|
![]() |
|
| UFDC Home |
myUFDC Home | Help | RSS
|
|
ALL ISSUES
CITATION
THUMBNAILS
PAGE IMAGE
ZOOMABLE
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Full Citation | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
STANDARD VIEW
MARC VIEW
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Full Text | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
T
"BRANIFF f W VIA AN INDEPENDENT;; fi3n MIAMI OR HOUSTON WLT NEWSPAPER Panama American "Let the people know the truth and the country is gafe'* Abraham Lincoln. Seagram'sVO. h CANADIAN WHISKY +M>&, Years Old! rWBNTY-SEVENfH YEAR 'PANAMA, B. P- MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1958 FIVE CENTS Bullet Swept Suez Breaks Out Again Vanished Seamen Not Yet Given Up SEATTLE, Wash, Jan. 14 The Pennsylvania radioed she (UP) A new storm lashing the had a H-foot crack in her hull North Pacific today stalled theand was taking water last Wed- alr sear<-h for vanished in a ago but, the Coast Ouard said messaged "we ar* that If cne men are in lifeboats hlo, New Rains, Snow \\*n Hit Snowbound California Scene Gun Alley' Of Battle BRITISH HQ., Suez Canal Zone, Jan. 14 (UP) >r 46 seamen who'nesday morning By "that night' JffrI sS^eTwlth'a^n! Wp terrorists and British troops fought u three hour : five days she wtu,. obviously sinking and i and mow inddrWen b*M S S" botHc in lsmoilia '* night along bullet-swept "Ste* abandoning ,i,i.- w~. j ij.j .1____ .../> they stl.'l are "probably" afloat1 'mere wert four lifeboats on and "possibly" alive. the 7.8UU ton freighter. The American freighter Penn-| They had to go over the side slyvania vanished Wednesday af- into 45 foot seas which had ter a radio message said boiling cracked the steel freighter, torn seas ha'l smashed open her hull, loose Its deck cargo and smash- "We are abandoning ship" the ed open a least one hatch cover.: _...h th v10Q1ct . .n.i r.i radioman messaged, and the ship It the boats and met, were still ?a m,'llif f fnh r? rain-; Anti-tank guns were used to was no: neard from again. .(afloat, 'hey had battled hieh ia-Lulf *?.tu.2:...,......_ disperse terrorists nring liom winds, bore down on flooded and qun Alley.' snowbound portions of Califor-i _7'. ,4 , nia and Nevada. Almost simultaneously attacks were launched on ^T^XMttSM Air Fo/ce 9Qrrson ***"* in lsmoilia. gale howled south from the Gulf I Loncosnire fusiliers guarding the mam gate of Lt. SKS^i66"' Er$kine's h"dqorters also came under fire. The same storm choked moun- buildings along the bank;, ol the withdrew. recUon of Zagaug. After a brisk exchange of lire the Egyptians Only d-brls was seen by search seas, gals winds. rain, snow and!,,/"" t. thi Z ouucunW along the bank* ol the vessels. None of the 46 men has near-freezing temperatures five '!]. ^" tow^L f. U.. 's, ve'twaLer Cana1' and irom the dealt Western Nevada, its deep- slender minaret oi the mosque Egyptian Universities marched .which dominates ismailia. through central Cairo today In There were no British casual-1 funer;, proCession behind bean found. A statement Ouard .a'd: nights and days, from tht Coast i Veteran sea observers said some evidence of the lifeboats should est snowfall since 1937. All communications, except by! the We heve' no way of knowing be found. So far these was noth-; l*** *ereJ!d_..uJ !***\ "" but Egyptian ambulances I cofiYn'UarmTTnV boTy of On observed visiting houses|Shahln. who wu killed in Satuf (NEA Radio-Telephotoi BACK ON DRY LAND Capt. Henrlk Kurt C arisen, (center), the Woodbrldge, NJ., captain whose valiant two-week battle aboard the Fly ing Enterprise made him a world-wide hero. raises his hand in salute as he steps ashore In Falmouth. England. With him are Kenneth Dancy. (left, the mate of the tug Turmoil, who shared the last half of his ordeal, and Carlsen's father. Martin, (right), who was flo wn from Denmark for the occasion. ' .. >*. Old Seadogs Da.R$ ompany whether the crew was actually ling. able to abandon ship, but we may | Only the Coast Guard cutter Iassume tlat If the lifeboats were (Klamath and the Canadian wea- Ilaunched they may be and lnther ship Stonetown continued all pro:r.>lllty are still afloat.the searrh today I As for the temperatures and the I Other merchant vessels In the cold watm It is possible to sur- area were released at their re- vive unritr suc-i conditions." quest in the fsee of the new The b-irometer was low and storm. still falling in the search area A third ship, the freighter. Ca- where intermittent snow was llfomia was heading for the driven by a 65-mile per hour gale scene to aid in the search. and waves towered to S6-feet. The Coast Guard said: "hope The temperature was 35 de- has not been given up. The grees, tir: sky overcast and flight search will continue indefinite- celling 1.000 to 4.000 feet. !ly," French 'Seeottd (.arisen' Abandons Broken Vessel the north California coast for a time! were last night. | nefrj tne Flood waters up U six feet /lorn where deep drove 2.500 people from rm.<9H their homes in San Francisco. \, ,1 thoueht tndav attack me .carned wreaths with the While the new blow rolled. *l J\SL Sent mem^ !iSCr'Ption: "You hflVe b0*-1 * down the Canadian coast, the "" S^STUSmlSS^SLS'S: *** f martyrs." Swectwater Canal,!days Te, e| KeW claJh h IirinR was dl- British. _ oers of the Liberation Army, re- first storm spawned In the .same w t be _.landestinely ler. 5a2^"2ltoJfe11 JWS22 *" M Canal Zone. California with rain and wind that toppled trees, flattened pow- er lines and blocked streets with mud and rock slides The U. S. Weather Bureau here said the general western region ""' K7bTs.turdav .,1J .vnt mor. rain nH inn Xe_'_ l^e0" BBtUrOaV. A party of these "commandos" is known to have reached Is- mailia. They are believed to be|D the remnants of the forces' ^.L!^.,?..8,-, which attacked the British at. They also carried demands fot vengeance for the students kill- ed in the clash. Along the Drocesison route 2.- 000 steel helmeted and armed could expect more rain and snow l In the bosged-down Sierra Neva- 1 da mountains. Reno'-s three-foot snowfall left FALMOUTH, England, Jan. 14 i -----o----- (UP). Two old aeadogs clinked ^ i I glasses at a hotel bar here yes- DEAL. England. Jan. 14 (UP) I from shock, were landed terday. grasped hands for a mo- French skipper Maurice Lan- Walmer by the lifeboat, ment, said a quiet goodbye earn dreau. 42, finally abandoned his Meanwhile at to the other and went their se-'broken freighter Agen shortly tanker prate ways. before lt was completely wreck- Capt. Kurt Car'sen and mate ed on the treacherous Goodwin Kenneth Dancy were off to re- Sands today, celve the resounding acclaim of The Jrench "second Carlsen" their countrymen for their vain at flrst resisted lifeboatmen's Ibut valiant fight to save the PleM ^ leave hls "'P' but im- plying Enterprise from the storm **& dWl so. lashed sea. His 37 crewmen, all suffering The American skipper was' leaving this Cornish port on the Klahrn'c Pnrfu overnight train for London. I^enrll S ruriy Prom London he will flv back CWi/iJ T \A/;M across the Atlantic, probably to- CXpeC I CO I 0 Win tomorrow, for one of New York's shoot-the-work receptions com- plete with a snowstorm of tick- er tape and roaring- throngs In India Elections BOMBAY. Jan 14 (UP) The massed along the traditional results o'. Ind'a's first national highway of heroes Lo wenelection snowed that Prime Min. Broadway. 'later Jtwahrlal Nehru's Congress ,The British mate, who leaped Party scored a complete rout of aboard the mortally stricken he Leftists In their stronghold Enterprise and with Carlsen *>' Bombay. rode out the saga of the sea to Howevci Nehru's followers con- Its bitter end, headed for hlsUnued ic tow ground in other home at Hook Green Kent lPrt* of the country even though At nearby Tunbride Wells, the 25 ,exPTf,!d f *',nd "P wlth a biggest reception ever was in the,S^0.]^,a n *J* i0n.aLa"^ works from Dancv lfrov*"ifi,al elections that began He leaned h-nd li hand wll^l Smf0% "I* arne.hrontlnu^ Carlsen into the Atlantic off thhUe8hCongre.s^am showed falmouth Inst beforS Carlsen's unexpec^ ^rengfh"In wmnTj the Panamanian Sevac Radiant was re- floated by tugs after having been jammed for hours of the jagged rocks at the foot of the South Foreland. At one stage the 17,598-ton tanker was wallowing broad- side on, '. with giant waves breaking clean over the ship Yesterday British troops man- ning a roadblock at M&ktel el IlcJid o:ovD off a force of 20 the pictv que gambling it^yp*ian police^r^'"I ^; silenC nearly Isolated. All mala- Wgh-^'rrori4- "S tr*" ;"*?? ^i* Student ways Into the city either were:R"ez Canal Zone from the dl-' closed or open to emergency: traffic only. - Students fired pistols into the v\r as the procession ir't the ruad rl Awr! Unb-ersll" c8- -pus pfter the rr- mo rial service for Crr">r Rb'hin. Tiien the temor.slratio:- fell Snowplows In Reno and up in the Sierras were able to clear city streets and highways some- what today but travel was still hazardous and the prospect of Panamanian Girl Drowns In Chagres workers refused to nermit striking workers to loin I the procession for fear t1-- would turn it into a noisy de monsi ration. But from the street* l-!lng off the procession route f*"OU-^ sands of workers and otbprs An eight-year-old Panaman- finally joined the ranks of the 14 lust before freighter went down. Carlsen voiced amazement at an announ*tient h> MavotjVrn- cent ImoellltterJ of New Ydrk that he wp< leavlnp London for New York tomorrow etenlne "The Ma vor of New York seems to know more about ytw move- ment than T do" Crlen sld But be Hid not object tn the welenme New Tort iras tr*w- lr for hum. and with.an sir of pie..,* r^l-natlon jirteAl "Well, thrv seen te be re- all four seats to the Indian par- liament 'rom Bombay City. Museum D*'Mes Bones Not Those Of British Explorer RIO DE JANEIRO, Jan. (UPiThe Anthropologist's Na- tional Museum concluded today that the bones found In a Bra- zilian Jungle grave last year were not those of the English explorer Colonel Percival Fau- cett. Professor Tardso Torres Mes- sas who is heading the exami- nation aald the remains of the man were about five feet six or seven Inches tall whereas Fau- cett was around six feet tall. The findings are similar to those of British anthropologists. K.Tr.sr"'u "^r-HSSPSJSrasB sac ternoon in the Chagres River in. ----------r the Madden Dam area. I IN M/iyu Privnf'prr Little Ella Pardo went on a'"J '^uv7 rriYUIC-r up the area agai Railroad schedules ran far be- hind. Arrival time of Southern Pa- cific's City of San Francisco, due picnic together with eight to arrive in Oakland at 9:15 a.m. adults and three children. About yesterday, was delayed until 3:20j30 minutes after their arrival this afternoon. Western Pacific's westbound Pacific Zephyr, due through _ Winnemucca, Nev.. yesterday at and found her body in six feet ternoon. 4:20 a.m., was still tied up there deep water about one-half a Three "rnshec In )"r*em TOKYO. Jan. 14 (UP) A she was discovered missing. 'United States Navy Privpteer The only man in the group, Patrol bomber crashed and Gregorio Moya, began a search.! burned near Yokohama this a of the 12-man crew today 504 Artillery Plans Open House For 100 Orphans The 504th Field Artillery Bat- aided In the attempt to revive .the little girl by bringing two talln will celebrate its fifth were put into use without re- mile below the Boyd-Roose- are known to be dead. velt Highway Bridge. A Navy spokesman said: "Oth- He rushed her to the Mad- er bodies are still In the burn- den Dam police station in his ln* Plane, but some of the men chiva. Artificial aid was ad- may have balled out before ministered there until the doc- the Privateer hit the ground." tor arrived.------------------------------------ The Pedro Miguel fire station 1^3 Fished FrOttl NY River As Convair anniversary with an open house'inhalators to Madden Dam, that:e^ i D* for 100 Panama orphans to- suits. I ^verSflO'TS MllV ^y morrow. The activities will get! The girl lived with her grand-! under way at 8 a. m. mother Ins Sosa in Chllibre The 504th Is extending an In- Her body was sent to the Gor- vitatlon to some 100 odd or- gas, morgue ior an autopsy. phans from Panama. The chll-l----------------------------- dren will be picked up in Army BALBOA TIDRS buses and brought to the fes- tivities In the morning they Tuesday, Jan. 15 will be shown the various dis-l High Low plays and will be guests at thei5:42 a.m. 11:56 a.m. review later In the mornln?. 16:10 p.m. NEW YORK. Jan. 14 (UP). A Northeast Airlines Convair with 36 persons aboard over- shot (he run wa v at La Guardia field here todav and crashed into the Fat River. At least 33 persons were rescued immediately bv tur. On a flight from Boaton. the Convair was approaching La Guardia field In rain and fog. ..,_. n ,. (NEARadlo-Telephoto r!P F A ,5?IP The last momenta ol the Flying En- terprise are pictured in this photo sequence. At top, the freighter lies almost subrnerged as debris fills the stormy sea and a tug steams from the scene. Then (next) lt rolls o^er as it start its plunge. The now of the vessel rises sky- ward (next) and then a mighty splash signals the death of variant ship. (UP-Movletone photos from NEA. Inr head with It." Judge Postpones U.S. Court's Civil Docket Call Judge Joseph J Hancock of the U.S. Dis!>let Court at Anean an- nounce I roday that the calling of the C! II docket scheduled for tomori * morning has been Carlaen s*U hi* btegest treat 'nee he opm ahor wm his firt hot bath >n two weeks. "It was m first *>nt* exeeo* for one In the Atlantic, and then I had no soap with me" he evolaioed. Todav carlsen walked with a hv smile through'a crowd of al- roos-t '.non In front of the.Danish Huh ha i^ndo-, j0 rt<.eivi the n*pi.h decoration of the O-der " PannenhOr fv his **]tant -fort to save the Plying Enter- Csrlen's advent In London af- ter his epic experience was so a'-let It appeared the big eRv n-iieht. not ^t a chance to show its admiration. He stepped irom the t*a!n from Falmouth in quiet civilian The body of Victoriano Ortega, clothes with a grer fedors hat. a Panamanian who drowned Frl- HI* uniform was In his suitcase day when his -ayuco capsized In But the porters at Peddln tne Gai-ir. Lake patrol officers of them tratHared to cheer d>ri- v morning. jien whli o'her neceen look- French Orphan Who Loved America Dies In Korea For Adopted Victoriano Ortega Drowns As Cayuco Upsets In Lake postponed until '.he regular1.^* 'fffii'T thwat defth !.* !n J*m tor "etirty monthly term day earlv in Feb-lwhU^,^"0''1."1.!- ."2!** I T'j .h""1...... onthly ruary. day early m Feb-while Ortega was' In Tn intoxlca't": So thev ton tolned the crowd I ad condition. round the little hero. By JACK GATES Mrs. Axelrod was notified yes- Alexandria's happiest moments! 34th Division In North HOUSTON, Tex.. Jan. 14 (UP) terday that the husky. A French orphan who never haired youth had given AmericaI knew his right name, but knew a; his ultimate. If she would cry if he were killed great devotion for the America' It was, Mrs. Axelrod recalled in the war. that adopted him, is dead. today, almost as if he had willed! "I told him yes, of course I They called him Alexandria lt. In his last letter to her he would. Stewart. He fought his first bat- wrote: tie with the U.S. 34th Division In | "As a soldier I am doing my North Africa when he was 12 best. I have responsibilities to- black- during her association with him. I after fleeing a French orphan- That was when he asked once age and stowing away on a ship to North Africa. He fought with the regiment for five years, through North Af- rica and Sicily, at Anzio and into "He acted like a little kid with! Italy. When he was 14 years old his first toy." | he had been wounded twice from The lonely orphan would have grenade explosions. But each years old. He had been wounded( ward my men. their life or theirl liked to have known that his' time refused to go behind front twice when he was 14. He fought death. When I take them out on "mother" did cry. lines for medical attention, his last with the US. 23rd In-[patrol I like to bring them back1 He also would have liked to When the 34th Division came fantry regiment in Korea and alive. But sometimes I fail...It have known that Mrs. Axelrod home from the wars. Alexandria died In a land mine blast Dec. 28. is a war custom or something plans to make every effort to came too. In the excitement of The boy soldier was adopted as a mascot In Africa by the 34th Division and named Alexandria for Alexander the Great and a misspelled Stewart for Confed- erate Cavalry General Jeb Stu- art From then on he lived and fought and died with only one fear, his guardian said here to- day. He feared that be would let dawn his precious adapted country and all the friends, in- cluding a Congressman, who war* trying to make him an American citlsen, Mrs. Alex Ax- elrod said....... that somebody always get klllei "Sometimes I wish it could be me, instead of me reporting to the company commander say- ing, Corporal Stewart report- ing from ambush patrol, sir. Tare* men lost... "I wish for you to be proud of me...I'll continue doing a good job till I die.. .If I die here, you bring hU body American soil. The strange story of the or- phaned French lad was reveal- ed to the world appropriately enough on the Fourth of Julv, 1947, when he arrived at Gal- veston as a stowaway, and was jailed as an alien. Mrs. Axelrod, then an Assist- ant U. S. District Attorney in may rest assured lt will not be In; charge of alien affairs In the a cowardly manner. It will be for the love of my adopted mother, my adopted country." Today Mrs. Axelrod remembers what had seemed to be one of back for burial In homecoming, h i s benefactors | simply gave him $200 and turn- ed him loose. He tried to join the U.S. Army. Recruiting officers discovered he was a French alien and only 16 years old and turned him over to immigration authorities. After several months detention on Bi- lls Island, Immigration officers finally let him work his passage back to France on a freighter. Back home, the boy found he was a man without citizenship. He was given 24 hours to prove French citizenship, an Impossible Southern District of Texas, read his war record and became In- terested. He had been adopted as a mas- cot by the 133rd Regiment of the task, since ail records at the ox-1 uniform. Africa phanage had been destroyed. "He decided if he had to spend the rest of his life hi jail." Mrs. Axelrod said, "he'd rather do so in America. That was when he stowed away to Gal ves ton, crossing the At- lantic a second time In his ef- forts, to become an American and arriving on Independence Day. After Mrs. Axelrod became In- terested In his case, members of the 34th Division who heard about Stewart also came forward to help. Rep. Albert Thomas of Hous- ton (D., Tex.) introduced a bill to legalize the boy's entry into the U.S., attaching a rider prohibit- ing the lad's deportation until action was taken on the bill. It was passed by Congress In August. 1950. and a few days lat- er Alexandria Stewart Joined the United States Army. Through the assistance of Gov. Allan Shivers he was assigned to a Texas National Guard unit training at Camp Cooke, Calif, and went overseas In February, 1051. and died In an American _.. r.. . THr P.4MMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1952 : THE PANAMA AMERICAN O HIO WO PcLiMID Y THI PANAMA AMERICAN PRIII. INC POUNDCO V NILION KOUNSIVILL IN I fit HARMODIO ARIAS. ID.TOM S7 H STRCIT r* O SOX 134. PANAMA. R. OF P Tt_r*MONC Ranam* NO 2-0740 Cable Adcrci RANAMBRICAN. Panama Colon Ofpicii i2.i7B ccntra; avenue BKTwriN 12th and 19th struts RoaciGN RfF^rseNTAiivf JOSHUA 8. POWER. INC- 345 madison A.r New Vork. 1171 N. Y. LOCAl V HAIL RCW MONTH in ni-jfi S 1.70) V 2.BO FOR IX MONTHS. IN APmauflf 9 SO 13.00 FO ONI VCAR. 'N *ew a *-> IB.SO 24 00 Labor News And Comment The Gravy Bowl Classic Walter Winchell In New York By Victor Riesel GANGS. GRAFT GOVERNORS Any tan i of public plundeiers operating over a period of time is storing up a tremendous political fortune. Not for them- selvesbut for me men who eventually send them to jail... Crime doesn't payfor the criminalbut It certainly pays off ior the public servants who bring them to bay... History proves tha when llueves fall out. not only do all honest men net their due, but a few set a great deal of publicity, which skyrockets them to fame and fortune. For instance, early in 1871, three scoundrels had a quarrel In N. Y. C. They wee ex-Sheriff O'Brien, Controller Connolly and Boss Tweed.. .O'Briens revenge consisted of turning over Con- nolly's records to the N. Y. Times. Tweed promptly offered George Jones the editor. 5 million dollars not to publish them. The Times ran the headline, of course, and simultaneousy the decline ol Tweed and the spectacular'rise of two other men started. . One was a young cartoonist named Thomas Nast who created the Tammany Tiger whh his pen...Tweed offered Nast a half million dollars to stop drawing, but Nast was already out of hear- inghalfway ud the ladder of success to his final destination. tr)e pinnacle of journalistic immortality.. .The man who pinned, tie prison stripes on Tweed's dirty shirt was Samuel J. Tilden of Gjramercy Park. As a result of the attacks on the Tweed Ring. New York elected him governor in 1874 and the people elected htm President in 1878but he was robbed of the latter...In any eyent, the fallen body of Tweed was the stepping tone for Til- den's career. About the turn of the Century, the very best names In New York were engaged in a very bitter fight for control of one of its very best assetsa large insurance company. The quarreling be- hind the closed Wall Street doors became loud enough to reach tie sensitive ears of Joseph Pulitzer In Park Row. The charges and counter-charges between the battling financial moguls con- vinced Pulitzer that the forgotten men were the policy holders t(ie little people who paid the premiums. Something more than a mere Legislative Inquiry was needed. A thorough, honest, mathematically and legally trained examiner .l.As an additional qualification, he could not be connected with tie Society and Wall Street world, because the interests he was to attack were the very citadel of both...The man was found. His careful, cold analysis resulted In the great Insurance reforms. The Inquiry earned for him the title of "The Man with the Rock- crusher Mind".. .The man was Charles Evans Hughes, and from tie grept lrsi:rnoe investigation he went on to be Governor of if Y...CMef Justice of the United Etates. and. very nearly in the tflfl elections, th; Presidency itself. In Mao's China the poppies .grow. And from these opium fields, it can now be revealed and documented by Federal narcotics records, Communist Party members across the world are smuggling billions, yes bil- lions, of dollars worth of the nerve-paralyzing "junk" into Ithe western world, selling it to the operators who supply it to| the underworld who slip It to our kids at our schools and what were once collegiate su- !gar bowls. Soviet China, in t he- fourth year of its Death Dynasty, needs dollars for guns just as Soviet Russia needed "valuta" {dollar ex- change) in the early days of the revolution. And just as Communist Party mem- bers including Ameri- cans still alive and operat- ing o?ice smuggled Rus- ' sian counterfeit dollars into 1 the U. S. to get that va- lutaso Communist Party i members in the Orient are moving tons of opium into the west to make dollars I for the Mao Tse-tung war machine. Recently, the U, S. accused the Soviet Chinese of dumping 300 tons of opium on the ci- vilized world. Mao's men tacitly admitted It. In fact, from the AFL's Asian < representative, Dick Deverall i comes word that Peiplng has: an officially appointed opium commissar. He's Red Army Gen- eral Tsen Sen, "King of Heroin," as the boss man Is known to; i the Hong Kong smugglers. King Sen is commander of i the military sectors around i Hong Kong and Macao and thus keeps the suggling routes open, provides bodyguards for the hop runners, and sees that Mao gets a straight count on the take. JSfiL 7fen? ilhofvf neN NEW YORK. There must be some inferred that apart from the dubious quality of her slng- wort " the Orient. compliment to the target of an imitation at lug voice there isn't much to work on. About the middle of the 1870?, there occurred in Sacramento. California, one of the most dramatic Incidents In the history of that great state.. .Frank Rhodes, a big time gambler, controlled Sacramento and too much of the State government. The decent people were more than fed upand among the decent people was a* fine fighting attorney, with two teenage boys, named Grove L John.-on. < ---------------- J O-e nl-V Fr-rV- Rhode? called a meeiing o' the big-time pelit'ciavs -T. creo';- r' his :pmbllnc houseand they all show- ell u-. In >'-e mid.. <-r che resting. In walked Grove L. Johrson Talents Of Silver Hair By BOB RUARK n the Federal narcotics files are the records of many arrests of Commun- ist Party members right across Asia from Japan to India. Not too far back in 19S1, Japanese police, work- ing with our government, arrested Communist Party officials there on charges of running the heroin traf- ile least a tacit admission that the subject of the caricature has firmly arrived and Is easily re- cognizable - which admits that by the time a person has been selected for impersonation he is pretty static stuff. On that theory alone we have not raised much About 20 years have passed since the subjects of today's impersonations had any ravingly popular vogue. The Jessels, Cantors, Jolsons, Rlchmans, Brices and Tuckers were all products of Dad's nights out on the town when the booze was ill 1 - in the last 16 years or so, In the entertainment clt and apt to burn a bung-hole In your goozle. field, or even in the broader pastures outside Of all the old bunch, only the Incomparable entertainment. and deathless Durante has swung back to con- Stark, sober, I dropped In on Miss Mitzi Green slant contemporary performance, to where you at the old Coparoo the other eve, and discover- could say he is part of this generation, cd that she is still giving us Hcrry Richman L cu the romantic Gables and Bogarts have d iili'trrVfc-)?s.' all carrying guns. Thev covered the meeting ,. "f-. ,ai.. ... i-tn.r* and SopW Tucker' and Fanpte Brice. Edwfrd quit the 50 mark, and Jimmy Stewart Is'as gray tth-their pistols and then Johnson, at pistol point, told them .5o.me **fi ^ASK? "1525s,G. Robinson and Eddie Cantor. as a wolf. off. He called them dirt beneath his feet, traducers of a great State^jcrooks and half men. He said they would be cleaned out by tflfTfecent people In the end because they would find their leader ..?Toffnson was right. Righter than he knew. As the man and tt# ?wn boys backed out of the thunderstruck room he did not taowthat one of the boys beside him was to provide California yith fi. great reform governor and U. S. Senator. Also very nearly ]|$f'dent- His very own son. Hiram Johnson. . * ----------------- dm a hot Julv night in 1912, Herman Rosenthal was shot down ItSfrf&U of ths Hotel Metropole In N. Y". C....A gambler and *S8Jol5jeon. he had long been a thorn In the side of crdoked pile Lt. Charles Becker The grafting ring was frightened at Rexriithal's disclosures, end on that fateful night Its criminal agfnW. "Whiter' Lewis. "Gvo the Blood," "Lefty Louie" and "Oa"o Frank" sent Rosenthal to another world by the pistol shot route:... But. unwittingly, by shooting him down, they also sent ano'her man on the wa>' up. Dls't Att.'y Charles S. Whitman was alec'.ed governor of N. Y. following his conviction of the mur- der re - InT 199'. the State of Idaho was torn by industrial strife. It erib>d-ln th" killing of Idaho's Governor. Frank Steunenberg. by a-bomb... The ouiraged and terrified community looked for arfti founda fearless State Prosecutor. A man of action, he walked into court with three murder indictments in his hand and two Six-shooters on his hios. Though the spectacular case ended in an acquittal, due to the brilliant defense of Clarence Darrowthe State Prosecutor, Wm. E. Borrah. was sent on by the peoole of Idaho to Washingtonand the eventual command of the United States Senate. of the stuff highly expend- able, for they could be caught with the dope on them. There are dozens of Incidents In our history duplicating the ii{ pa'tern.. .The brilliant lawyer who won the government's le'tfal^-t the Teeo-n Dome leases "ent on to become Justice "Robis of the United States Ppreme Court...The Sea- 5ve.itiatlop revealed the polities 1 racketsand for his ;lon of the leaders N. Y. repeatedly elecred D. A. Thomas ey Its Governorand his party twice nominated him for sidency. - TWs form chart of reward for public service against corrup- tion as the grcates' bearing on the Presidential Sweepstakes In 1M2 Op form. Sen. Kefauver should be the Democratic no- minee However opposed to this ordinarily easy path to victory a>thr polls. i< he military hero pattern. Washington. Jackson. jftrison and Gran, became President via this rouie. and numr- ete other warriors received their party nominations., .Thus. If ""llary repeat.-, r.self. Eisenhower should be a walk-in for the Lublicsn nomination. But, oddly enough, the politicians of In parties arc opposed to the nomination of the candidate So is most llkelv to bring their party to victory In 1952!_________ IS YOUR FORUM THI RIAMRS OWN COLUMN jfTHE MAIL BOX J2"T*t* MaH , it an SMn (.rum far raatrt at T Pimm. Aaaer- laBH. letter* ... racaivad raNfaHv and are haadled in a wfceHy cm- HLrmS.I lni. If y.u en*nkut. a Mtor .n't be MaaeNeat if M daeaa'f aaaaar the Ufar day. Laara ara paMhliad hi the arder received. !. fry la ktae tba letter* limitad te ana eaaa i.nath. IdtH t wtttr writer* held ia (trlcwet eafnteac*. j Tki* aewipap*' aatuma* ratpeaaiaility tar tatawiaati ar aaiaiaa* eriMii i a wttart tram raedera. -_ SUGGESTION ON DIABLO RENT PROBLEM Diablo Heights, C. Z Bbtor. Mail Box. w Panama American. I; If the Panama Canal Company feels It is imperative to have the 12-familv quarters at Diablo vacated in order to assign i*m to non-Panama Canal employes and segregate that group bCone town, then would it not be fair and more reasonable to elf the following: | 1. Notify the employes living in these quarters to put In re- * quests for quarters in Balboa or Ancon. That these employes be permitted to continue paying present rent (not double) until such time a* they are assigned other quarters. As of today there are no quart- ers available In either Balboa or Ancon to which a ba- chelor is eligible, and as there are 92 bachelors living in Diablo it seems it will be some time before they are as- signed other quarters, hardly before March 1, which is . p. the date set for the rents to be doubled. S. That the Panama Canal Company pay for moving these people to the new quarters. One ef the 92 Bachelor*. I remember Miss Green when she was a child It would seem likely that we might have rear- actress, In the pre-Shirley Temple era, and her ed a legen dor so since the middle 30s espe- plece de resistance in those days was the late daily from the 40s but I do not see anybody Others jailed were high in; George Arllss. peddling any personalities of a vintage much the planning echelons of the' Miss Qreen counted on sufficient grizzled so- more recent than Mae West's or Tallulah's. smuggling and sales apparatus phistication among the guests to fill out her Can it be that we have spread entertainment which sprawls across the world. scr,edule with apes of such.tender youngsters so thin that there are only bubbles on the crust, It's all in our government files. as Humphrey Bogart. Jimmy Stewart and Joe and nobody ever pushes his head sufficiently There are other dope peddling g Lewis, most of whom were paying adult tax- above the surface to make a lasting mark on Communists who needn't be asies wnen prohibition was still flowering. the nation's attention? The actor's trademark secretive as their jailed Japan- j ctn oniy gather that nothing else of suffl- has almost vanished with low-caliber versatility, ese comrades. clent personality impact has popped up since Maybe when I totter Into a gin mill some 10 That's one for 'Harry) An- ciark Gable's ears quit being a novelty. years hence they will have dug up some fresh sllnger and the King of 81am. we used to go to the White House for subject talent for satire, and we will snicker at a cut- For there in Thailand, dope Is matter, and toothy Imitators like Dean Murphy ting bit on Rosemary. legal. Stores sell it and rent had a high time with the Roosevelts, pere et Clooney or Pattl Page or Jerry Lewis or one pipes. mere, but I haven't seen anybody get up on a of the new Hollywood juveniles with the To avoid duty payments I stage and do Harry or Bess or Margaret, large- rumpled hair and the unrememberable name, there, the Communists ha veiiv because there probably Isn't enough physical But I doubt It. Most likely It will still be been smuggling their "junk" in-.or personal eccentricity to mock politely. Richman'i lisp. Durante's bugle. Cantor's eyes, to the lucrative markets. I Harry Is such a tragic little man, Bess won't and "Some of These Days" as sung by Miss Evidence? Last June 13. the talk, and Margaret such a model of decorum Sophie T. Thailand frontier police arrest- ed four runners trying to creep in with some 60 pounds of opium. The runners were head- ing for Bangkok. It's on the record now. On July 5, Thailand police \ Intercepted an opium caravan j __ , driving down from China's' Yunnan province. It had offl-1 WASHINGTON. Shortly after taking over At the same time, there is not the slightest clal protection machine gun- the Democratic National Committee, Chairman Indication that the President is arranging any nets, band grenade suuads and,*rank McKinney frankly told ^resident Truman transitional appointment which the Chief Jus- S7 smugglers, carrying 63 pounds that he would have to know the President's own tice could accept with dignity, and it to very uture Intentions before he could plan party l.ard to Imagine what such an oppolntment strategy. could be. Truman replied that he had not as yet reach- For these reasons, a Vinson candidacy Is grow- ed any firm decision about running again, but iryr less and less likely by the day, unless per- that he meant to do so within sixty days. The haps the Republicans erid by choosing Sen. Taft, President added that he would pass the word to while further" revelations of corruption absolute- the faithful at that time. ly blacken the Truman administration. The foregoing report bears every mark of gill- Truman's Deadline By Joseph and Stewart Alsop ready to Ian out the moment they got deep- Into Slam. Why such a small army for just 63 pounds of opium? It's no puzzlement, even In Slam, to steal a royal phrase from Anna's friend. A pound of opium simmers to an ounce of heroin. This Is it is watered down to ounces about 85 per cent pure. Then It Is watered down to ounces only 5 per cent pure. This, In turn, Is "split" so that there are sometimes 2,000 units made out of 60 ounces (from the original 60 pounds)- The pimply little street sales- man gets about $200 for one of these weak units. That's about $400,000 for just one caravan. Now recall that the U. S accused Red China of dumping 500 tons of opium or the enor- mous bulk of 1,000,000 ounces of heroin on the world market. SplH this down arid you run into the billions. Yet Mao's China, didn't deny the charge. Mao sim- ply retorted that he was ridding Red China of its opium usage inside China. Said so on the Pek- ing Radio. So it pours In from China over Intricate routes. One. ac- cording to the latest Federal Information, is from Yunnan province to Burma and on to Thailand. Or from Jehol province through Russian run Dairen and on out from the North- west and Southwest Chinese poppy fields. Right now heroin is manu- factured In truce-covered North Korea, long one of the world's largest heroin manufacturing centers. There are smuggling lines through Hong Kong and Macao iwhere the stuff is turn- ed Into morphine tablets.) edged reliability. Hence, if the President keeps his word, the second great uncertain factor will be removed from the political picture before the end of next month at the latest. In this crisis situation, the Chief Justice might conceivably be dragged, almost by main force, Into the race. Meanwhile, the other potential Democratic candidates can be roughly divided into two classes those not available for sound poll- General of the Army Dwight D. Elsenhower tical reasons, and those not personally accept- has announced his Republican candidacy, with able to the President. effects even more electriflylng than had been Those not available include Vice President foreseen. When President Truman also reaches Alben Barkley and Speaker-of the House Sam his decision, even if he merely communicates Rayburn, whose respective ages of seventy-four it to the Democratic Inner circle, the whole pic- and seventy would appear to rule them out; ture will begin to come clear. Sen. Richard Russell of Georgia, the real lead- The Republican response to Gen. Eisenhower'! er- and ablest man of the Senate Democrats, announcement, which Is already so Impressive, who Is ruled out by the racial problem and al- ls likely to Influence the President's decision most all the other more eminent senior De- considerably. mocrats in Congress and the country. For Truman is also known to regard Sen. Rob- ert A. Taft as the only serious Republican can- Those not acceptable to the President Include, dldate whose election would be genuinely dl- b> way of contrast, almost all the promising sastrous, and he has publicly described him as new men who have' recently come up in the the man he "would like to run against." party Senators Paul Douglas of Illinois and Aa the probability of Sen. Taft's nomination Estes Kefauver of Tennessee are two obvious grows less, therefore, the President will be more examples. and more inclined to follow his own undoubted To be sure. If Truman decides not to run personal Inclination, which Is not to run. again, he may have a very hard time stemming On the other side of the equation, however, the party tide toward one of these likely wln- ii the simple fact that with Gen. Elsenhower's nera Republicanism now openly professed, the Preai- And although Paul Douglas has denied tay dent will have a very hard time finding any Presidential ambitions in language close to Gen. other reasonably available candidate acceptable Sherman's, the Democratic leaders who want a to himself. winner will then he knocking on his door. His own preference, of course, Is for Chief Over-all, in short, the President must either Justice Fred Vinson, and he has pretty certain- run again or pretend to run again until he has ly indicated this preference to his friend of the engineered the nomination of some dark horse high bench. he happens to like, sue has Sen. Robert Ken- But the Chief Justice, who at first seemed of Oklahoma or run the risk of seeing a man tempted by the opportunity tentatively offered he does not like win the Democratic nomina- hlm by the President, now appears more and tion. more disinclined to leave the court for politics. It will be a hard choice for the President, He has said unequivocally that he will not do complicated as it is by uncertainty about the so, unless the President can arrange a trans- probable character of the opposition, tlonal appointment, so that he will not have to One must add that this hart', choice for the leap straight from the high bench to the hust- President is also a hard fact for the country: Inn. for the shortage.of Inspiring political leaders The Chief Justice's distaste for suah a leap, with national standing has now grown more which he regards as contrary to the best tradl- alarming tha nany other single feature of the tlons of the court, looks like being Impossible national scene, to overcome. (Copyright, 1952, New Yark Herald Tribune Ipc.) ^why WASHIKOTOH MERRY-CO-ROUND y oriw MARION I Drew Peorson soys: White House jealousy drives good men out of government; Symington, Clifford both left be- cause of inner-circle sniping; Sen. Gillette was timid about probe of McCarthy. WASHINGTON. Inside reason for the governmental exit of Stuart Symington, one of the best men to nerve the Truman Administration, is the soul-consuming Jealousy of the White House staff. i " It's also the reason why Clark Clifford, the best staff mem- 'ber Truman had, left the White House, and why it's difficult to get good men to work for the President these days. The little band of mediocrities around the President just do not want brainier men than they are el--se to him. It shows'up their own Inadequacy. This litUe band of mediocrities Is: > li Matt Connelly, an ex-WPA investigator and former Wall Street clerk, who, whenever he enjoys a convivial evening, re- verts to type. 3) John Steelman, a former country schoolteacher, who tried to put the skids under his former boss, sreretary of labor Fran- ces Perkins, and made Ufe insufferable tor the late secretary of labor, Lew Schwellenbach. Steelman has wanted the balance of labor control to remain under him and is probably responsible for many of Truman's labor headaches. 3) Donald Dawson, who had his wife in the RFC, pulled wires to get RFC loans, and accepted hospitality from a Florida hotel which was applying for an RFC loan. 4) General Harry Vaughan of deep-freeze fame, who has made It his job to tell the President how badly the press abuses him. Reviewing the news, Vaughan remarks: "That sob-sister... faker... pure lies... New Deal whlner." LITTLE LORD FADNTLfcROY Symington's first troubles began when he was put In the highly important spot of chairman of the National Security Re- sources Board, hitherto temporarily under Steelman. This made Symington senior adviser to the President on moDlllzatlon matters, with Steelman on the sidelines, a place John did not relish. So It was Steelman, who little by little betun cutting Sym- ington down to size, finally convinced Truman mobilization should be completely under Charles-E. Wilson. . Later, when Symington was given the tough job of. cleaning up the RFC, he fired, among others, Mrs. Donald' Dawson, to- gether with Dawson's close pal. Don Smith. Dawson had made Smith chief of RFC personnel which gave him a pipeline into the RFC on all jobs. Naturally Symington's clean-up Incurred more resentment from, the White House mediocrities. "Little Lord Fauntleroy" was their sneering name for him. And they dropped hint* that Symington, whose father-in-law. ex- congressman Jim Wadsworth of New York Is Republican, was plity'ne into OOP hands. Tired of the sniping, Symington finally quit. Not long ago. an old Senate friend of the President, worried over the corruption issue, remarked: "There's no use going to Harry and urging reform, because there's no one on the White House staff capable of following up end carrying through that reform, since Clark Clifford's gone, Harry Truman's about as hard to reach as Joe Stalin." This IS what has happened to Truman's good Intentions In trying to get Judge Tom Murphy to clean up corruption. There has been no follow-through.'arid'has been none since Clark Clif- ford's departure. Clifford's reason for gettlrig out was also White House iealousy. Steelman made It his business to plant stories with the press that Clifford was responsible for varioui unpopular policies, while Matt Connelly made Presidential appointments for politicians likely to knock Clifford's Ideas down. Clifford had brains; and they didn't want brains too close to the President. So finally Clifford quit. NOTEThough General Vaughans Influence Is usually on the side of the mediocrities. It should be noted in fairness that he has put across some good appointments His recommendation of Jiggs Donohue to be District of Co- lumbia Commissioner, though opposed at first by local residents, has turned out to be one of the healthiest things happening to Washington. D.C. Likewise Milton Kronhelm. Jr.. for xhom Vaughan helped get a police Judgeshlp, has turned out to be an A-l appointee. TIMID SENATOR Silver-thatched Senator Guy Glllet'e. Iowa Democrat, has been pulling backstage wires In the 8enate Elections Committee first to kill, later to tone down, the probe of Senator McCarthy under the Benton resolution. This is the resolution asking for McCarthy's expulsion from the Senate. It didn't leak out officially, but when the first vote was aken on whether to investigate Benton's charges against Mc- Carthy, Sen. Gillette was the only man who opposed. He argued that McCarthy was a powerful figure would re- lallate against Senators voting against nim. therefore the com- mittee should turn down the Benton investigation. However, when Gillette saw that tieoate Inside the commit- tee was going against him, he did not have the courage to stand on his own. Quickly reversing himself, ho voted with the majority. That made It unanimous. Since then, however, Gillette has toned down the" commit- tee's effectiveness by quietly firing three committee InvestJgaSors who were working on the Benton resolution Uncultivated Plant 3 HORIZONTAL 82 Cooking 1 Depicted flower of the------ strawberry 8 This plant usually bears ------fruit a it is to breed the common ..aS^S* 'Barrierfa a 12 Bewildered IS Age 14 Roman emperor utamil 5$ Social in act* VERTICAL linsect 2 Small island 3 Ertldlte 4 In one's gift 5 Lesal point 6 Symbol for erbium Anewer to Prsvioua funl i'V-. ,."IIBI l!Jl .'.VO-l r.'.i i2i u.'j.m tr ar 3 -; Ui las W.V ' '' l" IB ? '.H\m a -;i r i bASks*s*ei, ,- -rV.) i*'.) r ir.i>Mst: r il2i Wi^.'-' i .......< : tai Ju.i.-'_V-1 ' - ili.iM 15 Fine-grained rocks 17 European I swallow 19 Hazard 20 Mexican laborer 21 New'Version (ab.) ffi 22 While 23 Unfettered 25 For fear that 28 Cover 29 Rough Uva 30 Out of (prefix) 31 Unit of wire measurement 32 Forest ereetur* 39 Summon 3S Symbol for odium ST Article SS Silk fabric 41 Genus of geese 44 Ascended 48 French oyster pond 47 Mud 4$ Bustle 50 Quantity of medicina 91 Hessian river river 8 Fanciful Bristly 10 "Emerald Isle" 11 Puts on IS Hebrew deity IS According to (ab.) 23 Vanlshe*" 24 Oriental food 28 do *y steamer 27 Grest in stature 81 Manor house 33 All 34Llfler. *.' ... 33 Large nation 38 Identical IS Dry 40 Compses point mulberry 42 Formerly j 43 Scottish i ihaapfold* 45 Snoot* 49 Folding bed 49 Accomplish V" MONP*V. JANl'ARY 14 1952 TBE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAiTT NEWSPAPER PAGE Congressmen Start Scrapping f(%oHH$l Early In Pre-Election JACOBY OH lEll . .1 * * WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.-(UP)-Sen. Homer I r D p n-ll /T/i/aan E. Capehart (R-Ind.) complained yesterday that ; tj/ rOy KCIISe Dill VJ/Ven "not a single Republican" was allowed to sit in on . the Truman-Churchill conferences, proving there is | (|5f CnOHCe UltimOtUm "no bipartisan foreign policy." u Sen. John J. Sparkman (D-Ala.) retorted that not even Congressional Democrats were invited to the talks because they were, "a matter of executive discussion between the heads o Mi He added that John Foster Dulles, GOP State _ DeDartment adviser, did participate in some of the chance for a raise this year. Sut? J SsSLS be^en'British officials accompanying "fe cJt^?el EKSt1* By OSWALD JACOBS Written for NEA Service. WASHINGTON. Jan. 14 (UP) House military leaders warn- ed economy advocates today ithat 11 they-kill a 10 percent across-the-board military pay increase bill tomorrow, QI's in Korea will have lost their last' services committee brought back a bill amended to in- clude everybody. This passed in October, 1MB, and was the last raise the military has had. desire to new bill, said he will it as it stands, since ChurchilllandT S military and diplomatic leaders. .committeeT rejecTed" demands' no'* "d7}fn*5 *re, '" J?,er' QHe t-liurcnill ana u.o. ""^J K that tomorrows scheduled vote predicted the measure will pass. rarwhan ftnH Snaiknian an-! Johnston 'D.. S. O, long-time be delayed, and served notice _, i' ,. nearM on the cohK Broad- roe ot V Mon home rule, is he won't bring another pay bill The 10 percent boost would Uno itSsd I mayor for Washington who Some of the bill's backers,, -------------- w0t be confirmed by Senate, conceded there is a good chance m?n? now NORTH M 4.4 K!5 ? 7543 *AJ33 WEST AST ? AQB65 A K 10 S 7 1083 TJ74 ? 6 ? AJ10 *W1078 494 SOUTH (D) JJ2 AQ1 ?KQ82 + K2 .North-South vul. s. Wot North East 14) Pau 2 4 Pan 2N.T. Pan 3 A Pau 3* Pan 4 4 Pass 5* Pan Pase Pan Opening lead 3 GOP Officials Fence-Sitting On Ike vs. Taft Prospects WASHINGTON. Jan. 14 (UP) ,such officials openly pledged to North Dakota, Ohio. Tennessee*, About half of the nation's Re-I Taft as against 25 for Eisen-and Utah. publican governors, State com-!hower. Eisenhower was given the nod- mittee chairmen and members of Nine public choices were split in Delaware. Kansas. New Hamp- , the OOP National Committee are among Oov. Earl Warren of Ca- shire and New York. I still holding to a publicly neu- lifornia and former Oov. Harold i There were divisions of sentl- , tral position toward the rival E. Stassen of Minnesota, avow- ment in Alabama. Indiana. Iowa, Taft-Elsenhower Presiden 11 a 1 ed OOP candidates, and Gen. Louisiana. Maine. Massachusetts, | candidates. Douglas MacArthur. who is re- Nebraska. Rhode Island. A/er- A nationwide United Press poll,aarded as a Taft adherent. montand West Virginia. In some of these political officials, made A similar United Press poll, of these states, however, either 'after Gen Dwlght D. Eisenhow- made last Nov. 3 before Eisen- Taft or Eisenhower had a slight er allowed himself to become a hower's plans became known, edge. i "draft" candidate, showed today ishowed Taft riding a high tide Otates with all or some of- i that out of a total of 161 polled, toward the nomination, with flclals In the neutral column 82 are now "on the fence" on the ">ng support in 14 states. included Colorado. Connecticut, 'auestion of publicly endorsing Elsenhower showed consider- Florida. Georgia. Idaho, India-' >.t strength at that time na. Iowa. Kentucky. Mame Mary- but tt was tempered by un- land, Michigan. Missouri Monta __i.itv over his availability. na. Nevada. New Jersey, New' The officials were asked in the Mexico North Carolina, Okla- Elsenhower among the officials November poll whether thev sup- homa. Oregon. Pennsylvania,' willing to "go on the record." ported Taft and whether they Rhode Island. South Dakota, The poll covering all the 48 would remain steadfast or switch Texas. Virginia. Washington, either the general or Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio. On the other hand Taft Is al- most a two-to-one favorite over states and Hawaii, showed ind the ace the 45 their allegiance to Eisenhower Wisconsin. Wyoming, and should the general get Into the territory of Hawaii, of race. California was for Warren. In the current poll they were Minnesota gave three, votes to., at quarters and rations. Under the Residents would elect a district, the powerful economy bloc mav monthly for the recruit with-^dent. "Don't you fellows'naturally 5SJSi uihirh -mild make local succeed 1n votine down the hill out dependents to $1,148 month- ^vei gc borderline hands? It so. where-up mia ton?.iUOthI aw^ThVcapltoT^^Jw'iet a^Ttltands.'TheVewreTomes.ly or'or aboye^with maximum what do you do with them?-; crossroads. If he raised to three __1!...-K ,..?. ,, con- up under special rules barring service and with dependents. non-voting delegate to A G. L pay raise bill. Univ- ersal Military Train ine and "home rule" for the nation's Toteiess a.n _,. mora tho no cress consideration of amendments, tional B?oadcasnf "ompany'sl Even if It passes the Senate. The would-be budget cutters gr JTFSSFSSS. zESEEtlhamn*. the measure faces are contending it ought to be *SM&SFm!BSSk Kg *oln" ta the h0u8e **: con-Wered *& #" House r n'Mahonev (D Wvo.) and Devious home Sarl^Xundt (is D*> agreed \*&H222t that the people want Congress to economize as much as possible in foreign and domestic spend- li . jndt added that Americans 1949 scale, range from only a spade rrJrSiE second room Charles H. a^ed how they stand now to- Stassen and one tei Taft "Most of the bidding problems Gorw held the North hud. He ward Taft and Eisenhower; Arkansas ga ve Stasseni onr pay- in your daily question have been, decided In favor of a first re- whether they favor some other -d MacArthur got one in, $70'.airly clear cut," writes a cor-^n^Vlwo clubs. His partner "andida e; or, for the present, Nevada. (JE ^Gorerwarrtne^V^S officials play major upon Tomorrow the House begins work with consideration of a bill providing a 10 per cent cost-of-livln pay raise to all members of the armed service. A stiff flv-ht is expected, with have members get a chance to vote on some money bill more sus- ceptible to being reducedand 2Z Red Cross Holds Elections Tomorrow oils In organizing their states We ceralnljTdo get borderline 'diamonds" his partner "would"a-1 fr the part they will play in the hands. We do just what every- mos" undoubtedly bid three no-^publ can national nominating body else does. We argue about m?mp what then? convention n Chicago next Julv. them. I oSren decided to settle for a Many of those questioned ad- surVbut small plus score at two fitted either pro-Taft or pro- For example, today' handd'arm QSS P Elsenhower leanings but refused caused a heap of argument when inddentaUy the experts are f<> "" on record for various rea- it came up in the recent, team still arguing about this hand, ons.^ ^^ ^^ ^ ^ under regular House rules al- All Canal Zone residents who match for the championship of wmie they're arguing 7ra^10rd'8.ari"d, v-hich wav he Do1Hipa i.i___,._u~i..j______j_____ .a int,-rt(ri in ii nmrir nf Lhe Unltst States. One team i-o~ v,nirt. ih KhomnlonshlD. .ana see wmen v.a\ cne pomicai a', a want ^F^SiJinSLtS" ecSfifai whetting their axes ruptlon in the Administration ec {, t one,..costinsmeas- O'.lahoney said step, alreadj '*fet,nre^r. SD01sors of the h"" ,atp" to da thLv measure warn it will be the last chance to give G. I.'s In Korea a pay raise this year a potent; argument In an election year lowing unlimited amendment. One popular amendment would give more of a raise lo the S75-a-month recruit and less to the S954 general. The recruit would get' $7.50 a month extra under Vinson's bill. The general, counting his allowances, would get a maxi- mum of $114. Vinson denounced such pro-,BuUclln; ln Balboa ALso tomorrow the House Ar- posis as "demagoguery" and - .- ... com- ha^e been taken to do thL Olttahoney said the Justice Department prosecuted 1,600 tax fraud cases in recent years, winning 95 per cent of them. Mundt retorted most of them were small farmer; and busi- ness men, and that big racket- eers and political contributors V \ .dfitSn to their lawmaklng i^tata about" House | clioies, the Senators and repre-l sentatives also will confer this tn of New y0rk. chelrman, of ,et them vote against the till/'' thlcom'ng ve^r wluTeheld bv wee.: with military and diplo-Une training commission that Vmson ,d ** ^ne com.ng e[ *' Dr. nf^ oy matlc officials on some of lheidrewup details of the propped The economy bloc was not a-hi ne^l m ting problems facing the nation in UMT program, will be the first lone ,n protcSting the ban on are Interested in_ the work of the United States. I The American Red Cross have, got to a makable been urged to attend the nual meutlri and election of new members of the Board of Direc tors which will be held at 2 p.m. the winning team's margin tomorrow in the Canal Zone victory. Chapter hesda'.iarters located in Johnny Crawford held the Buildlm; 0810-B Gal'lard High- North hand in the first room. way, adiscent H the Civil Affairs He decided to risk the underbid of two diamonds rather than the overbid of two clubs. If South One team iearn holds the championship. vulnerable' an- game, and the other team stop- r m new ped at two diamonds. The dif- inilAr Mlf|IIIIV6 rec- teience. 450 points, was half of "JW "' ^ kicked Up Bv FBI Winds will blow. Others insisted they must remain unbiased be- cause their jobs are supposed to be administered Impartially, 8till others didn't care which candidate wins so long as they. think he will be victorious over; , .the Democratic, standard bearer MEMPHIS. Tenn.. Jan. 14 'UP) .next November. P-The FBI today captured John Here are the states where the: A. Pearson, wanted on liquor; pou shows Taft is getting his! hVH, tn noss^t two riImonT barges In three states and a fu-: i-tronge8t Suport frSm R?pub- SSSJLt?2r~ZLZT^0': gltlve since he failed to report at; Ucan officials now willing to meo oervjeca OTimu>ra "v;;-|-"v..i.y ...o ...,....,, ... uomug;mi**._ u.iii k. nrosenti>rl linfraraiin~i~ "* rTT'i~4i7'iiM~7niiw i __"'ginve since lie iiu *'---. iican orneis now willing bssjsssr itx asa.*- zssur92B&3ffi*&W^i&SB^3& *,,urt" '~~\:suz*s&x: members certain that the com-] bars amendments. Members!tnrI"i'"'hpM mittee will approve It but vn-jmust vote It up or down as It1 lt'pS.nc"niSt bjrtt Urchen" Chairman of the Canal Zone t i j. If thet don t want to give rhnnter Former Rep. James W. Wads-.the boys ln the foxhole, a ralse > 1932 and what Congress can do witness. about them.---------------------------- Prasldent Truman's economic |.l._-_ C,-:-/. massage, which goes to the Ca- 'CmaiCa jO *c pi. al Wednesday, will Rive details a "JZ'\ or some of the legislative reeom- UeiCr>rOT'*C! /- ' ' msndations le mtde In his x- , address to Congress last week. Y GOT 111 V" Tl'QrV More details, including the all- Important money requests, will -j.ne Jamaica Provident be. contained In the President's Benevolent Society will present budget message which will be a musical orogram at the Jamai- ' re?dv Jan. 21. ca Auditorium on Feb. 17 as one Other aspects of the Chief '0f the highlights of the society's E- :cutve's 1952 election-year -.debration of Its 25th anniver-; pr^ram will reach the law-1 i-y. w'iers ln separate mecsaes >^d e -'iments by cabinet offlci-ls. The program will be featured xt Thursdav members of with vocal and ipstnment3l, boh houses will take time to renditions from oooular Iocp). hf.r a speech by British Prime; artists and an elocution contest,; Minister Winston Churchill, who for which manv prizes will be will address a Joint session upon -ffered. h'- return from Canada.------------------------------------ Churchill is expected to stress, DEFR EVAOF HIM Anlo-American unity and soft- WARE, Mass. (UP) David, pedal any Idea of more U. S. '"rroll has bagged n lot of smell eonomlc aid to his country. i "ame In his day. However, he's! Some leading coneressmer. al-1 '"en deer hunting every year for rerdy have warned there w*ll he; <1 years without getting a deer. "lets of questions asked" if amendments. Some House mem-| bers want to make the pay raise bigger. Rep. Pat Sutton (D- Tenn.t said he would like to mat-e It uniform 12 percent. It was Sutton who led a successful fight In 1949 a- gainst a military pay raise 1 which would have covered and everybody in service except the private. After taking its licking that Ume, the armed Radio Programs Your Community Station HOG-840 Thar 100.000 e.opl. M.* Presents CN'rchlll requests more money. The first actual business of the new sesin comes up todav ln the Senate, which begins formal debate on a bill to let the Dis- trict of Columbia govern Itself. The measure, approved by a Senate committee, is expected to pass although Sen. Olln D. CANARY ETHERIZED MEREDITH, N. H. (UP) -Hop- pv. a canary ouartered ln the children's ward of a hospital' here, was overcome by ether fumes from a youthful patient lust returned from surgery. Doc- tors pdminlstered oxygen to re- vive Hoppy. TROPICAL Wednesday Man' COCHRAN nm................. Tomorrowls AnoTherDaY WAWNei woe, .fft ..%MCot-.G,E-*i. J...HENRY BLANKE - FELIX FEIS might then re-open the bidding, FJve pgj aent in two auto- which VW>M give Crawford a: ,odH acting on a tip from a chance to bid again to show his Memnh, sheriff, forced Pear-; maximum values. ^on's car to a halt shortly before Moreover. If South did bid 7 anl todav near Tunica. Miss., again. Crawford was in the olear. aoOut'40 miles southwest of here. ronowmg|He nad giready announced a wei>k hand with diamond sup-i Pearson. 34. hfd been free un- port. If South could still hope der bonds totaling $50.000 on for a game, in the fact of such phpr^os ln Tennessee. Oklahoma an announcement, North could n< nunols when he failed to re- aiford to accept any game lnvi- port last Julv to serve 18 months ta'lon. for conspiracy to violate the Na- As it happened. B. J. Becker, tional Prohibition Act. with the South hand, did bid1 ( again Crawford could then show His convictions d"te back to his clubs and eventually raise Dec. 31. 1949, when Pearson was diamonds again. sentenced to serve 10 years and There was nothing much to; fined $5,000 for hijacking a the plav of course. South could i truckload of *hlslvjnear.cairo ruff spades twice In the dummy 111. He was freed under a $?0.000 and lead diamonds twice through' appeal bond, recently declared East. The defenders could win1 forfeited. Arizona, Illinois, Mississippi. GENERAL PAINT (Pintura General, S.A.)-;, Announces their new telephone number 2-1891 % GENERAL PAINT CORP. (Pintara General, S.A.) No. 30 "H" Street Phones: 2-1891 2-1895 - ti If you belong to the Armed Forces or if vou have a steady job come to our Store and you can choose you* own terms to buy on credit. We have the best Mahogany Furniture. If you don't know our Club System visit us and ymi will be del'eh'ed. 86 Central Ave. Tel. 2-2404 rrs tovurat m an am a Canal Clubhouses Showing Tonight! [s the giant Goliath fell before1 Today. Monday, Jan. 14 PJtt. 3:30Music for Monday 4:00Music Without Words 4:15David Rose Sho w 4:30 What's Your Favorite 6:00Happy the Humbug Cla. Alfarot S.A. 8:15Evening Salon - , 7:00Calling All Forces (BBC) the DOY David, 7:30Sports Review I J ' 7:45Here Comes Louis Jordan j.j r\ -J A. v- ~ 8:00News and Commentary, SO Old David tile Mng (VOA) 3:15Voice of America 8:45Labor World (VOA) 9:00 To be Announced 9:45Sports Tune of Dav and News (VOA) 10:00The World at Your Win- dow (BBC) 11:00The Owl's Nest MidnightSign Off THURSDAY The True Life Story of a British Serret Agent's Courage ln The Laat War.. ! ANNA NEAGLE -- TREVOR HOWARD IN THE THRILLING AND EXCITING FILM! ODETTE" The Picture Chosen as the Best Film Ever Made In England I - Tomorrow, Tuesday, Jan. 15 AM. 6:00Sign On Alarm Clock Club 7:30Morning Salon 8:15News (VOA) 8:30Crazy Quilt 8:45Hawaiian Harmonies 9:00News 9:16Sacred Heart Program 9:30As I See It 10:00News 10:05Off the Record 11:00News 11:05Off the Record 11:30Meet the Band 12:00 News 12:05Luncheon Music 12:30Popular Music 1:00News 1:15Personality Parade 1:45Rhythm and Reason 2:00 A Call From Les Paul 2:15Date for Dancing 2:30Spirit of the Vikings 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00 All Star Concert Hall 3:15The Little Show 3:30Music for Tuesday 4:00Panamuslca Story Time 4:15Promenade Concert 4:30What's Your Favorite 6:00Happy the HumbugCla. Alfaro. S.A. 6:15Evening Salon 7:00Ray's A Laugh (BBC > 7:30PABST SPORTS REVIEW 7:45Jam Session 8:00NEWS (VOA) 8:15Voice of America 9:00To be Announced 10:00HOTEL EL PANAMA 10:15Musical Interlude 10:30 Variety Bandbox (BBC) 11:00The Owl's Nest 12:00Sign Off fall before Bathsheba, the adulteress! 20" Canlury fo> AND BATHSHEBA Technicolor BALBOA Air.rndill"'nK* f:15 A S:K MiUl GAYNOR Dale ROBERTSON "GOLDEN GIRL" (Tatsday) "TIIUNDBK ON THE HILL" DIABLO HTS sus a IAS Edward O. ROBINSON (i *>8Sy CUMMINS "OPERATION X" (TiMWlay) 'BEVENVP AGENT" COCOLI cis a -iM GAT UN Michael REDGRAVE f Jean KENT THE BROWNING VERSION' (Tunaay) "STRANGERS ON A TRAIN" (Tacada; > Gienn 'OBD a> Vivir LINDFORS "THE FLYING MISSILE" MARGARITA :15 ?:SC Penny EDWrtiiDS Jame. MILLICAN "MISSING WOMEN" (Taeadar) "SEALED CARGO" CRISTOBAL Alr-Condllinned 15 a S:M Paul DOUGLAS a) Janet LEIGH 'ANGELS IN THE OUTFIELD" (Tneaday) "NO QUESTIONS ASKED" GREGORY ii# SUSAN ' HAYWARO RAYMOND IWSSEY KIEMNIHK and s cut of many thousands I THURSDAY! REGULAR RELEASE | DATE ill LUX & CECILIA Theatres Simultaneously! CENTRAL PRESENTS ^- "HK WEDNESDAY 16TH I THURSDAY! WKFJC END RELEASE! FRE RFI.FASE! (IN TECHNICOLOR) FIRST IME Al SKY SRAnEIINE STORY POPIIIR F MAIINE Al19EVILS! jJoSEwFEkRER ACAPEMYAWARE ItK. ..because.. hm wot Hf >hr## mu%Mm*i in on*... and on* hvr in a million I Cyrano MALA P0WRSSS8 JOHN WAYNE , ROBERT RYAN ' FLYING LEATHERNFCKS .. cm CENTRAL JhHN HOWARD DAVIS ROBERT NEWTON "OLIVER TWIST'l World's Greatest Adventure Picture.. I LUX THtATRE "" is ?*" "as BELLA-VISTA 1:30, 3:M, 5:>S. IM, *M .sa. The moat enchantlns and Imaginative picture of the Century I 'THE TALES OF HOFFMAN" IN TECHNICOLOR! CECILIA THEATRE West mos. thrilling adventure! "SANTA Fr." <,n Technicolor I with Randolph Scntt Janr* Carter Also The uick-vt Ux-dodging acket^ e^er pulled' "KEVEM'E AGENT" ith Douglas Kennedy Jean Willet TROPICAL ABKOTT aad < OSTELLO. 1st "COMING ROUND THE MOUNTAIN" _______ llh KIRPV GRANT________ ENCANTO THtATRE Gene Fvar.i Steve Brodie. ln "STEEL HELMET' John Wayne, ln "Long Vcyoge Home" r/VOLl THEATRE srle Granger Ruth Roman In "Strangers On A Train" Khr Douglas. In THE GREAT DIVIDE" CAP/TOL/O THEATRE BOMBA The Jungle Bo v. ln "The Lion Hunters" Reea Hiidley. ln "Modern. Marriage"' with Robert Clark . VICTORIA THEATRE Yvonne de Carlo Van Meflin in TOMAHAWE'- also: "Francis Goes to the Races" si* for rom ' ..... THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER * J - MONDAY. JANUARY II, IMS Cargo and FreightShips and Planes-Arrivals and Departures Shipping & AirLine News TERRY THE LEAK SJ> Chiriqui Advance Passenger List . The United Fruit Company hip S.S. Chiriqui is due in Cris- tobal tomorrow morning. She is headed for Honduras from New! Orleans. The following passengers were listed: ' Dr. and Mrs. Payson Adams. Omaha, Neb.: Mr. and Mrs. Clif-; ford G. Broman. Bremerton.: Wash.: Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Cole. South Bend, Ind.: Mrs Grace Entwistle. Monson. Mass.;. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Haspel. Jr., New Orleans. La.; George W. Hav. Ooshen. Ind.; Mr. and Mrs.; Donald N. Hill, Tulsa.Okla.; John Kernlck. San Carlos. Cal.: Mrs.i Florence Krelder. Omaha, Neb.;< Mrs. Mildred Redgwick. Omaha. Neb.; Lt. and Mrs. Paul A. Sey- mour. Jr.. Leavenworth, Kansas; Mrs. Tillie Hinkle. Bardstown. Ky.: Arturo Pineda. Santa Bar-, bara, Hond.; Mrs. Lorene Alder- ! man. Tulsa, Okla.; Miss Jean- nette F. Benjamin. New Orleans. IL*.; Miss Elizabeth A. Bessey, Ann Arbor, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. John S. Blount, Nashville. Tenn.; Mr. and Mrs. Carson S. Clinton. Webster Groves, Mo.; Mrs. Rose Copeland. Granger, Iowa; Miss Mary C. Costello, St. Paul. Minn.; Mr. Tim J. Costello, St. Paul, Minn.; Miss Minnie S. Crane, Greenville. So. Car.; Mr. and Mrs.1 Charles Enyart. Stanberry, Mo.;, C. E. Enyart. Stanberry. Mo.: Mr.1 and Mrs. John R. Findorff, Mad- ison. Wis.; Mr. and Mrs. Otto R. Gossman, Des Molnes, Iowa; Mrs. Frances P. Graham, Green- ville, S. C; Miss Susan J. Gra- ham, Greenville. B.C.: Miss E. Janice Hansen. Genoa City. Wis.; Mr. and Mrs. William Heise, Northbrook. 111.; Hilmer John- son. Rockford. 111.: Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Kaplan. Tulsa. Okla.; Mr. and Mrs. Seymour M. Kre.sh- In. Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Paul IN HOLLYWOOD By ERSKINE JOHNSON HOLLYWOOD, (NEA). Ex- The first Los Angeles radio clusively Yours: Tallulah Bank-'flash on the Walter Wanger.- jicad went to court, and Ginger j Joan Bennett-Jennings Lang Rogcrts went to Fox, instead of headlines gave Hollywood a start. Lang's occupation was garbled. Tne announcer head-: lined it: the Alabama tornado, for a co- starring role with Fred Allen In 'We're Not Married." Fox high brass wanted Tallulah for the role, but she couldn't make lt because of her lawsuit against | vision producer." her former secretary. And with all the front-page headlines, the big boys were happier than Pollyanna. It's Fred's first trip to Hol'y- wood in two years and his first movie role since 1945. Current Allen cracks: Los Angeles Building Boom: "Pedestrians have a new worry. "Movie producer shoots tele- Don't be surprised If Gloria Swanson rushes out to Holly- wood to act opposite Clifton Webb when her Broadway show, "Nina," folds. It's a yarn! abaut a college proiessor who was once a Hollywood profile king. He sees one of his old Now they have to get out f j movies on TV and the fun be- the way of buildings." His Last Movie "People have trouble recalling the title ('It's MAERSK LINE Accepting Passengers for SAN FRANCISCO by m.8. "NICOLINE MAERSK" SAILING JANUARY 23rd (Every room with connecting bathroom) C.B. FENTON & CO., INC. Tel: Cristbal 1781 Balboa 1065 gins. Jane Russell's unhappy over in the Bag'i. Even the people j the sale of "The Young Widow,", who made it arc trying to re-1 her second movie, to television, call it. So is Faith Domergue, who had' "As a matter of fact, they, a teensy-weensy role In the film tried to recall when they are- and prefers to think that her leased it." Television "Eighteen yeais In radio ruined my health. Three TV shows ruined my reputa- tion." Old Movies on TV: "They're going to cause a lot of trouble in cemeteries digging people up lor personal appearances." movie career began with "Ven- detta." I,. Kluender. Melrose Park. 111.; Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Klim- UNITED FRUIT COMPANY Great White Fleet *ew Orleans Service Arrive* Cristbal S.S. Quirigua .................................Jan. 20 S.S. Levers Bend ..............................Jan. 25 *S.S. Chiriqui ..................................Jan. 27 'Handling Refriitraled (hilled and Genera Carga Arrives New York Service_____________________Cristbal S.S. Heredia ...... ............................Jan. 15 S.S. Jamaica ..................................Jan. 1 S.S. Cape Cumberland .........................Jan. 20 -S.S. Comaragua ..............................Jan. 22 Waekl Sailings fo Naw Yark. hm Anjrclea. San Franciftco, Seattle Oceaaianal aalllags lo New OrlCkU and Mablle. rKEQLENT SAILINGS HHIM CRISTOBAL TO WEST COAST CENTRA!. AMERICA Cristobal to New Orleans via Tell. Honduras Sails from Cristbal S.S. Chirieni.....(Passenger Service Only).....Jan. 15 S.S. Chiriqui ..................................Jan. 29 CRISTOBAL 2121 TELEPHONES: - PANAMA 2-2804 COLON 20 Robert Newton draws the lead in "Blackboard The Pirate," an Edmund Grainger swash-buckler on the RKO slate... Tony Mar- ...FV nnf> tin is trying to convince How-| ard Hughes that Deanna Dur- bln should be his singing co- star in "A Song Forever"... What ever happened to War- check. Ashtabula, Ohio; Miss | ?"s' P^ns to star Milton Berle Virginia Krafft. Genoa City,: ta a second and third movie?... Wls: Mrs. Jane Landry. New Or-1 Add the name of Ann Blyth leans. La.: Mr. and Mrs. Guy B.lto the roster of film stars who Leavitt. Tulsa, Okla.: Mr. and; *H1 ask for TV right when their Mrs. Alfons-Peter Mannebach,! studio contracts come up for Glen Elyn. 111.: Mr. and Mrs. Ar- re-negotlatlon Ludmilla nold A. Maver, Michigan City. iTcherina. the ooh-la-la In "Tales Ind.; V. R. Nelson. Fort Worth.i of Hoffman," is secretly in Lon- |W Tex.; George H. Overback, Chic-don to master the English Ian- 7 ago, Mr. and Mrs. Bony H. Peace, guage for a career as a drama- f Ur. Greenville, B.C.: Mrs. Laura C. Peace, Greenville, S.C.; Mr. and Mrs. George N. Phillips. Run- nel Is, Iowa; Mr. and Mrs. Ray L. Powers. Houston. Tex.; Dr. and Mrs. James L. Reycraft, Cleve- land Heights, Ohio; James L. Reycraft. Jr., Cleveland Heights, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Rust, Mission, Kan.; Dr. Chan- ning Smith, Granger. Iowa; Charles F. Walsh. Elyria. Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wertheim, Hudson. Ohio; Dr. and Mrs. Frederick A. WUlius, Rochester. Minn.; Mr. and Mrs. John H. Wynn. Columbus, Ga.: Mr. and The torch Jack Reynolds is carrying for Mariorie Reynolds would light up night scenes in Hollywood. But Marjories say- ing that she won't change her Mrs. Charles Zeman, Kalamazoo. 1 mind before her final divorce Mich. decree Is ready. MAERSK LINE ACCEPTING PASSENGERS FOR NEW YORK by m.. "LEXA MAERSK" SAILING JANUARY 21st (Every room with connecting bathroom) C. B. FENTON & CO., INC. Til. Cristbal 1781 Balboa: 1065 CHRIS WELKEN. Planeteer "WHEN IN DOUBT" BT BUSS WINTERBOTHAM tic actress. Destination: Hollywood. RKO is rushing "The Korean 8tory" into the movie houses to cash in on the front page headlines. The picture.is being edited as BOOTS AND HER Bmores lt is shot and a rough print will be ready three days after the filming ends. BT MICHAEL O'MALLEX MONDAY. JNM* 14 MB THE PANAMA AMBICT AN INDEPFNDENT DABLT NRW8PPBR pacific J^ocietiA nu SIDE GLANCES AMBASSADOR AND MRS. WILEY HOSTS FOR Ll'NCHEON TODAY Mr. John Cooper Wiley, the Ambassador of the United States to Panama, and Mrs. Wiley were hosts today at a luncheon at the Embassy Residence on La Cresta, given in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McDonald, who arrived on the Isthmus Sunday by plane and will be the house guest of the Wileys until Tuesday. Mr. McDonald is Special Assistant to Senator McCarran. Visiting General To Be [-house guest for the next two Honored At Dinner weeks, Miss Viola liigold, of Invitations have been Issued by Jackson. Mississippi who arrived the Commander-m-Chlef of the Thursday evening by plane for Caribbean Command, Lieutenant her visit to the Isthmus. General William H. H. Morris, -;------ 1. and Mrs. Morris for a din- Mrs. Aynesworth Returns ner to be given this evening at Fro: Florida Quarters One. Quarry Heights m' Mrs. Nelly Aynesworth return- honor of Brigadier General John ed recently to her home In Cu- 3gyS..Yf^f A. Elmore and the visiting Of- rundu from visiting her son-ln- "^.^'.-deTGrouD of the Bal- fleers from the Department of law and daughter. Mr and Mrs v\?0^'Ycub will meet the Army Francis J. Riordan, of South: ooa woman scjud wiii Miami. Florida, for the Holiday: Wednesday morning at season. day by plane for Call. Colombia after visiting with relatives on the Isthmus for the Christmas holidays. Westmans Change Residence Mr. and Mrs. David G. West-! man changed their residence from Bella Vista to Calle 11. I Number 116, San Francisco de la: Caleta, and are now at home there to their friends. ByGotbroirhj _ALntic Socid) Pedro Miguel Civic Council Meets Tonight The Pedro Miguel Civic Coun- vil will meet this evening In the i Movie Hall. The public is urged to attend the meeting. Visitor Honored At Luncheon Miss Anita Ramirez Duque, the First Secretary of the Panama- Patricia Downey nian Embassy In Washington. D. Celebrates Birthday C, who is vacationing In Pana-; Mr. and Mrs Charles H. ma was the guest of honor on Downey, of Curundu, entertained near luiure Thursday at a luncheon at the \a, group of the younger set at Union Club given by Mrs. Igna-a dinner party at El Rancho on do Molino. Jr.. the wife of the Friday Minister of Foreign Relations. eleven o'clock at the Morgan Gardens. I Mrs Pat Morgan will discuss rules to be followed in judging entries at the Cardenas Flower Show which will occur In the Barbecue Supper Honors Mrh. Altnlllategul The Minister of Agriculture and Commerce. Mr. All "members of the Club are cordially Invited to attend the evening given in hOOOT discussion and to enjoy a picnic of the sixteenth birthday an- niversary of their daughter. Pa- tricia. lunch In the gardens. Kobbe NCO Wives Club Meets For Coffee The members of the NCO The guests included Patricia, 5rnttfl Downey. Charles Becktell, Edith wives Club of Fort Kobbe met !?nK,nSMthr to Beauchainp. Ronald McConnell. on Thursday at nine thirty Almlllategui. was the guests or. Tucker. Robert Dolan, i o'clock in the Clubroom for a LT.Tyat^vMr *M I Georgiana Haie. Chick Kruse. ooee which honored Mr Ed- S Alemn jf"hey^no?able Sylvia Swift and William Under- wafd De Lodge wh will leave Deputy, at his home In El Coco WDOd- ______ deI Mar' _^____t sin not ts To Leave OMnt'e^iotrthSanT* I "wd. Harry J. Bin- T. m. mo. u.. f at. trr. com. mi i m* mviec. me. nu &, 195, (utun PBOMINENT MASONIC VISITORS FETED WITH RECEPTION AND BALL The District Grand Lodge of the Canal Zone Masonic District gave a reception and ball hi the ballroom of the Hotel Washington, Saturday evening, to honor the Most Worshipful Thomas S. Roy, D. D., Grand Master of Masons in Massachusetts, and Mrs. Roy. and the Right Worshipful Grand Marshal, Herbert H. Jaynfta, Grand Marshal of the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts and Mrs. Jayaes. She will not retara to the jmus before Mr. Stops sal had been previously p" They will ma!:e their home New York City. Army Couples Leaving Captain and Mrs Jack- D"i Okley. of Fort Guliek. are "leav- ing on the 22nd to be stationed} Receiving with the honored 'phies were: High average. Lieut. >tulCamiP r^vefin^ Arlle guests were the following other Worshipful Grand Master of the game. Commander Dave Hender- #W SlS^hootai Grand Lodge of Panama, Mr. son. W. D. Ronayne was In Captain Oakley the Isthmus over has been On three yeara Roles Socrates Mndez, the Most Mrs. r,. u. nuuajut .-.- m . _^ _^ n* ivr* Worshipful Grand Master o the chargjsol .the ->. for vtn* at ^0w m^Command! Grand Lodge of Costa Rica. Mr. the banquet, and seated tne #, e th mu, m b Eric Murra". with the following members and guests at a table }* lcer ol tne M W Past Grand masters from Cos:a I centered with bouquets o bou- wo- Rica, Mr. Alexander Murray, gainvilla and connected with Mr. Jorge Tristan. Mr. G. wlat sprays of the flowers and Officers for the new tourna- ?.n wltn iarev nd D001*! C. M Set. and Mrs. Donald NeLi Mong, Mr. Arturo Faith are also leaving on Jan. 22 by plane en route to Camp Crowder, Missouri. They will visit in St. Louis and Arkansas with rea- Uves before reporting for duty. Sergeant Nelson has beers stationed at Fort Clayton and Fort Davis for the past thrao years. Duplicate Bridge Duplicate bridge will be play-} 'What do you know! I just waited on a soldier who didn't pull a baby picture on me!" soon for stateside duty with her | husband. Mrs. De Lodge was given a parting gift of a linen cutwork tablecloth, from thei group. . The coffee was also In honor RUTH MILLET! Says A woman of fifty-five tells me she Is unhappy and bored and Canadians Honor Long-Time Journalist Mrs.'A. M. Pierie who were the ment will be; President, Corn- quests of the Right Worshipful mander Dave Henderson; vice- Grand Master James E. Jacobs, prealdent; Lieutenant D. L. District Grand Master of the Ca-j Payne; Secretary, Mrs. G. L. nal Zone Masonic District. Wallace; and treasurer. Mrs R. Also receiving the guests were: I. Oornick. Mr. Jerome F. Prager. Deputy Attending the banquet were: District Grand Master with the! Commander and Mrs Dave masters and their wives of the. Henderson. Lieutenant Corn- seven symbol Canal Zone Ma-1 mander and Mrs H J. Thorn- sonic Lodges. These included: ton Lieutenant Commander J. Edgar r. Daggett: from Army ,Mrs. W. D. Ronayne. Lieutenant "" ^"l, ^1 and M1 Lodge of Balboa. Mr, and Mrs. I (if) and Mrs. Frank Kraft Edgar Gerhart from Isthmian Lieutenant ijei and.l Lode? of Pedro Migue Mr. and-Gornik Lieutenant iMrs B Herring: from Chagrea;Mra. L A. Snead. and CBs and Lodge of Balboa, Mr. and Mrs. 'Mrs. R. L. Smith. Charles Sorrell. from Darter. Lodge of Balboa. Mr. and Mrs. !""*"**.. .. 8i 'T A. Cunningham and Mrsi C*S*%** was -- \MaB*&fJ&JOR Harry Green; 3rd Sergeant anj rmir irraft oaptam .Sam Rowe ana Mr A-Mrs R T Sidnev Passailapue: 2nd. Mrs and Garland Qrr and Captain JohnJ Fahnestock: 3rd. Mr. and Mrs* E. Cottrell, East and West 1st Colonel H A Greene and sorority Meeting Mr. Herbert Delgado. 2nd Mrs.; ; Bota Chapter of Beta Sigma _ A JFmnin5namJ *t^, furn- Phi Sorority held their regular Harry^Green; 3rd Sergeant and Zealand. The marriage will take place on Feb. 18 In Paihla. lty committee, Mrs attempt to answer. But whenever a person gets tt Prime Minister Clu Mrtsic for dancing was ram-xm w"h "u mi >cKui u -M nickwno iabed bv the 71st Armv Band of business meeting at the home of-" Edward DicKmson. Fort Clayton. Miss Sarah Macready at Brazos . During the venina: Mr Jacobs: HeMhts. Friday evening Cristobal Woman's Club . on behalf of the Grand Lodge The members who attended Meeting Brit- presented gifts of Peruvian silver wero: Mrs. Charles Judge. Mrs. The Cristobal Woman's Winston Dfctta to Mrs. Roy and Mrs. Max Welch. Mrs Dvid Col'fey. held their regular monthly meet- non was assisted by Mrs. Frank "Jrimo Kl amTTnhappy Churchill^ was made an honor- Jaynes .Mrs^ Robert Befger. Miss Ann , at the Red Cross Building' Cardenas Garden Club To Meet,pledger. Mrs. Harry Snyder.Mrs. 0 ,' ,,',^ , '!S "uf" """..ary member of the Canadian, Mr c. t. Johnston. District Wlohner and Miss Carolyn Rock- Ag tnig 4,as tne ftrst meeting ol The Cardenas River Garden ;j0h. Kerner and Mrs. Charles < n,tirmv Answerlna: those parliamentary press gallery at Grand Marshal, was In charge of well. the New Year. Mrs. R. W. JUi- Club will meet for its regular Hartman. hefow mav alve a hint as. to "the weekend arid said that he, the arrangements for the ball. -------- beUi. president had the club col- Wllliam Rav supper meeting on Tuesday, Jan.! -------- I L_ ...7 .L.f 0fferine the per- had been a journalist for half his and bufiet supper which was- Gaton Star C'nb Meeting lect read by Mrs. E. F. MM .^^u^ *...-.. Ti.h( Mfe served during the evening., i The Gatun Star. Club will meetxlelland. I Five Hundred Masons and Thursday evening at the home Mrs. Gordon Kariger gave a sides of: of-Mrs. Roger Or vis In the De- report on the raffle of the pief, ipmw, waniuir mm. *,"-"- tne istnmus attenaoa the gala Lesseps Area The meeting will ture donated bv Mrs. Ja start M, 7:30 p.m. Koerber. The" winner was Mrs- John Palmer Mrs. A. G. Tur* Inkles Return To-Ohio Une w^o cSe f^^^^^tOggmVSll ^S^^Uend^thTedmnfof lore? tL" Club^S's^rSm sfir^sas. tu s r--?z*the h08teMes or Arthur L. Burke.U. S. A. which the occasion. At Hotel Tivoli The regular weekly son more. bridge1 How many tournament will 1 held This last six months have "You was solemnized here Dec. 28, left' by plane Tuesday to return to!*^1 *?* M*!?, JSH^ITSi evening at seven o'clock In the Card room of the Hotel Tlvoll. Anv Interested bridge played Is )u pay me a high compll- thelr lad]es ttorn both : Churchill said, "t have tne isthmus attended t The Panama Canal Dental So- invited to attend. clety will meet tomorrow 7:30 ------------------ During their, visit of several pm. at the Fort Clayton Hos-j f weeks thev were the house guests pital. Dental movies will be N||IA.Yfi;|f L0lTlt3 ",er-ln-law shown and all members and af- I VVII rs. J. ] filate members are Invited to val Re-!attend. ' J Former Restfllnw to ito Arrive Eo Vlalf of Mr. Captain and Mrs Mathew Man- of Pe- ley, of Santa. Barbara. Calif or-, CINC1NNATI/0 Jan. 14 (UP) Medical experts said today, their home-In Cincinnati, Ohio. of Mrs. Unkle's bn and sister. Mr. an Walter Young, of the, servation. Mr Trim Retu Mr. Chester TI and Mrs. Preston . dro Miguel, left Wednesday by-nla are expected to .rrive Mun- '- for a visit to the Might Give Clues On Growing Old times during the out'of my way to do a smallv innmaMM, a mv life " .*" but helpful kindness to other^^^ffl^^^n^ffMr. "hS long has It been *Jmfjgqg* has t*en about I have begun Jme new project iIB" '", lr with enthusiasm and genuine i have made my living by ToMraVneki' their traditional interest something creative just to please myself? How many new friends huve I made In the past year? Do I ever stop to 'com.. y blessings? In the Boef War, more than 50 sc0^L_ant Commander H J tios^ltl ta st- ms?ead of arinln? and mol Churchill was guest of honor i the business meeting for the ir A find oufK faults' at an InformaTreeeption h> the election of of fleers, and present- Do I grt rea Sure from a parliamentary press, gallery.!ed,the trophle., Hewmp^ment-, man> - no r_ ___u^, M- John Stopa Retiring ner reported that the Christma* ;Bowlliv Banjuet at Coeo>ow Mr JonR stopfc m^ j^in seaI Mie was more successful The Coco Solo MixedIBmjUnaifrom emp-ioyment with tha Tef- lhan last vear Mrs. Lesleigh League het their ^tra^uonat mlnaU Division artd safl for New Davis, philanthropy chairman} S. Panama on reported on the Christmas char-. ,. Stopa was called itles. Churchill started his writing.. of. S^uSX 5?w!-to the States because of the U1-. Mrs. George Roth. Mrs. An- count my careers as a war correspondent trophies to the winners and mgn nearof ner father, who is in the drew Metager, and Mrs. Crono Louis, Missouri. thoughts contained In them." C,Q upon the conclusion of a ||j* 8n ^'s 8toPI SianTto"retum la'fi&b. Ecua-'daviy plane for a visit, to the r- n;"'%&'" oTA" Rahartvhea^tfuT-dav?" *" ~ ,where he waanajle anhonprary etr1 t captain of the winning dorTafter a visit^f^Bre> weelu;i.tn#ll?Wn their stay theyf"_5.of *?*?!;:??-^ ? t .fm^f.-aill in'ioarn- member. team. Lieut mant (jg) W. D. ] with his parerfts. I will be guests at Hotel El Pana- ma, Mr. and Mrs. Bryant Have _ House Guest Visitors Leave For Colombio Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bryant, Miss Claire Qulnn and her of Pedro Miguel have as their i nephew. Alan Eder. left Satur- SCHOLL'S SERVICES Panam No. 58 Justo Arosemena Ave. Foot Treatments, Corns, Callouses, Ingrown Toe Nails, Arch Supports. REDDCING Treatments. Massages, Slenderising Machines. Turkish Baths Male and female operators. For information call: 3-2217 Panama 812 a.m.; 2 p.m. ______ Steger who died after a nine-", Am I still interested in learn year coma, "might give science In new things? clues on how to slow down the How often do I Gallery president Paul A. Pa-j Trophies were given to Lieut-/ clues on how to slow down the How often no 1 mv'w l"e",radls gave him a gold honorary Ron' ^jrs. R. L. Smith aging process and prolong life." to share the hospitality of my memberahip card In a leather M h j Thornton. Ensign C. Vt\AnM nnln nm "Dot i*\f \T luirw*'' ...,. tii Boyer, Lieut1 H E Walther. then was-Lleut (^ F A Kra^ at which; 'Iht women's trophies were Known only as 'Patient X home? wallet, during his long illness, Steger Do I keep up with friends se- llved for nine years on predi- parated from me by distance I The official party aested food, served through a Do friends ever turn to me served champagne, at wiucu -*: >__ r "smith wit tube. With'that and vitamin for help when they are In Churchill quipped: 5&&SS; VV?SH ?Kh:JZrMlgl*?iC^^ tell you how to put' "Welk genUemen. you are now!fe?for high set. and Mrs H J.. wUVmaVdelu^cbnU Hi moreCam^ won the trophy for og come that astounded doc- Wing. \fS&-t my n'V'nR K'aM W^S tors was ended by death Friday. But by answering those cmej. water. "He never showed signs of tlons honestly, you may be able: ^^ in charge to figure out how you are missing- opportunities to make life seem rich and full of mean- ing. ____f I The winners of the men's tro- If you belimg to the Armed Forces or if you have a steady job come td oar Store atid you ca choose your own terms to buy oa credit. We have the best Mahogany Furniture. If you don't know our Club System visit us and you will be delighted. " 8 Central Ave. Tel. 2-2404 Buy your Native Furniture Together with A GUARANTEE BY SET OR PIECES This mahogany and plastic "Duran" beautiful li\ ing-room set with a year's guarantee. Cash Credit Club aging," the surgeon of the case said. "Once in a while he seemed I to get Indigestion and would be restless. He also indicated that he felt pain when he got penicillin shots." Steger was Injured Feb. 5. 1943. when struck on the head by a giant pulley while direct- tog construction work at a de- fense plant. Then came the long years of darkness. Doctors said he never regain- ed consciousness after a blood clot formed on his brain, bring- ing paralysis. Three shifts of nurses gave him round-the- clock treatment during the last nine years of his life. believed he remembered the years before World War II. They said he apparently never Vnew his two sons served over- seas, that grandchildren were born, and that the defense plant he was working on was com- pleted. "He was really a war casualty even though he died of injuries received on the home front In- stead of the battlefront." one of his nurses said. "Sometimes I thought that he knew what all around him but went on If he thought at all, doctors just wasn't able to let us know. * tWVIPKS ABOUT la TO I THE AVEKaSf 0*ty TOOP BEOUI^MENTS. TBNS! 10 ingl-rving pack- ages giro the enure family its favorito choice of eoroal. Dalicieu Oropo-Nwta la only one of .the 7 different varieties of nourishing cercle in PO8T- 7 vrieiei- 10 I 7>ost-TNS ~URNI 3=NTRAL.AVE.at21*'E.ST PHONES: 2-1830 . 2-1833 APE flf OFFICIAL LIST OF THE NATIONAl LOTTERY OF-BENEFICENCE Complete Prize-Wianing Numbers in the Ordinary Drawiog No. 1714. Sunday, January 13. I52 The whole ticket has 44 pieces divided in two series "A" "B" of 22 pieces each. First Prize Second Prize "hird Prize 9612 5244 742 7 $ 44,000.00 $ 13,200.00 $ 6,600.00 - NCS MI2 lit Ml 2 312 Ml 2 Mil Ml 2 712 MIS Ml 2 frlle- I 1.12. M ISt.M ISt.M 1K.M I MM 1M.M 2.2M.M I12.M lit m 1J2M Not 1(12 I12 212 131* 1412 1512 1012 1712 ISI2 1*12 PrU I ISM 112.M 132 M I32.M 132.M I32.M 2.2M.M I32.M 131.M I32.M Nee M12 2112 2212 2112 M12 2512 Ml* 2712 2SI2 *I2 Mis. S 132M 132.00 132 00 IS2.M II2M ISt.M 2.M0.M ISt.M IS2.M I32.M Xe M12 3112 tilt 3312 Mil 3SI2 MIS 3712 MM Mil rtiM 1 13200 132.M 112 00 llt.M 132 M 13200 12 2.2MM MI2 13200 4712 IM.M M12 132 00 M12 Neo MI2 4112 4112 4312 4412 NO MM 132.* 132.0 132.0 1320 1321 132.0 2.20000 M12 132 00 17 It 132 M MI2 13204 Hit Mil Silt 1212 Ml* Mlt SS12 rrtre- I St i 132.00 Mil 132 00 4112 IM.M Mil IM.M [ Hit IM.M Mlt IM.M I Mil 2.2M.M Mil I31.M 0712 I32.M Mil 132 M Mil IM.M- 7W2 m U2.ee 7111 132 00 I 7111 IM.M I Till iJt.ee i 741* IM.M 7SU 2.2M.M 7*12 2.20000 IM.M 7712 IM.M I12.M 7111 132 00 IM.M 7SM 112 M I 132 M IM.M 132 04 132 00 132 00 132M Nee. Mil lit M12 MI2 Mlt MI2 MI2 712 MI2 MI2 Nee I 132 M 132 M in.M IM.M IMM IM.M 2.2M.M M12 44.Mt.tt U2.ee Mil 13.M IM.M I Mil 1K.M- 132.ee i MU 1M.M MU IR 212 Mlt MU M12 1 112.M 1M.M 132 00 IMM 132.00 132.M Approximation* Derived Prom First r*riie IH M*7 440 M MM 440.00 Mil 4M.M M13 440.M Ml 4 4M.M MIS 440 00 Ml 4M.M i M17 440 M Ml 44000 Ml* 44400 Mil Approximation Derived From Second Wie 2M.M 1144 lio.oo 52.1; llt.M ( M3I 220 00 2*4 114 04 I MM 110 00, 5140 3*44 IM.M 4144 IM.M 4244 Mt.M I 7M4 > IM.M llt.M H44 lieoe M41 IMM H43 1U.M.MM H*M 240 ,H M47 IKMliMt IMM SMI 110.00 5*42 llt.M 245 220 00 0244 uo.ee U*.M t 2M.M 110M 111 Apffoiimatioo? Derived From Third rTiie 427 IMM I 1417 IM.M M17 NM 741 MM 74M MM 7MI MM MM 7422 74M 1M.N M17 IMM MM 1M.M M27 IM.M MM IMM MM 74M MM 74M 7MI 14M MM T4M MM 14M M.M 7435 MM ^*M Prue-wlnnln, number, tf ^torta f-ott.ro drawing were sold: first, aecond and third prl.es In Panam. The -i-e h.ndred whole UeaoU ending in 2 sod net lael.atd in the abov Utt * rorty-rM.r Dollars ($44.) mu The whole Ucket has 44 pieces which comprise the two series "A" and "B.- Sigaeol %y: DR. LCOPOLDO MAZZLA. Governor of the r-roviaet. HUMBERTO PAREDES C. RepresenUUve of the Ministry of Treasury JOSE OUnXERMO BATALLA *ABLO A P1NBL M. Pablo Delgado A-Ced No. 47-11156. JOSE GUILLERMO BArai WITNESSES: gar m&li-Ced. No. S-IMTO. Notary Public. Panam Secretary . ' f AGP SIX TOT PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 195t You Sell em... When You Tell em thru PA Classifieds I - Leave your Ad with one of our Agents or our Offices LEWIS SERVICE .No. 4 Trrot Ave KlOSKu Dr. LESSEPS r>ra>> ale Ia Pinimi MORRISON'S No. 4 r.arlh al Jell A** Pfcea -SMI BOTICA i .KI.'IUN IMS* McUn4n'A* Pkoar ZSS-Celea SALON HE BELLEZA AMERICANO Ne. Si Wen IXIk Bluet THE PANAMA AMERICAN n. "H" smcthiu So 15.17 Central ACal* 12 words Minimum for Jc. each additional word. 65th Antiaircraft Artillery Marks 5th Year On Isthmus FOR SALE Household FOR SALE Automobile. FOR SALE: Leaving for Stales Household effects including twc refrigerators, new Victor Console Radio, fans, clocks, ell 25 cycles 4 to 6 p. m.. da^lv. cottage 03 M Coble Heights, opposite Jardn Ml- raflores.___________ FOR SALE: Small upright piano upholstered wing choir, pedal sew- ing machine, playpen, crib, car- riage, bobv stroller, enamel wash basin, large electric broiler, waf- fle iron, roasting pan, lorge scoot- er, small scooter, tricycle. Apply Riviera Apt. Melender and 3rt? St. Colon Apartment 8. ____ Wosh- Service Pirionnel and Civilion Government Employe FINANCE your new or used car through GOVIUNMINT EMPLOYES FINANCl CO. Fort Worth, lexa. Serving Government Employes and Service Personnel in the Canal Zone for 14 years. With our fmqncing ,your insurance automatically djusted to U. S. covtroe*. ARRANGEMENTS CAN IE MADE THROUGH LOCAL AUTOMORILE DEALER MISCELLANEOUS RESORTS 0* you ft*a, eMaklnf put It, Write Alceaaliei Ajm*IM 2011 AmM. C Z. COMMERCIAL & FOR SALE Miscelluneum FOR SALE1950 Packard, refriger- tor. tooster, rugs, tobies, tricycle miscellaneous. 1446-D, Owen Balboa 2-37J5. FOR SALE Real Estate FOR SALE:Electric stove. ing machine, No. 7, Apt. I, Pere- jil Maria Building FOR SALE:Leaving Soon. Dining- room set. Chiffonier. RCA rodio. Au- tomatic roaster. Odds ond ends . Tables. Kenmore electric mixer. Pcnch bowl ond gloises. Boy'- overc:ct. 5 vears old Boy's sport jacket. 14 years old. House 1450 Balboa._____________ FOR SALE:60 cycle Silvertone. 3 speed, record ploser. S30.C0. Jorge rug, S6.00 House 107-B Pedro Miguel, phone 4-506. FOR SALE:Buying or selling on automobile? See Agencias Cosmos Automobile Row No. 29. Tel. 2- i 4T2I. Panama FOR SALE:1940 Buick 2-door se- dan, good running condition. 48- A. 4th St., Coco Slito. FOR SALE: Cadillac Series 61 black 1950 (Sept.) 4-docr sedon S3.225.CO. Phone 88-786. FOR SALE:1948 Chrysler "New Yorker" Sedan, 5 rfew tires, per- fect mechanical condition. Bargain Inquire "Cio. General de Seguro? S. A," Plora Herrera. Panama. FOR RENT:During three summer months to o responsible party w4th good reference, very modern furnished house, 2 bedrooms, liv- Ingroom. diningroom. porch, maid's room ond 2 bathroom, Peru Ave 58 upstoirs. . Helr7Wa^ed FOB SALE:1951 Dodge "Corone* Diplomatic" two tone, WSW tires 3.500 miles. Inquire "Inversione; Generales S. A." No.. 38, Jose Francisco de la Ossa Avenue, Pan- oma. FOR ALE: 1949 Packord. Four- Door Sedon. Duty paid. Excellent condition. New tires. Phone Bal- boa 3103. WANTED:Good experienced, ccok with., recommendation. Must sleer Tn. Good salary. Tel. 3-0405. Pan- ami. - FOR SALE:Ford 41 new motor point, tires. Best offer. One ook dinette, 4 chairs, table, buffet G mirror. 78-D. Coco Slito. FOR SALE:Chalet No. 12 in 16th Street, Pueblo Nuevo, built on 880 square meters lot. Two bed- rooms. Price $8,850.00 (Eight Thousand Eight Hundred ond Fif- ty Dollars). Easy payment plon Con be inspected from 2 p. m to 6 p. m. ot the premises. Ad- ditional information at F Street No. 7 any other time. FOR SALE-Laundry (Launderette) See at Galvez Building, 32nd St. 'ocol 14 from 4-6 p. m. Williams Sonto Clora Beach Cottages. Two bedrooms. Frlgidoires, Rock- gas ranges. Balboa 2-3050. Gromlich's Santo Claro beorh- cottege Electric lea ocxes. 90s stoves, moderate rota. Phone 6- 441 or 4-567. Phillip!. Occonside cottages. Santa Claro Bo 435 Balboa. Phone Ponomo 3-187?. Cristobal i 1673 HOTEL PANAMERICANO In cool El Voile. Reservation, telephone 2- 1112, Panama. FOR RENT Houses FOR RENT: 3 bedroom chalet mold's room, gorage. No. 76 Jut- to Arosemena Avenue, between 38th and 39th Streets. Phone Pan- ama 3-3305. FOR RENT Apart men ti LESSONS Learn to dance now for Cornlvol time. Balboa YMCA, Hornett ond Dunn. * WANTED JM MisceUaneotip_____ wfljlTED:Terrace furniture, sec- ^Id hand, in good condition. Tel J.0405 Panama. ' Position Offered Spanish-English speaking young gir1 with knowledge of bookkeeping ond stenography to ossist in of- lio*. Telephone 1386. Coln. Atlantic Society... 'Continued From Parr FIVK- ej were welcomed as new members. The president ave a report on the recent visit of Mrs. Hiram C. Houghton. president of the Federated Women's Clubs. Dr. Conrad Peterson, of St. Peter. Minnesota, then (rave a talk on "Panama, Crossroads of the World." Dr. Peterson is a I retired history instructor. Mrs. Peterson was Introduced to the Club. She is the president of the Woman's Club In her home town. FOR SALE:Packard 1941 Sedan new tires. good transportation, first $100 tokes it. Phone 2-2786 Lux Novelties No. 11. J. Street FOR SALE:Ford~Vcto7io~T95~two tone green radio, ovedrive, un- dercoat. See at 2038 Cunmdu 3rd street. Call Curundu 7194. 1 FOR SALE: 936 Ford. two-door. Powerful motor. Recently painted, I body in excellent condition. Four nevv tires and b good spore. Pon- omo's license tag paid for full year. PRICE: $150. Moke your own offer. Contact Richard E E. Shi. PINTURA GENERAL. S. A. Tel. 2-1195 or efter five o'clock, call 2-3933. Shell Collectors Dredge Mollusks On Ocean Floor Three musical selections were played by Miss Maricha Taga- ropulos on the piano. Mrs. Gilbert Morlanrt was chairman of the tea hour which followed the meeting. Alternat- lne at the refreshment table, which held an arrangements of red carnations, were: Mrs. C. O. Kelly, Mrs. Raumond Klrwin, Mrs. Colin Lawson. and Mrs. Gordon Kariger. Auxiliary Meeting in Margarita T*e Auxiliary o' the Margarita Union Church will meet tomor- row at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Cari R. New-hard, quarters 8124-A, Fourth St. Change of Address JtH. and Mrs. Raymond Ralph. 4*jJ-A. one of the newlv comnlet- eiresidences on Jadwin Road. toftnee at Gatun The Gatun Civic Council is sponsoring a dance at the club- house) on the evening of Jan. 9\. The orchestra from the "Stella PSlarls" will iumih miiRic for the evening, and will start play- h* at 8:00 p.m Admission will be a dollar per pfrson. TOO MUCH TO TAKE 'CLINTON. Mass. town's selectmen and merchants asked the Worcester Street Rail- wav Co. to discontinue sending a certain bus to Clinton The bus is painted with huge lettering that advises, "Shop In Worcester." WASHINGTON, D. C. Jan. 14 Since prehistoric times adults and children have collected sea shells, picking .ip pretty and un. usual specimens found along the shores. Scientists have used shells to explain marin. life, the nature ,of coasts and waters and the geologic past. Fossil shell re- mains hjve gul-led geologists al- most since (be study of geology I began. ^' The collection of shells for their own sake, on a scientific basis, however, has steadily gain- ed in popularity in the last few years, the National Geographic Society ran The science is call- ed conconlogy, and some collect- ors have spent thousands of dol- lars in p'irsu't of shells I Heavv expenditures followed i the discovery that the best shells are not fcund along shores as of- ten as nil the ocean bottom or on reefs. Almost all shfll collectors start by picking up sneclmens on the beach. Then *hey wade out in shallow water, using water glass. ,es to locate their quarry. From this stage the really earnest concho'oglsts move to . boats. They find that the shells nave greater beauty and bril- liance if taken when the mol- lusks are still living Inside. Sunday PA Included In New Union Church Cornerstone Cache A copy of yesterday's edition of The Panama American was included among the items to be preserved for posterity in the cornerstone of the new Marga- rita Union Church, which was laid yesterday during an impres- sive ceremony by Dr. Thomas s. Roy. grand master of Masons in Massachusetts. Coins and postage stamps now in circulation, a Bible, a U. 8. flag and photographs of pastor of the church and others also were sealed into the cornerstone. Following a procession from the Margarita Gymnasium to the site of the new church Anislee J. Stull gave the "trumpet call to worship" end Rev. Louis M.Fiske delivered the invocation. ALHAMBRA APARTMENTS Modern furnished unfurnished oport ment. Maid service optionol Con- ?oct office 8061. 10th Street. New Cristobal, telephone 1386 Colon. PROFESSIONAL We have everything to keep your Lawn and Garden beautiful during; the dry season. Tools Hose Fencing Sprayers Wheelbarrows Insecticides Fertilizers Weedkillers Sprinklers Fungicides GEO. F. NOVEY, INC 279 Central Ave. Tel. 3-0148 FOR RENT Room* ROOMS AVAILAM.E Light, ceo' entirety renovated anal Well fur- niihee". Rate raotonablo. locho ten only. Inquire ot The Amo ricen Club facing Da Lanep- Perk. FOR RENT:Furnished room, excel- lent residence. 4th of July Ave. No. 49. , A message to the community bv J. Stuart McNalr. president of the Canal Zone Union Church, selections by the choir and a prayer by Rev. Raymond A. Gray preceded the leveling of the foundation stone by Dr. Roy. who arrived in the Canal Zone last week for the ceremonv and several visits to Masonic lodges here. P/- Hoy delivered an address after leveling the stone and the ceremony ended with the Lord's Prayer sung by the Aboud Saad Temple Chanter, the Doxology by the assemblage and a bene- diction by Rev. Henry L. Bell pastor of the Margarita church. The visiting Masonic dignitary is accompanied by his wife and Dr. Herbert H. Jaynes. grand marshal of the Masonic Grand Lodge of Massachusetts, during his visit on the Isthmus. FOR GLASS INSURANCE Yardley Manager Visiting Panama YARDLEY- Run0 Denn-s E. Mathews. display manager for Ynrdlev cosmetics, Is visiting Panam during a tour of central and South America. Here he is 'ilscussing display problems with Flix Maduro, lo- cal distributor for the Yardley line. Having alreadv visited Argen- tina. Urupuay. Brazil Trinidad and Venezuela Mathews will leave tomorrow for Mexico en route to Cuba, the united States and Canad. US Home Defense Aircraft Spoilers Have Field Day SELFRIDGE FIELD. Mich. Jan 14 (UP). some 1.000 planes roared over seven Midwestern states Saturday as 25.000 vo- lunteer ground observers took part m one of the biggest, day- long atr defense exercises staged since World War n. From sunrise to sunset, air- craft of all types operated by the Civil Air Patrol. Tactical com- mand. Air National Guard units and the Naval Air Reserve criss- crossed the Midwest in a pro- gram designed to sharpen the eyes and ears of the members of the ground observer corps. The planes simulated enemy bombers In a raid over Michigan Ohio. Indiana. Kentucky, Ill- inois, Wisconsin and a part of West Virginia. Air Force Privates Die Escapinp Fire By Knotted Sheets CINC'/iNATI. O., Jan. 14 Two panicky Air Force privates feu to their deaths from >n im- provised, rope, made of bed sheets and blankets early today in a hotel fire which routed 350 guests from their beds. Hotel officials said the sol- dlers coald have escaped down ! a stairway. Two firmen and seven guests Of the downtown Sin ton Hotel were injured, according to police and firemen at the scene. The fire broke out at about 12:24 ajn. in a linen storage "x>m o ntre memanine between the second and third floors, firemen said. The flames were confined to1 the m'zanine and third floor, but billows of choking smoke swirled up a linen chute and filled the hotel. Authorities idrntifid the Cad fn Privates Harry S. Shaeffer. Harrlsburg. Pa., and Raymond G. Hatrack, Mt. Carmel. Pa. They wee sharing a room on the top floor of th nlne-storv. 528-room resident'il hotel when the fire broke out. Ralph lewis. n A<-t<-t*fc| rnonae-er of the hotel, said the soldiers could hpve reached safety If they had not pnoar- entlv walked th- "-o"t way down a smoke-filled hall. Lewis said evldentl thrv did not see o slon lust tt>i-e rt^nrg from tbfr room, nolntin to the i Inside fire stalrwav. Blinded "Ud Cbokln 'rorri the .moke1. thev ret^'m-H to hetr mim ar,i{ hestttv HH .i-.-t. -nd blankets together, Lewis said. The oldiers lowered their makeshift rope out the window nprf r*VT*gn" r v'hether the roo broke or whe- ther It was no* lone enough, but the men fe" to a scond- *'"or conrtyp'd roof and were killed instantly. LUX VENETIAN BLINDS Immediate Deliwy. Tel. 3-1713 22 E. 29th St. PANAMA BROKERS. INC Hole, r Panama Selling: Coca Cola and Central Theatre. Wants to buy: Brewery and National Distiller. Tel. 3-4719 3-1660 MODERN FURNITURE Ctrsroiw- buili SUpcovei Reupholstery VISIT oi'a SHOW-ROOM' Alberta Hera Kr .^1!!!""* < Deliver Tel t-4M i m:m am < I* Bm Pr ec ion, MEMORIES Freservea Forever! P*by!'nrtt *oe preserved forever in v>i.d metal bro.ize make a inatch- leao am Th.- amart miniature oval photo ('me and baby *noe combi- nation rtyle 628 SI0 9S. Larger base with ,wo oboes, trie 629 $14 93 Other tyle* from 13.75 WRITF TOP DETAILSl DUNMORE AGENCY Estafeta Imt-'toto Nacional Panam ir r2 ?AmT.IAGO M' *T*S> "nt Cook for Battery "C", 764th Antiaircraft Artillery Gun Battalion, needed a pit to roast a pig for Three Kln&s.' Day. Not a man to waste time, h.e s^?et'?k Climbed aboard* bulldozer and soon had his ' pit. The battery men report that Operation Pork was a complete success. (U.S. Army Photo) mer anttaircraftelements of the;in Port Clayton. Defensive post Coast Artillery Command, Pana- tlons of. these twin battalions ma Canal Department. dot the Canal Zone with highly On January 15 .1947, that group mobile and heavily armored antl- was designated the 65th Anti-aircraft gun emplacements ror AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE SEE V YD MOTHERS. IWC De l-rssepe Park TtL: t-f0 -Z0OS Ladle' dream, Mai' Bait. Slack A Seertnvoar Dry Cleaned to leak and foal like Raw. TROPICAL CLEANERS riant S3S Vie Eaeaaa Tel. 3-M7I Branch MA St Eaat Central Ave. Tel. 1-134* JUST WANTED STAMPS QOSBEN. Ind. vear-old letter was returned to the countv recorder's office with note explaining that It had been taken by a person looking for old stamps. ITS UNLUCKY STREET FALL RIVER. Mass. fUP)Pa- trolman James E. Taylor parked his automobile on the south side of Pleasant St. and found his left front fender crumpled when he returned. Two days later he narked on north side of the same street When he returned he round the front of his auto push- ed m. These days he's porking his car in the repair shop. Despite a heavy cloud layer that partially hid some of the planes, the network or ground observers tracked the flights of each of the make-believe bom- bers. Information telephoned to eight filter centers was quickly relayed to ground control inter-, ceptor stations which called for fighter-interceptor planes from the eastern air defense force. The air defense command avoid one problem that cropped up in earlier exercises when out- oi-the- observers became dis- couraged when no planes were sighted and left their posts. In Saturday's program, planes were assigned plotted courses so all ground observers could sight aircraft. A MONSTER 90 MM. GUN, part of the 65th AAA Group antiaircraft defense net-work cover- ing the Panama Canal, searches Canal Zone skies for enemy planes. This 16 ton antiair- craft weapon Is part of the armament of Bat tery "C." 764th AAA* Gun Battalion (U.S. Army Photo) The 65th Antiaircraft Artillery Group, Fort Clayton, observes the fifth anniversary of its present activation tomorrow. Command- ed by Colonel Sanford J. Good- man, the group has as its pri- mary mission the antiaircraft defense of the Panama Canal. Though only five years old in Its present activation, the 65th \AA Group has a history which lates back to the Revolutionary .Vr. The original unit, the proud history of which Is now part and parcel of the Group lineage, was known as "Gray's Battery." This battery of militia served so well during the Revolutionary War; that in 1789 when the Regular Army was established, Gray's Battery was Installed as the first Artillery Battery of the United States Regular Army. In 1906 when the Corps of Ar- tillery was reorganized. Gray's Battery finally became known as Battery "A," 1st Coast Artillery. With completion of the Pa- nama Canal in 1915, the newly constructed defenses were manned bv elements of the 1st and 4th Coast Artillery Regi- ments, both of whleh date their history back to the War of Independence. World War I found this battery and the many other associated batteries sidetracked In Panama no action reported. In 1923, with the approval of Congress, the 65th Coast Artil- lery Regiment (Antiaircraft) was activated in the Canal Zone with,, divided stations at Fort Amador and Fort Sherman. At this time the weapons em- ployed consisted primarily of water-cooled caliber .30 machine guns and pedestal mounted 3" AA guns equipped with highly antiquated fire control, in con- trast to the mobile automatic weapons and electronically con- trolled guns which today utilize the ultimate in the fire control precision; with far reaching beams of search Radar con- tinuously probing the darkness and the overcast seeking targets Invisible to the naked eye. Following the depression of 1929 and the resultant econ- ony wave, the 65th AA Regi- ment was deactivated. In 1939 it was again reactivated this time at Fort infield Scott, California. The Fighting Oce- lot, its regimental Insigne, re- sumed its proper place on the collars and shoulder tabs of officers and men. As a Task Force organization, the 6th AAA Group moved In- tact to Alaska In 1943. later sup- porting the landing operations at Attu. One Battalion received a Presidential Citation for In- fantry type operation* In the "Rattle of Massacre Bav." The battle streamer for the Aleutian camoalgn flies from the standard head of the 65th Group colors today. From the dreary garrison duty of the Aleutians, the 65th wel- comed its deactivation and or- ders home in mid 1945. For a vear and a half the ex-Regiment and Group remained inactive, but like a cat with nive lives It bounced back again. _ aircraft Airtlllery Group with headquarters at Fort Clayton. The major defensive strength of the Group is provided by two antiaircraft battalions which are stationed at either end of the waterway. The 764th AAA Gun Battalion, commanded by Lieut. Col. Wil- liam J. Bennett, has headquart- ers in Fort Davis. The 903d AAA Automatic Weapons Battalion, headed by Lieut. Col.- James D. Shearouse. has Its headquarters The 38th Radio Controlled Air- plane Target Detachment com- manded by 1st Lieut. Melvki Hoist, has headquarters In Fort Amador. The detachment pro- vides robot target planes for the training of Group gunners. Captain John J. Niehoff heads the 506th AAA Operations De- tachment, the mission of which is to.collect, evaluate and dis- seminate Intelligence concerning the antlalrcrpft defense of the Panama Canal. USAF Latin American School Begins New 5-Month Courses In December 1946 an anti- aircraft group, unnumbered, was designated to take over all of the residual functions of the for- ! The USAF School for Latin America today started five- month courses on 12 different aircraft maintenance subjects for 178 students from 12 Central and 8outh American air forces. The students comprise the largest group "-ever taught here, according to Lt. Col. William Lane, Jr., the school command- ant. They began arriving here a week ago in USA"" mission alr- Eilanes, whose pilots logged more han 10,000 miles to do the job. All personnel involved In mis- sion work are members of the Caribbean Air Command, head-, ed by Brig. Gen. Emll C. Kiel at Albrook AFB. The last class, which number- ed 160 students from 14 coun-J tries, received their diplomas] from General Kiel last Dec. 7. Most of the graduates returned to their respective countries to teach subjects they learned here. Courses offered at present In- clude engine maintenance, radio communications and repair, pa- rachute rigging, sheet metal work, electricity, weather and In- strument flying. Several other i allied fields are included In the 20-week courses. Established about seven years ago, the school is now considered j a vital institution to which chiefs of Latin American air forces send their best men for expert training. It now has a Spanish- speaking complement of four of- ficers and 70 enlisted men- many of them veterans of World War II with considerable experi- ence in maintenance work. Besides the corps of Instructors each an expert in his field the school has a translation branch, where the textbooks and other material necessary to the operation of the school are translated from USAF manuals. A printing plant at the base pub- lishes the books. * In the class which got under way today are 19 students from Bolivia, 25 from, Colombia, 4 from the Dominican Republic and 14 from Ecuador. El Salvador sent 11, Guatemala 8, Honduras 7, and Mexico the largest number, 26. Nicaragua his 11 students, Para- guay JO, Per 18 and Venezuela 25. In addition, Per has a war- rant offloer here as an observer of the training program. HONORING THE 4-H CLUBSThis green, three-cent stamp, honoring the 4-H Club movement, will go on sale at Springfield, O., on Jan. 15. Springfield claims to be the birthplace of the youth farm movement The design features a group of farm buildings, at left, and teen-age boy and girl facing the dub symbol of a four-leaf clover. It bears the tour H's. which aland lor Bead, Heart, Hands and Health. ITALY SHOWS HER JETS-Italy's new Fiat Q-gO Jet fighter take off on its ** "g""^ Foggia military airport. Equipped with a British DeHavlliand turbo-jet engine, toe G-M tonDe* oWetW feat la eight minute, gained a horizontal speed of 550 miles per hour. The Jet is ahout s -_________ feet long, has wing span ot 33 feet.-------- MONDAY. JANUARY 14. 1963 TI fAMAMA AHHUCAN AN IKPPsTNDINT DAILY NEWSFATI* ^ i. *i FAE jh NCAA Restricts Out-Of-Season Football, Basketball Drills Gibraltar, Brewers Cop Pacific Twilight Openers rACIFIC TWILIGHT LEAGUE STANDINGS TEAM Won Lout rot. Balboa Brewers ..1 1.0N Gibraltar Life In. 1 LOW Balboa Hifh Seh. 1 JM Pan'm Merchant 1 .IN YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Gibraltar Life 7, Balboa Hlf h 4. Balboa Brewer* II, Pata. Mer. TONIGHT'S GAME (Balboa Stadium, 7:M>> Balboa Brewer ts. Balboa High. In spite of the lack of advance notice In the local sport pages, a great number of fans turned out yesterday for the Pacific Twi- light League opening double- header. Thta was the first in a long time that many-tan have cone out to cheer the local lads. Q.-C. Lockrldge, director of physical education and recrea- tion, tossed out the first ball to officially open the season. The first game of the. opening day doubleheader was won by the Gibraltar team 7 to 4 over Bal- boa High School. In the night- cap, the Brewers took a 10 to 6 decision over the veteran Pana- m Merchants. The first game was fast. It on- ly took one hour and forty-two minute to completa. "> All four teams saw action in yesterday's games, espeoiall ythe two losing teams seemed to need a few more licks In before -they reach their, beat playing condition. The box ores: FIRST GAME ___ Gibraltar, AB 1 Presho,2b...... Dedeaux, as .... 3 Jones, of...... 3 bNapoleon. .. Maldonado, u cOstrea..... Arias, Sb .. Rowley, If. Raybourne, p. 0 0 0 0 2 1 Yankees, Bombers Play Today At Colon Park; Brownies Win Totals.........30 4 21 13 Seoro By Innings Gibraltar 302 000 T 7 I Balboa High > 000 301 0-4 3 aSlngled for Halsall In 7th; briled out for Henderson in 7th; eSafe on a fielder's choice for Maldonado in 7th PANAMA PRO LEAGUE TEAM We Lest Pot. Yankee........" WT Bombers.. ..,.. .. > Blueblrdi....... * Brownies....... M Jl TODAY'S GAME Coln Stadium (4 p.m.)Bomb- ers (O.orio4-1) VI. V eano 3-1) Brewers- Scott, 3b .. Carita, lb. .. Cox, as...... Gibson, cf. .. Neckar.c .. .. McGlade, 3b .. Quintero. 2b .. MeOee, If .. erring, rf .. Larrlnaga, p.. Totals.. . AB R H PO A 4 13 14 faakees (Fri- LABT NIGHTS RESULTS Balboa Stalnm Brownies 4, Bluebirds 3. La Boca High Scores Twin Victory Over Silver City 4 4 4 S 2 2 4 3 4 1 1 2 3 .. 34 10 11 21 II Hllalnger, 3b .. Sullivan, lb .. Kelleher, If .. DeLaMater.rf. Conover, c.. ,. Hlna, p..... o 1 i 4 0 0 1 1 0 Pm. MerchantsAB DeLaPefta, cf .? 3 Williams, as .... 1 aHeam........1 Rlchter. lb .. .. 2 Ridge, rf-lf .... 3 Hele. If-as..... 4 Tarfltager, lb-rf. 4 Phillips, 2b..... 3 Francis, Sb .. Thompson, B.,c. 3 Thompson, J., c.. 3 Medlnger, p .. .. 3 R HPO A 1110 La Boca Hi scored a twin vic- tory Friday night over Silver City Hi in the lid-lfitar of Interschol- astic Boys' Baseball and Girls Softball. . . The La Boca girls, trailing by h, miAn wu run In the final frame. This afternoon at U CWu siutcned a 7.8 Tiotory from the Stadium the league lead^Yan-,Wv ^ ro, Icees and second 1&JgS*\ Proverbs blasted out a triple and will resume their teud/rne*an- witA homa d^ win resume th*r tu^ fc' waltsed home on-Dolores John- kees will send Marlon Frtcano w the mound in an e fort to regain th jMepn tn< wlnnlns. the margin,lost last Saurday when Tneolic Smith "of the Bombers handed them a i-u whitewashing. > Joseph, the winning Sltcher, yielded five hits. The los- night, at Mount Hope. thrill-packed baseball tilt Ferdinand Alder, the winning pitcher, was relieved hi the fifth Inning by Coln Colona. H.j Brown was tagged with the.de- feat. I Oonrad Griffith, promislntr catcher for the La Bocans, paced the hitters with a homer and two; singles in four trips. Luther Par- ria, La Boca first baseman blast- j ed out a four-master. The teams meet again Friday fog hufler was C. McLeod who gave up nine safeties. up nil i box hltewasnmg. ~ The box score follows: The Bombers will usetheir.re- c,t Eg. AB R liable young r*"hmder Alber Webster to osorio, a they try to p icaup | Thom, ab........ more ground on the league lead-, Mftnnlng ,b# ers. 2 2 3 3 U. warner, w......-3 P. Allen, lb........ 3 E. Julian, rf....... D. Ersklne, If.. .. .. C. McLeod, p...... Total*........2 7 7 31 8 Balboa High ABB HPO Halman, lb .. .' 3 0 0 3 Flyim, c....... 4 o,J* Halsall, lb...... 3 0,1 10 aJones.. May.cf..,,. .. Henderson, rf. 1 1 Fastlich Teen-Age Leaguers Wlnd-Up Training Program Thursday afternoon, at 4:15, at Diablo Field, the Coneioa and the Palomas will wind up their traln- ln hi preparation for the open- ing of the Fastlich Teen-Ace League at the Balboa Stadium this coming Saturday aftemopn. After two and a half months of training, rato permitting, the managers of the five teams of the Fastlich League feel that they have their teams to fine shape and are ready to prove It on the playing flew. managers want them to know- that out of 104 teen-agers that registered for the Fastlich Loop, five teams of equal strength were selected and on Dec. 20, the five men selected to manage the Totals........31 3 21 IS Score By Innings Brewers 310 240 010 11 3 Pma. Merch. 010 000 5 6 8 7 Cristbal, Balboa Cagers In Retain Bailie Tomorrow Tuesday night's basketball ame between the two Canal one High School teams prom- ises to be one pf the most hotly contested duel* of the current Interscholastlc League season. The Bulldogs froui Balboa have a slight lead at this stage of the season, but a win for the Tigers tomorrow night would make ev- erything even. With the actual leadership In the league at stake, the round ball fans of the Isthmus can be assured of a real treat to basket- ball thrills during the playing of the game. The two teams have played twice this season, Cristo- U mght the p*jh S Era:::::: Ssassg*.....-- second toryagau the The Brownies pecKeaou S The box score follows: Silver City Hi-Boys AB IR. Thomas. If...... 3 H'V. Thomas. 3b...... 2 1 L. Smith, 2b........ 3 0 2 3 R. Lewis, ss........ 2 A. Hudson, c........ H. Brown, p........ 2 Denny, p.......... J, Bartley, p........ 0 3 11L. Smith, 2b. 1 IV, Smith, cf.. . 1 OK. Franklin, cf.. 0 0C. Ford, lb .. 0 0 E. Dawklns. rf 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 3 .erunftothefhsUhlrd. fourth ffifor^e^nintatthe plBcause of the tett*dojm o league **&$?& will mum-. .tHt^lboa Stadium tor Kow^rta'saturd.T and ^rdaysboxscorr. Bluebirds-- *f}f o' 4. 1 2 * l i I , 4 0 1 I .1 J J 10 0 0 .111 oooo ab* 2 2 I 9 ! 3 o i i_ "j *8 24 13 1 La Boca HI AB E. Pollard, 2b........ 2 B Daniels, If........ 3 E.Burnett, cf........ 3 E. Wilson, ss........ R. Springer, rf...... D. Johnson, 3b...... D. Joseph, p........ E. Burke, c........ K. Wilson, lb....... 2 C. Proverbs, rf...... 1 Totals............22 7 The La Boca Boys teed off to trounce Silver City, 10-2, In a Totals............23 2 Si La Boca Hi-Boys AB R H N. Prez, ss........ 4 2 1 L. Parris. lb........ 3 2 1 D. Roberts, If...... 4 1 2 C. Griffith, c....... 4 3 3 D. Weeks, Sb........ 3 0 S. Hey wood, 3b., .. .. 3 0 | R. Reyes, cf........ L. Glttens, rf...... 2 0 0 C. Colona, p........ 2 0 0 F. Alder, p........ 3 1 1 Totals............30 10 9 Umpires were Roberta and Matthews. J. C. Hoopsters To Clash With Albrook Tonight The Junior College Green Wave will take on the Albrook Blue Jays In a return engagement to- night at the Balboa Gymnasium at 7 o'clock. The last time these two teams met was In the finals of the Ju- nior College Invitational tourna- ment when the Albrook team cut a Green Wave rally short in the last quarter to win by four points. The game tonight will be dif- ferent, however, unless the Ju- nior College can come out of its slump that has been heckling them the past week. With con- sistent players on the Albrook team like Sclafani, Lee and Coy- cault no team can afford to be the least bit off in their playing. Although the Green Wave's floor game hasn't suffered too much lately, their shooting has dropped in each game, from 30 to 13 per cent when Cristobal Hith recently walloped them. If the J. C. cannot improve In this phase of the game for tonight they will be in for an awful lick- ing. Remember this game starts at 7 p.m. with adult tickets selling for 25 cents and 15 cents for stu- dents with S. A. cards. Schools Now Limited To 20 Sessions Within 30 Days By ED SAINSBURRY United Press Sports Writer CINCINNATI, O., Jan. 14.Spring footbl" practice and out of season basketball drills wer restricted by the National Collegiate Athletic As- sociation Saturdaj but bowl games were authorized for at least another year. Local Rate Playground Holder, cf Tedeaco, ss. Parrla, 3b . Oanaa,c Barbee, lb. . aThorne Filo. If bMlUer. Brathwaltj, Roberts, rf. NlcolU,p. Chegres School Softball Dia- mond. One of the Beetles, sta* batters. A. Roberts, had homer iquWdacK^el?arne Ban- RJU VW* **-* ww-ww-l ^"~~ ^1 winning the first and Balboa the second. Most rallblrds find it Setty difficult to really pick a vorlte, other than a sentimen- tal one. . This will be the next to last| game of the season for Balboa's ( ace scorer and center. Gene Rlchter. Rlchtar's father Is slat- { ed for transfer this week, and this game Tuesday and the game Friday against Junior College will probably be the last for Gene. Coach Al Blelfuss will have a man-slsed Job cut out for him . For the benefit of the fans, the ita trying to repUce the long tall i Han," "..SO10* ____ ai------. kwtnm 1-.1 ** .,-...n4 I tumi in hi I ISUrite, \i __ __ __ Totals . Brownies peeples, cf Gladstone, L6pe*,as. . KrTlman.c Arthurs, Sb Orenald.lf- Charles, Sb. Hall, 3b rf .33 "B . 2 . 4 . 4 . 4 . 4 . 4 . 3 4 HPO 1 S 2 1 3 18 0 0 3 lad. At present it seems to be a toss-up between veteran Leon Herring and newcomer Bob Don- ahue. Be that as it may. Rlchter teams drew a name from a hat, promises to be on hand this and in that way selected his (Tuesday, and that Is the big team. Since that time they have night as far as the Bulldogs are changed numerous players to try i concerned. Aiding Rlchter to tnt to farther balance the teams in point making department will be the league. Oscar Kourany, who cored 23 points to the game with CHS the played other week, These two between V them have accounted for most of ' the Red and White points, but either Edgar Kourany or Sam Maphls are capable of scoring, and can't be Ignored by the Tlg- The Tigers, on the other hand, will brlngHo Balboa one of the finest collection of high school basketballers the leaguehas aeen for several seasons. They still havent played the game they are capable of. and this might Just be the time for them to do It In Arnold Manning, Bob Bailey, Skippy Anderson, and Roy Wil- son, they have four very potent scorlrtk threats, and woe be unto the foe when all four of these lads begin to bit on the same nl|flt- .!_ A preliminary *jn,^f*w??> Br4aa& 101 110 O0X4 Bluebirds ta Crui Gym.. ' Canada Dry League Five Foot- . ers played a doubleheader on 0 Friday. Monday, Wednesday and Thursday. Results follow to or- der' FridayCrema beat Root Beer, 8-7; Tutti Fruttl sparked out Uva. 7-3; batteries were, Cre- maTo wnsend and Jones; Tutti Frutti, Thomas and Allen. MondayCrema won with a score of 13-11 subduing Uva; battery. V. Thousand and A. Jones; CremaH. Barker and M. Grant, Ova, __ Root Beer defeated Tutti Frut- tl, 12-11; F. Walthe and C. Bax- ter, Root Beer; J. Roaeley and E. Salnten. Tutti Fruttl. WednesdayTutti Fruttl wal- loped Crema, 13-3; battery- George Thomas and C. Scott, Crema; Sidney King and Jones. Uva whipped Root Beer, 18-4. UvaA Morales and Salnten; Root BeerWalthe and Baxter. All the teams have , practice games against each oth er and tne number of 3-1 and me neo m . 4-3 games played. Is a tribute to ither Edgar Kourany the men who selected the teams, .. w ni and lots of good baseball la to store for the followera of teen- age baseball. BRONCHIAL ASTHMA Sleep Sound All Night The lorooi Mlline medicine *m bronchitis ond Asrhmo In oil of Wb> xordly-cold Cenado Is Buckley's Co- nidio* Mixture Urlple octlng) e blessing 'o thouMndi end new sew n oil drugstore. There U nothing -o sote ond sure In the world 2 or i doses in eweet< nod not weter |usi tutors bedtime ond mony euHerer from strongllnt choking Asthmo ho 'oun# ellei and o good nlghfs ret ond thet bod. old, persistent, bronchlo eeugh has left you * voo don't be"eve il get e bottle at onv good druggist for you eon depend on fuekle/s Co- nodlol Mixture to give definite, outd- relief rom thot ehohlg. oasping struggle for b'0h the two Junior varsity .. gin at 8:45 with the varalta game right after that. Basketball this Tuesday night at the Balboa Gym. i. Motorcycle Races Listed Again For Juan Franco Sunday Duaty. devil-may-care doings are Usted again for Juan Franco next Sunday morning. The motorbike boys are com- ing out again. Coming out even f astar, if they can make it. Next Sunday's meeting win be after the same pattern as was the Jan. 8 turnout, with more races. Maybe with more entrants, too, after the enthusiasm stirred up last time. Basically all anyone needs to enter to the races is a motorbike, and the knack of not falling off It. It helps, though, If the motor- bike la faster than anyone else's. grounded om SKa^M Crema, -7; battery-r. wanne th. bRan for ^Slman Bee- no C. Baxter; V. Thousand and Batted ln-Lopez. Reliman, f a } Ura won ,_7 bating "... n nrenald. Fama - 2L,r.n o.>rv_wmima plea. Filo, u"^"',.;, _ Tutti Frut Wen Lest Losing "Wiw^fi,, CTrea-Thornton, tods Kar- nmaflltls. Time of Oamf l.w. Midget UaKM To Be Conducted On Atlantic Skit The Physical Education and Recreation Branch la conducting TbalebaU league ***;,** Ind ten-year-old boya Any boy who has not reached hi ele- venth birthday asof ^MM. and is not a regular^unUocmed player o none of the MlanUc Llte League teams is ellflble to Ser for the Midget League. 35 League substitutos are eU- ,lTems wU lbe made up on a community baaU. That la boys ttindtog Cristobal, Margarita or Gatun^amantary tchools must play on the teams of their re- apectlve playground. Boys who want to play should therefore rettoter at the gymnasium near- est their school and find out on what days practice will be held as soon aa possible. It Is expected that the open- ing gamea of the league will be played on Saturday, Jan. M, at the Margarita baseball diamond. All other league gamea win be played on the Margarita field. A doubleheader Is contemplated each Saturday morning starting at 9 o'clock. ^ The purpose of the league Is to provide an opportunity for those boye to play an organised base- ball team who cpuld not make the top is of the Little League and to teach the fundamntala .f V*! S*0*! tame to th lit- tlest fellows, - ANTA CRUS Over 300 parents and kids at- tended the annual bonfire and u..v... . .,.. .....,. weenie roast which took place on with three men on base. Every- Wednesday night. The lively at- cine played to the best of his "~ ability. There were many spec- tacular plays. On Tuesday the Sparrows beat Falcons, 13-1. Wednesday, a tied game was played by the Needles and Bees. The Needles won 11-7. STANDINGS TEAM Won Lost Fct. Beetles........ 2 0 1.000 Sparrows...... 2 0 1.000 Needles........ 1 0 1.000 Bees........ .. 0 2 .000 Balcons.;...... 0 2 .000 Junior and Midget Leagues will start on Saturday, Jan. 1, with three teams participating in each league. The Midgets are: Fight- ing Midgets, Flying Tigers. Little Giants. The Juniors are: Robins, C.Y.O., and Yankees. Physical Education classes will start today at the Chegres Gym- nasium, under the direction of Mr. Parris, Physical Director. LA BOCA CRICKETLa Boca C.C.. Spar- ton C.C., Red Tank C.C., Clovelly C.C. and Snorters C.C. are the five powerful elevens that will battle for the Mercurio Cup In the Pacific Cricket League which got under way Sunday. Whlppers C.C, for years a for- midable contender, will be absent from competition this season. BASEBALLThe La Boca Midget Baseball League got off to an explosive start Saturday morning. Granville Whlttaker pitched a no-hitter for the Milky Way team against the Dodgers. Whlttaker also led the sluggers with two homers and a triple to three tripa to the plate. League standings In the six- team Junior League follows: TEAM Won Lost Pet. St. Louis Cardinals 5 2 .714 Dep. Tropical .... 4 2 .887 Yankees........4 3 .571 Brownies lL1irbte in Thursday-Root Beer thrashed .Orounded out for farbeejn, Cwm battery-F. Walthe wa-r, for FllO in *" "*"*. _j r> nv+r- v Thmiunri and ,pex, Keflman. F FUo. Grenald, Pa"! Tutti Fruttl. Battery-Williams STANDINGS >g a softball adult team should meet Joa French at the Santa Crua Gym on Wednesday, Jsn. 18. CHAGRES Monday, Jan. 7. Chagras Ele- mentary Softball League was opened with the Bees playing against the Beetles. This thrill- ing gams was played on the NOW... Years Old! ...But No Incrtaf* IN PRICE Vou'tl enjoy Seagram's V.O. Canadian Whisky even more now that it is' 6 years old! Honoured the world over, Seagram's V.O. is the lightest, cleanest tasting whisky you have ever enjoyed.. Try it... it's aged fewftr. rh*sess.s*. COMPAA CYt-NOS, S. A. SeagramsYO. CANADIAN WHISKY HIGH MAN Bob Richards launches the major indoor, sea-, son and his Olympic drive in the Philadelphia Games. Jan. 18.< The national decathlon cham-l; pion and' James E. Sullivan Memorial i Trophy 1 winner has cleared 15 feet in the pole vault, ^aeven,times.,(NEA)f Dodgers........3 3 .500 Fergus........3 4 .428 Pirates........1 5 .143 Dodgers and Tropical are tied in one game 8-8. INTRAMURALS The following teams and cap- tains are set for the Intramural High School Boys' Softball Loop which gets under way Tuesday. Dodgers, David Roberts; Giants, Coln Colona;. Phillies, Nicholas Peres; Cardinals, Randolph In- nlss; Yankees, Earl Clarke; In- dians. Leonard Glttens; Red Sox, George Weekes; and Braves, Ru- dolph Hall. In the Girls' Softball League the following teams and cap- tains are listed: Braves, Evelyn Wilson; Eagles, Dorothy Joseph; Las Gardenias, Marva Parch- ment; Las Orqudeas, Carol Proverbs; Cuba, Norma Camp- bell, and Tigers, Olga1 Griffith. Football and basketball prac- tice was limited to 20 sessions to 30 days. The NCAA will sanction the 1052 basketball tournaments, the bowl games next New Year's Day and other post season contests. However, a committee will stu- dy the "pressure" such games create and recommend final na- tional action, perhaps to ban them completely at the next con- vention. Both measures were contrary to a program suggested by the committee of college presidents sponsored by the American council on Education. That program called for immediate elimination of the bowl games and out of season practices. Even though falling to accept these points, the convention ap- firoved a resolution endorsing he over-all philosophy of the report. Action to authorize out-of- season practices was approved as a constitutional amendment. 103-46. after a proposal to ban such drills completely was voted down. 113-34. The complete ban had been approved by the NCAA policy making council, 10-4. The limit on spring football fractice was more stringent han that proposed by the foot- ball coaches' rules committee which voted 21-4 to allow 30 days of drill over a six-week period. Hugh Wlllett of Southern Cal-' Juan Franco Mutual Dividends ifornia was elected to a third i term as NCAA president while Earl Holbrook of Nebraska was named secretary-treasurer. Hol- brook succeeds Big Ten Commie* ; sloner Kenneth L. Wilson who It- quested his name be removed 'from consideration for re-elec- ; tion. Saturday's final sesaien ato. adopted a cnstitatieaal amendment that all aid to ath- letes must be administered by ; th. institution. The regulation : does not outlaw alumni fund- I raiaing. groups but westld re- '"h^ Th*m i o donate their re- sources to the institution for disposal. An ethics committee to Centura "or recommend punishment for violation of a principle of ethics also was authorized. A proposal by the Pacific Coast Conference to Instruct the fort- ball rules committee to elimin- ate the free substitution rul. which permits the platoon sys- tem was rejected. The coaches earlier had ap- proved the rule. A committee also was author- ized to recommend at the next convention limits on the length- of season and the number of fames scheduled for various earn sports. The safe wa) i m the FIRST RACE 1Recodo $36. $9.80. $4.80. 2Hercules $33.40, $6.40. 3-^Proton $3.40. SECOND RACE 1Golden Babe $12.20. $5.80, $3. 2Opex $3.80, $3.20. 3Miranda $3.20. First Doubles: (Recodo-Golden Bab.) S347.8S. THIRD RACE 1Winsaba $3.20. $2.60. $2.20. 3Fulmine $3.60, $3.20. 3Tap Girl $3.60. One-Two: (Winsaba-Fulmine) $12.48. FOURTH RACF 1JeppeMn $11.60. $3.80, $2 20. 2Paques $3.20, $2.40. 3- La Chata $2.20. Quiniela: (Jepperin Paques) FIFTH RACE 1-Keyhaven $S.40. $2.20. 2Milros $2.20. SIXTH RACE 1Rechupete $3.60. $2.40. $2.20. 2Guarlna $4, $2.80. 3Lituana $3.80. SEVENTH RACE 1 Callmedear $340. $260. $2.20. 2-Sandarin $3.80, $2.40. 3Arabe II $2.40. Second Doubles: (Rechupete- Callmedear $6.80. EIGHTH RACE 1Notable $3.80, $2.20. $2.20. 2Cyclone Malone $2.40. $2.20. 3Roadmaster $2.20. Snlnlela: (Notable Cyclone one) 18. NINTH RACE 1Mingo $8.80, $8.20. 2Hechizo $5. One-Two: $37.90. TENTH RACE 1Black Sambo $2.00. $2.20. 2Golden Tip $2.20. Dan's Dilemma ! Dan's pockets lining, had no silver For some money he was lining! (Ming. Hechl-) Then a 1>. A. Want MM sighted. Got a Job.. now he's delighted! INCREASE YOUR PROFITS! By letting; us help you cut your operating costs. We have the office machine you need. V Ave. Tivoli #14 Tel. 2-ztls Adding Machines, Calculators. Bookkeeping Machines, Typewriters, Systems, Duplicators, FUe Cabinets. ^^^^^^^^^^CashReclsler^^^^^^^^^^^ TO OUR MANY FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS Delay all purchasing of automobiles until you see the sensation of 1952. The Record Breaker HUDSON "HORNET" The Luxurious HUDSON "HOLLYWOOD" The Glumorout HUDSON "WASF' All will be on display in our showrooms very shortly, a matter of days. Watch this column for opening date. Your dealer, AUTOS OMPHROY, SA. FANAMA Juste Areeemena Aeo.eiE.Mth St. Fhene: 3-SflS :> " ". ' NCAA SCRAPS UNLIMITED PRACTIC (Pre 7>| Solons Charge Congress' Cafe Prices Too Low WASHINGTON. Jan. 14 (UPi A couple of Democratic Con- gressmen complained today that, of all things, the cost of eating in the Kouxe restaurant Is too low. Thai's right too low! Taxpayers are subsidizing the Congressional eatery at a rate of i about $43,000 a year. Things are so bad thai the price of the reg- ular went up 20 per cent last week, to 90 cents. But Congressmen W. F. Nor- rell of Arkansas and Tom Steed of Oklahoma said prices on the Congressional menu are still too low. "I don't want the govern- j ment to subsidize what I eat," said Norrell. "Members of Congress are not AN INPEIT^^^XytlffixPAILY NEWSPAPER Panama American "Let the people know the truth and the country is $afe" Abraham Lincoln. TWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR PANAMA, R. P., MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1952 FIVE CENTS AEC Working Overtime On Expansion Of Atom Program By JOHN COI IMC short supply." responsibility..." While military aspects of the atom dominate the news, Dean The joint Congressional Com-'said, the commission is allocat- ion said that by next June la a thin one," he said, "and In the atomic program will be using i advance it is not always possible as much power as the entire City of New York. fnnH than WASHINGTON. Jan. 14 tUP- Our demand for physicist, entitled to cheaper_fOOd OH ^ Atomlc Energv commission chemists, technicians and en- Other Americans. Steed saia. is -working overtime'' on the .jneers is also extremely William N- Brockwell. man- ..comp,ex pr0Di.em" 0f expanding neavT> he added, "and these agir of the House restaurant. ,he atomlc energy program with- skiIIs are arready in critically said his prices might De uve | out upsettinR the overall econ- cents or more under the rate for | omy chairman Gordon Dean comparable meals in downtown, isd^ed today. Washington eatins places, but said there was no plan to raise them again. A United Press spot check showed a luncheon comparable | tee nowr consideringhow much comes ..cnaIienges of this kind." to the "House Special." would, the atomic programcan be But j g^ we shou,d a,. cost $1.05 m Miami. Fla.; op to g*****1 J military and member that the line bt-l M.MM00 hospital we are now $1.25 In San Francisco, and $1.501 non-military neids. tween boldness ftnd foolishness building for cancer study and at one of Detroit's better restaur- He jald ^ bR cstion!) ,n ants. Good luncheons in Atlanta, thp proposed expansion involve manpower and critical materials- but that the commission should Vatican Delighted Truman Will Push For Holy See Envoy VATICAN CITY, Jan. 14 (UP) Vatican quarters today voiced "great aatlsfactlon" at Mr. Tru- man's determination to send an Ambassador to the Holy See despite the termination of Gen- eral Mark Clark's nomination. A spokesman said that Clark's withdrawal "came as no sur- prise" In view of the great con- troversy stirred up In the United States, and indicated the hope that the president's new no- minee might be a civilian diplo- mat rather than a military man. One source said that "the I Vatican holds General Clark in 1 the highest esteem but under i the present circumstances, the mission could be more easily ; carried out by a civilian." research in Chicago for the cancer section of our hospital to distinguish between the two.' in Oak Ridge, Tenn.," Dean i Thev saId that ..tnla however We try to be bold without being added. i |s decision for Mr Truman foolhardy. I On the subject of Industrial use make e Vatican S "...So far, the boldness has of atomic energy. Dean said he ^gT%.fci?M "^gfiJS^Z been balanced b, a .eiu. of hopes some private todugr ft "ffiHSu, "BflLB e5P,er"V.$rZmf m'rthini Statea would serve the lnterests will come up with something of peace Knd hencet^ould ,. mittee on Atomic Energy in its ..j _._. ,, (V, .B-r- last report called for "greater to a joint Congressional commit- |Q Jj ?ncgcr^mlsslon wel- Ing more money than ever be- fore "for comprehensive pro- grams in physical research, in biology and medicine and in the Industrial uses of atomic ener- gy." ..We should include the feasible. i come any representative sent commissionnow are Investigat- ing the possibilities of produc- ing commercial power. lince nuclear reactors produce mav be had for 20 cents to $1. House members are sensitive about the annual deficit of their favorite eating place, lust a few steps off their ca- ptol chamber, became they have to make it up by voting an appropriation. Carnival Flag liaised At El Panam ' know the answers "within a few weeks." In a radio interview with Gan- nett News Service, Dean said that "on the basis of uranium He explained that four groups'"&. ^rVdent"We are there B,sC^rcoooenratFo0nWewi?hmP!} SftSSfft Mr.turnan', e determination to make another nomination at a later date." The President's first choice of 'th D?^erdcomnaT,eristhtoSMkbr B "SUMS?! praonduc Snir^^e'gov^l^" *"* Genera!, chief ernment and power for commer- milon was to work with an clal use at the same time. Thisia'Ieged "center of espionage" at procedure will help reduce the the Vatican, cost of the power. . In the past 12 years, the loss ore supply alone, our program has been $351.000. even though can be stepped up quite a bit" th* restaurant, gets free rent,! but that the AEC also must con- light heat and water. slder the amount of other strat- Brockwell attributes the pe- egic materials involved, rennial deficit to peculiarities of "This becomes important." he the operation. The restaurant said, "when you remember that generally serves only one meal already the atomic energy pro- . liav luncheon and its volume gram uses about 50 per cent of of business^indergoes sharp I all the stainless steel tub ng pro- fiiinrtiiatlon while its staff of duced in this country, and our Onetime CZ iMdm. '.Hn-Mr-Jbri-SkUt US Philanthropist, Trinkets Seized | Dies In Pennsylvania B Whee|jng [ops Mr. Marv Edmonds Craw- 'I ""vviiiiaj wwpj WHEELING. W. Va.. Jan. 14 | (UP). City Manager Robert L. I Mrs. Mary Edmonds ford, who taught In the Canal Zone schools from 1912 to 1915 led ::,a4 JSmSXSA Ii SHE Tonfiscal BSSWftSSSfK She't n of all pen y candy vending was 70 vears old. A native of Clarion, Pennsyl- vania, she came to the Isthmus in 1912 from Gary, Indiana where she had been a teacher for the two previous years. Prior to that time she had taught In Duquesne. Pennsylvania, and In St. Louis. Missouri. On the Isthmus she taught rn the schools at Ancon and Coroza 1. After she left the Isthmus she was married to E. R. Craw- ford, organizer and first presi- dent of the McKeesport Tin Plate Company. Mr. Crawford di-ri In 1936. A r'ipDlng of her death re- ported that Mrs. Crawford died In McKeesoort Hospital, an in- tltntion she greatlv benefltted One of the Crawford's favor- ite Philanthropies was the hos- pital. In December. 1948. she gave $300.000 to its buildin? fund. As earlv as 1945 and 1946 she had donated $10.000 to the hospital fund. "Besides helping dozens of Individuals and organizations financially. Mrs. Crawford gave a. large part of her time to vo- lunteer work in the American Red Cross. machines in Wheeling today af- ter trinkets bearing the hammer- and-sickle emblem of the Soviet Union were found mixed with the candy. "This is a terrible thing to expose our children to," Plum- mer said. "I want a complete in- vestigation and report of those machines." Wheeling Police Lt. John Mur- phy said the trinkets were pasteboard pennants about half the size of a postage stamp. On one side was a yellow hammer and sickle on a red background and on the other side was print- ed "U. S. S. R. Population 211.- .Th* an} box-car lot of mer- 000,000. capital Moscow. Largest chandlse from the Colon Free- countrv in the world" Trade Zone was witched to The machine? wire licensed Mde >n 'he Prt oi Crlstobal to store owners and were dis- on Saturday, trlbuled by Confections Special- It consisted of some 25-tons ties Co Pittsburgh, operated by 0f antibiotics, which is the larg- Irvlng Marrlck and his partner, Mt shipment of this item ever Herbert Cohen. Lt. Murphv said | exported from the Isthmus of there were trinkets bearing the I Panama, names of other countries mixed, in with the "chewing gum balls The vessel which received this and lawbreakers." Murphy said he talked IN A GAT CARNIVAL ATMOSPHERE In the Patio, Joseph R. Cunningham, Manager of Hotel El Panama, raised the blue and white carnival standard last night. He was cheered by an enthusiastic group. In the picture ar the Carnival Com- mittee of El Panama guests, who Included the Tourist Com- missioner of Panama, don Mllciades Arosemena, and the three candidates for Queen of Ei Panama's Carnival: Miss Marltza de Obarrlo, Miss Mary Watson and Miss Sonia Man- tovani. After the flag raising, the first vote count for Queen was held, and Miss Obarrlo emerged the winner of a very close race. Next Sunday night the second vote count will take place in the Patio of El Panama, and a large crowd is expected at the Fiesta. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1---------------------------------------------.----------------------------:------------ Pfizer Ships First Box-Car Lot From Colon's Free Zone plants of Chas. Pfizer Sc Co., which are located in Brooklyn,iQn Gall'.-.rd Highway in Ancon. Carl J. Browne Gets New Post With PanCanal Carl J. Browne. Assistant Build- ing Engineer, has been appoint-' ed Chief of the Southern District of the newly organized Mainten- ance Division, lt was announced today at naiboa Heights. The appointment completes the major personnel changes requir- ed by the merger of the Municip- al and Building: Divisions at the first of this month. The new di- vision is headed by Frank H. Lerchen. h\, as Maintenance En- gineer. Nelson W Magner was appolnifcd Chief of the Northern District and E. W. Zelnick con- tinues i.s Chief of the Water and Laboratories Branch. The maintenance and cons- truction work In the Southern District will be in charge of C. M. Braf.dl as Superintendent and T. G. Coieman as Assistant Su- perintendent. E. R. McVlttle has been appointed Superintendent of construction and maintenance ; in the Northern District. The appointment of Browne as Chief of the Southern District! followed the resignation of Har- ry A. M'-taler, formerly Building Engineer, at he first of thlsl year. His appointment has been announced simultaneously with announcement of the merger. The new Chief of the Southern District will have his headqart-' era in Building 0602. located in! the Malntenan-e Division yardsi "FIESTA BRAVA" IN SAN FRANCISCO A large erowd watched yesterday as Josellllo of.. Colombia (top) moved into to make the kill with the first stroke of his ''estoque" during the bull fights at San Francisco de la Caleta. Eduardo de Valencia (below) beats a hasty retreat when one of the four bulls killed yesterday caught him too near to the boards. Three sailors off one of the US. Navy vessels that visited here yesterday added a note of hilarity to the proceedings when a bull was released to give the more Intrepid patrons an .pR0,.rtnity *" "^ht and tease to their hea rt's content. The sailors Joined the amateur bullfighters and had the crowd In stitches with their antics, to the exasperation of SPa who prudently stayed behind the rails shoutl ng disregarded orders to "come out." Groton and Terre Haute. Last month Laboratorios Pfi- zer established a new Latin American record for the volume of air cargo In drugs. For the present time the trad- ing activities of Pfizer Inter- Nobody Knows Ho w Bonanza Happened-And Nobody Cares Browne a native of Avon, New York, is a graduate civil engineer of Cornell University. He was first employed by the Canal in I JACKSON. Miss. Jan. 14 (UP) money from the finders even If August 1938 being one of several! It vas still unknown today young college graduates who whether Jackson's $1040 bonanza were employed as student en- came from the heavens or a mys- American S A. will"be""directed Rhieers. Att*r completion of hlslterlous Mr. Wijlbom but no by J. H. Harrington resident training period., he was assigned one. including Mr. Wel born, Manager of Laboratorios Pfizer, with Marrlck today and the special- ities firm operator said he would return to Wheeling with the America, exact name of the New York firm1 , , which supplied him with the!, g m.ade a special stop in Crls- "She was a member of the;candy. tobal to receive the cargo, board of directors of the Pitts-1 The police official quoted Mar- Thls larPe lot consisted of bureh chapter and served five'rick as saving he did not know| d''ue,:s .nsiSnecL'0 tne Mlnl4try davs In the office as head of, the correct name of the supplier JWlo Health in Uruguay the Blood Bank until she en- but that he had It In his records tna to several wholesale drug- tered the hospital. in Pittsburgh. "During the World War II ' he conducted the Blood Bank activities which won her na- tional recoenltion. She was also, interested in many charities in the district- shipment was the S.S. Mormac-S A. ray, operated by the Moore-Mc-I Cormack Line from California to With the exception of the re- the East Coast of South sldent manager, all Pfizer em- ployees on the Isthmus are Panamanians. PanCanal Directors SSfS t'ne& wareffieMII ^^ ^M of Laboratories Pfizer. S. A., on l t Central Ave and 15th Street InSpeCIIOil TIPS The Pfizer concern has also' Arrangements have been announced that its newest sub- completed for Inspection trips sldiary Pfizer Inter-American, to a number of important Canal S. A., will inaugurate its new, Company installations tomor- Free-Zone warehouse at 5 p.m. I row bv members of the Board of tomorrow. Directors of the Company still ttv,._____ ... on the Isthmus. The ceremony will be attend- ed by local officials, doctors,' Members of the Board and Memorial services will be held !hf, Un.lted Slales- Canada andi^nsu's and shipping men. Pfi- others here to attend the Board at 4:30 om tomorrow at the L\Un AmerlC!i wl" attend- S!" *nte5.Ame^ican- s- A- willmeetlng last week Include Major Lutheran Church in Balboa ,AmonR the fl"t to arrive last i >e the first Panamanian cor- General Julian L. 8chley; W. R for Mrs Richard Bruhn--ho died R-h were Dr" H P' Saunders. Portion to operate a Free-Zone Pfizer, Vice President; Edward suddsnlv veiterriav afternoon asf,ls,ant t0 the director of the warehouse In Colon. D. McKlm; aid B. F. Burdlck, Mrs. Ro Di*s S'-Hdenly; Rites Tomorrow Surgeons Arriving For RP Conference permanently,to the Constructing seemed U. care. Quartet master Division, later re- named Building Division, as1 Disheartened searchers gave up junior engineer. He was promot- the gho.=t of finding any more of ed to Assistant Superintendent the crisp new $20. $50 and $100 of the Divisin in June 1941. b"ls th.v\ littered the lawns on Congress Street Friday mornlni Much if Browne's service has and investigators were stll been on the Atlantic side where stumped. he served both as Assistant Su-: al Revenue Department's code perlntendent and latei as Super- A cabbie provided the only triad no provision to coyer finding n Dls-substanl'al lead to the looseimoney that had been-thrown 111 he did throw It out the cab win- dow. "The people who lost the mo- ney, or threw lt away as the case may be." Nobles said, "wouid have to identify it beyond a doubt. And that would be mighty hard unless the money was marked." Tax C'jJlectou Eugene Fly also had good news for the lucky finders, rie said that the Intern- intendent of the Northern _ trict. Hi Is a reserve officer of money ?'hen he recalled that a the Army and was one of sev- passenjer, O. H. Wellborn, of eral Canal employes called to,waynesboro. Ga. cheerfully an- actlve d'ty during the war and nounce that he had tossed $4,- later reessigned with the canal;000 out he window as the cab organization. He held the rank of cruised down Congress Street. Major In the Ordnance Corps at i However, nobody was able to the time he resumed his civilian find Wcloorn and apparently the status wl geons will hold their regional conference at Hotel El Panama, beginning Wednesday. Over 50 doctors from different parts of at her home in Panama ChT"I E0,,g5;Pht&mp\nlelbv 2U .Mrs. Bruhn. the former Rose' ?at.cn.elder- another dlstln Wood, was 38 years old. S>*2!22L,0u. hfr ""band, presiden" uished American surgeon. This will be the fifth Free- I Zone warehouse to function In BA Symphony's Gregorio Rovic To Conduct Here The director of the Buenos Aires Syuiphonv Orchestra. Ore- oria Ravls. will be the conductor ere Monday Jan. 21 when Pan- Manila Sends force To Scour Hills For Jap Holdouts MANILA. Philippines Jan 14 .iciu.au MiiKcuu. ; poinn nt W.V. 'it '~'~"~" ***!*' nugncj, secreiarv tne univeraHYv oi; (UP>. The Department of Na-, lime de la Guardia Is 2"" ...D,^,..'1 c,onc*"1*',' Company; and Peter Beasley, 'Panama under hk direction. On charge of petty larceny tlonal Djense said a force of M t of the organizing com-1 Pn>.a -n fn o /i11"- Special Consultant to the Seete-1 The concern will commemorate .th_ nornln8 Cornello Alberto: Army troops and one if! Chief of the Washington Office.... all Company Directors; James ami's Symphony Orchestra will C. Hughes, Secretary of the | perform at the University^ of nder hk direction. wealthy eneer merchant wasn't worried about money. And most people .weren't -worried about Wellbortl. City kludge O. R. Nobles said as far as he knows Wellborn' couldn't lerally retrieve his mechanical street sweepers and burled In the city dump. A city c rdlnance Seeps citizens from entering the city dump and authorities said that it would be nearly impos&ible to find the mo- ney alter It had been buried by bulldozers. Cab Driver Junior Clark said he got I he worst deal because he ended up with a "measley buck tip." "I would a made more money if I stay.-ed at home," Clark moaned. Clark said he picked up Well- born and an airplane pilot and carried-them to a sanitarium in Hot Sprints, Ark. When they were riding, down Congress 8treet, Oiark said, he heard the window being lowered and Well* born tanred hia\ on the shoulder apd said, chucklngly ""I've Just , thrown-4M0 out the window." Borne people feared that If the Wellborh's wife In Waynesboro cahble'a story .was true that the, confirmed the fact that her hus- remalrmer of the $4,000 might bind. w*f b.ndlhg for Hot hare been .sucked up by the sprMievaoifcmat he had a "lot" of jnonayvwith him. But at the sanitarium, they said he hadn t been there. "Jaeks/'n police rounded up the flOS) thnt was reported found, but said hat It will be a "find- ers-k*n>e.': proposition if the awnor.iTtt retjisned to Its right- Ss&NJUici away anu the $1010 might be tax free. "There is no provision to take care of a man who sr his money deliberately away," Fly " i oaicoa dv iwn sisters, rhanlc ir .-. .v" "<= Mrs. Clara Neville of Balboa and u0m PanimJ^.^^""^" Mrs. Anita Jones of Garden !zone *nd the Canal pty; Long Island: and bv four brothers, William, of Balboa Heights. Robert, of Ancon, John. of los Angeles, and Eddie, now In the Navy, at San Diego. Call- fOTia. "Mrs Bruhn was born at An- con. now Gorgas, Hospital April Members of the family have asked that no flowers be sent. .VERY FISHY STORY MADISON. Wis., (UP) \ Ma- dison man returned from his va- ? w"h"t anv fish but with this fish story for his friends: A nsnerman named Fisher, living ,fu .hborln" cottage, caught a fish. Fisher didn't like fish so nihwve !huCaU:h- P". to an- other neighbor named Pike. operate _ warehouse at 14.134 Central Avenue, next door to those o Laboratorios Pfizer, 8. A. Th* "*kter" firm, Laborator- ios Pfizer, has been operating successfully since mid-8eptem- & S8p^0JpeCVlrg countries "1 lon' IndustrtaI Bureau of Central andP South America a,"dsrdU,,n *"" 0n tn* AtUn" However. the principal market tary and Assistant Secretary of the Army. The schedule for tomorrow calls for a visit to Mira flores Locks In the morning; a trip through Galllard Cut: Inspec- tion of Dredging Division facili- ties and lunch on the craneboat Atlas; and visits to the Commls- the founding of the present city of Panam. Ravic, a well-known conductor. arrived lr> Panama this morning h* the on the first eg of a tour of Court. Jo be served by Pfizer Inter- America Is the Far East The Pfizer line of antibiotics is produced in the Some members of the party visited the Motor TransDOrta- tion and Maintenance Division various oiffces and installations today. Havana. Cuna and the United Statea. ICE CREAM FOR ALL OAFFNEY. 8. C. (UP). A M- vear-old ice cream salesman who finally got his girl to say "I do showed his elation In the best way he knew how. After the ceremony, he went to his truck and passed out ice cream to everyone in sight. King was given a 15-day sus- have been sent to scour the hHls pended sentence, placed on a of Lubang Island oft Mindoro " where Japanese stragglers froxn World War II killed one etrolHr and wounded another last Fri- day. ear's probation and fined $25 Balboa Magistrate's King was found guilty of stealing two brass Journal bear- ings from the Panam Canal storehouse. He la a 23-year-old Panamanian.' For loitering In Building 28 at Gamboa, a 28-year-old Pana- manian, Jos Gustavo Rovlra, was fined $10. And on a charge of being Intoxicated Oscar Joseph Brown, 31, a Costa Rkan drew a $5 fine. A spokesman said that only four Japanese stragglers were observed on the Island, and it was not believed that there was a big force of Japanese holdouts there. It Is believed that the troops were considered adequate to cope with the situation but reinforce- ments would be dispatched im- mediately U necessary. Friends Of Italy' Invited To Meeting Itai-Americans and friends of Italy In the Canal Zone are InVlted to a meeting of "Lo Stlvale," tomorrow evening, ac- cording to announcement made today by Josephine Silvestre, secretary of Sie grpup. "We want to make friends with our 'paesanl' of the Zone, the announcement said. The meeting of Lo Sstlvale. an talo Panamanian, Italo- Amerlcan social club, will be- gin at 7:45 p. m. at the horns of Frank Silvestre 130 Calle E tudiaot*. near "J" Street. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 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 |
| 61 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |