALE .;.. Boats *Sr Motors a __, F5>| SALE:Boat 20 Ft. long 5 1-2 wide wilh accessories. Like new. " Moderate price. Riviera model Tal. 3-0680, Ponam. ~.--------------------------------- Winds Delay 2nd Pjiase Of A-Tests At Frenchman Flat AS VEGAS Nov. 18 (UP1 \ TblB second phase In the current enes of the atomic bomb tests at the Frenchman's Flat Proving Ground, were delaved today by i high winds that threatened to cmrv deadly radioactivity over Lai Vegas. The forthcoming blast* will jH-obablv be smaller than the five detonations touched off recently at Frenchman's Flat' and will be used the determine the effects of atomic warfare on military Dtwipment. ndustrial construc- tion and enemy weapons. Lewis Service Buyi Morrison's Store i Morrison's Novelties tore on Pteurth of July Avenue was sold today to Lewis Service, in Pa- mm*. Tht Lewis Service store, lo- tted opposite the Ancon post Mee, will continue to be open JtOr business, for the time being. LEGAL NOTICE Unit**- States Of America .* Canal Zaeia hatted Stetet District Court Far The Bnttricf Of The Canal Zone Di.iiion af Cr.stebal IjfDREW ETOHRER. Plalatiff FOR SALI: 1949 Ford Cuttem Cly Coupe til cylinder, now paint and tirei. This car hat naw car etrformonco, an excellent buy. Only $400 dawn and drive it away. COLPAN MOTORS, Your FORD. MIRCURY, LINCOLN dealer, an automobile raw. Tele- abana 2-1033 2-1036, Pana- ma. FOR SALE:1941 Studebaker Com- mander, Sedan, excellent condi- tion. House 5360 Dovis St. Dioblo Heights, Balboa 2918. FOR SALI:1950 Ferd Cuttem Da Luxe fardar dark fray, new' teat cavan. WSW ties. Thii car like new. Matt be taen le aparecate. Only $520 down and driv* it way. COLPAN MOTORS, yeur FORD. MIRCURY. LINCOLN d*al*r, an automebile row. Tele- phone 2-1031 2-1036. Pan- ama. FOR SALE:1951 Mercury 6-poss coupe, excellent condition, $1,900. OC. Phone 3-2153, house 124-A. New Cristobal. FOR SALE1947 Studeboker Com- mander. 4 door, in good condi- tion. Good price. Tel. 2-3128, Pan- ama. FOR SALI: 1946 Chrytler New Yorker four door teden, new paint, toad tires, radio. Thii car com- pletely reconditioned. Jut* like naw. Only $385.00 dawn, drive it away. COLPAN MOTORS, your FOR D. MIRCURY, LINCOLN dealer, an automobile row. Tele phone 2-1033 2-103, Pan- FOR SALE1941 Ford 4 door^se- don. Good tires. Good transporta- tion. Coll Balboa 2995. FOR SALE:1939 Chevrolet Panel Truck. Reosonoble. 5448-B, Dia- blo. LESSONS ADULT BEGINNERS! The ability to ploy the piano for pleasure can be quickly acquired. Toke free trial lesson and be convinced. Phone 2-1282 Bennett' Studio, Juan B Soso No. 9. Position Offered WANTED: Experienced American Beautician, Ancon Beauty Shop old Ancon Theatre Building 'Phone 2-1322. Boy Scout Executive Board Meets Sunday Morning In La Boca The last meeting of the execu- tive board of the International Boy Scouts of the Canal Zone before the annual meeting In January will be held in the study hall Of Silver Caty high school 9 o'clock Sunday morning. There are many important matters to be discussed at this meeting and luncheon will be served. Pacific District Commissioner Pearl E. Ford has summoned Scout leaders on the Pacific side to attend a meeting In Paraso Scout Shack at 7:30 tonight in Interest of the Scouters' Coun- cil. Burial Services For A. C. Boxill Tomorrow At 1:30 The burial of Anderson C. Box- f All. whose death occurred on (AT.ICE ROTH STOHRER. __ Defendant .SUMMONS Hh No. L?^H_ Pocket t ^|CTK>N T-tK DIVORCE the abova-nsmed defendant . fau a.o hereby required' to appear aaawer the rnrnelejnt filed ia the entitled action within ninety due IT November . ltd. JB ."" :l 7?"drfmVntr'-iU 'b. "J& TV.** *' '<* **" at ^^^Bt 70u b fault for tbe relief andod in tbe complaint. WITNESS tho Honorable JOSEPH J ^tCOCK. Judt' United Statet pit- Court for the District of tho Ca- i. ataaa, thii 7th November, ltd. C T. McCORMICK. Jr.. Clerk IK/Li 1. (Sfd) E. D. White, Jr Deputy Clerk lALICE RUTH sroHRtR ^Pka foregoiae summons is served you by publication pursuant to .order of the Honorable JOSEPH J. PCOCK. Judie, United Slates Dl. t Coort for tbe District of the Ce- | Zone, dated N'oveaaber tih. ltd entered anj filed in thii aitiun Bl oflice of the Clerli of aald Stalee District Court far the J**" of Cristobal oa Neveatber i [Ittl C. T. McCORMICK. Jr.. Clerk *r (Sad) S. D. While. Jr. Deputy Clerk FOR SALE Miscellaneous RESORTS FOR SALE:Just receive large vo- ri*ty of Tropicol fishes, plants, ornaments, lowest price in Pan- ama, aquariums made to order. I I Via Espaa, opposite Juan Fran- co Stobles, Tel. 3-4132 Acuorio Tropical. FOR SALE:Great Dane Pups, full breed AKC registered, best protec- tion. 2-3198. Culebra rood. 324, Ancon. FOR SALE:Wollensok 15x 40x telescope with coated optics, car- rying case, like new, $24.00. Al- most new Wollensok 65 mm. f6. 8 Raptar W. A. lens in Rapox shutter to I -400 sec. $50.00. Fair Mercury II f2.7 camera, cose, and flash. $20.00. House 0434-J, An- con, 6-V p. m. TIRES AND TUBES: New; 11.00 x 22; 12 ply; for trucks; bargain prices. F. Iceza Gr Company, 79 B Avenue. FOR SALE:Miscellaneous lengths used rubber hose, I", 1 1 -2". 2" ot 10; per foot. Best offer tokes entir* lot. The Texas Company IPanuma) Inc. Tel. 2-0620. FOR SALE: Buick 1941 exe- cutive desk, mahogany, bomboo chaise lounge, boby's high choir, coffee table, all very cheap. Tel. 3-2735. Sealed bid:, in triplicate, will be re- ceived in the office of the Engin- eering ond Construction Director. Panama Canal Company, Bolboa Heights, until 10:OQ o. m.. Jan- uary 16, 1952, ond then open- ed in public, for furnishing oil plant, tools, equipment, moteriols, labor and services, and for per- forming all work for construc- tion of on ice cream end milk bottling plont at Mount Hope Conol Zone. Bid schedules, forms of proposals, specificotions, ond full particulars may be obtained from the Office of the- Contract and Inspection Division, Room 336 Balboa Heights (telephone 2- 3739J. Specifications and drow- ings will be issued on a deposit of $40 00 per set. Deposit will be forfeited if specifications and drawings are not returned within 30 days after opening of bids. Gromllch't Santo Claro beach- cottages. Electric lea boxes, gas stoves, moderate rotes. Phon* 6- 441 or 4-567. CASINO SANTA CLARA Cob;ns. food, swimming. No reserva- tions necessary. Choice lots for sale. COMMERCIAL b PROFESSIONAL Phillips. Oceanside cottages. Santa Clara Box 435. Balboa. Phon* Panomo 3-1877. Cristobal i 1673 Spend your week-end in cool El Voile at Hotel Pon-Amencono. Rooms $2.03 daily per person. Children $1.00. Meols a-la-carte. Telephone Panama 2-1112. Houses ON BEACH Santa Clara. Phone SHRAPNEL Balboa 2S20. or see coretaker there, also home at CERRO CAMPANA mountains. FOR RENT Apartment ALHAMBRA APARTMENTS, modern furnished-unfurnished apartments. Maid service optional. Contact of- fice 8061. 10th Street, New Cris- tobal, telephone 1386 Colon. FOR RENT: Concrete bungalow. Three bedrooms, three services parlor, dinning room. big closed porch, kitchen, maid's room, wash- room, garage. Hot water connec- tions. B.I35.00. Vio Espao. Ap- ply Sabanas 810. Telephne 3- 3041. FOR RENT Rooms ROOMS AVAILABLE Light, cool entirely renovated and wall fur- nithed. Rotet reasonable. Bache- lors only. Inquire at The Ame- rican Club facing Da Lettept Park. FOR RENT:Independent apartment balcony, bedroom, diningroom, ser- vices. For couple without children. No. 4. Central Avenue. Panami. FOR SALE:Belgium ond Grmon pclice pups. 3 weeks old, reason- able pnces. Calle Estudiante No. 93. room No. 18. FOR SALE:AKC Registered cocker puppy, black, male. Excellent Pe- digree. 29 Champions In 5 gener- ations. 516-D, Curundu Hgts., Phone: 86-4109. FOR SALE: Fine breed puppies, very cheap. 9th. street, final en- trance Banco Fiduciario, Panama American Settlement. Vallorlno fa- mily. WANTED Miscellaneous WANTED: Clean soft rogs. Job Dept. Panamo Americon. WANTED:A good car for reason- able price Payable cash. Tel. Panama 3-2633. Help Wanted WANTED: Maid for housework, core of children, to live in. must have reference, come mornings. El Cangrejo, 7th Street No. 7, be- low Colegio La Salle 3-4242. WANTED:Generol housework moid to live in. References required. Coll Coco Salo 8413. 1:80 p.m. Saturday at the Pue- blo Nuevo Cemetery. The deceased was affiliated with the Sojoumers Society and the Barbadian Progressive Socie- ty of Panama. The body will lie In state at the Sojoumers Hall on P Street, where the last rites will be held. 8urvivors are: Stanley, Clyde, Cuthbert, sons; Mrs. Alma Butcher and Ivy Boxill, daugh- ters; grandchildren. Alexander Justin. Stanley Boxiil Jr.. and Eileen Boxill. OLD BUT GOOD JONESTOWN, Miss. (U.P.i Tim Brooks, 100-vear-old cotton -lcker; can still p''- " -v>iinds of cotton a day, a good average for a young omnr /'it i BUSINESS MAN'S LUNCH 75 Fresh Orange Juice or Potage Creole BRAISED BEEF TONGUE JARDINIERE Steamed Rice Green Peas Salad Dessert Hot Roils & Butter Coffee Tea Beer -Join as far CockUM-*--- from 4 to 0 p.m. MANHATTANS ,.. MARTINIS VSf DAIQUIRIS -** APPETIZERS 'On The House' FOR RENTFurnished room private entrance ond both, Bella Vista 44th Street. Apply No. 3, Jose Cuque Avenue, Lo Cresta, top floor. FOR RENT:Nicely furnished room, board if desired, Bella Vista, 46th Street 18-A upstairs. Phone office hours 2-1693 or 3-1789. New Books A book on golf and one on bridge, for the many Isthmian enthusiasts for both, are among the new books placed in circula- tion during the past week by the Panama Canal Library. "If I Were in Your Golf Shoes," by Johnny Farrell, presents a discussion of the game's prob- lems. Including 18 photographs of the right way to meet these problems. The book is not a be- ginner's manual but is written for those who are already golf- ers. "Point Count Bidding In Con- tract Bridge," by Charles H. Uoren, explains, not a system, but an approach; a simplified meth- od for valuing bridge hand. The complete list of new books at the Library follows: Aircraft Jet aircraft power systems, Casamassa. Fine Arts The great au- dience. Seldes; Point count bid- ding in contract bridge; If I were in your golf shoes. Farrell. Travel, Biography. History The Netherlands. Ogrlzek; D. H. Lawrence, portrait of a genius but... Aldington: The new So- viet empire. Dallin; and Indian art of the Americas, Appleton. Fiction Fruit In his season, Barney; The weight of the cross. Bowen; Three novels. Flrbank: I could murder her.'. Lorac; The green plaid pants.', Scherf; and Candles for Therese, Wylie. Children's Fiction Luck of the Irish, Knight; Federico, the flying squirrel, Palazzo, Strong wings, Robinson; A race for Bill. Wallace. Added to the Reference Col- lection Rand. McNallv and Company atlas of the United States. Canada and Mexico, 1951. P. T. I. SAFETY SAW BLADES COST LESS STAY SHARP TWICE AS LONG TAKE HALF THE TIME TO SHARP- EN AND USE 35% LESS POWER. THE GREATEST ADVANCE IN POWER SAWING since the invention of the CIRCULAR SAW. GEO. F. NOVEY, Inc. 279 Central Ave. Tel. 3-0110 LUX VENETIAN BLINDS Immediate Delivery. Tel. 8-171S ,22 E. 29th St. PANAMA BROKERS, INC. Hotel Fl Panami HAS (OR SALE: 100 shares Abattoir - 9M aharer (nreferred) ForeV Producta 3*0 shares (common) Forest Products tus : 1-47U a-itn MODERN FURNITURE cusroM BUILT Slipcover Reupholstery VISIT OUR SHOW-BOOMT Alberta Hero i. r. de la Otea 77 (AateoMblleftew) Free Kittautef Pickup A Delivery Tel. 1-4*28 l:M a.m. lo 7:M m.M. 504th WOjg Gets Promoted To Lt. WOJG Hector Garcia. Unit Ad- ministrator of Battery "B." 504th Field Artillery Battalion, was called to active duty as a reserve 2d Lieutenant on Nov. 8. Lt. Garcia was given his oath by WOJG W. F. Hopkins, Personnel Adjutant, in Headquarters, 504th FA. at Fort Kobbe. Lt. Col. William H. Bach and his staff looked on as Lt. Garcia was sworn In. Lt. Col. Bach then replaced the warrant offi- cer bar with a bright gold one with the remark, "You're costing me lots of money with these quick changes." Lt. Garcia, his wife and three children now live in quarters at Fort Kobbe. His home Is In Ma- yaquez. P.R. He worked there as a clerk in a shoe store before en- tering the Armv in July 1944. He will remain In Battery "B," ">04th. as a forward observer. TRAVEL ANYWHERE Without Worry Or Care 18 Tivoll Ave. Pan. Z-2t Eglinlon Named To National V.F.W. Security Committee E. J. Eglinton. Department Commander. Panama Canal Zone, Veterans of Foreign Wars, has been named vice chairman of the VFW's most powerful op- erating group, the Committee on National Security and Internal Organization. Word of Egllnton's new assign- ment was received on the Isth- mus yesterday in a radiogram from Frank C. Hilton, National Commander-in-chief of the VFW, whose headquarters is In Kan- sas City, Mo. Egli.iton, a cartographic en- gineer attached to the U.S. En- gineers at Corozal, took a leading part in the VFW convention last summer. He has been depart- mental commander here for four consecutive years. The committee to which Mr. Egllnton has been named vice chairman is in constant touch with members of Congress and the various government depart- ments which deal with national security and the Armed Forces. Nationalists Hold Lead In Philippine Election Race MANILA, Nov. 16 (UP)Two minority party Senatorial can- didates polled more than a mil- lion votes as an unofficial count of the votes in Tuesday's Philip- pine elections showed that other Nationalist contenders were holding the lead in a race for nine senate seats. Doctor Joae P. Laurel, presi- dent of the Japanese Occupa- tion Regime, was given 1,125,315 votes and businessman Oil Puyat polled l, 114,908 as the un- official count neared the half- way mark. The same returns showed the former Education Secretary Teodoro Evangelista leadlne* the liberal candidates with 666,409. RIDER UNGRATEFUL BRAZIL, Ind. (UJ.) Clay- ton Howard, bus driver, was bit- ten by a passenger who tVQfect- ed when Howard awakened him at his stop. "" ! Land Reforms Can Hake World Ideal. Raymond Swing Says PARIS, Nov. 16 U8IS) Fol- lowing is a commentary by Ray- mond Swing, American radio commentator attending the Un- ited Nations General Assembly session here: "Two out of three people of the world live from farming, and if their farming methods, and the terms on which they hold their land, could be brought up to quite realizable standards, life on this planet wduld surpass the dreams of a mlllenium. "Until the United Nations was organized the machinery did not exist for dealing: with this tre- mendous opportunity on a world scale. Land reform has become a key theme In the social policy and the propaganda of indivi- dual countries. But it never could be studied, defined and worked out to the point of action, with technical service being made ac- cessible to all countries, until the creation of the United Nations. "So, land reform Is a major subject, one bound to be a major plank in the policies of all coun- tries responsible for United Na- tions performances. That is why it Is one of the major interests of the United States, ranking with disarmament, uniting for peace, and human rights. "I speak of it today because the United States, along with Thai- land, Pakistan and Brazil, Has in- troduced evTesolutlon in the Gen- eral Assembly that deserves the widest attention. "Last year Secretary Acheson included a strong passage on land reform in his assembly address. This was followed by the action in ECOSOC, where the United States resolution, embodying cer- tain features of a Polish resolu- tion, provided an outstanding program. Now this reaches the assembly and will be discussed In committee two. so that next year's assembly can take final action. "More than 70 per cent of A- merican farms are operated by their owners. As recently as 1935, tenants in the United 8tates op- erated 42 per cent of the farms, a figure brought down through so- cial action by 10 points in 10 years and by now reduced anoth- er five. , "American experience natural- ly varies from that of countries nominated historically by large estates. The Stress in American policy is not simply on breaking large holdings Into smaller ones, but Insists on a number of re- lated factors. "Sometimes the need is the op- posite from breaking up large holdings, lt is to unite fragment- ed holdings into profitable units. But a formidable list of other re- forms is found necessary. "Simply breaking up large es- tates is not necessarily pern^v nent reform. In some countr.-! lt has led to the detriment of the individual farmer. He was taxed too large a share of his crop, and, being unable to meet the assess- ment, his land was taken from him and he became the underling of a collective. That U the oppo- site result to the one the United States promotes. It seeks to have the prosperity and stability of the world based on the individual farmer. "As the United Nations gains influence, basic changes can be realized In all countries now par- ( alyzed by antiquated land poli- cies." _________ CZ License Plates Arrive Here; To Be Issued December 4 Canal Zone license plates for 1952 have arrived on the Isthmus and will be Issued by the License Section starting Tuesday. Dec. 4, lt was announced yesterday by Col. R. Sil**, Civil Affairs Di- rector. To assist Atlantic side resi- dents, a branch office of the Li- cense Section will be established in Building 1029. Cristobal, and will be open for five weeks, be- ginning Dec. 4, from noon to 4 P-m- it It will be necessary for appli- cants using this office to file their applications and return an- other day to obtain their license plates. No fees will be accepted until' the plate Is ready, for lssu- The License Section, Civil Af- fairs Building, Ancon. will be open as at present, from 9 to 11:45 a.m., and from 12:45 to 4:15 p.m.. except on Dec. 4. when the office will be opened at 7:15 a.m.. In order to serve those who have waited In line for low numbered plates. From Dec. 4, to Jan. 5, the Li- cense sectlon_Ancon. the branch office in Cristobal and the offic- es of the police driver examiners on both sides of the Isthmus will be open on Saturday and dosed on Monday. These changes are being made on an experimental basis and they will be continued In future years if they prove to be effec- tive and well received by the public and also result in a reduc- tion of mall applications. Appli- cations received by mall take several times as long to process as those handled In person. SIDE GLANCES By Colbraith aero, ten erau ataviet. a}lffbarty'lj.j "I understand all this except freedom of speechI can't ay what Vi Ilk* to ay to mv oaronta and ><*" Justice Department Shakeup Predicted After Tax Probes WASHINGTON. Nov. 1 (UP) Chairman Cecil R. King said today his House Investigators expect "no difficulties" in ob- taining Justice Department tax fraud files despite President Truman's assertion that he made no promises on the score. The California Democrat made the statement aa his House Ways and Means Sub- committee announced it will call assistant Attorney General T. Lamar Caudle for public questioning next week In con- nection with its Inquiry into tax scandals. The investigators believe then- Inquiry will result in a shakeup in the Justice Department. They refused to predict who will be Involved. Rep. Frank Boykin (D-Ala.) said in remarks published today that no man has done a "finer or better job" than Caudle. He said it is "unthiakable that men should drag the name of a Caudle through the mud." Caudle Wednesday night de- nied published reports that hi tried to impede prosecution of an Alabama tax evasion case and that Boykin had brought pressure on him not to pursue the case. In another development, King said his group tentatively plans to start public hearings in Ban Francisco Jan. 7 on irregulari- ties In the tax collector's office there. San Francisco tax collector James c. Smyth has suspended recently and aeveral employes In his office have been suspend- ed or fired. As for the fraud files. King said Wednesday after telephon- ing the president in Key West. Fla., that Mr. Truman had as- sured him the Investigators "certainly should have what It needed to conduct a proper in- vestigation." King, who had been seeking Justice Department tax case files interpreted this as a oro- mise to make them available. The department has refused to make the files available on a wholesale basis but said it would turn them over in specif la cases. I muir..: tntlrt i tu i NOTICE I desire to notify the tab- lie that my nans* has been changed from Chester La- aoont Jone* to Lee Lament Thome as of 11/13/51. Santa up a tree! KADIO STATION HOG will help you tell CHRISTMAS SHOPPERS about your tremendous selection of Christmas gift-ware . thingi to delight i| everyone from toddlers to silver- haired grandpai! V SHOP EARLY . don't be "dogged" by last minute gift woef! A M UWP!..>1# .....^i.iijii^..-.- npwsppp^pppiw FRIDAY. NOVF.MBFR IS. 1951 ' THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE SEVEN" i Insect Answer to Previous Puzzle HORIZONTAL 1,4 Depicted insect 10 Injures 11 Itemized blU 14 War god 15 Elude 17 Tree II Six (Roman) It Individual* 21 Pert of "be" 22 Volcano In Sicily 24 Great Lake . 28 Foreteller 27 Short 28Gutta (ab.) 39 Goddess of ' plenty 20 Operated 31 Direction (ab.) 22 Palm fruit 33 Pulled 88 Above 37 Toiletry cate 3 Note of tcale 39 Malay | .garments 48 Radon (ab.) 44 Finish 48 Wash lightly 49 Fabulous bird 50 Shore 32 Run way to marry 54 Shows . pleasure M Be indebted VERTICAL 1 Common mineral SAge 3 Type square 4 Prejudice 5 Within (comb, form) Level 7 Preposition 8 Telia falsehood fl Pa i trie. 10 It sometimes infests 11 Observe It Ant 18 Queen . Victoria (ab.) Associates Fencing " positions 23 Nullify liir-Jinj'iiWWBsiiim.:! - 3 ri j IIIQ 11 1 1 >ii.i MHI ' l2.1I l^aial rv j" J 4J J IJQIdU I ... J ' 0 Deep valleys 32 Cupolas 34 It is found in 35 Cringe 40 Seed covering 41 Be borne 23 German prince 42 Unit 43 Canadian province (ab. 44 Driving command 47 Barrier 4 Propel a boat tl Chinese river . I Behold! 11 Young Orphans Prefer Rural Life To Mass Adoption PONTIAC, Mich.. Nov. 16 (UP) Eleven youngsters who lost their mother and father In an automobile accident today chose rural hardship.", rather than the comforts of a Pittsburgh suburb. After a conference with 15- year-old Jerry Moore, oldest of the orphans, and his relatives, Probate Judge Arthur E. Moore said the children would continue to live In their own home at tiny Leonard, Mich. Their maternal grandparents will care for them. The decision ruled out, at least for the Immediate future any hope of a well-to-do Pittsburgh couple to adopt the family en masse and take the five boys and six girls, the youngest 6 weeks old, Into their luxurious home in suburban Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Judge Moore, not related to the family left behind by Mur- ray Moore and his wife Mary Jean, said the children wanted it that way aweVa* did their grandparents and aunts and ancles. I But Mr. and Mrs John D. Babb, although obviously disappointed, had not abandoned hope. They Invited Jerry, who spoke for hla brothers ano sisters, to visit them "with no pressure Just" a friendly viiH." Jerry said he would do so "sometime soon," adding that he didn't think "inev come any het' ter than the BabbaV' who have three small cnildren of their own. The Babbs did not attend the conference with Judge Moore. They sat in an adjoining room cwaiting the outcomei Wn*n the judge announced that he had appointed tw-j uncles - Dick Moss and Art MeCure as co- puardians. the Babbs said they still want to help." "But we think valuable time is being lost. Their personalitie might change." said Mrs. Babb. Judge Moore emphasized that today's action did not rule out future adoption or other living arrangements for the children. Paper Says Stalin Suffers Hardening 01 Heart Muscles ROTTERDAM, Holland. Nov. 18 tUP) The newspaper "Agree- ment Dablad" reported today that Soviet Premier Josef Stalin la suffering from a hardening of the heart muscles and ,has left for Crimea for a cure and possible operation. The newspaper based its story on reporta which it claimed reached Russian occupation au- thorities in Berlin. Allied officials In Berlin de- scribed the reports of Stalin's illness as "rumors." The Soviet Control Commission could not be reached for comment. The newspaper said Soviet authorities In Berlin received word of Stalin's alleged illness when It was "disclosed" on Oct. 18 In a bulletin signed by four doctors. It aald the report might be a "giant propaganda move" de- signed to create sympathy to pave the way for ''Important Politburo decisions." The correspondent thought It significant that "a rather wide circle" had been Informed of Stalin's alleged Illness. La Boca Traffic Ta Be Rerouted Starting Monday Traffic: on La Boca Road near the junction with Balboa Road wUT'be rerouted for about three woeju atar ting Monday, because of construction activities in the area, according to information from the Municipal Division. Traffic will be rerouted tem- porarily via the extension of Bar. neby Street v/hich pusses the tups In front of Saint Mary's Chuten. Jailhouse Lawyer Returns To Former Place of Business PEN8ACOLA. tin.', Nov. 16 (UP) Al House, who once talked his way out of the State prison at Ralford, Fla., by pes- tering the Florida Supreme Court, was on his way back to jail today this time for 10 years. Judge Dozler Devane of U. S. District Court here passed sentence yesterday on the 54- year-old ex-convlct after a Federal Jury found him guilty of three post office robberies. House insisted he had been quietly making a living in Terre Haute, Ind., when the Federal officers arrested him. He aald he had made a busi- ness out of preparing legal briefs. The SUte Supreme Court and other Florida officials weren't surprised by that ex- planation. They remembered when House was sentenced to 70 years for robbery by a Tam- pa court and what happened when House settled down at Raiford. House, with plenty of time on his hands, decided to study law and spent all his free moments In the prison library or in his cell writing the court reasons why he believed he should be free. Fellow prisoners nicknamed him the 'Jailhouse Lawyer." The State officials could take only so much legal fireworks, and finally asked Raiford au- thorities to take away House's law books. This he didnt like. When he refused to stop his legal ma- neuvering, prison officials lock- ed Al away in solitary confine- ment. Al's fellow convicts gave the solitary section of. the prison a new name "Al's House." Finally, the SUte could take no more and decided to par- don House, who had served 24 years. The pardon was grant- ed on the condition he remain up North the rest of his life. Even If he had managed to avoid the Federal charge. House probably wpuld have faced a return to Raiford. The State Padrn Board revoked his con- ditional freedom following his arrest on the Federal charge. I A CHRISTMAS GIFT FOR MOM Through the Joint efforU of the hospital command, the Post Exchange Service and the Red Cross, a "giftmoblle" is now providing shopping service de luxe for soldier patlenu at the 12th Station Hospital, Fort Clayton, whose condition prevents their leaving bed to do their shopping for Christmas. Private First Class Ray L. Wysockl Is shown selecting a present for his mother. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Casimir Wysockl live In Detroit Michigan. Pfc. Wysockl Is a member of Company B, 370th Engineer Amphibious Sup- port Regiment. He is hospiUlized with a broken leg. Also In the picture are Mrs. Lillian Wainwright of Fort Kobbe. a Red Cross Grey Lady (second from lefti; Miss Patsy Sparks, "Red Cross recreation worker, and Captain J. E. Henry, Army Nurse Corps. (U.S. Army pnoto) RCA VICTOR 45 RPM PHONOGRAPH VICTROLA 25 or 60 Cycle What better Christmas present than this inexpensive phonograph made specially for the troptes. Contains a ceramic pickup that is not affected by humidity. Has its own speaker and amplifier. Unsurpassed tone! BULL RESENTS GLASS INDIANAPOLIS .(U.P.l A bull housed in a sUll adjacent +to a window at a dairy show twice indicated the Window panes gave him a pain. He lifted his nose and knocked out the panes. i Maintenance men replaced them but he did it again. Ft Sherman M/Sgt. Gets 7th Honorable Discharge From Army FORT SHERMAN. Nov. 16 Master Sgt. B. D. Carter. First Sgt. of the 370th EA8R Medical Detachment, added another ho- norable discharge certificate to his growing collection Tuesday, when he ended his seventh tour of duty in the Army. He re- enlisted for six years to fill his own vacancy. Sgt Carter has completed 22 years of active service. During World War II. he was First Sgt. of a tank company in the Eu- ropean Theater of Operations. He participated in a number of major engagements In France and Germany. The recent promotion of Mas- ter Sergeant Melvin R. Paine to the rank of Warrant Offi- cer i Junior Grade) made him the first soldier to become an officer in the 370th Engineer Amphibious Support Regiment since the unit arrived in this Command.' -- This .promotion ended 19 years and fl months ar art enlisted man In the Regular Army for Paine. He Is new unit adminis- trator for the Engineer Boat Maintenance Company, Fort Sherman. |i C* fatUknT H nit. Kiaa- GMip ! TnMrMray.OarMACe.1 Qua ordon's Stands Suptefiui wWW4Jaflf^ ... Nw WMgwy Hn*e ^ f citar w nf * rinMM w4iHr - 25 or 60 CYCLES ONLT $8950 Down 10.00 Monthly RADIO (ENTER 7116 Bolivar Celen Tel. 46 Balboa T Lists Dance Tomorrow A "Get Acquainted Dance" win be a ma lor program event at the Balboa YMCA tomorrow night. Music for this special occasion will be furnished by the 7 lit Army Band. Dancing will be from 8 to 11 p.m. and plenty of dance part- ners are promised by the com- mittee In charge. ., A special feature of this dance will be the formal presentation of a group of new members In the Girls' Service Organization. Membership in the GSO is re- stricted to girls who express a willingness to give regular vol- unteer service In "Y" activities and who are able to furnish good character references. Mrs. Ab- bie de Linares, staff aide at the Balboa "Y", Is counsellor for the GSO. Miss Louise Feemster is president. Senior hostesses who will be on hand at this dance are Mrs. Ruth Wilson. Mrs. Codrlngton. Mrs. Bthel Wood, Mrs. Leo Pa^ge and Mrs. Olive Piper. Hostesses who wish to attend the "Get Acquainted" party and who are not members of the GSO are reminded of the necessity of securing a guest pass at the pro- gram office in advance. Milita- ry, personnel are invited, to bring their wives but are asked to get guess passes also. Bootlegger Evades Jury Duty But Hell Face Judge OKLAHOMA CITY. Nov. 18 (UPi Jack Woody wasn't serv- ing on a District Court Jury to- day, but he had one of the best excuses the Judge had ever heard. The prosecutor asked the 28- year-old talesman If he knew any reason why he couldn't serve as an Impartial and un- biased Juror In a bootlegging case. | Why, yes, I believe I do," Woody said. "I'm a full time wholesale bootlegger myself. They arrested me last week.for the same thing you have this man charged with." Woody was excused from Jury duyt, but he'll be back next weekas defendant In a liquor possession case. Puppy Love Triangle Killer Gels 20 Years PRESTON, Minn Nov. 18 (UPi Sixteen-year-old Carroll Bakken was found guilty of first degree manslaughter today in the fatal shooting of his best friend in a teen-age "puppy- love" triangle. The Rushford. Minn., high school Sophomore was im- mediately sentenced to 20 years in custom of the Minnesota Youth Conservation Commis- sion. His mother, who was In the courtroom when the verdict was returned, broke down and sob- bed quietly. The father, Arthur, put his arm around his wife but did not CLU-MTC Meeting Set For Sunday The regular monthly meeting of the Central Labor Union Metal Trades Council will be held Sunday at 8:30 a. m. in the Margarita Clubhouse. I A repoit from William M. I Price, legislative representative I who has returned lrom Wash- ington will be heard. New officers for the coming lyear will be installed by presl- jdent Walter Wagner. say anything. Bakken was charged with the fatal shooting of Doeland Peter- son. 19, Sept. 15. He shot Peterson between the eyes after finding the older youth with Nina Peterson, 15, Bakken's "steady" girl friend. Children lovi Cream of Wheat Your child will ask for more of this healthful- tasty, cereal that is full of energy-giving food elements. As the first solid food and during the time when growing teeth and bones ask for extra nourishment, Cream of Wheat has proved to be an excellent, easily digestible cereal food. The "5 Minute" Cream of Wheat has been enriched with extra food iron and calcium. Cream of Wheat i DfLtCIOUS.,. \ ..NUTRJTIOUS ' AGE EIGHT THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, II mJiL aniic tic ^>ociet t Bo, 195, (jatmn "DMpkon* (JmUn 378 a VISITOR INTRODUCED AT LUNCHEON Ensign Virginia Doolin was introduced to group of la- dles of the Coco Solo Naval Station, at a luncheon given Thursday by Mrs. II. E. Walther at her home. Ensign Doolin Is the houseguest of her sister and brother-in-law, Lieutenant (jg) and Mrs. W. D. Ronayne. The guests were seated at a luncheon table centered with white ginger lilies and red hibiscus blossoms. The red-and- whlte theme was repeated in the red tapers in crystal holders. The other guests were: Mrs. L. Zi. Koepke. Mrs. T. L. Apple- uist, Mrs. J. W. Schwartz. Mrs. I. L. Hamon, Mrs. Fred Wroble, Mrs. R. L. Schaefer, Mrs. G. L. Wallace, Mrs. W. D. Ronayne and Mrs. D. E. Fabln. *! : K Dinner Compliments Mr. and Mrs. Brown Captain and Mrs. Floyd W. Arrest entertained with a hui- ! fat dinner at their Gatun resi- dence Wednesday evening to t honor Mr. and Mrs. James Brown who are leaving next jvweek to reside In Rhode Island. BJ) .The other dinner guests were V* Mr. and Mrs. R. G Tvdemnn, - Mr. and Mrs Floyd McDermltt, J Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Hudjrlns and Floyd McDermltt. Luncheon Given by N.C.O. Wives Club Mrs. Ralph Johnson. Mrs Owen Tolbert and Mrs. Mlllard k -Mundkowskl were hostesses for a luncheon meeting of the Fort Oirlick N.C.O. Wives Club Wed- Say at the club. Mrs. Virjril ucky. Social Chairman planned ^e affair. Bunko was played after lunch th prizes being won by Mrs. R. Agulrre, Mrs. Gladys Smith d Mrs. David Foele. The door was won by Mrs. Michael nnock." The other members who were sent included Mrs. Austin Ip, Mrs. Thomas Cousins, a. Carl Hess, Mrs Ernest eck, Mrs. Rosalie Wazaluskl. n. Harry Copare, Mrs. Donald molka. Mrs William Sweenev, rs. Eva Hart. Mrs. Francis emmer, Mrs. Betra Frelae, Mrs. :eph Shirley and Mrs. Ray- ond Townc. rlcan Woman's Club was held Tuesday at the club, with Mrs. L. L. Koepke. presiding. Mrs. James W. Pumpelly and Mrs. Samuel D. Puller, program chairmen, had prepared an in- teresting afternoon for the members. A group of officers from the USAR Carlb School at Fort Gullck gave a history of the flags of their nations, with Cap- tain Orville T. Shaw serving as translator. The officers who ad- dressed the group were: Lt. Dan- iel E. Jurado of Colombia; Cap- tain Hugo Antesano Castro of Bolivia, Lt. Rodolfo Rdano of Ecuador; Captain Lopez Lopez of El Salvador; Lt. Jose Cecilio Castro B. of Honduras and Lt. Victor M. Silva of Nicaragua. Mrs. Harold S. White gave a talk on tropical plants. Including their care.. Potted plants were, put on sale at the I.A.W.C. building and may be obtained from there. Tea was served following the meeting by Mrs. T. L. Apple- quist and Mrs. John Constanta - kis, chairmen and their com- mittee. It was planned during the meeting to adopt the children of Pina for Christmas and for each member to select a child and pre- pare a gift for this Individual. The names may be secured from the club. - Announcement was made of the monthly afternoon of bridge, next Monday. Cards may be played either in the morning or evening. Tables may be arranged by calling Mrs. Lenidas San- che/, Colon 1331-J. Mrs. Peiclval Alberga or Mrs. Fabian Pinto, Colon 321. Farewell Coffee Planned A farewell coffee Is planned for Tuesday, at 9:30 a.m. at the home of Mrs. Arthur Crandall to honor Mrs. William Hawkins, Mrs. William Sweeney, Mrs. Jerry Whyte. Mrs. Ralph John- son, Mrs. Ernest Beck and Mrs. Joseph Shirley. The party is being given as a "bon voyage" for these ladles who will be leaving with their husbands In the near future to reside In the States. -------- George Evans Celebrate* Birthday Anniversary George Evans, son of Mr. and Mrs. James J. Evans, celebrated his fifth birthday anniversary with a party at the home of his grandmother, Mrs. Esther Mlzra- chl in Colon. Balloons and toy birds were used In the decorations which were carried out in green and American beauty shades. The birthday cake was topped with a little boy encircled with birds. Games were played and the prizes were won by Ralph de Boyrie and Johnny Vasquez. The other young guests were: Stanley and Albert Motta, Jr., Raymond. Richard and Robert Pretto, Leila and Stanley Leon, Nelson and Lupe Mendlzabals, Jose Casis, Anita and Tony San- tos, Luis Cruz. Jr., Dexter Roman, Luis and Darlo Martines, Cristi- na and Billy Qulroz. Alonzo and James Fernandez, Esther Miller, Buddy Clarke, Peter Dykstra, Donna Wong, Clem Malea. Irene and Guy DePuy. Paul Frederick- son. Diane Vila Lindo, Nora and Nellie Kay tan. The adult guests were Mrs. Howard Clarke. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pretto, Mrs. Alonzo Fernandez. Mrs. Robert Asyn and Mrs. Luis Cruz, Jr. uMc.il and Tea The members of Coral Chap- r. No. 3, Order of the Eastern Star are planning a charity tea nd musical, with a Thanksgiv- kg theme, to be given Sunday ftemoon, November 13 at the atun Masonic Temple. The ours of calling will be from 4:00 I p0fice"Force. k 8:00 p.m. * A most cordial Invitation is ex- nded to the members and lends to attend. iirlli Announcements Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Robert- son, of me De Lesseps Area, have announced the birth of a son on November 13 at the Colon Hospi- tal. Mrs. Robertson Is the former Miss Mary Leach. Mr. Robertson is a member of the Canal Zone ? l\VC Hears History ' f South American Flag* The General Assembly of the I olon Branch of the Inter-Ame- on November 10. * Mrs. George W. Kennedy and Infant daughter, Deborah Kay, have returned to their Fort Da- vis residence from the Coco Solo Naval Hospital. The baby was born to Lt. nr>d Mrs. Kennedy Veterans of Foreign Wars Holding Annual Danee Post 100. Veteran of Foreign Wars of Cristobal. C.Z., are sponsoring their fifth annual dance to be held tomorrow evening at 8:00 at the Strangers Club. No admission will be charged for couples and there will be nu- merous door prizes. PARIS BAZAAR E.nilio Palomeras COLON v o NOVEMBER SPECIAL on popular washable COTTONS for Ladies Cay colors and prints . . In easy-to-don and easy-to- tond styles. With absolutely the tiniest price tags of the year during our SPECIAL SALE 395 (NEA Telephoto) NO EXPLANATION Otto Maynard. refused to explain the -hotos, drawings, clippings and notes on defense subjects, 1 n c 1 u d lng the atom bomb, which were found in his shack near the San Francisco-Oak- land Bay Bridge in California. The 42-year eld gardener was held by police In Oakland on a vagrancy charge. AF Pushes Back 95-Croup Target Date To 1953 WASHINGTON, Nov. 18 (UP) Lagging production and west- ern Europe's need for new planes have forced the Air Force to push back its target date for building up to 95 grups from late 1952 to some- time in 1953, lt was disclosed today. ARE YOU DISC'UURAGED^ cause you suffer distress Iron f COMPLAINTS wWch makes you NERVOUS. HIGH-STRUNG on such days? Sgtt/S.....mm wtieh m'k- r~ .X* lzlZ'-ou'- er*nkJ''tmeM' *- "TT"' Thn oo try Lydi E. Pinkaaa- " V *** Cmmm to relieve such irmptasMl BALBOA OPENS SATURDAY! 'r Lia/ *:** [LfflJWV'A*&M'S HIGH, w,DE j AMD HANDSOME MUSiCAL - odK-.l tttt it proved reoarkat*W s*pna womca troubled this wag. War oaVt "khsm's Compound b what DactM aal a * ** * grand aoottLnTdssTa a of -omin. mo, f important organ. TaaasBfasBlanyPmkham'i Compound Ma W up resistance gain* auca Oaatos, It. ai great atasMSsss toakt I "NKMAM'S TASUTS M, ooo mm. Lrdie I. Pinkham', VEGETABLE COMPOUND > Victor Young Is Legion Auxiliary Person-Off-Month Announcement has been made by the Department Radio Chair- man of the American Legion Auxiliary, that Victor Young of Gatun, ha sbeen chosen by Oa- tun Unit No. 3, American Legion Auxiliary as the Person-of-the- Month. Young has been active for the past five year in Canal Zone scout work. He Is the director, scoutmaster training, school At- lantic district, member board of directors, Trefoil House scouting center member. Canal Zone Council 801, B.8.A. A radio program will be pre- sented In celebration of Thanks- giving Day, sponsored by the American Legion Auxiliary at which time he will be presented to the public. Lt. Douglas Graham and Wal- ter Hunnicutt were presented during the months of September and October, respectively, on Person-of-the-Month programa Visiting Cadets From Colombia To Attend Dance In addition to the Informa- tional tours ol installations and facilities of the Naval District In Panama, planned for the 75 Co lomblan Naval Cadets from the destroyer, "Antioquia Caldas," and the transport "Ciudad de Pe- relra," the 15th Naval District will honor Colombia's future Na- val Officers with a formal dance to be held at the Naval Officers Club at the Coco Solo Naval Sta- tion at 8 p.m today. Invitations have been extend- ed to the younger set of Panam and the Canai Zone. Mrs. Lyle L. Koepke president of the Inter-American Women's Club, is chairman of the dance committee. A Navy bus, for the accomoda- tlon Of the young ladles and their chaperones on the Pacific Side, will depart f ro.n the Balboa Rall- ioad Station, for the Naval Sta- tion at Coco Solo, at 8 p.m Fri- day and will return to the same point after the dance. Music for tr.e dance .will be furnished by ihe United states Army Band of Fort Gullck. Radio Programs Your Community Station HOG-840 Where 100.000 Pmam Mm) . Presents ALVIN STERLING NOW AVAILABLE AT MERCURIO Next to the Central Theatre SPECIAL ORDERS SHIPPED DIRECTLY TO THE CANAL ZONE ARE ACCEPTED AT LARGEST DISCOUNT Panama K^anal Clubhouses- Showing Tonight BALBOA Atr-CaaattUaoaa : :15 IN John CARROL a Marie MacDONALD "HIT PARADE" Saturday "TEXAS CARNIVAL" DIABLO HTS. S:tt : Ann SHERIDAN a Errol FLYNN "SILVER RIVER" Saturday "RICH, TOL'NG AND PRETTX COCOLI : :30 AH Star RcvtttHI "HOLLYWOOD CANTEEN' Saturday "EMERGENCY WEDDING" PEDRO MIGUEL ttu tm Daan MARTIN and Jerry LEWIS 'THAT'S MY BOY" Saturday "RIO GRANDE" GAMBOA S:1I (aturda? i Louia JOURDAN a Ocbra PAGET "BIRD OF PARADISE" G A 1 U N T.m p at Can atTANT Jeanne CHAIN "PEOM.E WILL TALK" Saturday "INSIDF HTKAIGHT" MARGARITA a Satarday "TOE LEMON DROf KID" CRISTOBAL Air-CimdHtaned :li A :* Robert STACK Joy PAGE 'Bullfighter and The Lady' Saturday "TBS DESERT FOX" &n moiw a "Ceaaac Caaya Pa V-8 Has lively B&vorz Wholesome fioodess no *sny/*Juice can mlcl * __.i mu umm m mm um vm In V-8 there ara 8 delicila juice *A cardan-fresh vegetablea-not just one. That* why V-8 has lively flavor and wholeaoma goodoaM no mnl, juice can match. Each juice adds its own tempting flavor plus vitamin A, B, C-caldun and Iron, Your family will lov V* Sarva it ofhm. fVab Catary by*, aaaaar. W Um*, Today, Friday, Nev. 18 Ml 3:0-Mulc for Friday 4:00Toy Town (BBC) 4:80What's Your Favorita 6:00To Be Announced , 8:16Evenlne salon (rennat) i 7:t)(>-BarchsterTower (BBC) 7: SOBLUE RIBON SPURTS REVIEW 7:45Here Comes Louis Joraan 8:00NBW8 and Commentary- Raymond Swing (VOAi 8:16Radio In Review (VOA) 8:45Facts on Parade (VOA) 9:00The Perry Como Show (VOA) 0:15Science Digest (VOA) 9:30Commentator's 01 a t (VOA) 9:45Sports World and Tune of Day (VOA) 10:00Cavalcade of America _(VOA) 10:30 Adventures of P.C. 49 (BBC) 11:00The Owl's Nest 1:00 a.m.Sljrn Off Local 900 Starts Membership Drive "A Sure Way To Better Pay i Join the C.I.O," will be th*' campaign slogan of the'^annual membership drive of Local 900 of the Government and, Clvio Em- ployes Organizing Committee- C.I.O. to be launched on Sun- day In Cristobal. The benefits of unionism and its tendency to benefit all Local- Rate employes will be explained MORE DEAD THAN LIVING HAMMOND, Did. (U.P.) More people are dead than a_ within Hammond's city limits"! There are 126,322 persons burlad in the city's 80 cemetery acres,' which Is 38,728 more than the area's population. In a special message that will be delivered to all homes in the Camp Comer, Silver city Heights and Sliver City by C.I.O. repre- sentatives who will be prepared to answer all questions pertinent to the operations of the local 900. Saturday, Nov. 17 AJML 6:00Sign On 6:00 Alarm Clock Club 7:30Jazz Salon 8:15NEWS (VOA) 8:30Pioneers of the World (BBC) 8:45The Duke Steps Out 9:00NEWS 9:15Women's World (VOA) 9:30Highwayman's Hill 10:00 NEWS 10-06Off the Record 11:00News 11:05Off the Record (Contd.) 11:30 Meet the Band l?-nnnews P.M. 12:05-NEW TUNE TIMEPAN- AMUBICA 12:30The Football Prophet 1:00NEWS 1:15Personalitv Parade 1:45Tout de France (RDF) 2:00Latin American Serenade 2:16Date For Dancin? 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Battle of the Band 3:00American Band Concert 3:16The Little Show 3:30McLean's Proeram 3:45Musical Interlude 4:00Music for Saturday 4:30What's Your Favorito 6:0O-Guest Star 6:16 Masterworks from Paraca (RDF) 8:45American Folk Sone? 7:00-Gav Paris Music Hall (RDF) 7:30Sports Review 7:45Jam Session 8:00NewsreelUBA (VOA) 8:15--Onera Concert (VOA) 8:45Battle Reoort (VOA) 9:00Radio Universitv (VOA) :15tamo Club (VOA* 9:30Radio Amateur Proeram (VOA) t:46norts and Tune of Day (VOA) 10:00HOTEL BL PANAMA 10:30The HOO Hit Farade 11:00The owl's Wast 1:00 a.m.Slam Off cleanse . nourish A swift, aearchina cleanse with one of the Yardley CSeanaiat Creams, A massage with the all-important Night Cream-the bade beauty catenas* b your climate (m*t*g wiB tmfmrym Mm men mm, mm Ms am Uulj, mmHtkhit TordUy prrparatim). Then a brisk tone-up with Astringent Lotion. Just three simple steps. Ifs the Yardley way, and the easiest beauty routine in the world,, Skin Care by YARDLEY Liquen O^anaiag Orean Dry Skin Oeaaalnf Crass Night Clean Ascriogant Lotion Toaing 'nil TAItllT IS Oil OR STRRST IOIIOI LI..M " rnn.%T. NOVEMBER 1. J9M House Re To Ike As - - 0 i WASHINGTON, Nov. 16. -'(UP)A poll o 161 House Republicans showed today thai 44per cerrt favor Sen. Robert A. Tftft ***$&&'^^E^ dential'nomination, white, Ihvight D. EisenhowgM- The results were ais of m Eiaenhower-for-Pr^lidenifgwppaign. jjjge will o& a ew.hea4ai-Irs i#Washington ft*.., Ttoijcret poll was conducted#r8,belnK topped only by taft r PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DATLT NEWSPAPER PAGE N1NB Sh.pp.ng & AirLine News y# S. ROYAL SIPEMIIKI TRUCK TIIES Yacht "Virginia" Arrives in Cristobal The 18-ton yacht Virginia ar- rived at Cristobal this weeK from Key West. She Is headed for San Pedro with a two-man crew. The Virginia has an Ame- rican master, Eenjamln O. Brane. by Rep; W. Sterling Cole- to all 196 House Republicans They were asked to state their first, second, third and fourtn choices for the nomination. A bul: 35 members replied in some ^Taft" an avowed candidate for the nomination, received 71 first choice votes. The Ohio senator also on 30 second choices, 23 third choices and 7 fourth choices. < Elsenhower, who ha* not yet Bid whether he will run. but who has done nothing to squelch ft boom by his supporters, re- ceived 54 first choice votes. The general was listed in second cholees. 20 third choices and 5 fourth choice. Sen. Everett Dirkoen of Illinois, a prominently mentioned "dark horse," won 13 first place, 19 second place, 17 third place and 3, fourth place votes. Gen Douglas MacArthur. who ha- disavowed, any political ambitions. w,aivlisied as the first dtoloe f li.merhtotrs. Twenty- bkw others named the ousted Far East commander as their second choice, while.. 8 picked him as a, third choice. ^ . ?Gov. Earl Warren of Califor- nia, who threw his hat in the rins Wednesday to become the second avowed candidate for the nomination, ranked fifth with first place Votes. But he was the second choice of 23 mem- in this category. Warren also had 20 third choice and H fourth-choice selections. In other political develop- ments yesterday: President Truman told a news conference at his Key West. Pla., vacation retreat that he did not discuss domestic politics with Eisenhower during the general's recent visit here, but declined to comment when ask- ed whether he would support Elsenhower for the Democratic nomination. The president also said that his "Fair Deal" program will be the heart of the 1952 Democra- tic platform regardless Of whether he or someone else is the party's candidate. l Republican National Chalr- .jnan Guv George Gabrlelson ln- fvaded the not-so-solid Demo- cratic South and appealed in a speeoh at Oxford. Miss., for Southern GOP votes next year. Gabrlelson said a "real two- pattv svfftem" is what the South needs to win Its place In the *un. EXIST NOT SO GOOD INDIANAPOLIS (.P.'Clyde Pulton, jr., 25,01 milkman, sued for $1^,000 tor hi juries received when he backed out of a door marked, ^'exJt" in an apartment buildmjr and fell to the ground, 15 feetVlowV m ~' i ' m , ?i_-_.- a a ex ,PARISBAZAAR 'Emilio PalpmerM .COLON <***. j .'fc*. ' i BEAUTIFUL DRESSES for Ladies Extra Savings on .'An* * SI.KS IT COT TOTS S , Now at lowest prices during our SPECIAL SALE L. o In talk en Anglo-American1 cooperation given In Coln yes-; terday. Jasper M. LtdbitUr, Second Secretary and PtfiU At- tache'of the BrltUh Legation hi. Panam, told the Cristobal-Colon Rotary Club that: i "A famous philosopher once1 compared mankind to hedgehogs living in an Arctic climate who have to snuggle together to keep themselves warm, but are con- tinually drifting apart because of the prickles. "We do not have to read much of the history of Anglo-Ameri- can relations to appreciate that in .the past we have shown some pretty formidable prickles to one another; but. thanks partly to the activities on both sides of the Atlantic of organizations such as Rotary, I bajleve we have at last evolved a smoother-coated breed which can cling together with a more warming effect. If anything can be sure in this unsure world, it is that Brit- ain and the United States must and will stand together, now and a* far Into the future as anyone ""tKi. a truth which the news of theday often obscures. There are what appear to be almost continual differences of opinion; there are intermittent noisy quarrels. An American Senator denounces United Kingdom poli- cy on this or that issue A Brittah Member of Parliament criticizes American views or American be- havior. A good part of the press on each slSe of the Atlantic jos in and there is another of those all-too-famular free-for-all ar- guments which must often sug- gest to the rest of the world that the two nation are hopelessly at d"dy'et anyone who looks a llttte further than the headlines will remember that this Is a state of affairs which has existed lora long time and that it has never had any effect on the capacity of the two nations to draw together quickly and firmly at the appear- ance of grate crises. .__,. "Moreever, perceptive people will see that a P"rt~,,i must be very strong ****J* ! hie, withoVt any serlo* torn- elo itself, to fMriatt the partners he luxury of being as Frank with one another nd even, Occasion, as rude to one another, as are the Ameri- cans and British... "it is not only thftt the Ameri- cans and British speak the same language or spring ftgg^Wg same dock. Having kind of family relationship, we tend to criticize each other mocejthan moat people, and t* d*l\d P?J;* fectlon, which Is, after all,, un- reftSonabie.Butthough our ideas on central .heating and the right temperature- for beer re. far apart, we are profoundly ln.-- greement on the essential of lib- erty For our idea are based on more Ujan common convictions: they are Baseff on common In- stincts. "It is not differences of con- victions or Instinct which cause the Anglo-American arguments but differences of temperament and approach resulting from our very different development, sit- uation, and outlook on the world "Anyone who takes the trou- ble to examine the issues on , which the British and Ameri- cans have differed during the last hundred and fifty years Will find that the differences were almost never over what result it was desired to achieve but almost always over what would be the best way of a- ehievlng a result both nations desired. German Whaling Ship Returns for Repairs , One of the whale catchers from ihe German whaling fleet that left Balboa Oct. 2 bound for the Antarctic, returned to Balboa Wednesday for repairs < She is the Olympic Rider. The fleet, headed by the mother- ship Olympic Challenger was scheduled to be away about eight months. This was the first German post-war fleet to leave Hamburg. Fernie and Company are local agents. Oslo, Norway, and the 1952 O- lymplcs at Helsinki, Finland. Arrangements have been com- pleted by the I Jilted States Olympic Committee and Pan American for the transportation of the entire U. S. delegation of apDroximately 100 contestants and officials to the Oslo games and approximately 425 athletes and officials to Helsinki. The Olympic Winter Games will be held at Oslo February 14 through 25. President Postpones Rail Strike Threat KEY WEST, Fla., Nov. 16 (UPiPresident Truman today set up an emergency board to deal with a strike threat by 17 non-operating unions against "So we must expect to have these differences from time to time between our countries, Just as we expect to have them be- tween groups of opinion inside our countries. After all, they are stuff democracy Is made of, and so long as we remain at one on the basic questions, those that really matter, those that are vit- al to the common cause, and so lorig as we retain our confidence In each others Integrity, differ-, enees about methods, procedure, emphasis, or even about the ex- act policy to be pursued at any given time, need not trouble us too much... "From war, tension, the sup- pression of liberty anywhere in the world, BriUin and the Un- ited States have everything to lose. From peace, stability and the practice of liberty, we have everything to gain. "We have so much to gain, and we know it so well, that we are both submitting ourselves to the costs and sacrifices of the fight- ing in Korea and of a rearma- ment program we would long ago have thrown overboard If it had hot held out the only hope of the liberty and peace and stability we seek. "And so, though we argue as to whose rifle is the better weapon, and criticize each other's plans, we feel by conviction and instinct that so long as our present part- nership endures, with all it can muster of moral and military power, of human and natural re- source and of Industrial poten- tial, that we have a much bet- ter than even chance of keeping the peace." I---------------------------------------------... i iJ'BTUCB DRTVER APPBAJ* , MEMPHIS, Tenn. (U.P.1 The parking meter flag showed red but a note on the windshield ex- plained: "Please don't give me a ticket. My car won't start. I will be after It this .afternodrl." PAA Will Transport V. S. Olympic Team Pan American World Airways will serve as official air carrier for the teams which Will repre- sent the United States li\ the 1952 Olympic Winter Games at Lively Veep Barkley Says He'll Run Again all the major railroads of the nation. The unions are de- manding addition of a union shop clause to all existing con- Lrncts The railroad strike threat in- volves more than 1,000.000 em- ployes. The strike has not been for- mally scheduled and the Presi- dent's action today automati- cally halts any possibility of a walkout for at least 60 days. Named to the emergency board were David L. Cole, Pater- By DREW PEARSON son. N. J.. attorney, as chair- WASHINOTON, Nov. 16 One man: Georgie E. Osborn, law of the liveliest Democratic de-, professor at Stanford Unlver- bates In Capitol Hill cloakrooms sity, Palo Alto, Calif.: and Aaron has been whether 74-year-old Al-. Horvitz. New York labor arbiter ben Barkley should run for vice and consultant, president again. The Veep personally Is running like a house afire and taking a few digs at possible rivals in- cluding Tennessee's Sen. Estes Kefauver. Barkley has told friends: Sure I'm going to run again, and it Harry Truman steps down, I u run fbr President." But a wide circle of Democrats on the hill, searching for a new and fresh team, have been look- ing over the field. Chief Justice Fred Vinson, also a Kentucklan, is at the top of their list to run for President, which would automatically eli- minate Barkley since two Ken- tucklans could not run on tne same ticket. Barkley's busy campaign man- ager is bustling Les Biffle the Senate secretary, whose big din- ing room in the Capitol is a fav- orite haunt for senators and poll- 11P t 'A 1 \ S Blffle's relations with President Truman are off-agaln, on-agaln but with the Veep they are 100 per cent, 100 per cent of the time. PANAMA AUTO S. A. Apartado 1913, Panama ! At the close of Congress, Biffle ave a luncheon for "President ruman and Congressional lead- tave a It at which "the" Vice'presldeht! was slated to be No. 2 guest of honor. However, the busy Veep came in late, almost forgot the lunch entirely. KIDNEY TROUBLE Here's a medicine specially made for it! If yon supectthat there's something wrong with your kidneys it awy me*n that they need a corrective medicine. IHTERNATIONAL TRADE FAIR MARCH 22-APRIL 6, 1952 fton now to exhibit 0f. mi gigantic fair in the hear! of America's rich dollar market... a (tended in 1950 by 25,000 buyers, exhibitors from 44 nations. See yor nearest American Consulate or write, cable today for information. tUmm MlHUftsml Trade Mr, MStctwadh* Mart, CMaaa* s, U.VA.1 ,-V" Munll fbfcer, Nractor at 'Ian *IMr 'f Chkan tataraalianal Traaa Fak, Badfard Hal.l, farii I, Frame Your CHRYSLER & PLYMOUTH Dealer NOW offers for IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ALL MODELS ALL COLORS A,k for a DEMONSTRATION on the NEW CHRYSLER! k COMPARE the PLYMOUTH. . jewel of the low price field! AGENCIAS PAN AMERICANAS, S. A. Across from El Rancho (Estudiante Street) Tels. 2-0825 2-0826 De Witt's Mils f ptclilly mad* for BACKACHE JOINT PAINS RHEUMATIC PAINS LUMBAGO SCIATICA Neglected kidneys give rise to distressing symptoms such as bsckache, rhiaSic sauna, lumbago, oaOca, aUddtr disorders with scalding and burning. The trouble starts when the kidney grew sluggish and fail to perform their aatural function of Skrnag away arparrbas from the system. You can estore these vital organs to normal activity at many others have dona by taking De Witt's Pule. They have a cleansing, soothing and aaaeptk effect on the kidneya and you will vary quickly feel the good they are dotar This triad and trusted medicine has brought relief to many people Uka you in all parts of the world. Why not try De Witt's Pills for your trouble / They may be just what you need. Get a supply from your chemist OUt aUABANTH De Witt's Pis ere under strictly .'gienic cedition end ingredient conform to rigid standard of parity. DE WITT'S PILLS *# -- / -------fu lit FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 18 | *%G* "" -. ......... ______.,1 E PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1 ' j ' mil ii t ir--------;$ ii a i i ii m ii ........ tAmateur 'World Series' Playoffs Begin Toda I Atlantic Twilight League JHolds Opening Session The Atlantic Twilight League,, turn of the Sunday p.m. game, till riding on the crest ol their I ano li was with this thougnt in highly successful 1950 season, aid their first preliminary meet- ing of the 19S1 baseball loop. The main topic of discussion was the aim of the loop to give e Gold Coast a season of top cball played by local boys, to bstltute for the now defunct anal Zone League. Everv one resent at the well attended ,eeting seemed unanimous in heir optimism that the Atlantic aide fans will be pleased with what the amateur loop has to of- fer this year. IS The Atlantic Twilight Baseball League directors agreed on play- ing four games a week; three night games and one Sunday af- Jternoon contest. For some time (>now the Isthmian baseball fans .have been clamoring for the re- Sports Brieis By UNITED PRES S .5 *. i. < ji MIAMIThe Miami Sun Sox of i'the Florida International League >vl4ave dropped Pepper Martin as iSmnager. Club President H. B. Taber says the former St. Louis ""Cardinal star will be replaced by It playing manager, probably from the Brooklyn Dodgers. Ta- ber says the club isn't renewing Martins contract "for numerous reasons." CHICAGOThe Chicago White Box will open pre-spring training sessions lor pitchers and catch- ers in El Centro, California, on Feb. 22. Spring training for the I rest of the club won't begin until March 1 in Pasadena. mind that the Twi-Loop deciQLa i to respond 4o their demands. Other matters brought up at' the gathering of the Gold Coast oaseoal moguls' was the solvency of the league, the financial re- port and the possioillty of charg- ing admission. On the latter question, no definite decision was reached, and it will again be trashed out at the next meeting, j Fans, as well as members of the loop are urged to participate in i the voting on this important Is- sue, i i The Twi-Loop will meet once more on Nov. 27 at the Margari- ta Clubhouse, there Is still one open franchise, and all applica-' tions must be in before that date. For any further information prior to that date, all possible appll- , cants may call Trevor Simons at ; Cristobal 2530 between the hours of 7:30 a.m. and noon. Saturday's Program 1st Race "F-2" Natives|M Ffs. Purse: $275.00Pool Closes 12:45 First Rare of the Doubles 1Little Lulu G. Snchez 112 2Norma V. Ortega 120 3Recodo V. Rodrguez 117x 4Vlllarreal G. Prescott 120 S Tap Girl A. Mena 114 6El Mono J. Baeza, Jr. H7x 7Golden Faith C. Chavez lllx 8Romntico M. Guerrero 120 9Embustero H. Reyes 117x 10Fonseca F. Avila 118 Four Teams To Dispute Coveted Diamond Title 2nd Race "F-l" Natives 7 Fjs. Purse: $275.00 Pool Closes 1:15 Second Race of the Doubles 1Miranda H. Reyes 106x 2Rio Mar G. Ramos 107x 3Duque C. Ruiz 117 4Bijagual J. Contreras 120 5Campesino C. Chong lllx \i WASHINGTONThe Presiden- tial Cup football game in Wash- ington has been called offat . least for this year. Officials who sponsored last year's Inaugural gamebetween Georgia and Tex- as A. and M.say a game may be played next year. Game Chair- man Lester Steinem says spon- sors of the game cannot match ffers of large Bowls and won't ettle for anything short of the nation's top teams. Steinem says It may be a different story in 1952. ~ EAST LANSING, MichThe nation's number one football learn may have to get along with- out one of its key linesmen to- morrow. Michigan Stateranked .number one by the United Press feoard of coachesmeets India- na. Coach Biggie Munn says sen- ior tackle Marvin McFadden still Is hampered by an*ankle injury received last week against Notre Dame. ."rd Race "B" Natives 6Yi Fgs. Purse: $350.00 Pool Closes 1:45 One-Two 1Batn V. Ortega 112 2Grito y Plata M. Hurley 114 3Amazona J. Samanlego 117 4Dalida P. R. Vsquez 120 5White Fleet C. Ruiz 120 AMATEUR BASEBALL WORLD SERIES Final Standings Teansa Won Lost Venezuela ....................... 9 1 Cuba .. .......................... g j . Dominican Republic .............' 7 3 Puerto Rieo...................... 7 3 Nicaragua .........'...,'.......... 6 4 Panama......................... 5 5 Costa Rica...............*,..... & 5 Colombia ........................ 4 6 Mexico .......................... t 8 Guatemala ...................... 1 9 El Salvador...................... u r Pel, .900 .900 .700 .700 . .00 .SM .50Q .400 .290 .100 .000 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Puerto Rico 25, Costa Rica 5; Panama 2, Colombia 0. ith Race "E-2" Natives6'/j Ft. Purse: $275.00 Pool Closes 2:20 Quiniela 1Avlvato V. Ortega 115 2Aqui Estoy E.Campbell 112x 3Cafetal H. Reyes 112x 4Julito J. Chuna 112x 5 Don Catalino F. Avila lib 6Cosa Linda V. Rodrig'z 112x 5th Race "G" Imported 1 Mile Purse: $450.00 Poo] Closes 2:55 1Piragua E. Silvera 108 2Cyclone M'lone A. Mena 112 3Beduino E. Alfaro 117x 4Fright V. Ortega 120 5Levadura G. Ramos 105x TODAY'S GAMES (Championship Playoffs) Puerto Rico vs. Venezuela; Cuba vs. Dominican Republic. MEXICO CITY, Nov. 16 (UP) The championship playoffs of the Amateur Baseball World Ser- ies open today with Puerto Rico meeting Venezuela and the Dom- inican Republic versus Cuba. The playoff pairings were an- nounced by tourney officials late last night. Tomorrow's games will pit Venezuela against Cuba and the Puerto Rlcans against the Dominicans. The final games Sunday will see Venezuela tangling with the Dominican Republic while Puer- to Rico meets Cuba. If it is nec- essary to hold a playoff for first place, first place tie playoffs will Stanford Coach Pacific Little League Tops UP Poll ^^s Tryout Tomorrow Cicero of the AFGE, Lodge 14 teams, will be on hand to scout the players. Saturday, Nov. 24, a tryout will be held for the 11 and 12 year- olds, at 9 a.m., Diablo Height* baseball park. Louis Arrives In Japan For Boxing Exhibition Tour Time with Cuba meeting the Dominican Republic at 8:45 p.m. The weather bureau says it will be clear and warm at Delta Park for the afternoon with only slight chill In the air for the night con- test. Puerto Rico fought its way into the playoffs In the final ame yesterday by blasting six osta Rican pitchers for 25 hits and 35 runs while Puerto Rican hurler Juan Hernndez Massi- ni held his rivals to nine hits and five runs. Hernndez' pitching and the be held next Tuesday if two .powerful batting by hut team- HOW ABOUT THAT?Yu-l Berra mirrors a broad grin after learning he has been named by the Baseball Writers' Association of America as the most valuable player in the American League. Squat Yan- kee joins Dodgers' Roy Cam pa - nella, the National League win- ner, to become the first catchers to cop the prize. (NEA) 6th Race "1-2" Imported1 Mile Purse: $375.00 Pool Closes 3:35 First Race of the Doubles 1Celaje II E. Guerra 112 2Baby Rol) G. Prescott 120 3Delhi) G. Snchez 118 4Danescourt M. Hurley 114 5Bien Hecho V. Rodrig'z lllx 6 D. Elelda A. Coronado 115x 7Betn V. Ortega 118 8Flamenco C. Ruiz 115 9Bronx J. Contreras 113 7th Race "I" ImportedVi Fgs. Purse: $540.00 Pool Closes 4:05 Second Race of the Doubles 1Revlal R. Vsquez 120 2Caribe O. Chanta 115 3Mariscallto G. Cruz 111 4Apretador V. Ortega 113 5Prestigio) A. Coronado UOx $P. Star) J. Contreras 112 7Milros V. Rodrguez 117x 8th Race "1-2" Imported1 Mile Purse: $375.00 Pool Closes 4:40 Quiniela HEADACHE? caused by acid indigestion or temporary sluggishness Get sparkling Eno ... today! Let it relieve your sick headache two ways: Eno quickly helps neutralize xcess stomach acid ... and Eno also acts as a speedy, gentle laxa- tive when needed! PLEASANTas a glass of spar- kling, bubbly soda water! -J. LAX ATI VI- relieves temporary sluggishness quickly. (Take be fore breakfast when needed.) 3. ANTACID relieves sourness, ga< and heartburn promptly. Used by millions.Effervescent Eno is also good for constipation, DULLNESS, OVERINDULGENCE and SOUR STOMACH. At all druggists-Get Eno today. TAKE GOOD-TASTING 1Blumaha 2Ara be 3Mayordomo 4Tartufo 5Bartolo 6Beach Sun. 7Atasn ' 8Gay Ariel 9Bosforo 10Mete Bulla O. Chants 115 C. Ycaza 115 A. ngulo 112x J. Ruiz 115 G. Grael 115 V. Rodgz. U2x G. Cruz 115 A. Mena 115 F. Avila 115 J. Chuna 112x teams are tied or Monday and Tuesday if three teams are tied. The Puerto Ricans, who blast- ed their way into the playoffs Thursday with a convincing 25-5 victory over Costa Rica, announced that pitcher J. Cor- doba will start on the mound for them today. The Venezuelans said they will select a hurler for the afternoon game from among Rodriguez, Quintero, Arizmendi and Guillen. Last year's championship Dom- inican team did not announce a .starting pitcher for> the night game but the Cuban pitcher is expected to be Puentes. The fans have established the Venezuelans a 10-8 favorite to take the championship. Cuba, which finished the round-robin tournament in a first place tie with the Venezuelans also rates high. But many fans were rooting for the' young Puerto Rican squad which was lightly regarded in the early reckonings then started strong In the round-robin tour- ney, slumped in mid-schedule, and made a roaring comeback to the Dominicans In the final standings. Today's game between Puerto Rico and Venezuela will start at finish in a third place tie with 3:30 p.m. (Central mates gave the other Puerto Ri- can hurlers a much needed rest for the finals. A Puerto Rican loss would have thrown fourth place into a three-way tie and required a playoff between Nic- aragua, Costa Rica, Puerto Rico for the finals berth. But Puerto Rico, whose players predicted before the game that they would win, did just that in one of their most overwhelming victories. Panam shut out Colombia 2-0 in the only other game on the tournament's final day. Panam was one of the hottest teams at the close of the tourney. The Panamanians came back to win five of tbelr last six games after losing their first four contests. CITY PASSES UP CASH DALLAS. Tex. (DP.) Dallas has lost a source of revenue that has amounted annually to about $80,000. Hereafter, City Manager Charles C. Ford said, all cases involving driving and drinking will filed with the district at- torney. For year the city has handled hundreds of drunken driving cases in its corporation court, disposing of them by fines Standard of $50 and up. NEW YORK, Nov. 18. Chuck Taylor of Stanford, who fails to see how his team does it even though he has picked them in each of their eight vic- tories this season, was named United Press Coach of the Week Wednesday for the. most smash- ing triumph of allover swash- buckling Southern California. Taylor thinks it is luck and that the good fortune dates back to the time he hit the Stanford campus in patched pants with only a nickel in his pocket and stuck around to become an All- America guard, returning later to rebuild the Indians into a na- tional power as coach. This is Taylor's first year as head man and at 31 he is the youngest big time coach In the business. He also Is the first alumnus to take over as bead coach at Stanford in nearly half a century. And he got the job mainly because the athle- tic department couldn't lure the big time type of man it wanted. But the bigwigs should have known Chuck would come through. He always has before. He was guard on the Stanford "Wow Boy" eleven of 1940 which knocked off a great Nebraska team In the Rose Bowl. Later, after lucky Chuck es- caped unscathed In hot combat on Omaha beach In Normandy, he had a brief stint In pro foot- ball with the Miami Seahawks, then returned to Stanford as freshman coach. A strong believer in psychol- ogy which he thinks is 80 per cent of the game, he convinces the boys that the next game on the schedule always is the toughest, but that they can win it if they don't let down. That was the way he felt last Saturday about Southern Calif- ornia, which was coming back home from a smashing conquest of Army in New York. That is the way he feels about Oregon State this Saturday. The Pacific Little League will hold their Initial tryout tomor- row (Saturday) at 9:00 a.m. on the Diablo Heights baseball field. All boys (Including boys who Kayed In the Pacific Little rue last year) 8, 9 and 10 years of age and attending U.S.- Rate schools on the Pacific side are requested to report for this tryout. All boys In this age group are requested to bring along a birth certificate or a note from their parent or guardian stating the date of his birth. On arrival at the ball part all boys are requested to report to the Player-Agent for registra- tion. After registration the boys will form croups by positions they are trying out for-and will be put through batting and field- ing drills. Managers Lou Glud of Sears, Fred Mohl of the Firemen, Paul Mohl of Lincoln Life, Clarence Priest of the Police, Jimmie Des- Londes of the Elks, 1414, and Joe 9lh Race "B" Imported4Vi Fgs. Purse: $400.00 Pool Closes 5:15 One-Two 1Rose Hip V. Ortega 120 2Breeze Bound G. Ramos 106x 3Tully Saba J. Contreras 109 4 Miss Fairfax R. Vsq'z 118 5 Hechizo G.Snchez 115 6Vermont J. Samanlego 115 7Cantaclaro G. Grael 116 8Belfarset G. Prescott 118 9Rlnty E. Silvera 112 10Lujoso O. Chanis 120 lath Race "A'' Natives4W Fgs. Purse: $375.00 Pool Closes 5:40 4-rManolete V. Rodriguez 106x 2Don Temi M. Guerrero 108 3Golden Tip C. Chavez lOlx 4B. Sambo J. Contreras 120 5Marsellesa V. Ortega 118 $10,000.00'Stock of LINOLEUMS just received! All sise rugs and yard goods. More than 100 dif. fereat designs. Choose yours today. Mueblera El Diablo The Star* where you will find he largest assortment of Glass and Linoleums." 86 Central Ave. Tel. 2-2485 "Leaders in the Furniture Business since 1909." Zazmaier Closes In On Collegiate Total Defense Grid Record NEW YORK, Nov. 16 (U:P.) Latest football figures released by the N-C-A-A show that Dick Kazmaler of Prlndeton is closing In on the major-college record for total offense. Kazmaier has gained one- thousand-470 yards in seven games. Princeton still has two left to play. That yardage Is on- ly 83 yards less than Johnny Bright of Drake, out for the sea- son with a broken jaw. has rolled. Several other players probably will pass Bright before the sea- son is over. Don Klosterman from Loyola of California ranks third with' one-thousand-399 yards. Klosterman is the leading passer. He has completed 120 pas- ses for an average of 51-point- five per cent. Babe Parllli leads in touchdown passes with 16. Old-Time Slugger Still Able To Take Care Of Himself CHICAGO, Nov. 16 (U.P.) -r- A couple of thugs Jumped an old-time slugger in Chicago... and got a lot more than they bargained for. Oscar "Battling" Nelson, a one- time lightweight champ, says two hoodlums tried to get him from behind on a Chicago Street Tuesday night. The 69-year-old boxer flat- tened one with a fast punch be- fore the other one got him down. The second thug took one look at his pal iylng on the deck and beat It. The other hoodlum.pick- ed himself up and lit out. toa Nelson's legs aren't what they used to be... he couldn't catch up. The old boxer didn't want any first aid. All he asked was a return bout., another crack at the two thugs. TOKYO, Nov. 16 (UP)Former Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis arrived In Tokyo for a three- week tour of Japan. After stepping from the plane, Louis repeated what he said be fore leaving Americahe will de- cide about retiring when he re- turns to the United States. Louis was asked whether back Income taxes he owes would keep him fighting. "Taxes have nothing to do with It," answered the Brown Bomber. Louis continued: "I've been looking forward to coming to Ja- an for many years and rm glad > be here. I'm here to help the Shrlners build a hospital for crippled children." Louis will open the exhibition tour in Tokyo this Sunday. Joe will box four American service- men, three of them Negroes with good records in Army tourna- ments. Louis says he hopes to vis- It the GJ.'s In Korea. "If Joe wants to go to Korea," says Shriner Chairman Maurice Upton, "that means he will go." Juan Franco Tips By CLOCKER '. 1Fonseca Little Luid 2Bijagual Duque 3DaUda P. Batn 4Don Catalino Cosa Linda 5Cyclone Malone Fright 6Baby Roi (e) Betn 7Apretador Porter's Star (e) 8Bosforo Mete Bulla 9Brese Bound Belfarset 10Don Temi Black Sambo ONE BESTDalida P. Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With More Comfort FASTEETH, pleasant alkaline (non- cid) power, hold false teth mor firmly. To at and talk In more comfort. I Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your I plates. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Checks "plate odor" breath}. Get FASTEETH tort. (denture at any drug lets STOP STAUN NOW/ "Why wait any longer to win a Korea?"asks a former Par East commander who knows America's full war potential. And be adds that the time has come to warn Russia which move in Europe will be considered an act of war. Such a bold policy would certainly stop creeping communism, aad possibly clear the clouds of war from the free world for yean to come I Read the red-blooded statement by Lt. Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer, U.S. A (Ret) in the Nov. 17th issue: NOWONSAlff Collier's '1 RACES SATURDAY and SUNDAY DOUBLES 1st, 2nd 6th, 7th RACES ONE-TWO 3rd aod 9th RACES COLON! For the convenience of our patrons we are now operating both at the "COPACABAA" and "SAVOY." iili,,-,^ * &r* QUINIELAS 4th and 8th RACES \ SATURDAYS STELLAR RACE 7th Roce "F" Importeds 6V2 Fgs. Purse: $500.00 Pool Cierra: 4:05 p.m. SECOND RACE OF DOUBLES 1. REV1AL.................R. Vsquea 120 2. CARIBE..................O. Chanis 115 3. MAR1SCAL1TO..............G. Cms HI 4. APRETADOR ........... F. Ortega 113 5. (PRESTIGIO.............A. Coronado U0x 6. (PORTERS STAR........./. Contreras 112 7. MILROS...............F. Rodriguez 117x ut&t/pionco *ace 'Jiae CHILDREN ARE NOT ALLOWED AT THE RACE TRACK SUNDAYS FEATURE RACES 7th Race 5th Race "A" Importeds 7 Fgs. Purse: $1,000.00 Pool Clone.: 2.55 p.m. 1. (ROYAL COUP.........../. Contreras 126 2. (MAIN ROAD..............E. Silvera 96 3. RATHL1N LIGHT...........A. Mena 106 4. DICTADOR............. M. Guerrero 105 5. CHACABUCO..........M. Arosemena 96 rv D" Importeds 7 Fgs. Purte: $600.00 Pool Close.: 4t05 p.m. SECOND RACE OF DOUBLES 1. FAIR CHANCE ........... G. Prescott 116 2. RIDING EAST...........j. Contreras HO 3. TRAFALGAR.............m. Hurley 115 4. ROADMASTER ..,.......... A. Mena 110 5. NOTABLE ............. V. Castillo 115 6. MOSQUETON...........A. Coronado 107x 7. SUN CHEER..............V.Ortega 115 4 f ^"ffiWJB FRIDAY NOVEMBER 16, 1M1 NM* r r----------- ,- "-' tiiir THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER ' PAOE Law <- Trick Needle When Coach Ha Horesf But There Are Innumerable Way To Score By JOHNNY McCALLTJM NBA Staff Correspondent NEW YORK* Not.' 16. (NEA)' Michigan State threw the t at No boki (Jotre Dame. But Biggie Munn dldnt have to resort to voodoolsm, mirrors and sueh to get hla voracious Spartans m a mood to awallow the Irish,'*6-0. They ituck to good,. bule football, dldnt make a miatake," said Frank Leahy. Which was the soundest way to thwart. The Master's eager opportunUU. whosa o r .4 o ..\..........H ..... " '" ' through the years has been to let the other guy beat himself. A minimum of tricks are nec- essary when a coach has the hones. Albrook-CurunduNi. In First Indoor Rifle Thanks largely to top mid-sea- son shooting form shown by M-Sgt. Bill Merriman, the Al- brooI-Curundu rifle team squeez- ed out a three-point victory over the Balboa Gun Club In the first match of the UUimlan OMm League by a score of 1098 to 1095. The match took place Wednesday night at the Albrook range. Al- though the scores In general Jackson, Carswell In'Service Bowl' COLUMBIA, 8.C.. Nov. 16 (OF) Cerawell Air Force base of Fort Worth, Texas Thursday accepted a bid to meet Fort Jackson, B.C., here Dec. 15 In the "Service Bowl" for the mythical football cham- pionship of the armed forces. The game will be sponsored by <-- Columbia Optimist Club in acity university of the 35,000 capac, . South Carolina stadium with proceeds after expenses and team guarantees going to the Optimf-* club's program for boys. were not up to what these teams are capable of, the match was close and interesting all the way. With one shooter on each team still firing. Balboa was in the lead by one point, but the excel lent anchor-man Ed Coe RedBUlk Steve Owen "Texas simply hammers for tior-man performance Dy ,, .. d ht yards on Ed Coe pulled Alorook-Curundu, "* Je "J?%$ intothe lead Ironically .Ed isI XTreffied Scout Walt Roach local boy whose ability with tne. T* Junior squad which had lehit1 Yo"Lg fSSmon ^ fine record a few years back. He 'he ball all afternoon is now in the Air Force, and It. But tacticians with a little looks like he wUl take up some of Imagination long ago learned the slack on the Albrook-Curun- there are innumerable ways you du team caused by the loss of Oil can baffle, and sometimes de- Kemm who is returning State- feat, the other side, side In the next few days. Steve Owen beat the profes- Blll Merrimah's 289 led his slonal Washington Redskins, team to the win, and topped all,28-14. with alphabetical soup. shooters for the night. Archie The coach of the New York Turner with .278 and Al Joyce Giants used A. T and Double A with 277 were high for Balboa, as Ed Coe fired 274 for Albrook-Cu- rundu. . Balboa's squad has been strengthened by the addition of Sets. Breckon and Budd of the 45th Reconnaissance Squadroh, and they loom as a dangerous team. Trie league this year will consist of eight rifle teams and Along The Fairways Lady golfers will to* off tomor- row (Not. 11) at Brasos Brook Country Club in the regatar PWGA monthly tournament. All newcomers to the Isthmus and to golf who ara Interested an cordially Invited. It yon nave not called your Club Representative please call Box name and handicap to Edith ithieson, telephones Home t-lltt, Office I-1I. Luncheon will be served (1.58) after the tournament. Teeing off time 8:M a.m. four pistol teams, and any one of five of the rifle teams can easily win this wide-open competition. ALBROOK-CURDNDU Prone Sit Stand Ttl. B. Merriman 08 98 BO Ed Coe 9 BUI Jaffray 100 Bob Deming 05 95 07 06 80 76 75 274 273 265 Team Total 1098 BALBOA Prone Sit Stand Ttl. Archie Turner 07 0 88 278 Al Joyce 00 06 83 Fred Wells 07 04 70 Clay. Breckon 09 04 77 Team Total rr n -v tf 277 2701 Geo. Flor*' Widow Claims 'Negligence' NEW YORK, Nov. 1 (UP) Leading boxing officials in New York face a one-half million dollar law salt. Mrs. George rtoree, widow of the middleweight who died or rina Injuries two months ago, has filed suit against official of the International Boxing Club, Mad- ison Square Garden and the New York Boxing Commlaaion. The IBC promoted the Aag. M**'- son Square Garden boot to whleta Roger Donoghue kayoed Flores in the eighth round. Flerea died en Sept. 5 as the result of injuries suffered in the bout. Mrs. Florea charged "negli- gence" in this suitthe first ever filed by survivor of a fighter who died as the result of ring Injnriee. In the suit, the widow claims the IBC should never have permit- ted the fight because he had been knocked out in two previous l^lso^hIhth.tXri,tin "do-or-die" effc/rt in Madison *' "** V* | which they will "shoot the padded in accordance with com- j .... mission recommendation, | works" to get their first According to accounU of the JC To Make AU Out Try tonigh For 1st TD, Victory Of Season] Balboa High School Bulldogs E Trounce Working Boys919AL ..-* .i-i.t i-..f.. #iwtni iaat nuarter Out of this thev breaklna stride went over for to r%^\jrs^>^^^*>^SS%J%J^r%M^SJf^SJF%0%F^S0>^ Meet Scotland's Favourite Son JOHNNIE WALKER SCOTCH WHISKY OtN ll-ITtl COIN tTSOM* The faehionable drink everywhere /obn wautn a tow ltd. e**k wm*> o*mm. gruuawoca formations, rather heavy pres- sure. Just to be sure, the Polo Grounders intercepted three pas- ses and turned them into touch- downs. Decidedly outmanned. Red Blalk of Army threw a mild scare into Southern California by quick-kicking on first down, scored first and early with this surprise method of attack. It took alert and resourceful Yale players to thwart wily Fritz Orlsler's machinations when the Michigan athletic director coach- ed Princeton before numbered Jerseys became jogue. The Tigers spun out of the huddle, heads down, faces tucked out of sight. This scrambled a puzzled de- fense. The Ells couldn't tell one player from another without a scorecard. They called time out, got together on a solution. When the teams returned to position, Yale linemen jerked ~ "t sticks of chalk and marked the rival helmets they were in- terested in. X marked the spot. Sharp practice In football has backflrech An upstake New York coach once surreptitiously relln- ed the field two yards wider than 160 feet. The Idea was to further exploit a swift halfback on wide end sweeps. Twenty seconds before the fin- al gun an opposing halfback In- tercepted a pass, and toe-danced down one of the revised side- lines for the winning touch- down. Wav back In fabulous Pudre Heffelflnger's days at Yale. 13 Ivy League All-Stars barnstorm- ed the eaat. They played six rames In as manv davs. showed ud for the finale at Syracuse with only 10 able-bodied comb- atants. "We had no left halfback, so had to borrow the Syracuse coach." recall Old Back Num- ber. "In the huddle he gave us all his kids' slenela. 'We murdered 'em." 1005 Listen to... THE FOOTBALL PROPHET Every Saturday at 12:30 p.m. on HOG 840 on your Dial The Football Prophet Picks the winner of Saturday and Sunday** big football games. . And he's seldom wrong. The PROPHETS winning average last year 773. Don't make any bet* until you listen to The football Prophet over HOG-840 kcs. /Ml Ilium* .-___ -- - - fight, Flores- head bannced off the canvas a. he hit toe floor Doctors who examined Flore aid they were unable to deter- mine whether death was/awed by the puneh or the head trik- nthe ring floor, ttorney Jacob Fuchaberg, who represents the tt-fO1^* !" ow, says Flore wa mto-mtch- ed. Be also say e^Pet.Ja* the bout wa unsafe and inaoe- qn*in* filing thl wit," Fuchsbers, "Mrs. Flores beUeves the publicity may briag boat preventive measure that will protect other boxer." Benefits ana contribution have rataed about S4.0M for Mr* Flores. But the widow W " depends largely on the Pia month she receive from BocUl "fi wit against the three or- ganisation .k uM&ir s Juries to the stata fbtoruid another IMo.toe for Mr.Plores and aa infant son, Michael. Omphroy Tennis Tournament Play Dr. C. W. Omphroy, Jr-jejiar day afternoon eliminated Ibsen Avila, 6-1, 6-0, in an Omphroy Tennis Tournament match at tne Panama Olympic Tennis' Court This afternoon two matches wul be played. The fat,*** match which wa RMtPO*"* through Inclement weather Mon- dav evening pits Frank Hladky ffitort Ju?io Plnllla. This match begins at 3:30 p.m. and Immedi- ately upon its conclusion thesec- ond match will be ptoyed by ^ Simons and Harry WUUs. As previously pubUshed the following schedule will be to force on Sunday morning: 7.30 a.m. Manfredo Engel vs. Drjiu- bn Puertas; 8:30 am Benito Charrl vs. Myron Fisher^ 0JO am CyrU Oldfleld vs. George MottariQ.M a#^n. Angell Delvafle v. Carlton Taft; 11 :S0 am. Wil- liam Arthur vs. Dr. J. B. Hamp- ton. ________ / "gun club NOTES Mrs. MaxleWestover former Canal Zone shooterette, whl>hM recently returned from the unit- ed State, came out of her tour- year retirement from shooting when she blew away toe moth- balls out of her gun barrel and broke 08x100 to tie T. ^TMjto for high score at the Crtotobjl Oun Club Championship shoot on NMarie won a beautiful pair of sterling silver candle holder plus The Junior College GiOSii .. .ve t--------1. "..... less and scoreless all sea- son, will make their final 1951 grid appearance to- night at the Mount Hope Stadium against the-Cris- tobal High School Tigers. The clash is scheduled to get underway at 7 p.m. The Tigers are heavily favored to again wallop the Green Waye. "ThrBSiTd'og's'openedtheor- The J. C. players have ,ng m the first quarter, and from 4 then on were In almost complete command of the game. Taking the opening klckoff they march- ed on three successive first downs to the Knights' 32-yard line. With the defenses drawn in tight to stop the running attack, quar- terback Ray Nlckisher faded back and tossed a perfect strike to Maphis on the 18-yard line. Bam took the ball in full stride and went over unmolested for the touchdown. Bob Morris' try was blocked. Dick Ostrea returned Jim Thompson's punt for 20 yards to place the ball on the Knights 46- Forty-eight minutos of playing i last quarter. Out of this they Ume after it started It was aD were only able to connect on five. over, and the Balboa High grid-, Time and again Louie Dedeaux ders had come up with a convine- would hit his receivers only to Ing 10 to 7 win over the potent' have them drop the bail, out or Working Boys team. Big guns for the 10 in the final quarter they the victors were a couple of All- counted on two, and one of them. Isthmian League players, full-1 the last play of tne game, _was back Sam Maphis who scored twice and halfback Jim May with one six-pointer. announced that they in- tend to make this game a touchdown of the season, f hey also hope to pull a oig upset anu turn back the highly rated Tigers. The Tigers, co-champ- ions of the Canal Zone. Interscholastic C o n f e r-1 v, ii .i.:. . vard line midway through tne ence, Will USe this game gjand quarter, and from here as a medium to keep in'the Bulldog marched Jtheir , ... a*E2** I second touchdown. On runs by shape for their forthcom-' m^uh, and ing game with the Key West High School team December 7. It has also been an- nounced that the con- tracts for the Key West- Cristobal game which will be played at Mt. Hope al- so were officially signed yesterday. t;ood for a touchdown. Jack Cor Iss made a great running catch of the pass from Bill Carlln, stole the ball right out of the hands of safety Dick Ostrea, and without breaking stride went over for ft* touchdown. * Statistics showed that the Bulldogs had a net yardaga-ol 337 to 161 for the Black Kfiifhto. The Knights made 11 firat doma, t while the Red and White adding 17 to the total tor season. Of the 337 yard the doga marked up on the , side, Jim May accounted for of them. The Singer 5H1500 Roadster Is Here j You are cordially invited to see the perfect light Sport Car of today at TROPICAL MOTORS INC he a couple of passes from Nlckisher, one to May for 12 yards, and one to end Jim Jones good for 30 yards, the ball was moved to the 15-yard line. Jones made a sensational diving catch of his pass to snare the ball lust before going across the side line. First and 10 on the 15, and Maphis was held for no gain over the center. May then wok a pltchout from Nlckisher and sped around hla own left end for the score. This time Morris' kick split the uprights. There was no more scoring un- til the final stanza. The third quarter was played between tne two 30-yard stripes for the most Eart. Neither team seemed able > get anything like a sustained drive under way. Ball carriers were stopped cold for small gains, and passes missed their mark more often than not. Maphis Intercepted a Black Knight pass early in the fourth quarter deep in Knight territory. On the same play, however, the high schoolers were set back 15 yards for clipping, so started with the ball on the 32. It took exactly two plays to score here. May hit through the rapidly tiring Knight Une, cut back to his left and raced down to the 10-yard line before he waa pulled down from behind. Maphis then drove off his own right tackle for the promised land. Morris' kick was wide of the mark. After the next klckoff the *o- a 6 i Insist on a Quality 'sweet/ Fastlich Teen-Age League Players Asked To Report The first of several preseason game will be stayed tomorrow in the Teen-Age League for the pur- pose of allowing the managing personnel to observe the boys In actual play. A list of the player who should report at Coooli Athletic Field (g:3e a.m.) and Aneon Athletic Field (l:M a.m. and 10:30 a.m.) was published yesterday in The Panam American. The name of the foUowing player ef Team "A" who should report to the CoeoU field at 8: JO $ 'TS^SSSJn& I Bl*ack"KnYght-took "the air. In Btau, Wood, Lee Cotton. Dan, all thev threw 20 passes In the Wuowauad Barton 'Mead. I game, 10 of which came in the te- a- e- ld ne a- lat ie- * nd he V- n The lottery Tkot Needs Wotof OaJy 3 flam A Year* For the very highest raaliip- W battery construction and pert" formance that mo Lite "Hi-Level" Battery. IW Level" give you extra liquid, reserva... upertot "-j** insulation ::; earua tona use. Enjoy long lasting, eftcteflO battery operation tnyoar^i Get roar FreeaOnei "Hi* Level Battery now. MiST-O-LITB "HI-lBYlf tATTiailf >- K iW i ill ee WHOLESALE TIRE & SUPPLY CO., Ltd. No. 71 West 17th Street Teta, S-17M. UWIA _ ed at i bt sd >s re 8in also was awarded two jgeam- ing sterling silver c^te ?! otfhl acor of U*W i lf varda and 47x80 on the handicap taddie FteneHe^gejoMpofc til both smashed *M * yarda and were on top until the , handicap scorea rolled in. Joe I Kueter came in third at handicap with 44x50. , Mr. Rodell has announced that the Colonel Rice annual trophy hoot will be held at the usual time on Sunday. Deea.ttt Cristobal-Oun Club. This shoot has always been a very impor- tant event as it la a combination trap and akeet program. __ fjn the Pacific side Eddie Fran- cia tells us that the atalboa Own Club traps will be open Satur- day afternoon, Nov. ft, tor akeet and trap praetlee. Imported Canned Hams PEK DREWS KRAKVS & ATALANTA BRAND are offered by TAGAROPULOS COMMISSARY wBosar An opea rooda sparkling skyend gfamorous OUtmibUt "967! That's today's formula for a new stVontnre to motoring! Here's long, low, lustros keautrditiaetiTelT Olassaobile! Interior sea rich aad hawtoastailored for unlimited comfort! And to top it all. Tou'v got the power-fasaon "Rocket" afai CHosmobile Hydra-Matic*! Smooth-surging action In real high-eompreaaioa gat savings! m.Caiaeeat ci-OUimobiWt rUimnt "I Try this 98TI 1 I Filil if tii'lukit'Ciri! OLDSMOBILEi YOUR NIARHT OlDSfdOllll DleUlft PANAMA AUTO, S. A. COLON PANAMA i i < X 'I STANFORD COACH HEADS U.P. POL ranee Takes Drastic Steps ?To Plug $ Gap PARIS. Nov. 16 Wench Government todav an- nounced a serie* of drastic luures aimed at plugging the par gap and saving the coun- from financial ruin. he Ministry of Finance said free cutbacks in French im- ta from the dollar, zone will ip the return of austerity to nee for the first time since B bleak days of 1947. ' Among the steps announced 11*. the National Assembly bv ~r jWnce Minister Rene Mayer | Am 5> Elimination of all tobacco | j paper pulp Imports, starting i fay; Hk) Coal Imports will be halted S*ext Jan. l; Jjl Imports of chemical pro- liucr-s synthetic rubber, ferrous Imetals and synthetic textile* IWJl be cut by from 10 per cent ,io 75 per cent: 4i OH imports will be reduced j radically while France seeks to p,| i buy more from the sterling , I Mayer announced that mili- i,t tary expending this year will be J 28 per cent higher than last ? ^year's record figure. Be warned the Government yml promptly authorize the strict . rationing of any product in HUted supply. 2 New Forms Ready For Use By Canal - Ctmpany Employes t"wo new forms are ready for use by Panama Canal Company- Canal Zone Government em- ployes may obtain them from their unit heads. JL revised Form 194-L will be raed when employes are apply- ing for leave involving transpor- tation A new Form 265 will be used for local leav of more than 80 hours. Local leave of 80 hours or leas may be authorized verbally by dejlgnated supervisory officials. J3ke revised Form 194-L is made up to quintuplcate, has throw- tway carbons between the sheets ind is bound at the top with a perforated tear-away binding. The employe fills out his sec- , tlQBof the for-n and forwards it trm carbons intart through the 1 flHfcsary stages of approval to the Chief of the Administrative j Branch itbe Transportation Section of the Administrative Branch then issues the travel authority on the form itself, tears off the binding. _ ihrow* away the carbons and ' .-distributes the copies. In this manner the employe's 5 application for leave involving ransportation becomes his final wswel authority without use of jther forms [Employes leaving by air from faeumen Airport will find a de- sfigure permit card attached to Ma-Copies of the travel authority. Mox Herz, Former PC Property Clerk, Dies In Jamaica fax Herz, who was Chief Pro- ty Clerk for The Panam Ca- ; before ni* resignation in U died November 9 in Jamai-1 LH.T.. according to lnforma- received recently on the I Bus. He w-is 77 years old. i lived In Jersey City and had i ed ten years ago as' account- ' ! with the Department of Jlce. Jlerz was born In Austria and "^a naturalized united States til. He was employed for I 12 years In New York City Idre coming to the Isthmus. He employed :n 1909 as clerk in P-pfflce of the Chief Quarter- ! Keper at Culebra and served for period as Chief of the Quart- rmster Dlv'slon. He was named Chief Property a*tor In ion and served in . position throughout the re- ader of his Canal service. I - AN dtoepend: ritflfe DAILY NEWSPAPim Panama American "Let the people know the truth and the country is safe" Abraham Lincoln. TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR PANAMA, K. P., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER II, 1951 UVE CENTS Steelworkers Want More Pay; Prepare For Tough Bargaining ATLANTIC CITY, N. ., Nov. I Michael V. DISalle la reported 16 iUP> The United Steel- workers (CIO) mapped plans today to demand substantial wage hikes and broad fringe benefits for Its 600.000 members In the basic steel industry. Union sources disclosed that contract demands will hit the steelworkers "both ways." determined to hold the line. If steel prices go up. so does al- most everything else. A iteel strike would cut di- rectly into the heart of the defense production program, and government officials have served notice that a walkout must be avoided. Defense &-*& -. Jfi itfWSPMrtfi although unspecified across the board wage boost as well as improvement in premium pay and other fringe Issues. The union's demands probably will set a 1952 pattern for other industries and may wreck the whole stabilization program. The stepoed-UD timetable un- derlined the union's eagerness to start negotiations. It was emphasized further by the disclosure that Philio Mur- ray, president ef both the CIO and the steel union, has sched- uleda preliminary meeting next Monday with John H. Stephens, chief negotiator for the giant United 8tates Steel Corn. They will set a date for full-dress talks. The union hopes that "Big Steel" and other Industry lead- ers will be ready to sit down contract deadlock would be re- ferred promptly to the Wage Stabilization Board. If the case goes to the board, there is no guarantee that the steelworkers or the Industry m would accept Its reeommen- In dations for settlement. Undef the present wage for- mula, the union would be allow- ed about a 5-cent Increase to match the rise In the cost of living since Its last wage hike in December, 1950. The union then won 16 cents, or about 11 per cent, raising; tthe average pay to $1,90. But the wage board had open- ed the way for an end run around the cost of living for- mula by approving -additional raises for increased producti- vity 4 cent* an hour or 2 per cent. This Is the government's esti- mate of the theoretical increase national productivity each Gourmands Gorge Grandiosley year. Truman Declares Fair Deal Stays In Democratic Program nSPJ3SLJ&S Nov- 1[justly and rapidly when it la (UP)President Truman evaded discovered a discussion of Gen. Dwlght d: 2) He said he thought Sen. 5?ower "* Democrtt'c pos- Robert A. Taft (R-o.) one of ..... - .v.T lv on uwwu siDUities yesterday and con- the top contenders for the OOP at the bargaining table later centrated on his own firm in- i nomination next year should tention to make the Fair Deal not attempt to make a'political this month. Earlier Indications were that talks would open in December. The standard union contract with basic steel producers ex- pires Dec. 31 and the union will be free to strike after that date. Murray warned at the CIO convention last week that his union is readv to quit the mills if necessary to win large bene- fits. But the Industry also has de- livered a warning that it will need price increases to pay for any wage hike it gives Murray the heart platform. of hia party's 1052 issue of the Korean war. 3 He said he believes Gov. at a news conference that he and Eisenhower had not dis- cussed domestic politics at any time during the general's re- cent Washington visit. Asked whether he had any Intention of supoprting Elsen- hower for the Democratic no4- mlnation, the President An- swered: No comment. Mr. Truman, however, ex- plained at some length that j fc mac it given iviurrav. k-"'m nnc imgiri in. Steel men estimate that each 'here will be no retreat from naw* mm !*._ Iu ~_^_____ ... aia tKa 1U<> T\ak1 IT. ___, __ cent an hour increase will add $25.000.000 annually to thelr operatlng costs. However, they already have failed in one recent bid to win a price boost from the office of price stabilization. OPS chief Court's Order To Destroy Red Pepper No Sneerinp Natter BIRMINGHAM. Ala., Nov. 16 OiPiU. s. Marshal Raymond Thomason borrowed a gas mask from the fire department today and wondered nervously what happens when you set fire to 8,925 pounds of red pepper. Federal Judge Beybourn H. Lynn ordered Thomason to des- troy that much sub-standard pepper at the A. C. Legg Packing Co. here. The Marshal soon dls~ covered the job was nothing to be sneezed at. He learned he couldn't pour the pepper down the drain be- cause it could set up chemical reactions which would explode the Fair Deal program when the time comes to write the 1952 Democratic platform. That, he said, would be true, regardless of who runs for President. The President, at his first formal news conference in three weeks, threw these other logs on the political fire: 1) He again rejected charges of corruption against his Ad- ministration. He said that a vast majority of Federal em- ployes are eminently honest and that malfeasance is punished iiBEL *" w ne ocueves uov Mr. Truman would only say Earl Warren of California an- other Republican Presidential aspirant, is still a Democrat at heart and doesn't know it. He called Warren a fine man. 41 He thought the Taft- Hartley labor-management act in its present form still required changes, but as to whether this will become a 1952 issue depends on amendments which might be adopted by Congress at the next session. Bolivian Consul Jailed In Italy In Passport Sale GENOA. Italy. Nov. 16 fTJP) Ortiz Pacheco. 58. former Boli- vian consul here, was today sentenced to two years im- prisonment by a local court for selling Bolivian passports to Italian emigrants for $1,500 each. The illegal traffic In passports was discovered in 1950 when an investigator inspecting the Boli- vian consulate found 30 blank passport* missing. hortftr beforehand Pacheee who haj been warned f the imminent Inspection, had dls- Eric Johnston Quits As Chief Stabilizer appMgja.. The prosecution said Pache- KEY WEST. Fla., Nov. 16~ (UPiPresident Truman- yee^' terday accepted the retlgnaiion of Eric A. Johnston as Economic ' -roeeeution said Pache Stabilization Director, effective fs 38-year-old eon Gregorio Nov. 30. tried to cover up for his father Johnston will return to hia bv t**!n' a,iake holdup in the post as president of the Motion l.c9nf"iftf:..w"h " complicity Picture Association which he 2 A*0 ItaJ1n women employ- left last' January on leave of i eVilere' absence. r<**1 yo^K Ortiz drew one Press Secretary Joseph Short I Sfii **t h* wmen ">- as not ready to announce a Pi." .S our month Mam v.. u__u ____- / respectively. other was successor, but he said it would | not be John D. Small, now Two found with Italian Bolivian women hfJiwty'* sewer sy1""- The i chairman of the "Munitions a with Bolivian paaspom h nV.anger saW "* couldn't | Board. He said the Prtsident drew three months each. r.",n.D. v..1.".? stream because it i needed the services of Small in would kill the fish. The judge said Thomason his present post. When Johnston Joined the SSS re**lS Feder.?def?nse se?-uKagr S5 Veifher lurtV.0 ..de?troyed- i ? J only nlne months and ------------------ m *w !; UtOUUVCU. Neither could he give it away. The marshal decided in des- peration to don a gas mask and burn the pepper In the city in- cinerator if the barrels will go down the chutes. Otherwise, he will burn it In the open The only thing bothering him Is no one seems to know what happens whne you set fire to that much pepper. he had remained beyond the original October deadline. Johnston on Nov. 13 told the President that "in all fairness" to MPA, he felt he must return to hia post as movie czar. The president said he did not want to -let him go, but that he had no choice. He praised Johnston for his part in the initial stabilization program One hundred connoisseurs of the dinner jacket, et als. were quite happy and supremely satis- fied last night. Some said they were complete- ly exhausted. Whatever the condition, they all had had it. They had just finished the first Gourmets' Dinner ever held In Panama. It was the greatest show of fine foods and wines ever pre- sented on the Isthmus. The gentlemen, in formal din- ner clothes, met promptly at 7:30 in the Peacock Bar of Hotel El Panama where they were served "Le Caviar du Volga aux Blinis" accompanied by Vodka-Smir- noff. After a suitable interval, din- ner was announced. Aldrete's string orchestra provided back- ground music and the gentlemen took their placea at an "E" shap- ed table to pay serious attention to the dishes prepared by Chef Andre Douthe and his helpers. A gold embossed booklet re- vealed the menu. So as not to dull the tastes, cigarettes were taboo and all the diners acquiesced. Also as part of the gourmet tradition, every course was pa- raded around the room before being served at the table set up for that stage. A spotlight shone on this table and it was there that Andre presidedand carved. The soup, "La Petite Marmlte du Vert Galant," with cheese sticks was served from large tu- reens and Amontillado Snerry accompanied the course. English Filet of Sole with Mo- selle Wine followed. A crown roast of lamb, billed as "Le Baron d'agneau, Nivemalse" next hove into view. With the lamb was served po- tatoes, artichoke and tomato and a Rhone Wine (La Bernardlne Chat eauneuf-Du-Pape, 1942.) Champagne mousse was then presented, to give another lift to the appetite, and prepare every- one for the next dishone of the high spots on the menu. The pheasants were carried In by ten waiters. White asparagus was then served and a Bordeaux wine poured. The final dish was the flaming dessert. A procession of nine people took part in this, some carrying pieces of Ice sculpture, lighted from within, others bear- ing the dessert a bombe - and other bringing the cherry and brandy sauce, lit up. Mumm's champagne was pour- ed into the wine glasses at each place. Dinner ended with coffee and cognac, cigars and liqueurs. Diputado Alfredo Alemn Jr., on behalf pf the gourmets as- sembled, paid the traditional cus- tomary tribute to Chef Douthe. Then all left those who could walk, that Is. Arab UN Delegate Flays Middle-East Defense Command PARIS. Nov. 16 'UP) A. spokesman for the Arab Middle SNOWSTORM TRAGEDY Six cars of the streamliner City of Los Aneles He scattered ,0. the tracks near Evanston, Wyo. The train was rammed fro.. thTrear during'aKdh ,? torm^; another streamliner, the City of San Francisco. At least 21 persons wer? wlfe?^" some 200 injured in the tragedy. Befow. rescuers carry a bodj torn tte wreck^e * NY-Miami Express Rams Into Freight; 2 Dead, 23 Injured HOTEN8E, Georgia, Nov. 16 (UP) A N:w York to Miami streamliner clashed Into the rear of a alow freight in a rainstorm near here last night, killing two persons and Injuring 23. One of the dead was a young stationmaster vainly trying the flag down the speeding train. The Atlantic Coast -Line's southbound Havana Special piled Into the last six cars of a north- bound freight as the* freight crawled into r. siding. The Impact scattered cars over the right of way and demolished a 30 x 50 ft. depot. Six cars of the streamliner were overturned, and seven de- railed. Six of the Havana Special's crew and 17 passengers were in- jured. Many passengers were temporarily trapped in the over, turned cars. The wreck occurred 31 miles east of Waycroas, Georgia. 3 Women Vagrants Jailed In Balboa Three women this morning faced the Balboa Magistrate on vagrancy charges. They were Berta Maria Soto, 36. Colombian. Rita Bustaman- te. 28, Colombian and Ins Judith Campbell 26. Panamanian. Soto and Bustamante were .sentenced to 1C days each In jail. While Campbell, who has had several previous convictions on both vagrancy and petit larceny, wa* given 20 days in Jail. Tugs Continue Search For Hulk Of Brazilian Ship LONDON, NOT. 16 (UP1Two British tugs were still searching between the Azores and Madeira Islands today for the hulk of an old Brazilian battleship and crew of eight who have been adrift for ten days. The 19,000-ton former battle- ship the Sao Paul was reported yesterday to have been sighted. Pius XH Welcomes Finnish Minister CASTEL GANDOLFO, Nov. 16 (UP) Pope Plus XII today ex- pressed the hope for the awaken, lng of a "new spirit among big powers to free small countries from the haunting nightmare of the ancontroUable desire -for power." The Pontiff ypoke in welcom- ing the new minuter from Fin- land, Russia's nail neighbor to the West THE FIRST THANKSGIVING i Fire-Crazed Livestock Shot By Australians SYDNEY, Australia, Nov. 16 (UP) Hundreds of stampeding | Easi today warned the Western livestock crazed by the worst powers that Jewish and Egyp- bush fires in Australian history tlan problems must be ettled were shot to death In a blaze before they can "impose" a Mid- that encircled the farm country, die East defense command upon re?rher'.\ . th Ar*b states. A j-mlle wide wall of flame Syria's Faris El Khourl bitter- melted the railway lines, disrupt- ly denounced the Middle East ed tne telephone communica-1 defense command project at ttona, and destroyed 48 homes,! this morning's session of the leaving a trail of damage run-. United Nations General As- nlng into millions of dollars. sembly. Illustrated by Walt Scott Wil tfc* coming of Strmo, 1, rfct diMo* hod ?a jf cowrie. Frfty-on Bt boo of m colony survived -fr Be* them odarh. a. "IT IS A CHRISTMAS GIFT OF COURSE IT IS NOT TOO LATE TO ORDER FOR CHRISTMAS FROM SEARS REPREMMTATWES FOR ^/EARf, ROEBUCK AND <0J Across The afreet frim.Ancon Post Office ? *! 10 & Melndez COLON 1 |
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| 0 | item_aggregation_builder.get_item_aggregation | Found 'all' item aggregation in cache |
| 0 | system.web.ui.page.page_load (ufdc.page_load) | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_style_references | Adding style references to HTML |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
| 57 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |