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'+BRAHIFF
/Vet York OKI-STOP NON STOP TO Miami! AN MMfiPENtnENi^ 1 - V -**' ScagramsYO. i DAILY NEWSPAPER * "l>i tlw people know the truth and the country is tafe" Abraham Lincoln. < WWHW UI1ISK) Now. 6 Years Old! V TWENTX-SaWBNTH XEAE PANAMA, R. P., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1981 nvE ciact > Reds Term UN Prisoner List 'Useless'; May Delay Further Talks On Exchanges Navy To Take Over Cocoli On January J 'He's Alive*. * * The Navy will take over the operation and control of the lown of Cocoli on a permit, or license, basis on Jan. 1, in anticipation of an eventual permanent transfer. Names Of Prisoners PANMUNJOM, Korea, Dec. 19 (UP> The Com- munists indicated here today that they may block fur* ther talks on the release of prisoners of war in Korea, including 3,198 United States troops, till after Christmas. Alan Winnington, a Communist newsman who acts "Pr-M^ Klj^w/r- \*-\ I C T"^-*^4^i% a$ a sort oi tf'ca' spokesman for the Red truce delega- I Up I NcW 5 I i! U O I OUay on, charged that the list of 132,474 Communist prison- ers of war, furnished by the United Nations yesterday was incomplete and useless. Winnington said the list was entirely in English, which cannot be translated accurately into Chinese or BY DAYTON MOORE O WASHINGTON. Dec. 19 (UP) ithe "best Christmas present we There Is no news In the united could have." States today except that con- Two winners of the Medal of cerning names of prisoners of Honor the United states' high- Korean, and contained neither the unit identifications nor i^rtaexecdhKthforC=r TerlZ^V^ ** "I""" *wn ' *. P** u....... devoted much space and time to;g>repojw i"te^V that Maj mmij t the g^- DeJUJaWe. Th. p.,m, hr .. tronar ,h. M of tk, ^ !* '" ^KSKSWajai WJESrVS aS^r^cS^ The list of 3,198 United State |included. that tbgJ ^li probably de- the lists in English yesterda is now being drown up by local Navy and Canal officials , and must receive final approval of authorities in Wash- -^Sv^S^SA^^. other Medai of Honor win-: *? 'JgUS^miSVl ^T&th^asi ington. I The list is pitifully small com- ^SJSS^S^SPSSl '22 "i SS U*ta prodded.* JESMUSt Legislative authority is necessary for permanent 2 *} jran^-^^aWi'^.ta^l transfer. Usted as missing in action. 25:,BLESS ?g JSLt*e3!~ day to translate the k.,ui ,..ucu.-. , ,i wuu advised to **w'v "- 'ising In1 The Pentagon worked around-"""*' D;~Le,*y ln ">e cnosm Ke- tlon int0, Chinese and North- right to have It later. asked for a trar- he realized t not possible to have rttten in Chinese and Korea i Agreements now provide that'Bajb,,, or Ped:0 Miguel. i the cloclt to speed the eood news servolr fighting. inly the portion of the town east, sjnCe tnilfc ;. nai fa-1to anxious relatives; but the task rl Bruja Road will be included; milies have transferred from Co- of compiling the names is going Throughout the nation, wor- ji the t r a n s f e r and that the con, leaving fiS employe families slowly ried thousand bought each highway will emain under the in tne town. The remaining Ca-| By 9:30 am (EST> today 14 new edition of the newspapers, control o* the Canal Zona Qov-,,lai employe jrroup will be trans- hours after the Pentagon releas- H*ened anxiously to the radia, eminent. Vv ferred, on the basis of regular e(j the first name only 36 * merely waited stoically for Arrangement are being made applications, as rapidly as prac- names had been made nubile and **" Dsjfease Department tele- for the Navv to take over poltra t-.cable but not latir than March telegrams dispatched to next-of-' * *<* would bring the ALL 2gta ovw stuffed furniture from and fire protectien effective with i 1952 the transfer un eanuary 1, th*i \jnder agreement with the,^1"' news. Children Cry, Mothers Howl; Radio Says: No Santa Claus MELBOURNE, Dec. 19 UP'- by kindergarten experts, which fiMfll Tllfl TflDOflfl ousands of children were ln claimed there is no Santa Claus.;"' 'w m^y Towing Distressed A I'nited Nations spokes- man said today that it war imposaiMe for the I'nited Na- tions to furnish the serial nambers of Communist pri- soners because only a few North Koreans and n Chin- ese have them. Winnington nT there is m way of Idepwfying the Com- ..mpSeftJSy the \ffi?\ barton-. ' s/m fher* ?*re only Korean fawtfr' ^rornEng- 11st ahowel r assignment to tui nn- ... __ __.. _. .. lv railed fnr men a r nhe hetil n_;.-j iuk.> .>i. Korean, hut warned thak.thls task could not be completed before Christmas. Winnington's remarksthe only Indication oPthe Com- munists' s/ttfcpip while the POW talks re recessed . threw. oaM. -dfater on UnMed Nations hopes f 3i-daw trial ee*enre line Thousands of children tears and their parents enraged today over a broadcast prepared Traffic Offenders Draw $10 Fines Driving 50 miles an hour m a 40-MPH-eone or Bruja road netted a $10 tine ln Balboa . This would be the same as claiming there are no Wise Men ln Latin countries. Pacna7nal emp.ovea Uvlng in ^IXgfZZp^fV&l g^gg 2| Ihe^'^e^Srliv'unTu^e coll were notified ln July of thenersonnel AW in Balboa, Pedro natton v '1fPh>ne. <"o and ^ St wai checked1 One anticipated transfer and were Miguel and Oamboa have leeni television. Thousands of rela- gggJSM cnec*ea- requested to vacate their Canal' tives and friends searched ."tu iV the time for hone nt-arters no later than January, "'-^"-^ g* and^praylr.^adS hat^ "kJBp. M of January, all SBf ^ ^^ ** ** SSt SSjSfBS * Cocoli residents will make their, Now and aeatn a name, then a* s^ku.-V Mtttwntatm W Pfiyments for rents and all uti- serial number oran address sto^g^P"0""" f/iS he ^as "ve7v Ifties. including telephones, to out amon* the thousands of oth- m^nataturt^" auout the re- .,-p,.-, Vessel To Cristbal signed for children of kindergar-1 The Panama Canal salvage ten a,ge, told children ln 100,800 tug Taboga nicked up the drift- homes that their mothers and ins; vessel Caribe in the Carlb- fathers left toys under the, bean about 11 a. m. todav and Christmas tree, not Santa Claus, Is towing the disabled ship to Parenta complained that their ^Thfrab oga la expected to the Navy. Fort Sherman Gl Now Chief Warrant The promotion of Louis J. Kasthely of Comoany C. 370th Boat Battalion. Fort Sherman, to the rank of Chief Officer has ers and with it came joy that on- poned slaugnter of some 6000 ly those whe.experienced it American pris0ners. but he could know. They struggled to -committed" not to sav express their emotion: not to say any- thing at this stage or armistice Oh. thank God!-'This is tooineRotlation8 i j i.w.liiMS1' "UJft aver divo " good to believe."'We never gave up hope!" One woman fainted before she could reply. All agreed It was Magistrates Codrt this morn- fl, "E ^d,e"yd" reach Cristobal tomorrow with been announced by the United lng fo Muller or rredariCkw,ch;i^an!>uT^^ t Jr- ^ cSribTto iow. -yeac-old Navy man. SUtes Department of the Annv Amnfaclv (lfellll lA The position of the Caribe, a-i a veteran of 10 months com-|**"ilSJl| VI III IV A 27-year old Panamanian bus driver, Pedro Antonio Silva O., also paid a $lb line for failure to halt at a traffic sign. w plus another $10 for failure tolhi^hooi' appear in court when his case was first scheduled for hear- ing. -, vi-j,.rt- _..?.!bout 190 miles north of Cristo-1 bat service with the 1st Cavalry1. if 5 tT *,&-V**l th?i ,. bal was rePrted to Canal au- Division in Korea. CWO Kes- Qf Arnii TO AMflS said thehroadcast over the Aus-tho^tieg by the Marion Lykes.'thely came to the Canal Zone,"1, IIIHIIW NW tralian Federal Network merely o.hirh hart Urhterf the disahlediin s.nt.^hoi- iosi u as in which had sighted the disabled i in September. 1951. He was in. >?ve vessel, a considerable distance'the United Slates only 54 davs FXDfiCtfili MOIIlfldV been hearing from their teachers rr0m where gh, was originally: before leaving for his assign- l-A|vViVU I IVIIUOI in school. reported. |ment ta this theater. The Taboga was dispatched | A native of Olendale. Callfor-! Indications were today that The directors of the Kinder- in response toa relayed message;nla. he was promoted to the the final approval of a bill garten Teachers Training Col- from the Caribe Sunday night grade of Warrant Officer Junior granting amnesty to- former lege said the "true" story of San- indicating only that she was Orade ln July, 1949. He present- President Dr. Arnulfo Arias Alejandro Nester Bersol. 39-jta Claus was told to clear the,short of fuel. At that time, she, 1/ serves as unit admlnUtrator his followers will not be forth- year-old Colombian, paid a $10 minds of five-year-olds who are was reporjed to be about 140,'for his company, an amohibious comin. until Monday, unless fine for passing in a "No Pas-ipuaaled by the appearance of so miles northeast of the Cristobal engineer outfit stationed at Fort .me nrecedent i broken. sing" tone on OaiUard Highway, many store Santas. breakwater._________^_ F--rrran. __________ _____| The 72 hqurs ^Iven to the committee "entrusted with the 11/ f |*fl f f" ft "V" MM I first reading of the bill pre- Wanger Indicted For Intent To Mc/fcff;HS I procedure the committee's re- II If | J"> JF" #* | :port must remain in the secre- Hollywood Prepares For Spiciest Trial ff+zxsrzz''" I This means that the bill can- not come up for second read- Congressmen calling for an investigation Included Walter H. Judd, former missionary ln the Far East, August H. Andresen and Tom B. Fgate. Andresen said any inquiry should "determine what policy the Communists follow in talc- ing care of prisoners." Judd and Fgate conceded any investigation would run up against a stone wall in trying to get the facts on Red atroci- ties against prisoners. Another legislator, whe ask- ed not te be identiiied, be- lieved the Communists are withholding names of some prisoners for bargaininx pur- poses in the truce tlaks. Rep, H. R. Gross questioned the accuracy of the Defense De- partment's tabulation of men missing ln action. He said the Pentagon has been "coverinu up the number of men killed in action by reporting them as missing or wounded." agent Jennings Lang, whom he lywood's sensational trianglei He said that the beauteous' The "intent to murder" charge reading and the Assemoly does suspected of romancing with his tried to hush up the incident af-, grandmother was "as cool as a against Wsnger surprised the .not meet on SPturdsys, fina glamorous wife, actress Joan ter Wanger pumped a bullet into cucumber'' as she saw her hus- movie colony. Beverly Hills Po- approval cannot be given until Bennett. Lang's groin last Thursday night, band of 11 years shoot her long- lice Chief C. H. Anderson had,Monday. In a dimly-lit Beverly Hills park-1 time agent and "family friend."'said he preferred the lesser. Passage of a bill in a second After hearing two hours of ev-; Uig lot. "Miss Bennett climbed into my'charge of ^assault with a deadly reading is tsnterrount to ap- ldence. the jury returned an in- She Holtzman, owner of the lot,' car and sat between Lang and weapon" because he had no proval ard the third reading dictment against the 57-year-old testified he did not take Lang myself during the ride to the, doubt the charge would stick. !oniv consists of a vote on the producer on a charge of assault across the street to the police doctor's office." Holtzman add-, He said he feared "the hlgh-.wni]. Mif ^v, amendments with a deadly weapon with in- station because the agent insist- ed. "She was very calm all the'powered legal batterv'-now snif-'d. rt,,r,' th. ,.-orin- reaH- tent to commit murder. | ed he had "hurt himself." I time and as cool as a cucumber."; fin* out clues on the case would "."', hi wn read ln Wangereould he sent to prison I "I went ta. his aide when 1 However, the attendant, Scott,1 male mincemeat out of the "in- "* ;f5T,11 n" wn ingereo in to 14 >pi cte Diggers At Valican Confirm Discovery SI. Peter's Tomb VATICAN CITY. Dec. 19 'UP) "scientifically unquestionable" that the ancient tomb uncover- ed 23 feet below the floor of St. Peter's Basilica was the tomb of the "Prince of Apostle" him- self. United Nations circles today; of them near the Yalu River were surprised at Winningto's; in northwest Korea, suggestion that the Reds might All were in Western Korep, suggesting that any ultimate exchange of prisoners co-:l I take place in Panmunjom aa had been suggested at the con- ference. Thte Communists said the U- nlted 8tates prisoners were in camps numbered 1, 2, S. and f. They said No. 1 was a", Changsong, 30 miles northeas- Of Sinuiju. border town nea~* the mouth of the Yalu. No % was located at Pyokdong, H miles northeast of Sinuiju on the south bank of the Yalu No. 3 was near No. 1. and No. 5 in the Pyokdong area. PAA Force Back At Work After Three-Day Strike NEW YORK. Dec. 19 (UP) Pan American World Airways mechanics, stewards, stewardes- ses and commissary employes returned to work at the Inter- national Airport here today ending their three day strike. James Horst, international vice president of the Transport Workers 1 Ilion (CIO) said the strikers went back to their jobs. One minute after midnight last r\______ I I,.-__! nlaht after voting to let a Pre- UOmage In ISrOCI sldential fact-finding board me- diate then- dispute with the airline. Week-Long Gales Cause Enormous TEL AVIV. Dec. If (UPi Dales, rainstorms and cloud- bursts that have incessantly Horst said the strike was also swept Israel since last Thurs- over at Pan American's bases day have caused enormou* at Miami, San Francisco, Seat- damage and some loss of 11 f tie and Brownsville. The intense cold wave and The strikers voted about eight,humidity have provoked un- to one to abide by Mr. Tni-paralled hardships on some 80, man's move to appoint a three- 000 newcomers still housed un- man board to investigate the der canvas in tin shacks or in dispute. 'temoorpry settlements. Well, We Got The List' Admiral Tells Reporters By PETER GRUENrNG (I'nited Press Staff Cerresondent) for uo to 14 year if convicted on. heard a commotion," Holtzman said he heard the glamorous ac-, tent to murder" charge. its entirety, the felony charge at his trial, said. "Lang said,'I fell down and, tress scream "Don't, dont" as District Attorney 8. Ernest' OD?ervers. ? "I're '* no, which promises to be Hollywood's, hurt myself. Take me to a doc-1 Wanger. gun ln hand, surprised Roil, who had demanded the in- doubt that the bill grm.ing spiciest in years. tor." Lang chatting with her through1 dictment. introduced as evidence amnesty to Arlss. who has been Wanaer, who had been wait-! Rick Scott, attendant at the> the window of her car parked ln the gray plaid suit Lar was -inder arrest since May 10. wllj lng with his attorney outside the lot, told how He heard the shots the lot. j wearing when he was shot.' One be approved by the Assembly lurv room surrendered lmmedi- and summoned an off-duty Bev-, "I heard the shot but didn't trouser leg and a pair of white without any serious opposition. ately. erly Hills policeman who hap-, see the gun." the lot attendant shorts were soaked with blood. These obse-vers say that theitj %H ._ ,,_. __. - Lang's little black address book.;bm ,iw ger and the gun also were pres- fnn h the appr0val of the anted as evidence 'government's presidential can- Because of the indictment. ^^ Joj Remn There was m"ch specl'tl^r Me. Arls' P I never felt better ln my life,", pened to be fixing his car on the;said. "My attention was directed Lang's the white-haired producer grin- lot. Jto them because all three wer ned at newsmen as he stepped Scott said Lang told the offu'arguing in loud voices." into court. I cer, who was wearing coverall,. Dr. Robert Rlemer. Lang's per- Superior Judge Thomas J. "Go away and leave us alone. Ev^'sona! physician, testified brief- Cunningham exonerated Wan- erythlng is all right." lv about details of the wound. Wanger will not have to face a ger's previous $5.000 ball set Holtzman earlier had told re--Lang, in Midwav Hospital, still pMliminary hearing to deter- nere i when he was released on a writ porters that as he drove Lang to is sufferlni such pain that he rmne if there is sufficient evi- 8S fo w"_cn,' ifhabeas corpus after the shoot- the doctor, the actor's agent and could not be subpenaed to the dence for trial. Roll explained he menista Party v ill n and reset his bond at $5.000. Miss Bennett discussed how "to hiring. I demanded the grand Jury action upn-rt after te r The Judge ordered Wanger to, keep this out of the papera." But. County Jail Physician Dr. Mar-, because "I want to rnave iasL" (their leader. throw rejepse PANMUNJOM. Korea. Dec. 19. Communist newsman the num- The deadpan Chinese officer ,ber of names on the Communist clumped into the olive drab tent .list of prisoners The Red stood Vatican "archelogists "report- i where the Allies and Commun-'silent lor i moment, then ed todav after almost 12 years lists were talking prisoner ex-; shrugged his shoulders ana of excavations that it was change In his hands was what walked away *. ,... looked like a bundle of laundry. A hush fell over the little A few moments later other grouo of tents, thatched huts members of the Red delegation and waiting people. The alienee followed the Chinese officer. ,was broken from time to time At the same time Rear Adm by distant gunfire. R E. Llbhy. the grav-temoled At 3:26 p. m. the meeting chief of the allied committee ended. Brig. Gen. William P. on prisoners, led his team into Nuckols. the official allied the tent from the south. spokesman, came out of the ,cll.r ..,, Outside. United Nations cor- tent. As the reporters crowded mortal remains of St. Peter, the respondents and soldiers waited around him. he said he would first Pontiff of the Catholic ,quietlv as the minutes ticked let Llbhy break the news. Church who died about the year i by. Little groups assembled on Libbv came out. bareheaded the dusty road, sometimes chat- .holding a sheaf of papers in his ting In whispers. right hand. A Communist correspondent "Well." he oaused a moment went into one of the mud huts I as the reporters shifted to him. Pope Pius XH, who ordered j beside the road and started "We got the list." ____ the excavations, said In hla I pounding hisi typewriter. Red He said there hadub*enn Christmas message last year sentries guarding the north path time-to took over it. He; saM that th human bones had of the conference tent stood would be flown by helicopter The official summary of their monumental finding made no mention, however, whether any Vatican. It' been found near the tomb but; stiffly at attention, staring into to base camp at Munsan for of that it was not certain that they paca. 'inspection and then to TokJ i were SL Peters, 4 An allied reporter aaked a for releaaa. PAGE TWO THB PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER THE PANAMA AMERICAN NewUMTPlan WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER IS, MSI OWNED AND PUBLISHED IV THI PANAMA AMMICAN * FOUNOID IV NIKON KOUNHVILL IN 1*11 INC. MALMODIO AMIAS, edito 7. H THIIT P. O BOX 194. PANAMA. P. Of P. Telipmon Panama no. 1-0740 COLON OF'ICti 12 17 CENTHAl AVENUE HIWIFN I 2th AND 13TH iTallTE FOE ON REPRIIENTATIVEI' JOSHUA B. POWIRS. INC 349 MADIION AVI. NEW YORK. (171 N. V. LOCAL Et NA>L PER MONTH. IN ADVANCE 1.70 S.BO FOR SIX MONTHS. IN DYANCE SO 13.00 FOR ONI YEAR. IN wu*My IB 50 S4 00 Walter Winchell In New York BROADWAY LIGHTS The First-Nighters: Katharine Cornell returned to a reprise of Somerset Maugham's "The Constant Wife," which was em- braced In the long-ago. This time the star attracted honey- dripped wordage but two aislemen politely dissented. Walter (Herald Tribune) Kerr's citation: "Good fun"...Elmer Rice's 2?th play, "The Grand Tour," commuted between Hem and Haw. The general reaction was dominated by lukewarm appreciation. The Mirror's reviewer called it "an amiable little play"..."I.o and Behold" was greeted with yes and no notices, the kicks out- numbering the kisses. Reviewer Wm. Hawkins' estimate: "It is delightful'. ..The final entry was "Point of No Return," starring Henry Fonda. Enthusiastic oracles confirmed to tryout town Inspectors, hailing it as a high-voltage addition to The White Light Way. Richard Watts, Jr. rejoiced: "A brilliant, resource- ful and enormously enjoyable dramatic entertainment." In the Wings: Laurence Olivier and John Gielgud are fierce rivals for the title o England's Greatest Actor...Gielgud aleges Olivier is too bombastic and loud...At the premiere of Olivler's "Caesar and Cleopatra" (in London I someone informed Oielgud that if the two "Cleopatras" (starring Olivier and his wifei clicked the plays would be exported to Broadway. .."Why?" caustically Inquired Gielgud. "Can't they hear him from here?" The Cinemagicians: "The Strange Door" has Charles Laugh- ton's deft playing putting tome bite in a toothless Ul<- "Ad- ventures of Captain Fabian" is the familiar dare-devil drama tarring Errol Flynn, which is as quick as we can get to the point. . "I.nnghorn" is another cowboy cattle cactus cliche... "The Racket" goes a few fast rounds in the stale Cops vs. Rob- bers war..."I'll Never Forget You" presents Tyrone Power and Ann Blythe In a conventional romancinema. It inspires a sigh here and a throb there.. ."Jungle Headquarters" is a fairly en- tertaining safari featuring your old friends from the mena- gerie.. "Arizona Manhunt" is strictly for the dullble-features. The Alristocrats: "Crime Syndicated" requires a scripting transfusion. The felony fables are echoes of Hollywood's ca- mera-worn whodunit themes, and they are the Siberlas in enter- tainment... "Suspense" has come up with some expert thrillers but Its latest was more plsh-tush than heeble-Jeeble..."Tht Magic Cottage" (which comes over Dumont's channel) has the type of fairy-tale imagination that makes small-fry as happy as a visit from Santa...Fred Allen finally hit the Jackpot on his "Sound Off" show. The camera tricks were a high spot, too... Anne Jeffreys' beauty registered big on Paul Whiteman's pro- gram. .The good thing about Robert Q. Lewis' panel show, "The Name's the Same," is Mr. Lewis. The gimmick is merely a so-so sv.itch on the familiars...Alan Dean, the new British singing Import, is the No. 1 record-seller In England.. ."Leave It to the Girls" (just Jilted by Its sponsor leaves the Antenna Circuit next month...A medium that has more weeds than orchids can- not afford to lose a posy-rating show. S? ,. ------------------ > Stage Daor: Katharine Cornell's low bow to a great star. She saw to it that Graee George got the Ma. 1 dressing room at the National .."The King and I, how Weeks old, Is in Jht Black. It paid the backers their full investment. From now on It is clear profit.. Dorothy McGaLw, af tea-ten years 1st Holly wood, is in the 'if} out Jjurgs staffing idfLegend of lovers." Variety's Hartford man rajwrted It "staiMs a good chance"... That weekly's Boston agent, called Harvard's "Hasty Pudding" hew "the best In a decade." He reported: "In a top profes- sional treatmfnt it could be bigtlme stnff, though, of course, It's a long way from that".. .The reports were good on Princeton's Triangle show, "Never Say Horses." The tunes were given a spe. eial nod... Londoners found N. Coward's newest play, "Relative Values," a worthy starrer for Gladys Cooper but not up to the stands of his last straight play, "Blithe Spirit".. .The "Faithfully Yours" landlord scolded us for reporting last week that it "may soon close," which it did last night. The Press-Box: Ironically, the Giants and the Yanks lost their greatest inspirational player on the same day when Di- Maggio retired as a champion and Stanky was traded. Both were renowned as the sparkplugs who inspired teammates to win...How Times Change: The current Washington scandal In- volves the Treasury execs buying mink coats. A year ago the scandal had many In the State Dept. wearing them...A typical Vew Yorker mag filler for its "What Paper D'ya Read?r' will probably never be printed in it. The Times said there were 400 at the funeral (of its late managing editor) and the Herald Trlbun put the number at 1,500... People who know Tallulah Bankhead's accused secretary will tell you somebody made her jp to look like Whistler's mother In the courtroom. She doesn't xook like the news photos you've seen. Conservative journals spiced their front pages with every sinful detail In that messy iase. On page one It is news but in a col,urn it is gossip... Most goesip colyumlsts have never published the type of Inti- macies recorded by most dailies.. .Nominated for the Flop Show jf '51: "Harry Truman's Scandals." mn n row orum thi mapiw own column THE MAIL BOX Th Mail In ii open rerun to readers el Th kan letters an received aroterully and or* handled in fiVnfial manas*. Panama Amer- a wholly con- I ou contribute a krttei den be Imeatieirt rt it doesn't appear the next day. Letter are publuhed in the arder received. Please try to keep the latteri limited to one page length. Identity a latter writers it held in strictest confidence. This newspaper assumes no responsibility exprrtsed in tatters (rara renden. lor ttetamants er opinion Pedro Miguel, c.Z. Dear Editor: A CHRISTMAS POR YOr anything, for everyone in Pana- ma buys in the Zone. All the rel- atives, friends of people living In 1 friends0"^ PanamH ** So why say we can't have cash? Held Saleable To Congress BY DOUGLAS LARSSN WASHINGTON (NEA) Pro- ponents of the new universal military training program, which will become a hot Issue soon after Congress reconvenes, be- lieve they've got a plan this time the country will buy. They think that most of the people are sold on the need for UMT. And they believe that the program just proposed by the National Security Training Com- mission reduces to an absolute minimum the complaints that the traditional opponents of UMT have always offered. It calls for six months, of training, which, they believe, Isn't long enough to wreck any boy's civilian career. Train- ing starts when a boy reaches 18. It's just about as unmilitary a program as it can be made. The boys will not operate un- der the Articles of War. They cannot be sent into combat. There will be rigorous moral supervision of them while they are in tne train- ing corps. At the end of training they will have to serve in one of the civilian reserve components of the services for seven and one- half years. Trainees will get $30 per month, a free $10,- 000 life insurance policy which will continue four months after they are out, allotments to dependents and disability benefits equal to those given veterans. "Hope They Don't Bother You" A great deal of the tradition- al opposition to universal train- ing has come from educators, the labor unions rnd the churches. The six months re- duces the antagonism of the educators. A boy determined to keep on going to school will not be vl- Flagon Spirits By BOB RUARK NEW YORK.All the serious trouble I ever get Into In this business where you wind up with one foot in your face and somebody else's on your rear teems to come when I get humorous without sticking a red stamp saying "Funny" on the product. You see a man today hip-deep in personal apo- tally deterred in his plans by [logy for one of those transgressions In judgment, that relatively short lnterrup- I guess, where you hurt feelings unwittingly and people you love get mad at you. tlon. A summer vrcnilon and one semester Is all that need be lost. Relative shortness of the train- ing also spikes the main ob- jection of the unions which was that It would Interfere with a boy's job career. Also, boys are guaranteed reemploy- ment rights. ** And the emphasis on strict moral guidance In the program should pacify to some extent the church opposition. Top policy on the character of the training program will be made by the National Se- curity Training Commission, composed mostly of prominent civilians. Among a long list of proposed regulations is the fol- lowing: "No beer should be sold in a UMT training area. All taverns and bars with- in a reasonable distance from UMT camps or stations should be off-limits to train- ees, and a penalty would be attached to the keeepr of such a place, wherever lo- cated, if he knowingly per- mits a trainee to enter and purchase an intoxicating drink." The question of who can be delerred from training, and who might be drafted for regular military service and who might be put into the UMT program, the Commission recommends, should be decided locally by draft boards. Deferments for universal training would be the same as they are for the present draft, A boy will be allowed to finish an academic year If he has started college. If the services are drafting men for regular military duty at the same time men are be- ing selected for training, the local draft boards will have a very difficult problem on their hands. lm referring to a piece tl?c other day about my old friend, Mr. Bernard Baruch, in which I undertook to kid him a little and wound up crouched way back in his personal dog-house. I thought it exceedingly funny that somebody had snuck onto his properties down South and started a liquor still. I thought it was funny because, as everybody knows, B.M. Baruch Is far and way the moat respected citizen In the land, aiid.sucri a stickler for strict attention to the letter of the law, that, he goes out of his way even to obey some of the stupid ones. Apart from that, I have mure personal respect and affection for the old gentleman, as friend and citizen, than for anyone I know. So I write myself a piece .bout B.M.B., elder bootlegger, and laugh myseK silly at my own delicious wit. I find I ain't iunny, McGec Not only have l affronted a man whose friend- ship i value, but a lot of people write In and say what is all this about booze and Baruch? I guess there are times when your own sense of humor gets so keen that you can fall down and stab yourself on It. Believe me, citizens, our No 1 statesman Is not repeat Not In the bootlegging business, nor does he cheat at canasta. Like I said, I once knew a person so subtle ha slipped in his own subtlety and busted his neck. That would seem to be me. The business of dealing In numor that Is not clearly marked seems to become more and more difficult. Either sarcasm or heavyfooted exaggeration seems more often than not to get misconstrued by serious-minded folk, and there are Instances in which no man finds himself to be humorous, to himself. I have never attempted to liu^t anybody's feel- ings, except on purpose, and then the idea Is to take the typewriter and beat the victim's brains out. But on several occasions I seem to nave creat- ed- an enmity or a gratuitous teardrop without intent. This I do not like In me My boss man has spent the last 30 years In this business hollering that subtlety is not a commodity to practice In newspapers, and I have spent the last 15 trying to prove him wropg. I think I may have to conced finally that he was right, and throw away the machin with the unlabelled levity on the keyboard. Otherwise, I am apt to wind up with a perma- nent blaok eye and severe contusions of the conscience. I believe I may say that I uro more than ordi- narily upset over this last prattfall of min, since it concerns a neighbor who has given so gene- rously of his time, advice and friendship. I certainly know that this is the lint time since I started this business that I felt moved to sit down and spend two popes saying sorry, please don't be mad at me, chief. I feel more or less today like a small boy who has just shot Santa Claus at Christmas, under the mistaken Idea that he was a burglar. And that Is only a figure of speech, I hasten to add. I positively repeat positively did not In- tentionally shoot Santa Claus Or a burglar either. I don't want any misconstructions on that one, or the kid lobby will be after me with a buggy whip. A Lever Of Power By Stewart Alsop o LONDON -Looking back at a Journey of ob- a, basic change in the Anglo-American relation- servatlon through the Middle East, one impres- ship In the Middle East, and second a basic slon stands out. American policy throughout this change in the American approach to the Arab- - in a state of suspended animation, or Israeli problem. That taxes have taken away, Every thing that I needed. My workshop, my reindeer, my sleigh. I am now making rounds on my donkey. He is old and crippled and slow,: So you'll know If you don't see me' next year, They will have to decide what boys will go for six months and what boys for 21 months or regular duty. It will be a tough decision. Army will get about half the EUSZ '" '0r n0tJ^ t-"neeV the BrTSMRB Seitwa" * sri& as s s atnd 8o give us cash. Victor Lopes. CAMP BIERD PINES That I'm out on my ass in the' To the Editor of the Mall Box. snow. A Lover of Good Poetry. LOCAL RATER WANTS CASH IN COMMIES Panam City. Mall Box: Last Sunday the paper stated that all gold commissaries would go on cash, but the local-rate would not be considered On ac- count of contraband. What Is the difference in our com my and An eon? We all know that the contra- band in Ancon has been going on area is paralysis. And the basic reason seems simple enough. The United States lacks any real lever of power in the Middle East. The Greek-Turkish aid bill, that great turning point in American foreign policy gave the Unit- ed States a lever of power in Greece and Turkey. The Anglo-American relationship in the Mid- dle East has heretofore consisted of broad agree- ment on vague generalities at the top, combined with beady-eyed suspicion and mutual rivalry at the working level. The British, acting alone, can no longer exer- cise power effectively in this ea as recent hia- Both Greece and Turkey hnve visibly bene- tory in Iran and Egypt has shown fitted, without any Impairment of their sove- But the United States cannot concelvablv af- ford to dispense with Brltlsli pr.wer, which takes the form of some 50,000 troop. in the Suez Canal Zone, and many other forms as well. What is needed is a real pooling of American and British power in the Miodie Easta sort of Anglo-American political, military and economic joint stock company for the whole area. Such a close working partnership would repre- reignty or sense of nationhood The net result has been that the Soviet drive on Greece and Turkey has been halted in Its tracks, while the United States new has staunch allies in both countries. When Greek- Turkish aid was first proposed in 1947, Loy Hende:son, now Ambassador to Iran and then chief of the State Department's Mid- Dear 8ir: I would like to bring to the at-, tentlon of everyone the sad plight of the West Indian workers who Uve in Camp Blerd. Everyone agree our houses are! so bad they must be removed,! and tne people to be given better i places to live. We hear for a long! time now we are to move to the 12-family houses in Old Cristo- bal. But when will this be? Meanwhile we sadly look across1 the street and pine for these places to Uve Training will be strictly military. The Army plans to give the first 17 weeks over to basic training. Next six weeks wttl be training with units and some leadership instructions. The balance will be schooling in special Army subjects. Training by the Navy would be similar, with sea duty being the last vhase. The Air Force plans to give eight weeks of basic training, It weeks of spe- cialist training, followed by duty with regular units of the Air Force. All three services would give de East SecUon, Very strongly advised that Iran sent a really formidable'aggregate Vpower~sf o. t. lncIudec\ s , w. fc dent power to offer the only possible real to. But Iran was not Includeda decision which surance against the outbreak of another Arab-1 seems fatally wrong In retrospectlargely be- Israeli war. rF?TW nimo cause Iran was considered primarily a British This Insurance can only take the form of an rThlyK . -a i unlulyocal Anglo-American guarantee against What has been happening in Iran, and also in expansion in either direction fffi;,nother. areB ?f exclusive British respon- it Is this, rather than a pllev of keeping the ability, suggests an obvious conclusion. Arab states permanently weak which offers the Tne traditional British system of exercising only ultimate hope of anvthlno like stahla rea I power in such countries as these is breaking tlons between Israel and the A-ab states I down, while the United State* has lacked any This must be combined with a reallv serious' means of really Influencing the course of event* effort to deal with the poisonous problem of the in these countries. Arab refugees. At the same time the United States has also In close working partnership with the British lacked any real lever of power In the Arab coun- American power must then be brought to bear "!? wlth rpal energy and determination to achieve The creation of the state of Israel has led to mutually agreed objectives cnieve the danger of a second round In the Arab-Israel The central objective must be to creaU in th war tarting up at any time This might well be Middle East reasonably enlightened authoritarian fatal to American and Western interests through- regimes, capable of dealing with the West on a out the Middle East. rational basis, and capable above all of forclne Therefore the United States. had adopted a change m an area where change is abwlutal? policy of attempting to maintain a precise, pre- Inevitable. It seem to me that something ever since cash was put in. Also can be done for the faithful mwi training In many subiects S?^S?ii rYtf'^^t ^.W-hy.."t( WeitIndl,,n employes who need which could help get them Jobs. It.n ft X/d in .nM ,2'f etter Place to live, and I do'when they get out. Including wren It U allowed.In gold com- trust and hope the housine man- training In communications, ve- m(es. Every one knows that the mer- Chants in* Panam do not makt ager wUl pause to read this. Thank you, BopefaUy Waiting. hiele maintenance, work, law enforcement medical work. ciUNHY WSUIHOTOH MERRY-00-ROUND OIIW PIARSON Drew Pearson soys: Truman got more clean-up minded after leaving Key West; Washington mink market is broken; Mystery man Grunewald says he can't read I WASHINGTON.White House advisers report that whUe tha K?' wai at Key ^est he dld not Kem &> mtoui"to raw" boldly toward a corruption clean-up. When he got back to Wash- ington, however, he got much more In a mood to houseclean ?>. u me .f tn? young men around him felt pretty strongly about the housecleaning and did their best to influence the President I ..at m.didJ,8en vc,llnton Anderson of New Mexico, a former Cabi- "trnerober.whUe new Democratic cnalrman frank McKinneT also threw his weight behind a purge. ^*' Kevw^m8,fna,to1r Ar,derson w,ho first phoned the President at Key West more than three weeks ago urging drastic action. At first, chief Justice Fred Vlnson, though anxious for a ?mJ'W 8eem?d ? th.lnk thln*8 cou,d ^ Pniched up without ho^ve*dl,agreldGrath att0mey *enefal 8enator Andea. mHu ?id the c,lef Justlc that the President would lean on .ll:avUy ior adv,ce and that he 8hould recommend drastta nitosurcs. ?hWi1^t..lLdia8Uc pur,ge-,the Senator from New Mexico argued. 12, ,taUon,ould l0M aU control over Congress, Vlnson nLOT^.Chlew1?"h,ng8-alone advocate Inside the White S2 av8n?een ail .Conney. the President's appointment sec- cSSiSSSl'm^.mt!m iavorltes would not *** * much - BROKEN MINK MARKET t h,T-.!nd.ay a .hlgh o,flclal of the Munitions Board wanted &r h& wlX! P Mth Wedd,ng 2f*S present HftVi* h^'ritii 'tSS&tiSf the currant Congressional inveitlga- Koml runrteneffieh.,ne!0n8 ,W%ak E'leb*ch" d TtS 'Th.t'*tav,nhe?UrMlan "IHR* $mo Pr "W"/' M e clerk, official elae d0 you h*ve?" ",d the .uiI,ThE.t!je#1clei,k Produced a stone marten fur piece at $335 a a price anS addeda8aln 8hk hU head'tMan* W" W ^t^Hl'/T make th.ege.,fur D1** m mink?" K,.??eH ta*tle,d cl.erk Poetically had a stroke. Recovering hla breath he finally stammered: ' "" ^ "Mink! Who would buy mink in Washington? The market has ien. inr0wBn.htn?tken,ta ilttle pie?8- have been no mmk sales in Washington for two months " brushhset.Ciia,tened ffld*J flnaUy "ttIed ior Ut comb "d ~ _; MYSTERY MAN *- i?100! those who know the score on Capitol HU, betting la 3 unscithed ^ 0runewaId wm come out * " ^ent to proba .rorvth2ugh.i.",,rhe. Dutchman" la the mystery man of Waah- Sn these'da" Irlend8-" And frien exactly one year ago when he was Investigated by a Senate com- mittee for tapping Howard Hughes' telephone wires on behalf of Senator Brewster and Pan American Airways. At that time Democratic members of the Senate committee lecpmmended unanimously that Grunewald be cited for contemnt of the Senate. .. J*-*..?1"' p members were inclined to agree. Then Senator McCarthy of Wisconsin buttonholed each Republican, got them to sign a report vigorously opposing the citation. As a result, Grunewald went his way, free to practice In. fluence, entertain high officials and fix tax cases. Here is a cross-section of the Senate's examination of tha mystery man In the wire-tapping probe: "Do you read the papera?" demanded Chairman Matt Neely - Wi!2 v,lr*)?-ln ,an effort to find out why Grunewald hid out VUalula, fifty miles from Washington, and then claimed he didn't know the Senate was searching for him. .* jypon the Inrtnictsbrff my doctorTl was told not to read anything," explained Grunewald. The reason for this, ha added, was an inflamed intestine. *" "Since your doctor told you not to read anything, what hat been your practice about reading? Have you discounted reading?" asked 8en. Harry Darby, Kansas Republican. "Only when the side flares up," replied Grunewald. "You don't read?" asked Darby incredulously. "I read everything." snorted "The Dutchmun * "You read everything now? How long a t-me have you been reading everything?" asked the puzzled senator from Kansas. "As a matter of fact I haven't read anything yet, to oe per- -cctly honest with you," fumbled Grunewald. "I understood you to say you read everything." Darby shot back. "I said I could read everything providing I don't have this ilare-up on the side." "Your flare-upa do not keep you from reading, do they?" demanded Darby. "No, it Is not a question whether It keeps you from reading. To the doctor's mindand they know better than I do," Tha Dutchman groped. "Have you been reading lately?" the Kansas senator tried again, "I haven't looked at the paper." "How long has that been your practice that you have not even looked at a paper? Can you look at a wntch or a clock?" persisted Darby. "Certainly, yes." \ "And you can talk, they dont object to your talking. They just object to your reading," continued the senatoi from Kansas. "Do you read the telephone book or look at anything like that? Is your disease so bad that.they will not oven let you Took." "I wish tha senator would never have It. I guarantee you that." Overnight it ocurred to Grunewald or his attorney that the ductor, under oath, might not confirm that he prescribed no reading for an inflamed intestine. So the next day he changed his testimony. ________ Food Fish HORIZONTAL 1 Depicted fish 9 It has long 13 Thought ' logically 14 Kind of cheese 6Aiaff VERTICAL 1 Painter 2 Guide 3 Prohibit White 8 Price Answer to Previous Puzzle niirjuriesu i,. ...r i >..iiir;w.'iiflr.,rir'ii' l tail? as- U>1( )! 1 J Mr-Jtv, LiUlillJ SUSAN, 15 Light brown 16 Theater 18 Goddess of infatustion IB Psyche part 20 Ho- tiers 7Erect 8 Rim Iron (symbol) 10 Feminine appellation M'j<:Ma! lUlas UbsM !.!!'_''. , II. . *uno*-aers .zz' ,------- 33 Medical suffix Ithnlc aroup carious balanc between Israel arid the Arab states. This policy seems logical enough at first glance. Yet the net result of this attempt to strike a balance between a tiny state o a million and a absolutely We cannot expect to create In the Middle East a series of American stooge government*, and It would be fatal to attempt to do so In brief, given a Determinedand costlytf. .? .VeuV'mSfilr,?1-^ hope^ to render ths sltua- half people and 4 vast vital land area containing tlon ln the Middle Bast, hot ideal but manaaa forty million people ha* been to create a vacuum able. ; f power ln the Arab states. And we can hope through such governments As long as the Arab states cannot be strengt- to exercise the sort of lew of powe7 we now ened beyond the strength of Israel, the United have, on a basis of mutually profitable consent 8tates can have no lever of power In the Arab ln Greece and Turkey consent, wo/. .v But we can hope to help to create and tn aun. - aw i1**. "L00!" of "integration In the Middle port ln the Middle East government* with some Dersonnei Sf11 u t0 be h,|td before the Middle Eaet goes measure of inner cohesion and Internal authorttv Et rn I he w'y. of chlna the united States muet lain If we do not, the power vacuum in, th. MMdfc nt, ndjieyers of power lp this absolutely vital area Bast will b- "- This In turn means that there mast ba, first. China. be filled and soon, as It wu filled in 33 Brittle 38 Love god 27 Horse's gait 28 This fiih Is widely sold la----- 2 Palm lily 30 Cesium (ab.) 31 Tantalum (symbol) 32 Pronoun . 33 Encourage 33 Permits 33 Nostril 33 Revise 40 It 1 founr- warn asas 41 Wood-boring larvas 47 Transpose (ab.) 43TsitgI* SO Torment 1 follower 63 Blackbirds of cuefcoo fsmlly 84 Item* MNsrrowroed 87 Comes In " 138olls 17 Comparative suffix 20 Cloys 21 Little saca 24 Sway 28 Assembled 33 Beast 34 Fruit 38 Giggle 37 Emphasis 43 Near 43 Have on 44 Ready (dial.) 48 Italian city 44 Check 43 Can SI Island (It.) 83 Direction (ab.) IB Court (ab.) EDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1951 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE uu US Government Moves To Avert New Year's Eve Steel Walkout WASHINGTON, Dec. 19 (UP) The government "FOT fU^kc fifi Miflltl.'t. tepped into the deadlocked steel negotiations yesterday. VjI * Moving to head off a threatened Jan. 1 strike, Fe- leral Mediation Director Cyrus S. Ching summoned offi- ils o( 10 major steel companies and the CIO Steelwork- srs Union to conferences here starting tomorrow. Chlng said a steel strike now would "seriously af- Ifect" the national economy and have a "direct and cri- tical impact" on the defense program. / Calling the strike threat "a matter of grave con- cern to the people of the United States," he said the [national welfare "demands" that the government use lall its facilities to seek "a speedy resolution of this Idispute." Recent Racial Bombings WASHINGTON, Dec. 19 (UP) iln an exchange of letters with Attorney General J. Howard Mc- Rep. Louis B. Heller (D-N.Y.) Grath today promised "approprl- who made the letter public. ate" Justice Department action If an FBI Investigation shows that federal laws or civil rights were violated In "recent bombings per- petrated against Negroes and Jews" at Miami, Fla. McGrath made the statement never admit a strike is Inevit- able." - He said whert the talks begin here, his negotiators expect to have an "appropriate idea" of how big a wage increase is per- missible under government wage ceilings. The steelworkers are eligible to receive only about-6 cents an hour under general celling re- gulations. ' They are expected to seek ap- proval of their full demands under other rules premltting raises for "productivity" and other factors. Sleel company officials, who have said they cannot grant a wage boost unless- allowed to increase steel prices,- met with federal price officiate again yesterday. The steel men want to find out how much they can legally hike prices under the Capehart amendment. The answer may help them decide how big a wage boost they will grant. Economic Stabilizer Roger L. Putnam already has warned the industry not to expect any price relief to cover higher wages granted the steelworkers. The 10 companies called to that his negotiators have de-, Washingtoni for the wage talks manded average wage increases I are the United States Steel CO., of 18V* cents an hour, a guar- Bethlehem Steel Co., anteed annual wage for 32 hours weekly for 92 weeks, and other benefits. Chlng said Federal mediators would be "everything we pos- sibly can to find some area of agreement." He added "we Negotiations between major Isteel companies and the 650.- looo-member CIO union have I been deadlocked in Pittsburgh I since Nov. 27. If it occurs, the walkout also would curtail aluminum pro- duction. , CIO President Philip Murray I said in Pittsburgh Monday that l"it now appears" that a strike at midnight, Dec. 31. Is "un- I avoidable" due to what he call- ed the steel Industry's ''refusal to bargain with us in good I faith." He held out hope for a last- I minute settlement, however, if I the steel makers "will get down I to business and bargain out a I reasonable settlement with us." Emphasixing the critical need for steel, the Defense Production Administration to- day called for a steel-produc- ing capacitv of 123,000,000 tons year by 1954. The previous goal was 118.000,000 tons by 1953. This year's estimated out - I put of 105,500,000 tons Is not enough to meet major defense and civilian needs. Murray, who also heads the Steelworkers Union, disclosed ' Armco Corp., Republic Steel Corp., Jones and Laughlin steel Corp.. Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co. Wheeling Steel Corp., In- land Steel Co., Sharon Steel Co., and the Great Lakes Steel Co. Ching said a "substantial" J ##*#** i t i i i t from Italy Last Minute Shipment All Kind of ALIAN NOVELTIES Ask for your GIFT with each Purchase over $5.00 Moduritos I. L. MADURO JR. 100 Central Avenue Open Until 9:30 p.m. THE NEWEST RCA VICTOR Complete Coverage Long & Short Wave ONLY MONTHLY $10.00 MONTHLY 7110 RADIO CENTER 3 Bolivar Open Until 9:00 p.m. Families On Relief Allowed TV Sets PROVIDENCE, R. I., Dec. 19 (UP) Persons on relief in Rhode Island may keep their television sets if they bring "so- lidarity" to the family. Miss Elizabeth M. smith, act- ing public assistance adminis- trator, said a television set "can sometimes be considered es- sential for the heath and wel- fare..." "We don't consider it so es- sential that we would provide money to buy it, but if a fam- ily has a TV set and it is found that it is serving the interests of the family's welfare, then we don't think they should be required to sell it," she said. part of the aluminum indus- try is involved in the steel dis- pute. Workers at the Aluminum Company of America and Kaiser Aluminum Co., are free to strike the same day as the steel workers If no agreement is might well coyer reached, he said. McGrath noted that the FBI already has been Instructed to Investigate to determine "what if any, action can be taken" by the Justice Department. Heller had written McGrath that unless an "immediate and vigorous investigation" Is made by Federal authorities, he will in- troduce a bill in January "calling for the most severe penalties for those committing such un-Amer- ican and un-democratic acts a- gainst racial and religious groups. Heller noted that such "acts of terrorism, vandalism, or desecra- tion of religious property and institutions" have ceased in New York State since enactment of similar legislation he introduced as a member of the New York SUte Senate in 1943 and 1944. He asked McGrath whether such legislation Is needed nation- ally. McGrath replied that, he as a U.S. senator, had introduced a Mil which would provide "severe penalties against two or more persons committing or attempt- ing to commit violence upon any person or his property because of race, color, religion or national origin." The measure never was enact- ed. McGrath told Heller that "a statute of this nature, together with existing conspiracy laws. most of that which your bill would be design- Aluminum industry officials ed to accomplish without of- have not been summoned here, fending the 10th amendment to however. 'the Constitution." Famous Engine 999 Escapes Scrap Pile TOLEDO. O., Dec. 19 (UP) Railroad men, nostalgic and sentimental as seafarers, are busy preparing a "home'* for old "999" here. Old 999 is now parked in the New York Central's Airline Junction yard, guarded from the clutches of the scrap heap, which is the usual fate of out- moded locomotives. Railroaders look with respect at the engine, which has been the pride of the railroad for nearly 60 years since she pulled the Empire Express from New York City to Albany at an av- erage speed of 112.5 miles per hour. The record, set May 10, 1893. stood for only 13 years, but regard for the engine and me- tve ier a Cnrtstmas thrtll! \ Our sheer nylon nightgowns and negligee* are fabulously bewitch, ing. She will be entranced with the lavish exquisite lace ... or for that beautifully draped look, our permanently pleated nylon nightgown will win her heart! Remember our Christmas Raffle $2,000.00 in Prises OPEN TILL 9 P.M. FELIX B. MADURO, S. A. 21 Central Avenue 6 Tivoli Avenue The best Santa Claus brings Next to the Control Theatre > Open frem I a.m. to p.m. mory of the men who worked on her, demands that she be preserved. Rhode Island was the first of the original 13 colonies to renounce allegiance to the Brit- ish king, and the last of the 13 to ratify the Constitution. EDWARDS, Calif. (UP)Me-! chanics at the Air Force flight; test center replaced the right- hand jet engine of a Scorpion! 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Only your own hands at the wheel, your own foot on the accel- erator can tell this great storyfor there has nerer before been driving Uke thUI Juat art the new Dual-Kant* Hydra- Matic in the Traffic Range aad feel Pontiac' high-compression engine whisk you out in front with the moil eager surge of power you ever felt I Then flick into Economy Range and rehlia ride so mooth, so effortless you almost forget you hare an engine. That kind of power and economy Is built Into Pontiac to stay! It's a great story, a great car, and a great valuecome In and see! Iollar for I>ollar VMIMMibrala PoiiOac ON DISPLAY FROM TOMORROW CIV A, S. A. PANAMA No. 14 J. Feo. de la Ossa COLON 16th & Melndei r it PAGE rODB i-i THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER WEDNEEDAT, DECEMBER 19, 1951 IN HOLLYWOOD BY ERSKINE JOHNSON NEA Staff Correspondent HOLLYWOOD (NEA)Pay- was from the "Slndler & Son ton in the Middle: The Idea of |Bakery." a feminine All-America football. SIDE GLANCES team Is an annual challenge to movie press agents. But this year UI Producer Aaron Rosenberg and Assistant Director Jesse Hlbbs. two former Ail-American grid greats, beat the publicity boys to the kick-off. Their team: LEPiper Laurieno one has more passes tossed at her. Then came the blow. The scene was cut from the picture. "It's gremlins," Irving Is moan- ing. "Gremlins in Hollywood." By Golbraith TERRY THE OPPORTUNIST They Never Fade: It's a big: year for ex-movie kid stars oni the stage. Jackie cooper's a click: on Broadway in "Remains To Be Seen." Dickie Moore Joins Fred- LTYvonne de Carlonever ric March in "Autumn Garden," falls to throw the boys for a loss, and Terry Kllburn, the moppet of LGSonja Henieshe's so used "Goodbye, Mr. Chips," is March- to guarding her Jewels. banks to Olivia de Havilland's C__Barbara Paytonalways In "Candida." the middle. ----------- RGLana Turner has so much lo guard. One Too Many: Mary Castle, RTAnn Sheridannever pe-; the gorgeous ringer for Rita Hay- nalized for roughing the passer..worth who quit Columbia when RE Gvpsv Rose Leeso little Rita scooted back to town, has yardage'has gone around her the lead In a TV drama. "One nd .Angle Too Many," at Hal Roach. QBDeborah Kerr Being Explaining her movie duck-out, English she's a tea formation ex- she told me: PfI.HShellev Wintersshe's al- "I had five leads and the ex- wavs kicking' nerience was fine, but with Rita FHDenis Darceloutstand- back I knew rd either do just In- in th two-platoon syst-m westerns or sit around and draw F~D?Rmar great at line salary for doing nothing. That's pi nil"a. ' >li El. Cyr didn't in?ke the first team. I suppose, because of a rerent backfield-ln-motion pe- ,n*l"v no good." A plain-wonderful comedy ringer named Billie Havwood is th* rave of Hollvwoori's r.itery beli. A few weeks ago. Billie was tolling a1! Steve Cochran's trrid Not in the Scripts: Kenneth Tobey. who hasn't made a film since his click as the Air Force cantain in "The Thing": "The studio bosses don't even speak to me but the fan mail keeos piling un. I think my next assignment will be a tea dance at the Beverlv Hills Hotel.-' Reverse Play: Now that all the fan mag and audience re- action polls have agreed that moviegoers prefer sexy glamor dolls to the girl-next-door type of heroine. Fox has come up with the title, "The Girl Next Door." FRECKLES.AND HIS FRIENDS "No" RT MERRILL BLOS8ER ^0 **-2F T. M MO. U. MT. Of com imi it Nt uavicf. mc. "Aren't you going to a poker game tonight? Mom said you would when you took ut out to dinner and the show last night:" Bob Falln, who will wed Marie Wilson before Santa Claus time, has signed a big TV contract that will launch him as an actor-pro- ducer In a film series. "Junior l Aces." Thp Bare Facts: Hedv Lamarr may still scream for the smelling salts whenever "Ecstasy" pops up -In movie houses, but Hildegarde -Neff isn't going to bat an eye- lash if exhibitors succeed in bringing prints of her sizzling German-made movie. "The Sin- ner." into this country, F'ldegarde. who's Ty Power's leading lady in "Diplomatic Cour- ier." admits that she shucked off her clothes for certain scenes in .the film. But she says she hasn't a legal leg to stand on to halt American showings of the pic- ture. "I didn't know how far I would have to go when I signed the con- ' tract." she told me. "But I bad to do what the director told me to do. A contract is a contract." Cut finger? Seat Warmers. Thermostatic- ally controlled lounge chairs, that heat up at.the touch of a but- ton, for homes and movie the- Btters are being turned out by In- ventor Frank Irving. How about chairs that cool you off when Lana Turner is on the screen? Irving Sindler. the prop man, Is disconsolate. For 29 years the name Slndler has appeared in every movie on which he's work- ed. In 156 pictures the name Sindler has popped up on store windows, on book covers, in news- paper headlines and even on a tombstone. Irving finished Sam Goldwyn's :.latest. "I Want You." a content- ed man. In one scene Peggy Dow looked at a calendar. Irving printed the calendar himself. It Qukkl Put on BAND-AID ADHtMVI ANDAOf Keeps oul dirt and germs. Helps prevent infection. Wmmmmmaml * Inw. U, | i-nw*w- s ALLEY OOP What's Up, Doc? BT V. T. HAMLITf Only New ODO-RO-NO Cream gives you all these advantages! 1Stops perspiration quickly safely. 3Banishes odour instantly. 3Its protection lasts for one to three days. 4Docs not irritate normal skin use it daily SAbsolutely harmless to all fab- rics. 6Never dries up, never gets gritty or hardens in the jar at ordinary deodorants often do. Millions of satisfied uomen us wuSuuutak BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES Plans BY EDGAR MARTIN -^mm ODO-RO-NO Cream it doodoronf wifhouf a doubt CHRIS WELKEN, Planeteer Does It Talk? RSS WINTERBOTHAM ' wrr to OSCILLATE,. THE HAIR- ^HOW-D BE ANCHOKEP AT BOTH TUB LOOSE SUO &AHCHOKBP tLKCTRO- ^TATtCALLY, BI>PD>.' VIC FLINT II IAS POP IM GOING NOW, PRISCILLA! COME AND KISS ME ^GOODBYE! Stuck With He rStory (7^^ AME, PRscLLaT f WHAT YOU'RE DOING- I^NT NEARLY SO IMPORTANT AS KISSING. YOUR DADDY' BY AL VERMEER '// HJGa BUNNX Conniver 6 VKGHT N\C* 'n W.\6V6Qft\.Y, 1 RVCVOVi ,POR &OV0WOO-W YVSVP r MIS* V06 WWH VSR ,---------------r VKR \*f HI *rA6@t*R9 -tSttrx MOOCH OVVP US j------------- CAPTAIN EAST THE OTHERS MIWT'UE l-LED WHEM THEY HEARD THAT CROWD OUT FROWTl Speak Up, Richie BT LESLIE TURNEg No Leads BT MICHAEL O'MALLEY J A* I/VB ALREADY f TOLD TWE POUCB, MR, ' 1 SCWBE WA* FAB BBUIND I J IK ui* RENT MB MAD I REASON! TO BE v*-7 DEJECTED OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR UOOPLE OUT OUR WAX By J. R. WILLIAMS WHERE DOES IT HURT YOU, CARP, OLD BOY ? REMINDS ME OF "THE GAG A0OOT . THE GOY WHO ATE SOME TOADSTOOLS -*~THE DOCTOR RECOMMENDED A CHAMGE OF DIET-----, KYOK-^YK.WLET,5HAN(e_ WB thermometer: WE'LL SEE IF YOUR FEvJER IS HIGH EMOUGH SELL./; ( UR6, GOOD HEAvlENS, < PIKE/ LET'S FOfJESO the jests.'carp seems to be Displaying definite symptoms ^'appendicitis.' 1 all -The doctor -*- \ko put pike under ether" rt-ii ml HE SHOULDA 5AID'WHUT A PRICE.'* TH' GUYS HALP1 DEAD--ArJ"HE'S <5CT TH'TRlSiSER to Puu. yet/ , VfVPft^T 1 WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 19. 1951 i-HE fANAltrA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER paor rra >>*>> fflyyfftfewirrir>t^rrr.r^o*nMWWyW^ KSC**************, >>>>>>>>>> > MAKE SHOPPING A PLEASURE NOT A CHORE! N COME TO L PANAMA where under one roof you will find in the finest shops a fascinating variety of items and services for the most demanding customer! It's CONVENIENT from every point of view! # TRAFFIC: No heavy traffic to fight, either from Panama's chief residential districts or from the Canal Zone. m PARKING: Absolutely NO PARKING PROBLEM! Plenty of room for your cars, and they're .quite safe here. 9 TIME SAVED: No running from shop to shop; they're all in one convenient location here. 9 V A Kit I Y: You'll find men and women's clothing, certain house furnishings, cameras and camera supplies, flowers, jewelry, unusual gifts, airline offices and travel service, brokers' office, and of course, modern beauty and barber shops, and an inviting air- conditioned Cafe drill. 0 r KILL"j: The SAME as in our main shops downtown. You pay not one cent more for the quiet, luxurious surroundings which in the States you find only in "carriage trade" shops. r, ^ fiUUKj: Shops have new hours now for your convenience. From 9 a.m. open through the lunch hour to 6 p.m. Noon-day shop- pers can have lunch in the popular-priced Cafe Grill or the Poolside Snack Kitchen. # lNIRANLl: Main SIDE entrance to the shopping arcade by the Cafe Grill sign. No need to walk thorugh the main lobby. i i i i i i i i ^^^ DAG MAR V- i :.t or SWEDISH CRYSTAL, CERAMICS AND FURNITURE TOYS, LEATHER ITEMS, TABLE LINENS, CHINA i \TI dutVCa/a fa/klich JEWELRY HEADQUARTERS PANAMA STORE World-famous watch brands -k MOVADO -k ROLEX * LA MONT * ELGIN * HAMILTON . -k LAGUNA k BULOVA UNIVERSAL-GENEVE NGELUS CLOCKS . 3 NATIVE HANDICRAFTS & BOOKS * Tef. 3-T74 .ft World-famous Sterling by Gorham Towle Stieff Heirloom Marthinsen of Norway Art-Carved Ring* by J. R. Wood YOUR DOLLAR GOES FURTHER AT THE DUTY FREE STORE i . i i. cfrench {Bazaar PANAMA'S LARGEST DEPARTMENT STORE VISIT OUR DUTY FREE STORE AT EL PANAMA HOTEL French Perfumes and everything for he dressing room French Evening Bags French and Italian Handbags Italian Angora Sweaters Italian Gifts Swiss embroidered handkerchiefs and articles Elizabeth Arden Products, The famous Berkshire Nylon Hosiery Bathing suits Ladies Lingerie EflU* CAFE GRILL NEVER CLOSED! Open All Day and Night With An Appetizing Choice of Tempting Dishes! Breakfast.........from J .50 Lunch............i. from .75 Dinner.............from L40 And the best cup of coffee in town, made from freshly ground coHee beans only 10c. DROP IN AFTER THE PARTY OR THE MOVIES! THE AMERICAN BAZAAR FROM TOP TO TOE! You'll be pleasantly surprised at our beautiful assortment of .men's wear.... Everything a man can nsed, from TOP TO TOE Including an exceptionally large assortment of sports shirts from MIAMI, NEW YORK and A_* California. -i-- 1 ii< t : I of he flewsstaad She leading ^American magazines [Panamanian magazines ana newspapers Postcards & ouveturs Christmas cards ith wu local themes Pan Amerca/v World Airways "THE SYSTEM OF THE FLYING CLIPPERS' -PANAGRA^ "World's Friendlieet Airline" VIA EL INTERAMERICANO RESERVATIONS TICKETS Colombia Ecuador Peru Bolivia Chile Argentina TRAVEL TROUBLES!? Large or Small. .. Let us Cure Them AT NO COST AT ALL PERSONS TRAVEL BUREAU * * i ! 1 i i * i i i i i i i * * i i i I N i i i * i * * n Bran iff Hotel El Panama Tel. 3-0244 i To the UNITED STATES via MIAMI or HOUSTON Connection to ll important cities from CHICAGO to RIO DE JANEIRO i i ! JLolas [Beauty Shop i ., The Only Air Conditioned Beauty Shop Merle Norman Cosmetics Reasonable prices T t a.m. to S: SO p.m. CAMERA STORE LEICA o BOLEX ROLLEIFLEX CONTAX PANAMA BROKERS, INC. Stocks, Bonds and Securities * * i i GREET THE NEW YEAR IN THE EfiLem GRAND MANNER! MAKE YOUR RESERVATION NOW! DANCING TILL DAWN TO TWO ORCHESTRAS! Entertainment, souvenirs, and noisemakers. . Special midnight supper $5. Light refreshments also served. Entrance $2. per person. <<<<<<<<<<<<<< <<<<<<<<<<*<***<<<*<<: PAGE SIX THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER ' WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 1, 1H1. if You Sell em ... When You Tell em thru P.A. Classifieds I Leave your Ad with one of our Agents w our Offices LEWIS SERVICE No. 4 Ttvoll Av Ptm-r -T5SI KIOSKtl DE LESSEES r.-qu' of l*r P.n.m* MORRISON'S No 4 PaarM ef July At*. ho 2-SM1 BOTICA CAKLTON ll.Wf Mrlrnati At*. Phon 25 -Col* SALON DE BELLEZA AMEAlCANO No Wo.1 1Mb Street THE PANAMA AMERICAN No ST "ST Straal Panaa No. 12.17* Cnlnl At.Colo 12 words Minimum for 3c. each additional word. Jungle Jim Price Of Daring Doings Jangle Jim Price today described hit scheduled Christmas excursion to the Darien and Pearl Islands as an adventuresome and educational' tour and proceed- ed U describe some of the experiences of his guests a last jear's excursion. Jungle Jim's story runs like this: Tells Tale In Daen FOR SALE Household FOR SALE Automobile MISCELLANEOUS RESORTS 0* roa star* Si asking sawMesafiHOTEL PANAMERICANO in cool El Service Personnel end Civilian Government Employes 1 N A N C I your new or used car through ' GOVIRNMINT EMPLOYES FINANCE CO. Fort Worth, Texas. Serving Government Employes ond .Service Personnel in the Canal Zone FOTTaLE M,lil V",,,,Qn Blinds, 'or H yeors. With our financing 6-) v 5"1 gocd condition. House vour msuronce automatically adjusted MO Pedro Miguel. Phone 4-4SI. 'o U. S. coverage. m. reoro y__________________AMANGIMINTS CAM IE MADE :R SALE Leaving Isihmuj, bed- THROUGH LOCAL AUTOMOBILE . r.vm and dimngroom set. rein-, DEALER LEAVING COUNTRY must tell gas Mote, red go'ato bed> end mol- rre ses. dressers, dining table ond 6 choirs, 6 piece bamboo ih,f!9d Msv-ehoir, ostorted tables end choirs. 48th Sireel No. 10. Bella Visto, Ponomo telephone 3- .' 3406 Write AleeaeNcs Aaeayi as 2031 Aaeea. C Z. COMMERCIAL b PROFESSIONAL FOR SALE Miscellaneous Voile. Rooms $2.00 per person per day. Meels a la carte. Special Christmas Dinner $1.25. Reserva- tions telephone Panoma 2-1112. Gromlich's Santo Cloro beach- cottages. Electric ice boxes, gas stoves, moderate rates. Phone 6- FOR SALE:International Harvester. 441 *-S6?._____________________ Freezer, slightly used at bargain'pfcjgj,,,. Ocoanside corteges. Sonto pnces Cio. Alfaro S. A. Panamo Claro. Box 435. Balboo. Phone No. 28 Peru Avenue. Panamo' Ponomo 3-1877. Cristobal 3-1673 City. Tel. Panama 3-0301. -------------------------------------------------------------------- 'ge'Ctc1' Apt ; I No 47 Central Avenue, DO IT THE EASY (ond ECONOMICAL WAY) !lf you ore too busy to write publishers, if you don't like to pay ol CERRO CAMPANA mountains FOR SALE ft, Westmghouse re- fi.gf.3toi 25 cycle, all porcelain 125 CO Walnut drop leaf table S: 00. Bamboo 1475-B, Holden S: FOR SALE Simmons couch. Guale mo a set, Singer industrial sewing FOR machine. 60 cycle, 1-4 H. P Bar- ci b Youth bed stroller Phc >e c S, Colon 1951 Ferd Victoria hard top cen- vertielel two tone green. This ear,.. M like new. Only 6000 miles. Ih> driTS it away. Only $725 dewa. , rW FORD DEALER. COLPAN ro"s, mon*y rders, ~ s,k us MOTORS INC.. en aur.mee.le ' a" th f""'l. professional ond rew Teles-hone 2-10JJ 2-10361^""*" r" J*L T ",' Panama y of " ,he daloll. supply fresh copies of latest editions and Houses ON BEACH Santa Clara. Phone SHRAPNEL Balboa 2S20. to' Or see caretaker there, also house with buying Williams Santa Clora Beach Cottages. Two bedrooms. Frigidaires, Rock- gas ranges. Balboa 2-3050. It i actually cheaper to bay a P.r.l. SAFETY SAW BLADE than to accept anv other as a Gift. Beside Protection Against Injury, they save many times their value in cost of SHARPENING and POWER alone. GEO. F. NOVEY, INC I7S Central At*. Tel. 3-S140 SALE:Buying or selling anido ' " ot o saving to you. Just; FOR RENT Houses automobile? See Agencias Cosmos."''' ,ne phone and tell us whot you Automobile Row No. 29. Tel. 2-'wonr- And ,or flood1 measure, we'll;________.________ 4721, Ponamo. |'oke your subscription to any ma-FOR RENT:Furnished house. No. gazine for business, profession or; 107. House 12 Paitilla. Tel. 3- FC* SALE Westmghoue relnger- 1950 Mercury 6 passenger Cause home new or renewal. oork green. learner uphelttery.i geeo) hres. Only 9000 miles. This; cer is e steal. Only $600 down1 and drive it awey. Yeur FORD DIALER. COLPAN MOTORS INC.. Moil en automobile rew. Tel. 2-1033 2-1036. Panam. otrr 6 1-2 It pirfect condition. 90S" 8 1-2 St Apt. I. Colon. P0C S*i-F ? P'ece Trooical living- ,tcc-^ iel with innrrspnng cush- .rre Consul no of 3 seat settee. 2 eho" Cwe Ortomon end Coffee T --. < X Set HI 10*. Fmg. An T#M j um4 -'' "9 'new 20.00. Phone S,Bmhil(, f###] ,.r , houie &4-B Coco Son- Ctm. MMm1t, _J_'____________________________________' e Jery Avenue. FOR SALE -One pa new Guate-.* "** tmn * * "aey. maleoi '-a-an-oce bedspread (Cro- 1950 Stadebafeer Champion Ster- FOR BOOKS OR MAGAZINES call on AGENCIAS STEER, S. A. Telephone Ponomo 2-1219 Apartado 731 Panama, R. P. 2434, Panama. FOR RENT Apartments FOR SALE:Lodies platinum dio-~ ALHAMBRA APARTMENTS I ring 1.27 corot plus ten Modern furnished-unfurnished opart- No. 13. 4th chips. Insured m U. S. fourteen ments. Maid service optionol. Con- hundred dollcrs. Sell for seven act office 8061. 10th Street, New hundred dollars. Coll Navy 2540;Cristobal. telephone 1386 Colon. during day and Novy 3394 offer --------------------------/--------------------------------- five. IFOR RENT:Nicely furnished smoll cVt Te epnone ?-4^20 light Ceupe black, teee tires, seat apartment. Peru Avenue No. 57 near Lux Theater. Tel. 3-0746 ond 3-4888. FO SALE China cabinet, kitchen Itooi "-ap.e evtens.on tobe, single bed frame, bed lamp, cnJd's pe-, dr.: orplore. child's musicol rock-1 e I ke new 4 vo?reton blmas 35 ,c/\|> c*i c b, 80, 741-A, Enterprise PloC.^ - boa P'OfJo PANAMA CANAL COMPANY OPFERS STRUCTURES FOR SALE caver. clean car. Only $465. For sole to the highest bidder Bliild- 00 Sown and dnve it away. Your ings Nos. OS33 and 0835. Balboa 'hOR RENT:To responsible family,, FORD DIALER, COLPAN MOTORS Sealed bids will be received in the1 cocl oportment, one bedroom. ins " VEX&i ** T*'- 2" "'Ce 0( Superintendent of Store- 1033 2-1036 Penema. houses at Balboa until 10:30 o. m.. December 2 LUX VENETIAN HIINDS Immediate Delivery Aluminum Awnioff Different Cotorg $14.00 Industrias Panamericanas Tel 3-1713 E. 29th Street Last Christmas) we shoved off from Panama's Marina Dock In front of the Presidencia on Ave- nida Norte, around 9 in the [morning. As soon as we cleared the Ca- lif ale reefs, some of the guests dropped their fishing lines astern, and by the time we reachedd Pa- checo Island of the Pearl Island group, we had 73 mackerels and bonita*. Someone suggested a Ash-fry. The tide was right, to we Tow- ered a boat loaded with fish and trimmings and Machi (my right hand Indian) headed for the1 beach. Most of the cuesta chang- ed to swim suits aa we worked our yacht into shallow water near the beach. A large brush and log fire was made and some of the excursion- ists roasted hot dogs. Panama Rotary Chib Meeting: Cancelled , There will be no meeting of The Panama Rotary Club this Thursday since theRotarlans are holding their Christmas party and dance on Saturday night, Dec. 22 at the Panama Golf Club. This Is to be a Hard lima Dance and all Rotarians and of these excursions on Dec. 26 their invited guests are expected *f """f t a.m. It will be an to wear "Hard Times" attire. The all-expense tor at S35 per per- dance wUI begin at irSO p.m. mm. Children, 4 to 1 years, and a buffet dinner will be serv- *a->_______ led about midnight. Point, changed course and re- turned through the middle of the Pearl Islands, indulging in more fishing. (Jungle Jim will lead another Oh, My Aching Back Is Theme Of Disaster Crew On D Plus 1 that is the commonest, com- plaint today amdng the wives Machi fried the fish m corn and dependents of Army and meal. We ate, explored the island Navy personnel who live In the and swam in the clear waters off Fort Amador-15th Naval District. Pacheco, area. .... _, Th* aliments are the result of Some three hours later we con- theif ,trenu0us activities yester- ttaued on our way through the day ln ^ Jolnt Anny-Navy Di- lalands Md arrived at the vU,;MUJter Control exercise which lage of Qarachln about 7 p.m. wa* conducted In the Fort Ama- We had to wait for the tide here dor Zone. Approximately 80 wo- In order to enter the SambuRiv-i men of the Army-Navy resl- eri _. dential community went Into ac- Some of^us had our first ride tlon ln a theoretical problem ln i a piragua (dugout canoe) which an atomic bomb was as- Sore muscles and aching backs had only a classroom acquaint- ance with disaster saw vividly what a serious thing they were from ship to shore We went la a small store in the center of (iarachine. where "mejoranas" (folk songs) werej asug to the ladies. Here some people bought Indian silver earrings, ehains and so forth. training for. And the exercise served to "iron out the bugs" for future Disaster Control planning and Instruction. Lt. Col. Jotm P. Mial, Direc- tor of the Disaster Control Cen- ter and over-all head of disaster control on the Isthmus said: "The Joint Army-Navy exer- cise at Fort Amador was emin- ently successful. It clearly de- monstrated to the necessity for between Balboa and Corozal, leaving "casualties" sprawled over a wide area. The keynote of the entire ex- ercise, as Disaster Control offi- cials later pointed out. We boarded our boat about strenuous activity tempered with 10:30 p.m., crossed the bar into .enthusiasm and wholehearted the sambu and proceeded about cooperation by all who particip- .ten miles up the river, where we a ted. dropped anchor to await day- There was a little confusion light. I don't think anyone slept that night, it was a beautiful night; full of jungle nolses. Several guests put mattresses on the for- ward deck. SIAUTIFUL ...,~. ^., 1951, when they win with UTILITT ot truck Dodce -9 ** T*"*? '? ,?ubl'c- F?rm' of pro" perfct. Phone Balboa 2^0 ori^'j""''1 " pf;"culQ'5 mV J* nspecl at house 30. on. way "C"'f ''" 'h? ?*** * ,he *" Street to QVrv Light. ''""" * Storehouse,. Balboa. --_________?____ nnd the Hcuslhg Manager at Bal- m.,cr Pa: .tree, Ne :. tway.;|m s^g^, Tn^~vT"mjn* 1 "" "*** bathroom. $35.00. Via Espaa ond Second St.. Carrasquilla. No. 48. Tel. 3-0471 Panomi tC* :-u t - Choirs, crib. *i'h mat- : h-.- g \ Co- *"Lum Henrv" repci' refinish Rattan Bomboo Furrnture. tree estimate. c - uf ond punctual service Dia-; ^ ge-nat H-tel Roese\*.t Ne ^2 POR RENT Rooms tray SWW tires. Tais car r beeaty. Only $415.00 down end rf's Tears. Year FO*o DIA LI COLPAN MOTORS INC.. on op. temeeile rew. Tel. 2-1033 2- I03C. Panama. Mohooo- bedfor" Pc r. beos w.rh I S AND TUBES: New; I 1.00 x CQR SALEA K C 22; 2 ply, tor trucks; borgoin pr^es. f- icoia & Compony, 79 B Ae~ue. L 194 f.,4 TaeW V-l aaek JC SAL I su-te I S> motiressei only few p.. .... r ., -y^.j^jii. House x ':*-f Ba-sa Street fI Ma Stierraan Dispensary Officer Promoted To 1st. Lieutenant J K SALE 194S Ford-Club Co^oe FORT SHTRMAN. Dec U E*. *rt Cc^k rtiroughc!? nieta] :.:oi;ionwasreceivec Pt^, Faoorno .4UW 5 JWh E.ASR For: Shers-^r.. of "-___________________^ J*.e pa-raMOtsnsj to fir?: neutensr.; IMJ Pet 'nit Sot earfc keaa 4tf Joe W Cberrv Diipensary Ad- ttr.ir.r:iTe Officer. $350 ----------------------------------ROOMS AVAILAtU Liga, eaal SALEBlonde Cocker-Spaniel, entirely ranaveted and well tar- two year old Automatic Bend. nished. Ratea reasonable, eche- woshmg mochme. latest model. Ion only. Inau.ro at The Ama- l.ke new. $250. Comer 37th and ricen CUjfe tasmg Do Cuba Avenue No. 18. I Perk. i PANAMA BROKERS, INC. Hetel n Pname Selling: Brewery. Panam Cement, Clay Froducts and Faeraa y Las (preferred). TfA S-471 ,- 3-lfJo0 iuid_t0-h*ve h5?5 lrop?ed continuous practice to create a relaly effective Zone relief pro- gram and the necessity for 100 per cent participation by all de- pendents. Enthusiasm, coopera- tion and wholehearted participa- 21* I tlon by the ladles of Fort Ama- dor and the 15th Naval District were particularly impressive. The work o Major P. L. Peter- son, Zone commander; Lt. Com- mander Theodore Aldous, alter- nate Zone commander; Warrant Officer R. C. Huddleston. Oper- ations Officer; and Lt. (JO) D. M. Feinman. Navy, assistant Op- erations Officer showed careful planning and highly competent FOR RENT:Furnished room with registered Cock-! private bathroom, seprala en- er Pups. 2 femles. I mala Gotun trance, splendid for bachelor, No. 3"291- 13. 43rd Street. MODERN FURNITURE CUSTOM BUILT Slipcover Kenphalstery VISIT Otm aatOW-POOMt Albert Bteres J. P. e la Osea Tt (Aateaaeatle law) Prae Manatee Psekap n*Uver< Tel J-44JS s:es am. m tree aav a*m. FOR SALE:^-Long plovmg rords of ST ST Sfi ^D^DtilU;, f STpSf^DIAZ-37,h COLPAN MOTORS INC.. en --' 6 P"mJ _______________ mfcj raw. Te*. 2-1033 2- I03. Panama. W SALE:Electric rarwj, lik, new ,pOR RENT SITE:NIW YORKIR. ------- Must sell $175.00. H:use 233-B. ?3*A; Justo Arosemena Avenue. FOR RENT Misffllanrou Gotu For information No. 26; 37th St.'. REPAIRVenetian Blinds. MAKECornices it Curtains. FAINTFurniture. Work Guaranteed. . | TALLER CEDE SO #28 Per Ave. Tel. 3-1046 ?0R SALE: fre.ght train Lionel "0"-gouge with extra track oat cortert^'e coupe. vt Se see>. Estocan Shell, Voa Espora ..,.., Hkm *"*V- Yao fOt-D OCALIP. A native of Nashville. Teanes- colpan motors Inc tee L: Ci-.errr a::raded second- ..^m. TtL 2.)0j, _~; rr schools :r. his Tucsor.. Amo- i0J. Pmm, t)a and noldi s Bachelor of Sel- ____ ace ceerec bo 2Vsoaogr from fos SAt tjn:Tersi:v c: Ar.rons He vrxs Joint: r.radua:e srork ^-. hjo- tfeeTi-:f- at :>.e rniTcrKty af Sou:herr. CaUforaia when he A-e c Scss. bro*.es e^wr4 ora VMS recaUed :o acure duty ^-es -*j, tor spect<> m., During Worid War n. he -*.* ajasacned to a rcecjca: detoV&mec: Of the TT5U mantrr Regale-: Be served ir :he European Tfces- tar of Operations and is aaUxc- to wear the Brorje S".ir aa Comba: Medx-3 Bsire Hildegarde Neff, Tyrone Pow- er's Qarboish leading lady in ft!r*2rciLZ^Zu0' -Diplomatic Courier" denlos %krlJ??\ntw-,*t estranged hubby Kurt ZL r p(WbM 2"4, house Hlrach serve" her with divorce ana L^IC. Plonk Street ..r, r. ih.l .h. ..n.. LOST & FOUND papers or that she got a secret unhitching ln Paris. It will be a Los Angeles or Reno divorce for; i Hildegardf. who says of a possl-| ble marriage to Director Anatole Lltvak: "We are very good friends and d* ill * mon'v llk nlm wry m"ch- o"1 l0"l 3 as I'm not free, I can't talk about LOST _Brow~ alligator oollet. Gotur. Canol Zone. i marriage.'' New hybrid rains of gwavmle the rubber-yielding shrab that glows wxlri ba oar dry soaxhwes: Produce S5 to Mfi more nabbe: Usar, the bes: wild vanetsts a- vattahar a decade ago. THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRLS IN PANAMA, HAVE JUST ARRIVED FROM ITALY! OUR DOLLS this year are the finest ever received, including an attractive "pollera!" THEY START AT $2.50 THE FRENCH BAZAAR Juan Palomera COLON SHSATI0HAL0ffR! IN iat alia C I ill*' -: conta SAVra *% IKONING TIMt!! Fits aU Unear< 'i Ironlna naaros. Will last Ineeflnltelj. Oaly $3.75 each 2 for $7.25 Postpaid (iet one far vourself. Give one as a Zmas Gift. Limited Quantity. ORDER NOW. Sand Moaey Order is Dunmore Agency Estafeta Instituto Nacional Panama. K. P. Baby Sitting Reduced To An Exact Science MADISON. WU.. Dee. II (UP) Many a mother has had an evening out spoiled by remembering that she forgot to tell her baby titter something vital. Mrs. John Taaiwtt of Madi- son had the same experience and derided to do something a bout It. She designed "Sitter Notas." s combination scratch- fad and baby sitter manual hat contains vital telephone numbers, tips for emergencies, and eight 'baby-bye-lawa" for any good baby sitter. Thar* siso Is a separata page for special instructions on each parent's evening out. Mrs. Taggett'a manual proved so popular with nor sitters and friends that she has turned her Cos of mind project into a Insss. ^^^^ WairoWay'a^rUtmaa Day TV show on film will be the most expensive hour show ever put on Tvf-WOiOW for th. film and tlms.HraiVs aolna a rtpafct of his mailo mirror trick of last year ara will unveil bmmb from There conversation ran some- thing like this: "What on earth i is that noise?" One woman an- swered, "creepy chills are run*; nlng up and down my back." Another asked. "Jungle Jim, are there any boa constrictors ln the trees along here?" , I answered by tVaabhu asy light ttspa the trees and *very- one saw little green yea gleam- ing at them. They were certain the tree* were filled with boas. until we blew the boars hern and ah the snakes turned into sarde. Bverybodv stayed up that night. They giggled, drank coffee or orange juice, ate sandwiches land played pranks on each other all night. i At daybreak, everyone was on i the forward deck having an ear- ly breakfast, watching parrots and birda of every description flying back and forth over the river. Of course, every small log that floated by Just had to be a cro- codile, until someone said. "It's only a log." Machi and another Indian were there to point out the real crocodiles. We moved on up the winding Sambu between the Venado and Sapo Mountains to the Boca 8a- balo river about a three-hour, run. We dropped the hook in the mouth ot the 8abalo. where she flows into the Sambu. This was our second day out. Some visited the Sbalo village over the jun- gle trail and returned by dugout, i visiting Indian houses. Others visited Indian houses along the Sambu. f> the afternoon 200 Indians came down both rivers to sell plantains to trade boats. That evening after dinner, we i went crocodile hunting. Nearly everyone had a flashlight. They were shown how to catch the eyes of the crocodile In the glow of the flashlight and were told, "when you see ruby-red eyes g'smlng in the light, that's the old croc himself." It was rare that the women didn't scream when they picked up a croc's eye. The old cree was warned by screams many times, but he is a damb fellow. Be Just toys there until one of the Indian haraeens struck bean*. After that there was a lot of thrash, iug about far poeaibly a minute. Flashlight bulbs worked over- time. All crocodiles were kept until morning so that color shots could be made. When we returned to our home boat, we hoard walling flutes and tom-toms Tobares) over In the trading post. And here we went again. The Indiana wore having a danoe, so we Joined in. Strag- glers kept coming back to the boat all during the early morn- ing hours. About T a m. the last day wo started back down the river over the bar Into the Oulf of San Mi- guel. Wo passed Oarachin and same awkwardness, as Dis- aster Control afficials fully ex- pected. But the overall results shewed that the name roa* training sessions of recent naeutha were not wasted. These women, who before had organizing ability." DISASTER CONTROL WORKERS look much more pleased than they would have had yesterday's exercise at Ft. Ama- dor been the real thing. But that did not prevent all "vic- tims" from receiving thorough treatment for their simulat- ed wounds. Here, a burn "victim" is being checked at the Naval first aid station before being sent on for more treat- ment at the Central Casualty Station. Left to right are Mrs. O. J. Gagnon, Mrs. A. M. Bledsoe. center, and Mrs. H. V. Mitchell. The Corpsman at right Is Jesse Parker. (US Army rhole) AMERICA FINANCE CORPORATION NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS Notice a hereby given that a Special Mooting of Shareholders of America Finance Corporation, a cor- poration domiciled in the Republic of Panama, will bo hold on Thursday the 27th day of December. 1951. at ton o'clock in the morning; in the offices located at Avenida Norte No. 83. (Offices of Cia. Martinz) Pa- nam City, Republic of Panama, for the purpose of considering and acting; on a proposed toas* of all the real property, plant and equipment owned by Panam Forest Products Corporation to United States Plywood Corporation, approve the balance sheet as of Novem- ber 30, 1951, and such other business as may pro- perly be brought before the mooting. Panama City, Panam. December 17,.1951. THE PRESIDENT . Problems, problems, problems: Jane Oreer's vrordage on why she's mad* only three movies In The studios mad at me. I got my pay check every week, but I'm In Hollywood to make good pletnres. not Just money. "The public saw a lot of m when 1 was trying to learn koine- ''Petar Pan1' Inow White," by .thing about aoUng. Now that I've the war, will bo reissued In fob- learned, I nevar got a chance to uar -' 'make a plcluro.- , Now...6 YMi-sOld! ruary ntflxfl ^PH^? bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbH W^DNFSDAT.-noTIBER M. IWt THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER .-..,----------r PAGE SEVEN pacific Society * ///. Carroll C~ -Kochtr O n, BJL. V.L &JL. 352/ Providence, Rhode Island and the College o Mt. St. Vincent, New London. Connecticut and Is now employed with ca. Panamea de Fuerza y Luz. Cocktail Party Honors New Panagra Representative Mr. W. J. Bird, who arrived re- cently to succeed Mr. Harold Eby as Representative of Panagra In Panama was honored Sunday evening with a cocktail party giv- en by Mr. and Mrs. Eby In the Bella Vista Room of the Hotel El Panama. The Ebys will leave for Lima, Peru In the near future. Tea Held at Chilean Embassy Mrs. Manuel Hidalgo Plaza was the hostess at a tea given on Monday afternoon at four thirty o'clock at the Embassy. Mrs. Lucas Entertains Bridge Club The Fortnightly Bridge Club met recently at the home of Mrs. Marlon Lucas of Balboa. The guests attending included Mrs. William Black. Mrs. Frank Bry- an, Mrs. E. W. Schnake, Mrs. Ethelyn Wood, Mrs. H. V. Howard. Mrs. J. M. Da vies and Mrs. Lawrence Adler. MR. AND MRS. JAMES MATTHEW MCGUINESS, JR. CAPWEXL-MCGUINESS WEDDING SOLEMNIZED AT CRISTO REY CHURCH On Saturday, December 15, at seven thirty o'clock in the Cristo Rey Church in Vista del Mar, the marriage of Miss Kathleen Mary Capwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Lewi* Capwell, to Mr. James Matthew McGuiness, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. James Matthew McGuiness of Haxelton, Penn- sylvania, was solemnised with the Reverend Father Kohe officiating. The chancel and altar were decorated with white lilies and were lighted by tall cathedral candles. ' Miss Lilia Sosa, organist, played the traditional wedding marches for the processional and recessional and accompani- ed Mr. Carlos Porras when he sang "Ave Maria" by Gounod and "I.iebestraum" by Liszt. Lt. Garvyn Moumblow Home for Holidays Lt. Garvyn H. Moumblow. who has Just completed his first six months of flight training at Moultrle, Georgia, arrived early this morning on the Isthmus by Braniff Airlines, to spend the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Moumblow, of Gatun. Lt. Moumblow was reared on the Isthmus and- attended Canal Zone schools and Canal Zone Ju- nior College. He attended Wil- Imlngton College, Wilmington, Ohio and is a graduate of Okla- homa A. and M. He will leave the Isthmus at the close of this year for Texas, where he will be- gin the next six months of his training. Escorted and given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a wedding gown of white Chantllly bodices and champagne colored nylon net skirts, matching nose veils and carried bouquets of Miss Trimble to Arrive Friday Miss Ann Marie Trimble, whose engagement to Mr. Charles Parke of Kentucky, was recently announced., is expected to arrive on the Isthmus Friday, by plane, from Langley Field, Langley View, Virginia to visit her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Trim- ble, of Balboa. Arrival of Arlene Kay Jakubik is Announced Master Sergeant and Mrs. Jo- seph J. Jakubik of Fort Clayton, announce the arrival of their third daughter, Arlene Kay. on Saturday, December 8, at Gorgas Hospital. M-S Jakubic is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Jakubic of Yonkers, New York and his wife. Is the daughter Of Mr. and Mrs. Harry P. Steckle of 8ayvllle, Long Island. Mrs. Steckle Is vis- iting her daughter and son-in- law at the present time. IAWC Cooking Class Holds Annual Christmas Party The annual Christmas party luncheon and gift exchange of the Inter American Women's Club Cooking Class was held re- cently at the Fort Kobbe home of Mrs. W. S. Bach. Co-hostesses for the occasion were Mrs. J. R. Townsend and Mrs. Thomas Mc- Kibbon. The attending guests included Mrs. Alice Lombard. Mrs. Diana Bright. Mrs. Jennie Stephens, Mrs. Ethel Ives. Mrs. Susan Fish, Mrs. Louise Eaton, Mrs. Mary de Garcia de Paredes, Mrs. Ursula de Ventura, Mrs. Rosa de Her- nandez, Mrs. Rita B. de Duran, Mrs. Ampara F. de Brostella, Mrs. Urania B. de Arnuz. Mrs. Panchita de Ponce Rojas, Mrs. Esperanza de_Perez, Mrs. Mar- guerite Brown, Mrs. Dora A. de Arias, Mrs. Marge Daniels. Mrs. Cecilia E. de Arias, Mrs. Betty Lou Austin, Mrs. Irene Parmley, Mrs. carmen de la Lastra, Mrs. Isabel de Angellnl. Mrs. Ada S. de Jimenez, Mrs. Ifigenia de Ty- paldos. Mrs. Mercedes Lasso de la Vega, Mrs. Paul Duran, Mrs. Marina Romero, Mrs. Hannah Barreto, Mrs. Albert Magglori, Mrs. Ruzena Goldstein, Mrs. A. L- Anderson, Mrs. Katherine Kerr. Mrs. Helen Adler, Mrs. Bu- lle Medlnger, Mrs. Natalia L. de Rivera. Mrs. Mabel M. Comley, and Mrs. Luz de Mndez. The meeting that was to have been held early in January has lace over satin made with long pink roses, sleeves which ended In pohits| The best man was Captain H. over the hands, scalloped neck-1 A. Lowe and serving as ushers line and a tiered skirt with a were Major Arthur Buckley. Mr. train. Her fingertiplength veil of Arthur Erb, Mr. George Capwell, illusion was fastened to a satin cap embroidered with seed pearls and she carrle' da prayer book covered with white orchids satin streamers. Jr. and Mr. John May les. Mr. and Mrs. Capwell enter- tained three hundred guests at a and | reception t their home in Bella Vista immediately following the A sister of. the bride. Miss I ceremony. Mrs. CaflweU wore a Jeanne CApwell. wasthe maid of gown ui blue lace with a stole honor and worea *wn -wtth a and a rorsage of white or" strapless gold brocade bodice, ti- ny bolero and a full skirt of champagne colored nylon net. He rFrench nose veil was fasten- Miss Thelma Capwell. aunt of the bride, who arrived Thursday night from Rochester, New York to attend the wedding, wore a ed in the back with a rose and gown of lilac net and a corsage she carried a bouquet of pink of lavender orchids. roses. o The bridesmaids were Miss Dorothy Capwell, a younger sis- ter of the bride and Miss Nina Norman who wore Identical gowns made with opal'brocade The couple have gone to San- ta Clara on their wedding trip and will be at, home, at No. 102 Via Espaa, alter December 23, The bride is a graduate of the Sacred Heart Academy, Elmhurst, 34th Street Lux Building TeL 3-M97 LIVING ROOM &1U \ i i i GROUP in new colors . designed in comfortable Mahogany and DURAN Plastic. JUST UNPACKED . . DRESSY COTTONS for egg-nog parties 39th Street Vista del Mar c/T {ift to please her.,.. Sterling Silver DRESSER SE.TS Ibe mirror brush comb FELIX' CHRISTMAS RAFFLE $2,000.00 IN GIFT PRIZES! OPEN TILL 9:00 P.M FELIX B. MADURO, S. A. 21 Central Avenue 6 Tivoli Avenue 1 Whether you're seeking that very Importar' family gift, or need a new Living Room Set you'll welcome this new model! COMFORTABLE v EXPERTLY MADE VERY MODESTLY PRICED Yours $65.00 Monthly $20.00 Oub $6.50 CASH CREDIT CLUB ^EBLERIfl} AVf .CENTRAL y CALLE 21 E.1TELS.* 2-l83CS y 2-1633 The Perfect Gift.,. For Christmas . . Birthdays . . or for that "Special Occasion" a beautiful box of PCRUGIRSI Candies . Nougats . Chocolates I been postponed because of the New Year holiday. C.Z.J.c. to Hold Christmas Dance The Sophomore Class of the Canal Zone Junior College will hold a formal Christmas dance on Friday evening at seven thir- ty o'clock at the American Le- gion club. All alumni of the College are invited. Admission price is $1.00. Theater Guild to Have Christmas Party The Theater Guild will hold a Christmas party for members and their guests on Friday even- ing at seven o'clock in the Guild Workshop at Diablo Heights. Re- freshments will be served and en- tertainment provided. Winners of Bridge Tournament Announced The winners of the bridge tour- nament, which is played every Monday in the Card Room of the Hotel Tivoli at 7:00 p.m., this week were: 1st, Mr. Tom Orr and Mr. R. Torres; 2nd, Mr. and Mrs. W. Norris; 3rd, Captain and Mrs. S. Schafer; tied for 4th and 5th places were Major and Mrs. N. Hoi lad a v and Mr .and Mrs. H. G. Robinson. Bridge Group to Meet Thursday The Bridge Group of the Bal- boa Woman's club will meet Thursday at 12:30 p.m. at the (Continued on Pas* It) {Beauty at ts best... BY PROFESSIONALS Ot/O fMC SPECIAL q WHY HAVE A HOME PERMANENT ? ...with Inadequate facilities, no certain finished look, and no guaranteewhen you can have a professional one com- Siete for only $7.5#! It will :t longer..and look better i MONDAY thru THURSDAY These can be had BALBOA a*lhM ri.MiMH* apMaln Make'yoar 7-7959 Appointment ***# BEAUTY SHOP Mrs. Bates Wleman. Mgr. Of :* I *M rm ore the goods you!I find at fflffipw ti/rifa*Mmffm aso /# cioti'fBoiT Buten m .abn.a._>r. coioh $(Hit/*e*-\rilLUZ REMEMBER! NO DOWN PAYMENT UNTIL XMAS WE WILL BE OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY, DECEMBER 23 fverybo y tfeads Classified* SANTA KNOWS BEST BUT.... YOU... WILL BE RICHT TOO IF YOU CHOOSE FROM OUR VARIETY FOR "HIM'' Briar Pipes Tobacco Poncheo Cigarette Lighters Pipe Stands. Book Ends Brief Cases Picture Frames Sheaffer Pens Men's Stationery Desk Sets English Billfolds Pocket Knives Alarm Clocks & many mere items FOR "HER" "Core" Jewelry Artist Supplies Bestsellers Perfumes it Lotions Porcellain Figures Boston Billfold-, Foto Albums Picture Frames Table Lamps Crystal Vases ' Marvella Pearls Butterfly Wing Trays Parker Pens Cigarette Holders FOR "IT Helster Set Mechanical Trains Baseball Sets Fire Engines Roller Skates Lotto Bingo Monopoly Lovely Dolls Plastic Furniture Tea Sets Sewing Machines Toy Irons Canasta Sets Jig Saw Pussies LEWIS SERVICE #4 Tivoli Vnuo Opon continually from 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m. MORRISON'S = 1 Fourth of July Avenue Just across the Ancon Post Office PAGE RIGHT THE PANAJtfA AAfetlYCAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAfgH WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19. 1951 Cargo and FreightShips and Planes-Arrivals and Departures UNITED FRUIT COMPANY Great While Fleet Mew Orleans Service Arrives Cristbal S.S. Esparta...................................Dec. 24 S.S. (hiriqui...................................Dec. 30 S.S. Inger Skou ...............................Dec. 29 S.S. Fiador Knot ..............................Jan. 12 Hindlim Rtfriftrated Chilled ad Genrrai Car** Arrives e\\ \ork Service____________Cristbal S.S. (ape Cumberland .........................Dec. 23 S.S. San Jose ..............................Dec. 25 S.S. (ape Ann ...............................Dec. 39 s.S. Jun'or .................................l*,ti. 1 S.S. Cape Avinof ..............................Jan. 6 miQIKM SAILINGS PHOM CRISTOBAL TO WEST COAST CENTRA! MURA istobal to New Orleans vla_ Sails from lela. Honduras_______________________Cristbal S.S. (hiriqui ..................................Jan. 1 S.S. (hiriqui ..'Passenger Service Only).....Jan. 15 TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL 2121 PANAMA 2-2S04 COLON 20 JACOBY ON BRIDGE BT OSWALD JACOBY Written for NEA Service WEST ? 10743 VQJ109 ? 7943 4 North 1* 6N.T. NORTH (D) 4.KQJ 4 ? AQJ ? AJ63- BAST 4995 872 ? 1053 ? Q1087 SOUTH ? A62 VAK53 ? K88 ? K95 Both side vul. EMt 8hUi Pas* 3N.T Pas* Past 27 Radio Programs Your Community Station HOG-840 Wb.r. 100.000 P.apl. MoM Presents Japan Will Be Her Own Boss After Peace Treaty Is OK'd k m3L We*t Paw Pai Opening leadV Q COPA AIRLINE ANNOUNCES That the flights to Bocas del Toro, Changuinola, and Armuelles -1 I h < 11111 ; I for December 25 and January 1 hII lie operated on Mondays 24 and 31 of Decemher in order to allow your Christ- mas and Mew Years gifts to arrive in time. Co/mi's office situated at Peru Are. !So. 25 will he-apen Sunday December 23 and 30 from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Today, Wednesday, Dec. 19 P.M. 3:30Music for Wednesday 4:00 Music Without Words 4:15French rn the Air (RDF) 4:30What's Your Favorite 6:00Happy The Humbug Cia. Alfaro,8.A. 8:15Evening Salon 7:00"The Greatest of These" (Xmas Cavalcade) 7:30BLUE RIBBON SPORTS REVIEW 7:45Here Comes Louis Jordan 8:00News and Commentary by Raymond Swing (VOA) 8:15Twenty QuesUons (VOA) 8J45Arts and Letters (VOA) 0:00The Jo Stafford Show (VOA) 9.: 15Radio Forum (VOA) 9:30Commentator's Digest r (VOA) th lUJ. 4 ., ^ ,, 9:45Sports and Tune of Day The bidding of today's hand (VOA) was very instructive. Souths re- 10:00The BBC Playhouse sponse of three no-trump showed (BBC) balanced distribution, strengtn 10:30Foreign Policy Address by .in each of the unbid suits and Pres. Truman (VOA) high cards equal to a minimum 11:00The Owl's Nest opening no-trump bid. | MidnightSign Off. North did not'make the mis-i ------ take of thinking that South had Thursday, Dee. 29 made a closing'' bid. He thought A.M. to himself: "How high would I bid; 6:00Alarm Clock Club if my partner had opened the 7:30Morning Salon bidding with one no-trump?" The answer was obvious, so North. promptly bi dsix no-trump. The play was as thoughtful as the bidding. South won the first trick with the king of hearts and set to work on the clubs, knowing that he needed four 10:00NEWS club tricks to make his slam. 110:05Off the Recor If the contract had been a! 11:00NEWS grand slam, South would have 11:05Off the Record (Contd.) finessed the jack of clubs at i'1:30Meet the Band once. But South could afford to NoonNEWS lose one club trick. Hence he took p.m. precautions against losing two 12:05Luncheon Music tricks. 12:30Popuar Music Declarer began by leading a 1:00NEWS club to dummy's ace at trick two. 1:15Personality Parade TOKYO. Dec. 19 (UP>All dl-'no likelihood of such a violent! rect American controls over Ja- reaction, American officials here! panese economic policy will end believe. They are confident that! when the peace treaty goes into the complex pressures of mod- | em international life and Ja- /Jlost cJa/ked J%out Store on the 3sthi effect. Official sources in Tokyo say the U.S. government will make no effort to retain any special position as a supervisor or even ed by the occupation. adviser to the Japanese govern-1 Their confidence is. based on ment on economic matters after these main assumptions: fan's own self-interest will keep! his country generally on the de- mocratic capitalist course chart- the occupation ends. The peace treaty signed at San Francisco places Japan under 1. Japan will for a long time be "on probation" in the eyes of the Pacific allies, who will be only general obligations to abide quick to voice their opposition to a reactionary Japanese course. The allies will be in a position to apply pressure on Japan through trade embargoes and diplomatic measures. 2. "The hard facts of the mar- '| by the principles of the United Nations. Japan is to maintain stability as started under the oc- cupation, and to conform to in- ternationally-accepted "fair practices." If Japan remains independent;, of American economic aid and *et place will force the Japan- the restrictions attached to re- ese, who are dependent upon ex- eelpt of such aidas now seemsi paneling foreign trade, to adhere likelyit actually will be freer of i fairly closely to the principles of American interference in its af- the economic stabilisation pro- fairs than many of America's .gram. wartime allies. Theoretically, at least, Japan ^ .. will have the sovereign power to,. throw out most of the occupa- tion's economic reforms. Japan could revive the Zaibatsu-cartel system, pursue a reckless pro- gram on the tutelage and turn its back on the tutelage of the American financial adviser, Jo- seph Dodge. , Practically, however, there Is { WILL } BE rn* * SAL HEPTICA EVERY EVENING UNTIL CHRISTMAS! THE FRENCH BAZAAR i 8:15NEW8 (VOA) 8:30Craay Quilt 8:45Jerry Sears Presents 9:00NEWS 9:15SACRED HEART PRO- GRAM 9:30As I See It Then he led a low club from dum- my towards his king-nine. When East played the eight. South fl- Inessed the nine, not caring whe- ther or not the finesse held. Actually, of course, the nine of clubs won. South then cashed the Un gof clubs, entered dummy with a spade, and gave up one club trick to East. The rest of the tricks were clearly declarer's. South' line of play was safe 1:45EXCURSIONS IN SCI- ENCE 2:00Call for Les Paul 2:15Date for Dancing 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45 Battle of the Bands 3:00American Debut 3:15The Little Show 3:30Music for Thursday 4:00Panamusica 8tory Time 4:15Negro Spirituals 4:30What's Your Favorite against queen-ten^x-x of clubs, 6:00Happy The HumbugCia. on either side. If West had held 'the four clubs. East would have been unable to follow suit when dummy led the small club. Thus' warned. South would have put up the king of clubs an dretumed a club towards dummy's jack. PACIFIC-ARGENTINE-BRAZIL LINE POPE A TAIIOT, INC. ANNOUNCE For the information of Importers in the Republic of Panam and the Canal Zone the expected arrival of Cargo from Pacific Coast Ports on Board th "P&T TRADER" AT BALBOA, DECEMBER 20, 1951 This vessel will accept cargo for the following ports: CURACAO, PUERTO CAB&L0, LA GUAIRA, TRINIDAD, RIO DE JANEIRO, SANTOS, and BUENOS AIRES ACOB CANASTA/#* BY OSWALD JACOBY Written far KEA SetTice "Please tell us the correct play in this situation." requests a reader. "Both sides needed MMi^nnZiMan rift-' points for the initial meld, and'1, the card turned up by the dealer was a four. I -as first, and I drew from the stock and discard- aan ri't ih ed another four. The next player B Alfaro. S.A. 6:15Evening Salon 7:00Make Believe Ballroom Special Xmas Show (VOA) 7:30BLUB RIBBON 8PORTS REVIEW 7:45Jam Session 8:00World News (VOA) S: 15Cross Country, U.S.A. (VOA) :45Jam Session (VOA) 9:00Meet Eleanor Roosevelt (VOA) 9:30Commentator's Digest (VOA) 0:45Sports Tune of Day and News(VOA) 10:00HOTEL EL PANAMA 10:15Musical Interlude 10:30Take It From Here (BBC) 11:00The Owl's Nest Explanation of Symbols VOAVoice of America Broadcasting nil afe. W. Andrews & Company CRISTOBAL Phone 3.21(1 BALBOA r-hon. 2-1251 EMERSON A HANDSOME GIFT! Big "Small Radio" Value Amazing Performance Splendid Styling $24.75 SEE IT AT PANAMUSICA, S, A, 127 Central Avenue Corp. edTjkn^'*Wrta^(U*Card"'RDr-"Radiodlus,on FrancaUe July, 1950. "Much to my joy. my partner put down three aces and two jacks, which enabled her to take the discard pile. She now had three jacks and three aces on the table and two fours among the cards in her hand She discard- ed a queen, and the play contin- ued. "Everybody discarded safely for that round of play .and my partner drew from the stock, melded three fours .and discard- ed. This left her with tour cards in her hand. "The next pis ver discarded safely to me. and I held the fol- lowing cards: A 10-10-10 9-9 -7--5-4-S. "What was my best play?" The answer depends slightly on how good a plaver the partner happens to be. Your course la clear if your partner Is a good player, but your cues* is as good as mine if your partner is a be- ginner. A good player has a definite idea in mind when she melds the three fours at her second turn to play. She already has her initial meld on the table and the three fours can hardly be considered an important meld. The only possible reason for the play is that she is ready to meld out if she can only get a base of four natural cards somewhere or oth- er. At least three of her four re-1 mainbng cards must be wild cards. Hence you must co-or>erate bv| providing the base. You must: add the ace and the four to her melds, thus giving her two bases. Then, you should add your deuce to either of those two melds. This will give your partner the maxi-' mum help. You should also meld your three tens to provide a park- ing space for any odd ten your . partner mav happen to hold. I If your partner is a poor play- er, her play may have anv mean- ling or none at all It Is still wise |to add the ace ard four to her melds, but vou srould prohabU stop right there. Cave vour deuce | and your three ter* until you see I how the play devdops. i slowpoke, either, when it comes HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 19 (UP) Gene Autry is a fast riding sad- dle smith on the screen. He's no to ringing up "first" in a career that has boosted him to the rank of No. 1 cowboy hero. He was the first screen sing- ing star to become popular as a recording artist. His first try in this department was with one of his own compositions, "That Sil- ver Haired Daddy of Mine," which he recorded in 1932. It zoomed to a then-unprecedented sale of more than 1,000,000 cop- ies in the first year and since has passed the 5,000,000 mark. Autry then, still in the early 30s, became the screen's first singing cowboy star and created the pattern for one of filmdom's most successful formulas. Westerns were on the down- grade at the time. Autry sang briefly in the Ken Maynard star- rer. "In^Old Santa Fe.M The fin response was so tremendous that he was starred promptly in his own feature-length western mu- sical. "Tumblv Tumbleweeds.'' That was released in 1935. Voted Top Star Two years later he was voted the top box office western star by U.S. film exhibitors. In 1940. he became the first cowboy to break into the top 10 on Fame's industry-wide poll of box office ratings. Autry also was the first of to- day's western stars to enter the merchandising field. In 1934, he granted the first license for the use of his name on a commercial productthe Gene Autry cap pistol, of which more than 10,- 000,000 have been sold. He led the way in personal- appearance tours by cowboy he- roes and says he has been to towns so small that "even Harry Truman has not seen them yet." Finally, he was the first ma lor star to go into production of his own pictures especially for tele- vision. They have been going out at the rate of one a week since It's gonna be easy, Dancer * TO FILL THAT CHRISTMAS LIST with gifts that really suit! Alert PANAMA MERCHANTS r tifinf y Radio Station HOG to tell shopper about tbrir sparkling selection o fftf Always keep gentle SAL HEPTICA the laxative that suite your convenience in your medicine chest. Don't (eel sluggish end miserable. Don't let headaches spoil your day. SAL HEPATKA bring, you gentle, speedy relief, usually within en hour. Antacid SAL HEPTICA sweetens a sour stomach. IHt TIMIS SELECT YOUR DREAM RANGE FROM AIL THE really new UK V IK *saT Sit weaderfbl models to Aoo Mast Tare 40". two 3*", sad sm 20" ria* nits all mad to Ike hightst suadxd by che aun- factura af ever 2,000.000 ojual- Itr bota* tfolUacMl Na asease as basa staxad so briog you soca* Th. . has Medel 01-44, nMl f f rMftSJ .rfeef tar yo* UtthMil of ibe finest nagas oa the market today. Yet, because of new Murray miss-production methods petfect- ed ovar Usa yaw, yon cao boy them at sMney*sviag pilcesl Corn* ia ad see your new Muttay Gailaagsan RANGE MODELS! AS LOW AS $40.00 DOWN $10.00 MONTHLY JL. Beautifully designed ^ one-piece top BO burn.r-bowl or front- dge seams lo clean I Robertlhaw precision thermostats. Interval timers built Into accu- rate Metric clocks I JL. Giant ov.ni, porcelain w nomld, roudd, asily-cloanod comers I High, swing-out ssnoke- l.is brollar; lira- larga I i Larfl* drawers gild* on S til.nt nylon roHrsl i JW Models with divided or " grouped burners. Ranges can us* any type gas sueplyl Acid and stain porcelain {n* ail 7111 Bofivar An. RADIO CENTER OPEN 'TILL PJH. TcL 40 COLON WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19. 1151 THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE VINE Number of New Zone Tro///c;i50NewP,ymou^A:BottomOfRiver Rules Go Into Ef feet Jan .7 MEMPHIS. Term., Dec. 19 (UP)iQolconda, 111., when It broke a- i A barge transporting 150 new way from the tugboat Winches- ter during a high wind. , A number of new C2 traffic regulations' will go into effect January 1, under the provisions Df a supplement to the Canal Zone Highway Vehicular Traf-, lie Laws and Regulations sign- ed recently by the Acting Qov-I fernor. T Vehicle registration card, Bigned on the face by the re- gistered owner, must be carried In the vehicle or by the driv- er and must be exhibited on klu> demand of authorized of- ficials, according to the provi- sions of the new Supplement. The registration must be re- placed, at a cost of 50 cents, pf it is lost or damaged. The only decrease in regis- tration fees for periods of less than one -year will be on or tfter July l^when the fee will >e one-half the annual rate. Periodic decreases have been nade quarterly. Charges for the replacement* Df lost or destroyed registra- tion cards and plates will be: 50 cents for trailer-motorcycle plate; $1 for any other vehicle tag except official plates; and cents for a duplicate regis- tration card. Registrations are governed by these regulations in the new Supplement and in agreements between officials in the Canal Zone and Panama. 1) A vehicle must be regist- ered in the Jurisdiction in vhlcb the owner resides and the registration will be valid |ior operations In both the Ca- nal Zone and Panama as long las the residence remains un- changed. 2) The license plate for a ve- ilcle transferred from Panama to the Canal Zone or vice versa lis valid for operations for only 115 days. 3) Persons who must apply lior a Canal Zone registration las a result of a move from Pa- |nama to the Canal Zone must {present with their application heir Panama registration and lany current Panama tag that |mav be outstanding. In the case of transfers, the new Supplement provides for the following procedures: l> Transfers are defined as including, among other thingi, gifts condition sales,, mort- |ages, and trade-ins. 2) Persons transferring a ve- Ihicle registered in the Canal (Zone must endorse his regis- I nation to the transferee in the ^ =; V The automobiles were beln-?; shipped here for redistribution I over the South from an assembly LA MODA AMERICANA ? r Plymouth automobiles valued at $300,000 retail sank m the Ohio .River today, the Commercial presence of a notary public and hiele registered in tne canal Barge Lines Inc reported here, must deliver the endorsed re- Zone Is wrecked or dismantled.1 ^ Memphis'- bound barge,- gistration to the transferee. The The following special provls- k 35 feet oi water below1 plant at Evansvllle. Ind per."s.i making the transfer Ions are applicable to commer- to the License Section within cial licenses: five days, using a form which. 1) A Canal Zone commercial Is available at the License Sec-! registration may not be issued tlon or any police station. for any vehicle which is being The person to whom a Canal operated In both Panama and' Zone licensed vehicle is trans- the Canal Zone. In this case, ferred must, within ten days the seat of operation is con- after the registration has been sidered to be In Panama, re-! endorsed to him by the trans- gardless of the residence of feror, present the endorsed re-the owner, gistration to the License sec- _. , tlon and make application on! A Panama commercial re- the proper form for a transfer. I giatration Is valid for opera- In the case of the transfer i on in the Canal Zone onlyl of a vehicle registered In Pa-1 **r the vehicle has been pro- nama, the person to whom the|vlded with a certificate of in- vntele is traruf erred must pre- sPeion and sticker for the sent the Panama regiatration windshield, and any outstanding current Other provisions concerning Panama tag, In addition to any [changes of motors and motor other document that may be numbers are: required as evidence of own-, 1( The reiUtered owner must erSr~ w -.v.. m.. *.o.'rePrt changes of motors to #to hi\J2L T/hIth Licen 8ection wlthln ten Y,hk.le~^r.endHtuH^'*W- Presenting evidence or h?T:& SBSSLpTS^I0 wSewlp of the new motor, 2! S555CS!,l2 t. "3 nder his registration 1 nti.e?HrfL^JS^JSita** replacement with a new Kju^fnHWh%L?LS card showln* tne new number. mJ}LS """lAieeof 50 cents will be chang- returnea. ed for the new registration.. M -. ... .... .,,.. . Failure to report such motor t^Sitintif,artnH.hUMt?ti^f change will begrounds for sus-l^ inspection, or windshield stick- ^^^ of the registration un- J I!iS^a?H^/hu0fk^?LSUT^nt the regulation has been C ed by the Chief of the License, Hprt ,?h ^ Sectiorion the ^^^nj- ^No plSn shall tatentlon- . V. I?ei^S?Mn ; .hpv; allv deice, destroy or alter the h^i-in .H M.?oJmanufacturer's motor or serial. E h P TV Ir.uAZ'r.i?rf number or stamp or insert any the basis of a fraudulent P- motor number that has not, *TtS vehicle Is in unsafe S^'^ by the 5 ma^or^tad* *" dlS I v= onNhlchy thl 5? Th,. fuii^Statratton fee motor *. ior Purposes of k 4> Jk-1 'Iff '"concealing its Identity, has % . ^iC 'El.ta. ,,h Jm removed, defaced, cover- . 8veryic?ePoatnerNnealngthaetd &*' "ered or deetroyed. which it was Issued. . 8 The vehicle should haveA*. JameS LISTS been registered in Panama. I .... J> The owner has violated XflKIS ActlVltlCS JUST UNPACKED DRESSES Cocktail s-'ormals Dressy. Also in Flnr Cottons. BAGS HATS GLOVES for all occasions. Rayon LINGERIE Lace-Trimmed Half Slips from.................. 1.75 Lace-Trimmed Slips, from.. 2.95 Beautiful Panties from.....75 "Jubllle" Bras from ....... 1.45 . . The Most Precious Menial Case Stalls Rescuers With (hair While Cutting Throat JACKSON, La., Dec. 19 A depressed mental patient cut his throat with a razor blade and died in 15 minutes today, after holding attendants at bay with a chair. Dr. L. F. Magruder, super- intendent at East Louisiana hospital, said the patient was a 37-year-old white man from New Orleans. He did not furth- er identify him. Dr. Magruder said the man was not permitted to keep a razor because he had previous- ly tried to kill himself. But he snatched a safety raz- or from another patient In a washroom, quickly dismantled It and started cutting himself with the blade. When hospital attendants and other patients started clos- ing in to prevent violence, the man picked up a chair, Ma- gruder said Using his right i hand to wield the chair, he slashed repeatedly at his throat : with the blade In his left hand. Dr. Magruder said the pa- tient had tried to take his own life before, but not since he was recommitted to the hosplt- i al more than a year ago. .fc&a& BUY S5r*f ON THE % % CLUB PLAN PHILLIPS RADIOS EASY PAYMENTS EASY PARKING * SYLVANIA - 1 Va Espaa Tel. 3-0383 The Sunday School at Paraso, L...^.U r*t D TPm..> 0J Tank any of the provisions of this article. Any police officer or author- h.._BVin,, i ,...-. ,,. T.r.ir lzed agent of the License Sec-' ^nch of St^ James Red Tank, tlon Is authoriaed to remoye win render a Christmas program 1 on Sunday, at 3 p m. at the club- bouse. Pupils will recite, stag carols and other Christmas pieces. Other services are: 11 a.m. ho- 1 y communion an dbaptism: 7:15 evidence of registration from vehicles on which registrations, certificates of Inspection or windshield sticker may be re- voked or suspended under these provisions. The tag and- registration i p.m.. evening prayer: Christmas must be surrendered to the Eve: midnight communion.pre- ( License Seetlon In case a ve- ceded by the aingmir of Carols. LA MODA AMERICANA 102 CENTRAL AVE. PANAMA V X rrV 9/e O* *w, V ' SNV & TOP-QIIALITY {Jiamonas and semi-preciolu stones ** ,**^ a* I HAYWARD Quality Men's Jewelry ** ;if ALL PURCHASES ATTRACTIVELY GIFT- WRAPPED Hovel c/rench (creations ^ Brand yantes Exclusive with mercurio N*xt to th Control Thootro Open 8 a.m. to p.m. THERE OF Tl..p to CHOOSE E IS STIU T'^oRTMEHT us**** Use your Xmas Dollar NOW. "Ring" your loved on* this Christmas. We have sparkling, new assortment of fin- est designed quality rings. Don't worry about the size; we can size any ring you choose. $29.50 I $15.- $35, tt $12- tt NO CHARGE FOR CREDIT , H. \ ' X r {'' i Genuine) Cameo set on colored stone base. Mounting of 10K yel- low gold. An unusual bargain at this low ""' $15.- SHOP NOW IN AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT TAHITI THE JEWELRY 8T0RE 157 < >^i. .-.^-.^,. page Try THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER Coa! Boom Coming Christmas Activities For Little sown Of Joppa, Illinois WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER U, lsj, VIW Pos( 3822 Gives The affair will be known as Xmas Parly For Kids Holiday Inn. Santa and members VFW Post 3822 will give a of.the Girls Service Organlza- Christmas Party at the Post lion and Gardner's band will be Home in Curundu for 200 boys present to insure a happy time and girls, ranging from 2 to 10 for servicemen. years of age. of three Panam Infantry Officer Whs Medal of Honor For Hill Attack WASHINGTON, Dec. 10 (UP) Voice To Present littlest Angel' Over HOG Tomorrow 'The Littlest Angel," a Christ- I Bv DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON. Dec. ir The small to ah of Joppa. Illinois, will soon become Hie hub for a llowinir rlav th s r> i r-3*500"11 Lt. Darwin K. Kyle, mas story written by Charles I Enn rSS?SL*SH(l2: ft!* Charleston, W.Va.. army Tazewell .will be performed as a oiphanages-Malambo. Our Lady will don pretty frocks and serve Ern i' ?w.",fJy "*". Df Pfnormea as a and Susana Clement next Satin- as dance partners at Port Sher- 2w2Lf,5 ,w,ho &* "'"Voice of America" presentation dav moniinc. !man's formal Christmas dance. *rea whlle 'eadlnf a "ver StaUon HOG on Friday at ill Christmas The Atlantic side's popular 60th SSSSS hSPTSB?. l2aa, been ,-ed the chil- Army Band will furnish the mu-! a* o.ohe M ?w' of Ho,nor" day morning At 10 a.m. market so immense thai even experienced coal operators can- not visualize Its size The total amount o coal in- volved is expected to come to 17.500 Oro ions annually -or a- bou! twice the coal required yearly by the whole State of Massachusetts This immense tonnage m coal will -o chieflv to the Tennessee Valley Authority's steam-gen- erating plants and to Electric j Energy. Inc.a group of five private power companies sup- plying a secrei Installation of thp Atomic Energy Commission. This Iremerdous increase in a full dinner will y the Post. The menu will include turkey, pie. nuts and candy. A , be serwu i tor coala dren bv the indies Auxiliary of sic. A recorded arrangement of I '-" 32- won tne award as a 7 p.m. as a part of the station's Christmas Cavalcade." the Messiah, an oratorio brief member ' Company K. 7th In-| This U a program for people with the distinguished Handel I yPJ* *s!5~ Division, who love Christmas and Christ- local tour-piece band will furnish Oratorio Chorus of Augustanal?""6. ,,drlvin8 enemy troops;mas trees, holly berries and mls- ihe music. .College will be played at the 4 'I hill .positions last February, tletoe, Santa Claus, and music After the meal Santa Claus will p.m. Master Work Music Hour. I 8gt. Jtmts D. Yeomans, an,boxes that tinkle Silent Night. give a present and candy to each The Christmas bedecked lobby > eve w,.tnes!i 8ave th* partial I child. Santa will distribute the of the T" will swell to the music|a<*"m of Ky'es feat: I it tells the story of a dejected iMfts i rom lindera 15-foot Xmas of carols when church choirs! ,_.We were pinned down by a cherub who, somehow, was com- CENTRAL TODAY At 3:00 p.m. TODAY GALA PREMIERE OfOne of the Greatest Dramas of All Time! tree fullv lighted and dressed. and caroleers make the "Y" a|la" of e,ne,mv lr from the Dietely unable to get along in rLand-Kianks- heaven. Not only did he sing of i- rifiL mal!5* w"' usin* key m the Heavenly choir, but file 'u 6 *uns 5f mor" he was always falling "head over udrieW f~eK.,C Especially featuring this year's point of call on Christmas Eve. '""fit and flanks. Christmas Party will be the first Several pounds of artificial snow visit of the children to "Our La- have been imported to lend an dy" and "Susana Clement" atmosphere of reality, homes to the Canal Zone. "Our Open House will be observed Lady' cares for 100 young girls on Christmas Day when visitors mire the Christmas decorations!Rlyin? his instructions for our th^h lui slmnle tove and hii n ,. he. ,. e,h h atUck. Ig^tgB Sa'Sfehof "We began deploying forward SSe%9SeT **"" "^ but a machine gun opened fire Heaveniv ratner again, wounding six men and while the "Susana Clement" may come into the "V and ad- slapping us on the back and d,., houses 30 small boys. mire the Christmas decorr*' As an extra gift. Post 3822 will and the beautiful creche, coal consumption is cood news sponsor and keep a watchful eye the muted tones of Christmas for southern Illinois cool opera-'during this coming year over the music hi the background. The tors who piona with the rest "Susana Clement" home, which traditional musical film strips of the industry hm Ion- r-en for the past tew years has had "The Littlest Camel Knelt" and. faced with dwindling markets, difficulty staying in operation. "The Holy Child" will be on viewi further holding up the advance It's also encoiirasini news tor. -------- at 8 p.m. lof the entire company. dozens of small towr.. :n the t's Presents 14th On Wednesday, at 6:30 p.m..' midwest dependent on coal Annual Xmas Festival the Girls Service Organization at the emplacement. The 14th annual Christmas will hold its annual Christmas "Why he wasn't nit I'll never Festival will be presented bv the buffet supper and party on the know. The enemy was firing Cristobal High School Music De- grounds adjoining the YMCA|everything he had and it all partment under the direction of cottages. The following night the| seemed to be directed at Lt Mr. O. E. Jorstad tomorrow at girls will be present at the FortjKyle 7.30 p.m. Gulick Holiday Dance. "He threw a grenade Into the The first part of the program The social program for the'position and then killed the oc- will be presented inside the aud- year will come to a close at the.cupants three Chinese when itorium and will consist of mu- Calendar Review Dance on Sat- thv pam. QUt .. th if," wncn sic by the band, orchestra, and urday. Dec. 29. This will make1 -He then waverf m to mnv. RT.'e TVA Cw,',l'need a. least S**^ M-* ?J*SS? * V* \uSJSi V^g ! this -little angel. LORETf A YOUNG, atar of stage and screen who will nar- rate the story ot "The Littlest Angel" on a special Volee of America" Christmas presenta- tion ever station HOG Friday at7.Mp.ni. TRIPLETS HELP MOOSUP. Conn. (UJM The new increase In withholding taxes is no worry to Arthur A. Delmonico. Less than a week af- ter the boost went into effect, his All the Excitement, Suspense and Gripping Drama of the world's most cherished ^ry comes ^ brilliantly tofife! mining, and indirectly may be a .shot in the arm" to the whole Industry. Electric Energy. Inc.. will use 2500.000 to 3.00.0O0 tons an- nually in its electric generating plain at Joppa This power has been earmarked for the new atomic plant across the Ohio, The production has Loretta Young, star of stage and screen, '"LIT KMe'nersonajiv eharced narrating part of the story, sup- wile gave birth to triplets. Del- the emplacement *"** ported by a small cast and ef- monico now claims six depend- fective incidental music. ents. sic by the band, orchestra, and urday. Dec glee club, with several soloists, the 37th da llissee ll\crs. Tr._ nllh,ll<. U nnrriiotlt- I it^H "OLIVER TWIST" OPENING TODAY AT THE CENTRAL THEATRE IN GALA PREMIFRE AT 8:00 P. M. The public is cordially invited ?,S n h 1 y thus far is theto atte^d and there wfl] ^ no art of adequate rail transpor- admission charge, lation to JoDpa. now served only n.'i Ine r,Cn,icae? and Eastern i Cristobal YMCA Ushers u ?a,lr^d' Season ,n With Dn Both the New York Central The holidav season program of and the Burlington Road are the Cristobal Armed Services seeking Inter-state Commerce YMCA will be ushered in by a Commission permission to build; Christmas dance on Saturday short extensions running into|--------------------------------------' Joopa. This has the support of . both TVA aid the Atomic nols. ls trying to maintain its Visitor Overdoes It On Traffic Tickets "We began to move towards i the objective but onhr had 15 men left. The Chinese allowed! , us to pass through and then I opened ud on us from the rear.' Lt. Kyle closed in among the i enemv and led us in a savage. are bayonet attack. "He was still tired from htei 19 WHEELING, w. Va.. Dec. (UPi Wheeling police willing to forgive a parking' ticket or two if the offender is previous fighting but he"kilied from out of the city but they i four more Chinese in hand-to- be lie vc Robert R. Hannabauer hand combat, of Charleston, W. Va., abused 'It.was at this time that a the courtesy. Chinese killed Lt. Kyle with A policeman was getting rea- sub-machine gun fire at a range dy to tag Hannabauer's car of about 10 yards Energy Commission which de- "opoly M the, on.'Y ,""* now when he noticed that the U-; Kyle was born June 1. 1918. mands that there dp no curtail-servmlJoPPa-Dut officials point cense number corresponded at Jenkins. Ky.. and is" survived' of their fuel suoply bv V131 ,theres more than with i ment of .. a traffic ticket that had bv his widow Betty Alice Kvle flood, wrecks or anything else lenouR" coal involved to keep all been issued before. He also no- and two daughters. Donna Kay The Chicago and Eastern Illi- m05? rallroads busy. ticed a red tag inserted under 6. and Nancv Carol, 5. Thev live --------------------- The controversy between the the windshield wiper. at Sharon WVa. railroads is now under con- The officer called for a tow-, '___________^__ sideration by the Inter-state truck to haul the vehicle to a The Milky Way is made uo of Commerce Commission. garage and climbed into the between 200 and 300 billion stars f.?wc .1 ei-FC "clears the driver's seat In doing so. he The number of stars in the Milkv1 tracks the hule town of Joppa tipped the windshield visor Way ls thus lust about as large Jewish Welfa*- Board Center InljPr becnie,lhe coal capital of downward and was showered as the number of dollars in the Pacific Society... 'Continued from Wre 7) Balboa. Biuco Tonignt s Pedro Mntel Boat Club * Bingo wfifbe played tonight and each succeeding Wednesday' night at the Pedro Miguel Boat Club at seven thirty o'clock. Priz- es will be awarded. the. 'A midwest. .with 68 red tickets. ..American national debt. Biniro at Legion Club Thursday Night Bingo will be played tomorrow night at the American Legion Club at seven thirty o'clock. All members and their guests are invited to attend. Elks Request I'sed Christmas Cards Be Saved. The Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks in Balboa, have re- quested the general public to save their Christmas cards to be given ' to the United Cerebral Palsy As- sociation The cards may be turned over to the Elks who hope ! to benefit children afflicted with palsy. New Year's Eve Party at Legion Club The American Legion Post No ' 1 are planning a gala New Years Eye celebration at the Legion : Club at Fort Amador on Deccm- ber 31. Admission is free. -_ ' Elks to Sponsor "Kiddie" Christmas Party The Elks are sponsoring an an- nual ""Kiddie" Christmas partv to be held at the club on December ! 12 at 1:00 p.m. Refreshments,! movies, candy, toys and old St. Nick himself will provide enter- tainment for the children. BabyLandia otters Hotel El Panama to Have New Year's Eve Celebration New Year's Eve will be a bi" night at the Hotel El Panama with a celebration to begin Dec. 31 at 10:00 p m in the patio. Dance music will be furnished bv alternating Panamanian and American dance bands. Dinner will be served at 12:00 midnight and breakfast at 3:00 a.m. Re- servations may be made bv call- ing the hotel. Admission price is 52.00. Roger Maduro Spending Christmas With Parents Roger Maduro who Ls studying at University of Connecticut." ar- rived by plane to spend Christ- mas vacation with his parents Mr. and Mrs Felix B. Maduro of Bella Vista. Famous "MARIQUITA PEREZ" Walking Dolls .. .from Spain - Exquisitely dressed PLASTIC ANIMALS .. .from Italy Finest "STEIFF" PLUSH TOYS and MECHANICAL TOYS .. .from Germany Beautiful Musical "BRAHM'S LULLABY" LAMPS .. .from Holland ?auusmci WVSTOTKOW ROBERT NEWTON-ALK GUINNESS KAY WALSH franos l swjjvan BOON JOHN BOTA* DAVES *' * im u. mm *h*. _J il^.^.ium.h^...,>-.-..--------^........_ fcimii.......nanm! BALBOA rA*TA SATURDAY! * Bing CROSBY * Jane WYMAN * Lucille BALL "HERE COMES THE GROOM" Second Anniversary Presentation In ene of the many dramatic scenes from the J. Arthur Rank Organization's presentation of "Oliver Twist," which will open today at 8:0* p.m. at the CENTRAL Theatie. newcomer John Howard Davies as Oliver is threatened by Bill Sikes (Robert Newton's role). m ITS lfOVIETIltt. anana Lanai (clubhouses Showing Tonight! BALBOA HIGH SCHOOL CHORUS On Stage SATURDAY 8:30 p.m. Show Only! TODAY O A I On A Farley GRANGER Robert WALKER JtLI: "STRANGERS ON A TRAIN" :I5 a 8:15 AUo Stipwlnp ThuraUy! 0/AB1O HTS. "SECRETS OF MONTE CARLO" :IS l:2S awl "MILLION DOM AR PL"RSI"IT" a TaairwtM "Of Wen Aa ulule" PANAMA CITY THEATRES! Present COCOLI i:!5 IMS . Humphrey BOGART . Michele MORGAN "PASSAGF TO MARSEILLE" Tharaday "CALIFORNIA PASSAGE" GAMBOA laM Kenneth TOBEY Marrare! SHERIDAN 'THE THING" TbnrHay "TUT FROGMEN" MARGARITA :U A IS Gene AUTRY Lrr.ne ROBERTS "BLAZING SUN" ThwTay "THE ROCKING HORSE WTNNER CRISTOBAL *lr-CiasMliiii :li ill Joan CRAWFORD " rndell CORKY "HARRIET CRAIG" AUo Showing Ttitindayl BELLA VISTA ""g"" S James MASON Ana TODD, in "WICKED LADY" Helmut DANTINE Faje EMERSON, hi "HOTEL BERLIN" ALL THIS. Slartin AND MUCH MORE at ih* OKLY .STORE THAT (LITERS ONLY TO BABIES! B DECEMBER 20ih.. we will REMAIN OPEN I.ATII. 9 P.M. No. 40 44th Street Tel %AW* STARTING TOMORROW! TWO RELEASES AS A XMAS OFT Uied"r4ipI,l,11^V00d and It" fabulous days of tnis "ew susvnse drama com Hoi I mood ___mmm ******** ***** AUfO current who J A *m*y m ****** Im ft MMRMUtr-MMrViaai Gtooi mu Sf& * * * Urn at <** t*mm WHAT BETTER GIFT FOR THE LITTLE LADY THAN A COMPLETE SET OF "ORREFORS" "The Finest Swedish CrystalP Now you can get a complete service for twelve for ONLY $ 98.50 THE FRENCH BAZAAR jAAaaaaaM PTAaaaftaaaaaaaaaKVaaaaaBa COLON LUX THfATRE This theatre will remain doa- ed this week to complete the .inaatllitlorn ol new air-con- dltioning equipment. RF-OPENINO TDESOAT, DEC. 23 Pre-Releafe Engafement DAVID & BATHSHERA UN TECHNICOLOR) with Gregory PECK CECILIA THEATRE'- Hie greatest musicians of our times In a real gift for the plrltl "OF MEN AND MUSIC" Artkur sealoin Jsaeha HrUeti Jsa Peeece Dwaltri MMrapealoas TROPICAL THEATR ENCANTO THEATRE Alr-Csatfltlonea" TWO TSTHNICOLORSI Van Heflln Yvonne de Cario, la TOMAHAWK" Aoe Mtmhy ' VUrgu-rite Chapman, in "HAN8.A8 RADEK5- TIVOLI THEATRE SAW DAY SIMM Cash saw rr* a< f as t p.m. Also: Boa Hope m DROP KID" !. la MUTINY IN THE BIG HOUSE' with Charles BICKFORD BrUn Mct^NE CAPITOLIO THEATRE Chapters and of the Serial: "HRATES ON THE HIGH SEAS" with BussarOah . Also: WUllam RandJAn "KILL THE UMPfcE" and ^' ANOTHER PICTOftBl.._ VICTORIA THEAIRI JohnnT WewasnunW. fe -NATnrr gibl"' Rita WajworH). _ -TONIGHT AND EVBalT NIOHT" WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1951 fHE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER PAGE ~ \ A D L Wr>. Wilton J flask lull ^ttlantic Jloiciif &w9v/H %t*L & 378 MRS. BULLOCK HONORED ,M_ BY VOLUNTEER RED CROSS WORKERS Mrs. A. C. Bullock, who recently resigned her Poitionr* chairman of the Votanteer Services o the *""J" Cross on the Atlantic Side, was honored by her "<** . workers with a Christmas morning coffee in the Red Cross moms, Monday. ... All members of the Armed Forces, who are Interested in photography are cordially invited to attend the meetings. of Christmas Carols. This will be held Thursday morning at 10:15. Dorothy Dix Buried Quietly After Long, Troubled Life Mr. Frank H. Lerchen,chalr- man of the Canal Zone Chapter of the American Red Cross, was over' for the occasion. He pre- sented Mrs. Bullock a ten-year service pin, commenting on the varied phases of the work of the organisation in which she has participated during this period of time. , Judge E. I. P. Tatelman, a member of the Executive Board, presented the honoree a gilt from her fellow workers. Mrs. E. A. Faberberg will suc- ceed Mrs. Bullock as Chairman of the Volunteer Services with Mrs. Walter H. Kuhrt as vice- chairman . A Christmas tree cake centered the coffee table and was served with other refreshments. The other ladles present were MUrShrSe J. Taylor, Mrs. Edith tngelke Mrs. Anne Pittman, Mr. Frank Parmeter, Mrs. Ca- therine O'Hara. Mrs Lucy Blades, Mrs. Stanley Wdd and Mrs. DoraMcllhenny. Mrs. Anderson Complimented With Shower Mrs. M. F. Dunn and Mrs. Bob D, M*ynard were co-hostesses for ivenkig at the Maynard residence In New Cristobal, to honor Mrs. f. A. Anderson, Jr. The gifts were presented the honoree in a playpen. After they were opened games were played ith the prizes going to Mrs o mCuster and Mrs. Kenneth Brassell. Buffet refreshments were serv- ad from a table centered with pink carnations and baby's breath flanked by white tapers in silver holders. Christmas decora- tions were used throughout the residence. The other guests were: Mrs. William Hollowell of Diablo, Mrs. Willard French. Mrs. Tom Bren- nan. Mrs. Mary Dunn. Mrs. Ed- mund MacVlttie, Mrs. Robert Walker, Mrs. Harold Babcock, Mrs. Joe Smith. Mrs. Oeorge Bennett. Mrs. Thomas Herring, Mrs. Fred Moynihan. Mrs. Ed- win Roddy Mrs. Mllo Klssam, Mrs. Walter Marek, Mrs. T. G. Relthan.. Miss Dorothy Henry. Mrs. Robert Thomas, Mrs. Alton Jones, Miss Florence Lamson, Miss Thelma Godwin, Miss Ada- mary Anderson, Miss Toby Bau- blltz. Mrs. John Peterson. Mrs.- Henry Hartz. Miss Ruth Crozler. Hotel Fittings Have Hard But Long Life and Cristobal-Coton Rotary Announcement The Cristobal Colon Rotary Club will hold its annual Christ- mas dinner at the Strangers Club at K:00 noon, on December 30. In accordance with the custom in the past, each member will bring two presents, one for a fellow Ro- taran and the other for the Chil- dren's Christmas basket, which is given to Old Saint Nicholas on Christmas Eve for distribution to the children of Colon. Traditional Christmas carols will be sung at the luncheon by the Fort Sherman Carolers of the Special Service Club. The Rotary Club wishes to thank the Fort Sherman Special Service Officer. Lt. William H. Healey and the Service Club Director, Mrs. B. 8. Slaughter, for their splendid co- operation in planning this pro- gram- ______ Mr. and Mrs. French Retara from Vacation Mr. and Mrs. Worden E. French and sons, Wordeft. Jr., Louis aHd Charles, returned Mon- day from a visit with Mr. French's family in Vermont. years, the pillow for nine ! pillow slips for only one. ' Linens go fast, because of daily washings and bleaching*, ..The mat covering the bath- NEW YORK, Dec. 19 in a hotel room varies. las furnished by the American hand towels and sheets have to i Hotel Association: I be replaced annually, on the They wear out faster than '.,.,,. "-*- ? v,.r .ht their trou- the furnishings and equipment Dressers, writing desks and a,cra^_________________ Mr. and Mrs. Alberga NEW ORLEANS Dec. 19 r-.J"0* to her about tnel? "" of the average home but not tables have a life expectancy DRESS GOES FAR Visiting in Colon (UP)-Dorothy Dix .whoprob- bles. I fast one mlght think of 12 years in the average hotel i **> Ef Mr. and Mrs. Frank Alberga ably bad shared the.tf"bi?s She was a bride at 18, but'.some, like the clay tile In the! guest room. Lamps and shade* LH0OMKiaiSMaJF| Dove'a of Santa Clara are the guests of of more people than any worn- one husband! bath, are good for the lifetime are good for eight but arm and, Mr. indite SSmSuX Mr. and Mrs. Fabian Pinto of, an in history, was buried in ~nt invalid and-she of the hotel. Some, like the straight chairs for only six. baby (daughter-was.:hrlstened at Colon They will return to Santa Metalrie cemetery yesterday af- recame an aled 35 light bulbs or the tumblers on The bed In a hotel WH *m*&JS&M2m Clara Friday, with their son, ter a prvate funeral service at " |the dresser have a span of 0n- expected to last 12.year its, 7-yr-old dresshtch hs serv- an undertaker's. ' ' ly about sbc months, while oth-1 box spring and mattress nine, ed three generations of the lam- ?f5 D T fu*ll3riita; Her column was 50 years old era are good for years. The bedspread is good for five lly. zabeth Meriwether Oiuner 10._ M otniev Arthur' died Sunday in Touro infirm- 1M6- Mrs- stanley *^ U1' Frank, for trie Christmas days. holl- 2 S*hinh?Uiain fr 2 her personal secretary, said she ary, where she had lain for 20 to lte tne months, partly paralyzed and semi-conscious. She was 90. She answered frankly and of- ten harshly in her newspaper column. "Dorothy Dix peaks," for more than 50 years let- ters from people in trouble and seeking advice. She had had received millions of such letters. Her funeral service was read from the Book of Common Prayer by the Rev. John M. Allin, assistant rector of St. Andrews Episcopal church. On- ly her family and close friends were invited. She was buried in a simple gray coffin. The service at the undertaker's lasted about 20 minutes and the service at the graveside, in bright sunshine, lusted about 10 minutes. the hadn't been able to write the column herself since 1949 and lt had been written by "oth- er*" under her name. Her will provides, however, that the name "Dorothy Dix" can't be used over the column after her death. Rebekah Lodge Meeting Cristobal Rebekah Lodge No. 2. will hold its regular monthly meeting this evening at 8:00 p.m. at the Cristobal Masonic Temple. Mrs. Emma Estes, Noble Grand will preside at the meeting and election of officers. T Moslems Flee Red Republics, VOA Reports NEW YORK, Dec. 19 (UP) Whltethe body was at i The 8tate Department's Voice of undertaker's lt wa* surrounded Company, Shore Battalion, 370th America reports that more than by flowers, most of which were'EASR. 3,000.000 Moslems have fled Sov- from New Orleans. wma_ ta . let Asiatic republics to escape ^g undertaker said "a good! These men, all of whom were Communist oppression. many people, but not an ex- ,promoted to corporal, are Paul R. The Voice, in a series of broad- cepti0nally large crowd." called Chappelear. Norman A. HUier. casts beamed at the Near East t0 thelr rMpects before the John K. McDermott .Haroldl W ge republics of the flinproi Muzzav, Frank E. Phillips. Albert 7 Davis Soldiers Receive In-Grade Promotions FORT DAVIS. Dec. 19 Head- 20 quarters. 370th Engineer Amphi- bious Support Regiment, Fort Sherman, announced this morn- ing the promotion in grade of seven soldiers assigned to "Fox" Gatun Star Club Has Christmas Party The Gatun O.E.S. Club held their monthly meeting and Christmas party Monday evening at the home of Mrs. William Hughes in Margarita. Mrs. John Fahnestock was po- --= hostess with Mrs. Hughes for the evening. and at the fringe republi Soviet Union, said that many members of the Islamic faith have fled Russia since the early 1920s, when the Soviets crushed the Independence movement of the Turkestanis in, Central Asia. The Voice estimated that addi- tional thousands have fled the Chinese Slnklang since the es- tablishment there of Communist funeral. In life, she had suffered more than most of the people who Muzzay, Frank E. Phillips. Albert A. Schocke and Hal J. Schafer,: Jr. A Christmas motif was used for The Moslem escapees, the Voice said, have sought and received A Christmas motif was usea ior asylum m inaJa Kashmir, Af- the meeting, with an exchange of ehantaUn and tl gifts among the members. Don atlons of food were given by the ladles for the Atlantic Side Christmas Charities ghanlstan and the Middle East- ern states. It said that the Chinese cultur- al delegation which visited New Delhi earlier this month refused tls George, Mrs. J. W. L. Gra- ham, Mrs. L. L. Barfleia. Mrs. Fred Schwartz. Mrs. Joseph Irv- Mrs Gradv Hardlson. Miss Elsie,ing, Mrs. Michael Greene. Mrs. H alii well Miss Dorothy Kern, (samuel Rowley and Mrs. Leo: Miss Lenora Smith. Mrs. Harvey lEgolf. Smith, Mr Ray wm;M1i8IPa2L" ees Mooaaw. Mrs. Gilbert Furey Mrs. VeitM-Morris-* and Mrs ririsMuno i,mi". ueun earner tuia umuui '"" Officers for the 1952 year were to accept an Invitation to tour elected as follows: president, Kashmir "by way of protest" a- Mrs. Kerdis Meeks. vice-presl- gainst the Kashmir province dent, Mrs. Whitman Garrett; government's policy of granting' Secretary, Mrs. Fred WlUoughby. i asylum to refugees from Sinfci- The other members presentan. were1 Mrs LeRoi Leeser. Mrs. The theme that Moslems are porter' McHan; Mrs. Siarford persecuted in Russia, that they Churchill, Mrs. O; K. Hanners, are denied freedom to practice Mrs Arthur Albright. Mrs. Cur-, their religion and are forced to flee the Soviet Union is one of the foremost-propaganda weap- ons used by the State Depart-; ment in its broadcast for the| Near East and Russia's Moslem- inhabited republics. Wallace E. Rushing. yEgr2if' t .-. ..tin of the U. 9 propaganda is leaning - The January meeting of the v r * religious persecu- r, club will be held at Ose home of M^J^t aSlfi to iCshort- . firtfsRoger Orvls'ttHhe Delis- 5Jvf^roSd*caW\ft policy; Voice officials said, serves a dou- seps Area. Mrs O'Hara Visiting Relatives Sherman Club Electa Officers Mrs" Catherine O'Hara, arrived| The newly organised Fort Friday night from Washington,Sherman officers RHODA 8 Tivoli Ave. Tel. 2-3121 Good News..... We'rt Presentingfor the First Time in Panam TRIPLE A (AAA) SHOES D C; to visit her mother, Mrs. Frank Parmeter of Colon, for the Christmas holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Seal Vision at Coco Solo Mr and Mrs. Otho Hanson met Monday at the home of Mrs. rtobert F. Alexander for their Christmas meeting and election of officers. wtouikh The club will b under the: the allegiance of the Arab mass- leadership of the following ladles | Mi the emphasis on the religious for the coming year: president,; aspect of the question is seen to ... -*>______ n,,ili (a.nnasL k> a# v*>(mA ImnnrtonCP ble purpose: 1. It underscores the United' States contention that commu- nism Is the gravest threat to the religious and political freedom of Arab states. With the U. 8. en- gaged in an Ideological battle for Real of Baltimore, Maryland, ar- Mrs. Wayne Cecil; vice-presl-' be of prime importance. rived-Monday on the /neon for a vis with their daunter and son-li-law, Commander and Mrs. W. .w. Bemls of the Coco Solo Naval Station. J\ Mr. and Mrs. Seal will sail ori; the "Panama." December 28, return to their home. -* Came Club Has Interesting Meeting The Atlantic Camera Club held their regular monthlv meeting Monday at the R.O.T.C. build- in cr Mr. Martin Sawyer, president .., introduced Mr. Albert Lindo of risLyons. Panama City, veteran Isthmian otographer and a member of b Diblo Heights Club- Mr Lindo showed thirty prints from his collection, taken in Eu- rope and in the Republic of Pa- naAsVhe club Is a member of the j Annual Christmas Carols Photographic Society of America, | t Gaton ft had the pleasure of eeing a The children of the Gatun Ele- erouD of color slides from the Ro- mentary School will entert dent Mrs 'John Herrmann," Sec- i Vit "helps to" aow discontent retary Mrs Robert McMullen among Moslem minorities in and Treasurer, Mrs. Robert W.(Russia St evens Jr Tne Vo,ce claims it has Intel- The thirty-two ladles exchang-Ugence reports showing that Its ed Christmas gifts and enjoyed i broadcast* are widely heard in re-reVhments served by the hot- the Moslem republics in Russia, reiresrunenu servea oy we m ^d thgt ^^^ po]lm have 'eM- _____, adopted stern measures to cut Card Part, at I.A.W.C. down the growing audience of The monthly Monday after- "^^t offkla,s Mleyt rw,r! wa, e'nioVed the August bloody revolt of Kaz- lcan Woman's Club was enjoyed flkh e|sants ln central Asia was by twenty ladles. |to somc extent influencd by the A door prise of a deck or ca- Volce,s constant reminders to nasta cards wa* won by Mrs. Lor- Russia'S Moslems that they are s Lyons. I denied the freedom to practice It is hoped that more members; tnelr religion. will take advantage of the op-i xhe Voice's Near'Eastern oper- rjortunlty of meeting at the club ati0ns consisting of dally for an afternoon of cards. Reser- broadcasts ln Turkish, Arabic, vatlons may be made by calling Azerbaijani, Armenian, Georgl- Mrs. Fabian Pinto. n, Tatar and Turkestanlare directed by Gerald Dooher, a vet- eran department Near Eastern expert. Dooher himself speaks Russian, Turkish and Persian responsible for 62 justo Arosemen Ave. Tel. 3-1477 The most beautiful collection of EVENING COCKTAIL FROCKS also Gay COTTONS From $ 9-95 UP Both of Our Stores will be I until Christmas ^^TarroToS- the'lVl"pare^rand"frtends 'Wscripts* brcSsTto to. Tear mentatory was given by Captain school with their annual program i Ea*t. C. 8. Townshend. Captain Townsherid also show- ed a group Of pictures which he and Mr. Frank Scott took on a recent' trip to the*. San Bla*. J t rca Victor console 25 or 60 Cycle L_ -J-____!------- 3 speeds 8 bands 8 tubes Made only tor the tropics Mahogany Walnut Blonde What finer Chrlstmss present than this luxurious RCA VICTOB Radio Phonograph with large 12-inch dynamic speaker, unsurpassed tonal quality. Con- tains marvelous new electronic "Microtuning. n never to, be forgotten Christmas present. EXTREMELY GENEROUS CREDIT TERMS 'ANAMA RADIO CORPORATION Central Avenue Phones: OUR 400 DAY "ANNIVERSARY" CLOCKS ARE GUARANTEED FOR A YEAR! CHOOSE FROM TEN INTERIOR-DECORATOR MODELS, AT THE BEST PRICES IN PANAMA! THE FRENCH BAZAAR Juan Palomeras COLON 7atZ at MOTTA'S CHRISTMAS GIFTS FOR YEAR 'ROUND EASE! pamper his tates for comfortable relaxation or active Sports wear... With one for these handsome Shirts from Panama Colon Mr SPECIAL SALE 50% DISCOUNT ON ABOVE WATCHES READING FROM LEFT TO RIGHT: BEFORE ROLEX TUDOR ROLEX OYSTER 17 jewel precision watch.....7 $32.50 17 jewel precision watch, water- proof, shock resistant, stainless steel band.................. ROLEX TUDOR OYSTER 17 jewel precision watch, watei- proof, shock proof, shock resistant ROLEX OYSTER (ladies model) ROLEX PERPETUAL 17 jewel precision watch, water- proof, shock resistant, stainless steel band.................. 65.00 39.50 89.50 18 jewel precision automatic watch 10 kt. gold case with stainless steelback.................. W-OO Now $14.95 32.50 19.95 44.75 97.50 Now yon can easily buy a magnificent watch for ypnr give Rolex, you are giving the nest Swiss watch. loved ones. When yon FELIX' CHRISTMAS RAFFLE 2,000.00 IN GIFT PRIZES! OPEN TILL 9 P.M. FELIX B. MADURO, S.A. 21 Central Avenue 6 Tivoli Avenue p PAGE TWBLTV THE PANAMA AMKRICAW IK 'INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER WKDKMDAT, DECEMBEK ls'liQ Maryland University May Drop Out Of Southern Conference When Hughry Fullerton condemned Joe Jackson to failure 9 a big league ballplayer berau.se he couldn't read or write he was (iving yoire to a popular misconception which confuses Intel, ligence with quick reflexes and natural instincts. The truth is the athletic brain and the academic brain have nothing in common. Jack Dempsey never got through grade school, yet he was generally known as a "smart fighter." Gene Tunney told me: "I wasn't able to get one good shot at his Jaw in 20 rounds." Tunney xas repeatedly accused of loitering with books. Babe Ruth had little formal educatiop. Not only was he handi- capped by limited opportunity but unresponsive faculties. Ruth won many distinctions. One tha' was completely deserved and accurate was that he never 'pulled a rock." Or made a mental mistake on the field. What old Httahey forgot, or overlooked, in the case of Jack- son, as other did before him, and have since, it that a man might have a very mediocre brain for most of the demands of civiliza- tion and still have a productive type for competitive sport. After all. Jarkson wasn't going to be askec to split the atom, translate Sanskrit, or even saw a woman In half; his assignment was to hit big league pitching. No books or classroom formulae could have aided him. This was a job that ca'led for timing, co- ordination, sharp eyes and loose muscles, and to develop these qualities it has long been agreeu a tour of the bushes is much more likely to hasten perfection than, say, an extended visit to the Sorbonne. Terps*Barred For One Year NEW YORK. Dec. 19 (tJ.P.) There- are indication on the University of Maryland campus that the school may drop out of the Southern Conference. The Conference recently discon- tinued Maryland's membership for one year because the Ter- rapins accepted a bowl game bid despite a league policy against post-season games. Both Maryland President H. C. Byrd and Football Coach Jim Ta- tum have accepted the confer- ence ruling. However, other sources who ask that their names be withheld predict that Maryland may bolt the confer- ence. THE EMBARRASSMENT GREW I have suggested that possibly Jackson's illiteracy may have had something to do with his participation in the shameful Black Sox scandal. Not that he, a grown man In his late 20's, didn't know right from wrong. He was desperately sensitive about his unlettered state, always tried to conceal it from strangers and even resorted to pathetic deceits and decoys, such as carrying magazines and books under his arm. It probably was no fault of his that he didn't get at least an elementary education. In the bushes he wasn't too conscious of his handicaps, but once he got to the majors and became an Im- portant lellow with certain social and business obligations, the imbarrassment became agonizing. I wondered if he could have become embittered, developed a dark, brooding psychosis, if that's what it is, and decided to exact a fee from a society that had hurt him for no reason. In entertaining such thoughts maybe I was Just trying to nlibi a naturally weak character who had happened to be some- thing of a hero to me when I was a young reporter back home, and I wanted to keep on thinking kindly of him Even so. my sympathy for him never ceased, for I knew ho"/ much he suffer- ed. In a very real sense he was like a blind man: He knew of the existence of rare and beautiful treasures, but he couldn't enjoy them. Ernest Barnard was general manager of the Cleveland club when Jackson arrived from the Southern League. He was an un- derstanding and ingenious fellow and years later replaced Ban Johnson as president of the American League. When I came up I learned how Barnard had helped Jackson: how he devised a con. eplracy which enabled him to cope with problems no other player on the team ever had to face; of a pretense the great slugger was to wear In public with some dignity. * THE HONEYMOON PARROT Barnard roomed him with Bill Steen. a pitcher, who was obviously a decent sort of fellow, too. Steen handled Joe's mall, cr.swered his wires and read him the menu in dining rooms and on trains. He did a slick job with the menu, dlrcusslng the vari- ous items with such seeming casualness and Interest the waiter quite often was fooled into believing Jackson was doing the ordering. I seem to remember Barnard told me Steen even took charge pf Jackson's romance, at least to the extent of reading the lady's OS "WeIs an bride made with the club. The newlyweds had a drawing room Joe was very proud of a parrot he had brought along, and most hofpitable with his sparkling, crystal-clear corn whisky which he served from a five-gallon glass container... "Birmingham thinks It special water I gotta have for my stomach pains" he laughed... Joe Birmingham, the outfielder, with the great throw- ing arm. who managed the club Baseball has never known a more remarkable hitter than Jackson, and probably never will. I like to think he would have been an even greater ballplayer, a classier fellow and a more honorable man if he had gotten a more helpful start as a bov crookedness is crookedness and there's no wav to justify it no matter how extenuating the circumstances, but it never h'elDs when a weak fellow is asked to carry an extra load. These sources point out that Maryland Is disappointed in the action of two of its neighboring conferences rivals George! Washington and West Virginia.' They add that Maryland fought to get both schools into the Southern Conference, then both voted in favor of black-listing the Terps for one year. The sources also point out that Maryland with a new 45,000 seat stadium is aim- ing for status as a big time football power. With that in disguise. The conference action cancel- led six Maryland games with other conference opponents. Ta- tum will try to schedule other schools, and it may be he will cme up wih rivals that will i prove to be better attractions I than the games originally sched- uled. Gun Club Notes THRILLING FINISH Panama's barefooted 17-year-old distance runner Faustino Looei Cfpt.UL"Jthe V50 meters race ln tne B0var Ian Games at Caracas after an exeffi homl tnrrn\CIngdo7^tO.Vmteesran ^^ * WenCe8'a Bartota- |P3^"WS*SS LOS ANGELES, Dec. 19(U.P.I University officials Indicate Maryland would be interested In ~~----------. isetting up knew "Middle Atlantic The National Football League I Conference." ,is all set for a re-play of last "I doubt if Maryland can take year's thrilling title playoff be- [the initiative at the present!tween the Los Angeles Ram and time," says one spokesman, "but Cleveland Browns, that doesn't mean we wouldn't Both clubs are scheduled to be interested in the future. After |start workouts today for the the first of the year." he adds, 1951 edition at Los Angeles this National Grid Loop Set For Replay Of Last Year's Thrilling Play-Off "anything could happen. The Missouri Valley Confer- ence, -which was reduced from Sunday. The Browns winners in the American Conference for two years and ln the defunct eight to six members recently, All-America League for four has voted In favor of a national years before that are scheduled visional title two Sundays ago. I'----------------------------- Los Angeles waited until Sunday ~. .. ^ to win the National Conference i (hANIA KlIrT DflOt crown. The Rams got into thel",K""v DUll KIU61 playoffs via the back door when they beat Green Bay. 42-14, while San Francisco knocked the De- troit Lions out of the title with a 21-17 upset. RESIDENTS of the CANAL ZONE and MEMBERS of the ARMED FORCES We offer you all the facllltln vou need to buy furniture for your home. Be practical In your Chriatmn* shopping for your family furniture is the Ideal Gift. During December we are oprn until 9:00 pm SIMMONS SPRINGS MAITRESSES The Store Where You Will Find the Largest r. AMOrtnwnt of Glass and Linoleum. N t'nlral Avenue Telephone J-24S leaders In the Furniture bus'neu since ISO'' policy concerning the recruiting of athletes. In a meeting at Kansas City, conference officials also voted for the creation of a national agency to enforce the policy. The officials charge that proposals recommended by the NCAA Executive Committee fail to cover what they call "the heart and real source of all our problems." The officials say those problems are in their words "recruiting and pay to athletes." The faculty representatives al- so called for a re-study of the | bowl game problem by the NCAA extra events committee. They 'say such post season games have far more merit than the current drive to de-emphasize them would indicate. The Valley Conference was re- duced in size when Bradley and Drake resigned in protest against the league's handling of the now- famous Johnny Bright Injury case. However, Conference Pre- sident Frank Stovall of Houston University says the resignations didn't weaken the loop. "The conference is stronger and more firmly knit together than ever before," ays stovall. to arrive in Los Angeles today. Coach Paul Brown will put the team to work immediately. Los Angeles Coach Joe Sty- dahar will have his team on the field early. Stydahar has called a morning session for 10 o'clock and says the emphasizes will be on tackling. Stydahar says he'll start what he calls his "Jumbo" backfield against the Browns. That lineup includes halfbacks Dan Towler and Tank Younger, fullback Dick Hoerner and quarterback Bob Waterfield. All except Water- field are converted fullbacks and their average weight Is 219 pounds. On the basis of past perform- ances, the Browns will be favor- ed. The two teams have met three times and Cleveland has won them all. The first win came in last year's title playoff at Cleveland. Lou Groza boosted a 16-yard field goal in the last half minute of play to give the Browns the championship, 30-32 m that one. This year Cleveland won a pre-season exhibition game, then defeated Los Angeles. 38-23 ln a regular season meeting. The Browns clinched their di- A former Ram player tac- kle Dick Huffman has been granted a review of his court case. Huffman played in the Cana- dian Pro League this season de- spite an injunction obtained by the Los Angelas club. The West Virginia Supreme Court agreed Monday to hear Huffman's appeal from the in- junction. If the injunction is up- held after the appeal, Huffman will be liable for action ln cori- tempt of court. oOo Longshol Winner For Season's 297th CORAL GABLES, Florida, Dec. 19 (UF.) The hottest Jockey In racing did It again Monday. Seventeen-year-old Charlie Burr chalked up his 297th Win of the season by booting horn "De- flation" in the McCallister Purse. The win moves Burr within three victories of the magic 300 mark. Only six Jockeys have ridden 300 winners ln a single season since the 1890's. - Usually, Burr's name automat- ically throws support -to his mount. Monday, however, the betting public leaned toward "Flying Weathers" and "De- In another legal action, Feder- flaiion" paid a big $29.90, $9.40 al District Judge Allan Grim and< *410- Flying Weather ran postponed hearings on the Gov- second by a length and three ernment's anti-trust suit against the National League and its member teams until January 8th. Hearings had been scheduled to start in Philadelphia yester- day. Judge Grim granted the postponed because the case was 12th on the court docket and it appeared there would not be time to complete the hearings. In Its suit, the Government contends that the league's po- licy of restricting television and radio broadcasts of pro games is quarters and "Fighting Mad" ran third. Burr got Deflation up with the leaders hi the six furlong race, then moved him at the back turn. Under light pressure. De- flation shot through on the in- side and overhauled Flying Weather. With two weeks left in the year. Burr seems a cinch to hit the 300 mark. The four-year-old gelding which he rode Monday had won only one race this year at Belmont ln June and had finished in the money on. two ACTIVE WEEK FOR INDOOR MARKSMEN; BALBOA PISTOL ALRROOK. CRISTOBAL Jr. WIN As the rifle and pistol compet- ition in the Isthmian Gallery league moves into high gear with many matches during the past week, the Balboa Gun Club's pis- tol team and the rifle teams of the Albrook-Curundu Gun Club and the Cristobal Junior Rifle Club still remain in the unde- feated column. As the Cristobal Juniors clash with Albrook-Curundu later this week, one of these two leading rifle teams must fall by the way- side. This reporter would hesit- ate to try to pick the. winner Of this one. Both teams are consist- ent over 1100 scorers, and carry adequate reserve strength. Albrook-Curundu took the Cristobal Seniors 1112 to 994 at Cristobal in their last rifle match, with Bill- Morriman fir- ing high score. The Balboa Sen- iors, led by Al Joyce with a score of 275 took over the Cristobal ROTC 1080 to 689. The Balboa ROTC in a much improved performance gave the Cristobal Juniors a run for their money as they went down to defeat 1113 to 1026. Jim Schei- beler's 285 was high for the win- ners as Dave Hoopes rang up 267 to lead .the losers. The Cristobal Juniors made it look easy when they defeated'the Cristobal ROTC 1072 to 794, with John Fahne- stock hitting 285 In tris one. The Balboa Seniors rang up another victory in defeating a much improved Cristobal Senior team 1070 to 990. The Cristobal outfit- is moving into the 1000 class as they improve with every match. Fred Wells led Balboa with a score of 285 In this pne to prove that he can hoot a ri- fle as well as- pistol. In the pistol division of the league, the Cristobal Seniors took two to stay on the heels of the Balboa Gun Club. They first de- feated the Coco Solo Marines 994 to 812 with Paul Stewart firing 268 to set the pace for the win- ners. Later on Paul Stewart a- gain led hli team to the win over the Albrook-Curundu pistol team (a somewhat weakened outfit this year) by a score of 970 to 861. Albrook-Curundu went to the cleaners again when they met the Rodman Marines at their range on the West Bank.- Col. Howard Turton never, dropped below 90 In any stage of the match as he rang up 278 while his team was scoring .1033- a- ialnst the 959 totalled by the lbrook-Curundu outfit. Detailed cores of the matches fired up to the past week-end are as follows: RIFLE Albrook-Curundu P s s J. Scheibeler John Hatgi . J. Fahneatock D. Tagaropolos Cristobal Jr. 100 98 87 97 98 86 99 98 77 98 94 81 Team Total Balboa ROTC Dave Hoopes 93 90 84 H. Jordan 93 97 75 G. Hendrickson 94 79 76 Ewing gs 93 56 Team Total 285 281 274 273 ilii 267 265 249 248 ioS J. Fahneatock John Hatgi Jim Scheibeler Alexis Vila Cristbal Jr. 100 97 88 100 94 77 96 93 69 100 92 66 Team Total Cristobal ROTC Dak Cockle Vic Fisher Henry Harts Darlo Gonzalez 90 89 69 89 46 80 33 57 42 76 34 Team Total 285 371 258 368 578 225 202 188 179 Balboa Sr. Fred Wells 100 #7 88 Clayton .Breckon 99 98 79 Al Joyce 100 96 59 Wayne Lucas 86 95 73 Team Total Cristobal Sr. Bill Blngham 97 00 74 Noel Gibson 95 88 67 Frank Anderson 90 91 61 Wendell#Cotton 97 75 85 Team Total 28S 276 255 *** im Ml 250 242 237 PI8TOL Cristobal S T R Paul Stewart 85 91 92 Dale Barck 73 97 93 J. A. Cunningham 75 88 71 Grady Hardison 71 76 82 Team Total Marines, Coco Solo Bill Herriman Ed Coe Earl Mitchell' Bob Demlng 91 100 86 99 100 83 96 95 85 97 95 78 T 284 282 276 270 ilii Team Total Cristobal Sr. Bill Blngham 98 88 81 267 Noel Gibson 98 94 59 251 Roy Perkins 95 84 61 240 Wendell Cotton 96 88 52 236, Team Total Larry Pratt 82 82 70 Gone Hamon 69 86 66 H. Henderson 40 62 64 Willard Garret 61 70 61 Team Total Cristobal Paul Stewart 83' 94 76 Max R. Boggs 80 79 86 Dale E. Barck 79 87 79 F. A. Anderson 84 78 66 Team Total Albrook-Curundu Bob Gorder 75 95 92 Ed Coe 86 84 85 Jack Kennedy 66 86 64 Ben McCasland 40 46 43 Team Total - Marinea, Rodman Howard Turton 93 91 94 John Counselman 79 91 88 George Tucker 70 85 89 Ted Richer 73 81 89 Team Total Albrook-Curundu T- 268 283 234 229 234 220 160 193 11 253 245 245 238 978 363 254 210 13 Ml 278 243 Bob Gorder Ed Coe Bill Jaffray Earl Mitchell Total 81 81 76 72 93 72 74 84 86 77 83 80 IMS 245 239 239 335 , ~..w >s>.......now w* u,i/ unifico js iiuioiicu *n uic uiuiiey un. bWU in restraint of trade and com-other occasions. The winning merce. time was one-12 on a fast track. >,>>.>>,>>>>tt,>>>,,> ; the V-M tri-o-mahc CfllR FRf TLICH JOt BEAUTIFUL CARPETS. y0UR H 0 M t EN 1 M N f USE OUR EASY PAYMENT PLAN 25 or 60 Cycles modernize your radio-phono* combination with the new V-M tri-o-matic 950! 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Balboa Sr. AlJoyce 100 94 81 Archie Turner 97 96 75 Fred Wells 98 94 75 Clayton Breckon 100 95 76 Team Total Cristbal ROTC D. S. Cockle V. R. Fisher W. L. Stevens H. A. Harta Team Total 95' 76 33 83 62 21 71 35 58 80 38 38 275 267 267 271 MS 204 165 164 IM Drinks sold t St 71*" from 3 to 7 p.m. eVerV DAY The Boston Bar >!'" a beautifm C H R Y 5 L E R / PLYMOUTH = Choose your tolor name your model! AGENCIAS PAN-AMERICANAS, S. A. Your CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH Dealer. M A. POWELL, S. A. Coln AGENCIAS PAN- AMERICANAS, S. A David China... xxssausMSBmwaa . WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1951 . THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAGE THIRTEEN Twin Football Invasion Centers Out West Coast Rose Bowl Bound lllini, Cleveland Browns Arrive By UNITEQ PRESS PASADENA, Calif., Dec. 19A twin football inva- Ision ono aimed at the Rote Bowl, the other at the pro- fessional title has hit the West Coast. , The Illinois gridiron army which will meet Stanford In the battle of the Rose Bowl already has landed In Pasadena. Its Rose Bowl Special pulled In at 12:28 p.m. (EST) yesterday.. an hour and 16 minutes behind schedule because of storm con- I ditlons. The other prong of this Inva-. I lionthe Cleveland Browns club which takes on the Los Angeles Rams Sunday for the pro title arrived later last night. The Ulloi o a p t a 1 nChuck Studleywas the first of the 44 playera to step off the train., Pretty Nancy Thome, the Rose Bowl queen, handed Chuck an orange and pinned a rose on his lapel. When a photographer urg- eo Studley to kiss Nancy, he tried to oblige. But Nancy displayed some fancy broken field running and there was no traditional kiss. There was a big cheer for Johnny Karras, the All-America back, when he stepped into view. After that Illinois Coach Ray Eliot was the center of attrac- tion. Eliot, smiling and poised, paid the usual tribute to the op- Soslng team. He predicted Stan- ord would be "the toughest team" any Big 10 club has met since the series started. Eliot seemed a little worried by the slightly overcast skies above Pasadena and the chilly winds. He explained that the ililnl had missed several practices at home because of snow and examina-! tlons. Eliot hoped to get the squad down to practice '^a soon as possible.'' Unless public rela- tions commitments interfere, that would be today. For Eliot scheduled a light workout for the afternoon. Tomorrow he'll start two-a-day workouts and Western newsmen will be bar- red. Eliot admits that he has a full scouting report on the Stanford team. He revealed only one thing the reports told him... that Stanford will be tough. Only two injuries mar the Il- linois squad. Left end Frank Wodziak has a twisted left knee. And fullback Pete Bacvhouros has an Injured wrist. Both are expected to come around shortly. The Cleveland Browns landed in Los Angeles around midnight. They traveled in two planes, the first arrived at 11:20 p.m. (EST) .. .the second at 1:01 a.m. today. Paul Brown's club is a one- touchdown favorite to win their sixth straight professional title, and their second in the National Football League. Cleveland won all four years in the now-de- funct All-America Conference. Basketball Clinic To Be Held Tonight The Pacific Side Board of the National Association of Approved Basketball Officials will hold a meeting at 7 o'elock tonight at the Fort Claytoa Gym. A rules Interpretation bas- ketball off (elating clinic will be held. All members and other interested parties are Invited. College Basketball 4 I . M, Loyola BY UNITED PRESS (Monday Night) EAST s.1 .. Temple 114, Qlassboro (Pa.) Teh rs 47 Boston College 70, Boston U. 48 Grove City 79, Bethany (WVa) 75 Cal. (Pa) Teh 65, Fairmont (W- Va) Teh. 41 Shippenburu (Pa) Teh.73, Wilson (Wash) 58 Stroudsburr Tchrs. 61, Ithaca . College 50 Georgetown (DO 88, Catholic U. 44 Cathedral CoL 68, NT State Tech 64 American Univ. 50, Roahoke 44 St. Michael's (Vt) 68, Cham- plain 46 Adelphi M, Springfield (Mass) 56 Butler 83, Michigan 53 Depaul 87, Illinois Wesleyan 47 Kansas SUS* 93, Hamline 71 Notre Dame 77, Chicago Loyola 57 Bowling Green South 69 Wisconsin 55, St. Louis 54 Iowa 61, Washington (St. Louis) 53 Alma 76, Ferris 70 Wright FUd Klttyhawk 75, Rio Grande 68 Ohio Wesleyan 71, Denlson 66 Yankton (SD) 73, Sioux Falls ota 3 6 Aucsburg (Minn) 65, South Dak- ota State 51 Concordia (Minn) 74, Moorhead Tech 46 Bemidjl Tech 91, Mayvllle (ND) Tech 45 Southwestern (Kss.) 58, Has. Wesleyan 53 MllliUn (111) 80, Elmburst (III) 43 Pittsburg (Mass) 58, Drury (Mo.) 49 Lake Forest 62, Ohio Univ. 57 Emporia (Kas) 65, Rockhurat 63 Nebraska Wesleyan 51, Buena Vista 44 Culver-Stockton 53, Iowa Wei- leyan 52 , Stout (WIs) 76, Michigan College 51 Momlnsside 64, fresno State 63 St. John's (Minn) 86, River Falls (WIs) 70 SOUTH Kentucky 81, St. John's (Bkn) 40 VenderblK SefTestas Tech 40 Alabama SO, Mississippi 70 Louisiana State 80, Texas 55 South Carolina 14, Wake Forest 14 Esitern Kentucky 86, EvansviUe Murray (Ky) State 89, New Mex- ico A. ft M. 51 Western Kentucky 76, Central Mo. State 56 Morehead (Ky) 78, Citadel 40 North Carolina 70, Hanes Hos- iery 59 ' Florida 69, Miami 65 Tennessee 61, Clemson 52 ring Hill 84, S'west Louisiana Ins*. 57 Quantico Marines 80, Martin B'm's (Md) 66 Elen 78, Atlantic Christian 61 Louisiana Tech 78, Ouachlta 41 Wilmington (O.) 69, Centre 62 Austin Peay (Tenn) 89, Mid Tenn. State 40 Guilford 72, East Carolina 67 Union (Ky) 62, Emory and Heu- Nry . SOUTHWEST Mississippi SUte 64, Arkansas SUte S3 FAR WIST Drake 57, Denver 56 Stanford 91, VMI (Cal) 77 St. Mary's (Cal) 68, Regis 47 Wyoming 51. Baylor 45 WiqhiU 84, New Mexico 58 Rea Trav (N'M) 104, NM Military Institute 55 San Diego NTC 52, Phoenix Col- lege sf Whltworth 69, Lewis and Clark 59 Whitman 55, Memphis State 52 Oakland Eng. 69, Stewart fhev (Cal) 47 N'west Nasarene CoL (Ida) 66, CoL Ida. II Williamette 98, Chico State 58 Panama Beats Venezuela 4-3 In Baseball CARACAS, Deo. 19 (UP)Pan- am yesterday upset the previ- ously unbeaten Venezuelan base- ball team 4-3 for her second vic- tory In the Bolivarian Games baseball tournament. The setback, however, did not affect the final standings of the Venezuelan team which had already clinched the championship. Panam put over the winning run in the last half of the ninth Inning with the bases loaded. Vepezuela had scored two runs in the second Inning, Panama one in the fifth and two in the eighth, but Venezuela had tied up the game with a single run In the top of the ninth. Sylvester McDonald led off for Panam with a double in the fin- al frame. Agullar struck out. O- berto was walked. Valencia sin- gled to load the bases. Oliver Hardy hit a long fly to left and McDonald tagged up and crossed the plate with the winning tally The linescore: Venezuela 020 000 0013 10 4 Panam 000 010 021 4 9 3 Arizmendi, Quintero (9) and Garca. Gonzlez and Cobos. The scheduled playoff between Per and Venezuela to decide second place in soccer was called off after 35 minutes when It was announced that the delegates of Per and Venezuela had decided to vote for a second place tie in hsoccer.^ However, Julio Bustamante, 8resident of the Venezuelan lympic Committee, refused to accept this decision and sched- uled a new playoff for tonight. The Peruvians state that they will not play, however, and will leave for home today. In the boxing semifinals, fea- therweight Avalos of Per won by forfeit over Salazar Torres of Ecuador. Joaquin Len of Ven- ezuela scored a close decision over Manuel Barton of Panam. Welterweight Luis Samuels of Panam won by forfeit over Rodriguez Quiones of Ecua- dor. In boxing finals, Venezuela's Sergio Qaacue decisloned Peru's Garca Arclla. Esmeraldo Campos f Per copped the heavyweight title by decision over Venezuela's Eduardo Rodrigue. Ecuador's boxers did not show up for the finals or semifinals, losing four bouU by forfeit. Vandals Spoil Crop WYANDOTTE, Ind. (UP I Not content with breaking 34 windows in Dr. Nelson B. Combs' farm home, vandals mixed a quantity of oat and wheat seed, making It useless for planting. I'.ULLDOG HOOP ACELeon Herring, shown above as he gets ready to fire his one hand push shot, will be the big gun in the Balboa Bulldog basketball team lnthe coming Canal Zone Junior College Basketball Tournament. Herring stands 6-2, and will be playing his. second year of varsity ball for the Red and White. Fight Results BY UNITED PRESS Yankees Exhibition Schedule Will Be Mostly Big League MONDAY NIGHT BOSTONNorman Hayes, 16?, ton. outpointed Robert VMe- ..ain, 164, France (10); Johnny .__.___ _, ,- ,_, Greco, 150, Montreal, stopped A!-' NEW YORK, Dec. 19 (UP.) fredo LaGrutta, 144', Milan, It-, The New York Yankees will aly (3); Red Priest, 166, Cam- 'ne up for the defense of their bridge, Mass., knocked out Joey world championship next season Arthur, 16214, Indianapolis (8); -y playing a predominantly Maj- and Tommy Collins, 1264, Bos- or League exhibition schedule, ton, knocked out Jimmy MeAUls- j Generai Manager George Weiss ter, 1Z(>! i, Baltimore (). Kentucky, Under Investigation, Beats St. John's NEW YORK, Dec. 19 (UP) Kentucky players are in the bas- ketball spotlight today for two reasons...their skill in trounc- ing St. John's Monday night, and the possibility some of them may know something about basketball bribers. The Kentucky Wildcats tram- pled St. John's 81-40 Monday night as New York Assistant Dis- trict Attorney Vincent O'Connor continued his bribery investiga- tion In Lexington. The Wildcats were in charge all the way as they scored their 100th straight victory at home. Coach Adolph Rupp says: "I'm especially glad to get that 100th victory against such a tough team. I'm proud of every one of the boys They all played won- derful ball- KentucKj s shooting was dead- ly. The wildcats sank 43 per cent of their shots. St. John's hit only 16 per cent. As for that Investigation, O'- Connor still is trying to get some Kentucky players to talk about two games played during the 1948-49 season. New York Aa-| slstant DA. even has promised the players Immunity If they'll talk. "The players whose assistance we want," says O'Connor, "did not act within the state of New. York, therefore. New York does- n't want to arrest them. All we1 want is their testimony to tell a. grand Jury how they were linked with New York gamblers." The Investigation was slowed; down yesterday when John, Brown, attorney for the players, I attended a funeral In Russel-I ville, Kentucky. Brown refuses to1 allow the players to talk unless he Is present. It Is believed three players are involved. Yanks Score 5th Straight As Neville Hurls S-Hit Shutout PANAMA PRO LEAGUE The Standings TEAM Won Lost Pet. Yankees.......S 1 Bombers.......3 2 Bluebirds, Brownies 3 5 regain their winning form and give the other teams in the cir- cuit a fight for the champion- .838 ship. .600 Other new importees who will LAST NIGHT'S RESULT Panam Stadium Yankees 3, Brownies 6. TOMORROW NIGHTS GAMES Panam Stadium First Game (6:30)Spur Cola Brownies (Arthurs 0-0) vs. Ches-, terfield Bombers (Johnson (1-1). Spar CoL Second GameCarta Vieja Peoples, cf. .400 soon be here are Theollc 8mith, .1671 a righthander who play for the Chesterfield Bombers, and catch- er Steve Karas, who will be add- ed to the Yankees' roster as In- surance behind the plate. Yankees (Fricano 1-0) vs. Cer-|L6pea, Ss . vecer'a Bluebirds (Stemple 1-1). Ware, lb . Whitewashing AB R H PO A 3 0 S 3 4 2 'Arthurs, 3b . The Carta Vieja Yanks made it Gladstone, If five straight last night as they, bKnowles 0 whitewashed the hapless Spur charles, rf. . 4 Cola Brownies 3-0 behind Eddie Talt, c.....3 Neville's five-hit pitching at the cKellman ... 1 Panam Stadium. Clark, p. ... 4 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 .30 0 5 24 14 2 AB R HPO A 3 0 0 3 3 2 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 to report to the St. Petersburgh, iays the Yanks will play 36 spring 1'lorlda training base on February 22nd. The rest of the squad will report March 1st. The Yanks will play exhibitions with all Major League clubs! training in Florida, they open the "Grapefruit League" season on March eighth against the1 St. Louis Cardinals and close with NEW HPtSSL-SefSS exhibitions, with all but seven L&S& ft&&*ATCSUwtasHKjor League clubs. ny (Red) DeFailo, 144, Bayonne Mana er Casey Btengel has PROVIDENCE, R. I Georre'as^ his pitchers and catchers Araujo, 1334, Providence, out-j pointed Charley Rlley, 130, St. troit, outpointed Gerald Labroi, Louis (10). 140, Chicago (14). TRENTON, NJGeorge John- CHICAGOTim Dalton, 1374, son, 150, Trenton. N.J., stopped Chicago, outpointed Lem Thorn-'* WUKffS, \E^. art Clarence (Honeychlle) Johnson,',., 140, Chicago (8). 9P ew York starting April. 148, Philadelphia (). NOTTINGHAM.EngUnd-Alex11"1- ....__. .. _, HOLYOKE, Mass.Otis Gra-jBuxton, 15914, England, stopped' In addition to the Dodgers and , ham, 165/j, Philadelphia, out-; Burl Charity, 1584, Youngstown, Cards, the Yanks will meet both pointed Sammy Walker, 157, o. (3). gp** teams the Detroit Tigers Springfield, Mass. (10). PARISRay Famechon,1304, w*shinFt?' Cincinnati and both QUEBEC Fernando Gagnon, France, outpointed Juan Padilla, Philadelphia clubs. The Minor 117, Quebec, knocked ont Joe, 1314, Mexico (10). Leaguers on the schedule are At- Torres, 1174. Puerto Bico (1). SYDNEY, AustraliaRay Cole- lanta, Columbus. Georgia. Char-i BATTLE CREEK, Mich.Har- man, 125, Australia, outpointed lotte, North Carolina, Norfolk old (Baby Face) Jones, 138, De- Lois Castillo, 120, Mexico (12). and Baltimore. The game was a pitchers' duel Gil, 2b between Neville and lefty Vibert aBarnett. '. . Clark. The Brownies' ace also Hall, 2b . . turned in an excellent Jobal- lowing only six safetiesbut two Totals .... errors by rlghtfielder Hermsn Charles paved the way for the Carte Viola Brownies defeat. Koshorek, ss. The Yankees got their first run Jacobs, 2b . In the second inning when Dale Kropf, cf . Lynch got a base on balls then Lynch. If . scored when Manager Al Kubskl Cronin, rf . singled and Charles booted the Kubskl, lb . ball. Jazinski. 3b . In the fourth the Yanks made Dabek, c . . It 2-0 on a single by Johnny, Neville, p . Kropf which was preceded by! --------------- Forrest Jacob's double. The final Totals.....27 3 6 27 15 0 Yankee run came In the sixth Score By Innings when Lynch again walked and Spur Cola 000 000 0000 tallied when Jim Cronin singled Carta Vieja 01O 101 00x3 to right and Charles again tried aGrounded out for Gil In 7th; for a "field goal." bRan for Gladstone in 9th; Jacobs and Kropf were the, cForced Knowles for Talt in 9th. leading hitters for the Yankees Runs Batted InKropf. Earned with two-for-four each. For the RunsCarta Vieja 1. Left On losers, Clark singled twice in, BasesSpur Cola 8, Carta Vieja four trips to the plate. 15. Two Base HitJacobs. Hit by With the expected addition of pitchNeville (Gladstone). Base a few new playersPablo Ber- on Balls offNeville 4, Clark 5. nard, Humberto Robinson and struckout byNeville 1. Clark 2. pitcher Alex Newklrk who will Doubleplays Jazinski, Jacobs, soon be brought from the States Kubskl; Hall, Lpez. Ware. Los- and the return of Qranvllle ing PitcherClark (1-2). Win- Gladstone and Manager Leon ning PitcherNeville 1-1). Um- Kellman to the lineup, the piresRoberts, Parchment, Ka- Brownles can be counted on to .-amahites. Time of Game1:56. Special Sale ROLEX WATCHES 50% DISCOUNT FELIX B. MADURO, S.A. 21 Central Avenue 6 Tivoli Avenue OPEN TILL 9 P.M. >>!>>>> >9t9>9>9\P>\>9>> > XX 9.3 .9 XX >>>>>li>>>>>>>: i.KXKM.*MKXKX*XM#*XVM* t > > > J! 9 1*1 l JLI > > .. 9 * ****.*> M > 1 > i RiiJ.i//. '. . KXJLJLXJ.JtJLAJtXJLXXAJULlLJ #**** From CASA FASTLICH 9:00 P.M. TILL CHRISTMAS *<*4*i*l**V* 5.. BMMnww0wsrk .* -~\ . MARYLAND BARRED FOR YEAR BY SC (Pate 1 Hotel Loan To Get Fina! Approval Today *n*b .. AN PTOBPENDEjjrj^ ____ Panamalmmcan ''Let the people know the truth and the country i. safe" Abraham Lincoln. TWENTY-SEVENTH XEAR Vishinsky Hopes Captured US Formal approval of a $1.500,-. .'00 loan contract by the Nation- al Assembly was expected today following yesterdays passage in n second reading of a bill to com- plete the financing of the Hotel El Panama with money borrow,-; id from the U.S. Export-Import Bank. The Nation* 1 Assembly also re- ceived yesterday President Alci- biades Arosenicna's nomination of present Minister of Agricul- ture and Commerce Jose M. V- rela as manager of the Social Se-1 ;urity Bank. Final passage of the loan bill pars, Dec. 19 (UP)Russian will permit Ei Panama Hotel to Foreign Minister Andrei Vishin- cancel a $1.000 000 debt with he sky told tne political committee Panama Trus". Co enabling the of the UnUed Nations here to- latter to resume operations after day that he hoped the four Unlt. thre ^ RusaiansVtrftyTutho-1 be? clwed 'or nine months. ed at tM f]te held ln Commu. ritiM.^pen parachutes were re-: The President's nom nation of nist Hungary would be put on portedly found nearby ! Vrela for the Social Security trial as Kg ^ ^ouncernent said Os-' P ,',s. ,h!,f,rc'' st.ep ,in a m?Ke He sco"ed at th* United States manov andI SaVanteev were e-' lo fullfill his promise to R1ve the clalm tnat thelr c_47 bound quipped with large s^s oTmonJ PANAMA, B. P., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER It, 1951 FIVE CENTS Fliers Face In Hungary said the two parachuted into thei Moldavian Soviet Republic, for-: merlv known as Romanian Bes-i sarabia, and were -apprehended I coupled with Soviet bloc P against the Unit States $100,000,000 -Mutual S- test note* iro- ted rurity appropriation to aid the foe* of Communism, is taken to indicate the Reda are ready for tome hard bargain ins be- fore they release the captured fliers. A State Dpartment spokesman The airmen are not expected to be subjected to a big spy trial, as were VS. newman William N. Oatis and businessman Robert A. Vogeler. The new . S. minister to Hun- gary, Christian M, Ravndal, is en route to Budapest to take di- rect command of the negotia- [i tions. He has personal instruc- pfforn, on?ffihfESESt if *>*? to Belgrade a ey, false documents, arms, pois- in Washington said theU.S. gov- tions from President Truman to po,tin the Cabinet. montn ag0 today ]ost lts way on in5truments ,, "0't her, eminent is doing "everything do everything possible to obtain ryt air: .T^th^m?^ t0 iree tne alrmen" COmMlniSferVoY SSlfiS? ^! lS irt outA^AaI'a.rg.eube,H*t*eVnledNatl05s Force flIers held "y Communist to release them, na had sounded out tne as- tnat tne united States commit- Hunearv nthrr official. sident's messa?e. said of the four United States Air has shown no sign of preparing sembly and found that the no- Hungary. | other officials felt the timing the l!n nangngnslon y* earmarkln8 It is regarded as practically of their release depends on how "'"'?nh j. rffl*L,B 2L5 f:10;000',J00T of **u*u,*1 Se,curit.y certain that they will spend soon Russia winds up its current K nnt Mtaeld. wlth thean-',Ald to ,ald Iron Curtain res dents Christmas In captivity. ^ campaign to nail the United LTnft;;^v : aIid reiuSees from the Sovlet or-| It is believed they will be used states on charges of espionage proval of the majority. 0lt. as part of masslve Russian and fomenting discontent behind Vishinsky said the C-47 was campaign designed to prove that the Iron Curtain. the Western states are parachut-, the release of the airmen. Micmac Warriors Again At Peace With Palefaces INTO THE^ HOUSE OF THE LORD-Comhat-roady soldiers of the U. 6. 23th Division file into 2*J2?" t^S^SSSL^S1! SS 2 f-rp'w }imJ "* *>" decorate by a heavy blsnJcetl ti of snow. Most reilgioutservices for front-line troops in Korea have been held outdoors or In tents,! ]| (NBA-Acme photo by Staff Photographer Walter Lea.) ^^ J * The Reform party a member ?oimnlVehP7,.eTae,vlrta: se"ched "'* *o be in the western stitesare parachut-, "TheUnited;States has agreed; SftaStasTtaMiS Patinenre pefct "P*"0"1 eondMlon. m- apieii behlnd the Iron Cur- to debate in the UN to prove the; wSm^jffff9S.#"3BfflhsMrtaSarreTOltagain,,ttheRdafstfts&ist w*h8hittom,sss?. lee" rZSi*S haHe ny:[hisWraoSned^terately ** "" ^Hungarian ^SSW2S JSJS5 S SSvE made to carry out the promise U^SSSyi charges followed JfigS ^0^^% e/taYugo when ifmK'he'la Nova Scotia woods to guide the To further support their case Moscow announcement today SSf and rachute them mto "mere S I feefinR; to some di- once-hated white man through the Renovadores postponed their, that two United States spies and EaravM Penme tnem mw- .There tea lewing in the province's lake and forest convention from Dec, 15 to Jan. saDOteur5 who .parachuted Into[""SSSk Bri announce- I SXby "wl T&X the XS ^JgST*^ warllke towlrd the sjHes' execntion, after the debate. the Brltlgh for tw0 ow,tmlti| 5. 4 Nations Accuse Russia of Trying To Scare Mid-East WASHINGTON Dec. 19 (UP) *J2 T&.SPt&dPSSif tToTrthVtwoV"Arosn- E&*^^VlM&ll.0.1 ov and F. K. Sarantsev. southwest Russia from a United States plane have been executed by a firing squad. The official announcement said the two Russian nationals con-1 fessed their mission was to carry out espionage, wrecking and ter- rorist activities in Russia on be- half of the united States. All Russian newspapers gave a . prominent display today to an account of the trial and execu- Today'i ment. of trying to frifhten Middle-East- ern countries against joining the proposed Midd!e Eastern Com- mand. The charge, made ln parallel notes delivered to the Soviet Foreign Office by the four West- ern allies, unanimously rejected earlier Russian complaints that' The Russian announcement said the pair confessed they were recruited from a displaced persons camp in the United States zone in Germany and trained by United States in- telligence instructors for sab- otage work in Russia. They said they were smuggled the Mlcmacs today are a] friendly, lawablding and indus- trious tribe. In the early fall, many of the Indians Invade Aroostook County to help harvest the huge Maine potato crop. Later in the year, they spend much of their time guiding sports- men through the trout-filled chains of lakes, or pointing out deer, bear, and moose half hid- den by forest background. Blizzard, Severe Cold Howlsl To Midwest In Storm-Hit US\ CHICAGO, Dec. 19 (UP) halted ln suburban A blizzard, pushed by a severe Plains. cold front, howled down lntoj Trucks and autos dotted Montana and the Dakotas to-'streets leading Into the metro- day on its way to the snow-polis where they were aban- smothered Midwest. doned by their drivers and pe- A vast cold wave stretched deetrians stepped gingerly a- south to the Gulf and east to long slippery sidewalks, the Atlantic seaboard. Most of New York state was Winds of np to 70 m.p.h.. pelted with snow, while New lashed the northern Rocky Jersey highways were coated Mountains, piling snow ln deep drifts. The storm developed over the Pacific Ocean, struck the Student Kicked Out Of One School Has Practically Nothing Left To Do MEMPHI8, Tenn., Dec. 19.1 full-time job somewhere now to (UPiRobert Starr. 23, wonder- keep me busy," said the stocky, ed today how to fill the gaps in curly-haired youth who makes his life. He now has only one straight A's in his studies. "I've Many of the tribe, according |COid prevented It from melting college course, a column, a got to find something to do on to the National Geographic Big Midwestern cities were White snarled and school children beJ gan their Christmas vacations early. Snow depths Included U Inches at Iowa City, la., as Chicago and 10 inches at De-t troit and Dayton. Hundreds of workers fought to clear Chicago streets, where Elows pushed the snow into uge piles along the curbsJ Streetcar and bus seats wentf to the agile who could leap over the drifts. TJjree men were killed wher their light plane crashed ln jobs to keep him occupied. Starr, a World War II veteran who insists "I am lazy !w ras?..c"SS2SL^2SLd|into"or^."^""f^XS,v nature''sald * "8eli-dl- sports editorship, the creation | Tuesday, Thursday and Satur- of a novel and two part-time day now that I'm leaving Mem- phis State. Id go crazv with all that time on my hands." Starr's exit from Memphis State stripped him of two ln- seek to cloak an aggressive mill-, {low th 'd t ,-M cipline" schedule was shatter-! cidental dutiesas sports editor tary strategy against the Soviet bv a United States ulane andac- ed when Mnplus 8tate Collegelof the school's annual and col- companied agents. The Russian by United announcement Union. The notes were delivered in Moscow late vtsterday and made public simultaneously today ln Washington, London, Paris and Ankara. The notes eized the Soviet charged that the four countries rere interfer/ing ln the internal af'airs of Egypt Syria. Lebanon, Iraq Saudi Arabia. Yemen, Is- rael and Transjordania and toss- ed it back at ine Russians. The Soviet were told that their r.ote of protest on November 24 amounted to "threats" and pres. ta^v w ph , aeainst the Middle-East- g&ft SjUfZ " "stales gaTe nim an honorable dis- umnist for Its newspaper. But charge from classes. he still wHI do the same chores The reason: Memphis State; at Southwestern where he Is due found out that Starr also was a to graduate with honors In June. Czech Lambasls Jewish Capitalism In Party Speech fulltlme student at Southwest- ern here. He had been taking five courses at each school, cov- And ln addition, Starr covers prep sports five nights a week for the Memphis Commerclal- ering the five miles between the Appeal and works for United campuses on a motor cycle. Press on Sunday. At home, he Memphis State forbids a stu-' is writing what he calls a dent to take more than 18 hours "psychological love novel." of work during one semester and Starr was almost doubling that amount in his studies at two VIENNA. Dec. 19 (UP)An at- schools. em states. Rare Books Collector Finds Cheaper "fVay CLEVELAND, Dec. 19 (UP _ "Jewish capitalists'" and "interference from Jerusalem'" has led observ- ers here to believe that anti- semitism may be one of the fac- tors behind the purges which have shaken Communist Czech- oslovakia during the year. Zapotocky said In a speech re- guess Mrs. Starr said that maybe now her "lazy" husband will be able to spend more time with her, their two-year-old son and Sell Baskets and bakery Otto F. Ege didn't make enough ported today: "We will not tol- jnoney as dean of the Cleveland erate outside interference whe- Jjisiltuteof Art to follow the hob-: ther from Washington. London by he loved mostthat of collect- or Jerusalem. Ing rare old books. "We recall the days before Fe- Instead he created a hobby for ruary the month of the coup himself, as close to the original which brought the Czech Reds to as he could and collected seg- power 1 when it was the aim of Bients damaged books, partial snanuscrlpts and single pages. Ege died and his will showed he had amassed about $45.000 worth Of valuable fragments. The ap- praisers who put values on the relics said their figures probably were "absurdly low." The collection included more khan pages a 1825 Persia Koran, a stained velvet Book of Hours from the 15th Century, and an 800-year- old brown Morocco Psalter. 1 Socialist Leader Petri Senkl, People's Party leader Monslg- nor Jam Sramek and Slovak Democrat Josef) Lettrlch to re- turn the factories to Jewish and other capitalists." It was the first time a top Communist leader had described Jerusalem as a center of antl- Communist activity or mention- . m^nhem ASSS&E St*" tttoCta n capltol- ists. Jewish leaders here have pointed out that a high percent- age of the men. arrested in the, Czech purges were Jews. girls leave reservations and,!si0Wed subway* traveling free on railroads, vis-Duses on gtatn it homes in towns and cities to sell their brightly colored baskets. The Mlcmacs are the earliest known inhabitants of Nova Scotia, including Cape Breton Island, the northern part of New Brunswick, and Prince Ed- ward Island. Their language is perpetuat- ed in such place names as Whycocomagh, Head-of-t he- Water, Shubenacadle, Place- Where-Wlld-Potatoes-G row, and Tatamagouche, Meetlng- of-the-Waters. The Mlcmacs were encount- ered by the earliest explorer of the northeast coast of Am- erica, among them Sebastian Cabot in 1947, and 8ieur de Monts, Champlain, and Les- ear bot ln 1605. with ice and travel was hazard- ous or impossible. New England was warned to expect three snowfalls before Northwest states with winds of Christmas day. up to 50 m.pii., then skipped | Buffalo, t. Y., and adjacent heavy snowstorm a"t Vienna" "ill over the Rockies and started counties were hit by snow Most main highways In the Its eastward Journey. | squalls after a blizzard dumped midwest were open but second- The wintry onslaught had 1 two feet of snow on the area, ary roads and suburban street claimed at least 203 lives since Rural schools were closed and were clogged with snow. 1 began last Friday, snow-removal crews were ham-1 The storms moved again lnt pered by hundreds of stalled.the South, with rata ln Missis- cars. sippi, Alabama and Georgia Forecasters said the pattern and snow forecast for Tennes- of storms and cold sweeping see and Kentucky. Virginia and from the West to the East mountain sections of Nortb would keep up. They said there Carolina also expected snow. was a "lot more cold air" still Many of the dead were vie* to come from Canada, where'tuns of heart attacks fron the mercury at Embarras, Al- i over-exertion, berta, touched 54 below zero. At Boundbrook, N. J., seven-1 In the U. S. the lowest read-' year-old Billy Buchman fell lnl ing was 37 below at Napoleon, to a pond en route to school,! N". O. it was 35 below at Bis- managed to crawl out but col-| marck, N. D. Ijapsed and froze to death. Cleveland had 13 Inches of ---------------------------- snow on the ground and ex- pected seven more. Traffic was Several persons froze to death. The northern tier of states was blanketed in snow ranging from 10 to 34 inches, with drifts much higher. The prevailing Society, are expert bricklayers stifled m drlfts that left thou- or carpenters trained ln gov- ernment Indian schools. sands of autos stranded and public transportation fighting to keep on schedule. New York City was sheathed . in ico from a freezing rain that Once a year the women and|crippied airline operations. and halted Island. Milk deliveries were 8WEDI8H IMPORT Singer Bibbi Johnson of Stockholm, Sweden, makes with the traditional big smile and ankle display as the arrive In New York on the liner Gripsholm. The umbrella " U there for added decoration and in case of rain. Honored Guest Chief Membertou always was an honor guest at the feasts of the Order of the Good Time organized by Champlain to cheer his comrades during the winter of 1606-07. The last man to remember the Mlcmacs as a warlike tribe was Jeremiah Campbelton of Van Buren, Me., who died last year at the age of 105. When he was seven years of age, Campbelton was kidnap- ped by the Mlmacs after they had burned his home and mas- sacred his parents. Raised by the Indians, he learned all their ways and wiles in the woods and spent most of his Ufe as a hunter and trapper in northern Maine. "THE SONGS OF CHRISTMAS" Hlusfrated by Walt Scott 28 Passengers Sail Friday For Xmas On 'Ancon' Twenty-eight passengers, ln eluding United States Represen-I tatives Clarence Cannon and" WASHINGTON, Dec. 9 (UP) ur's article. "The Citizen Sol-Morris Cotton, will spend Christ- Gen. Douglas MacArthur call-1 dier," was the first signed article.mas on the S. S. Ancon, sailing ed this week for tighter civilian by the general to appear in any .Friday from Cristobal. MacArthur Urges Louder Civilian Voice In Army control over the Army to make sure the nation is noi turned in- to a military state "by those seeking to strengthen and en- trench political power." MacArthur, who has spent his entire adult life ln the Army, said it is particularly essential to "extend and intensify" the role of civilians now because all efforts airead youths soon may see service un- der Universal Military Training. These young men, he warned, must not be formed into a "le- gion of subserviency to the so- called military mind.'' Writing ln the American Le- Son magazine, MacArthur urged ie elimination of ''arbitrary re- strictions" on the advance of ci- tizen soldiers in the Army. He publication since President Tru-; The complete advance pas-l man removed him as Far Eaat-'senger list for the Ancon, front em commander. |tne Panama Line offices at .. ui j.j 1.1. ... 'Balboa Heights, follows: , MacArthur did not mention di-i m*n AihZrt t nomcv Mr ES awe? as a HBSi i noticeable to sup-"e and Mrs- Morrl< CottonJ dy 1 OIC jreas the voice he citizen soldier." and Mrs. i opinion of!John I. Frank, Jr.; 8K2 Dick* son Walter Frederic; and Mrs,: James R., Folsom; ' It Is essential," he said, "that! Mrs. Joseph Hancock; Mrs.. the traditional role of the Army Maggie M Harrison and son? in these distressing times be Albert 8 Indrierl: AD2 Mr. carefuUy preservedthat It not and Mrg John w. Ley; and it be used as an Instrument of ty- ranny or oppression." 8gt and Mrs. Harry H. North! and son. States continues to enter warsi^"1 H. Oesterltag, Miss Mlldref and Mrs, He also noted that the United ny. States continues to enter warsi also said they should be "tragically unprepared" and tol8cnwartzbur&; M'Sgt given more voice ln the "higher "demobilise to haste" and dissi- William H. TppSon and daugli- staff studies and planning." pate its military strength once a ter; Thomas J. Trumble; and The magazine said MacArth-i conflict appears to be over. :'MtL, and Mrs.'E. A. Twltchell. for GOOD roads or I rw n^sjriWWl- M lfc Ny af mm kf lie gnat ef ft rime. Geeras Frederick ' k ***) M or* traale raen for mankind- then rhrt work or Km mWimity I It* metre Mrs r. afreet en tor/i seirrhMl been a greet vehicle for charity Literally it has "fed *V -fc dothed the iwked, comforted the lorrowmf," ' oeda ^r, feat EmMi by Pdeotfeo, 0 #" drliareehritima. Hm career wo re- X-weeM. I-. Irst-heoded petti * .1 -- kit IHITIIIIsaT *ht o dwti. disormieg hi. oe^eeot. .^ reels o*""***1 "* "*"".Me* *-* *" w-* .r~r-"""* PANAMA AUTO 5. A. a^do1",fon^ __ . **. |
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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 |
| 58 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |