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*BRANIFF AN INDEPENDE^ aHttto NlWSPAm NOW VIA MIAMI on HOUSTON Panama Amanean "Let the people know the truth and the country is ,afe Abraham L.ncoln. SeagrturrsY CANADIAN WH1S m PANAMA. R. P., THTJR8DAY, DECEMBER , 1M1 fiyi CHUT* TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR Churchill Says Danger Of World War Less Today Than During Berlin Blockade In '48 Deadlocked Truce Team Holds Firm On Soviet Bid For 2nd Seat PARIS. Dec. 6 (UP) The United Nations General Assem- bly became hopelessly deadlocked todav In a sizzling fight over | LONDON, Dec. 6 (UP) Winston Churchill, open- ing a House of Commons debate tn defense today, said: "I cannot feel that the danger of war is so great today as ft was during the Berlin Blockade in 1948. "Our policy is one of deterring war. The theme which His Majesty's Government will pursue is the idea of de- terrents rather than the idea of danger. "Our feeling is that the deterrents have increased, r^Vtfons truce negXlo and os they have increased the danger has become more today refused to abandon the un||ie|y." United States troop rotation plan v.-,, nromle* in Korea for the sake of an ar- churcbill then began a review | Dec. 17 with T*\""JS of Britain three-year S13.160.-|Rene Pleven before his early rearmament program January conference with Presi- dent Truman. On Rotation PANMUNJOM. Dec. 6 (UP> mistice. The United Nations also re- laterln Yhe s sloii i aT islands and waters north of Eight ballots failed to settle i theceaselIre Une. tlme -to translate words Into Communists' candidate. Pakistan and Chile were elect- ed on the first ballot to fill the i 68 Vacancies In Canal Service Up For Transfer Cabin Of Downed Plane Losf After Strange Doings At Sea ... a. ^ AAAA'l r>Qll $SSSl$mS* cosU.if any to main* of the plane. |_____-------------...... >' ------:----- s&ffiffi]UiM* Kills it at the time, but he reluctant- LiyilHIIHy # ;H^^^iBefere Wedding Day parlen. V'paitlU' a :rh Dwlghf Education Ministry Asks RP Officials To Watch Expenses A Panamanian laborer who vru planning to get married .cxt week was struck and klll- by a bolt of lightning ye- te.ay. Il'-fated Guillermo Rodrigue*,1 S3, was working in the bum, yerterday afternoon about 500 yards east of Building 102 at Ft. ,Kobbe when lightning hit; a An "economic crisis" which dead tree near which he was ha* hit Panam has been given standing. by Comptroller Henrique d0| ___ Obarrio for the non-payment over 18 of nil co-workenor of certain bills presented^ Army Malaria Control Unit against the government, saw him fall down Five mln- A communique Issued to hlghutes later he was deadj school director and Inspectors i Rodriguez' body showed a long bv the Ministry of Education burn on the left i that his son had $2,000 In cash on him when he boarded the plane at La Pklma. And relatives of Diaz have tes- tified that he had several hun- dred dollars -rprobably $1,000 in his possession at the tune oi the accident. TiiJrtntl Francisco Alvarado, District Attorney of the Second Superior, Court who was aboard the Sam-, bu during yesterday's fruitless i search, declared last night that he Intends to continue the in- vestigation* It is suspected that the crew of the different boats which have reported accidentally bringing up the plane In their fishing nets may have looted the plane be- fore dropping it back into the water. There is also some speculation that the bodies of the men had been found by native in the pa- rlen area and threwn back into the shark-Infested waters. France Puts Into Effect Measure To Aid Church Schools FRFtTLESS SEARCH PAR- TYJJA Francisco Alvarado appears at lower left taking a statement from Eduardo Cam- Kthe muter of a fishing I that led the fruitles search yesterday for the re- mains of the missing Fiper CUpper RX-159. In the next panel Alonso Da and Jorge > u> ""Wata'Su as menre discussing with En- rique Alvea, father of another of the men who went down with the plane, where to start dredging for the planes cabin. The .4*p Photo show two of the beats that aided In the dredging operations over a < mile-wide area yesterday. today in a sizzling fight over The United nations * I 000.000 i Russ'ia's bid for a second Soviet! Jected a Communist demand that Jtarted by clement Attlees Lab- bloc seat In the Security Council after a cease ted Natrans or government. The Issue was postponed till forces be withdrawn from coast- K*4. .n,i t. Churchill asked for reasonable translate words into and promised "true United Nations warships as well eco and lts twm 8lster. ef- ouirn0g0^hfTugcenOrth0itoU clency' In the rearmament A United Nations spokesman program. ed on the I rst ballot tM,&ounK^dblackmalU cated Jan. 1 by India and Ecua- ^^factory truce by refusing at quest! dor. . The fight between Greece and Byelo-Russla was for the seat \' -'f)a Is vacating. It was no mere squabble, oth- e o.eece would have won cEslly. The key to the dispute was the separation of many members of the 20-member Latin American bloc from its traditional United States leadership, for two main reasons: I) The Lata Americans were 1 piqued at United States refusal to support their choice for a , seat on the 15-meeber Inter- national Court ol justice; 2) Mtoy Latin AmgJM felt thv should vote for UJw-kus- -- mrm withdrawn Mig-ia una in is bj'k "lc,,"i xne crmiw i#o..-o - sUanywav^ regardless" of the troops were wlttdra- attention to bringing tte aircraft,.maker; eleetrteUn: ***** International Co*t squabble to^ye ""^uy Snored yester- not just up to par. but to a bet-, suction dredge .fteWcltm. in order to strenfiften the prac- toW c^munl^t proposal that ter level than the Soviet." 4 tery arid ^^%ejec)S*2* tice of allotting iotas of seaU W|h thJ.lines Inspection lol- plant electrician; chief towDoas mkey United Ha%ns organiza- fahtad ^^taapc ^ ^ chu WlleWe J SnBrJ^ifficKfib tions by region. ,_, i 2," Vutral teams drawn from.ran^menU have been made track foreman .electrics miwr To weaken tWjfcctlce would ^Kand* Denmark, Sweden, tor^im to begin talks in Paris ^^g^^r.^^JS^Saa^^SSSi. be to weaken thf?Latln Ameri- d and Czechoslovakla. Instead the United Nation re- There are 68 vacant position* ntS*aTto^yTrucrbT reiusmg" at queition" second only to the In the Canal wgnzaon to Present to discuss the exchange united States in measures taken i which eligible V" "" S ubMr Tof war. loday to en.ure the peace^ ployes may tranalea accordhig The Reds have sought to end, HighUghU from ChurchlU'.: to the latest teeue of ttaMffl the United States system of speech included: SKl^S Bureau sending troops home after a year "EBropea Ar,; -We do not Pe"nv 'f craft' positions and in combat by Insist ng on a to-:propose t0 merge British forces ^ 'r.c T$Jfi and re- tal arms and truce freeze which mt0 a European Army, but we fa8'rmin CXMHnea would bar any replacements, are already joined to it." "Ued group, even tor Injured or wounded soi- (Through th North Atlantic The classified and related poe- dlera Ipact.i _a tan_ itions are: general architect; The United Nations, on the *" other hand, has proposed mere- ^"ld be **..jg. rtuHne the armistice. Soviet air ferce: "It is formid-: engineer mechanical anglnaarf Stru^erdthgtintteadr N.Uon. able not onf In numbers *"K^^*Jg^jJ3E?- MW?n *q.^nVnma^TSt' thTiu Priority of the Soviet, nikteim. troops were wltodrawn Mig-15 Britain Is giving urgent) The craft positions are bou- cans' chance to Sold their cus- tomary two Security Council seats and other United Nations positions unofficially reserved for them up to now. In today's balloting In the 80- member General Assembly a two-thirds majority was needed to elect a member to the Security l5Sf oTie eighth ballot the SarsF} of Cocoli equal numbers of officers from 3S id. in the present jf fay. ^^ United SUtes Sabres today A|f safe- ln ab | staining. Arosemena To Name Honor Court To Mediate Walkout Sinn uvv* = a third over Mig Alley. c All the Sabres returned afe-| Wor(1 of (inai approval 32' ly but one Thunderjet on astral-' Washington Is being ,h- m'g sortie was downed by anu-, fQr tne I0rmal transfer aircraft fire. ... town of Cocoli to the Navy. It United Nations planes attack-1 announced today at Balboa ed Communist artilleiy positions Helhtg Negotiations for the transfer of the Third Lock town have mauitKiuxi. i-.- outside, machine erection, fleet, refrigeration i; towboat master, dipper dredge mate; construc- tion equipment operator: locK operator*. (cablesplicer. machi- nists and wiremen. qualified ana unquallfledi: powerhouse opera- tor; body, repairman pain planing mill and wiremen, hand; shlpfltter; 30 More Towns Evacuated In Lavas Path A will five-man ourt of honor be named by President Al- ea ^Ullllliu""1" "-------"._* j- 11 along the western front, de Stroylng at least S3 Red field guris. Dean Rusk Resigns To Head Foundation KEY WEST, Florida, Dec. 6 (UPi_ Pres. Truman forn STttS Stores In Panama Permitted To Open On 'Mother's Day' and students. yesterday the PreaMent re- jected the teachers and stud- ents demands for the forma- tion of a non-potitlcal cabinet which Is the reason given for. the strike. I The court of honor will be made up of two members from MAMBAJAO, Philippines, pec.!tne opposition parties, two from m.. ........afir .M~_ AAftHi and one1 to in- official to become head of' the Rock- feller Foundation. Rusk will continue as con- sultant however, in connection with the Japanese peace treaty. been in progress for several months and agreement on the term of transfer was recently reached. . Actual transfer of Cocoli 1* expected to take place soon after final approval of the agreement ha been received by Navy authorities here. Canal employes residing in Cocoli will be reassigned to The MinUter of Agriculture and Commerce announced to- day that stores in Panam may remain open Saturday even though It is "Mother's Day^ He also gave permission for businesses to remain open Sunday, December 23. in answer to a request made by the Pa- nam Chamber of Commerce However, employes who work quarters "in other towruTas soon on those days must be pcld *.._._ .ui_____w _ j.fi.Mnnhu *hir alarv. and given i "possible although no deft- i double their alary and nit* time limit has been set to, a day off during the course vacate all quarters there. .the week.__________________ of < (TjpiThe evacuation of 30 tne Remon coalition and more villages was ordered "independent, according Mount Hlbok heaved o"1" formation released by of molten lava in the third MUKea major eruption of the volcano Th. this week. The strike, meanwhile, wa? marked today with a virtual battle for the use of Panama t Prices Due For Another Jump As Processors Get Go-Ahead . -_ .___i4..M .r.r.r.tiA ihot aH ota in rft*i*rvei furniture. | warned that feed grain reaervee naraware^ucbergoodaandma-'ior Uvestock have cuppea to a WASHINOTON. Dec. lW JSgS 8P*cUl oro.i. wlU be new low which may mean a By ANTHONY ULLSTKIN today urged them keep pen diture down to a minimum and quoted a letter from the Comptroller which described the condition of the Panama treasury a "serious." The letter pointed out that this situation has caused the non-pnyment of bills on which pavment r^ been approved since last July. chest, and police trousers were torn report his to shred. The victim had been plan-, nlng to be married next week, it was learned. His.mother. Jus- tina Bethancourt lives In Pue- blo Nuevo. Rodrigue had ed by the Army been em-Moy- ilnce 1M7. PARIS. Dee. (UP^The French government today put into effect a law providing tor tate aid to church schools. The controversial law was ap- Sroved by the National Assembly ept. 22 by a vote of 321 to 257, but has been help up by a dispute between the Supreme State Council and government. As passed bv parliament, the legislation provided for 3,000 francs monthly to be paid to every pupil between the ages of six and 14. with their parent being allowed to decide to whom tb money should go. J* The provision giving the par- ents the right to dispose of the money, was bitterly opposed by antl-clerlcal Communists. So- cialists and Radical Socialists. The fight provoked a month s governmental crisis before Ure- mler Rene Pleven took office, end almost brought down his rovemment several time after- ward. agines and the Capehart \ the Controls Whatever the effect ef the new order, Price Chief Mi- chael V. DiSalle warned to- day that price apparently are startin* another upward swing. He flatly rejected congression- suggestlons that he remove The verified death toll rose ^ communion"'"""! WASHINOTON. ^^^c^^^^^lt^M'(^t.\Sit'i livestock Production to 208. Estimates oi the total tePntheC"tudents and teach- The government autnonzed.ma- ueo t automobile lndutry! 19H Tne depwtment saw th dead remain at 500. But no of-1 m ^^ of wi-es to nuiaciurer and Processors to '^ v llrmg such M bank*, would mean a -bite out of pre- |SK3SSSfwigrfra SffSHSliSSr - - ' ^"'" b^J^red eventually lrego.of Education was rylng^ g mUk, canned foods, cigare. U- the dismal ruins where dog tmessages through tn *mi and where dazed starving vU- Bom grour were encountering " an order brlnglng r^er.rovred helplessly In search |a^^\"^an^^J,l ^ne ly aU the nation's manu- nf toad or telegraph wires to some erl processors O *** ^loarts of the Interior and the oclrm8 ^r Governor Paclenco sallnza j ct tnat the imes to some mendment to tne v,oniruia -. "--TI^iTSti now selllna 'ordered 30 villages around the are ^^ tlea up by the un- ^effective immediately. The controli on' ProducU now selimg cities of Mambajao and Catar- acUTlty. I amendment permits ceilings to below celluiga^ aenate- man cleared as the lava poured ,,, sltuatlon was .till static meecl neariy all cost increase., In.a memo to the^Bena^l down the mountain Govern- pg Uf M ^ gtrllle m Panama rDeelween lhe 8tarl 0f the Korean House *tchdog ment truck, jammed with re-aty and colon concerned. war and last July 26. control, n Ifugees clogged the roads of tne A few ^^^ are functioning, OP8 officials were cautious 'disaster one NeKlyon^thim the(r fuU quota of teach- about predicting any eneral of the islands .000 PPU" , oth .oiner island.. tr!v'and the rest were elosed down h0wever, that In specific cases Individual torles of tragedy ? f complete lack of where applications for higher 'appeared everywhere An Army beciuse compi &pp ^ tfttct doctor found sevfen charred ie"^ noorttd tnat the ma-wlU be to raise prices. bodies in the wreckage of one It reported tnat ^ w*^ ^^ previously home group of women and omy or reacr^r^fd ^tn ^y appUed tnr Coehart formula to o^er^uJrT. rST1 o?the* ^2"unions. '"'a 70.000 manufacturer. Of aaoiuonai IniUtionary pres- sure." t. Federal Reserve Beard Governor Oliver S. PoweU aid the government's vol- untary curbs an money- lending by banks are play- ing a big role In fighting inflation. He aai4 they fig- are prominently in next year', anti inflation plan- ning. Wholesaler and retailer are not included in today's OP6 or- nuuec i.avvivt-------------------. control, he aid If contro are removed on under-ceiling Item, uv.. "^'"-"- " "~' v. tht prices of those Item soon may oer because the agenc> saya tne ihnot akTward too fast to relm- Capehart amendment does noi pX themtadtCf in addition apply to them. TMa tetetgffc he said removal of price contro|tlon has been chaUenged in tne would bring a demand for ell- court by the Safeway mlnatlon of wage controls and Chan another fcuh to tha Inflation spiral. Other developments Nevertheless any manufactur- ing price increase, resulting from the order probably v ?Th. AaVlctSt^Departmentib;Tpaaasd along to consume TTT^ n it-*- t>AGB TWO THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER [ JACOBY ON BRIDGE BY OSWALD JACOBY Written for NEA Service tin Ti'i ~ -Ti"11 THURSDAY. DECEMBER , lttl ROY E. GRAHAM, right, Cash Accounting Clerk In the Fin- ance Bureau, has received an Employe Suggestion Award of $10 for a proposal to revise the printing on paper bands used bv Canal cashiers to band currency Into packs of 50 bills. The award was presented by Ira L. Wright (left), As- sistant Finance Director. Graham suggested the addition of a printed line on the paper bands used for the currency to save time and assure uniformity In the wrapping done by various cashiers. NORTH (D) M #41 VAK107 ? A973 + KJ5 WEST AST * 10 9 8 S 3 A None V6 VQ84C2 ? 8642 OKQJ1C5 4(76 *AQ4 SOOTH 4AKQJ7 f J85 ? None + 10932 N.-S. vul. North But Soartb Wott IV 24> 2+ Pan 2N.T. Pas* 3 ? Pass 3N.T. Pan 44 Pas* Pass Opet Pass ins lead ? 2 CANASTA BV OSWALD JACOBY Written for NEA Service I was disappointed to see the American team lose the recent international Canasta match, but it was very pleasant to see that In this game, as In bridge, important matches of this kind can be held. The con- test was not given a great deal of space in American news- papers, so perhaps I can tell Canasta fans a little about it in this column. The American team consisted of John R. Crawford and Mrs. Andre Lord, both of the famous Regency Club In New York. The English team consisted of Te- rence Reese and Colin Harding, both very well-known card ex- perts. Crawford, it may be re- membered, was 'my partner In an American championship match almost two years ago. The contest was held in a large London department store, andw as sponsored by the Lon- _ don Times. The players were | enclosed In a sound-proof glass The hand shown today was cage so that spectators could plajed by Dr. Richard Greene, observe what was going on ol New Orleans, in last year's without distracting the players. Mid-South Championship. Thej Each player had an official hand makes It easy to see why,kibitzer at his elbow to write l\ii trtrtrvt > his team won the champion- snip. down his hand and each play he made. These notes were sent out, play by play, to a com- When the hand was played mentator, who was thus enabled first, in the other room, ouramy, to show the progress of the took the opining lead with the hand on a giant scoreboard ace of diamonds, and declarer which showed all the hands. As one might expect, the Eng- lish rules are somewhat differ- ent from the American rules, drew three rounds of trumps before beginning the clubs. East won the first club and returned a diamond, forcing I so the rules of the alternation- I < IN A RECENT VISIT to the Canal Zone ROTC unti at Bal- boa High School, Colonel Robert J. McBride, ACofS, G-3, US Army Caribbean, Insp^c.ed the tr.-lning and facilities used by the cadets. In the above picture Colonel McBride (right) ard Captain Wlllbm R. Hon (left, also of the Army G-3 ssrJ-m loci: on as Major Wayne L. Lart, PMS&T for the Ca- nal Zone's High Schools, explains the combat firing training which cadets have had on the landscape targets. As Opera- tions and Training Officer for Army Units in the Caribbean area Colonel McBride supervises the conduct of the ROTC program. (Official US Army Photograph) (Z Sparrow Gang Loses One Member -pOj Oft Have ' Charles Robert Eastman was sentenced to a total of 60 days in jail, fined $30 and pieced on a year's probation on a battery Charge during Tuesday's session of the Balboa Magistrate's Court. A-i original charge of assault With a deadly weapon against Howell Skeetc. whom the defend- ant .knifed in ParrJro on Nov. 20, was dismissed by s motion of the government, and the battery charge substituted. Eastman, a 22-year-old mem- ber of the notorious Spairow Gang of Paralso-ed Tank, was convicted on March 18 of this year for battery and had been on a year's probation and sus- pended sentence. According to Judge Altman, 7,706 US Gamblers Apply For New Federal Stamp WASHINGTON, Dec. 6 (UP) The Bureau of Internal Revenue announced today that 7,706 pro- fessional gamblers have applied for the new $50 federal gamb- ling stamp, and ordered Its agents to crackdown on those who failed to comply with the law. Eastman will serve an extra 30 days In Jail in default of paying the fine. This will bring his to- tal time behind bars to 90 days. Excuse Works PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UP) Armando Bolchat escaped a speeding fine in court when he explained he was hurrying to get two chickens so a sick friend could have some broth. South to ruff. East then won the second round of clubs and again returned a diamond, leaving South with one trump while West had two trumps. The contract was now hope- less. West could ruff the fourth club or the second heart, which- ever declarer tried to lead. West could then lead back his last diamond to force out declarer's last trump; and then West was sure of a second trump trick. Two trumps and two clubs were enough, of course, to defeat the contract. When Dr. Greene played the hand, he discarded a heart on dummy's ace of diamonds at the first trick and then drew only one round of trumps. As soon as the bad trump situa- tion showed up, Dr. Greene abandoned the trumps in order to develop the clubs. East took the jack of clubs with the queen to lead a dia- mond, and 8outh ruffed. East then took the king of clubs with the ace to lead another diamond, and South ruffed again. The big difference was that dummy still had a trump. Declarer next cashed the ten of clubs and followed with the nine of clubs. Dummy dis- carded the last diamond on this card, and West could ruff or discard as he pleased. West saw he could not gain by ruffing, so he discarded his singleton heart. Dr. Greene then led a heart. West had to ruff this time, but still could not defeat the contract. If he returned a diamond, dummy could ruff, and South's high trumps would then win the rest. If West returned a trump, South could draw trumps safely and take a top heart. The key olay, of course, was to ler-"o a trump In dummy to al contest were a sort of com- promise. For one thing, the English allow a bonus of 500 points for winning the game. In America there is no bonus at all. The compromise took the form of a bonus of 300 points. I must say that I think the bonus is a pretty good Idea. If the opponents are almost out, it Is sometimes a close ques- tion whether to end a hand and thus stop them or to keep the hand alive and thus pile up some modest score of your own. With the bonus. It would pay to end the hand In such close cases. You would hope to get a big score the next time, so that you could win the game and the bonus for your own side. The English also like the rule that you. cannot pick up a dis- card that matches your own canasta unless you have a matching pair in your hand.l Many Americans follow this rule also, but the official rule Is that you are allowed to pick up such a card. Some like it one way and some like it the other. I prefer the official rule, but the English procedure was fol- lowed in the- international match, SHOP Give a LONDON Classical Album in 33i RPM. Choose from our wide selection of the finest music in the world. PANAMUSICA, S .A. | 127 Central Avenue GOOD NEWS for Key Keepers* THE EXPANSION KEY CHAIN Newcomer Leaves Saturday for Budget Hearings in States Governor Newcomer Is scheovl ed to leave the Isthmus Saturday by air for Washington. D.C., where he will take part In Budget Bureau hearings. LeRoy B. Magnusoh of the Finance Bureau, who win accom- pany the Governor to the hear- ings, will leave Sunday by air. The meeting of the Board of Directors of the Panama Canal Company, which was originally scheduled to be held in Washing- ton on December 10. has been 1 ometme wu cove a Aopina fora HAM ILTON If you're looking for the perfecl gill you'll find it in the finest watch Hamilton. Only Hamilton meeti all the stand- arda of fine watchmaking. For its tested accuracy and time-endur- ing beauty, Hamilton hai become known as Tho Aristocrat of Watches." stop the diamonds eventually, postponed to January 7. introducing eOpl Agents for Panama: IMP A, S. A. Aportaste 4*3, tanmma, I.. - REPAIRS INITIALS , /* KEYS SHOWROOM Keep your fey fnan happy. Give him thit clever new key chain, with Anchor and QuicKey Ring featuru, by SWANK. It combine* the beauty and emarineee of a tort chain with the convenient* ofa long one. Crafted with the epecial dittinetion that make* any SWANK tifl a natural. Gold-col, Available at I ?a:> PAJtAMA HERCULES LUGGAGE MFG. Ave. Jose *. de la Otsa No. SB (Next to Bulck Agency) Tel. 2-1MS BAZAR MADRID BAZAR IMPERIAL MOTTA BAZAR AMERICANO CASA FASTLICH CASA LUIS BAZAR rRANCM MOTTA'S ." FLOR DI BOLTVAR BAZAR INGLKfl ALMACN COLOMBIA BAZAR AMERICANO ALMACN LA FAMILIA onao (HILODY iN_ SILVlll), the newest pattern in MATTRESS WILL REVOLUTIONIZE YOUR IDEA OF EASE AND COMFORT Once you sleep on a Dunloplllo mattress, you will millions of tiny air tunnels which breathe with your set a new standard of comfort. Even in the hottest every movement and endow the Dunloplllo mattress weather, a Dunloplllo mattress will afford you a cool, with air-conditioned coolness. For comfort, there's luxuriously refreshing 'sleep. The secret lies in the nothing ae good as Dunloplllo. MATTRESSES Complete with handsome Damask Coven 4M TWIN MATTRESS...................(39"x76"x4") 4" DOUBLE MATTRESS ................(54"x75"x4") 6" TWIN MATTRESS....................(39"x75"x6") 6" DOUBLE MATTRESS................ (54"x75"x6") v Panam Canal Zone* $66.80 $53.45 85.30 68.25 90.50 72.40 119.45 95.51 PI New and rigAi for you, Gorliam "Rondo" is a 0 * modern expression of the best traditional design elements of sterling tableware. A rhythmic design with three repeating movements like a musical Rondo it rises to a climax in a deep-cut scroll at the handle tip. Rondo's cushioned panel casts many lights and darks, giving it an unusual feeling of richness. Start your new pattern with-a six-piece place-setting knife, fork, teaspoon, salad fork, cream soup spoon, and butter spreader. CASA FASTLICH Exclusive representative in Panam ^" w DUNLOPILLO CUSHIONING . .BEST for your aphoUtering needs! *; Reduced Canal Zone prices given when Free Entry Permit le secured. COOL HYGIENIC SUPREMELY COMFORTABLE HARDEST WEARING , ! NO SPRINGS TO BREAK RESIL ENT 8UPP0RT ODORLESS DUST FREE GERM RESISTING AGENCIAS W. H. D0EL, S.A Ne. 14 Central Avenue Tel. 2-2766 * \ THURSDAY, DECEMBER . 1951 ...----------------------------------------------. " TBI PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER - ' PAOB V^ PER'S GUIDE .... . - . ,fiW TO BETTER -VALUES :M ' 'S SID MAKE HER DREAMS COME TRUE ~Mrt Parvea -Jiamona reinas By WOOD / The diamond you choose for your beloved should be the finest! 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IN ADVANCE------ f 1 70 S 2.SO 9 SO IS.OO 18 50 Z4 OO Labor News And Comment By Victor Riesel Behind the closed floors o guarded hotel rooms, Inner sanctum Federal bureaus and special Senate committees there is a great and sensitive debate right now across country: How. alter the Korean "truce," can o u r strategic defense plants keep their secrets from agents sent in by Communist unions without creating a secret poli- tical poli:e of our own and without losing our own decen- cy in this fight with the un- derground? I've just returned from such a session with the men who make our most lethal muni-! tions, aircraft and guns, and whose skills spin the world with our communications networks. After hours of talk, no one1 had an answer to the handling of some half a million workers who follow American Stalinist labor leaders. This is part of the answer in the Atomic Energy Commis- In the Wings: When Olivia de Havilland was rehearsing in sion which has just lowered a 'Romeo and Juliet" her husband. Marc Goodrich, approached the security curtain around C-31 producer and made a demand that is now famous In show folk and C-33 plants at the H- fircles. "I want," he Intoned, "everyone In the cast to address my Bomb site in Paducah, Ky. Wife as Mrs. Goodrichand I want you to call her Mrs. Good- soon specially screened guards rich!"...To which the poor man ogic'd: "But. Mr. Goodrich, that Wiu permit only specially FBI- isn't the name I have on the contract!".. .One of our pet pops- screened <"Q-Checked") visitors in-the-nose: The time critic Alex Woollcott told an actress she into tne gaseous diffusion tn- wouldn't make a good Lady MacBeth.. ."No," she jabbed 'but .you would!" J The Cinemagicians: The official observers found "The Man tvith a Cloak" a dinger. Full of suspense with Barbara Stan- wyck, Leslie Caron and J. Cotten delighting the spectators----- Among the Lower Forms of Animal Life \ BROADWAY LIGHTS The First-Nighlers: The critics played Romeo all last week. JThe.v transformed typewriters into musical instrumnts and sere- naded Audrev Hepburn's compelling playing in Gigi," adapted By Anita Loos. The plav, thev however'd, didn't merit as many itive-lettrrs as the star. The bright side of the dissenting reviews as J. Chapman's size-up: "A charming fairy tale".. Every no- tice was also a valentine for Julie Harris' superb gamuting in John van Druten's play, "I Am a Camera." Not all the oracles were as enthusiastic about the script as they were about Julie. JR. Watts found it "a striking, intelligent and steadily arresting Elay"...GB. Shaw's "Don Juan in Hell" returned for a limited ooking with a marqueeful of stars. The only drama of the sea- son to win unanimous raves... Variety's Washington ambassador greeted "Ladder to the Moon" with a thorny orchid. It isn't, he noted, good enough for Broadway but should appeal to Hollywood. stallations there. But that can't be done with half a million worker in Communist led unions which under our labor laws have a legal right to oper- ate in our jet, atomic, sub- marine, radar and allied fields. Yet there must be a formula! For example, when the FBI traced the activities of Com- "Warpath" has Redskins from the Movietown Reservation execut- ing familiar chores. Heap Big Hokum.. "Pool of London" offers nn entertaining British crime-isn't-cricket fable. The latest ver- an of "A Christmas Carol' indicates the classic still jingles mer- Mly.. ."Stagecoach Driver" moves so slowly you'd think it was harnessed to turtles. tThe Airistocrats: Phil Fosters gag-pecHling via The Big munist Party leader Gus Hal! how offered a profit in chuckles .If vour eats are swing-ringy, dynamiter, before he scooted to Mexico, It was learned that he lived in the New York City apartment of Esther Letz (at 90 W. 164th Street. This Red lady led her own self-styled American delegation I hen switch your dial lo Frances Langfords soothing ABC sing- 'to ,-ling and relax.. .Those science-fiction dramas have spaceships he rooming from planet to planet but their pilots are in the Cover- eU Wagon era.. Remember Ric Cortez? He turned up on Jack Carson's breezy showsuave as ever.. Bob 4: Ray (NBC's Boob- y Twins! celebrated an amusing .'estival with their teevy travesty ". .Dinah Shore's new teevy session is gifted with her silky thrush- jg and velvety scripting. A bargain... The oldy about soandso .Saving his picture on U.S. currency and Truman being a fellow who'd be happy if he could get his hands on it!'- showed up on ^wiyV^SHIMTOK1 MERRY-GO-ROUND y ORIW PIARSON I NEW YORKI feel that the subject of Samia [Gama!, the belly dancer whose name means Noble having his picture on U.S. currency and Truman being a fellow M~m, il? , Wu'*, . .I5T......V".-----! =C who'd be happy if he could get his hands on it!' showed up on L-S "- lfi the ,lady ,n.Red. Beauty, Is too much a part of our history of fab- Bed Skeiten's video show...The typewriter on Uncle Nick Ken- Ptics who was vice-president ,|ed love to be lightly consigned to the circular nys tv program had no paper in it. If Its criticism you want. j?d secretary trMsmrer of some- file, now that she nas become Mrs. Sheppard 'thinsthing called District 65 King of Houston, Taixus, and love on the Nile a most Important sprawling| has been consecrated by Moslem law. pro-Communist union reaching I was somewhat slighting, I fear in a former from New York to the deep reference to the lady, and have been taken sharp- high moral indignation." Southwest 'ly to task by an old Egypt hand who knew her As an old 8uth'n gentlemar. 1 feel our friend is So powerful was fhis she-'when. right, although1 I aid detect a trace of cad In commissar that, she bossed this' According to Larry flabcock, mv correspondent, fa about as musical as a riveting machine.. Ctinent No. 1 song vast union while some of ltsiBetn j"1 Liltl* .Wr}m.e,n" .i?. n;> Patcn on 8amla ft "Sin." Proves songwriting is no closed shop if you get the right top le record. In this case it was a small label and an unknown group There The Music-Makers: June Valli is a new nightingal with a remising fnture. Her platter of "The 3 Bells" M a ding-dong-dil- h .Imlv Garland's album, "Judy at the Palace," offers the brightest gems of her melodic treasure .Don't miss Ethel Smith's I test Decca of "Charmaine" Eileen Wilson's version of "Sensa- ional" certainly is...Stan Kenton's noisy "Blues in Burlesque" about as musical as a riveting machine.. Ctinent No. 1 song "Sin." Proves songwriting is no closed shop if you get the right ecord. In this case it was a small label and an unknown group Khe 4 Aces) enriching two obscure songsmiths of Chester, Pa... r Time is the name for Kav Toomey's latest. "Monastery Bells." $f Fred Waring Deccas it "The Little White Cloud That Cried" spunils better than its silly title. Stairway to the Stars: How many producers ran match Leland Sayward's record? He has father'd ten show .--of which seven ere smash hits.. The 5 shows that folded last week lost $450.000 if."Guys and Dolls" completed Its 1st Year and netted $510.000 '.{."Point of No Return" is one of the highest -priced straight p)ays. Its production cost Is $100000. "The Fou-poster" Is the season's quickest click. Will repay backers after 6 weeks.. ."Peter ttin" ran for more than a year on Broadway and on tour. Lost S45.000.. Current season is rachnig a new low in quantity. We've had 23 premieres and only 18 new shows are .scheduled for the rest of the semester... Webb Tilton, the alternate male lead in "S. Pacific," has subbed for Roger Rico 30 times since July. Tilton erticulates so you can understand the delightful dialog...Not many know that very young Audrey Hepburii i the new star in "Gigi" i is the dghtr of a Belgian Baroness. Her mater's lorgnette name is: The Baroness van Heemstra.. .French Plrector R. Rou- leau gets so distressed when folks mispernour.ee the title, "Gigi." To be properly Gallic you must say: "Zhjee-Zl'jei-." correspondent's shoulder pin. Hei one wish was to see America and die.' "Now that this girl has mad"1 the grade, and Is in point o lululling a dram she may have dreamed in a- Bedouin tent, oe a sport ana make amends when she finally arrives. 'Since she has married below t*e Mason-Dlxon Line she will have trouble enough without your union while some of ltelBeln OI Lllu* women naa n;> pawn on eamia aders were in the rmv as a paragon 01 all the virli.tS. ie7eUnodoubtothe T avola h iul" hoss-whippir.' at the hands to/VZ 0tJ*t of the greatest lover since Mark Antony, I ex- relationship between such union whips as Lett and the Party people. And her union has been the pivotal point of the new pro-Com- mie labor network which Harry Bridges has been the pivotal point of the new pro-Commie labor network which Harry Bridges has been weaving across coun- try. It is the wealthiest of the group, with a building, night club, social halls and other vital equipment all its own. How should the government treat such labor politicoes as Letz? A bi-partisan Senate Commit- tee led by Senator Hubert Humphrey, and made up of such men as Senators Irving pect 1 belter get off the hooi on Samla. "Gallantry and a passion for truth," writes Mr. Babcock, "bring me to the defense of Samia Gamal, whom you so recently besmirched. "No Rita Hayworth, she, no Bergman. When I knew her in Cairo she was an obscure dancer In a Joint whose name I have forgotten on the Sharia Malika Faridaand au; ut as honest and admirable a female as you'd be likely to find among the Bedouins jr in Buck Bay." Our correspondent says that Samla was "il- literate fluently in tnree languages, and had been Ill-used by an MP Sergeant nicknamed Irish, who jilted her for a girl iron Alabama, and at the mention of whose name sh would shed tears the size of piastres." It seems that Samla unwisely loved the ser- geant because, of all the odd denizens of Cairo, he was the only one who never smoked, drank or cussed, and who shared her passion for going to the movies. Our correspondent took her to the flickers, one night, to stem the tide of tear;:, and he says ner Broadway Confetti: In Danny Thomas' next film, I'll See i,1*'* ,ana, Robert Taft, wants chaperone handed out baksheesh and bangs on f"ou in My breams" (based on the "life of songwriter Gus Kah'n), ' devise laws to keep the pro- Patrice Wymore plays the role of a femme stir in Ziegfeld's "Whoopee." She sings the hit song. "It Had to Be You." She also C-s On the Make for Gus. In real life the "Whoopee" star was th Etting and she was very married at the time. Her reputa- tion for being a One-Man-Woman is famed in show bit.. ."Across ihe Wide Missouri" is doing good business with Clark Gable de- spite sour reivews.. .If you enjoy freezing to dealt., try the May- fair balcony.. Sweden beats France by a blush in the Sexy Sweepstakes. Most Swedish Birds-Meet-Bees cinemas are so frank very few are permitted -.here.. Anything-for-the-Box-Offlee Be pi: When the British flicker. "Quartet," nLivs Italy the title will be "Passioni" Some of us winced at the way "An American in Paris" brushed off Geo. Gershwin. He should >e been mention- ed with every breath. NOW you can FLY to MIAMI via Costa Rica and Cuba on LACS A (PAA affiliate) for only $83 one way, $150.75 round trip. Enjoy All Day-Time Flying; Make Your Travel Dollars Take You Farther! 3 Flights weekly from Tocumen 7:45 a.m. Tues.. Thurs., Sat. To COSTA RICA $30 (round trip) Flights to MEXICO every two weeks One way.S 80.00 Round trip $140.01) , PANAMA DISPATCH SERVICE Tel. 2-1655 4 of July Avenue No. 7 at the Ancon Bus stop or your travel agent. Commies out. But CIO policy makers, such as Philip Murray, his national counsel. Art Goldberg, and Walter Reuther the three men the comrades hate most- want the government to per- mit labor to fight this battle There are other proposals. In his dynamic way, Jim Ca- rey, leader of the anti-Com- munist electrical and electronic workers (IUEi, has disagreed with his CIO colleagues. He would have the government re- fuse to hand contracta to cor- porations dealing with Com- munist-led unions. Others would have the gov- ernment simply deprive the leftist labor leaders of their .bargaining rights. Meanwhile, the Munitions Board, responsible for guarding the plants which ichip out our weapons, doesn't quite revel in th luxury of debate. It is ham- mering together an ultra- special committee to advise it on this sensitive problem, which, in effect, resolves it- self into depriving men of their jobs for political rea- sons. Its approach is tough, and it seems to me that those who follow Commun- ist leaders should be so treated. Real tough! They can make or break their men leadership . and they should be judged by those they choose as leaders. However, Munitions Board the head to all the beggars in thiir path. There was a duplication C tickets, so the charitable Samia left the duplicates at the box office with instructions that thev be given only to American privates. "I nover detected a trace of venality In Samla,'* our friend writes. "During my long and Innocent friendship with her all she ver asked of me outside of mandatory dance-hall fees was a war him .iien he mentioned Same's figure. He, too, as faj* back as 194* few red she would have a Uuic i. ouU! uiuund '-he flimsbil line.! That is the tragedy of belly dancen, no mat- ter how pure the mind or Innocent the aim. They do have a tendency to thicken In the thwartshipa. possibly from undue activity of that region In the fulfillment of their art But I will endeavor to make n y amends, and give the girl a rousing salaam aleikum when she comes to Miami to filfill her night-club engage- ments, because I expect that; In addition to the Mason Dixon Line, she a'ready has trouble enough in her new apouse, Mr Sheppard Abdul- lah Bey King, who does nut anpear to have enough chin to guarantee a po. mment constancy comparable to Romeo's enduring yen for the balcony kid. I hope the pair will be eno'mously happy, bumping along on their cameis In the moonlight, and I hope that Samla will get along well with the other three wives Sheppard Abdullah Bey, suh. is allowed under Moslem law. Yaliah! Trouble I. can read It in the sand. But I also hope that when he embraces mul- tiple bliss, he brings only one at h time home to meet Ma. They gpt strong feelings r.bout bigamy down yonder in the land o oily Canaan, and I wouldn't want to see this idyll wrecked by anything so severe as a necktie party. But in the meantime I cry aloud In the voice of the muezzin, Bismillah, hamdii'iUallab, inshal- lad, and emshi besselemah. Also Kismet, el mektonb mektoub. This means roughly that they should all live a thousand years and wear it In good health. Bob Bey an eld Nile boatman himself, has spoken. Change And Decay By Stewart Alsop BAGDAD.Here, where civilization waa born, it is quite easy to see how civilization may die. For here it Is possible to watch painlessly, as through dark glasses, all the forces at work which are causing the Middle East to go the way of China. First, of course, there is the progressive decay of the British technique of exerc<.ing power. In essence, this technique has been to create a small ruling class of rich, venai or ambitious men, dependent en British support and then to exercise power through these men . Iraq is Interesting, as some wel' preserved fos- sil might be interesting, because this tried but no longer true technique continues rather shakily to Function. But no one really oelleves that this system, which has collapsed already in Iran and Egypt. Will work for very much longer Parliament, to the accompaniment of Commun- ist-organized street riots. But sooner or later, in the universal opinion here, some ambitious politicians will seise the torch from Mossadegh's trembling hands, and the days of the Iraq Petroleum Company wlfl be numbered. As the Iranian oil crisis has Its pale counter- part here, so does the Egyptli.i crisis. The British have, by treaty, the right to sta- tion certain troops in Iraq. Actually, they have only a corporal's guard, most'y Royal Air Force- men. Although less vital than tne Suez base, the British Installations In Iraq woui-: be an Import- ant forward defense and staging area in case of war. Without them there could be no defense of Iraq. anti-Briusn regime installed here wl;l undoubtedly fol- the treaty with Drew Pearson says: Brass ring goes to J. Howard* Mc- Grath; Attorney General has his pye on Suprema Court; Friendships come first with McGrath. - The brass ring, goedfor one free, theugkratber reach ride en the Washington Merry-Ge-Ronnd, gees today to At- torney General J. Howard McGrath. WASHINGTON. Those who have worked with likable Ho- ward McOrath as Attorney General say there are only two thinss wrong with him: ^ 1) He is seldom around the place where he Is supuosed ta work the Justice Department; kh-ju u> 21 He has his eyes so firmly fixed on the U.S. Supreme Court that he is afraid to make any moves that might make enemies Real fact is that McGrath entered the Justice Department v-.ith every expectation of being upped. to t'-.e Supreme Court within a year. Justice Stanley Reea, not in the ** of health was expected to retire. But Reed recovered. Meanwhile the policy of offending no one, established early in the McGrath regime, has drifted on Early in life, likewise, Howard got Into the habit of offend- ing no one. He. learned that If you're lucky and don't rock the boat things come your way. ' He also learned that If you exude enough charm, a reason- able degree of common sense, and know how to finesse friend- .snlps you can get along with most of the piople most of tha time at least in a small state like Rhode Island. McGrath's father was a prominent member of the Knlahts of Columbus and one of his father's Jobs was to handle K c insurance. So, through his father, young Howard got to know most of the Irish in the small state of Rhode Tsland On top of this, Howard married the daughter of the leadine French-Canadian, Estelle Cadorette, one of the loveliest ladles now in the Cabinet. There Is a heavy French population In Rhode Island, and the marriage didn't hurt him at all wi,th French voter. SHREWD PARTNERSHIPS In addition, McGrath formed a 'aw. paitnership with the leading New England blue blood of the state. Theodore Francis Green, one of the most courageous numbers of the US Senate ,. EH h*ve been pure accident, or it may have been as' ,ne^?0litlcians ray becau*o the Italian peculation is heavy hi Rhode Island, but McGrath also formed a political partner- ship with John Pastore, Italian-American governor of the State who took McGrath's seat in the Senate when he became Attorney General. With this array of nationalities behind him, nobody could rise in Rhode island, and Howard has gone a lone way In the Senate he had an excellent record, while as Attorney General he has never flinched at a case Involving civil righta or human tolerance. " The chief trouble is that Howard doesn't have many opportu- nities to flinch: for the men below bring few complex or forth- right cases to him for decision. They know, first, that Howard isn t around much of the time io review cases; second, that the key tune of ti e Justice Depart- ment is pitched at a low, easygoing, make-fe^-enemles level Thy know, for instance, that their boss, the Attorney Gen- eral, was a leading figure In on* of the big tax-avoidapce found- ations, Textron, set up as a charity trust, though it operated huge textile mills. There was nothing Illegal about this, but when the man you r.re working for once drew a $15,000 salary merely for being a figurehead on a large tax-avoidance scheme, it doesn't encour- age his subordinates to push tax prosecution Those who work in the Justice Department also know that McGrath long has been part-owner of the tincoln Downs race track. ' And while he has had absolutely no part hi the gambling sur- rounding this activity, it's only natural that some of the A.G.'s subordinates ahouid not ieel too enthusiastic' about crwcktarss down vn gr.iP.Ullng. Undoubtedly there Is no connection, but they also know that the Attorney General took a definite stand against deporting i.-iimbling king Frankie Cost ello when a fraud was discovered In his naturalization papers. McGrath has other Varied activities which tend to give him a fim root in the rocky soil of New England business and make him next to Wall Street banker Bob Lovett, the Secretary of Defense the wealthiest member of the cabinet. For Instance. Howard has a prosperous Chrysler Plymouth tuto agency and has been considerate enough to put his auto partner, G. Merlyn OKeefe of Providence, o.i the board of di- rectors of the Leitz Company, a German firm making Leica ca- meras, which the VS. Government seized during the war. Howard also was president of the first Federal Savings and loan Association of Providence, and has cousiderately put its vice-president. Harold C. Paull, on the board of the aame LelU Company. McGrath has the power to do this througl. the office of Allen Property Custodian, which Is under him. HATES TO PROSECUTE . The Attorney General's human reactions are of the best. He ilkes people. They like him. He hates to prosecute That may be why his Justice Department has frittered around for almost a year regarding. prosecution of certain wit- ness referred to it by the Senate after they gave perjured testi- mony in the Anna Rosenberg and the Maryland election cases. Though the Senate went to some pains tu refer these cases to Justice, the Attorney General has not acteu and probably will not act. He Just has too many friends. Tip-off to McGrath's friendly character.Is his own record as a Joiner. Not alnce the days of "Puddler Jin" Davis, Secretary Labor under Calvin Coolidge, has there been such a notable ioiner In the cabinet. Here is Howard'a record of good fellowship: Elk, Eagle, An- cient Order of Hldernlans. Friendly Sons of 9t Patrick, tha Grange. Knights o Columbus Patrons Of Husbandry, Indepen- dent Order of Foresters, Klwanis, Irish Historical 8oclety, Rhode Island Historical Society, New England Association of Chiefs of Police, National Association of Insurance Agents, Royal Arcanum. So yon really can't blame Howard McGrath He was never cast for the role" of Attorney General a role where friendships must play second fiddle to prosecutions. SIDE GLANCES By Galbraith But ,the anti-British regime which will sooner The erosion of British power Is accompanied or later be installed here wL) by a universal and totally irrational hatred of ,.lpw Egypt's lead and abroga'., the British. This reporter wa.< co'.ducted by one Britain. of the most intelligent Arabs h': has met, through Here, as everywhere in the Middle,last, there the stinking slums of Baghdad wnere people live Is mass misery. in mud huts, In company with their livestock and And here there Is also the feai and hatred of an occasional poisonous reptile, lr the shadow of Israel found in every Arab state the palace grounds. Partly because the Unltt i States credited -.-...,.<, su.. u This man was wholly convince,- that the sur- with responslbilit\ for creating Israel, partly be- u.,w0hn D SmaU hM ked rounding degradation (which has existed from cause to seem to challenge our Br'tlsh ally would Phil Murray, Bill Green and the time immemorial) was excl-iivcly the fault of be disastrous, and partly through aheer inertia, independent unions to come sit the British. American policy in Irao, as elsewhere in the Mid- Everybody %s C\as$ife in on this top guardian board and help make security policy Murray has not yet accepted since that would be recogni- tion of the government's right to decide whether a certain union can operate in certain plants. Meanwhile, the Humphrey- Taft committee, representing honest bi-partisan thinking on. an issue which demands bipar- tisanship, is working on a com-J [plete survey of all industries lin which operate/ In this atmosphere of unreason. Iraq, like Iran, is quite likely to cut off its own noseits oil re- venuesto epite the British fice. The same men who somewhat unbrilUantly managed the fortunes of Iran's Anglo-Iranian Oil Company have been managing the almost equal- ly vital Iraq Petroleum Company die East. Is para.vzed. Even the ablest Americans sonably enough, "But what can you do?" Only the engineers, pouring over their maps, For if the Middle last goc ihe way of China, their eyes gleamL.g as they .o'nt to the natural They long ago adopted the p'o,lcy of keeping waterbaslns and watersheds whicn surround this the Iraq oil fields a largely untapped reserve, parched land, rtate something of their nativa which not unnaturally enraged the Iraqueans, optimism. ..... .. .. .. _. _ whose oil revenues have been a mere trickle. And this Is the last twist of the kniie. ror so Having learned a belated lerson in Iran, the much could be done, so tailly. and even ao British oil managers have now offered a reason- cheaply. ably generous contract to Iraq Here, at least, the desert conld Indeed be made -. Iraq Premier Nuri Said, an agi'.g monument to to bloom like the rose. Here afl the Arab refugees Communist unions I the British technique of power has accepted the from Palestine could be absorbed Hare the atand- new agreement. It is expected tc pass through ard of living could be made to rise miraculously. THURSDAY, DECEMBEP r sTf THE PANAM AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAC PTft racihc J5oci let 'i * nu C~Jt .Kock., &. 17, &tU .L &IU 3521 Mr. and Mrs. John. Matthews are shown above at a reception tiven In their honor' following their marriage Saturday evening At the Balboa Union Church. Mrs. Matthews is 'he former Miss Dorothy White Roden, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. Herbert Roden of Scottsboro, Alabama. The young couple will reside in Ciirundu on their return from a wedding trip to Costa Rica. PRESIDENT OF PANAMA HONOR GLS AT LcNCHEON His Excellency, the President of the Republic of Panama, Don Alciblades Arcctmena was the guest of honor, Monday, at a luncheon given by the Comptroller General of the Re- public, Mr. Henrique de Obarrio, at the Hotel El Panama for the delegates to the Conference on External Trade and Bal- ance of Payments Statistics. Congressmen nd Wives to Sail Tomorrow " .The Honorable Ivor D. Fenton and Mrs. Fenton and the Honor- able Benjamin F. James and Mrs. James plan to sail tomorrow a- board the SJ3. Panama for New York after a visit of two weeks to the Isthmus. / Henry Menard, Mr. Bruce Trout- man (best man). Miss Jean Van Evera (maid of honor), Miss Vic- ki van't Veld. Mrs. Alice Bent- hall. Mr. Robert Coulthard, Mrs. O. E. Cooper, Mr. Edwin Y. Wil- ley. Miss Jean Kieswetter and Sergeant Edward J. Mann. Carbaugh-Jones Marriage is Announced The marriage of Major Peggy Glynn Carbaugh, Army Nurse carried on her mother's prayer book, wore white orchids, sent from Hawaii by her brother, CPO James P. Carbaugh, stationed at Pearl Harbor. The matron of honor, Mrs. Graham, wore a copper colored faille dress and a velvet cap and wore a corsage of green swan or- chids. A reception for two hundred guests was given by the nurses of Fort Clayton Hospital In then- quarters immediately following the ceremony. The couple are spending their honeymoon at the Hotel El Pana- ma and at Santa Clara in the Re- public of Panama. After the first of the year they will be at home at Fort Clayton. Mrs. Quintero is Visitor Here The wife of the Minister of Panama to Honduras, Mrs. Abel Quintero, arrived.on Monday, by plane, for a visit with relatives in Panama. Donna Marie Sovern Celebrates Fourth Birthday Major and Mrs. Charles Sov- ern, entertained Saturday after- noon at their home at Fort Kob- be in honor of the fourth birth-i day anniversary of their daugh-i ter. Donna Marie. Playmates attending the party Included Joe Ann and Ella Tlese, Margaret Douglas, Harry Phillips, i Gall Graham, Lynda Solomon, Jim Hayes, Cathy Berger. George Ann and Bruce Miller, Charles and Darlene Russel, Al Norby, Robert Bledsoe. Tanya Wagner, John and Sandra Willis, Ronald Goodman, linda Bryant, Patsy Gainey, Mike Janney. Juay Har- rington,'Roger Dodge. Pamela Grzegorowlcz, David and Barbara Lindstrom, Danny Sovern. Adults who attended the party were Mrs. Dennis Johnson. Mrs. Janney, Mrs. Berger, Mrs. Grze- gorowlcz, Captain and Mrs. T- lese. Lt. and Mrs. Willis. Mrs. Wagner. W.O. and Mrs. John- son, Mrs. Harrington, Mrs. Rus- sel and Captain and Mrs. Good- man. Italian Minister's Wife to I.rave Today for Mexico The wife of the Minister of Ita-u Roatet Desandre, plans to leave Harry Carbaugh. of Stonlic.is Cl- by plane today for a short vaca-' tar, Virginia and Colonel Kenneth tion trip in Mexico. I Paul Jones, U.S.A.. son of Mr. O. J. Jones and the late Mrs. Prominent Architect is Gasst at Hotel El Panama The prominent Honduran ar- chitect, Mr. Mario Valnzuela, arrived on the Isthmus Tuesday bv plane and is a guest at the Hotel El Panama for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Kieswetter E i >rtain With Pre-Rehearsal Dinner Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kieswet- ter of Gamboa, entertained with a dinner last evening for the members of the bridal party of their daughter, Jean, whose mar- riage to Sergeant Edward J. Mann will take place this even- Jones of Santa Asia. calllornla, took place on November 30 in the Chapel of the 15th Naval District at Fort Amdaor. Chaplain W. M. Winers, USN. officiated at the ceremony. The- bride was attended by Mrs. W..D. Graham, wife of the commanding officer of the Fort Clayton Armv Hospital where the jride Is the Chief Nurse. Colonel Jones, who Is the Inspector Gen- eral of the USA In the Caribbean Theater had as his best man, Colonel W. D. Graham, the hos- plal commander. The bride wore an original Ma- cme de Hond creation, a two Mrs. Talboy to Attend Son's Wedding Mrs. Eva M. Talboy will be a passenger aboard the S.S. Pan- ama tomorrow when lt sails for New York. .She plans to attend the marriage of her son, James Ralboy. Jr.. to Miss Ann Virginia Rose, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon 3. Rose, of Corydon, Io- wa, to be solemnized on Decem- ber 17 in Ames. Iowa. Mr. Talboy, who was born on the Isthmus, Is the son of the late Dr. James Talboy, of Boque- te afTd Is a graduate of the Canal Zone Junior College and of the University of Iowa. He Is now employed.by the Atomic Energy Commission in Ames, Iowa. OAS Chief Lists 1st Fruits of LA Technical Aid WASHINGTON. Dec. 8 (USIS) Latin America is "already re- ceiving the benefits of the OAS Technical Assistance Program," according to Alberto Lleras, Secretary General of the Orga- nization of American States. In a foreword to the Decem- ber Issue of the Pan American Union Magazine "Americas" Dr. Lleras points out that during 1951, the first year of the Inter-American Technical Aid Program the OAS Committee on technical assistance launch- ed five projects "vitally import- ant to the solution of tremend- ousp roblems affecting under- developed areas of the himis- phere. He then lists the Pan Amer- ican Center for hoof and mouth disease established at Sao Ben- to, Brazil; the technical agri- cultural course of the Inter- American Institute of Agricul- tural Sciences, located In Cos- ta Rica; the workshop In the teaching of communicable dis- ease nursing held In Guatema- la: the training center*r di- rectors of the cooperative move- ment to be held at the Univ- ersity of Puerto Rico; and the housing research and training center established at Bogot, Colombia. _________j_______ string tro will play for dancing. Free cocktails from 6:30 to 8:00 p.m. . Daily Reading THE WAY OUT OF THE DARK John 3. This chapter Is a great favor- ite. Its sixteenth verse has been called "the little Bible" due to its dynamic presentation of the great central message of Holy ( Scriptures. As you read the first [part of the chapter put your- self In the place of Nlcodemus. With him try to absorb some- thing of the shock Jesus' words leave. Nlcodemus appears to have been the purest and high- est type of religious man. And yet he was told that he needed a change so very radical that lt was called a rebirth. In the light of the chapter of today take an Inventory of yourself. I do not mean that you should try to think of all the bad about yourself. Not that at all. Think all the good about yourself that you possible can, put the score as high as you feel lt Is decent, then listen | again to the words of Jesus, "Ye must be born again." Is not that a shock It ought to be. That is how it Is meant. And Jesus does mean lt. uTuw mm Members and guests of the American Legion Club are invited to a Barn Dance to be given Sa- aturday, December 15 at eight o'clock. Card of Thanks . We wish to express our heartfelt gratitude to our many friends for their kind expressions, floral offerings, card of sympathy and assistance that consoled us in our recent bereavement. Joan Scott Una M. Scott Arias Teodoro A. Arias IAWC to Hold Christmas Party The Inter-American Women's Club will hold a Christmas party on December 13 from four to six o'clock at the club's headquarters. ing at the Gamboa Union i ilece semi-formal dress of white Church, previous to the rehearsal (brocade with a nipped in waist for the wedding. and flared skirt and shoes of Those attending were Rev. and'matching brocade. The- blouse Mrs. Raymond A. Grey and their i and mitts were of Chantilly lace daughter, Mary Elizabeth. MlssUpDllqued with brocade. A lace Joyce Herrn* Mrs. Herring,Mrs.Ihat with a small nose veil and Herring, Sergrantand Mrs. Man-tiny white- orchids formed a co- uel Moreno, Sergeant and Mrs. ronet effect. The bride's flowers, Lo.wiy Evening and Bailer i DRESSES for the coming holidays! Extra Sheer NYLON HOSIERY 15 dernier 68 gauge! No. S 39th Street Vista del Mar Morning Guild to Meet Tomorrow The Morning Guild of the Ca- thedral of St. Luke, In Ancon, will meet tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. at the home of Mrs. R. M. Howe of 0832 Plank Street in Balboa,. Mrs. James Schaffter will con- tinue a program on Brazil, speaking on Its artistic and cul- tural background. DAR to Give Christmas Party The Panama Canal Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution will meet on Saturday at 2:30 pjn. at the Jewish Wel- fare Board Center, on La Boca Road, Balboa. Following the business meeting Chapter members will play host to over thirty youngsters, mem- bers of the Children of the Ame- rican Revolution Societies, from both sides of the Isthmus, with a Christmas party. All ladles who are eligible to become members of the DAR are cordially Invited to attend. PAULS MARKET and DELICATESSEN Our store will be closed ALL DAY SATURDAY 8th of DECEMBER J MOTHERS DAY W&CEND SPECIALS Fresh Danish Butter &......^7c. tk. Danish Swiss Cheese..........860. Lb. Danish Tilsit Cheese .......___62c. Lb. Danish Port de Salut..........62c. Lb. THURSDAY A FRIDAY Fresh Lettuce from the VOLCAN Shop early to avoid last minute rush OPEN ALL DAY FRIDAY V.F.W. Bingo Tonight Bingo will be played tonight at the V.F.W. Home on Curundu Road. Play will begin at 7:45 p.m. and cash prizes will be awarded. American Legion Social Activities The American Legion Club will hold a bingo party for members and their guests this evening at seven thirty o'clock. The American Legion Club will hold its regular Friday evening cocktail dance for members and their guests on Friday evening. A Tie Miput THE MOST ALLURING PEXFUME IN THE WORLD COT Y Tal*. 1-17*1 1-lTM for the coming . oHoliaag cieason WE JUST RECEIVED NEW ASSORTMENT .. DRESSES beautiful styles Dressy Sport Formal Also SUN DRESSES BLOUSES SKIRTS for all occasions FENE LINGERIE at low prices . "LADY MARLENE" BRAS. LA MODA AMERICANA 102 Central Ave. 18 DAYS TILL CHRISTMAS Only a few models of BUICKS and CHEVROLETS available for delivery this month I WHY NOT... Soften up, Brother, and BUY THE WIFE a BUICK or CHEVROLET IF... you don't have a wife, YOU'LL FIND ONE - DRIVING A BUICK! IF... you can't afford a BUICK AND a WIFE - BUY A BUICK fUL-QPEP i, >>>< fe t si . -tot.f.toi Distributor: C. O. MASON, S. A. P.O. Box 883 Panam City Coln rr eep your bens at a high ** rats of egg production, and maintain them in good physical condition. The oatmeal in Ful-O-Pep Feeds and Mashes for starting, growing and egg production contributes toward more profitable results. Tt by Oat* Of? At* fr **l-0-f CHEVROLET No. 1 BUICK No. 4 IN ALL NEW CAR SALES Smoot & Paredes SRE...WE TAKE TRADE-INS! | s rAGE SIX THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY. NEWSPAPER THURSDAY, DECEMBER (, 115] You Sell em... Leave your Ad with one of our Agents or our Offices When You Tell em thru P.A. Classifieds! LEWIS SERVICE No. 4 Ttvnll Avt Phr-.e 3-:>I KIOSKO Df. LESSEPS Parque a> l.evrpa Fanaai MORRISON'S No. 4 Foarth of July An Phoaa -tMI BOTICA IARLTON Id.MK Melena**! Avt Phone ?5SColeo. SALON DE BELLEZA AMERICANO No. a West 121b Street THE PANAMA AMERICAN No. 37 "H" StreetPhinm No. 12.179 Control Ave.Col. 12 words Minimum for 3c. each additional word. Argument Over Doubletalk Opens La. Newsmen's Defamation Trial FOR SALE Household FOR SALEChildren'! toblt. and chain. tub*-metol frames. Sturdy ana* practical. Ordor taken lor Xmai Delivery. Phene 2-3708. House 0954. Amador Rood. FOR SALE Automobile l For the buving oi selling ot your outomobile consult: Agencias Cos- mos, S. A.. Automobie Row No. 29. Telephone 2-4721. Ponomi. MISCELLANEOUS RESORTS Do rou have a drinking problem? Write Alcoholic! Anonymou oi 2031 Aneen. C. Z. FOR SALE:Venetion tobal 3-2320. blinds. Cris- FOR SALE: -Bamboo divon with cushions covets, S40 00 House 796-A, Tovernillo. Balboa. Phone 2-3163. _ FOR SALEComplete set ot Pan- ama Canol type metal furniture f:r apartment, in 12 family build- ing. Kelvmaior refrigerator. Cold- spot refrigerator 25 cycle, numer- ous other pieces of household fur- niture. Venetian blind louvers Cooking utensils table ware. Cor [FOR SALE:Your Chrysler and Ply- mouth Dealer offers for Christmas season the following used cor- Chrysler Convertible 1951 fully equipped, 4,000 miles, $2.850; Chrysler sedan 1950. fully equip- ped. 52,400; Chrysler Sedan 1948 $1290; De Soto Seden, 1948, $1 195; Plymouth 1949, $1,400. Agencias Pan-Amcncanas, S. A. front El Rancho Garden, Tel. 2-0825 FOR SALE:1950 V-8 Ford 6-pos- senger Club Coupe, radio, original owner, can be financed. SI,450 807-X, Apt. A, Tavernilla, or ith CHRISTMAS CARDS the most beautiful views PANAMA in colors may be obtoined at o FOTO FLATAU Via Belisario Porros No. 95 Son Francisco de la Calcio where we also print your Nome at very reasonable prices. FOR SALE Miscellaneous phone Balboa 3582. be purchased week days after ii-------- p. m. Saturdoy O Sunday. Build- FOR SALE:1950 Renault, 4-Door ir.g 0839 Acooo Place Apts. J & Sedan, seat covers, excellent con- K. Phone 2-2653 2-2582 dition. at good price. Phone Pan- Balbco. Qmo 2-1644. FOR SALE: -- Bureau Street w i t h F0R SALE:1951 Buick Super Ri- mirror. $10.00. 807-C. Balboo. Tavernillo Street FOR SALE:3-pc overstuffed living- room set. cocktail table, end tables, refrigerator 25-cycles. Simmon! couch. Boby crib, youths bed Phone 916. Colon. FOR~SALE~One 9 cu. ft. Wasting- house refrigerator with 2 year guarantee, 25 Cycles. One General Electric woshing machine, 25 Cyl good condition. 5337-D, Davis St Diablo, any time. FOR SALE:Complete bedroom set modern design, color dusty-white, never used, $300. 40 St. No. 4 Panama. PERSONALS Mr. Victor Finkel: You ore requested to coll Tel. 2-2128. Ponomi. vena, 7,800 miles, with radio seat covers W-SW tires, wale al- cohol injector, cor and occessones like new, con be seen ot Cristo- bal Police Stotion between 3:00 p. m. II :00 p. m. All this week. FOR SALE:1942 Buick Sedan with radio. For informotion appiy Bal- boa Bowling Center, after 3:0C p. m. WANTED Miscellaneous WANTED: TO BUY OR TRADE Used kerosene refrigerator, about 7 foot. Hove 7 ft. Frigidaire, O cycle. Write Box 535, Fort Ama- dor, for quick deal. WANTED TO RENT:Reliable North American family wants 3 bed- room, unfurnished chalet. Tele- phone 3-3923. WANTED-!-BUY Coot for lady Size 16. coll 2-5121, Panama. WANTED:Screened cottoge, com- pletely furnished preferred, for occupancy Jonuary first. Coll Pan- ama Cota-Cola fbtt. Co. Tel. 2- 0750. WANTED TO BUY: Old metal trom Siemens oven; old i r o r* for smelting (old machinery'; roils, wheels, flywheels, axles. For Offers Tel. 2-0386, Panamo or write Box 722, Ponama. Help Wanted WANTED: Good cook and loun- dress. Bring references. Good sa- laries. Avenido Cubo No. 11 "Nestle" Building, entrance 28th Street. WANTED:Good cook with refer- ences. Apply Carr Street, No. 1423 Balboa. Apt. B. FOR SALE Motorcycle* FOR SALE'51 Harley Davidson motorcycle 74 O. H. V. Pointed red. with all accessories of chrome. Bike about 4 months old. Inquire ot Cristobol Police Station, Cris- tbal. C. Z. FOR SALE: V. T. Indian, light- weight motorcvele $475.00. 45 Indian $225. Both excellent con- dition. House 171-B. Pedro Mi- guel. Phone 4-567 (terms'. FODR SALERED M. G. convertible 1951, used two months. Under cooted. $1,400. 1523-F, Balboa RETURNNG~to~Stotes wdTseTl T95r Buick 4 Dr. Special, with all ac- cessories. Phone: Cocoli 596. FOR SALE 1951 PontioT Super Da Luxe Catalina Coupe, radio and Hydramotic. Duty paid, new con- dition. Phone 3-3477. WE SELL --600 Pre-fabricated Ve- netion Blinds at cost price, cream color: 22". 24". 26" wide by 48" long S4.80 eo 28". 30" 32" wide by 60" long $7.80 ea. 34". 36". 38" wide by 60" long $9.00 eo." Telephone 2-0756, Ponama. R. A COWES Y CIA. First Street by Union Club Houses ON BEACH Santa Cloro. Phone SHRAPNEL Balboa 2820, or see caretaker there, also house at CERRO CAMPANA mountains. COMMERCIAL b PROFESSIONAL Williams Santa Clora Beach Cottages. Two bedrooms. Frigidaires, Rock- gas ranges. Balboa 2-3030. CASINO SANTA CLARA Cabins, food, swimming. No reserva- tions necessary. Choice lots for sale. Phillips. Oceanside cottages. Sonto Claro. Box 435 Balboa. Phone Ponomo 3-1877, Cristobal 3-1673 HOTEL PANAMERICANO in cool El Valle. Room $2.00 daily per per- son. Meals a la Carte. Reserva- tions. Telephone Panamo 2-1112 Returning to Stotes must sell new Boldwm "Acrosonic" spinet pianc in beautiful mahogany $200 under list rice. Phone Cocoli 596 FOR SALE: Miter table ond saw $25.00. Breast drill $4.50. Liqui- dizer SI 0.00. Air compressor S25. CO. 361 France Field 37-88-722. Gramlich's Santa Clara beach- cottages. Electric lea boxes, gas stoves, moderara rotas. Phon 6- 441 or 4-567. FOR RENT Apartments It is actually cheaper to buy a P.r.l. SAFETY SAW BLADE than to accept any other as a Gift. Beside? Protection Against Injury, they save many times their value in t*jst of SHARPENING and POWER alone. GEO. F. NOVEY, INC. 279 Central Ave. Tel. 3-0140 LAKE CHARLES, La., Dec. (UP). The trial of five news- papermen on charges of vari- ously "defaming" three gam- blers and 18 public officials in a vice crusade opened yestor-| day with an argument about the^ meaning of "doubletalk." Assistant District Attorney Melvln Wetherill, who consider- ed that Managing Editor Ken- neth Dlxon of the Lake Charles American Press defamed him with an editorial entitled "Le- gal Doubletalk," declined to commit himself on the defini- tion. Bird of Prty 7 HORIZONTAL 5 Varnish 1 Depicted MM rUnt of prey Symbol for 8 These birds cadmium -----about two 7 Lubricate feet long and Middle of vary powerful * day ALHAMBRA APARTMENTS Modern furnished-unfurnished apart- ments. Maid service optional. Con- tact office 8061. 10th Street. New Cristobol, telephone 1386 Colon. FOR RENT:Beautifully furnished 2 bedroom apartment. San Mrtir St. (50 St.) Bella Vista. Coll Pan- ama 3-4405 from 6 p. m. to 8 p. m. House No 30. FOR RENT:Furnished aportment. Mexico Avenue and East 42nd St Mothers, child specialists recommend wT'NGhJHAf\Sh0eS ':,COrreCl years. Exclusively ot BABYLAN- f0R RENT:Apartment in best re Are your glasses, brokes, ailignments and lights ready for early inspect- ion this year? Get ahead of the rush by visiting Tropical Motors FOR SALE: l95~Ford convertible with rodio A-1 condition, $2.000 00. Call Albrpak. 86-5155. Sgt. Gouftney. QUICK EASY CAR FINANCING FOR GOVERNMENT EMPLOYE. SEE FEDERAL SERVICES FINANCE CORP. No. 29 Automobile row. Tel. 2-4555. Ponomi. FOR SALE:1948 Pontiac Convert- ible, good mechanical ccnditior and appeorance, $1,000. Miss Old- hom. Hotel Tivoli. FOR SALE- 1951 Morris Minor convertible, green. 4,500 miles Excellent condition throughout. Priced to sell at $950. Albrook BOO Bldg. 19. Apt. 3. Tel. 7194 FOR SALE Real Estate FOR SALE: Excellent investment cholet located Exposition Grounds S200.00 net income, monthly with a seven yeors' contract, guaranteed rent. Insurance and water will be paid by tenant. For further de- tails phone 3-2269, from 4:00 tc 7:00 p. m. LESSONS LEARN Waltz, Foxtrot. Jitterbug Rumbo, Tongo, Samba, Mombo lalboa YMCA. Harnett & Dunn mil nrrnit I f J/HCIi BUSINESS MAN'S LUNCH 75 Clam Chowder or Tropical Fruit Cup Pried Red Snapper or Mamhuiser Steak Onion Sauce Saute Potatoes Creamed Peas Hot Rolls it Butter Combination Sslad Dessert Coffee Tea Beer -Jain aa for Cocktails from 4 to 8 D.m Like All Fishers -^They Need Bait Seagulls fisheating birds that are ordinarily seen hover- ing over the ocean waters have been stimulating the cu- riosity of Pacific side residents by flocking to grassy areas on land in recent weeks. Many explanations were forth- coming, but Captain Stanley La-Rose of the USARCARIB Madden Wye medical supply office came through with the most curious answer. Listening to a friend's com- ment that the gulls were fish- eaters and hence it was un- usual to see them on land, Captain LaRose said. "Sure they're fisheaters, but they have to dig for bait sometimes." DIA. No. 40. 44th street. Bella Vista, Te\_ 3-1259. FOR SALE Winchester 12 gouge double barrel shot gun. Model A Ford. 3-4 H. P. 25 cycle motor. 2132 Apt. B. 6th. St. Curundu. telephone Curundu 5279 PANAMA CANAL COMPANY OFFERS FOR SALE ONE TANK Sealed bids will be received until I 10:30-A. M.. December 18. 1951, for Tank, oil. steel, located south- east corner Sosa Hill Rock Quorry. Balboa. Btd forms moy be obtained from the office of Superintendent of Storehouses, Balboa, telephone 2- 2777, sidentiol neighborhood. Modern construction. Well planned ventila- tion. Porch, diningroom, living- room, two bedrooms with cedar lined closets, bathroom, kitchen laundry room, garage, storage room. Water heater furnished. En- tire opartment screened. City gas line connections. On bus route tc ond from town. For further ajj formation call Panama lux VENETIAN BLINDS Immediate Delivery Aluminum Awnings Different Colors $14.00 Industrias Panamericanas TeL 3-1713 22 E. 29th Street FOR SALE:Kcdok 620, cast, light meter, flash attachment. Bargain 422-B, Colon Beach. FOR SALE:German police puppies low price. Panoma Viejo road facing "Club de Equitacin." EXCELLENT BYT^Eect7ic~sewg machine. $75.00, 25-60 cycle desk model. House 744-A, Bal- boa. Tel. 2-1751. FOR SALE:New condition Junior Torget rifle, ideal Xmos gift. Bal- boa Gun Club office. Excellent Lionel Double Guage Excessories Half price. Phone 4-479 ofter six FOR SALENew 5' x 6 1:2 Pw- vian Llamo rug. Phone Curundu 7200. House 2036-C. We iust received lorge assortment of ioldfiih ond Tropical fiih, also first class ttoinleii steal oquoriumt accessories for aquariums. Jardn La Inmaculada No. 58, Avenida FOR SALE Philco Tropic radio. 25 cycle washing machine, ladles winter coat, wearing apparel siie 18. boy's winter coot, size 6 1468-B. Holden, Bolboo. FOR SALE:Boy's sport coat, 12- 14, new, $12. Radio-phonograph One speed Silvertone. $60.00. Will deliver. Phone 4-567. House 171- B, Pedro Miguel. FOR SALE Boats & Motors FOR SALE:Johnson Outboard Mo- tor 10 H P. New model. Boot & Troiler, $360. House 152-B, Tel 6-246. Legion Post Honored By Panama Bomberos FOR SALE: 17 foot inboo.d 4 cylinder Leroi engine I magneto) just reconditioned. Cristobal Yacht Club, name: "U-Liar." Phone 5- 169. MANHATTANS MARTINIS DAIQUIRIS 25 c APPETIZERS I "On The Mouse" American Legion Post. No. 1, was honored by the Panam Bombero Corps at the recent cel- ebration of Fireman's Day No- vember 28, in the city of Pana- ' ma. Post No. 1 and the Panam Bombero Corps are close friends This friendship is further ce- mented by each organization program taking part in the other's days I of celebration and commemora- tion such as the Cinco de Mayo exercises and 4th of July cele- bration. Representatives of the Post had their flag decorated with the Panam Cold Medr 1 I v President Alcltiadcs Arosenr a, and a beputlful parchment scroll was also presented. Religious Drama To Be Staged By Methodist Girls Leap/tie Dec. 14 A religious drama entitled "The Coming of Our King," will be staged next week Friday at Gecides Hall by the Panama Methodist Girls League. The drama will be portrayed by a cast of 35 persons, includ- ing Myrtle Markland as Mary. Winston Sinclair as Joseph Fred Trottman Zacharlas and Mavis Springer as Elizabeth. Mrs. Ismay Foster will direct the production which will be preceded by a short musical n- 2-1574. FOR RENT:Comfortable, cleon, one room furnished apartment. Alii modern conveniences. 43rd Street No. 13. I -------.---------------1-------------, FOR RENT:2-bedroom opartment living-diningroom, $60.00. Screen- ed. Telephone 3-0841, PonarrU* FOR RENT Rooms ROOMS AVAILAM.E Light, coo* entirely renovated and wall fur- nished. Ratas reasonable. Bache- lors only. Inquire ot The Ame- rican Club facing Do Lessept Pork. PANAMA BROKERS, INC. Hotel r' Panana Offers Mock, for ale; San Fernando Clinic. Panami Insurance, Central Theatre, and Abattoir. Wants to buy Slocks: Panam Cement and Fuerza y Luz (common) TELS.: 1-471 3-ICM MODERN FURNITURE CUSTOM BUILT Slipcover Renpholstery VISIT OUR SHOW-ROOM! Alberto Herts J r. da la Otaa 17 (Automobile Bow) Free Estimate; Pickup Delivery Tel J-4S28 *:M am to t:M p.m. Assistant Attorney General M. E. Culligan, who was espe-i cially appointed by the Altor-1 ney General to prosecute the case, then read into the record! what Webster's unabridged die-' tionary says about doubletalk:! "Talk or writing that to all appearances la earnest and meaningful but Is actually a! mixture of sense and unintel- ligible verbiage or gibberish." Dlxon was the first of the defendants all connected with the Lake Charles American' Press to be tried. He is ac-' cused of "defaming" Wetherill,' District Attorney Griffin Haw- kins and the 13-member Parish Police Jury. Judge J. Bernard Cocke, who was appointed by the State Su- preme Court to hear the cases, without a Jury, Indicated that the trials will be long. He excused co publishers Thomas and W. Hugh Shear- man and court reporter Carter George until Dec. 18. They are accused of defaming gamblers Claude Williams, E. J. Miller and Sam Smith. Dlxon was specifically indict- ed on charges of defaming the district attorney, his assistant and the Police Jury (County Commission) with the "Double- talk" editorial and with his "Charlie Lake Says" column printed last March 7. Both editorial and column! commented sarcastically on the; Instructions of the district at- torney and his assistant to law enforcement officers to enforce "all the laws" in- Calcasleu Par- ish. three witnesses testified hat Hawkins had a god reputa- tion personally and as a dis- trict attorney. Hawkins recused himself from the case because he was an "injured party." Another "injured party," Dave Dugas, 50-year-old president tit 12 Scottish sheepfold IS Wireless 14 River (Sp.) is Xind of vane 17 Beaut* preparation 10 Haughty 20 Birds' homes 21 Registered nurse (ab.) 22 Symbol for neon 23 Pause 25 Fillip 28 Class of birds 20 Negative reply 30 Goddess of the earth 31 Ratio 33 Within (comb. form) 38 Exude 37 Pronoun 38 Exist 30 Succinct 42 Scorched 45 Form a notion 47 More facile 48 Legal point 48 Employers 51 Mine shaft hut 52 Abstract being 53 Wandering VERTICAL 1 Grasp 2 Period of time 3 Compunction 4Drjr 0 Ascended 10 Tumult 11 Eternities 18Light hits In baseball 18 Numbers 23rury 24 Level 28 Against 27 Versifier 31 Type of puzzle Answer to Previous. Puzzlt i !l"JIil"iMi2Hii, '..lie:-'.ii <,*, | M !.:.. i j ^ I l|ai]|a]ri isii < mum, v in lv-\ -. zuMsiii rot3 i II"I I'-latlliMJir j rj itfatfUMiSJM 32 It Is found in 42 Foundation i Arctic regions 43 Gaseous ' of------end elsewhere 34 Compulsion 35 Bones 3 Weary 40 Paradise 41 Toiletry cese element 44 Allowance fa waste 48 East (Ft.) 47 Sea eagle 50 East Indies (b.) Q Six Congressmen Due In Monday For 4-Day Visit Six United States Representa- tives will visit the Isthmus next week. They will arrive Monday on the 8.S. Cristobal and leave Friday on the same ship. The visiting Congressional party will include: HORSE AND BUGGY HELP WILLIAMSON. W. Va. (U.P.) One of the "paper boys" for the Williamson Dally News Is a 6(- year-old m#n who covers hi route with a horse and buggy, Mike Acord started delivering papers to supplement his regul- ar monthly pension check. Non he distributes papers along a four-mile route in the coal flelca around Williamson. tlve Fred G. Aandahl, Republican North Dakota, and his wife; Re- presentative Frank T. Bow. Re- th" Pollcv" Jurv"_teTtrfT.~r"Vht Publlcan of Ohio and hi wife; eg %rsrL,2x Klhsas r^ps; sylvania. He is a graduate of thi Representa- Pennsylvania State Forestry A* " cademy and worked for the stai* Forestry Service, from 1811 t 1918. COST fir FOUND LOST:At Quarantine Station Nov- ember 19th, Spayed female white cot 2 years old with tiger mark- ings and tiger marked toil wear- ing red leather harness. Answers to nome KI-KI. Twenty dollars re- ward for return of this cat. Do- nold C. Kaon, 812 '/2 Empire St., Balboa. C. Z. P. O. Box 1650. LOST:On Notional Highway Mon- day, between Puerto Vidol and Panama, one canvos bag contain- ing clothes and bedding Reword Reese. Tel. Balboo 3323, Box 214. Ciablo. C. Z LOST:Sunday In vicinity of Far Fon swamp, one black ond tan hunting hound. 8 months old Name: Tom. Tel. 83-6212. Re- word. LOSTNear Bolboa Annex. brown ond white dachshund dog identification collar "Kontiki " reward. Call 2225. 15th Noval District reservation. TRAVEL ANYWHERE Without Worry Or Care TiVrf EL SERVICE 18 Tivuli Ave. Pan. 2-2008 day in March," before the edit- orial and column were print- ed. "We're Just plain old every- day folks and I believe we did the right thing," Dugas, a rice larmer. cattleman, and owner of some oil wells, said. "As a taxpayer and citizen, I believe all laws should be enforced." Culligan asked Mrs. Berta Moss, the stenographer who took down and transcribed the Grand" Jury's report when it Representative Patten is i member of the Agriculture Com' mittee and has been in Congrei.l since 1948. He was graduated wife and sons, Michael. 13 and.from the University of Arizona Tommy, 10; Representative Jae. i 1830, taught In the Tcso:i F. Llnd, Democrat of Pennsylva- High School and was director oi nla; and Mrs. Llnd; and Repre- recreation for the city and later sentatlve Samuel W. Yocty. De- state director of recreation, mocrat of California and Mrs.; He served in Africa and Itali Yorty. in World War II with the rank d Representative Aandahl is a'major and became assistant member of the Interior and In- manager of the Phoenix AgenoJ sular Affairs Committee and has been In Congress since November 1850. He' was Governor of North Dakota from 1045 to 1850 and served in the State Senate in the of the Mutual Life Insurancs Company in 1845. Representative Llnd is a mem- ber of the Agriculture, Commit- lndlcted the newspapermen last!1931- 1837 and 1M1 sessions. He tee and has been in" Congresi August, whether Dixon had'18 a naUve of LitchviUe and a^nce 1848. He is a cost account- been offered a reward or bribe graduate of the University of |ant. He served with the Army 01 to testify before the Orand Jury as he did, or whether any violence had been used on him or whether he had been threat- ened with violence. Special Christmas Sale of FINE FURNITURE at low prices *t*7 Central Ave. Phene 3-1158 Edgar Gillette Dies; Funeral Tomorrow Funeral services will be held at noon tomorrow in the St Theresa Church, La Boca, for Edgar R. Gillette, who died yesterday at Gorges Hospital alter an illness of two months. Gillette, a St. Lucan, had been a resident of Isthmus for 30 years and was an employe of the Dredging Division up to the time of this death. During the last years of his life he resided at Gamboa. He is survived by his wife and three sons. Burial will take place in the Corozal Cemetery. Salvation Army Launches Annual Appeal For Gifts The annual Salvation Army appeal for contributions of msr- - chandise, clothing and tovs for but each man attending will distribution to the poor on be asked to contribute a part Christmas, was launched yet- or the whole of $2 needed to terday by the sectional head-1 purchase a Christmas basket quarters of the Salvation Ar for some needy family. Tick- my. ieu sold in this fashion will be 8enior Captain M. O. Mc- numbered and theirs will be a Donald announced thct all con- door prtae for the winning trlbutlons will be pttb'Ic ark- number. nowledped anJ will be diV.rl-l Music will be furnished by buted starting at 9 a.m. on Dec. Gardner's Band. Dancing will 24. - |be continuous from to 11 p.m. First Cars For CZ Employes Arriving Aboard 'Cristobal' The. first group of 38 cars be- longing to Canal employes, which were left in New York because of the backlog of ship-' ments for the Panam Line, have been loaded on the s. S. Cristobal which will arrive on the Isthmus Monday. The remainder of the em- ployes' cars awaiting shipment on the Panam Line will be shipped as soon as space be- comes available, according to Information received at Bal- boa Heights from the New York office of the Panam Canal Company. Cristobal YMCA To Hold Benefit Dance On Saturday "Light the Candle" will be the. title of the dance at the Cris- tobal Armed Services YMCA on Saturday. It will be a benefit affair at which the Girls Service Orga- nization will seek to raise $50 for the Christmas Basket Fund for needy Alantlc 8ide fam- ilies. If the goal is reached a large candle will be lighted on the night of the dance. The traditional policy of no-j charge to servicemen will hold North Dakota. He has been en-!prance and Germany In World gaged in farming except for five War I and in the European Thea- years m which he served as su-|ter of Operations in World War perlntendent of schools. u, leaving service service In 1941 Representative Bow is a mem-Wlth the rank of Lieutenant "Not to my knowledge," sheioer of the Interior and Insular i colonel, said. Affairs Committee and has been, Defense Attorney Clement m Congress since 1950. He has. He served with the Veterans Moss asked whether there was .been a member of the bar since Administration and was chief anything in the record to show 1923 and served as general coun- clerk to the county commission- that Dlxon was warned before'"1 to tne Subcommittee on Ex- ers of York County, before his he testified that might be used him. his testimony later against Viot that I heard," she re- plied. Judge Cocke said he didn't know of any law that compel- led a prosecutor to warn a wit- ness that his words might be later used agalifst him. Hard To Explain CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UP) An officer .in a raiding party which invaded a veterans' club on suspicion of possessing liquor illegally found his own name on pendltures and general counsel election to Congress7, of the Select Committee to Inves- tigate the Federal communica- Representative Yorty. an at- tlons Commission In the 80th torney. is a member of the Inte- Congress. irior arid Insular Affairs Commit- He was legislative assistant to Senator Andrew F. Schoeppel In the 81st Congress, and was a war correspondent in the Phil- ippines in World War II. tee and has been in Congress since 1850. He was a member of the California legislature from 1837 to 1840 and from 1848 to 1950. He served as captain In combat one of the confiscated bottles of whiskey. The flustered cop Insist-Ized his own company which he ed he did not know how It came.!and his son still operate. to be there. He was born In Steelton, Penn- He was born In Canton. Ohio, intelligence for the Air Corps in and was educated at Culver MU-1 New Guinea and the Philippines tary Academy and Ohio North-in World War II em University. Representative Mumma is a member of the Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee and| has been in Congress since 1850. He has been engaged since 1818 In construction activities and build- ers supplies and in 1821, organ- The Picture Every Man and Woman Should See! "A MODERN MARRIAGE" * Qjulfill your iooy's Chrtstmas iOreani with a LIONEL TRAIN LIONEL TRAINS whittle, puff smoke and run just like a real train! Full scale realiwn captivates all beys . intrigues all fathers! 'ALL ACCESSORIES CARRIED FELIX B. MADURO, S.A. 21 Ctntral Avenue I THURSDAY. DECEMBER 8. 1*51 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE SEVEN w/v/(antic J^ocietu Bo, 34, Q*l*n 'DJtfLm* Q*l* 216 or 463 BON VOYAGE COCKTAIL PARTY HONORS COMMANDER'AND MRS. SCHWARTZ Commander Jack W. Schwartx who Is completing his tour of duty aa Public Works Officer at the U. S. Naval Station. Coco Solo, and Mrs. Schwartz who will sail Friday aboard the s. 8. "Panama" for New York, were guests of honor at a cocktail party given Tuesday evening by Major and Mrs. Eugene L. Hamon at their quarters in Coco Solo. The guests included Captain land Mrs. Lyle l. Koepke. Cap- tain and Mrs. John W. Ander- I son, Commander and Mrs. Chas. IB Farwell ol Balboa, Rabbi and Mrs. Nathan Witkln of Balboa, Commander and Mrs. W. E. I Thompson, Lt. Commander and lairs. Paul L, Balay. Lt. and Mrs. |H. J. Thornton. Lt. and Mrs. Fred Wroble. Lt. and Mrs. L. J. Ducote. Lt. and Mrs. L. H. Pratt, Lt. and Mrs. G. L. Wallace. Lt. and Mrs. Chester Lucas, Lt. and Mrs. Mark A. Loy and Lt. Ken- neth P. Stafford. Mr. and Mrs. John Kelly Bronx. Mew York City. She ar- rived on the Isthmus aboard the 8.S. Panama Monday. Mr. White. Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie E. White of Nla- Club was held in their club room. The president, Mrs. Oeorge Marsh, presided. Three new members were wel- comed to the group. They were The officers for the year 1952 01 were elected. Mrs. George Marsh Army Will Convene Board lo Consider Officer Reserves Headquarters. TJSARCARIB has Times, Tribune Gives High Praise To Singer From PR Corporal Supplies Boots, Combat; Ball Darktown To Men At Sherman NEW YORK. Dec. 6 (UPtThe Puerto-Rlcan coloratura. Gracie- la Rivera today received uni- formly high praise from the announced that lt will convene a Times and the Herald Tribune board of officers for considera- music critics for her Carnegie Cecilia Berard, Mrs. Mary Cote tlon of applicants for direct ap- Hall debut before a near capaci- and Mrs. Roger Soucy, Mrs. Jo- polntment In the Officers' Re- ty house which gave her a tre- seph Palm was guest. serve Corps as part of the Judge Advocate General's Corps. A concurrent call to active du- ty will be issued with the ap- pointment. This includes quali- fied personnel In active military service. The appointment will be as a first lieutenant. Qualifications for acceptance waa re-elected president; Mrs. Joseph Gormly. vice president; Mrs. Thomas Cousins, secretary; Mrs. Virgil Lucky, treasurer. The members of the Board of gara Falls, New York. He is with Governors are Mrs. Russell Mann, I are as follows: Applicant must be the US. Navy Medical Corps at Mrg Millard Mundkowsky.Mrs. a graduate of an approved law mendous ovation She sang four encores after the finale. Coco Solo. They will live at Coco Slito. Woman's Club Board Meeting | and Exchange of "Gifts The members of the Board of Directors of the Cristobal Wom- en's Club met for the regular monthly meeting Tuesday morn- ing in their room at the Red Cross Center. Mrs. R. W. Ru- belll, president, was in charge of | the meeting. Following the close of the I meeting coffee was served and the exchange of Christmas gifts I was enjoyed. The members present with Mrs. iRubelll were-Mrs E. S. Wald. copare. Mrs. J. F. Meehan, Mrs. Edward W. MiUspaugh, Mrs. Raul O. Theriault. Mrs. George N. En- gelke, Mrs. Stanley Kidd, Mrs. William Clute. Mrs. H. E. Plhl- srln, Mrs. Leslie E. Davis. Mrs. William F. Grady. Mrs. E. F. McClalland. Mrs. George Wertz and Mrs. Raymond F. Ralph. Austin Tulip and Mrs. Jose Me- school and hold a professional lendez. degree; he must have been d- 1 mitted to practice and be a mem- Other members present were "ber of the bar of the highest Mrs. C. 8. Harvey. Mrs. Robert state or Federal court; he must cate General's Corp and concur- rent call to active duty under this program will be forwarded to Headquarters, United States Army Caribbean, Fort Amador, Canal Zone, ATTN; Civilian Component Division. Officers of the Organized Re- serve Corps In the grades of first lieutenant or captain not in ac- tive military service who are qualified for transfer to the Coffee Party at Fort Gulick 'VjtSifffSm.O.O. iSosman"MVs""Rob"er MoorV.ibe engage g Wives Club of Fort Gulick. hon-iMrs. Davld wolfert. Mrs. O. E. | tice ol law teaching of law, or judge *^*Jgt*^<&g> ored Mrs. William SweaneyJSmlthi Mrg. Albert Bresch. Mrs. holding Judicial <&; aatfha Th^SlftoFwlw are eay' whose husband has been com-, Harry Carlson, Mrs. William mustbe aUeast 21 years of age missioned a First Lieu tenant Je> njrg pie Crumley^ Mrs and not over 32. \ I^J^J^M epfTWas-ulek Mrs.'WUUam | d^S^^fVusfa^ry evidence that they were engaged In the private practice of law,! ' 9l on active transfer. duty may apply for morning. The party was held at Ellsworth. Mrs. Joe Kinnick. fW P"''""^X the home of Mm. Ernest.Heck Mrs.8 Carl Hess, Mrs. Jesse f^ldtln" trh*t,^nrartice of law Hunting Made Easy CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UPt Harry Colbert, Mrs. Jose Flores. bagged a grouse on the first day of the fall hunting season with- out moving from his chair in the m cujicc owiiw. Harry uoioeri, caa, juk ", offlp- nrinr to ...try on nre. Present with the guest of hon- :Mrs. Alfred Pacheco. Mrs. Ernest Sur cS active mMarTdutv or were Mrs. P. A. Volght. Mrs. ^^ Mrs. Arthur Cnmdal, MM. rAnSM^wd^ed^ffi Joe Klnnlck, Mrs. Carl Hess, Mrs Davld Harshaw. Mrs. Owen Tol- Qf Jf e)lglDie and qualified per-captol. The bird flew in through Ralph Johnson, Mrs. R0Dert|Dert< Mrs Ruth Hutchlns and sonnei serving In the Panam'an open window.crashed through Mossman. Mrs. Millard Mund-Mfs. Harry Copare. area who dl,te to apply for ala glass office partition and fell tS^cSSrt^.ab% As the members left the room commission in the Ju George Marsh and Mrs. Harry;stocking to be filled by them and ; , I which will later be donated to the Mrs Edward Barthlng and children in the orphanage of St. Mrs. Emmett Head were guests j Vincent de Paul in Colon, for the occasion. A gift of figurines was present-1 ed to the guest of honor as a re- membrance from the group. i FORT SHERMAN. Dec. 6Cor- poral Donald H. Prlbek of the supply section. Hq. Si Hq. 8vc Co., EA6R. la supplying hla fellow en- Elneers with everything from oota, combat, tropical, to Ball, Darktown, 8trutters'. The boots are government is- sue, but the music is accordion i and strictly Prlbek and good. Prl- I or to the receipt of his draft call j he was using his accordion for , entertaining and teaching in Manitowee, Wisconsin. For two and a half years he was the leader of a four-piece combo which played in numer- ous resorts in the Wisconsin j country This orchestra first started back in the days of a high school swing band In which Prlbek played. His high school playing also j launched his teaching career. One day he received a call at the high school from a downtown ! studio. His abilities won him a job giving lessons while he was yet a student. For the three years Don taught 50 students each week. But the Armv didn't prevent his playing. While taking his ba- sic training at Fort MacArthur, California, word got around that Prlbek had his accordion with him. An audition won him sev- eral appearances on Glnnie Slmms' television show. "Front arid Center." In nearby Holly- wood he played over both NBC and ABC network programs. The Canal Zone Community, too. have felt the Influence of Pribek's musicianship. His first ' public appearance was in the Gatun Civic Council's Vaudeville Varities Nov. 28. He has played at the Cristobal YMCA and the Fort Sherman ; Service Club. And there is more I to come. He said, "The people In the Zone want to hear good stan- 1 nerd tunes from the States." The Fort Sherman Musicians' Club of , which Pribek Is president is now organizing a replica of his civll- i Ian combo to mee this demand. And all of this started 16 years ago when Papa Pribek decided ithat little six-year-old Don should be the family musician. Don liked the accordion; the ac- cordion liked Don. The Army I likes both of them and the music , they produce. Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Stokes I Entertain With Dinner Party Mr. and Mrs. Edward I Stokes of the De Lesseps Area, were hosts for a dinner party at [their home last evening. > Their guests included Mr. and I Mrs. William E. Adams. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Henrlquez. Mr. and Mrs. W. Fritz Humphreys. Mr. and Mrs. Albert G Delsz, Dr .and Mrs. J. M. Wilkerson, Captain and Mrs. William Par- sons. Mr. and Mrs. Marcel Grin- goire, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Howard and Captain J. Klrsch- ener of the S.S. "Panama." Mrs. M. Walker is Visitor in Margarita Mrs. Melvin E. Walker of An- I con, is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Walter D. Williams of Margarita, for several days. Shirk Family to Holiday In the States Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shirk of Gatun. accompanied by their children, Henrv Jr., and Susan N. will sail aboard the "Panama" tomorrow for New York en route Pen Women Open 1st Xmas Bazaar At Hotel.Tlvoli The public is invited to the first annual Christmas Bazaar to ace season visiting friends. relatives and to Reading Pennsylvania, where De given by the National League thev will spend the Christmas 0f American Pen Women in their ' Little Gallery at the Hotel Ti-: oil today from 4 until 9 p.m. Everything to be exhibited la the work of local Pen Women I members, and all items are ap-. Freddie Ann Sergeant The fifth birthday anniversa-] pfoprte for Christmas git-giv- Dr. A. Sanguineti Host for Buffet Supper Dr. Albano Sanguineti of Cris- I toba!, entertained the members of the Italian-Panamanian As- sociation with a buffet supper in S^^th^pWrSS'^U ^d water color paintings S55 SWSSe of he handpalnte OgPfctal j mtnt, rolon mltM, and books are among thei mSlU' .253' .V- w.^nrotrt > gift suggestions which will be on, The birthday cake, decorated, *" *& everything In and suitably Inscribed, was sur- &32RFyF rounded with novelty candles re- tne "*zaar presenting little girls. Those invited to help celebrate were Nancy Chadwlck. Alexis and Sheila Endara, Ralph DeBoyrle, Dickie Hull. Stephanie Maher, Laurie Morales, Jo Carol Pretto. Angela Brennan, Anna Raquel Gallardo, Cecilia Grtmaldo and Freddie Ann's brother. Charles David Gallardo. Atlantic Side American Society Chooses Officers the ball room of the Washington Hotel Monday night. Fort Gulick NX.O. The group meet the first Mon- | Wives Meet day night in each month. The Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock president is Lie. Alfonso Correa the regular monthly meeting of | Garcia. Leaving to Spend Holidays in New Jersey Mr. and Mrs. Howard E. Mun- ro. until recently residents of Ga- tun, now living In Ancon. will sail tomorrow on the S.S. "Pan- ama" for New York. They will visit the mother of Mrs. Munro. Mrs. G. Walla, in Camdeh, New Jersey, over the holiday season. They will be Joined over the Christmas holidays by their chil- dren, Howard, a Junior at Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology in Boston and Miss Elizabeth Munro. a sophomore at Beaver College, Jenklngtown, Pennsylva- nia. the Fort Gulick N.C.O. Kelly-White Wedding at Coco Solo Chapel The wedding of Miss Ellen Jean Kelly o fBronx. New York City, and Thomas Richard White of Coco Solo, took place Tuesday evening, December 4. In the Cha- pel at Coco Solo. The ceremony was preformed by the Chaplain Lt. Commander EX. Pralno. The bride was attired In a street length dress of white ny- lon net and wore a corsage of white gardenias and white acces- sories. Mrs. White Is the daughter of COLON, Dec. The Ameri- can Society of the Republic of Panam, Coln Division, was re- established in October In accord- ance with the constitution and by-laws of that organization when the society was founded in 1932 The following were elected on a provisional status as officers and members of the board of di- rectors, until the first general meeting slated for January, 1952: President, Charles E. Maher; Vice-President, James W. Cain; Secretary, William A. Hanly; Treasurer, William B. Kam; Di- rector, Dr. Harry Eno; Director, Robert Von Tress and Director, the late Theodore A. Aanstoos. POND'S aw fo.-el.tla> id piwdsr ll-la-aa Not a coke make-up. Not a greasy foundation. Goti on without water. Stayt en- much longer than powder. Perfect to carry! Can't spill over handbag or dork domos. COFFEE ON THE HOUSE GLENDALE. Ariz. (U.P.i City officials and the Glendale cham- ber of commerce hope to make this a community where no ser- vice man can buy a cup of coffee. They have arranged lt so that any man or woman in uniform from nearby Luke Air Force base, or just passing through, who visits a cafe or lunch counter and asks for coffee will be told "it's on the house." WONDERING WHAT TO GIVE THIS CHRISTMAS ? t.j "Personalize" compacts. cigarette lighter. Jewelry, rings, watches, etc. We engrave them quickly, beautifully to order. TAHITI THE JEWELRY STORE 1J7 CENTRAL AVE. 137 Use your Xmas Dollar NOW. Open until 9 p.m. 'till Xmas. la ala angsl-iwest liadas Csseplets whti downy swff MOTTA'S brings you (iftS From PANAMA The "Pollera Blouse" ia modified version of the original) Linen Skirts and Peasant Blouses with colorful embroidery. Hand-blocked Figures of the Pollera and Montuna in Scarves. Linen Towels, Place Mata. Colorful Straw Luncheon MatsPanam inscribed. MADE EXCLUSIVELY FOR MOTTA'S IN PANAMA. Panam Coln Suddenly, on every hand Keep out dirt and germ. Help prevent infection. (|ofcwOKflofteton * IMM'IIH LLI.U. RCA VICTOR CONSOLE 25 or 60 Cycle 3 speeds 8 bands 8 tubes Made only for the tropics Mahogany Walnut Blonde )?tt-.fj2!K-0fcr,nf Preset than'thU luxurious KCA VICTOR Radio Phonograph with large 12-inch dynamic speaker. Unsurpassed tonal quality. Con- tains marvelous new electronic "Mlcrotunlng." A never to be forgotten Christmas present. EXTREMELY GENEROCSCREDIT TERMS PANAMA RADIO ^*, CORPORATION *^ tt Central Avenue Phones: 2-33*4 y t-UM BIRDS EYE Cut Graan Beans Because all the work is done; there's no waste to bother with! a new and wonderful nail polish. CUTEX %tit SkffltoM,* No other nail polish offers so much not even the mott expensive polishes! Amazing wear without peeling or chipping. Alluring, lasting luttre. Array of fashionable, fadeless shades. Never before a nail polish with so many * extras. Beautiful "dreMing table" bottle. Long- handled "artist's" brush for thst professional touch in application. Ift true, not even expensive nail polhet offer so mmny extras as Cutex Nail Brilliance. Try it today! i R emember &n ater CDay UJecember 8th. with a beautiful CAKE from our MODERN BAKERY \^)tner (ift Suggestions .. Perugina Candy Peek Frean's English Biscuits Imported Perfumes A Set of Italian Chinaware FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE S.A.S. will be OPEN SATURDAY, December 8th. from 7 A.M. to 1 P.M. Our BAKERY and BODEGA Open 7 A.M. to 7 P.M. f/ewfner/Hm MORE EFFECTIVE LONGER. PAGE EIGHT THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILI NEWSPAPER THURSDAY, DECEMRER , Cargo and Freight-Ships and Planes- Arrivals and Departures Shipping & Airline News TERRY D (FOR DEATH) DAY Brazil Now Building Fleet of Large Tankers GLASGOW. Dec. 6 (UP The new tanker Ceara. 16.500-tons. was Jaunched yesterday by Seo- ra Borges Fortes, the wife of the Brazilian Naval attache. The tanker Is one of four ves- sels being built by the shipping company for Brazilian Tankers" Purchasing Commission, and measures 510 feet long with n top speed of 14-',2 knots under load- ed conditions. Chairman Hugh MacMillan of the Blythwod Company said that It was "very heartening and en- couraging" to find Brazil now determined to build a fleet of large tanker vessels. About June 28 the 34.000-ton liner will sail from New York on a one-month North Cape Cruise, scheduled by popular demand following last season's sell-out success. The Caronia's itinerary will take her north to Iceland, above the Arctic Circle to the North Cape, through the Norwe- gian fjords, and to ports in Scan- dinavia, Scotland. Ireland. France and England. Stop-over privileges permit summer tours of Britain and the Continent be- fore returning to New York. Rates are from $975. Cunard Line Announces Three Spring Cruises Three luxury cruises during the spring and summer of 1952 have been scheduled for Cunard's famed world cruise liner Caronla. marking the Line's postwar de- but into an April July cruise season highly popular among va- cationists of the 1930s The schedule announced today by Harold P- Borer, general mana- ger of the Cunard Line In the United States. Includes a 41-day European Spring Cruise, a sum- mer holiday voyage to the West Indies and a North Cape Cruise to the Land of the Midnight Sun. Following her European voy- age, the caronia will leave New York about June 14 on a-.V 11-day Sunshine Cruise to the West In- dies, offering summer vacation- ists en opportunity to enjoy the pleasure of a seagoing Caribbean holiday. Minimum rate is $270. New Navigational Aid To be Show nto European Aviation LONDON, Dec. 6 The Decca Flight Log. the Important new British navigational aid, is to be demonstrated to representatives of more than 60 European civil aviation authorities. They will be observing its performance in a series of flights to be conduct- ed from London airport over the next few weeks. The Flight Log is a machine I which automatically shows a pi- |lot the position of his aircraft on i a map by a moving pointer. To find out where he is the pilot merely has to look at this polnt- |er: the line which it has drawn shows him his previous track. The equipment consists of a map fitted in a case about the (slze of a large cigarette box. The ' oolnter is a stylus oen controlled by radio beams. These beams are sent out by a chain of radio sta- Jons and a re~.?!ver In the air- craft nicks i'pthe beam and plots the aircraft's position In relation to them. No tuning Is required and operation is independent of atmospheric conditions. This automatic navigator is an addition to the standard Decca radio aid which Is already In use In about a thousand ships and aircraft. Without this addition, however, the pilot has to trans- fer meter readings to a special chart to check his position. With the Flight Log the process is au- tomatic. The map unit can easily be fit- ted to the pilot's dashboard since the visible section la only about 10 inches by 4 inches in size. The entire set, Including receivers and power unit, weighs less than 125 lbs. PAO/IC^RGATINE-BRAZiL LINE Y^-^POPE ANNOUNCE TAIBOT, INC. SfS "P & T SEAFARER" i ON BERTH AT BALBOA DECEMBER 8TH, 1951 Accepting Refrigerated & General Cargo for LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO PORTLAND SEATTLE & VANCOUVER tm m *i W. Andrews & Company BALBOA Phone 2-1258 CRISTOBAL Phone 3.2161 Trippe Strives to Cut High Priced Air Fares A showdown Is nearlng In a one-man fight against a power- ful aviation bloc that has pre- vented trans-Atlantic air fare from being reduced, according to Pan American World Airways. Juan Terry Trippe, the far- sighted president of Pan AmVl- can World Airways, says that\ the other members O the Inter- national Air Transport Associa- tion (IATA) still refuse to go a- long with his plan to provide low- cost tourist-type air travel, he will go It alone. By next summer, Trippe says, travelers between the Americas and Europe will have their choice of Pan American's present luxu- ry service at $375 one way. or of tourist-type flights at $225 one way. with 10 per cent off for a round-trip. Thus a flight across the Atlan- tic and back could be made for $105 a price that would open the road to travel to millions who never beXore could afford It. This decision to take air transportation out of the luxu- ry classification was first voic- ed by Trippe eight years ago. He put it inot effect in PAA's Latin American Division in 1948 long enough ago to demon- strate its practicability. Trippe had no opportunity to put his plan into practice until after the war. when the neces- sary equipment was available and travel restrictions had been lifted, but he did reduce fares to Latin America four times after V-T Day. Pan American's route between N?w York and San Juan. Puerto Rico, was selected as the testing laboratory. It was decided that a one-way fare of $75 was with- in pocketbook range of most tra- velers on the route. The ques- tion was whether a $75 fare was feasible. The regular fare was $133. There were several possible a- reas of economizing, but there would be no compromise with safety, Trippe decreed. Instead, more seats were added and frills eliminated. So, on Sept. 24, 1948. the trail- blazing tourist-type service be- gan.' with one flight each way dally. In less than three years, PAA's traffic over the route was so heavy that the tourist fare was cut to $64, or four cents a mile, and the regular Clipper fare was reduced to $100. Statistics tell the story. In the first eight months of 1948, before the tourist plan went Into effect, Pan American car- ried 52,811 passengers between New York and San Juan. For the same eight months In 1951. the traffic totaled 125,110 passengers a gain of 137 per cent! Of these. 36.000 traveled on re- gular Clippers and 88.510 used tourist service, proving that the 91 Students Receive ARC Standard First Course Diploma Today FO'RT OULICK, Dec. 6 A to- tal of 91 students (67 residents of Fort Oulick and 24 from Fort Davis), who recently completed the American Red Cross Stand- ard First Course, will graduate at exercises to be held at the Fort Gulick Theater this afternoon. The ARC Standard First Aid Course Is part of the program of the Army-Navy-Air Force Disas- ter Control Sub-Center (Atlan- tic) whose Director Is Colonel Henry F. Taylor. The principal address at the exercises will be delivered by Captain Robert L. Ware (MC), USN. Executive Officer, U.S. Na- val Hospital, Coco Solo. Colonel Henry F. Taylor, com- mending officer. Atlantic Sector, will present the diplomas and first aid cards to the graduates. Captain James E. Hemann, At- lantic Sector Chaplain, will pro- nounce the Invocation and the benediction. Appropriate music for the ex- ercises will be furnished by the 60th Army Band of Fort Oulick under the baton" of WOJO Emi- lio Rodriguez. FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Or Crutches BY MERRILL BLOSSER lower fare did not ruin first class travel. In 1949, Pan American ex- tended its tourist service from San Juan to Buenos Aires and inaugurated it between Miami and Panama between Houston, New Orleans and Panama. Then it was extended from Pa- nama to Buenos Aires on the West Coast. Healthy traffic in- creases have resulted. By making it possible tor more persons to travel, lower fares are Living tourism a tremendous boost. Crashes Wrong Door WILLIAMSON, W. Va. (UP) Rary Musick, 25, followed the wrong traffic oattem and tried to go out the "in" door at a su- oer-market here. The Williamson life saving crew nulled him out of the wreckage of the plate-glass door and took him to the hospi- tal, where he was treated with 33 stitches In his face, arms and stomach. mosr famous Location 2000 modern rooms bothradioMuzak spotless comfort -t soth $t! NEW YORK ON TIMES SQUARE IT RADIO CITY '"* "'. "Hi l I Mac* mpmi 0O660NCT.1 "mOOGKT &OVOVVf\H PKJVWtKJ Wl VOOWSfcS ON TV* TO* '. r HfMCft WE * CHRIS VVKLKEN. Planeteer Space Pioneers BY RUSS WINTERBOTHAM WSSt&tT CUKt-IM' PK -CILIA'S POP .T" KC. u. a nt. Off 'win mt warm, tu h=Z^ greeting, ^ GUVNOR.' 1 -; V BIT Of* i \\SLOW, WHAT? 35fc ^r^r^p^p^gVi^B| ^z-~i v***^ 1 -----------_-----JUlJ & NA-\W>'. OW,V.Y\_" SO WWK* '.WE'* OWtOrMt TO HMSfc MtOOND ~ \N COV\9V\VT\OK'. SfcX .IV ?SOT I OOVNXS AKK- r' ivime twit *- HOW MKNR A WVN ,60YDWOTOV\ V PitWftVKG tVot "vo oo wwk*' SO OWAV, SNVG L '.J CAPTAIN EAST The Owner BY LESLIE TTIR MO WONDER 7 WT MR.HIU 16 THE "; RICHIE TRIED I EASY. WME" VOU TELL MM TO NSCREDItV MONT TM TESTS HE WW WASH* OT0RV\A6tt JO MJCWKMMOD with th- pouct-f Of w*#te tusro>AX! HE'S COWHECTED WITH THE PLAWT! BUT MR. HH.L It) BUSY! HE'S Ml CONPEttUCE WITH THE OWNERl VOU CAN'T-: . AH.THEY'RB COMING our WOW I 'SO CLAY RICHIE Ml THE OWNER. EH I. ,-rm j*-i;.t rial* VIC FLINT Mistakes? BE MICHAEL O'MALLEI A*/YOU'D TRY1-----S BLACKMAIL AGAIN IPL X (SAVE VOU ANOTHER CHANO/ VOU KNOW,- TOO AAUCM/ fiffTTINd A n WHAT DO VOU ITMAT B- UTTLB NBBVOUftl BXPOCT WITH "SBERISH EH? >OURB-rr--' T>'AT CANNON k WILL. WRJTIN ^| POINTING ATA\e**TiHBMD" BBCR1*K PlDEATHLK** PROSE?/, YOU TO THE CWAIRVBT/ S&SSss "^^- Titea *we9to OITB BOARDING BOUSE . with . MAJOR BOOPLE OUT OUR WAX **^^ By J. R. WILLIAM A 0KS HLLO, MRS. HOOPLE.' (?eM5MBee old peescott Pike? OR iSyCR MEMORV LIKE-THE FELLA 6MS: "MY WIFE'S 30T A TERRIBLE- MEWORV, MEVeKT=DR- GET6 ANYTHlMf"? KYUk-K/K' -** MEET THE OTHER HALF Of MV. ALL-STAR COMEDyT/M ~ ><\-*~H\6NAWE'S, ^->=r7 CARP.' WES, 1 REMEMBCR VOU, * AND I SMeO A LILY*TO LAV ON YtJUR 3DIES.'-* IS IT TRUE YOU USED TO BE AfJ ARCHITECT BECAME AN ACTOR. TO-DRAW BETTER YE SODS/ WHATS THe, A CATTLE STAMPEPE? NO. IT'S A COWBOY STAMPEDE--TH CREEKS COME UP SUPDENLV.' BUT rrS JUST AS BAD AS A CATTLE STAMPEDE BY TH' TIME THEY STT ALL THEIR STUFF ACROSS YOU/ ^ ->-* !fc xi. :*3*^ ' H * *-U| ' THE SAME PIFFEREMCE ju^mi*,1 . _ -. v . . HtTRgDAT. DECEMBER I. 19*1 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE RIR1 Further Top Tax Official Out; Denies Any Part Of Shakedown WASHINGTON, Dec. 6.(UP)Chief Counsel pharleg Oliphant resigned from the Internal Re- venue Bureau yestetrday and angrily protested that House investigator aired "fantastic" charges that fie participated in an attempted $500,000 tax shake- iown. Simultaneously, "influence peddler" Frank riath;.n told a House Ways and Mean3 Subcommit- tee investigating tax scandals that the shakedown pharges, made by ex-Capone attorney Abraham Teitelbaum, are "a dirty, filthy lie." Oliphant suggested bitterly that the Chicago |awyer may have heen trying tp take the heat off tax case lodged against him. He demanded the right to testify but subcom- littee members did not know how soon he would called. IN HOLLYWOOD BY BRSKINE JOHNSON NBA SUM Correspondent HOLLYWOOD (NBA) Oli- da Qray coming backboneless hips, quivering shoulder, and all It's good news for all the born- too-late.lads who have listened to Pop rave about the undulat- ing beauty of his whlppersnapper days who could have given Btty Grable lessons In the snake-hips As soon as she sells her life story to the right movie producer. Olida of .the sea-green eyes, high cheekbones and half-parted lips, thing I Have Is yours. I ran off- People of Americas Held Key To Needs Of Own Hemisphere i WASHINGTON, Dec. (USIS) ; The "American Republics are united In spirit'' In the present emergency but the final solution of their current problems will de-. nd upon their peoples, the U.S. . ate Department hi out. late Department has pointed; This U.S. view is presented In, a pamphlet which reviews the; accomplishments of the fourth! meeting of consultation of Amer- ican foreign ministers, held last uiuig 1 nave is yuuin. i iu **- ican ioreign ministers, neia w stage and told Sophie that this spring m Washington. The pub- was a crazy man. llcation is titled "The American " 'Honey, go1 back,' said Sophie, I Republics Strengthen Contlnen-1 'He's net craay. That's Al Jolson, I tal Security." honey.'" Olida became the golden dam- sel of Broadway in the Zlegfleld Follies of 1921, which ran for three annual editions. Her co- stars were a gangling rope spin- ner named Will Rogers and the team of Gallagher and Shean. She starred at her own Broadway nltery, the Rendezvous, toured The pamphlet observed that; Secretary of State Dean Acheson had said in the closing minute1 for of the foreign ministers' meeting that Judgment upon the agree-' ments reached there "will be made by our peoples and by thel peoples of the world and by his-' lory." cneeaDones ana niii-|iwwa - - --------.-. -_ .-- is going to bounce back as an In- Europe and once disappeared ln- thS-rlesh attraction and give,to the Sahara desert for four nose beads and tassels a ^I'^'W^ngjj^ "Some things, however, 'are al- ready clear,'" the Department, publication said. "The American. .Republics are united in spirit In Oliphant made public, along i <>u *E,n- .. h .,_._, lh|m.! wiped out her $2,000,000 fortune, the present wrJd-wW enwwjjW- rith his letter of resignation I *&f8Bi ? Mr.'*?-*... r.iTrto md* four movies. | cy, They have shown themselves Teitelbaum testified Tuesday uiipnani maae puonc, '* I"hAT-ven de her famOBsshlm-iwip__ hat Nathan and Bert K. Naster with his letter of resignation! J&fSRthepiayboysrt the Gilda made four movies. f Hollywood, Fla.. demanded his personal income Ux returns "7 *"''Vl Sir lSTmla and t She was caught in Waraaw SK2rrr"fer""-''--- feLr r-BaiWSISS3&S&&&23Sei Teitelbaum claimed he ran ditlon. able to face the consequences of! the crisis and to plan together j Into tax troubles when he re- listed the extortion attempt. Teitelbaum also aid The latter showed net worth is $4.693^4 and *"JTOfX?Lt5fr*E. orifices. They have examined in hi,! Whal's more, she may even a few hoonbefoft^h ""l Ger ; detail the multifarious problems As chief wave her hips on the screen. I man planes dropped bombs mpt. net worth is $4.693.84. As chief. wave n "W ASBi- Sii*^ the citv urn also ..id heP wa, counsel, the 42-ye.r-old ^S5MJMJ2M^iE^^lflMM JSSPS 0SS&MUE*m.l^iEtoE. old- that Nathan and Naster | drew a salary of $12,500 a year. I m only 48.1 don 11 s about my Ud Oliphant and T. Lamarl Teitelbaum had tesUfled that 'audle ousted former assistant j Nathan and Naster claimed to ttorney General, "in their vest- represent a "clique of high - ockets. Subcommittee Chairman I Cecil R. King (D-Calif.) open- led yesterday hearing by say- I inf that no evidence had keen offered that high government I official* took part in the al- lleged shakedown effort. But he charged that Caudle. i'ho was fired Nov. 18 as chief ficlals looking for "soft touches. He said he was told that the clique Included Caudle, Oli- phant, General Servase Ad- ministrator Jess Larson, and age. darling. Marlene Dietrich's doing pictures today and she's a grandmother. Why can't I?" Gllda ran her long fingers, an" to herself and then said: Involved and have established framework of cooperation for their solution. The feeling that difficult tasks had been success- tipped with blood-red nail polish, through her cropped blonde hair. Four years ago, she. said, she mlnistrator Jess Larson, and wiggled what she thought would ..-..-. the world'a bet- former Internal Revenue Com- be her last wiggle, packed her worm, it maae tne worm a oe missioners George D. Schoene- grass skirt away and, racked by l *' _______ tuberculosis, went to Colorado to "I did the shimmy to that in fu accomplished was general the Follies. The shimmy gave at t'he cIose o( the meeting, people a chance to let loose. It, .ultimate success depend was really an African aboriginal dance, darling, and it showed people how to lose their Inhibi- tions. The shimmy swept the man and Joseph D. Nun an, Jr. King noted that all of the if tax frand prosecutions in the oMlcials have vehemently de- u *,..... -v - uatlce Department, made -iHnled any part in the scheme and was pronounced in good shape by ' *- her doctors last February. die. She pulled a happy switch on the Camille story, though, and Big howl in the forthcoming "Ma and Pa Kettle in Paris" will come whan Marjorte Main gets Ultimate success depends, as It must and should in a commu- nity of democratic nations, on the peoples of the Americas. If they understand the crucial Is- sues being decided in the world,; they will harden their determi- nation that aggression shall not; succeed. For the attainment of this goal, their governments,: through the foreign ministers, iasy for Nathan to use his name said that, m the absence Of at- |n -influence peddling" schemes.rect testimony linking them to [oliphant flatly denied any i it, "we assume they did not lelations with Nathan and Nas-, participate. ler He sharply criticized Caudle [ He said he is quitting his I for maintenanlng and "avowed. ki4 800-a-vear job because he is ope and constant friendship" fed up with "attacks, vlliflca-' with Nathan despite warnings {ion, rumor and innuendo" pub- that Nathan was using the re-!wa8 on the sunny siae or ww iV^fZJ^Uji'' off* t" Banta licized under-a Congressional l.tlonshlp to build himself up health chart was to via tar turnuie w committee's protection. as an influential character in home town.Milwaukee.andlata^scnom a f Nathan swore that he never Washington. offered to help Teitelbaum "fix" His tax difficulties, and said; I King said Larson also allowed j "I don't know how a man can Nathan to pay for his hotel "Ita*th same oldi and. dar- treat women where I come from, ling" she EX25SF& hair and beats the male dancer to a started to fall out while I was 111. P"'P-_________^_ That's why I'm wearing these l ^^ aBvwnv lousy false lashes." VALPARAISO, Ind (UP) - ..* twin, mirto did when she \ When the city water department uniendo" pub-'that NaTtan waV'usin, the re- waon**SSfftS^b?.\.r^?!^ Congressional llatlon.hlp, to build himself Pihealth chart was to vhdt her tornUie water Incensed over an apache dance, have provided the ground wons. screams, "that's not the way they I in the balance of the uation. a new hope has been put in the scale of freedom, peace and security." EHSsiaSSsw* lake up such a fantastic story.", room on one occasion and other- Nathan admitted he h wise "pose as a friend," despite known Teitelbaum for several Larson's angry testimony Tues- ears. and that they have visit - 1 In one another's homes. He also knew; Mrs. Shryrr enkin. who testified Tusada pensive medical treatment. She bubbled: "It snowed'on my opening night, but people were lined up The Screen Bares Marriage's Vital Problem, in "A MODERN MARRIAGE" Keiauver Thinking Of Getting Into Presidential Race SEATTLE. Wash.. Dec. 6 (UP) Sen. Estes Kefauver said yes- terday he would announce early next year whether or not he will seek the Democratic nomi- nation for President. "I will appraise the situation and make a decision, probably around Feb. 1," the Tennessee Democrat said. "Many of my friends have been interested in putting my hat in the ring. I told them I'm not running at the pre- sent time." He said he was not interested in the vice presidency. Kefauver said If he decided to seek the Presidential nomi- nation, he would do so "Pres- ident Truman's position not- withstanding." "However, if President Tru- man is nominated, I will sup- port him." he added. Kefauver said he hadn't talk- ed with the President and did not know what Mr. Truman planned in connection with the 1952 elections. If Kefauver decides to run he said he probably would make his decision before it is known what Mr. Truman's In- tentions are. The Senator said he had some doubt that Mr. Truman would seek the noml-l nation. i "President Truman can be re-; nominated If he wants to be,' and if he is nominated he can elected,'' Kefauver said. "If the President does decide to run, I don't expect him to make an announcement of the fact until shortly before the convention." Kefauver told a news conference. The lawmaker, who gained fame as chairman of the Sen-f ate subcommittee Investigating i crime, said he thought Oen. Dwight D. Eisenhower would make a "formidable candidate of either party." He said he was in no posi- tion to appraise Sen. Robert A. Taft as a candidate for the Republican nomination. "I have a feeling Taft would have a hard time winning the Presidency," Kefauver said. GdLy)xu i ( < a r -1 i:M S:M, 8:25 7:M, 8:5 p.m. WEEK-END RELEASE! TODAY DAVID BRIAN PWlUJilttlfJ -nsssaff EDVVN lmarin , Panama Canal Clubhouses Showing Tonight! BALBOA Alr-C.ndllionfJ :IS A 1:1* David WAYNE Tom EWrLL "UP FRONT" Friday "SUiiAaTOOT" DIABLO HTS. 1:1S A 7:5* Jack WARNER a Jimmy HANLEY 'THE BLUE LAMP" Friday "HIT PAKADE" COCOLI I 15 a *:M John CARROL Marie MarDONALD "HIT PARADE" Friday sonilsiiu: 1-iOM" PEDRC MIGUEL is a. kin i Friday) Barrier WILLIAMS a> Had SKELTON 'TEXAS CARNIVAL" GAMBOA Robert CUMMINGS aj Joan CAULFIELO "GIRL OF THE YEAR" (Technicolor) Saturday "SOUTH3IDE l-iaaa" GATUN 7:M (Friday) Batty GRABLE MacOonald CAREY 'Meet Me After The Show' chairman said. "H points up the tact that rack persons thrive on any public official who Is more interested In high living than in his own and the government's reputa- tion." Nathan, who formerly lived in In support of Teltelbaum's story, but thought she wj Mrs. Teltel- aum. The self-styled gambler and promoter of .deals" said the at he knew about the tax case vas when "Mrs. Teitelbaum" ailed him long distance from flaml to New York and told, iw,i,tavuaanunia dm that Naster was seeking Pittsburgh but now divides his 125,000 "or maybe It was $175,-. tT,e between New York. Miami from Teitelbaum "for hlsian(i Washington, told the ln- ax case." ^ : .vestlgators that he-makes his Nathan said he called Naster, jiving promoting ."deals with 1th whom he had had some different people.". . t "business deals," and ask-, _ d him what was going on. He was hazy about the details. Naster told him. he said, that | however, and was "unable to Teitelbaum had come to him remember" specific figures on ;or help in getting his tax.nts income and gambling losses, troubles straightened out and | although he was sure the latter :hat he had offered to get him ran more than $20,000 this year. good lawyer.------------------------------- "I asked him why he waaipa. i Cu.u Jasking so much money. He said UOOQe LXeCUTIVe fthis Js a high class lawyer.'" Mrs. Menkin had told the sub- leommittee she telephoned Na- Ithan to tell him that Teitelbaum Larsons angry wiuaiuuv .1 u"- nlgnt, DUo peoc wnt'u r day that he recognized Nathan | ,or blocks outside that little club aanalnllunnce.natUl+fejnd dWito see rn* J aMbced better than. i beat to shake film OTf. eVer. I Jast couamn't turn It off. Thai is an okject lesson in They were payii vicious influtnce seeking," the Arriving On Trip O. W. Franke. Operations wanted no part of the $500.000 Manager of the Dodge division lahakedown. She said Nathan 0f the Chrysler Corporation of fold her Teitelbaum was mak- Detroit, Is scheduled to arrive ling a big mistake. Nathan admitted that his close friendship with Caudle gave "a let of pople" the idea that he coald fix tax cases. But he swore that he "never sked Caadle for no help on no tax ease at ao time." "You can't oven socialise with people any mere with- out something being wrong." He complained. "Maybe it's fceeatise I earn* from the ful- ler, I don't knew." Nathan said he sometimes used to visit the Justice De- partment, but never to discuss a tax case. He went "jnst to aay hello to Caudle and some of the other boys i knew. I sometimes would see Rothwack or Smith." Meyer Rothwack. a top Jus- tice Department tax official, had Issued a statement earlier denying* that he ever was In- troduced as a "buddy" of Na- than's as Mrs. Menkin testified Tuesday. ., , .Turner Smith was Caudle's top assistant, and has resigned. Nathan said he had met Oli- phant onceat the Kentucky Darby. DHphant, who disclosed his resignation at a news confer- ence, told President Truman that he has "never had any re- lationship with the alleged ex- tortionists." Be said that Teitelbaum, who made the charges, is "a self- described former Capone repre- sentative, himself charged with tax fraud." ___ Internal Revenue Commis- sioner John B. Dunlap said Oll- phjmt's letter of resignation "peaks lor itself." He made clear that Oliphant resigned entirely of his own volition, and not under pressure. < Oliphant's name has reme ] Si several timas dering the ese InoestigaUen of tax candis which has led to the dismissal, resignation or sus- pension of more than M be- reaa efficlate aad employes. in Panam today from Urna. Per. Mr. Franke will via Panagra They were paying me StON a week. I'm still a big koxefflce at- traction, darling. What do yoe think ef that? "Now I'm raring to get on with my dancing. But first this life story of mine for the movies. They're doing pictures about Eva Tanguay and Blossom Seeley and the Yama-Yama girl. People who never heard of them know about me." , Gilda talked about her long careerher three husbands ('I never knew real love, darling") and the spangled, frantic decades through which she shook hei torso. As Maryanna Michalska, she started on the Stardust trail when she picked up a megaphone at a Milwaukee night club and sang some Polish folk songs and a Tostic operatic aria. "In broken English yet," Gilda sighed. "Then I went to Chicago, and Rosalie Stewart discovered me. I never had a singing or dancing lesson in my life. Sophie Tucker put me on at one of the Sunday night Winter Garden concerts In New York. People went wild. "A man rushed up to the foot- Mr. Franke will spend a few "f m"'V .kV. hUnr-it davs here in extending hU va- Ufhts. and threw hUi coat, cation on the Isthmus. He is wallet _and_ to watcl^ on accompanied by Mrs. Franke. his the You can make every member of the family happy this Xmas with the wonderful bargain priced rifts we offer yea. Men's and ladles' watches. 17 Jewels, goldfllled. guaranteed frese tN.- Beautllul Costume Jewelry from $1- Birthstone Rings Ilesa $7.5* and many more articles to choose from. ON TERMS Come In now with your Xmas Dollar and save at HAWAII JEWELRY The Reliable Stare M Central Ave. M OPEN UNTIL F.M. stage. 'Gilda,' he shouted, 'every- .. why mote women every day aie swrtehirig to tea new. improved It's because Modes jive. Ihem more fraadom more cmfcri.m-f 'aM-taaa they 'v. ever enjoyed be* fees. And hare's way. Tais aow.'-iav proved laailary napkin has extra coi ton on the edgesextra softness lo help prevent'.chafing." And there's a irlph sefety shield fere*. re-long protect ion. Are y*i enjoying these advaa- PAGE TEN THF PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, M Key West, Cristobal Hoopsters To Clash Tonigh Game Set For Coco Solo; Football Tilt Tomorrow Bales College Picks balboa High ROTC Rifle Team New Football Coach ... _.. ... , for Next Season Again Defeats Ohio Wesleyan The Key West (Florida) High School athletes By United Press According to word received, the cadets of Balboa High School in '""7 ".Z" i "u _;!, ? Station irvmnasium where they will take on the Cr.S- Monday has picked a man for margin In their first match, the Baltoa ROTC rifle team had their DT*1 _.*?,. ,T 11 next vear work cut out for them to defeat the Ohio colleges team this time. tobal High basketball contingent. I Bates college of Uwiston. v The game is slated to get under way at 7:30. 'Maine year Bates College Maine turned the reins over to Bob Hatch an assistant to the on all positions, particularly In the standing position, where Cadets The Conchs here for both bas-, Cristobal, of course, copped the 0Htgotng coach. Raymond 'Due-' Hendrickson and Jordan shot particularly good scores. High score Af &-SLSfil< &SJS& ..... -v. S* Po^.f.Hat.h \ a former fort* second ^i^g^a^^ score of 368/ Summary of the two matches Motorcycle Race Slated For Sunday At JuanDiaz-Tocumei the Cristobal Tigers, arrived at The Florldlans will put an ex- Bost university football cap- *tol U* M Tocumen yesterday and were tra tall team on the floor with m wno has ^ etching the g** with a total Prone welcomed at a dinner party at all players six feet or over For- varsity backfield and the fresh- 'now. the Strangers Club last night, i wards are Bob Cooper and James for tne Jast three ..._ Th Kev West players were Baker with Ken Bazo at center '" t Sr , ** ruined up" for uST dlatrlct'S and ^"^Hen^uMdLu.^^S^ sta, wnlch Ph.l.p* Placler .. 03 1650^oop_^mpior^P_Jind cl^OonzaWat ^ ?? '.'. V. Army Sports OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY are*R$ Seal. EfcBSSSi ** *"* me ** < rin,m virtai naming a coach. Thf tSialthough weakened Chairman H. A. Fisher of somewmu by graduation stUl athletic council which dropped EHa *"strong ag- rezurzass Coach Paul William D. Sevon tne Joseph Stavenhagen 03 80 Sitting 87 91 84 82 90 Kneeling 84 83 84 82 71 Standing 78 66 67 71 70 will field a mighty strong ag & lhree.man commluee NAME_ ^ FORT DAVIS. C.Z. A total of "'coach Paul Moser has four screen candidates for the North i Robtlt M. Decker .... 05 twentv-seven officers and en- holdovers In his starting lineup: Carolina State vacancy, inai Don p Smith...... 92 listed- men of the 764th AAA Gun Forwards Arnold Manning and screening, says Fisher, may take phlUp R piKieT .... 9, Battalion Fort Davis, qualified John Anderson, center Roy Wil- three weeks. Fisher declined vesterday with the .30 caliber, son. and guard Bob Bailey. New- comment on possible candidates, carbine Twenty of the group are comer Vernon Bryant will fill in But thetwo names most men- asslgned to Hq. and Hq. Battery at the other guard spot. uoned are George Barclay of and seven to "Able" Battery. Hq. on the bench Moser will have Washington and Lee and Marvin 1 and Hq. had one Expert, five oil Smith, the Salter brothers Bass ot William and Mao-. Sharpshooters, and 14 Marks- and several members of last As for tne coacnes on me out- men; "Able" had three Experts, year's junior varsity squad. __ sde looking in... Feathers and one Sharpshooter, Marksmen. Those men are: William D. Sevon .... 06 Blair Webster ...... 80 Sitting 07 86 90 87 77 Kneeling 80 82 84 74 60 Standing 77 72 66 60 60 NAME Gerald Hendrickson BALBOA HIGH SCHOOL ROTC Prone Sitting Kneeling 07 and three For the football game, which pond both say they have no un- Joseph Fuller...... 08 will be played tomorrow night. mCQlate plans for the future. I Hubert Jordan...... 97 the Panam Railroad train will ----------_ David Hoopes...... 98 be held up for the convenience Jt happened at a football ban-; Bart ley Smith...... 03 of the attending Pacific side re- Monday night hi Cincin- sidents. ThetMdn. which nor- m me scandal-conscious mally leaves Colon at 10 p.m. will innali f0otoall players sliU1 _^ be held for 20 minutes. arTshuddering overa remark | NAME Prane The probable line-ups for to-^shuddenng ^ c0.;Joseph Fuller Gerald Hendrickson .. HQ. 4 HQ. BATTERY Pvt. Luis A. Surez. 183. Ex- pert. Maj. S. J. Verga, 172. sharp- shooter. Cpt. Leo J. Hock, 172. sharp- ntent.s^ame: shooter. ____ Cristobal No. Pvt. Angel Elias, 171. sharP- Anderson...... 6 Munlz, 165. 165. shooter. WOJG Rafael sharpshooter. Pvt. Jos Prez, shooter. Pvt. Csar Canavel, 162, marks- 2nd Lieut. Ernesto Coln, 161. marksman. Pvt. Anselmo Prieto, 158, marksman. WOJG George S. Coughlln, 157, marksman. WOJG Ovidio Peres, Jr., 156, marksman. Pic Nelson Mann, la5, marks- man. Pic Santiago Montalvo, marksman. Pvt. Miguel A. mrrksman. Capt. Louis D. marksman. Pvt. Julio C. marksman. Pvt. Angel A. marksman. Pvt. Rafael A. marksman. Pvt. Hctor Rosado, marksman. Pvt. Germn Zambrano, marksman. "ABLE" BATTERY Manning...... 3 Wilson........10 . Bailey........ 7 sharp- Bryant........u Key Weat No. Cooper........88 Baker........00 Bazo..........99 Henriquez......10 Gonzlez........ shuddering made by Nicit Schundlch, Position captain of their team this year. forward The Wilmeromg. Pennsylvania forwari boy casually mentioned that he d ""j center oeen given an automobile when guard he arrived at Cincinnati. It was guard a swell car," said the grinning Schundich. Position Tension eased and color came forward back to official laces when Nick forward explained that he was joking. center seems he's driving a 1928 Hup- guard m0be and he bought it him- Buard self. Hubert Jordan .... 05 Fred Lee.......... J* 06 98 89 97 92 95 82 06 87 02 88 Sitting Kneeling 100 05 96 77 01 83 85 01 07 78 Standing 80 64 65 57 53 Standing 74 87 79 60 63 Total 342 339 331 328 320 1660 Total 340 332 331 317 304 1633 Total 364 351 330 338 326 1718 Total 368 357 347 341 334 1747 On The Alleys... 153. Borrero, 152, Fournier, Rivera, 150, Miami Open Draws Top U.S.A. Golf Pro's, Amateurs Sears and PAA Flyers Continue! Race For Title In Classic Bowling Leaewe 3525 __ The Sears team sponsored byicooley The scores of Friday night: PAA FLYERS Yoanc But Enterprising SS? cb~ K^seTsa-d- Bo^UntSjgjS; Siga*. Most of the top golfing profes- SH& ^ ^ "^ *^U2^^ 143, sionals. and quite a few big-name 205 162 197 143 141 170 204 209 212 ,102 201 576 203 569 183 586 235 590 159 492 Sunday at 9 a.m. a motorcycle race will be held from Juan Dlaz-to-Tocumen and return to select the team that will repre- sent Panama in the internation- al "Panama Grand Prize 1952 Motorcycle Race," which will be held In Panama City next March. The Panama Grand Prize race is being sponsored by the muni- cipality and several commercial establishments. Official approval for the big race is expected to be received scon from Government officials. The organizing committee of this big race is formed by Mayor Alfredo Alemn, president; Plo de los Caceres, vice-president: David C. Robles, treasurer; Feliz Avadillo Ztilga. secretary and trustees Alejandro Wong, Ray Magan, R. Mcllvalne and Do- mingo Hinds. Technical advisor will be Capt. Hassan of the Pan- ama Traffic Division. Sunday's tria lrace is open to all types of motorcycles. The on- ly requisites are the filling out of the entry forms and adher- ance to the rules. Entries will be closed tomorrow afternoon. There will be three class groups and the distance of the trials will be arranged according to the class. Sports Briefs By UNITED PRESS PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 6. Welterweight Gil Turner Is look- ing for Number 27. The red-hot Philadelphia fighter ran his victory string to 26 straight Monday with a un- animous ten-round decision over Mario Trigo of Los Angeles. That string of 26crowded in- to the last 18 months Includes 23 knockouts. Turner didn't knock Trigo out, but he had him on the ropes in the third. Trigo had one stand- out round, the second, when he 'rocked Turner with a body at- tack. Bombers Edge Yankees 2- In Thrilling Pitchers Duel PANAMA PRO LEAGUE The Standings TEAM Won Lost Pet. Brownies........1 4 1.000 Bombers. '......1 0 1.000 Yankees........0 1 .000 Bluebirds......t 1 .000 LAST NIGHT'S RESULT (Panam Stadium) Bombers 2, Yankees 1. ^ TOMORROW'S GAME (Panam Stadium7:30 p.m.) Brownies vs. Bombers amateurs, are tuning up at Mla- Mercado, 143, mi Beach. They're setting their putting Mndez, 142, and driving sights on the $10.000 Miami Open which opens today. This four-day tourney is the first stop on pro golf's winter tour. And the big names are on hand. hopeful of digging a little gold . from the fairways at swank La WOJG Jos A. Morell, 183. Ex- Qorce Country ciub . 848 987 JANTZEN . 110 147 . 183 . 211 . 148 . 101 9812816 100 233 212 187 148 405 206 570 171 615 151 511 174 552 141. 141. pert. Pvt. Pedro Coln, 183, Expert. Defending Champ Sammy 2nd Lieut. Pedro Mascaro, 182, 8n- & White Su.ph^Spring, Pvt. Cndido Cartagena, 169, \Md expected to have at least sharpshooter. (150 top-notchers. But Snead will 2nd Lieut. Eusebio Surez. 161, have plenty of competition. Most Biarksman of his pro rivals... plus Max Capt.WoodrowC. Schmidt, 147, Faulkner, the British Open kharksman. Champ and Frank Stranahan. of Pvt. Antonio Vidal, 145, marks-:Toledo, a top U.S. amateur... are man. entered. . 843 969 8502662 NASH-WILLYS 150 101 189 147 129 16*7 150 182 158 212 171 488 179 520 193 564 155 460 185 526 806 869 88322558 Melanson. Colston , 8EARS 164 165 188 193 145 224 161 192 216 213 206 535 188 537 189 574 173 534 182 619 014 047 0382799 The Sears team took over the-J"1 . 'strong Nash-Willys team in each 2JS^ " of the three games when the lat- Morwn I ter group was unable to strike I . through to victory. The Sears ,"" keglers took the first game 014!M, to 806. the second 047 to 869. and S*"? ' the final game by 938 to 883. Bud i?,0"- Balcer, as usual, kept up hU;"""" streak of 600 series by snapping SSiitai out games of 224. 213 and 182 forl *aaeiine. a total of 610, and this, coupled' . with his teammate's good scor- * ing. kept the team in the lead over the PAA Flyers. The PAA team, keeping up with the Sears team, smashed, _ Maduros "Jantzen" team in the tfi?yK- same manner, taking the first SE2;" ' game 848 to 843, the second 987 Malcer ' to 969. and the final 981 to 850.' .... Christ Hermann with 590 wul?" high for the Fryers, followed by __ .- n... f% Schneider with 589. while Bllll ff[ /Sfft. Bill Graham Jamison was high for Jantzen It ... with a fine 211. 233 and 171 for fnitrflirf. Rasphall .615. but Leo Preaho dragged hls UM (feet all evening and wound up I with 405, his lowest In several seasons. The standings of the teams are presently as follows; TEAM Won Lost Sears............ 30 It PAA Flyers........ 27 21 Nash............ 21 27 Jantzen .......... 18 30 The ranking playera in the l Classic League, after Bt' play, were as follows: Average ft............ 202- 5 Morton............ 188-10 Jenner............ 186- 4 Hermann.......... 184-25 Madeline.......... 184-13 Best.............. 184- 0 COLUMBUS, Ohio. The ! Minor League scramble continues today at Columbus, Ohio. Triple and Double-A leagues looked over draft eliglbles Mon- day and bought 66 players. The bargain-basement athletes cost a total of 224-thousand dollars. Lower class leagues got a shot Tuesday at what's left. Umpiring Classes PORT OULICK, C.Z. Master Sergeant William L. Graham, well-known local umpire. Is cur- rently conducting a baseball um- piring class at the Army Educa- tion Center at Port Gulick. Classes are held every Tuesday evening from 7 to 9 o'clock. The Friday present enrollment totals four- teen: Army and Naval personnel and civilian employes of the Ar- my, Navy, and the Canal Zone Government. - Anyone wishing to attend these classes, which will end on December 18, Is most welcome to do so. Here'i a timely "tip," Fido Smart merchant* are tending their CHRISTMAS SALES MESSAGES via RADIO STATION HOG I RALEIGH. North Carolina. A three-man screening commit- tee is seeking a new football coach for North Carolina State. Beattle Feathers was fired Monday after eight years at State. He says It may prove "m tha best Interests of all." The committee says it will take some three weeks to name a successor. Speculation centers a- round Coaches George Barclay of Washington and Lee and Marvin Bass of William and Mary. Feathers' overall record was 36 wins. 41 losses and four ties. His 1951 team lost seven out of ten; A crowd of 6,337 paid their way to the National Stadium last night and were' rewarded with a brilliant pitching duel between right-hander Connie Johnson and lefty Eddie Neville of the Chesterfield Bombers and the Carta Vieja Yankees respective- ly. The Bombers copped the ver- dict, 2-1. The winning margin was sup- plied by Bobby Prescott's tower- ing 350-foot homer to left field In the sixth inning. Up to thatpolnt the score was tied at 1-1. The Yankees having drawn first blood with a tally In the second inning when Dale Lynch singled to right, went to second on a passed ball, moved to third when Jim Cronln flied to center and crossed home plate on Manager Al Kubskl's single to left. The Bombers tied the score In the third when Napier singled to center and moved to second when Neville's pickoff throw got by Cronln. Harold Gordon walk- ed. Johnson then attempted to sacrifice but Neville made a fine play to cut off Napier at third. Pepe Osorio got an infield hit over Neville's head which was stopped by shortstop Jazlnski in vain. This loaded the bases. Frank Austin singled to left to score Gordon and Joe Tuminelll ended the rally by hitting into a doubleplay. Both teams turned In fine fielding plays. Prescott made a brilliant stop in the seventh in- ning to cut short a Yankee threat and Joe Montelro made a fine running catch in right for the Bombers also. For the Yankees, Ray Dabek's throw to Jazinski to pick off Prescott at second In the second Inning was excellent. Ne- ville's pickoff of Montelro at first In the sixth Inning was also top caliber. First Blood Carta Vieja AB R H PO A E BOBBY PRE8COTT mm). WE* s& MELBOURNE. Lanky Ken McGregor has boosted the stock of the Australian Davis Cuppers. He moved into the semi-finals of men's singles In the Victorian Tennis Championships at Mel- bourne by beating Ken Rosewall. McGregor downed hla fellow Australian In straight sets. 6-3, 9-7, and 6-3. But young Rosewald showed he can play with the best by breaking through Mc- Gregor's service three times In the second set. SAN FRANCISCO. The win- ner of the Ezzard Charles-Joe Maxim fight may get a title bout with Heavyweight Champ Joe Walcott in San Francisco. Matchmaker Al Weill of the In- ternational Boxing Club is talk- ing it over with Charles and Maxim In San Francisco. Maxim fights Charles neat Wednesday. TACAROPULOS INDUSTRIES, S.A. Phonos: 1002 1003 #4041 Feo Boyd Ave. Coln R P FRESH MILK FRE8H BUTTER RICH ICE CREAM Everything Inspected by the Health Department BOMB DELIVERY Jazlnski, ss Jacobs, 2b . Kropf, cf . Lynch, If . Cronln, lb . Kubskl, 3b . Dabek, c . Sclafanl, rf Neville, p . 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 1 1 1 S S 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 14 1 2 1 5 1 2 2 0 2 0 1 1 4 Totata-. . .32 1 8 24 17 5 Chesterfield AB R H PO A E Osorio, P., cf . 4 Austin, ss . 4 Tuminelll, 3b. 3 Brathwalte. If 4 Montelro, rf . 2 Prescott, 2b. . 3 Napier, c. . 3 Gordon, lb. . 2 Johnson, p 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 10 0 0 2 1 1 1 7 Totals.....28 2 7 27 13 0 Score by Innings Carta Vieja 010 000 0001 Chesterfield 001 001 00x2 Runs Batted InKubskl, Aus- tin, Prescott. Earned Runa Chesterfield 2. Left on Bases Chesterfield 6, Carta Vlela 4. Home RunPrescott. Sacrifices Montelro, Johnaon, Tuminelll. Hit by PitchNeville 1 (Montel- ro). Passed BallNapier. Base on Balls offNeville 1. Struckout byJohnson 7, Neville 5. Losing Pitcher-Neville tO-l). Winning Pitcher-Johnson (1-0). Double- 6laysG o r d o n (unassisted); lubskl, Jacobs, Cronln: Jazlnski, Jacobs. Cronln. UmpiresRob- erts, Karamanltis, Parchment, Hinds. Time of Game2:30. At- tendance6337. BRONCHIAL ASTHMA Sleep Sound AH Night fhe largest selling mtdlclrw to bronchitis and Asthma In all ? Wis- Kdly-cold Canada k Buckle/ Co- nadiol Mixtura tripla octirtfl) J. blessing lo thoutonds and now sow In all drugstores. Thar li nothing o sofa and sur In the world 2 or 3 doeta In *! nod hot wets |ust bator* bedtime and many a sufferer from stranglin choking Asthma has found teHst ond goad nighf rest ond thai bod. old, parslstant, bronehloi cough has left you -. M you don't believe It get o bottle at any good druggist for you eon depend on ioefci/ Co- nodlol Mixtura to glva definite, quick relief from rhot choking, gatplnfi struggle lor braoth. ^_^ 1 I \ 7k* WHITE OWL It's the big news la doe* to White Owls! 1 up! See Bow modi / ?how muds m$Une*t-1 Cil Nerac-oavac to wledge-ha. a dear light and mild at this be so richly lUrorfmf! , Your taste will cheer tj White Owl' "Flavae C troL" It maaaai Field-1 field aelactioB of toba* cate-by-case curing, boa-l boa cood4tiaiiiig-toe flavor in every White roo smoke! Price 10#. , ^ .* Wk* ta eatr nkfl THTSSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1951 eaaW THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INPEfENPENT DAILY NEWSPAPER paof. I East Teams Play ^Cousins' To Other Sections This Season OH THE WAT DOWNIt's tough to take on all Army champ as plucky Robert Mountain, Corozal. found out during the semi- final* of the USARCARIB 1951 boxing championships at Fort Kobbe last Saturday night. Mountain, right, is getting what be- came one of the final punches of his bout with Frank McLaugh- lin, of the 33d Infantry, the aforementioned champ in, the first round of their scheduled 3-rounder. (U.S. Army Photo) TIGER TACKLEFRANCISCO WONG, 5'9". 179 pounds, 8enlor, PositionTackle. Playing his last game of his High School career, Wong will be trying to make this one nls best. A starter all season long.^Wong has given hi best and has been a fighter down to the last second of play. Known for his spirited efforts whether losing or winning, Francisco was chosen on the All- League team this season. Wong is the heaviest player on the Blue and Gold team, and even with his extra weight, he can move with deceptive speed. On Friday night, when the whistle blows for the opening kick-off, Wong will be in there on every play possible. The Singer SM 1500 Roadster Is Here You are cordially invited to see the perfect light Sport Car of today at TROPICAL MOTORS INC. RESIDENTS of the CANAL ZONE and MEMBERS of the ARMED FORCES Wt offer you all tha facllltlw you need to buy furniture for your hora*. Je practical In your Christmas shopping for your family. Furniture Is th# Meal Gift During December we are opon until 9:00 p.m. SIMMONS SPRINGS MATTRESSES Toe Store Where You WIU Find the Largest Assortment of Qlaas and Linoleum. M Ccatral Avenue TelepheaM 2-1MS "Loader In the Furniture bus'ness since ISO" NOW YOU AN GET IT at MORRISON'S too The Complete Variety of Merchandise for which LEWIS SERVICE is known for more than 27 years is now available at MORRISON'S 1 Fourth of Inly Ave. Opposite the Ancon P.O. BigTenPlars Havoc With Eastern fRep9 By STF.V1 SNIDER Magazine* Book* Toya , McCALL'8 Patterns 8HEAFFER Pens EATON Stationery BUXTON Billfolds CORO Jewelry WE MAKE FRAMES TOO Paints Albums Pipes NEW YORK, Dec. 8 (UP)'ihe easy East proved to be the patsy in lntersectional football this year, with all sections fattening their records at the expense of an area that once fostered the greatest teams In the nation. The East had Princeton and not much else, according to a re- sume of 1951 football results. And Princeton, unbeaten and untied for the second straight season, played right in its own back- yard. The Big Ten, which fared badly at the hands of mid- western independents Ilka No- tre Dame and Michigan State, caused heavy damage to East- ern prestige with eight victor- ies and only one defeat (Mich- igan at Cornell) for the year. The Southeastern Conference rang up a 5-1 record against Eastern teams, the Southern Conference was 5-2, Pacific Coast Conference 2-1, mldwest- ern Independents 4-1 and South- west Conference 2-0. The East did gain an advan- tage over the Big Seven when Fordham defeated Missouri and Penn State knocked over Nebras- ka and had a slight edge over Missouri Valley Conference Among the major teams con- tributing to the dubious honor of placing the East at the head of the list In lntersectional defeats were Pittsburgh, Navy and Penn- sylvania, which tackled some true toughies and failed to win even once against out-of-the- area foes. That won't stop them from trying in the fntnre, though. Each is keeping its schedule tough. The Southeastern Conference had the best lntersectional rec- ord of any conference with 10 victories against three defeats Silus eight victories, three de- eats and a tie against Southern Conference teams. The Southwest Conference proved rugged lntersectlonally, too, breaking even with the Big Ten, Southeastern and Pacific Coast Conference while whack- ing the Big Seven, Missouri Val- ley, East and, once, Notre Dame. The Pacific Coast-Big Ten fuel, wound up in the Far West's favor for a changethree vic- tories to two. Illinois, heading for the Rose Bowl against Stan- ford, scored both those Big Ten victories against UCLA and Washington. A Rose Bowl vic- tory would square accounts lor the season. , Except for unbeaten, untied Maryland, the Southern Con- ference had a rough row lnter- scctionally against nearly ev- ery group but the East. The Big Seven fattened up on the Missouri Valley and Rockies but couldn't match the rest. Even tough Oklahoma, perennial Big Seven champ, dropped a pair of games to Southwest Confer- ence teams. Tournament Play Omphroy Tennis PETIT ELIMINATES WILLIS Yesterday afternoon the un- completed match between Achil- les Petit and Harry Willis was played out. Only one set remain- ed unplayed. Willis had won the first set 8-1, and dropped the second to Petit 8-4. Yesterday Petit won the first game on Willis' service. Willis responded by taking the follow- ing two game to lead at 2-1, but Petit rose to the occasion forc- ing Willis into frequent errors" and took the following four games to lead Willis at 5-2. Willis won the following two games by forcing Petit into er- rors with spectacular shots, then both men settled down to a tame series of returns. Petit forced Willis into error to win the game on match point. Petit led at match point three times but twice Willis equalled him. ., . Petit volleyed a shot which Willis got over in such a manner that the point was almost con- ceded to Willis when Petit, in the mid-court, moved his racquet and in a miraculous way placed the ball Just over Willis' head to win the set and match at 1-8, 8-4, 8-4. Both men received a big hand from the crowd. This afternoon Petit will face Roger Little at 4:15. This match promises to be another humdin- ger. Little places the ball with speed and depth, with no appar- ent weakness In his game. The winner of this match goes to the semi-finals which will be played Sunday morning at 7:30. Reminders are made to all players that in these following matches foot-faults and other faults not previously called will be counted against each player. Sports Shorties Panama Area Army Boxing Finals Saturday At Ft. Kobbe Sixteen soldier boxers are busi- ly training for the finals of the 1951 United States Army Carib- bean (Panama Area) champion- ships to take place Saturday night at the Fort Kobbe Arena, getting off at .7:30 P.M. I Winners, who will thus be USARCARIB (Panama Area) champions, will be flown to San Juan, Puerto, early next week to participate in the overall USAR- CARIB championships, engaging the winners of the matches 'sponsored by United States Army Forces Antilles. The bouts In Puerto Rico will take place In the celebrated Sixto Escobar Stadium in San Juan. The pairings for Saturday night's finals at Fort Kobbe were 'announced today by the Special Services Office, USARCARIB, and are as follows: FEATHERWEIGHT PROS- PECTVicente Worrell, above, Panama's up-and-coming 128- pound semiflnallst, hopes to resume his winning ways a- gainst unbeaten Pedro Tesis In their six-round clash Sunday night at the Panam Qym. The main bout will be a return clash between Young Flnnegan and Charolito EsDlrituano. COLUMBUS. O. Al Vincent, veteran minor league pilot, yes- terday wss named manager of the Birmingham Barons of the Southern Association. Be suc- ceeds John (Redi Marldn, broth- er of Marty Marion, both of whom were fired on the same day. Marty was let out by the St. Louis Cardinals and signed on with the St Louis Browns as a coach and perhaps a player. For over 20 year) people hare used Alka-Selrzer for quick relief from acid indigestion and sour, pact stomach. AUca-Seluer sen taro ways, combining alkaline in- gredients to neutraJiae excess gas- tric acidity with an analgesic to relieve this headache ao often caused by gastric distress. Millions daily and Alka-SeltsSt a* easy to take...to pleasant-tatting. Try it mat drop one or two tab- leta into a glass of water, watch it fits, then drink it. Not a laxative, not habit-forming, you can take it art time. Keep a supply handy always I ka-Siltzif helps JilMS daily & let it help ih tu! Alka-Seltzer Flyweight Edflmiro Jimenez-Lopez, 45th Reconnaissance Battalion vs. Laureano Berrlos, 504th Field Artillery Battalion. Bantamweight Nelson Velasquez, 7461st Sign- Sports Shorties COLUMBUS, O. The minor league clubs yesterday finished their draft by advancing nine players to bring the total draft- ed this year to 182. The playees selected by tele- gram this morning cost the clubs $15,700 to make the total paid for promoting the 162 players with- in the minors $315,200. The clubs last year drafted 153 players. Selections included: Charleston, B.C.: pitcher Wil- liam Ecklund from York, (no record). Miami Beach: first bsseman Jesse R. Levan (no record) from St. Hyaclnthe and second base- man George Handy from St. Hy- aclnthe (no record). al. vs. Eladio Perez. 504th Field Artillery Battalion. 'Featherweight Frank McLaughlin. 33d Infan- try Battalion, (All U. 8. Army Chavnlon) vs. Raymond Vacil- n, 4\th Reconnaissance Batta- lion. Lightweight Pfc. Osvaldo Santos-Oonzalez, 504th Field Artillery Battalion, vs. Pvt. J. M. Hemandez-Ferrer. S3d Infantry Regiment. Welterweight Pe. Marcelo Morales, Jr., 65th AAA Group, vs. Sgt. Lorenzo Ba- ca. 33d Infantry Reg. Middleweight Cpl. Arthur Collins, 33d Infan- try Regiment, vs. Pfc. James Lewis, Post of Corozal. Light Heavyweight Cpl. Eugene Tate, 65th AA Group, vs. Pfc. Robert Mohn. 7461st Signal. Heavyweight Sgt. Ramon Rosario-Rodrguez 504th Field Artillery Battalion, vs. Pfc. John Hodges, 370 En- lneer Support Regiment. (Fort herman). *A wonderful housekeeper- bat she's CARELESS about her floors" No matter how carefully you "keep houae," if floors are shabby you get no eomplimenta! Vi% so easy to avoid this problem-whon Johnson' Paste Wax gives linoleum, wood or terraxxo tile floors a shine that lasts for months! Never smeary or oily. Specially made for use in thai tropics. Savebuy larger i COLUMBUS, O The Nashville Vols of the Southern Association sold lnflelder Joe Damato to Ok- lahoma City In the Texas League] for an unannounced sum. Dam-, ato hit .265 in 129 games with Nashville last season. ' DARING!... SENSATIONAL!-. "A MODERN MARRIAGE" PICTURE FOR ADULTS! Floors Hi Cleoit.i.0? JOHNSON'S LIQUID WAX cleans and polishea all at one*. Removes stubborn dirt, because it contains a special dry clean- ing ingredient. Qivaa a hard, 11 earning wax finish! JOHNSON'S WAX to U. S. A. For sale at all P. C. Commissaries TROPIDURA "f \ \ \ \ f \ \ m& i ^ ni* i**1 n L tbr * \ 00* *0f jttlO RITZ NOW AVAILABLE AT CANAL ZONE COMMISSARIES AND CLUBHOUSES FIGHTS, BIKE RACES THIS WEEKEND Leaking Glue Misses Flies, Sticks Workers AN INDEPEND S& DAILY NEWSPAPE* Panama American "Let the people know the truth and the country is safe*' Abraham Lincoln. GRAND RAPIDS, Michigan, Sec 6 (UPi Workers at the Tanglefoot Fly Paper Company had to walk where liles ieared to tread. . About 2600 gallons of glue used to catch flies ana other in- sects flowed i rom a deiective valve at the Tanglefoot Plant into the street In front of tne factory. "It will be six months before all of the glue wears away Ni- I cholas Battjes, secretary-treas- arm of the firm said. Dozens of boxes and bags that; were packed for shipment are; stuck tight. The glue mixture of resin and castor oil. gushed: from a broken valve, seeped: through two floors and oozed, into the street over the curbs | on both sides of the street, and \ then turned sticky as rapidly as it hit the cold air outside. One man had to be pulled from his shoes and hop to a solid footing. Other workers laid down cardboard as they tiptoed through the gummy mass. Trade Statisticians Conference Hard At Work On Systems Representatives of 19 coun- tries that are attending the Conference on External Trade and Balance of Payment Statis-: tics at El Panam Hotel were| continuing their talks that will eventually help the United; Nations and International Mo- netary Fund experts decide on, uniform statistical systems. TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR PANAMA, R. P.. THURSDAY. DECEMBER . 1951 HVE CENTS Doctor Freed Of Charge He Speeded Up Patient's Death To Grab Her Fortune ^"" ~ _______,_______u..., ,. uo thnu nlll were aa- The conference, which began Mondav and will last 12 days,' is divided into two working groups, the External Trade group, and the Balance of Pay- ments Group. Carmen Miro hea-1 of the government's statistical department is the Chairman of the conference. BRIDGEPORT, Conn., Dec. 6 (UP)Dr. Donald F. Giuson, who blamed "gossip and talk of scan- dal-mongers'1 for his Indictment, was freed today of a charge he precipitated the death of an aged, wealthy Danbury spinster for money and love. Superior Court Judge Kenneth Wynne dismissed a manslaugh- ter charge against the handsome 49-year-old Danbury physician. He said that the state had fail- ed to prove that Gibson had hastened the death of Miss Eliz- abeth M. Ayres, 74, with drugs, so that he could inherit her for- tune and marry his nurse. Gibson was the sole benefi- ciary of Miss Ayres' estate, which has been variously esti- mated at S60.000 to S100,000. Judge Wynne said "there has been no proof that the deceased died of any act of the accused, and that all of the evidence in- dicated death by natural causes. He observed that no charge had been brought against the doctor until more than a year after her death. July 26, 1950 ,and after an investigation had gained "widespread publicity and public clamor." The Jurist commended the prosecution for bringing the case before the court, but at the same time pointed out that its evi- dence was designed to support a charge of murder, rather than manslaughter. The case was thrown out or court mid-day in the second day of the trial, without a sin- gle defense witness taking the stand. .. ji The prosecution had hardly rested its case when chief de- fense counsel David Goldstein moved for dismissal. He said there had been "not one bit of evidence that this .sc.i died of administration of drugs." A few minutes later Gibson walked out of the old brown- stone courthouse, appearing a bit bewildered at the fast turn of events which freed him. He told newsmen he was "very pleased that the court was so fair." "I may now continue to devote my attention to the best Inter- ests of my many patients and friends who have had faith and confidence In me, and who I am sure will continue to repose con- fidence in me." Directors at Danbury Hospital were expected to take early ac- tion whether td remove his sus- pension and restore him to the staff. In endeavoring to build up a circumstantial case against the physician, the state brought out that: . The body had been embalmed so quickly that a pathologist could not determine the cause of death. . Another physician, Dr. Frank T. Genovese, had signed the death certificate, at Giosons suggestion, five hours before death occurred. Gibson had persuaded Miss Ayres to change her original will so as to remove a Danoury bank as a co-executor, leaving I him completely In charge of . the disposition of her estate. A box of green amidopyrine pills was among other pills found | on her bedside table when she ! died. Gibson had expressed concern, knew v. hat those pills were go to a State police^investlgator,; .agio do.' fc . ,m.|.o(Ki that these pills might have been! Genovese who was implicated responsible for her death. by the county coroner with, Oib- However, one'of the principar son, was exonerated by the grand state witnesses, FBI chemistry jury. ipeclalist Joseph L. Gormley of He said he signed the death Washington, testified that an certificate after vudting Miss Ay- examination of the vital organs res and noting that 'the onset of of Mss Ayres showed no trace of death had started' and_ that, * noteon. was only a matter of a few hour And another state witness, oefore she died. Yale pharmacology Prof. Willl-1 He signed the certificate pre- m SaPltermsald that only "one maturely he admitted because in about 10,000" persons were al- he wanted to attend the races lerScto amidopyrine and would at Belmont Track In New York very likely die" from effect* of that day.___________ In his summation, as the pro- yAav|w III Dllkkor KS isff^wfflff'uffas Nearly ah winner ss fifnSK K? a Controls May 60 has admitted that he knew of the serious danger involved In the administering of drugs. He Joe Jackson Of 'Black Sox Dies At 63 GREENVILLE, So. Carolina, Dec. 6 (UP). "Shoeless" Joe Jackson, 63, a key figure In baseballs 1919 "Black Sox- scandal and the man called the 'greatest hitter that ever lived" by Ty Cobb, died last night of a heart attack. Banished from baseball for Ufe as an outgrowth of the scandal, Jackson insisted until jthe last day of his life, "Deep down in my heart, I know I'm i Innocent." Jackson and sir other Chica- go White Sox teammates were* placed on baseball's ineligible i list after the 1919 World Series with the Cincinnati Reds. Their banishment followed the fa- !mous trial In which it was charged the White Sox "threw" the Series. Although acquitted of conspi- racy, Jackson a slugging outfielder who had a lifetime batting average of .3M for ten years In the Big Leagues never was reinstated. Priest, Free After 5 Years In Jail, Holds Mass Again KRA8IC. Yugoslavia, Dec. (UP1)Aloysius 8teplnac, free after more than five years In prison, said mass today in this little village of his birth. Then he announced that he did not recognize the Yugoslav government decision to strip him of his title as Archbishop of Zagreb, and highest Catholic pre'ate in Yugoslavia. The 53-year-old churchman, sentenced In 1946 to 16 years Peasant women in their homes recognited him im- mediately as he walked calmly through the village, the scar- let cap of an arehbishlp iden- tifying his high office for those who did not remem- ber him personally. Townspeople knelt in tin streets as he passed, and fol- lowed him to church for the;flrs( mass of the day. The church was no more filled imprisonment on charges of than usual for a Decembe wartime collaboration with the mass because this tiny town wa Germans, was released yester-1 completely unaware of th< day on condition he stay in archbishop's arrival. Krasic. The archbishop, first in . He said today: "X never sought long line of Catholic dlgnitarle any high Church dignities, and to be Jailed by various Com I will relinquish my archbia- munist regimes, received h hoprlc only if the Holy Father desires, but I will never give it up under pressure." He said he never asked for his freedom "because I do not feel guilty." Alert, and looking well bat thin, Stepinac declined to talk about his expreiences in Leopglava prison, where he spent the last five years and 55 davs. freedom "conditionally." He will remain on parole un- til his full 16 years sentence has expired, Yugoslav sources said yesterday, and will be barred, from resuming his church ac- tivities. His arrest and imprisonment} on Oct. 11, 1946. had stirred continuous storm of protests from Catholic quarters, fror the Vatican down ever since VFW To Dedicate New Playground On Curundu Road By End of December To assist in determining what type of aid each country needs, the second group is eonc-Tied with the International Mone- tary Fund's manual on balance of payments, which seeks to maintain economic stab 1111 y throughout the world. The technical discussions will! provide a common basis for gathering statistical informa- non on each country, in an ef- I fort to determine a uniform I statistical system that would; most benefit the countries. Chairman of the External Trade group ts Carlos Labezles. and Paol Host-Madsen presides i over the Balance of Payments group. Labezles Is the United i Nations Representative, and I Host-Madsen is with the Inter- national Monetary Fund. BALBOA TIDES Friday. Dec. 7 Hifh Low 19:45 a.m.............4:55 p.m. 11:25 p.m.............4:34 a.m. New Catalyst Plant Will Aid Britain's Gasoline Industry I LONDON. Dec. 6 CUPIA $2,- 800,000 plant to produce the cat- alvst needed for Improving and speeding the refining of gasoline, was opened at Warrlngton, Lan- cashire, England, yesterday by Sir Geoffrey Seyworth, chairman of Lever Brothers. The new plant will supply the oil cracking catalyst required by five oil companies in connection with their sterling area refinery expansion program. The compa- nies are: Esso Petroleum, Anglo- Iranian. Shell, Trinidad Lease-' holds and Bahrein Petroleum The plant includes two stain- less steel driers which are one of the largest of their type ever made. They were manufactured in Britain. Operation of the plant Is ex- pected to save the sterling area several million dollars annually. Legion Sponsors 'Voice of Freedom' Film Preview The American Legion today sponsored a premiere showing of a short film "Voice of Freedom" | in conjunction with the Crusade for Freedom campaign which is' being conducted in the States. Local clergy, motion picture representatives, Information of- ficers of the Armed Forces and the Panama Canal and members of the local press attended the preview at 10:30 this morning at the Diablo Theatre. , The nine-minute film deals with the dissemination of in- formation in Munich to people behind the Iron Curatln, through the "Voice of Freedom" pro- grams. Ma]. Leon J. Carrlngton, De- partment Commander of the Le- gion gave a brief talk on the reason Canal Zone communities will be asked to enroll, spiritual- ly, in supporting the Crusade for Freedom campaign. Chairman of the campaign in the United States is Gen. Lucius B. Clay. WASHINGTON, Dec. 6 (UP). Practically all the controls on the production of tires and other rubber goods in the Unit- ed States will be abolished by the end of 1951. Restrictions have been neces- sitated by defense buildup. The National Production Authority, i issuing the order around Dec. 15 A playground for the use of,would permit unlimited output all Pacific side children will of rubber products effective. be dedicated on Sunday by' January 1. ___ Veterana of Foreign Wars Post I The decontrol will be possible No 3822 I because the Increased supply of The playground was built by synthetic rubber has ended the members of the post and Is lo- rubber shortage, cated adjacent to the post's' At present, manufacturers of headauarters on the Curundu "less essential' goods may not Road near Galllard High way. i use more than 90 per cent of The equipment was also furn-'their pre-Korean rubber supply, lshed by Post No. 3822 and will;The makers of other rubber pro- be added to from time, accord-duct* are limited to one hun- Ine to Post Commander A. A.dred per cent. Hannberg. The NPA warned that It was The dedication exercises will still necessary to conserve na- start at 2 p.m. Sunday. tural rubber which is imported. Department Commander E. J.'For that reason, the government Eelinton will speak and De- continues to limit the amount partment Chaplain Stepheniof natural rubber which manu- Palmer will give the invoca- facturers may mix with the syn- tion. Ithetic rubber. Refreshments, hot dogs,| -------- pop, and so forth will be pro-; |rfl|| T|>ll TlfllM. Vided for all youngsters who at-, I tend. VFW Post No. 3822 Stages Carnival Night Tomorrow Carnival Night will be held tomorrow by the V. F. W. Post No. SS22 at 7 p.m. to raise funds for a Christmas party for 100 Panam City orphans. Present plans call for using the money raised tomorrow night to feed and donate gifts to the orphans at the Post Home in Curundu. Stepinac did not know till was charged in September, 1946, Tuesday that he was to be re- with, collaborating with Adoll| leased. I Hitler's Nasi occupation fores Late yesterdav two cars of the in Yugoslavia. Croatian Interior Ministry ar-i The archbishop's conditional rived at the prison and took the release under parole and wlttf archbishOD and his few belong-, restrictions on his church acl ings to Krasic. 30 miles south-; tlvlties was not expected east of Zagreb. 'silence the criticisms or satlsf The parish prlst and some the protests. Croatian nuns were notified at !____________________ the last minute of steplnacs; A.Bombers Flv Nnnstnn impending arrival, and hurried-, A-oraDers riy r*onstop ly prepared two rom* for him Morocco To Ft* Worth, in the vicarage. At dawn today 8teplnac and| FORT WORTH, Texas, Dec. the parish priest. Father Joslp (UP). Six giant B-3 "Atom] Vranekovlc. walked slowly.bombers landed at the Carswef through the village streets to Air Force Base today at ti- the 400-year-old graystone end of a 30-hour, 11,000-r. " church where the prelate was non-stop flight from 8idi SI christened. ane, French Morocco. Gulick Captain Named Assistant Adjutant FORT GULICK, Dec. 6 Head- Correspondent To Pack His Suitcase TEHERAN. Dec. 6 (UP)Iran today ordered New York Times Correspondent Michael Clark m* fk% m quarters, Atlantic Sector, Fort expelled and gave him 48 hours Gulick announced today that to leave the country. the appoint of Captain Archie B. Davidson to the post of As- sistant Adjutant. He is also Headquarters Detachment Commandant. Captain Davidson, a native of Brecton. Illinois entered the Army in March, 1941 when the 33rd Infantry Division of the Illinois National Guard was mobilized into Federal Service. He was commissioned a second lieutenant of Infantry on July 11, 1942. Deputy Premier Hosseln Fate- mi summoned Clark and told him he served the Anglo-Ira- nian Oil Company, and anti- Iranian interests. Fatemi said that the im- mediate cause of the expulsion order was an article Clark wrote about terror in Iran. Clark was the third newspa- perman against whom Iran had taken such action. Two British correspondents were expelled during the oil crisis In June. ad^ VIGA*11 SOW i-^"' rm "THE SONGS OF CHRISTMAS" Illustrated by Wolt Scott Campbell's Vegetable Soup is a great family favorite. Into a rich, invigorating beef stock go luscious tomatoes, green peas, lima beans, crisp carrots, sweet golden corn, and many mora garden-fresh vegetables, each one contributing its own special, tempting flavor. Thafs why Campbell's Vegetable Soup is so deeply nourishing... grand eating for all the family at any meal BECAUSE IT IS Nmodra meal n rfeelf "t. Frown of Ati*i n cor i. #i to b rht eriginotof si I .' ...ih,; corol of fonnlior typo, though mot of ft* hvmr, card :am( TK story goes thot St. Fronc* ow Chnjtinot Eve presentad a nativity ___ m the littio church hi the town of Grecia, near Amni. Priests and people viewed the ma* Frin ang new jongj, clarifying rht meaning of the ln- camatioa. cow, iniiywi MnjfXfj Frew riih tuno forth, cerel singing found its woy to node From this time forth, cerol singing toune rn woy into mock and mystery plays end Notrrity celefcfetion, loying the feaa- datiom for our own interest w Christine corol tinging. VEGETABLE SOUP CONDFNSFO FOR GRATFR VAIUE "OH tHf RIO AN |
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| MILLISECOND | CLASS.METHOD | MESSAGE |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Application State validated or built |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Navigation Object created from URI query string |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.display_item | Retrieving item or group information |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | Retrieving hierarchy information |
| 0 | sobekcm_assistant.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | Found item aggregation on local cache |
| 0 | item_aggregation_builder.get_item_aggregation | Found 'all' item aggregation in cache |
| 0 | system.web.ui.page.page_load (ufdc.page_load) | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_style_references | Adding style references to HTML |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
| 49 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |