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? BRANIFF
AN INDBPCNNENT^ DAILT VEWSPAPSB WENOS AIRES SIT CLAU $712.80 TOURIST MW.50 Panama American "el ffce p*v>p/> fcfiotc 1X10 frulfi omt f/t* country is $afe" - Abraham Lincoln. Seagram'sYO. g CANADIAN WHISKY na TWENTT-SEVENTH TEAR Panama, a. p, Saturday, march 1, im riVE CENTS UN February Pla Grippe Wave Hits US But Flu Epidemic Not Likely WASHINGTON, March 1 (UP) US. Public Health officials said today there Is little likeli- hood the current wave of grippe- like ailments aero the nation will turn into an Influenza epi- demic. Dr. Dorland J. Davis, influenza specialist at the National Insti- tutes of Health, reported "an in- crease in respiratory diseases all over the United States." In meat.localities, the ailment So far the Influenza vlraa has been identified in only' three lo- cales. Type B tafluensa was proved In laboratory tests of cases in California, the Balnbrldge, Md., Naval training ospter, and in Ot- sego County, N.Y. nie U. 8. Public Health Serv- ice has an elaborate checking service, In cooperation with 50 laboratories throughout the country, for Identifying influen- lar ti7Visevere cold, are fever, on the prevalence of lesser re- hlvh absenteeism. "In general,-" Davis said, the disease has been Very mild and there has beein no increased death rate discernible for influ- enza and pneumonia.' Another spokesman for the Subltc health center said: This appens every year and In every, C0 widespread nor wore virulent t'->n in othrr veErs. He din say_ the wave of lllaesae app-avert later this winter." Davis aid teams of public checking] out- of absenteeism In the public schools. Calttarnia An epidemic -of "lnfluen*-llke illness" sweeping through Sarita Barbara. Type S influenza identified in Los An- geles and at Fort Ord. New Mexico, Illinois and New YorkIncidence of respiratory disease now on the Increase. Czech Historian Draws Parallel Of Hitler, Stalin NEW YORK. Mar. 1 (USIS) Hitler and 8talln both made their greatest mistake In Cze- choslovakia, according to Pro- Losses Thieves Pujl $1,500,000 Job As Watchdog Feeds RENO, Nev- March. 1 (UP).Police were searching today for thieves who Wake into the home of multimil- lionaire Lavme V. Redttsids and stole a 400-pound aafe hose contents were verted at 11,500,000, while the fa- mily watchdog fad leisurely on a hambone. The thieves overlooked a battered suitcase In the nouse which contained another million dollars. The safe waa taken from the 15-room stone chateau of Mr. and Mrs. Redfiehji while the couple were playing roulette In a downtownj#asino. If police estimates On the amount In the safe prove correct, the burglary wjl be one of the largest on rec- ord. The largest cash robbery in history was the $1,290.- 000 holdup of Brink's pie., an armored ear service in Boston In 1980. The prink bandits have never been caught. ' * * Truce Talks Remain Locked Over Russia 29 Sabres Migs In Got 15 Return the Influenza reports. The latest weekly report, how- ever, gave this scattered infor- mes? Vi'ltau^Absenteetm In fesaor Hans Kohh. noted Czech' schools reached 36 per cent ati historian now teaching at the he peak of the wave. The Incl-'city College of New York, dence of the disease was high in industrial areas. Brazilian Scientists Theory: Hunger Causes Overpopulation ArkansasAll ages of the pop- ulation affected and a high rate 16 Women Graduate rom First Aid Course At NEW YORK. March 1 (UP' Addressing a large student ral-1A Brazilian scientist.has set ou IV commemorating the protest of I J'i.mX matin* aTthS" Charles University students 1" over-r^pulatlon-lnitead of the Prague against the Communist other jy round, seizure of their country In 1948. Professor Kohn sketched the (Z Copper Probes Occident, Finds It's His Own Car deadly parallel in forceful terms. "The tragedy of Czechoslova- kia served *o aw ken the free world to the morstous chnrac- tor of Communism... without Ffbrutrv 19*tnere would have bee-i no Brussels Pact no Mar- shall pis iorth Atlantic 3reetv.*the state* The 11th First Ald^puats "Although ft will be little *- class of the Fort Kabw^^^Bitlsfar-tlon to the Czecholova*rian Control Zone received WWiV neonla at present, we know that from Col. Robert H. Douglas, Hitler's march Into Pra-tt* In commanding officer of the 33 d 19? doomed Narism *nd tlli s Infantry Regiment, at the l*ort "larch Into Prarue In 1948 Seeking to disprove the theory of Malthus that increasing food, production will only cause popu- lation to rise even faster, Dr. Jo- sue De Castro said that when diets become deficient in pro- teins nature makes humap be-, lngs more fertile to guarantee continuation of the apeles c tro of the Ground Action Up 8TH ARMY HQ., Korea, March 1 (UP) The Unit- ed Nations lost 29 war piones on operations in the Korean war during February. In return, United Nations Sabres jhot down 15 Migs. Red tfntiaircroft fire accounted for 17 UN planet, eight more were lost behind Communist lines from un- known causes, and two crashed in Japan. Two Sabres were shot down by Migs. In addition to shooting down) 15 Migs while flying as escorts re*- _a iVll^J' for fighter bombers, the Sabres; iOf 161 DGflCI (l6o( probably destroyed three more', mwwuwM i""iwni Migs and damaged 33 others dur- [_ 'll*|kaM| f .,-# tag the month. .. Ill 0113^8(8 UUSCS The pilota of some of the t be explained by a failing supply tlv^s there wlu ^ n0 other so- downed UN planes were picked ||f.___ |_ ||f U^..* s of adequate protein diet during Uon t thls qiM,tlon." up and returned to friendly lines |f QfTf Uj mOUSC e a period of surface prosperity chane's proposals were: I For security reasons the Alrl,ww" m Wl# ""^ and industrialization. Communist Spies Gel Death Sentences From Court Martial and Japanese birth rate* would:.Apart from tnese two alterna PANMUNJOM, March 1 (UP I Korean truce talks neared a breakdown today as Communist negotiators "demanded" that the Allies withdraw their oppo- sition to Russia as a neutral truce inspector, while Red pro- pagandists intimated that the war would be renewed. Colonel Chang Chung San, North Korean negotiator on the Communist staff, told the UN team the Reds "will eternally reject your opposition until you withdraw your unreasonable ob- jection." Chang said the 14-day old deadlock over Russian partici- pation in the armistice could be broken upon Allied accept- ance of one of two proposals both Of which would leave Rus- sia as a member of the inspec- tion commission. The Chinese Red declared: tag 'Agrien theory Is xpl aboaOV'The Geography Of Hun gex' baing pubUafred today. birth rat*. . countries hav-IJf Comjaun *He says nijlTE In Greek court maeSVIWay sen- Positlan n- tnced to death*lght alleged1 If '/. Communist spate aft toe conelu-1 row. tpeal l) Both sides to "agree si- Force U withholding the number multaneously" to all nominees till missing. T^Ka^f tr^kmrSrSin of neutral nations: Ground action stepped up.- SJ_8"J * r>mocratio 2) If United Nations objects Three tank columns limped back "n n -^*""i". 'to ratifying Russia, the solution,to the United Nations lines in ";- *2 ' "rJL.,2"HJSI would be for each side to select the western *nd central fronts "jf:0^2,*< r "Ki1,?'** 1U ncmlne without any agree- ner h-a-y CommunHt fire had ^^SRL^a- , ment between Communists and deatroyed on* tank and damaged ov,et oaacaneaa the Allies. nine others. ** Colonel Chav; voleeeV the, These ardbelleved to be the i Communist "demand1' Ufat the UN'a yqe( aeWe.loHea. of. armor Ita op- to r. Three disabled Sherman tanks were towed Sack to the Unl in Gualcma- United Nat ^1 n OcWr- the United V^that the ICobbe theater. onrrin? Communism." Emil Ransdorf. one of the Vader rrf the 1948 demonstra- tion In Prwe recounted events that led to the Communist seiz- ure of hie homeland. "Just as a communltv cannot hive without feur nd in neacaA* Capt. Fred L. Huff Jr. Disas-.lnn M ft crimHal Ls at larg^H the accident pn Galllard Hl^h- ter Control Officer of the 33d In- tnerf cannot be neace and fre- vay near Paraso Hill, Police-1 fantry Regiment, lntrod 0 c e d I ^om jn the world as long-as aft man John Harris discovered his|Douglas. Chaplain John A. international criminal U at own Jeep in a badly damaged Zwack delivered the Invocation iare he said Douglas congratulated the la- dles on their active community .spirit in taking the ten lesson A Pedro Miguel policeman was; courM and tgeA, them to Join a surprised this morning when he D),aster control team in one of answered an accident call to rma ^g 16 KoDbe sub-zones, out the car involved was his own After reaching the scene of lUeVett i.S XM wr Communists could rt "demand" iu9r^KiuV.tals ZV.' anything, tng a low production of meat and.'JtA toUl of CoirimunlsU were /"^ *nll, mBk and eggs. ' Bb says one and one-half mi- ntatlves John McdH , Mass. v aar ~t.. MaaeT) caflr Itton to devewpfflents In Our- lion persons live today in a con- Tom other defendants were given life imprisonment and ten in another tent, sub-delegates were- deadlocked over the solution ot how prison ers should be repatriated. trlever was damaged. The tanks destroyed at least 48 boaters and concrete tunnels. . Quebec Clamps dWm of permanent hunger and RivenJiM'",gSa^itaa? from The CommunlsU refused the that hunger produces excessive,received Jail. terrniijrefting rrom UnUed Natlong reauest that ai and inferior babies. The rapid rise of the birth rate in such countries as Italy and Japan has been explained In the past mainly on the Malthus the- one to twenty years. Seven more ccnditlon. Then he realized happened. Earlier, In the morn- ing ha had given* permission to two young men to borrow It. Da- vid Mcllhenpey of Balboa, who has a driver's license, was teach- and Benediction. The 71st Army what hadBand, Warrant Officer Thomas E. Oolder. conducting, provided music. Receiving diplomas were: Jes- sie Avans. Doris Anne Bradley. lng hto friand. Henry Cruz. of!shlrlev Carter. Margaret Cox. Panam, who had a'learner's ma Dyer. Jane Fleming, La- permit, to drive. Vaughn Oreer, Lois Helton. Mar- InvMtigatlon of the case could t ha Kate Koenlg. Mary La Perk- not be made by Policeman Harris Alice Morrison. Gloria Ndet. El Ransdorf described how the Communists corruptor! the edii- -ation svstem In rtechO!,lok)^. "Thev are worse than the Nazis j who closed oi>r Institutions of leamln. Th communlts keep the universities >nd schools onen to tsah ideologies which elir ouls." because the policy of Canal Zone fiolice ls not to send a man to uvestigate any Incident Involv- ing Ills own family or property. So another policeman took over and reported thnt the driver of tits Jeep, Cruz, lost control of the vehicle as he came speeding down Paraso Hill, ran off to the right hand side of the road, tra- velled across the road and hit a bank on the other side. Neither of the youths was in- jured. However, the Jeep was tow- ed Into the Ancn Corral for re- len Nnunellee, Barbara Pallas. Hedi Louise Schuelke apd Espe- ranza Stephens. Mrs. Eileen M. Davis. Huff and Bfet. Joseph P. Donnelly cave the instruction. TV For Ckile The Jintees' Bench nadler Carrasco, secretary of pairs on the left front fender, a' the Chileaan Broadcasters As- wheel and an axle. soclation, told the press today. An American, Thomas Mt- shall Smith; 29, was fined S30 durin* ytsterdav afternoon's ses- sion to the Balboa Magistrate's up, Court for reckless driving. ChifeWwTl? ta^ievtao? b^I^^l^Z??'" the end of thsTyear. Julio Me- Ki^^-n'SSa^ One Cell Electrician Is Charged By Widow ' MIAMI BEACH, March 1 (UP) Any hopes Steven A. Heufeld might have had for a Leap Tear change of fortune In his unrequited love for a Miami Beach widow were dashed In city court here yesterday. Judge Albert Saperstein whs admitted "I'm a lever too" ordered Beufeld to spend a half-dsrr In Jail. And the judge further direct- ed the 51-year-old electrical engineer to "go way" for one year and "switch off" his love for Mrs. Kathlyn Granger who had hauled the unwanted suit- or twice tato court because of his neighbor-arousing atten- tion. Ob the second court visit last week Saperstein ordered city psychologist Seymour Blamen- thal to examine Heufeld. The judge looked over the examiner's lout report but did not reveal its contents before passing sentence. "I think that if yen really laved tide woman' linseUhhly,'' the Judge toM Heufeld, "yea u would want to spare her further i mini i sseaaM do, don't yon?" "I love her," was Heufeld'* reply. The judge tried another tack. "You're an electrical engi- neer... when yen tarn off a switch it stops the electricity. "Now If I ordered yon to go to New York fer a year, would- n't that be like pulling the switch?" "It would stop it," Heufeld admitted. "But Judge, this Is an electrical age. It's so easy to generate new electricity M The electrical engineer indi- cated, despite even his own at- torny's Meas, that his love would still course through his veins despite jail and a year's banishmeat. But the crashing Mow can* when the judge turned to 'Mrs. Granger. "Is there any chance that S will ever come to leva Mr. leufeld?" he asked. "No!" she snapped. Mdden Road and then dlagon allv across the road. There were no Injuries Involved. The case of another American Chorles Gladv. 21 charged With reckless driving was continued! until Monday morning on a mo- tion made hv the government. For BDeedlne an American ai dler. John Fischer, 28. was fin $10 yesterday. And for tresnasslna In the "ommLwrie* Francia Diaz der' Tomberdo. 28 and Thelma Pn- when Farouk ousted th.**"*"?* 2nha?D? tos. were twice Aly Maher Resigns As Anc'c Egyptian Talks Hit New Sim CAIRO. Mar. 1 (UP' Pre- iler Aly Maher Pasha resigned oday as crucial Anglo-Egyptian negotiations hit a- last-minute snag. No official reason was giv- en immediately for Maher's ac- tion. rouk. who Immediately asked Ne- gulb Elsilalke Pasha to forsa a new government. Mahef resigned shortly after the Angte-Egyptlan talks sched- uled to start today were port- ooned indefinitely because Brit- ish Ambassador Sir Ralph Ste- venson bad been ordered to bed with a own. .._., c resignation shocked Brlt- 'flclals who feared the ef- on the whole troublous aues- ot Aosjlo-Egyptlan relations British curtly dismissed susr- )ns that tvenson's illness t be diplomatic, her became premier at the end of January. He took office I sick and wounded^ prisoners of request of Llbby that _ be delivered ""ring anesedly active since to prisoners The fiery sessions 1947, was chp with collecting were recessed at 2: p.m. and transmit*! by radio, mill-. rrr . . t:.ry. diplomatic and political In- Asa Khali IS Abed formation about Greece and her *%$ BAlidii wa raa#i.*s From Other Cities past mainly on the Malthus tne- wn.czjK'ESrl~~h,\ The Commies a ory-that Improving vn^^^yl^^^^VJ^^^i^aarp 'no" to the caused It. But under De Cwtro's money smuggiad ftP '" ;Rear-Admiral R. S. theory, the rise In the Italian Iron Curtain eoutries into packages Both legislators based their remarks on reports which have appeared during the past ^^H weeks In newspapers and maga* ztaes throughout the United Embargo On Cattle 8Ut~ McCorraack recalled that toe- several years he had been warn- ing of "the growth of the Soviet QUEBEC. Mar. 1 (UP).The beachhead" In Guatemala.
Quebec government t o d a y | congressman told the House of | clamped an embargo on Uve-1 Representatives last August that stock from all the other pro- the people of the United States vlnces to prevent the spread of I were concerned over reports ot the foot-and-mouth disease. soviet penetration In Guatem The restriction was announc- la). ed by. Premier Maurice Duplessls last night. He said he ordered the Agriculture Department to "W of the United States." McCormack said Monday." havp ban the Importation, sale or to recognize that we have a full- possession of livestock from out-,fledged Soviet beachhead on oui formation about -" *" W "'J : ^a^oT whV^ 'The defendant, sentenced to The wealthy Ag^Kh^n lay a-; ^VsplcTaTclearanc'eTrorn" the ,.k -Tf.. ah of the lone today In hip bedroom at Art*Zt r department. areex cmn^?nl"Te1arc0hythe he* Sff "Yaqulmour," They were* HtoJT Beloyannls, Cannes, cut off from all n BtaWrwrWeVTs beatln? |- Phillip Lasaridas. Miltlades BU- heart might stop Mung. to tMn tne effect of ^ both XunMto death chosal. a /epeva specialist, Duplessls said that the Quebec Agriculture Department believ- ed it was "humanly Impossible the mass slaughterings In i within a few mfeutes of his ar- Saskatchewan and the Fo'ur wommj were ong those rival^ere yesfcrday by P-lal ^oes^against Wester^ friendly to the United States have a full-fledged Soviet beach- head on their flank, too." McCormack cited a recent ar* tide which described "the a al from Moscow of one Victor the Gutierrez, bearing antl-Amari- em- can orders from Moscow to Uto mest oarty organizations to Guatema- la fined $10 each. Another tras- oaser, Mprla Isabel Sosa re Cu- caln. 20. Panamanian failed to apper to answer the charge and her $15 ball was forfeited. A Panamanian was released on his own recognizance vester- dav after being chareed with drivlne his bus on Balboa Road without a valid certificate of in- oec.tlon. The defendant. RoberH to Bellzarlo McFarlane. 21. asked for time to get witnesses In hl behalf. The case win be heard Monday morning. Good Bettor Bust VERACRUZ, Mexico, Mar. 1 (UP) Spectator Guillermo Cms Gallnds climbed late a wrestling ring on a dare today and won a IM bet. But he was carried eat sa- cn; sious with a broken leg and bruises. There were eight wrestlers in the ring engaged In a "rst-for-aU" light. after El Nana Pasha bloody Cairo riots The British postponement or the meetings seemed to catch Egyptian government circles r>v surprise and Maher promptly called his cabinet to an unsched- uled session. ? .-He resigned shortly after. + Senate Committee Is More Niggardly Than House Over Military Pay Hikes answer the call iHtncMssnw WASHINGTON. March 1 tup> The Senate Armed Services Committee approved a new mil- itary pay bill today providing a 3 percent basic lpcrease for servicemen, pins hMSer allow- ances for rations and quarters. The base pay raise fell far short of the 10 percent across- the-board Increase requested by the Defense Department. The House has approved the department's full request. However, the comnflttee work- ed out a system of sattra allow- ances which amounts ot more than the flat 10 percent hike the House provided for sub- sistence and quarters. Chairman Richard B. Rus- sell (D., Ga.) said the commit- tee reasoned that allowances closely relatedr_to the cost of living should!* need more than basic pay. Russell estimated the com- mittee's bill would, cost $375,- 000,6*0 less 1MB the House ver- sion, which would total about $S90j)M,eM a rear for 3.5*0.000 men la the Armed forees, the anticipated strength for fiscal 1953. The Senate bill would raise: 1) Subsistence for officers from 42 to M. 2) Subsistence of enlisted men authorized to eat off the post from $2.29 to $2.75 a day- 3) Rental allowances for of- for second lieutenants to $150 ficers with one or two depend- for one and two-star generals. ents $10 a month. Russell said this would be the first time officers with large 4) Rental allowances for of- families would get extra be- ficers with three or more de- nefits. pendents $20 a month. Officer rental allowances pre- The House bill would raise the above four items a flat 10 per- sently range from $75 a month cant. PRESENT MOreTBXY BASE PAT SCALE FOR MILITART PERSONNES, AND THE 1 INCREASES BOTH BILLS WOULD r ROVIDE: RANK 1 (OW HOUSE SENATE Private ......,........... 1 75 $ 82 $ 77 Wc.................... Corporal................ SO 88 82 102 113 109 Sergeant ............... 12S 137 128 Staff Sergeant .......... Sgt. 1st Class ............ IS! 177 1B1 210 188 Iff Master Sgt............... 236 298 242 Warrant Officer W-l ..................... 240 2S4 247 W-2 ..................... 283 312 291 W-J .............. 334 388 344 W~4 ........-e 421 484 434 2nd Lieutenant .......... 213 235 21 2M 321 370 407 set Captain ................. 981 Major ................... 427 470 448 Lt. Col. .................. 484 532 49S Coloaei .................. 841 706 SIS Brig. Gen................ 78 877 822 Maj. Gen. ...'............ 64 1.090 883 Two, three and four star generals get the same base pay, although they receive varying allowances acoordlag to their rank. Five-star officers get special pay which, with other allow- ances, totals about $18,900 a year. Here ls the way the Senate blU differs from the House -ver- sion on quarters allowances for enlisted men: 1) All grades without depend- ents and last three grades-with one dependent ribw $49 a month, Senate bill $91. 2) Two dependents in lowest grades and one or two depend- ents In top grades now $87 a month. House bill $74, Sen- ate bill $80. . 3) All grades with more than two dependents now $89 i month. House bill $83. Senate $100. Russell pointed out thnt quarters and rental allowances for both officers and enlistad men apply only to personnel not furnished housing by the dl^H Those living in rent-free gov- ernment quarters "don't draws a dime." Neither the House nor the Senate bill attars the present rate of "hazard" pay, which provides extra benefits for fly- ing and some other duties. A special bill providing extra pay for ground forces on com- bat duty Is pending; in Congress. Russell said he hopas for ^^H Senate action on the pay bUl. Either the Ho or Use San- ate measure would bibail ef- fective the first dav of ttsa sasath after becoming law. t M r I wo THf: PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAII.T NEWSPAPER SATURDAY. MARCH 1, 1SI I Ml I fHE PANAMA AMERICAN OWNED NO *uL>SH0 TUB PANAMA AMICAN KIN. INC. FOUNOtO ' NtlMN IH>UNIVILL IN 1*11 MAftMOOlO ARIA. OITO 7. H STRUT r. O BO< 13*. PANAM. B. Of t. TllVHOKI PANAMA NO. 2-074O '9 UNO I C*Lt AODHH PANAMBKICAN. PANAMA > (LON OrICI. a.17 CtNTRAl AVNUr IITWIr 12TH NO UlM ST*T PemiN Pei-nrscNTATivi JOSHUA e. POWSRS. INC 349 Maoiion a'vc. NW YORK. |li> n. y. LOCAL PIT MOhTH. IN AOVANCI----------- PC ! MBNTH*. IN ADVANCE. !*' ONE VIA.. IN AOVANCt------ t 1.70 CO 1* so S .SO 1S.OO 14.00 Labor Mews And Comment tional Campaign Button u.oddway and Elsewhere By Jock Lait f TOPIA CONFIDENTIAL Thii is what has happened while we weren't looking closely. tfhey slipped socialism over on us. It isn't -creeping." It's leaping. By Victor Riesel Of course, there's something rotten in the bunch which runs the banana Republic of Guate- mala. Of course, it's a "full fledged Soviet beachhead" here In the West as some Congress- men charge. Of course, we're losing a war down there just up the not very merry isthmus from the Pan- ama Canal. Of course, we're i losing vital airbases which we Rig business has been taken in by the Government through had du,.lng thf war to protect government contracts, allocations, wage and profit rulings, taxes lhat cana] administrative boards, RFC financing and infiltration. Many Wall I ^ gute ^ t hM Street houses and big industries are forced tohire ex-Ncv. Deai 8t,ateglc area to So- fts as chairmen of boards, presidents and general counsels, or .nt, who infiltrated the ^ey get no handouts, and may be prosecuted by the trust-busters ^ntr^Sl now sit"n the same ** men- platform with its president and run Moscow demonstrations with the approval of the government of Guatemala And, of course, the suave Guatemalan envoy, Senor Alfre- do Chocano, either conceals that he knows or knows nothing of his nation when he brushes off Congressional charges of So-. vlet operation a move de- signed to dlsaffect millions of Latin Americans from the U 8. in that vital little land you must not ignore. If you do, then Korea with its 125,000 casualties has meant no- thing to you. Chiquita Banana strums a ba- lalaika, these days. And if the State Dept. doesn't have the Information to throw in Senor Alfredo Chocano's teeth, here it is on the record: s , There are hundreds of Soviet The Government succeeded in socializing the nation on other levels through giant reclamation projects, which, when complete, turn out to be competitors of legitimate business, which they un- "dersell through tax exemption. * The following few are not Isolated cases: f"The Interior Department Is planning to saddle the taxpayers with several millions more to irrigate a minute area in Arizona f with fewer than 8,000 farms. The long-range purpose is not to jprovide water for a handful, but to set up a giant government- owned electrical industry to drive private business In the area Into bankruptcy. Meanwhile, a favored few are buying land tlie Gov- ernment will condemn. Others are selling power stock short. In Idaho, the Bureau of Reclamation plans a project on the Snake River to dwarf Hoover Dam. Though its excuse is to fertil- ize nearby farms, it will be almost exclusively for generaMm .elec- tric power, none of which will remain In the thinly-populated readout will be carried to Oregon and Washington to be added to the socialistic Bonneville boo!. .Cronies of Senator Magnuson and Truman's pal. Mon Wafigren, stand to make fortunes from this. _______ The same bureau is earmarking billions more to dam the [arias Wver in north central Montana, where a new gimmick agents in Guatemala, working hVa been added to force landowners there to reduce their hold- through the bitterly anti-U. S ln to 160 acres in an unadvertised attempt at -agrarian reform. Guatemalan labor movement. _---------- Proof: Last Oct. 13, there The TV A first of the socialist enterprises, Is branching out gathered in the Teatro America, to take over' control of education and scientific research in the Guatemala City, 1.000 workers South under cooperative ticups with the Board of Control for delegates for the first of three Southern Regional Education.. .At first this was all to be ror < sessions of the Congress for the flood control" Electric energy would be a by-product a-yard- Unification of the Guatemalan .stick to keep private producers in Une Then T.V.A.. withi lega Labor Movement. They screamed "Long Live the Communist Party. .Not a single Guatemalan Soldier for the Imperialist War... The Guatemalan Workers demand immediate peace and armistice tn Korea___ The workers are against the atomic war and against V S. capitalist imperialism." ^w"* WSJfMGTOH MERRY- GO- ROUND IIW MARION ..UthoHtyR onV to darn' rWerV;started building steam electrical |pla"*- ?" "HArriit commercial Droducers whom - trc; nts to undercut commercial producers y with its water-derived energy. Now Fair Denl Sen. Murray and Sec. of Interior Chapman are working for an extension to allow T.V.A. to experiment with w nd- fmilla as a source of power, because "private utilities are Inhtbit- ' and the Federal government takes all profit it hasn't yet re- gulated or reduced, There are 75'federally-owned EnSnK in operation or under conatructlon. More than gl0.000.00ti.OOfI was pent to finance this. And $50.000,000 000 more Is on the^draft boards. Mo.n taxpayers get no return. The oheap power goes to a favored few. 1 fj _ Drtw Pearson says: Texut is steamed up over oil it may not have; Tidelands oil wells off Texas coast haven't produced; Long Beach has no meters on its oil wells to measure royalties. . ,&E MS' Te!as'.r. In, thl8' tne ,ar8t oil-refining city in the world, tidelands oil Is almost a fighting word The average Texan Is so sore about It that he talks as If Texas were about to secede from the union. ,. ?.a.tivc T6*8.1? To,m clark' wh0 * UJS attorney general brought the tidelands oil suit, and native Texan Mastn White, solicitor or the Interior Department, who helped, are excoriated almost as If they were top members of the Kremlin. To people of the other 47 states, tidelands oil may mean nothing more than the oil wells drilled under water off the coast of the United States. But to Texang, it has become almost as symbolic as the Alamo. Most of this is due to Texas pride, which run* strong tn the Lone star itate; but part also to the fact that three of the weal- thiest oilmen of the southwest H. L. Hunt, Clint Murchison *n.il.Roy.1C.ul!en,. see the tidelands oil issue as an effective stick with which to beat Washington over the head. Vigorously anti-Truman, Hunt and Murchison both siphon- ed money up to Sen. McCarthy to help defeat Sen. Millard Tvd- ings in Maryland, while Roy Cullen paid a million dollars for part interest In the Liberty radio network in order to put liberal commentator Bill Shlrer off the air and substitute for him rabid antl-Acheson propaganda. These three are among the leaders of the battle against elder statesman Tom Connelly, which is why Texas attorney general Price Daniel, who knows little about foreign affairs, has sudden- ly become an expert on foreign affairs. Daniel has struck a gold mine of campaign contributions, and talks learnedly about Formosa just as If he really knew where Formosa was and who lives there. . Tne.Jnore th? younK attorney general talks about foreign affairs, the more he pleases his. big-money backers and the more he convinces at least himself that he knows Just as much as the present cha rian of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, sen. connally. NO PROFITABLE TIDELANDS WELLS u, Itxi\ to ,ufh ? wide-open, friendly and sensible state thai It s hard to understand how it can get so worked up. However. Callfomlans are lust about the same. The paradoxical thing Is that Texans are worked up over something that so far doesn't seem to exist. What few Towns seem to know is that not one dollar of tidelands 611 royalty has vet been received on the wells drilled off the Texas coast in the Gulf of Mexico. In fact, the wella drilled so far have been duds. Only one tidelands oil well, according to the records of the geological survey, has struck anything. This well Is in block 245 and produced 48 barrels in a day, after which It was plugged as not being worth the running of a NEW YORK.There seems to be a consider- advance In medical science that might have pipeline. able dogiigh'-. In progress here In New York been Impossible without the experimental use of Of about five other wells near Beaumont, drilled close to Staie over the Metcalf-Hatch bill, which is animals. ; the shore line some time ago, one Is bringing in a small return simply a measure to allow the state to drain Anesthesia itself, the iron lung, ACTH. and. In contrast. 15 or 20 wells have been drilled In water several Paws For Thought By 806 RUARK the animal pounds of their strayed or unlicensed insulin are Just a tiny few boons to mankind miles off the Texas coast at a loss of more than a million dollars animals for use in medical research. that were developed through animal experl- each. Dogs that would be destroyed unless claimed ment. would go to qualified laboratories for expe- x believe only 30 dogs died to make insulin a.W. ?! rd P?.1* houts? Whoirimentation. possible, ahd maybe some million-plus diabetics v,,. Hi P'st'orm? I Right here is as far as you have to go for are alive this moment as a result. one otner tnan Guatemala's the howl to arise, and not from the animals. Tn* awful economics of this bill to provide latest tarret I*. the telephone business. When a small com- President Jacobo Arbenz and I can think offhand of no more potent small animals for research is that they kill about inanv in Iowa applied for a $175,000 loan from the U. S. Rural his cabinet mlslsters. Hobby than the antl-vlvlsectlonlsts, who have W.OOO si rays a year in New York alone, and ifee'-'lrlflcailon Aim., to add 135 subscribers, bureaucrats insisted Who else? Only Vicente Lorn- made a large hue and cry ever since I can medcial science needs only from 25,000 to 30,000 Ht kc and pay interest on. $813.000... Also, it must hire one cer- bardeToledano, Moscow's Latin remember about torture chambers and poor a year-, taln engineer at $20,800. American chief. little Fldo and the unfeeling brute who sadis- J1'1- Dr. -Charles Kensler of Cornell writes i------ Ucalhr. tied "han down and chopped him up that Vital'Teeearch projects on cancer, heart die- for fun, 1'guess, or so the antl-vlvs would ase. hypWWmslon. radiation Injury, and shock- have it. and-wound healing are seriously delayed *nd r And the insurance bmnness, a backbone of private tnterpriM fey the end of 1952. the government will have more life lnsuranee fir. force than all private companies combined. Social security fVetr-rans Administration and railroad retirement will pass 325 tiillion, while private ltfe insurance will be below 300 billion. Was ihat the-first such de- monstration? Wope. On May 14, same city, the Right here I must say that the personal re- ln some cases abandoned for laok of animals, cord is clear on dogs. I am dog poor. Nobody ...se*,ns. .t0.me that the long and bitter fight cow often* "n'a^our-day meet- Is. '.^"iL*,'}? /r^ciTof mine off" t"any 'pount, g*._tte *Ptt-vlva .against prorresi[is merely "an ing of the air, ground and trans- port workers there. Egregious public housing projects are competing with busl- fieas as they control elections by colonization of reliefers and the privileged poor into Republican zones and reward the party faith- ful with luxury apartments at paupers' prices, paid for by other taxpayers, who are forced to support the tax-exempt projects riand^r^^^ I {ST MS T"* *Z fe FStiS^J?^ SRS SSS WablTsSnfmper boats over $10,000; similar privately built units, $5,000. Right up on the platforrm was Moscow agent Louis Sail- lant, special from Paris, who said he brought greetings from Wherever public ownership has been tried on a small scale- M city-owned transportationthe cost Is higher and the service Is worse, though private owners pay taxes, where the others are tax-exempt. Examples of socialism in action are the New York, Chicago and Detroit transit messes. Britain was far ahead of us, ut got a bellyful and quit before it was all washed out. i Btat Fair Dealers. Labor Partyltes. Progressives, Roosevelt ADAS- and "ex"-Communlsts now .touting Tito, scream for more federal control, for direction of education from Washington for Inore welfare and security and less red herrings, and for the Four freedoms"which are what? Radicalism is popular with the "upper classes." Socialism and bommunism have become playthings and hobbies of the rich. The American proletariatthe still underprivileged fewwants none f It There Is ho socialism movement ln Mississippi, poorest state, id'plenty of It ln New York and California, the richest. Ahd the big socialite are surveying foreign fields now with reedv eyes Federal Security Administrator Ewlng s agents visit- _d Burma, his social-security expert went to Turkey, his 20 spe- cialists went to Stam. and cased Cairo. His public health experts investigated pains and aches in Southeast Asiaall at govern- nent expense.. Hey. I have pains and achesin my checkbook! ysiu is you foauM tmi mames own column [THE MAIL BO* Th Mail lax it a* ape* famm iar nadan a The Panama Amar- La. Lattan art received ar.tarully eed ara h.n.ltd ir a wholly can- Mentiel nwaaer. I yea antnautt latter daa't ea mi.ti.nt K it deaml appear Uta text day. Lett* ara bt rite araar racaivsd. Hun try t* kaap th. lattan limited ta en* **t itnath. Maatrfy at letter writen k beM in atrictaat canilaaMa. Thi* Mwapaper astenias teepaatnifrry far ttattmairh ar apmiant yapnana* hi leMen neta teaatis. isrs. t}1' banana joint Jumps with antl-UiS. sentiment. You can get yourself lynched for saying a kind word for the United Fruit Co. and other U. S. investors. While all this goes on and on. the anti Communists are suppressed and their rallies banned, mind you. That occurred last Jan. 5, when Minister of Govern- ment Chavez Nachmann prohibited students from running an anti-Commun- ist rally. Yet the Subversive. Moscow-controlled Partisans of Peace movement is free to roam Guatemala (along- side of our free-spending V. S. tourists). Lust June 10 the Partisans ran a huge anti-American rally bwilt around the pro-Communist Youth Alliance nobody banned that pro-Soviet ope- ration. Nor were subsequent Partisan rallies prohibited. Why? Want more evidence of Gua- temalan collaboration with the Soviets? During the International Lab- or Office conference ln Geneva last June 24. the Guatemalan delegation voted with the Iron Curtain nations against admit- ting Japan to the ILO. or to any laboratory, except over the cold car- Impassioned work of the cranknot a kindness ca-ss of the master of the hounds. ' "** animal se much as a cruelty to the But my beasts are licensed and eat better lu,man-,But ll Persists, and has killed this and than I do and crowd me out of the sack and s,ml'ar bills before, are not public charges. A very potent minority always has played on But a dog needs a great deal of care and un- a suscePtible American fondness for dumb ani- derstandlng ot be a worthy member of society m,a~j malce a mawkish point of the boy and Unfortunately, as soon as you turn thlm loose 's do* at }hp, P.cnsc of the boy'sand other without proper care he fares ill boyseventual welfare. I can think of no more miserable living anl- x ,not*ce '"at one group ln Westchester Coun- mal than a displaced dog. because, while per- ty tu circulating a yellow dodger of complete sons do not always need a dog, there has never "ntrutns and half-truths. Intimating that If been a dog thai didn't need a person ogs are taken from Pnds (where their pres- The mangy, starved, bedraggled mutt that 5hHiinam.W.i1tem *?*walfs' th kidnaping of winds up in the dogcatcher's wagon has one C T^h^fi?1 ? **'"* **?..the ,tat- fate-death unless claimed. That's the best deal h-^5,-2?nb" uals0, alle5es that the 0s w" osa?" make-uselMS death and valueless dls- a vicious untruth. P Property, "No part (of the children's property) should subject to confiscation by the state. Lets Impounded anl "Vex- """"sh freedom. Stress this point, and make pcrlmental fodder. mpounaea animals as ex- your ^hea as soon as p^,,^ t0 your ,eBlsla*! There is no threat to pets. The doas aren't ni" U-^1 and tended, and are invariably anesthetized rrI?5iieap*S.st 1nRwash- surC but part of a when they are operated on anestnetized contrived setback to general welfare merely out Those that die in the process are no deader wr21n5.u. ,ranaticlsmthe kind of wild-eyed than they would be if they were destroyed sectmnuf 5at9tf,"M2I ?one y0UtMuI antl-vlvi- a pound. ,co '" SffiSKi'.l0,. attempt to murder a California So I can't find any holes ln the new bill, h* ,J }? tn* phl'dren's property) shouh which Is meeting the usual violent ouDosition ^.SUuJe^ to confiscation by the state. Let'/ to legalize the use of Impounded anlmaTas -' .^."lsJreedom- Btre* this point, and mak. There's no point in dwelling lengthily on the tSr'was^sing dej," taMsTork **"* ^ d0C_ The Gap By Petei Edson DO PANAMANIANS HAVE SHORT MEMORIES? Er: I was rather surprised (pleasantly, that Is!) to read a letter I vour column recently ln which the writer took exception to Ame of the complaints made by Panamanian merchante and f hen concerning "unfair competition" by Panama Canal and #her U. B. agencies. I had always thought the "Casper Milquetosat" attitude of the U. 8. State Department and the intense nationalism of the nuuunanian government would onlv allow one side of this ques- Vm to get Into print. Apparently the motto of vour paper won Hi There Is more to this matter of "unfair competition" than M been brought out by the Panama Chamber of Commerce, t since the unmentioned factors would not be favorable to its use they have been carefully avoided. It is refreshing to ob- rve your willingness to print ln vour column opinions dlffer- b from the frenzied screams of accusation appearing on the at Page from time to time. With particular reference to the closing of the Tlvoli Hotel t would appear that some Panamanian memories are rather l I haven't been down here very long, but I can remember kit too long ago when quite a number of prominent Panama- Ebm were verv happy to be able to secure reservations at the ^Svcll for a week or two. The advocates of closing the Tlvoli should rememberthere I another election coming up soon, and this time it might be bdr turn to scoot across the border to the sanctuary of the maligned Tlvoli I K. Pasa. The Guatemalan brother got up and said. "We wish to sup- port our Polish colleagues." who had Just charged the if. s. with using Japan as a military base for aggression in Korea. How do you like that, Senor Alfredo Chocano? Maybe that doesnt startle your diplomatic soul because you represent a nation in which no one is startled to see huge mural posters of Joe Stalin adorn meetings (June 26 in Guatemala Ci- ty), or into which Wash- ington government news $er- vice material just cant pe- netrate because your people keep it out. Yet Moscow's man. Toledano, and his comrade. Carlos Alex Gomez, go In and out as they wish and we can't get a D. fi. labor specialist ln. And why does the Guatema- lan government now censor all outgoing and Incoming press messages under an "old law" dug up by Col. Federico Fuentes Glron. director of Mall and'Te- lecommunications? I could roll this pro-Soviet record on and on. sure, been abandoned. The nearest the come to filling the gap in consider ver In negotiating Louisiana, on the other hand, has brought in some lush tide- lands wells. But Texas whece the term tidelands oil Is almost a "fighting word, hasnt been so fortunate. Maybe Te*ans are getting sil steamed up over nothing. CALIFORNIA TIDELANDS In California, also, there's been so much oratory about tide- lands oil .that lew people are aware of some certain highly tn- terestisg'facts. sn This is the failure of companies operating on behalf of the city of Long BeaCh to put meters on their wells. Without meters. It is obviously imposible to measure accur- ately the flow of oil, and accordingly fix the amount of royalty accruing to the people of Long Beach or the Federal govern- ment. This is Important for several reasons. In the first place, revenue from tidelands oil off Long Beach was supposed to be held in trust for the people of Long Beach; or, under the subsequent U.S. Supreme Court ruling, for the Federal government. Second, California claims that it can administer tidelands oil more efficiently than the Federal government. However, failure to put meters on the wells would seem a powerful argument to the contrary.^ TIDELANDS OIL PILFERAGE Another Interesting reflection on California efficiency Is a recent report by M. D. Hughes, chief harbor petroleum engi- neer of Long Beaeh, that tidelands oil was subject to pilfering. "It is possible for almost anyone to drive a tank truck into the field and load up," the alert Long Beach Independent re. ported. T The newspaper also quoted harbor engineer Hughes as stating: stating: "There is an unnecessarily large number of unsealed clean oil outlets at all test tanks, trap setting and tank farms that are inadequately controlled." When this and other tidelands oil Irregularities came to the attention of the California state legislature, Its committee on oil issued a critical report, warning that because of Inefficient ad- ministration, it might become necessary to take tidelands oil lands away from the city of Long Beach. "There Is evidence of substantial unauthorized use arid ad- ministration of at least a lar;?e portion of the granted lands," the California state legislature said of the Long Beach tidelands operation. Since Long Beach Is by far the wealthiest tidelands develop- ment off the Pacific Coast and since California has claimed it can operate tidelands oil more efficiently than the Federal Gov- ernment, the above critical report plays squarely Into the hands of Secretary of the Interior Oscar Chapman. TEXAS MERRY-GO-ROVND Two Texans are now ln charge of the nation's Income taxes slder very carefully Just Jonn DunlaP of Dallas. Internal Revenue Commissioner: and 5a- ^n go in negotiating the real Issues *'rar',c "*" ,f rady, In charge of the highly important lntel- iietdvunabK decide what Th5 .".11 rem"- e "'IMUe,i Hgence unit Both re as honest as the Texas prairies are broad, to do about-what actuluy XmmtowESx he!? .tPw*0nr lsaUe U the most Important, and Mart1lni,Pl This U the huge, glaring gap ta Bnited State. ^^^^to^^^ commu? "P & '^ ~ntto5Kl2% The truce talks have already, aer all, been nl_Paradise. so heTl run for Congress instead, going on for weary month after with no end yet in sight. Whenever they seem to move _ of agreement, and the usual tentative optimism henceforth . begins to be expressed ln Tokyo or Washington, Preste? anrtt,ca "'"*", some entirely new Issue Is Injected by the Com- caj^rvin/thr?, td .P,laii8u,lready extat a,so ior munlsts. rTEXr&u* war,to "" Chinese mainland, if the Vishinsky proposes that the talks be moved to wirw for iftE att"* ln r?rce' the United Nations, or the Chinese Communists tromKi-?l ,w'lhdrawlnp most American forces insist that Russia be accepted as a "neutral" na- the -ceomnani suc#ce,sru> truoe is negotiated, to tion to police the truce. the accompaniment of a flat warning that re- The Communists know that the United Na- waT Lt. *2?v?n wU1 be regarded as an act of tions cannot conceivably accept these proposals. *>, ? * been evlved Yet they can quite easily continue to Inject such th. rnmmlw Rap.tlIJ remainswhat to do if issues, simply to keep the truce talks going, and {^1honinI"nJst1ne,trer "ttaek nor make a truce, to give the negotiators at Panmunjom something f'T^ i^f,Earding,,he real lssues whUe inject- to talk about. What.then? '"2a "2.endless series of unreal issues. This is On the ground. Communist troops are now well J, """f 0een nPPening for months, and is still dugn. expending little or no precious material, n|5F, Chicago convention pledged to Gov. Shivers as a favorite son not with the Idea of nominating Shivers, but In order to block Truman. Most Texans don't believe the Dixiecrat idea will work and ln excellent jump-off position in case of gen- ^(W,I.f-1? Presur,re Is brought to bear on the eral war. communists to make a truce, this may go on hap- In the air, United Nations losses from ground pe?,. QJJ"* indefinitely, fire and air combat together about equal Com- ,_,22f in.^iUme rnay soon * coming when the munist losses ln air combat alone. Moreover, the m.ted Nations will warn the Communist* that Soviets may well be content to trade the loss of "tner a truce ,s negotiated on a reasonable basis, a few doaen Mlg 15's, out of well over 5.000 pro- f he war will start again in deadly earnest. The duced yearly, in exchange for the valuable air 'vu * ,ucn course are very obvious and very experience they are gaining. 8T?a_ Already, the structures of the Migs have been nr allies, especially the British, will violently strengthened as a result of this experience, and oppose the taking of these risks, they have been equipped with more effective fire- "t this country simply cannot indefinitely power. commit much of Its military strength to the Ro- under such circumstances, why should the rean peninsula. Communists make a truce? And somehow, some day soon, the great gap in Hope of successful negotiation of a truce has American policy must be filled. Mr. P.A. Want Ad' attract a following Of prospects mighty fin! What's more ... he signs them quickly On the dotted line! Your classified ad wUI at* tract a parade of good pro- sects because everyone is Panam and the Caul Zoae reads P.A, Wast Ads regularly. Try them tow ... the results will surprise you! SATURDAY, MARCH 1, lMt THE PANAMA AMERICAN AM mPPPrPEKT DAM NCWSPAPBt mimm .....'-----------rii " i it if ISTHMIAN CHURCH NOTICES Baptist Htiattatka Matting *. n. Divina SaT- Set 7:1 pjn. and Serving, ol Tha tort ippr at both Sarvtco Bond Sentar TV ivm C ., uivlni Tees llTw an. nd 1M pm Sorvlnp .._ Lord Suppar at B da r School 1 i:* oJn NATIONAL BAT I IB I > Panama Baptist. Prayei A Divine Service. *:S0 rica 7:11 p.m. and kipper at both Si 1:00 o m Boya Baptist. La Boca, Service 11:00 ajn. and 7:: tha Lord Suppeg.at both Sarvtce Sun Naw Hope. Chlva-CAlv. O.t,. Uttne Services 11M am Sunda School a< I0 D4B Uamooa. C.Z Mvtne Service at 11 **> am and 7^0 D-m with Sunda School at 3:0n D.m Ac*. A W. CtOafc. Mdate *lo AbaJO- *"- Sunda School < p.m. COCOLI BAPTIS1 CHURCH Bulldlna 311 Bruja Road Rev. B. G. Van Boyen Sunday ercnooi ............. ?-**,m' taachlmi Servlea .......... l}: TralnlnaUnlon ............. !i2? pjn Preaching Service ........... 7ao pm Brotherhood 7.-00 cm. Monday. Prayer Mental '-V Wadrieadav Be*. A N. urawa. Minuter RADUarnOM BATIal CHURCH U. 1' reel (Baalai the National institute 1 Box 144. Panam Cliy Sunday Servlaa Sunday School ......... 'VSS* Preaching Servir t ------ 7 JO p.m. Wadnc'd'v Bin'. Stud 7:10 Din. Rev. ^ UP^C riASl BAPTIST CHUMCB Balboa Halghu, c.z 627 Ancon Boulevard Drawer "B" Balboa Helena Phone Balboa 1717 Teal Church away fia A-, with welcoai lull a trlendly' William H. AMI Sunday Scnuoi Churches of tha mony felthi in the Canal Zana, and tha terminal cstlei ef Panama ana Colon, Republic et Panama, aitend wilcensi at.all tlmai to man and women af tha arma* lervicei, and H civilian ariahbori, rriandi ana* itrsngen. Aa public lervice, the Tha Panama American Halt below, by denomination!, noticai of houn at wonhip and other rafular activities. Listings ara rotated tram tima ta time. Daneminationi having only ana at two cengicgstioni ara Hitad under "Other Churchai And Servlcai" A ipecial lilting it included far lervicei et Arm aaatl, Air Parca baiai and Naval itetioni. Mlniittrt. church lecretoriei and chaplain! ara aikad ta Inform the newi deik by Wadneiday noon at tha latait af any chanfloi far tha earning Saturday's church gag*. Catholic pjn first T r-aatai ,... :*U am Moraine Worship .......... 10:4S a.m BapUstTralnin Union .... :> o.m Evangelistic (Service....... I :u o.m er Meetlm Wednesday 7 30 om MS Bible Study Thursday ....................... 0 a* Men Brotherhood (Lest Monday in motMAi .. i:** ATLANTIC etAPTlSl CHURCH Bolivar Avenue at llth Street Cristobal C.Z Rev Prad L Jooee. Paitoi Methodist ran. METHOD!* CHURCH i British Conferenne Minuter Wllitam H Armitrons :U0 am. Mornmi Prayei no Sarraor 5:00 p.m. Sunday School :00 Mana Meeting. 7:1 o.m Cvenlni Prayei ano Sermon nUNITt MKTHOD181 CHURCH 7th Street and Melender Avenue. Rev. Norman Pratt. Mulntee s- Colon. RJ> Rev. Normen Pratt, Minuter Sunday Service at :S0 a.m and 1:1 p.m.. Sunday School for all anee at * p m. Monday 140 o.m Weekly Prayei Meetlna WMfftSaW MRTHUDlSl CHUMCB . Alvar CHa, CX. Sunday Service t a.m. and 1:1 p.m Sunday School or all age at JO p.m Tueadav 7:10 Dm Prayer Meetlna. ^Yo laytUUea Ta Wenhlp- Slble Sehool ............... t:tt ejn 'orahip................... II:* aj Training Union ............ JO p.m Worihlp.................. 7:K p.m. Prever Meetln IThum.l .. 730 om Seventh Day Adventist Sunday it 00 am Pint A Third Wed- BVNTH-UAY Weekly Service Ui all Churakea, ai follows: Saturday Sabbath School :30 a.m Divine Worship 11:0* a m Youth Meet- ing 4:30 o.-i. SundayBible Lecture ': p.m. Wed- netday Bible Stud and Prayer Ser- vice 730 p.m. Pacific *Ue Pan.aU A Balboa English "hurchea R T Rankln. Dli- trict Paitor Churebea: Cabo Vade. Ave J. P. de la One; Jamaica Society Hall: Chorrillo: Rio Abajo; Vueblo Nuevo; Balboe Chapel - AM Javllin Rd Balboa (Saturday Meeting un. Pastor; Calle Daran Gamboa an- Frilole A. A Grlizle. Paitor Atlaatlr Side Angliih Churche S P Clarke. Dis- trict Paster. Churches Colon BnflUh. Third Street; Cristobal English lth St A Bolivar Ave.: Criatobal Spanish ltb St A Bo Uvar Ava. Union Churches i Whei ail Pretaataata caaaarate with anity in aaaeaUala, Haarty In neei- easentUia aad charily la all thing rut ATLANTIC SID CraMaaal The Rev. Phillip Havana (LIMad balo ara un caliiuiic Cburcbe. in the Canal Zone and tbooe In the ter- minal cities of Panam and Colon wheat eonareaations are primarily English ipeekin Beside these, the Cathedral In Panama City, the Cathedral of the Im maculate Conception in Colon, end num- erous parish churches In both cilia, wel- come English peaking visitors, though ihali congregation* are in mar 11. Span, 'h-ripeakltig i / SI MAatrS Balboa Sunday Masse. S3. IM 10:00. 11:00. 11:00 a.m. Benediction: :00 pjn Holy Day Masses: 13. I:0. 11:10. 113 a.m Confessions: Saturas3:30. t:00 7:00, 1:00 p.m Thursdays for Friday-7 .M, 8:00 p.m Miraculous Medal Novena Monday 7:00 pjn. Rosary every evening at 7 30 SACRA! HAAatT Ancon Sunday Masses. 3. 130. 30 a.m Holy Days: 5:58, 7:30 am. Confessions. Saturday3:30, 5:00 pm 730, 8:00 p.m. Thursday for PI . Prlday-7:00, 8:00 p.m. Sacred Heart DevotionsFriday at 7:00 d m ST 1-EAGSA'S Coeoll Sunday Mass: 30 am Holy Days: 8:00 am CURUNDU CHAPEL Curundu Sunday Mas: 8:30 am Holy Dayi: S:i a.m. Confwalons: 330. 5:00 p.m Saturday AMUaaVTION Pedro Miguel Sunday Mass: (:3C a A Holy Dayi: 6:30 a.m Confession!: Saturday-J:l. 1:4 pm ' Sail Lutheran .thULkMUl LUTHaAAN CHURCH The Church ei Ike Lutheran Hour1 a. l Bernthal. Paetof u Balboa Road. Balboa Sunday School and Bible Class am Worship service 10115 a.m.. 'Coma thoti With Us and We Will Do Thee Good." A friendly welcome waits all visitors Pat- luck supper ecnnd Sunday each month :30 pm., gam* night fourth Si naaday thrnuch Sund dial welmme lr exten open nds a ':30 om The Service Center, open Wi day sil militar narwwmal Episcopal first Rosary: Monday Wednesday and day at 7: ichlsan Cl Catech Sunday .ly Da :00 p m atui asses Sunday-IOJO 1130 ST. JOtVEPH* Haralao . 1:00 am 5:4 am Holy Daya: 1:4 am Confeaaloni: Saturday-*30. 430 am Roaary: Tuaaday7:*0 pm Catechism Classes Sunday-1030 II 30 Sunday Mints: Holy Dayi: :00, Conf sesiona: 8:00 p.m Before Holy Dayi VINCENT' Panama 8:00, 8.30 am , 8:30 a.m Saturday-3 00 4.00 1:00. 1:00. :00 Rosar every evening: 7:00 Dm ST JOHN BAPTIST Dt. LA SALLS Rio Abajo Sunday Masse; 6:30. :M am BcnedTrtlon: 4:00 p.m. Hly Day Maasaa: S3 am Confessions: Saturday-3:0. l*ia- Frlday after Miraculous Medal No- vena. Miraculous Medal Novena Friday 730 p.m. Rosary: Monday and Wednesday730 0J" ST Sunday Mass: 7:00~ajrn Holr aley 6:4 am. .^. Sacred Heart Devotion: Friday 730 Cenfemloni: Saturday3JO. 30. 730. 8:00 p.m. Roaary every evening except Tuesday ' IM pm _____ COCO SOUTO PLAVPJIJT Pastor. Rev Wm 1 Finn CM Sunday Mass .............. I'M am Holy Day Mam ............ J3B am Sunday School ............ :4 a.m Service Thursday olghts .. 7:4 o m Cnnfeaslnns before Mass CHURCH OP UK BOL* fAMIL Margarita. C Z lev William J Finn CM asas...............' MIRACULOUS MEDAL CHURCB New Cristbal. 4th A G St. Pastor, Rev Sunday MaaM Weekday Mam. 30 am 1:00 am Vincent Ryan, CM 7. 8 A 10:30 am Phone 3-14C3. 10:45 Worship service and Church-Unit (30 Youna People Meetlnj Gatun nuraary Tha Rev. J Wullam L Graham. Paster Phone *-Ue. (00 S3* Broadcasi an HOA, MPtK and HON. :4 Sunday School 11:00 Worahlp Service. 500 Christian Endeavor atargartta Tbe Rev. Henry BalL Passes Phuna S>1M. 130 Bible School 10:45 Worahlp service and Church-time 30 Touch Fellowship. THE PACIFIC SIDE albas The Rev. Alex .noes H Shaw. Pastoi Balboa Rd. at San Pablo St Phone 2-141*Church Office 1-3236 30 Church Sen... Free bus service 10:30 Worahlp .service. Junior Church. Primar Story rlour Church-time Nur aery. 5:00 Chi Rho-Senloi HI fellowship 6:00 Post HI Fellowship. Jamba AU services at the Gamboa Union Church, corner of Gaillard Highway and Slbert Avenue. Tbe Rev. Raymond A Gnu. Minialer, Phone 6-130 9:30 Sunday School. 1030 Momfr. Wop-hip Pedro rSlgael Rev Raymond A Gray as Slated Pas toral Supply. 30 Sunday 730 V, Sat.. Holy Day Mama. 30 A 30 am Confeaalon. Roaary. nightly 7 30 p.m Sunday School after the S a.m Mas Miraculous Medal Novena .ervlce don 5:00 A 730 p.m lit Sat Devotion, every tat Sat after Mas ____ IMMACULATE CONCEPTION CHURCB Bolivar Highway. Gatun, C.Z. Paster Rev Francis Lynch. CM Sunday Man. 830 am Weekaa Masse Thur 30 am Sat. 7:00 a.m Holy Day Mas. 130 am Miraculous Medal Novena service - Mon 7:1 pm 1st Friday. Confession, Communion / :1S pm Confessions Sat *3b A 130pm ST. THOMAS' CHURCH Gatun, Near Lock Pastui Re- French Lynch CM Sunday Mas*. 8:45 am Weekday Masses Tuca A Frl 30 am Holy Day Mass. 6:00 am Miraculous Medal Novena service - Frl 7:1 pm. Confessions Sat 1:1 A 130 em lit Sat Devotion, ever 1st Sat ftei Mass BOL* (AMILi CHURCB Margarita. C.Z. Paatoi. Rev William J Finn. CM Sunday Maaaea. 7Je A (30 am Holy Day Masa. 6:00 am Miraculous Medal Novena service - Moa 7:00 Dm Instrucuons foi adult Fn 130 pm Confessions Sal 4:00. (00 A 73 to 3* am ST. JOHEPH'b CHURCH Colon, lOtn A Broadway Pastor, Rev J Raymond Maohata, C M Annum. Rev Robert Vlgnola. CM Sunday Maaaea. :45 A S3* am Weekday Mase. S:45 am Holy Day Ma ana. 5:45 (3* am lit Frl Maaaea, S3 A *30 am Communion. I a.m Baptlaen Sun., 30 pm Miracuiou* Madai Novena service Wed at 6:1 A 730 p Novan ef the Sacred Heart Fn IM om. Conlaaaiona bel. 43 (3 om A 7:3 to 130 p.m. School ANCN, C.E THE CATHEDRAL OF atl LUKE The Ri Re/ R. Beber Gooden. Blihop rhe Vary Rev Raymond T Ferris Dear 7:n a.m Holv Communion 30 am Cathedral School 10:48Morning Prayer and sermon (First Sunday of the month Holv Can -nunlon and Sermon. I 730 om.- Evening Prayee and Sevmor. Other Churches And Services BAHA'I CENTa* Apuiiiiient 1 Lux building. 4Ui Street Panam Monday: Lecture and Ots- cuaaiope (30 pjn. ra a> Church el Jases Christ eg Saints (Mormon) Sunday School J0 am Servlcm 1(30 a.m _, At JWB Armed Force Service Canter in Le Boc Road Evening Service at t pjn. at a flaca of meetlna announced at taaattHng car' rica. CHURCB O CHtUtrl 0(01 Balboa Road. Balboa nd Dill Haran Tal beck. Evanaalun e 3-3602 sunKK Bible Claies tor all age .... 103* am Preaching and Communion .. 10:4 a m Preaching and Communion .. 730 o m POBI a. VICES SERV Bible Study ..,. Wednesday 130 pa Ladles' Bible Clse Thursday 1:4 on CHURCH Of CHRISTOla Cihtliaai SUHI " We meet in DAYS: the American beg!or Hall i front of the Clubhouse Morning Wonhip 10:4 am Visitar weicome Ladies Bible Study at Uatun Phone OatUP 41* a> Ft Oullelr Ml CRISTOBAL. CHURCH OP OUR B.P _ SAVIOUR 3rd St near G. Navy Rev. Milton A Cookson Paitoi Holy Communion 7 30 a.m Church School 130 am Mornine Prayer-Sermon ll;00 am (H.C first Sunday In the month i Youne PeoDle's Vesper Service 431 j m Wednesday. Holy Communion :30 o.m Choir Rehearssf 730 s.ro A House of Prava lor all oeople COCOLI Church ut SI Andrew rhe Rev David R Bead Holy Communion l:lru a.m Sunda School 11:30 ajn Public Worihlp 10:4 am IH C first Sunday In the month I Youna People's Fellowship 4:00 pm Choir rehearsal Wednesday evenlnrs t JO p.m Women' Auxiliary 3nO ana th rhurs lays at 7:30 p.m. House of Prayer and FeUowahtp lot an oaopla Good Shepherd The Ven A F 1:00 am COROZA! Nlghtengala . Every Friday: Morning Pray (H.C IM Friday.. GAMBOA SI Slmen'i Church Re Antonia Oetvaa A I l-< Padre Mlanel Holy Communlop ........ Sunday School ......... Youth OrganlzaUona (:00 Praj ayer A Blbble Evcnlfia 2nd A 4th Sunday Women's Auxiliary ....... 2nd end 4th Thursday i:30 am MS pm 30 am /:* pm 7:S* am Priaet LA BOCA at Petac'i Chaw Rev Lemuel B Shlrle; a.m.Holy Communion t am.Choral Eucharist and Sermon IS a.m.-Mornlm Prayer and Church School. I p.m.-Holy Baptism 730 pm.vespers and Saimn Communion Tuesday and Thursdays. I a.m., Wednesdays and Friday am.; Girls Friendly ( and 7 am Monea p.m Tuesday: Vespers nightly at T. ex- cept Saturday Compline 7 30 d aa MARGARITA A. Margaret' Chapel Margarita Hoaplul The Rev. M A Cookson Sunday School am Evening Prayer ' 00 p.m. PALO SSCO Chare of The Heljr Coaafertet The Van A P. Nightengale Every Mondap (JO am Holy Cote ti union PARASO Rev D. A Oabome 00 am Holy Communion 2nd Sunda 130 a m Sunday School. :3 p.m Evenlna Praver no ana 4tt iundayi Monday: 1:00 p.m Youth Meeting Wednesday 30 om Girl rriandi Society Rav BED TANK D.A Oeborne A Rev C.A Cragweli "M tnd ado Sunday School. 130 p DlacuaaMn Club Young men of Pariah Sun. M pjn Instruction to adulta ledge of the Catholic Church Thurs at 7:1 pm lit Sat Devotion every 1st Sat SI Pastes Unitarian IS! UNITARIAN soenrrr 1030 am JWB Armad Forces Servir Cantar Librar Balboa CI Year Invitation to liberal ing know i Mon A after VINCENTS CHURCB Silver City. C.Z Rev Raymond Lewis. CM Sunday Masses. 1:45 A 8:00 om Weekday Mam. (30 am Holy Da Mamas. 3B A 63 am Sunday School. 1130 am Miracuiou Meda' Novena earviae - rues.. 73u p.m Bapttaa Bun.. 30 pm Confaanon Sat 3 JO. i00 o.m A 7 3 to (30 IB. Instruction foe adulta. Tuaa A Frl. 7 30 pm. lit Sat Devotion every let Sat aftei -non 1st and 3rd Sundays 11:00 a.m Morning Prayei -ess: Rod and 4th Sunday 3:00 om Sunday School ana Baptism 7:30 p.m. Evening Prayer and address (nd. and 4th Sunday*. Panama crn ST PAUL'S CHURCH A P. Nlghtengala. B L> M B.E and The Rev RIU Regina lo Al well Venerable Archdeacon :0U a.m Holy Communion *:0tt n 7 30 o.m Evenson and Sermon CHRIST CHURCH Bt-TttE-SEA Colon. R de P tOppoaile Hotel Washington i The Rev Malncrt J Peterson ___ STJ) Rector SUNDAYS. a.m Holy Communion. am. Choral Eucharist ana Sermon 1*3* am Church School 73* om Solemn Evenaon WEDNESDAYS ( tja Holy Communion 30 D m Evemone. nd Sermon JO om Adult ConfirmaUop Cla ntURSUAYS S D.m Prayer Guild CURUNDO MOTEVIANT COMMUNITY CHURC7I Chaplaln William H Blah Sunday School............... Morning Worship............... Young People's Samoa ........ Evening Worahlp............... Prayer Meeting Thursday ....... Choir Practice. Wednesday at 7:00 o.m and Salurda *30 am :4I 'JiS k OLD CATHOLIC CHURCH St Raphael The Archaagel 13th St West No I Holy Eucharist: Sunday at <30 a Tuaaday. Wednesday and fburadav crameni ol Unction. (Healing Bar. Shipping & Mr Line News Norwegian Tanker That Hit Canal Bank To Leave Tomorrow With a Dortlon o her 11,4500 ton cargo of crude oil lost when ah* struck the rocky east bank of ths Canal In Cucaracha Beach Thursday morning;, tbe Norwe- gian tanker Aslaug Rogenaes will laave tomorrow for Norway where he will go Into drydock. The 9,430-gros ton tanker wss loaded with 13,400 tons of crude oil when she arrived here from El 8egundo. California. Local agent Wllford McKay re- ported that th* accident was caused by the failure of the steering gear. The ship wss tow- ed hito Crltobal sfter the acci- dent. Results of the Investigation carried on by marine officials could not yet be determined. She Is owned by N. Rogenaes of Nor- way. Ex-King Leopold En Reste To West Indies BRUSSELS, Mar. 1 (UP) Bit- King Leopold and hi wife, th* Princess de Rethy, left here to day by KLM plane for Lisbon. The couple will make a trip to the West Indies and perhaps Central America. /25 Guests Escape As Fire Sweeps Philadelphia Hotel " vice i Plrat tan oj Sunday of each month ai Mount Ha libel! Panama Rt Re Chrtettan R P T. james. D D officiating Morning devotior. a ....... lion a. ....... orahio at ..... Sunday School at .......... Divine Service at........... Sermon at .................. Holy Communion at ........ Monday Roll eel and stay- ar meeting a........ " Evaiiaeliatlc Ser- Pasting! an d redneedavs vice at . Pridaya. Litany. Sermon from 130 am (30 om. Christian Scientist CHRISTIAN St UNO CHURCH irst Church ol Christ Scientist Ann 5(0 Ancon Boulevard Sunday 11:00: Wednaadav (:0ti om Sunda School S3 a.m irsi charch at Christ, aeieettn. Crtataka < lui Street A Bellvai Highway Sunday 11:00 am Wedneadav 73b am Sunday School (30 am Chrlni.B Science Society, Uamkee Civic Center Bulldlna 1130 am first A Third Wa Sunday mmdav'Sei ml 10 Salvation Army Panama City Calla i de rearare service at 11 am and 730 pm. I Mai Heon); Sunday Sehool at S p m La Boca: II am and 7 3 m Sunday Sehool at (JO pm Bod Tank: Service at 730 om cbool at (30 em. Sunda Servlcer at....... llamAIJOpm Colon I4th SUeei Sunda School ol...... 13* om Colon. 3rd Street arvlea at ...... II a.m A 130 em lervic Sunda Silver City at ............ School at ... . German Training Ship Arrive In Rto de Janeiro ' RIO DB JANEIRO, Mar. 1 (UP) The German training barque Pamir, bearing 91 crewrnen and cadets, arrived m Rio Thursday evening after a 47-day Toyage from Hamburg. The Pamir lost It anchor dur- ing the storms In the English Channel and continued the yoy- age by sail, thus giving the cruise unscheduled problem* in the caltris off Cape Prlo. 0 mile north of Rio. The Pamir was becalmed for 24 hours until a tug towed it to Rio. She will stay two weeks In Rio. SJ. Cristobal Arrive Hare Monday . The 8.8. Cristbal Is scheduled to arrive on the Isthmus Mon- day with 104 passengers, accord- ing to the advance passenger list from the Panama Line offices at Balboa Heights. The complete advance list fol- lows: Mr. andMrg. J. T. Ackeisman; Sgt. Robert L. Ambrosler; Col. and Mr. Walter L. Angle; Mrs. Ethel M. Baum: Mr. and Mr*. Wendelln J. Beck: Mrs. Chester Blesterfeld; and Cpl. George W. Burkart. PHn^DaXPHIA, March 1 (UP). A night clerk In the Clinton Hotel luckily found a fire smouldering in a basement linen coUet early today in time to rouse the 136 guest beiore the pet-up flames swept the hotel. Firemen talked some hyste- rical guests on smoky upper floors out of Jumping and scur- ried up ladder to save them before the roof of the seven- story hotel caved In. Nobody was killed In the $1,- 000,000 pre-dawn blase that lit downtown Philadelphia but sev- eral guests were treated for hysteria. Fifty-nine firemen were treat- ed for smoke Inhalation and minor cuts. The hotel night Clerk, joe Golden, may have averted a major disaster when he found the fire in the basement. Golden, along with hotel manager E. A. Patrick and fire- men, first tried to douse the blaie then gave up and dash- ed through the hallways waking guests in the 180-room struc- ture. While the guest* hurried down stairs snd fire escapes, the basement fire slowly spread. Two hours sfter Golden found It, the flames suddenly roared upward through wall partitions and burst through the roof. But by then all occupants were safe. About a dozen guest* were trapped on upper floors by the smoke, filtering up through the building. And some became hyterlcal, leaning from windows. Firemen talked them out of Jumping. They were brought down ladders to safety. Guests rushed down fire escapes and stairs in hastily- donned clothing and several were treated at nearby hospitals for hysteria. Five firemen were taken to hospitals for smoke lnahalatlon. Fifty-four others were treated at a fire rescue squad flrst*id station. The seven-alarm fire roared to the roof through wall parti- tions on the souih tide of the building. In a matter of minutes It swept across the roof to the north side, feeding on roofing paper. Then the roof collapsed, toppling a huge sign and showering the area with sparks. The flames, speeding down- ward through the Interior of the 180-room hotel, also spread to an adjoining four-story apart- ment house snd a private dwelling. /:** pm 30 n.m Jewish Jewish Wait.ra Boaro, ma /-*. La aloca Road, Balboa C.Z Rabbi Nathar Within director. Service on Prioay < Ju gim< (See also listing* of Jewish sehvteo mdar Poet Bases and Sudona . Congregation KoJ Shearith Israel Ave nida Cuba and loth Sheet Bella Vista Panam City Rabbi Harry A Merfeld Service" or Frill a o.m Posts, Bases And Stations PORT __ Sunday Morning" V.'o-ihlt, COBOZAL OUR LAOS OP GOOD COUNSB. Gamboa. CX Paatoi ttev Charle Jacobs. CM Sunday Maasaa 7:0 A S3* am Weekday Mams (JO am Hoi Day Mae V43 A *J0 am Miraculous Medal Novena service - lues 7 30 p m Sacred Heart Noven service PTL 13 om Conleaslon Sat I Mi pm. 1st- Set Devotion, every let Sat after CTUDAYS: 7:30 p.m. Stations of the Cross. SATUHDAtS: IS a m Children s Confirmation Clam 730 o.m Complin and Meditation. OATUN SL Geerge-i Charch Oatun. C.Z Rev Solomon N Jacob 1:0 am Church School H em. Morning Prayer 10-00 a m Holv Eucharist and Sermon njeaday 130 am Holy Communlor, (Aleo Holy Oavs nd Saints Daya.) Wednesdays: 130 pm Sventng Prayer 030 d m St Vincent's Oulld '30 om Choir Rehearsal Thursday' Chorea of St Mary Tbe Virgin Archdeacon w.idoek Priest In Chare Morning Praxa, ........ :45 am. Holv Cucharisf and Sermon 73* am Church School ........... (3* om Solemn Bvensoni ........ too sra Woman's Auxiliary, Snd Monday Order of St Vincent Acolite Guild. Vostrv Meetlna Xnc Thursday Roly Commun'on 7 ajn Th evenaon 730 pm Morning Prayer i am rrioay Choir Rehearsal I o m ____ buo'abao 81 Cararseeaaer'e Charch. la St. Parane Lefevre Rev AntoaU Orhee S Pheae Podre Migo. Holy Communion .. Sunday School ...... Baptlarna. t to om : venina Prayer- BID! 1st and Srd Sunday Woman's Auxiliary (no A th Sunday 'Oo pm Holy Communion ednaaoays. 1 am PAClPIt SIDE Protest set POR'l AIA JOB Sunday School .......... Morning Wbrahln .......... PORT CLAYTON Sunday School Pldg. 1S4 Morning Worth-p U S. HOSPITAL :1S l*:3* 1:00 1030 Miss C. Camden: Mr. and Mrs. Robert Chopak; Miss Ger- trude Colby: Dr. and Mr. Chas. Craster; John M.Curley; Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Cusack; Miss Fstri- da Da versa; Mrs. Teresa M. Ds-|aer Vrles and 2 children; Mr. and Mrs. Charles a. Doris; and Cpl and Mrs. Alfred Dunbar. James Eddie; Miss Ras F. Ellcker; Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Ooetz; Mrs. Esther Greenspan; Robert K. Harma; Miss Char- lotte Hansen; Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Harrington; Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Harter: Mr. and Mra. RoRer N. Heald; Dr. and Mra. X. E. Hill; Mrs. Helen W. Hook; and Richard Hughes. Mr. and Mrs. Marco Jimenez; Gerald J. Kelley; Miss Anne Knych; Mrs. Ruth M. Laurence; Mr. snd Mrs. Michael Lossner; and Mr. an dMrs. Stuart Lyd- dane. Lt. Walter O. McBride; Mrs. 7. McCloy; Mr. and Mrs Harry McGrath; Mrs. Agnes McVey; Erie H. Malcolm; Miss Christine Matula; Mrs. Pesrl F. Mendel; Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Miller: and Rev. Terence Mooney, CM. Capt. and Mrs. Newton Lord Nichols; Mrs. Charles Ogllvy; Miss Lillian L. Pratt; Jesse Price; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Rosen- thai; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ry- san; Frank Sassano; Dr. John M. Seth: Mr. and Mrs. Albert Small; Cpl. John I. Smith; and Mr. and Mrs, Robert P. Stark, Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Taplln; Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Tate; Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Tator; Mrs. Red Cross Showed Deficit of $5,460 During Last Year The Canal Zone Red Cross Chapter showsd a deficit of $S,- Mio in Its operation for the C ending Dec. 31,1991, accord- . to F. G. Dunsmoor, chair- man. The deficit was covered from the previous year's savings. The financial statement for the year showed total receipts of 181,633.17, and dlsbursemenU of |37,0t3.83. Principal items under disbursements were: 33.S89.41 for Home Service; and $,4a.e7 for National Headquarters. In explanation of the Home Service function, Dunsmoor said that financial and other assist' anee was furnished to a total of 3,4*11 persons during the year, or an average of 17 cases per week. Financial g^slstance accounts) for 16,147.1 of the expense un- this heading. In addition, Imately 196 food bundlss are distributed weekly through i.v Ancon and Cristobal offices to needy colored persons at a co*t of 1.80 per bundle. A detallad financial statement follows: aUeeipts 1891 Total Fund campaign......$25,787.21 Junior Red Cross.. .. 1,484.94 Home Service Refunds 1,79440 Interest and DlvklBnds 1,136.00 Sale of Chapter Sup- plies............ 1,087.06 Advances, etc. .. .... 343.58 Thirty occupants were order- ed out by police beiore the flames set fire to the two build- ings. They fled to the stres* with all the personal belong- ings they could carry. Two 40-foot sections of the cornice tumbled 70 feet to the street as firemen scampered out of the way. No one was hurt by the falling debris. The rescue squad and six po- lice doeten set up an emergency hospital in rescue trucks. The Red Cross took over the King Hotel snd a restaurant, one block away, to provide (hell- er snd food for those evacuated from the hotel and apartment housse. Among the guests who red was 89-year-old Wuanlta Smith, well known as an artist for more than a century. Some of her oils, etchings and book Il- lustrations, valued at thou- sands of dollars, were lost to the blase. NOTICE At the request of shareholders representing more than 20% of took in circulation, shareholders of Compaa Fiduciaria de Panam, 8.A. (Panam Trust Company) who were registered in the Shareholders Book of the company p to February 28th, 1952, are hereby summoned to attend-an Extraordinary General Assembly to be held on March 14th, tt 4:0O p.m. in the offioes of the company located at No. 20 "I" Street, in this oity, for the purpose of submitting to the consideration of shareholder* th* plan presented by Mr. Pierre Monteil and for tha amendment of th* by-laws and the Incorporation Agreement. Panam, February 28, 1952. Th* Secretary, OlllLLERMO E. QUIMNO. 31,833,17 DiabursemeNta Home Service...... 23,659.41 First Aid.......... 34.57 Junior Red Cross.. .. 1,173.60 Volunteer Services. .. 1,259.31 Production Supplies .. 13.30 Supplies for Regale. .. 1,169.30 Gen. Admin. Expense. 2.207.18 Transfer of Advances. etc............. 200.25 Campaign Expense. .. 923.94 National Headquarters 6,452.97 37.093.83 Edward I. Toetman; and Melvln T. Veatch. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Was- ley; Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Wa- ters; Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Wild- man: George K. Withers. Jr.: - ..Mrs. F. Wolpert and Mr. and Theresa M. Thompson and son; I Mrs. Turbutt Wright. The Pacific Steam Navigation Company INCORPORATED BT ROYAL CHARTER 1*4* Royal Mails Unos ltd. FAST FREIGHT AIW PASSEN0ER SERVICES BETWEEN EUROPE AND WEST COAST OF SOUTH AMERICA TO COLOMBIA. ECUADOR. PERU AND CHILI M.V. "SALAMANCA" ...........................March 7th aassaa>aaaa-- i aa.ai i a.in i i -a-^aaaoaaaaaaga-...- TO UNITED KINGDOM VIA CARTAGENA, HAVANA. NASSAU. BERMUDA. CORUNA. SANTANDER and LA PALLICE M.V. "REINA DEL PACIFICO'" (11.000 tons)... March Is NOTA: Tha at.. "BEINA DEL rACiriCO" ID aa4 caB at an th March Vayaga. TO UNITED M.V. "SAMANCO" ....... S.S. "KBNTJTA".......... KINGDOM DIRECT ..........a .........MATch 8th .........MArch 21st ROYAL MAIL LINES LTD./HOLLAND AMERICA LINE TO NORTH PACIFIC PORTS M.V. "DTJRANOO"..............................March 14th TO UK/CONTINENT M.V. "LOCH GARTH"..........................March 13th 'Accepting passengers In First. Cabin and Third Class Superior accommodation available for paasencers All sailings abject to change without (Mate*. PACIFIC STEAM NAV. CO., Cristobal. Tet MM-MU FORD COMPANY Inc. Panam Tel. 3-1257/IM*: *!* ISM ..... MS Srhooi ................ 19:** 11 :M Worsr.ip .... roscr ......... U** BASE ......... (JS ....... 1(41 ......... as RODMAN 1:** Morning ALBROOK AIR Bibl Vhoal ........ Morning Wonhip ..... Youth Group........ U. S. NAVAt STATION, Morning Worsh.p ....... Protestant Sumlay School Uth NAVAL DISTRICT Mam Ing Woratur ...... Catholic TOBT CLAYTON Dally Maca ... ...... Sunday Mass' ........... U. a HOSPJTAL Sunday ?na ........... COROZAL Sunday Mas .......... rOBT KOBBI Daily Mas ........... Sunday Manas ........ coa and ALBROOK ra>. Dally Ma. Sunday rosrr clavton Saturday LBROOK (US Ci 7:3 *aj im lSSaJ 7:: M rRcz bass .'.Y-eV 7:4 'and 'llM huradas'. 7*1 am 1030 * 4tb Sun- Study AI rORCB BASS Saturday.................. FORT KMBE Thursday ................ JWB. Balboa, C S. Friday .................. Atlantic" side TTOtntaat rORT DAVIS rrotoatant Wirshir Sarvlca ... PORT GUUCK Sunday School................. COCOSOLO NAVAI STATION Sunday School ................ Protastaot Wo.si lr> Sarviea..... CatbaHc FORT DAVIS Daily Mar Sunday Mas OatTGOIICK TOBT Sunday Maaa FORT SHERMAN Sunday Masa ... - COCOSCILO NAVAI Sunday Msaa .... Naval H .sjltai IOBT C11.ICK Tuaaday ... STATION co* IN CO* CO* 10:(* (3* 11:1* 4:1 ice* 114* LAM HERMANOS, S.A. ARE NOW ACCEPTING ORDERS FOR 1952 Kaiser & Henry-J 1952 KAISER & HENRY-J WILL SOON BE ON DISPLAY COS 1*4 Phone Coln 629 P.O. Box Coln 342 la* | ------------ fage ron THE fANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAItT NEWSPAPER UMMm SATURDAY. MARCH 1, 1MI IN HOLLYWOOD.. BT ERSKINE JOHNSON HOLLYWOOD. (NEA> Ex- clusively Yours: It's been kept quiet, but Vice President Albcn Berkley was said to have been opposed to MGM making Us new Van Johnson picture. "Mr. con- gressman." and at first refused to lend Washington's official aovernment buildings as back- grounds. The studio finally changed the Veep'* attitude by getting veter- an newsman Cecil Dickson. a close friend, to Intercede. Reason given for Barkleys hostility: His anger over two other Hollvwood movies abom the Capital "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town." and "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington." Hollywood's first big heart- break story of 1952 is the surprise blowup'of Gail Russell's movie comeback as George Raft's co- ttar in "Loan Shark." Although "illness'' has been Siven as the cause of her withd- rawal from the cast. Gail had regained her health and was all set to take her place again in the Hollywood sun. The real story: Shock and con- cern over the injury of her bro- ther In an auto accident un- nerved her to such an extent thst she was unable to continue with her role. There's a serious wobble m the man-lane of the Dale Robertsons. [Cook. Both Clifton Webb and his mother are steaming over the characters of a famous movie star and his mom drawn by the author. Bie topic of conversation a- mon-? the girls around Holly- wood is Lisabeth Scott's collec- tion of diamond baubles, bietrer than Zsp Zsa Onbor's. All gifts from he Mr. Bie. Attention Lana. Beth- (Kern). Ava an* Kathleen! Artie Show's first lvk. "The Trouble With Cinderel'V is an i>utobio It. h'ts the bookstands in May and Is reported to explain Artie to 'he world. MarMvn Nash, who was Chap- lin's leading ladv in "Monsieur vrdoi'X." is starring In "Come Pack. Little Sheba" at the Pasa- dena Community Plsvhou.se. hut rn> st>"ip# "com ba"V" to h',vbv PpH vonrriPi the writer. They wv divorce. Rita Hayworth is on a lean- sleak-and-tomatoes lune h e o n diet. Bat how dees she count the calories in her usual two pre- luncheon cocktails? While other comedians are veiling for filmed shows to save their TV careers. Bud Abbott and Lou Cotsello quietly are cellu- loldmg half-hour comedies Just as fast as they can. Thirteen are on film and an- other 13 are in production at the Hal Roach studio They're due to hit the TV channels in the fall All have the same castBud and Lou. Gordon Jones, who plays a cop. Hillary Brooks. Sid Fields and "Bingo." the chimR "with the human brain." In one film Lou and the chimp play checkers and the chimp wins. "But." Lou's protesting, "he beats me only three out of four games." Now it can be told- Gloria Grahame turned down the fac- tory-glrl role Shelley Winters played in "A Place in the Sun" in favor of another film, "In a Lonely Place." Jack Parr's definition of an agent's-contract: "Mein Kampf in small print." One new novel th"t }ll nnsl- tlwlv not he purchased * po\ Is *->t-..>ti Comedy." bv Whltfield Par the sake of the record, de- spite English complaints that Bob Hope and Bing Crosby are not good golfers: Both conform to the British amateur handicap limit.... "The Ruth Ettlng Sto- ry" is on the story docket at Pa- ramount as a possible starring film for Rhonda Fleming. There's drama that's not in the script on the set of The Story of Will Rogers." Will. Jr., is learning all of his Dad's famous rope tricks from Ben Pitti. a cir- cus rodeo star and one of his late father's pals. Thirty years ago Ben taught riding and romping to Will. Jr., and the two other Rogers chil- dren. Angela Lansburv is the first Hollywood movie queen to follow the natural birth procedures ad- vocated by British obstetricians Her son was born at home... Mltsl Oaynor Is denying she'll wed Richard Coyle on her birth- day in September. But the mar- riage date, adds Mltzi. may be set at that time. Gig Young, handed an award for his alcoholic role In "Come Fill the Cup." expressed disap- pointment over the scroll and cracked: "Really, I expected a statuette of Ray Mllland." LlTTlf- L I 2 No one is entirely useless. Even the went of us eon serve es horri- ble exrnele. THE SAYINGS BANK Institution Guaranteed by the State Pays 2% Interest Annually on Savings Accounts INITIAL DEPOSIT $5.00 We make loana with guarantees on flrat mortagtt or other securities. CHRISTMAS SAVINGS 25c. 50c. $1.00 and $5.00 deposits are accepted thru a period of 48 weeks. Individual safety deposit boxea, for jewelry and documents, in 4 different sizes. OFFICE IN PANAMA: 119 Central Ave. at cerner ef "tM Street. Q. R. De ROUX Manager. COLON BRANCH: Front St. at corner ef 7th St CARLOS MOUYNES V. Sob-Manager. BOORS: From :* a.m to I2:lf a-.m SATURDAYS: from 8:00 a to 12:M p.n Martin a^ Lewis HOLLYWOOD'S KINGS Of COWEOV FRFTKIES A!TD HIS FRDJNDS 'nWEV' Rebellious iWMOYXtS k-f0NAt>K$ HAVE A GOOD t/AD STDT OV 7H feSCUF ____ ftnry BT MRRRILL BLOBfBH) VOU WOMT UNWEX YOUR Team ] We GOTTA HIDE HIM QUICK TONIGHT, YOU MAWGY CAN-EATER-/J DUD'THESF SHADYSIOC DRIPS'UBE HOT ON OUR (WeIl just Tie ^ Grab HIM HERE ANO THAT HEY' / Rope' ^. .'TU----,-^ERN E-I AT LOOK ALLEY OOP No Like-Urn Talk Vt V. T. AMLOf LOOK.-rOU HAMMER-HEADED GALOOT. 1 X'M HERE TO BUY CORN FOR A LOT OF ENGLISHMEN, NOT WASH POTS j FOR A LOT OF 60UAWS.' Happy Harvey! Relax Harrey. all is well. A ten vou found, at we can tell! Our Want Ad too answered to a -T." toon voall be president wait n - see! The Chase National Bank of the City of New York ' 1 otal resources over $5,607,000,000.00 General Banking ' PANAMA BRANCH COLON BRANCH CRISTOBAL BRANCH BALBOA BRANCH DAVID BRANCH We Specialize in Financing Imports and Exports f+OU TALKUM/WELL.YEV LOUD VOICE I SURE, TO CHIEF POWHATAN BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES Great Stuff BT ROGAR MARTOf SMklMSW iUMMMKgfc CVOftY I GOt V> TH\NK\W MaOVR A ecmvt Of "AAT TOWC yoo MAG\C S0rA\H\N" OR OTHW" A' \ YAPVlWte, YRttfmtt-R Cr> NT \6W? \HfcSi Vtt C*V\P 3 SWRRNt. VtARft A60 VttO VT? v*crt awv >W A OHOP:ilWrf(fiicvi MMNTX t*CKH\N" WRONG W\Y*M* *OT tt l\XV4 CORK THAT! CAPTAIN EAST One More Diny Spin BT LESLIE TURN El CHIms W EL KEN rianeteer Another Waf ninr BY RI'SS WINTERBOTHAM MM ll.l.A'S POP Voice of Experience BY AL VEX* I MeVER FkSHT WITH MY BROTHER.. EVEN THOUGH HE IS VERY TRYING kON OCCASIONS! fJ'GOOD FOR MX!,DEAR! r YOU MUST MAVE A STRONG CHARACTER." T. M (W. u t. Pat. Off. Cepr IfJ y WtA Wwe, >ne HMM-1 str.) VERW WELL, OPPICER... IT MAY SAVE I ME A UPE OF \ OWEFNirHTHe> WRONG MAN! VIC FLINT Growl in Action BY MICHAEL OUAIXII NOT1PV * 6ET TUB PRINT AABS THE PHOTOwRAPH BON'4-, AND NOTIPV TUB CORONtR-AND ON TMB BOUBiB, 6aaAWT! ja* with MAJOR HOOPLK OUT OUR WAY By i. B. WILLIAMS MUGS HUNN1 Reroltinir >% A^CAN TMCYieE REALLY GONNA PLfV iAY NBW ONC AT TH' P.OU J WB T'NiGWTT v _>i i mt t*U0T WATSN, auv^ioK.' Welcome home, gastn' WHILE SOO iMEES AvnJAY I CONTRIVED TO SELL ONE OF YOUR. PRIZ.EO ANTl2UCSl THE NAPOLEON \!EST' *VOU QUOTED IT AT #qOO, 6UT1 TALKED THE PRlCe OP TO 500 HEH- ~ ~-- --------------------------- rNiCE <50iN,A4A30R/-rMA.T'5 SUCKER THAKi THROvAllMG S^VEiO NiTHOKie DICE/ YOU KEEP VtXJK COT,OWE- "JC-NOTE, AS PER AGREE- M6NT.'-That AiN'T too propitaSlc. BLrr it seats., ^gDBBiMG, FOR APPLES IN A (CCOCODi POND.' LE kr (f t+2 if a. Ml *m. *+ e M 'C30T 6ADFOR THE OLD CLOTHES fB06IMESS= SATURDAY. MARCH 1. IMS TIE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER ---^________________ raciflc S^ocietu &. 17, &!U .L &&~ 3321 SIDE GLANCES sS By Galbraitb GIRL SCOUT COUNCIL TO ENTERTAIN AT GOVERNOR'S RESIDENCE The Girl Scout Council will honor Mrs. C. Vaughan Fer- |UM at a tea te be given on Mondar afternoon from 3 to S p.ni. at the home of Mr. Francis K. Newcomer, wife of the Governor of the Panama Canal and International Friend- ship Chairman of the Girl Scout Council. Mrs. Ferguson Is the retiring President of the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. Visitors Honored At Reception The Chairman of the Board Of the National City Bank of New York, Mr. William Oage Brady, Jr., and Mrs. Brady .and Mr. Louia Naetzker, the Vlce- President of the National City Bank of New York, who are visitors on the Isthmus, were the guests of honor at a recep- tion giren on Thursday evening in the Balboa Room of the Ho- tel El Panama" hy Mr. and Mrs. Leigh R. Cramer. Isthmian Visitors Sail For States Mr. and Mrs. John P. Dwjer and Mr. and Mrs. Perry B. Campbell, who arrived Monday aboard the 8. 8. Panama for a four-day visit to the Isthmus, during which tune they were house-guests of .the Lieutenant Governor of the Panama Canal and Mrs. Herbert D. Vogel, sail- ed yesterday for New York en route to their homes In Buffalo, New York. Dinner Honors Minister And Wife The Minister of El Salvador to Panama and Mrs. Joaqun Val- des, who are leaving soon for their new post In Luna, Peru, were the guests of honor at a dinner given recently by the Ambassador of Chile to Panama and-Mrs. Manuel Hidalgo Pia- se at the Embassy. Mr. and Mrs. Brown Honored Before Departure Mr. and Mrs. William N. Brown, of New York, who left Friday morning by plane after a short visit to the Isthmus dur- ing which time they were guests at th Hotel El Panama, were honored at a dinner before their departure given by Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Johnson at the Ho- tel Tlvoll. Dr. and Mrs. Raymond Have House Guest Dr. arid Mrs. Frank Raymond have- as theh" house guest Miss Nellie iWhtttemore, of Phlla- delpUwFerinsylvanta, who ar- rived recently for a visit on the Isthmus. are spending the winter months in Panama, are visiting in the Interior for several days. Mr. And Mrs. Healy Return From Vacation The Vice-President .of the Chase National Bank of the City of New York and Mrs. J. Edward Healy, returned recently to Panama after a vacation spent at the Hotel Panamonte in Boquete. Mr. De Faramo Leaves Isthmus Mr. Frederick de Pramo left Wednesday morning by plane for his home In Wilton, Con- necticut, after a visit on the Isthmus during which time he was a guest at the Hotel El Pa- nama. Guests At Hotel El Panama Mrs. Arthur L. Pratchett ar- rived by plane Friday for a visit on the Isthmus and to a guest at the Hole! El Panama. Miss Agnes Wllcox arrived recently by ship from Bermuda and Is a guest at the Hotel El Panama. Mr. George Wiltner Is a re- cent arrival in Panama and Is staying at the Hotel El Pana- ma. Canal Zone Art League To Meet The Canal Zone Art League will meet tomorrow afternoon at 3 p-ra. at the Jewish Welfare Board Center. Color slides will be shown of flowers of Pana- ma by Mr. Kongable, the Pres- ident df the Diablo Heights Ca- mera Club. Painting Exhibition Extended The current exhibition of paintings by members of the Canal Zone Branch of the Na- tional League of American Pen Women on display in the Little Gallery of the Hotel Tlvoll originally scheduled to termi- nate on February 29 has been extended another week. Mem- bers are requested to call for their, paintings on I March f.. will meet on Thursday at the home of Mrs. William H. Allen, 553-B Curundu Heights. Mrs. Allen and her mother, Mrs. Carl T. Hoffman, will be co- hostesses at the meeting. Mrs. Walter Bryja will re- view "Science Fiction." All members of the group are asked to attend and other members of the College Club will also be welcome. Miriam Circle To Meet The Miriam Circle of the Bal- boa Union Church will meet at the home of Mrs. E. R. Baltozer, 0554-A Ancon, on Tuesday. Mrs. Munro will serve as co-hostess. Altar Rosary Society News The Altar Rosary Society of 8t. Mary's Church wlir receive Communion in a body at the 8 a.m. Mass tomorrow morning. Actors Needed For One Act Flay A "One Act Play Festival" will be sponsored by the Cris- tobal High School Thespians In observance of International Theatre Month on March 28 and 29 at the Cristobal High School. The play, "The Old Lady Shows Her Medals," by J. M. Barrle has been chosen for pre- sentation. Try-outs for four character women, one character man, and one leading man will be held tomorrow morning at 10 a.m. in the Theatre Guild Shack at Diablo. ^rrtlantic J^ocieti &, 195, <7/* V,tqk* Qmlmm 37 FAREWELL PARTY FOR MRS. GREENWOOD The ladles of the Coco Solo Naval Station bade good-bye to Mrs. Thomas Greenwood at an elaborate morning coffee Ken at the Coco Solo Officers Club yesterday by Mrs. F. L. lay, Mrs. L. B. Boston, Mrs. J. C. Novak and Mrs. L. A. Snead. Mrs. Greenwood has been the only offloer's wife resMIng at France Field since the Field was de-activated and Cap- tain Greenwood was stationed there as officer in charge. As such, she has been adopted by the Coco Solo ladies as a member of their Clnb. Captain Greenwood has been order- ed to Florida for duty, and they will be leaving in the near feture. Panam aRotary Clnb Has Luncheon Meeting The Panama Rotary Club met Thursday for their regular wekely luncheon meeting at the Hotel El Panama. One of the speakers at the luncheon was iwr. Jorge Carrasco, a visitor from Venezuela. be another hour or to, ear! Towser it enjoying hi* exercia* so rr.'.rohT' ATLANTIC SIDE BHR. wLLW A gift of a pair of sterling sil- ver candlesticks was presented the honoree as a bon voyage gift. Mrs. James J. Gable, wife of Major Gable, who arrived recent- ly to succeed Captain Greenwood, was Introduced to the ladles of the station at this time. Another new arrival. Mrs. R. J. Patterson, the opportunity to meet the wife of Dr. Patterson, also had whole group of ladles. Coffee and refreshments were served from a table centered with a model aeroplane encircled with tropical flowers. Mrs. L. L. Koepke. Mrs. Charles C. Yan- quell, Mrs. W.W. Bemis and Mrs. W. D. King alternated at the coffee services. Slxtv ladles called during the| morning to visit with their friend and meet the newcomers to the Isthmus. Friday, Miss Elliot la Visitor Here MUs Hanslta Elliot is the | Bridge Tournament house, guest of Mr. and- Mrto. Robert 'Keen Morris of Bella Vista, having arrived here re- cently from her home in Bo- quete. W " Mr. Robinson Leaves For California Mr. gharles W. Robinson left Wednesday morning by plane for his home in San Francisco, California. after a lengthy stay on the Isthmus. Visitors From New York Honored At Luncheon Mr. and Mrs. Max Pick were hosts at a luncheon given at the Hotel El Panama in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Jules Beckhard and Mr. and Mrs. Mike Katz, visitors on the Isthmus from New York. Visitors To The Interior Hotel El Panama guests Mr. nd Mrs. Theodore de Sabias of ew York and Connecticut, who Monday Ebenlng The regular Bridge Tourna- ment will be played on Monday evening at 7 p.m. in the Card Room of the Hotel Tlvoll. All Interested players are Invited to attend and play In the tourna- ment. Those planning to attend are asked to be prompt. Elks To Sponsor "Moonlight Cruise" The Benevolent and Protec- tive Order of Elks In Balboa In- vites the public to attend a "Moonlight Cruise" to be held on March 21 at 7 p.m. The cruise will begin at Gamboa and continue through the Cut to Oatun Lake and back. Ad- mission is 32.00 per person and Includes refreshments, dinner and dancing. 'Book Review Group To Meet March The Book Review Group of the Canal Zone College Club The Whole Town's Talking1 Readied For Diablo Stage With Kathryn Colclasure and Margaret McCubbln cast In the unusual roles of "America's fun- niest comedy." the Canal Zone Junior College production of "The Whole Town's Talking" will be on stage at the Diablo Thea- ter Wednesday. A special matinee rill be giv- en for school students 'during the afternoon, leaving all seats re- served for the one-njsjht show- ing at 8 p.m. I Ronald Angermuller and All jMcKeown are cast In the roles jpf the "big men" of the comedy, 1 while Betty Entunen has. 'the I "fat" role of the maid. These players, with Wendall Spreadbu- |ry, make up the actors for the first dozen roles of the show, which presents a score of peo- ple. "The Whole Town's Talking" will open Its four-performance "run" on Monday night at Gam- boa Theater, before the Diablo showing on Wednesday. The fin- al showing will be on the Satur- day following at the Cristobal High School, under the sponsor- ship of the Student Association of that school. Tickets for the one showing at the Diablo Theater are now on sale by college students, under the general supervision of K. Jane Butler, business manager for the comedy. Composer Of Smash Hit, 'Cry/ Si/7/ On Night Watchman Job m charge of arrangements and she was assisted by Mrs. Carl E. Hess. Mrs. Frank Jones. Mrs. Charles Bresch and Mrs. William Bell. Guests tor the day were Mrs. Wallace Paulson and Mrs. Ed- win Penning. The members present were Mrs. RUTH MILLET7 Says 1 Claire Vice. Mrs. Mills Brooflb. Mrs. Donald Smolka, Mrs. Vir- ginia Potter. Mrs. Joseph Flores, Mrs. Adolph Trujlllo. Mrs. Ciar' ence Harvey. Mrs. Domenicj Plfctt. Mrs. Joseph Cote. Mrs. David Wolfert, Mrs. Roy Smith. Mrs. John Byrd, Mrs. Mauriee Towne. Mrs. Tom Brooks. Mr*, Lester Davidson. Mrs. Ernest Beck. Mrs. Pauline Marsh arid Mrs. Duane Mimdkowskl. _____ Mrs. Grady Has Dessert Bridge Party Mrs. William Grady Cristobal had a few friends l_ dessert and an afternoon ff bridge at her home Wednesdays Her guests were Mrs. Heetflf Grant. Mrs. Roy Fort, Mr Stanley Kidd. Mrs. Nell Warff* law, Mrs. Anthony Fernando, Mrs. Wayne Gilder and Mrs. El- sie Mohr 8klllman. The prises went to Mrs. nandez, Mrs. Wardlaw and Fort. -------- of N4> ds in ir MiY. Farewell Party for Wendle Cotton "Criticism is never much fun but you Mve through it. You even become Immune when you are working on a good, hard Job." So says a woman who has!Oatun In the near future. * braved criticism to hold downl*lven a farewell party at Wendie Jeanne Cotton, wh fj frosh moving to the Pacific Side PITTSBURGH, March 1 (UP> Churchill Kohlman. a Negro cleaning plant night watchman who composed one of the current hit songs, credits the long hours he has spent patrollng his lonely rounds for the inspiration. Kohlman said he planned to continue In his Job even though his song "Cry," Is near the sates top. Sixteen record companies have waxed the song and one company alone has sold almost a million copies. "All my life I've been chasing the songwriters, rainbow, but I didn't dream It would be like this," Kohlman said. He sent more than 200 of the songs that came to him in the night to publishers without a single acceptance. In many cases the envelopes weren't even open- ed. Then one night as he worked as watchman at the University of Pittsburgh, he heard a profes- sor talking to bis wile on tWtel- ephon. The wife wanted fcovtre on how to quiet her baby, who was crying. "He told his wife to let the baby cry; It would do her good to get it out of her system," Kohl- man related. Before the night was over a song urging the world to "go ahead and cry" was lilt- ing through Kohlman's mind. Informal Bon Voyage Dinner Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Cotton and Mr. and Mrs. HP. Bevfng- ton of Margarita entertained with an Informal dinnerparty at the Cotton residence Thursday evening to honor Dr. and Mrs. R. R. Gregorv and Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Ruley. Dr. and Mrs. Gregory sailed today via United Fruit Line for The melody sounded good to,Mobile. Alabama They will go him then. Now, hearing It from directly to Florida where they radios, television sets and music i will reside. boxes. Kohlman said: Mr. Ruley is retiring from em- "It's really music to my ears."'ployment with the Panama Ca- A native of Pittsburgh, Kohl-'nal and the couple are leaving in mans only musical education the near future for was a correspondence school course In theory, but he can "chord enough on the piano to get a tune down on paper." The songwriter is the father of three children. He Is prouder of them than his hit song. Elean- or, 18, Is a cheer leader and hon- They will visit their sons in Mas- sachusetts and California before deciding where they will reside. Mr. and Mrs. Kollman Announce Birth of Sob Mr, and Mrs. Francis Kollman of Old Cristobal announce the birth of their first child, a son. or student at Peabody High! Tlie8day. February 26. In Co- School and Carl, 10, is getting A's i ?" ',"i atJbf,ty,8Ch001- h , Mrs Kollman Is the former Phyllis, 2 recognizes her fath- B lan 8im0ns, Mr. Kollman to employed with the Bureau of The girls played games, aftlr which refreshments were serve*. The members of the troop wrjo were present were Grace Argn. Linda Cunningham"; Diane Haiv- nigan. 8hlrley Keeners. Judy Malcolm. Rachel and Rosalie Rflr del. Barbara Thrift. Naney m Clubhouses, er's song when It is played on the radio and Joins in. "I don't want to sound like a doting father, but she never misses a word," Kohlman deol L*!EhB2L22 Help Your Piles Don'l aunTar from P*!"'"'- '"*_ Pll.i anothar n',"1'^ rh naralq Chln.raia. Upon at>1 rat on Chinar** ,,t.rurblBri.ml..rla:.>..i- Honored with Shower Mrs. C. W. Oibbs. Mrs. R. J. Netro and Mrs. J. R. Wolfers- berger were co-hostesses for the job of mayor of Portland, Ore. It's a pity more women don't have that much immunity to cri- ticism. For it'is fear of criticism that keeps so many women from stepping out and assuming Jobs of responsibility. "I wouldn't have that Job for the world," Mrs. Brown says complacently. "You couldn't pos- sibly please everyoneand you're sure to come in for a lot of cri- ticism." So Mrs. Brown and thousands of other capable women steer, Grimes, Claire White and Ka clear of Jobs requiring leader-tryn Argo. ship, including everything from president of the P.-T.A. to Jobs in politics, They are so afraid that every- one won't agree with them. They fear that everyone won't cheer them on. and that some may cri- ticize and ridicule. They keep to the sidelines In- stead of getting into the game. There are many reasons why women don't make better use of their education, their brains, their executive ability and their leisure time, But there is. perhaps, no more important reason than the fear of criticism that Is shared by so many women. As the mayor of Portland says: "Criticism is never much fun." But you do Uve through It. And as long as you are doing a 1 meeting of Girl Scout Troop Monday evening. The group met at the Trefoil House with Mrt. Ralph Malcolm as leader. SB was assisted by Mrs. Emmett AP- go and Mrs. Thomas Gibson.i Atlantic Camera Club Begins New Series Of Exhibits Starting tomorrow through next week Sunday, the Atlantjs Camera Club will present the se- cond in a series of photographic exhibitions at the Washington Hotel. The Washington State Salon to in International exhibit spon- sored by the Photographic Socie- ty of America and presented here bv the pictorial division of the Atlantic Camera Club. These salon prints were last exhibited by the La Crosse Cam- lob that you consider Important, era Club of La CTOsse. Wls.. and have also been shown In Bone Kong. China. The first of these exhibit tons the "Australian One^-Man JSal piln" "and itching. . H.lp. .hTlnk or.. awollan tlM.i.1. J. H.lp. n.turf heal Irrltatad membrana* and allay P N.rvon.n. A.k your Druggl.t Chlnaroid today. for To You Who Have No Church Home AND YET feel that these days call for a move- ment which is emphasizing the basic values in life, a movement which keeps up with the timas and which challenge tach individual to create hit own spiritual and ethical codeand to live by it. WHY NOT VISIT THE UNITARIANS this Sunday morning at 10:3fJA Cheerful Welcome Awaits You at the J.W.B. Armed Forcee Center, La Boca Road, Balboa. Chjtrch Membership in U.S.: Protestant Total: 78% - Unitarian: .1%. But in the Hall of Fame 20 of the 72 distin- guished Americans are Unitarians. BOVRIL the very goodness of beef Too cm taut tfc* riehnm f prime Iran btct lona 70 can >W th* tiSi that comet job OJom nil... h eaaan roa baa you'r* at aapaoet atd the l a baa an at aad wall. UaBaraoaty A m amuiniaf ana, BOVRIL PUTS BEEF tNTO YOU A. VSBJaOM SASSO S MOO LT*a-, TARADO 1389, FANAaJA, Kf. slop worrying.. start tinting! Don't worry about that first gray strand! Let it be s ""blessing in disguise" a signal to you to take action and do something about ob- taining lovelier, nature looking new haircolor! So relax and let Roux take over! For Roux Oil Sham- poo Tint treatments conceal every visible strand of dull or gray hair, give sparkling highlights and lustre, adds subtle, natural-looking color that changes your worry to delight' ROUX OIL SHAMPOO TINT COLORS CONDITIONS CLEANSES Caution: use only as directed on label. OatrlMiM la Um aaaaant 1 Paaaaa aad la* Caaal Eaaa JULIO VOS No. S -A" Street Telephone 1-2*71 Panam to the best of your ability, crttl- clxm shouldn't carry much of a sttnz. . ,-._ i Certainly It L^ better to be cfl- was , 'surprise shower rtmat me t.o- |tlclzed for tne wav one does a Job ahow- whlch was very well r* co Solo Officers Club Wecinesciaythlin ,0 ayoJd , crjtlcl9rn bv n*-irMved when It was shown at thw to honor Mrs. CO R0Dms *" ver doine anything worth any* Washington Hotel several months her infant son Allen,^who was ^'s notice. W born February 13 at the Coco So- lo Naval Hospital. A bassinet decorated with blue and white bows contained the gifts, which were presented to the honoree. After thev were opened, refreshments were serv- ed from an attractive table, A white decorated cake. Inscribed in blue: "Welcome Ai!en," form- ed the centerpiece and was flanked by pink and blue ruffled parasols and bowls of pink lilies. The guests who attended in- cluded the mother of the, hon- oree. Mrs. Lila Stacey. Mrs. A. P. Anderson. Mrs. E. C. Atkin- son, Mrs. J. F. Barlow. Mrs. W. W. Bemis, Mrs. F. H. Bonekamp. Mrs L. B. Boston, Mrs. H. R. Hitchcock. Mrs. W. 1. Holtz- claw. Mrs. J. C. Novak. Mrs. M L. Lilleboe. Mrs. R. Tucker. Mrs, V. A Schweitzer. Mrs. E. M. 8teifl, Mrs. R. L. Smith. Mrs, ;L. E. Souders. Mrs. W. E Simp- son. Mrs. M. E. Tomlln and Mrs. Wlnslow. Picnic Supper Honors Two Couple Dr. and Mrs. R. R. Gregory. I who leave tomorrow for Mobile, || Ala., were honored with a picnic supper on the lawn of the resi- dence of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Harris and Mr. ano> Mrs. Fred Newhard in Oatun Wednesday evenlna. Also complimented by their group of friends were Mr. .and Mrs. Fred Wllloughby. who I are moving from Barro Colorado I'Circle to Bolivar Highway. The friends who participated In the supper were: Bill and Ar- !dls Wllloughby. Rev. and Mrs. I J. W. L. Oraham. Mr. and Mrs. | Leon Egolf. Mr. and Mrs. Oeo. Poole. Sr.. Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Clement. Mr. and Mrs. Harris. Mr. and Mrs. Newhard with Freddie and Carol, Orrln and J'Mary Clement. Mrs. Alice Clem- llent, Mr and Mrs Sam Maiildin I'with Virginia. W.O. and Mrs. I George Poole. Jr.. with Chris and Kate. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ora- ham with Martha. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Albright and John. Mr. 'and Mrs. Leslie Croft with Carl- ton and Raymond and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Nash and Andra Lee. i Karaloe Turner Celebrates Birthday Mr. and Mrs. E. Beverly Tur- ' ner of Cristobal arranged a par- ty at their residence Wednesday to honor their daughter. Kara- lee. on her eighth birthday an- 'niversary. The children enjoyed a treas- ure hunt and played games. The prize winners for the' games were Sandy Welgle. Jean Allen and James Manning. The other young guests were Earl Orr. Rickie Maedl. Kudv Eder. Carol Bruland. Christie Wirtz Darien Diets. Bobby Ood- des. Cathy Lewis. Kenny Smith. Ursula Alexaltls and Marie Bru- land. Morning Coffee at Fort Gulkk The Fort Oullck N.C.O. Wives Club held their monthly morn- ing coffee at the home of Mr*. Owen Tolbert Mrs Mike Ktn- nlck. Hospitality Chairman, was prr snr THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER _i^ , SATURDAY, MARCH 1, 1851 You Sell em... When You Tell em thru PA. Classifieds! . Leave your Ad with one of n Ajents or our Offices W H M.KVIO rtOKKI>UN> a SMAtS UH BK1IKZA i* wast tteb e-et AMKKICAMJ LKkU* BUI It A as a ave lUt PANAMA AMERICAN No .7 "H" Hull fieaaa io am cn> .-.*.c*mb w ; 12 words Minimum for 3c. each additional word. ,!_!__L_.i_S FOR SALE Household FOR SALE:Upright p>no, West- inohouse refneerotor, 60 cycle. cu it., bedroom at, kitchen tables motchmg cupboards, ii orted household items. After 5 p. i. ... House 105. 1st St. Los Cumbres. 9-2 p. m. Sot. end Sun.________ FOR SALE: 4 piece overstuffed, livinoroom set, Philco cobmet ra- dio, twin beds, innerspring mot- , tresses ond box springs Holly- wood type. 14 cubic foot deep freeie. Quarters 38 Albrook 5181. ^__ Phone FOR SALE Autnmphili** FOR SALE:Household furnishings, modern, excellent condition. Rea- sonable. Phone Curundu 83-617V Soturdoy. Sunday. ___^ FOR SALE:Wicker livinoroom set consists of rocker settee. "P"<>h' ' chair, and center table. $50.00. I Quarters 537-B, Fort Gulick. phone 88-875.______ IFOR SALE:Overstuffed sofa ond chair, new slip covers $200; oc- casional chair $15; end table $2.- 50. An excellent buy. Albrook 86- 522K________________________ FOR SALE:Overstuffed safe, four sections; chino closet or book-case; mahogany coffee table; mahogany nested tables; cedor chest; gas water heater; gas stove; gloss- ware; other furniture. Telephone Panama 2-3067 after 6:30 p. m. FOR SALE:Mehogany dining toble 4 chairs. Handsome modern de- stn. Perfect. Simmons studio couch 3 cushions. CuKjndu 4141. Qtrs. 2041-C, after 4 p. m. 'FOR SALE:One bomboo livingroom set. 7 pi -es. 1 mahogony d'ning- roo-n table ond 4 chairs. House 779-D, Balboa. IIIBSCZ Delegates Going To 'amaica for Carit Jamboree Ten scouts and a leader, rep- resenting the International Boy Scouts o the Canal Zone, will leave Tocumen airport Monday morning for Jamaica to attend th first Caribbean jamboree. The group Is headed by Romeo M !ler. district commissioner for tr s Atlantic side, and consists o Ecward McDonald, Troop 1; Al- bert Jardine, Troop 3; Leonard Fi-ter, Troop 4; Alfred Griffith a: J Frederick Brooks. Troop 7; Dcnald Walker and Juan Lpez, i T oop 12; Arthur Green, Verneel L"ing, Jr., and Robert Walker, T.oop 13. The scouts were selected for ti ir Qualifications by a special ccmmlttee under the chalrman- h.p oi Nathan S. Bryan, a mem- br. of the IBSCZ council, and one of the founders of the Baden P. :ll Boy Scout movement h- .e. --.raining of the boys for the Js nboree was entrusted to lead- er.; and individuals specialized a!mg certain lines, with Scout Executive, Raymond George, su- p: "vising the course. . he jamboree lasts from March A- to 17 and will take place at Bi'igg* Park. Up-Park-camp, St. Andrew. Jamaica, a beautiful site about 400 feet above sea level in vlsw of Kingston harbor which , has been used as a training cen- ter for the military. The IBS Council is thankful to Ivan Edward, Wilfred Mal- colm, Joseph Downer and Clif- ford A. Bolt, who assisted In the drive to raise funds to help fi- nance the trip of the delegates. Voice Of America To Rebroadcast Acheson's Speech The Voice of America will re- broadcast Secretary of State Dean Acheson's speech on the re- cent accomplishments of the North Atlantic Council meeting just concluded in Lisbon, Portu- Listeners in the Republic of Panam will be able to hear "Acheson's address from 8:15 to 8:45 p.m. local time today through HOG. 840 kilocycles and MOXO, 760 kilocycles. FINANCING Service Personnel ond U.S. Civilian Government Employe* new used coi through G0VI>NMKi iMtPlOYfS FINANCI 90 Fort Worth. Texas Also Direct Loons Automobile serving jovernmem employes ond Service "enonne' * Cvt0' **** lot 14 ,eon Witr J financing your insurance outomotieolly adjusted fO U. S covarope. AMANGIMINTJ CAN MADI THROUGH LOCAL AUTOMOBILS DIALER Quickly Fou< ought 52 m5f,rr*" you nothar e*r without try In r Nlxeearm. Thl raat madlcln. combata tha urn and paraaltu which ften ara the rea.1 ca.ua* of akin troubL. Ttat la why Nlx.a.rm ae quickly nutku yoer akin aoft. claer. amootk and at- trectlva. Oat Nixadarm from your druf- ajta* today how much bottar your kin looks and '! tomorrow. IN* CHEVROLET Fleet - master 4-doer Sedan, very te*d condition, easy pay- ments, fan- smic at Smoal y annicatt. 8.A. ISth Street Central At*. Colea TeL 8*8. Agencias Cosmos, Automobile Row 29, will solve your Auto-Problem. Tel. Panama 2-4721. Open all day on Saturdays. FOR SALE: 1951 Oldsmobile 98, Holiday Coupe. Tel. 2-2980. House 5513-B, Diablo. FOR SALE:1951 Ford Fordor Se- dan, $1.750.00. Will occept trade In. House 531 -D. Cocoli. Position Offered WANTED: Americon Compony needs English-Spanish secretary. Write to Apartado 134; sending small photo, ond stating age ond experience. WANTED:C'erk-Typists experien- ced in general office work. Apply between 7 to 9 a. m. daily at Time office on rood C-21. Chivo Chiva Rood. Canal Zone. Mocco-Ponpa- cific, Inc. MISCELLANEOUS 0* eew ** aWiokmt ajreklemr Write Akewelki Aaea.ma* Bes 2011 Aae. C. Z. CANTINA DAVH>, Central Avenue No. 151, under new monagement best of service end set nights for cut prices. Proprietress, Dell P. SPOT REDUCING Take inches off hips, waist, or legs quickly ond safely without diet or exercise. Coll 83-5245 for oppoint- ment for a free trial treatment. FOR SALE Mi&celiuueous FOR SALE:Lete 1949 Packard 4 door radio, heater, leather up- holstery, WSW-tires, other extras. Excellent condition tleoughout. Less tron 12,000 miles. $1,600 cosh. Can be financed. Phone Bal- boa 3438. House 214-B, Ancon. FOR SALE1950 "Packard, bicycle, tricycle, toaster, rug, lamps, shav- er, Mis. 1446-D, Owen, Balboa. FOR SALE: One boby crib, inner spring mattress. Excellent condi- tion, one diningroom table, four chairs. PAD 3189. LUii tr FOUND ATTENTION: Substantial reward for information helping recover sil- ver goblets. Also knives, forks spoons (Reed Barton's French First) stolen recently. Contoet Box 573 Ancon. Information confiden- tial. I-OST:Signet Ring marked O. G. P. Finder cell Balboa 1835 and receive reword. FOR 8ALE 1947 Oodrr Pick-up. perfect condition, easy payments at Smoot y Hnnniriitt. S.A. 16th Street Central Ave.. Coln Tel. 808. Radio Programs Y oar Community Station HOG-840 When 100.000 eee>le Meet Presents Saturday, Mar. 1 P.M. 3:30McLean's Program 3:45Musical Interlude 4:00Music for Saturday 4:30 What's Your Favorite 6:00Guest Star 6:15Masterworks from France 6:45American Folk Songs 7:00Gay Paris Music Hall 7:30Sports Review 7:45Jam Session 8:00Newsreel U.S.A. 8:15Bing Crosby Show 9:00 HOG Hit Parade 9:30VOA Hit Parade 10:00HOTEL EL PANAMA 10:30H a v i n g a Wonderful Crime 11:00 The Owl's Nest 1:00 A.M.Sign Off. WANTED Miscellaneous WANTED:Second hond rowing ma- chine ond billiard table complete with balls ond cues. Call Panomo 3-2190. WANTED:In good condition. In- expensive Boby Ploy-pen, Baby Chest of Drawers, 2 night tables. Coll J-1618, Ponamo, 9-12 2- 5- r WANTED:I buy penny scole* with or without Ancon P. O. Box 638. weighing locotion WANTED:Two or three bed room house or oportment. Phone 86- 7111. Secluded furnished house with large garden. Porque Lefevre, to let June, October inclusive. Telephone Ponoma 3-3798. Help Wanted WANTED:A maid to sleep in. Cu- rundu, No. 2181-B ofter three O'clock. Lift Up Your Hearts Sunday. Mar. 2 A.M. 8:00Sign On Musical Inter- lude 815Newsreel UJ3.A. (VOAi 8:30Hymns of all Churches 9:00BIBLE AUDITORIUM OF (A Lenten feature of the Pa- nama-American prepared by The Rev. M. A. Coolcson. Epis- copal Church of Our Saviour, New Cristobal.) TRUTH AND FREEDOM And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free" Read: St. John 8:12-82. The Lenten season can be used as a period of progress for eacn one of us a spiritual opportu- nity for growth and refreshment in our religious life. We all want , to enjoy a sense of progress, a 9:16-52*brighter, &ft* n^eStlon* "BreS 9:30-London Studio Melodic & ta^tton?*TuVn JK^ 1000-Inlhe Tempo of Jazz ^he^"1 :he ** w,th 10:30Your American Music >our nean-- 11:00NATIONAL LOTTERY _.. ll:15-The Sacred Heart Pro- .J*^"te" c.olumn lsMhunibl>; ram submitted to help us understand ll:30-Meet the Band the mening of the highest hu- 12:00 Invltation. to Learning "J*0 freedom and o the truth (VOA) th,lt ie*d* men to It. r a I "Ye 8nu knw the truth," Je- 12:30Salt Xake Tabernacle sus said, 'and the truth shall RESORTS Sonta Ciara beoch- Gromlicl\'l cottages. Electric ice boxes, gos stoves, moderate rotes. Phone 441 or 4-567. Phillie. Oceonalde eottaflee, Santa Clem, lex 435. Balboa Phone Ponamo 3-1177. Cristobal 11673 Williams bonto Clare Beach Cottages. Two bedrooms. Frigidaires, Rock- gos ranjes Balboa 2-3050. I-OK RENT Apartments ALHAMBRA aPARTMENTI Modern furnished unfurnished apart- ments. Maid service optional. Con- tact office 8061. 10th Street, New Cristobal, telephone 386 Colon. wOiVilVlllKClAL 0 PROFESSIONAL We haw everyfhini to keep voof Lawt and (larden beautiful , dnrine the dry season FOR RENT:Choice 2 bedroom un- furnished oportment In 3 eport- ment new building located comer 51 St. and Manuel Yeoza In Cam- po Alegre. Tel. 3-3181. FOR SALE Real Estate FOR SALE:Lot in Parque Lefevre, opply 16th St. No. 6, Son. Fran- cisco. FOR SALE: *- Cottages, completely furnished, Santa Clara Beach. Term available, for information. Phone 6-441. ^JACOiV ON IRIDQt BY OSWALD JACOB* Written for NEA Service NOKTH 1 None VKJJOI ? AQJ 101 *K<}7 WES BAST (D) A10S3 4AKQI74 AH Qt7 ? 2 684 e>AIII OS SOUTH J9J 6SS 6K7II 4.J104 North-South vuL Beet Seaith Weal Nerth i* Pasa 2 6 8 6 Pan 4 4 Pass 16 Pass Pus Double Pass Pass Paw Openins lead6 * ''oofc Hose Fencing Sprayers Sprinklers Wheelbarrow* lnsectlcin.6 Fertilizers Weedkillers Fungicides GEO. F. NOVEY, INC 878 Central Ave. Tel. 3-8148 PANAMA BROKERS. INC. Hotel El Panana Buys: Brewery. Sells: Abbatoir. Tel. 3-4718 3-160 MODERN FURNITURE CUS I MM MJIL1 SUpcovet Reanbolstery vtarr ova sRovt-stnnMi Alberta Bare * ee la Oaaa it (Aeteaeuetl* a* i ftee Eattmatet Ptek A Deliver. Tel t-te m a.aa *e t*a -2>anafac INSTANT rat-Frte Powtrtd Uttk (fortifierl with Vitamin Dl lor DRINKING e for COOKING for WHIPPING Farm Fresh Flam! On Sale In P. C. Co Commissaries. Choir 1:00The Jo Stafford Show 1:15The Chorallers 1:30Rev. Albert Steer 2:00Drama and Symphony Hour . 4:30What's Tour Favorite 6:00London Forum (BBC) 6:30Music ot Donald Voorhees (VOA) 7:00Musical Notebook (VOA) 7:30Thru the Sports Glass 7:45Science fe.The Christian Man (BBC) make you free." St. Paul, who himself had been delivered from bondage to sin through faith In the Crucified, and had become one of the spiritually free, said, "Stand fast in the liberty where- with Christ has made vou free." "o absolute was this liberty to be. that Christians should owe no man anythine but love. It was freedom Derfertert In love. For to love is to fulfill the law. To love is to be free: to hate is to be a slave. A man might be free from 8:00Sports Roundup and News al lexternal authority and yet he (VOAi a slave a slave to his own self- Si 15 Report from Congress{will. When man does not come (VOA) to an understsnrtlne with God. 8:30Show Time (VOA) I refuses tn Identify his will with 8:45The Letter Box (VOA) God's will, he finds himself In 9:00 United Nations Re vie w. bondage, a shner In servitude. i VOA i ^ | Christ Is life's res test Ubera- :30 The Bing Crosby 8how tor. Bv blndlu* ourselves to Him we find ourselves truly free. (VOA) 10:00BBC Concert Hall 11:00Sign Off! IMS PLYMOUTH 4 dew Sedan. Very gawd condition, with leather seat covers, radio, rood Urea, easy pay- ments, far sale at Smoot y Hunnicult, S-A. 18th Street Central Ave, Colein TeL 888. "Make me a cantive. Lord and than I shall be free." When you're defending a hand, it's usually a line idea to play In such a way that your partner knows what you have and therefore knows how to put up the best defense. It's possi- ble, however, to overdo this de- fensive signalling, as today's hand shows. North's cue-bid of three spades was forcing to game and pro- mised support for the three un- hid suits. North didn't really have full values for this bid, 'but he wasn't far out of line. When South got to five diamonds, West came to life with a quick disci- plinary double. West opened the three of spades, and dummy ruffed with the nine of diamonds. East drop- ped the ace of spades on this trick, partly to show complete control of the suit and partly to encourage a spade continuation. This play was highly informa- tive to West, but It was a com- plete giveaway to South as well. South happened to be Harry Flshbeln. a nationally known ex- pert who seldom needs more than one hint to help him play a doubtful hand. Flshbeln realized that East's play definitely located the axe- king-queen of spades. What could West have for his double of five diamonds? The only other high cards were the ace of clubs, the ace of hearts, and the queen of hearts. West might have raised to two spades on an ace and a queen, but he certainly wouldn't have doubled with that meager hold- ing. It was obvious that West held both of the mlsslnn aces for his double. Acting on this information. Flshbeln led a club from dummy and played the Jack to force West's see. West returned a low heart, hopine that declarer would finesse the jack, but Flshbeln confidently put up dummy's kinc to win the trick. He then drew two rounds of trumps and ran the clubs to dis- card a low heart from his hand. He gave up onlv one heart and one club, making his doubled contract. If East had played the eight Instead of the- ace of spades at the first trick. South would haVt BARGAIN 1958 Boick ga- per 4-door Sedan, with ra- dio, rood teat covers, all new tires, at Smoot y Hun- aicutt. S.A. 16th. Central Ave. Colea TeL 888. DR. B. L. STONE Chiropractor STONE CLINIC 7th St. 8c Justo Arosemena Ave. Coln Tel. 457 Woman's Body Found In Trunk In Fashionable Long Island With Zonians In the Service (Isthmians with family members or friends in the U. 8. Armed Forces are urged to contribute to this depart- ment bv mailing data to the Zone Serviceman's Editor, The Panama-American, Bex 134. Panama. R. P. Informa- tion as to ser v I e e m e n s whereabouts, their promo- tions and excerpts from their letters are of particular In- terest.) GREENWICH, Conn., March 1.(UP) Tht partly-clothed body of a young woman was found crammed in an old trunk yesterday on a $500,000 estate fronting Long Island Sound. Police said the woman probably had been murdered. The body was taken to Greenwich hos- pital for an autopsy. A gardener on the 120-acre waterfront estate of Dr. James Cowan Greenway and Harriet Lauder Greenway found the body in the trunk beside a stone wall. The trunk evidently had been thrown into the estate grounds from a highway running through Greenwich's Mead's Point section, one of the city's oldest and most exclusive areas of mansions and tree-shaded lawns, 26 miles northeast of New York City. Greenwich police, with a re- Indian Field road, which passes LT. MICHAEL J. DAWSON Michael J. Dawson, above, Balboa Junior College gradu- ate, received his commission as an air officer, radar intercept, at James Connelly Air Force Base, Waco, Tex., last Tuesday. Lt. Dawson is the son of Mrs. Charles W. Dawson 'of Diabla Heights. He gradaated from the Foreign School of Service, Georgetown University, after leaving here and was an em- ploye ef the Texas Petroleum Co. at Cristobal before enter- ing the Air Force. He is now in Panam City, Florida, for farther training. ISTHMIAN DATA putatlon of being among the nation's most efficient law en- forcement officers, withheld de- tails on the death pending a report on the autopsy. Identification of the dead wo- man could not be established immediately. It was learned that Dr. Green- way, retired founder of the Yale University department of medical research, and his wife Harriet, a relative of the late steel millionaire Andrew Car- negie, were away from their $125,000 mansion on the estate at the time of the gardener's grisly discovery. They were reported spending the winter at their southern estate on an island off the South Carolina coast. An investigator from the state the great Greenway grounds. Besides the Greenway man- sion, many smaller buildings dot the vast estate fronting on the Sound. The Greenways are among the better-known wealthy in this city of 41,000. Balboa Rd. Detour To Start Monday Traffic will be detoured a- round a short section of Bal- boa Road near the Union Church for about two weeks starting at 7 a.m. Monday mor- ning. The Municipal Division will be at work on a sewer Une across Balboa Road at that point. Because of possible traffic attorney's office was called into congestion, the public Is asked the case. to cooperate by using other The point at which the old | routes, If possible, especially trunk was found was Jus off during peak traffic periods, Radio Songstress BIRTHS 8 Goddess of infatuation 6 Unit of length (ab.) 7 Speakers 8 Tower 9 Ruminant mammal 10 Harpy IS Biblical land 18 Babylonian moon-god 184 CHEVROLET 4-door Sedan Styline deluxe, ex- cellent shape, good seat covers, radio, new tires, for sale at Smoot y Hnnnleutt, S.A. 18th Street Central Ave., Coln Tel. 888. FULA, Mr. and Mrs. Felipe of Red Tank, a daughter, Feb. 26 at Gorgas Hospital. ROBERTS. Mr. and Mrs. Hor- ace of lvef City, a son, Feb. 28 at colon Hospital. WELSCH. Mr. and Mrs. Hom- er E. of Gamboa, a son, Feb. 87 at Gorgas Hospital. MORENO, Mr. and Mrs. Mi- guel of Red Tank, a daughter, Feb. 28 at Gorgas Hospital. , TORRES, Mr. and Mrs. Fran- 47Reams (ab.) cisco H. of Panama, a daugh- 48Spherical Red Cross Drive Among Military Off To Good Start The 1952 American Red Cross fund campaign went off to a fly- ing start on the Isthmus of Pan- ama yesterday when volunteers began their membership drive within the Canal Zone. Indications are* that the objec- tive of full milltarv membershiD In the Red Cross will be achieved. The three Commanders of Ca- ribbean Command also received their membership cards from vo- lunteer workers yesterdav. AH three Commanders lauded the American Red Cross for its great service to the civilian communi- ties as well as to the military. Each general and flag officer stated that he was pleased to re- new his membership In this wor- thy organization. HORIZONTAL 1,8 She's t radio singer 10 Actor 11 Skill 12Attempted 14 Fruit drink 15 Devices used by golfers 17 Bewildered 18 Categories 20 Detain In port 19 Female iheep 22 Money (slang) 21 Seine 88 New (comb. 24 Weeps form) 25 Year between 24 Spire 12 and 20 38 Barter 26 Therefore SI Above (pott.) 27 Goddess of t Effete discord 88 Heavy impact 2 Wolfhound 38 Entreats 88 Basic Igneous reck 40 Fourth Arabian caliph 41 Rostrum 43 More placid 45 Born Answer to Previous PuziU 111 r-.'issi-ji 1'v.r- i || MUU- l.-HM"i l.-J rjflgl i Mlii-Jl i I I ite-'-T 1 i pjr ii nuil i: : nm i .' mt?u irarjuisi IBiatl !UI ) WUI3 Uaai'JVJ. ne< j, l^islU rji lifflM .*:' i v.r-i rni:n'.vn-n'i r ]r^wj>r_^',vr-:Me'jir'. i niii iWMwiran v- ir lie, i ihn-, >-, ) 30 River valley 31 Arabian prtoea 34 Exuden 37 Reddish- yellow color 38 Armed fleets 42 Beverage 44 Worm 48 Measures of cloth 48 Grains (ab.) 8 Secular 50 Holy Roman > tmptrof 82 Heap 53 God of love 54 Young socialite 67 New Guinea 60 Reprint (ah.) ter, Feb. 28 at Gorgas Hospital. MARRIAGES SULLIVAN, William Ashton of| Ancon. to HOOK. Martha Ann Hook of Diablo Heights. RATCLDJFE. George Ellis of, Albrook Field, formerly of Port-i land. Maine, to TERRY. Dorothy | Lorraine of Balboa, formerly of Brooklyn, New York. SESSIONS, Walter Warren of Curundu, formerly of New Or-; leans. La., to BORTLE, Mary Batchelor of Curundu. formerly of Baltimore, Maryland. BUONVIRI, Eugene Lewis of Albrook. formerly of Brentwood. Maryland, to GILBERT, Stella Isabel of Curundu. TAYLOR. Francis Walter ot La Boca to ROBERTS, Claris Inez of Panama. GORDON, Dean Lyle of Al- brook, formerly of Neoga. Illinois to GOODWIN, Marialene of Rushville. Indiana. 51 Caught breath convulsively 55 Evaluate 58 Winter vehicle 58 Anger 58 Oriental guitar 6) Brazilian macaw 62 Pollack 63 Condense 64 Electrical unit VERTICAL 1 Wench 3 Augury 3 Overlords 4 Pedals Salvation Army Band To Celebrate Anniversary The Panama Cltv band of the salvation Army will celebrate Its first anniversary tomorrow with n special program starting at 3:- SOn.m. Tars also will be sold In con- 1 unction with the anniversary orogram to raise funds to buy new Instruments. The Salvation Armv's Band ceased to function officially for * number of vears. owine to a lack of musical instruments, but was reonranizeri last year with the help of public contributions. Donations for the band may be sent to the local Salvation Ar- my headquarters at ISth of Feb- ruary street or Box 3*56 Pana- ma. RP. or Box N Balboa. C.Z. credited West with some high Colon Officials To Attend Private Showing Of 'The Mob' "The Mob." starring Broderlck Crawford, will be run In a private showing Monday morning at 10 In the Caribe Theater. Colon, for Colon Oov. Oscar Teran and other city officials. Crawford, who stars In the Co- lumbia picture, was the 1950 win- ner of an "Oscar" as the year's best actor. Major Pastor Ramos, chief of the Colon Pdllce and Carlos Bie- berach. Colon Secret Police Chief will be among the other officials at the private showing Court Minerva To Hold Important Meeting Tuesday An Important meetina of the card In spades. There would be,court of Minerva No. 8384 will no reason to credit West with the be held Tuesday at the Lodge's ace of hearts, and the chances headquarters, are that South would have lost] Final arrangements will be his contract by mls-guessins that made at that time for aalt. Court's Dedication. FOR SALE 1848 Oldssaobile 2-door Sedan, good condi- tion, with radio, seat cov- ers, good tires, easy pay- ments at Smoet y Hanni- ruit S.A. 18th Street Cen- tral Are.. Celon TeL 888. La. I FOR SALE: 1851BlekSta lion Wagon Headmaster, I with radie, all new tires, I perfect condition. Easy pay- I aeents. At Sasoet y Hunni- catt, SA. 18th Street Cen- I ~aJ tral Ave, Ose* TeL DISTRIBUTORS. CIA. CORNOS, S. A. SATURDAY, MARCH 1. 1M THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDKPKNDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER PAOJR Eighteen Horses Entered For Today's Santa Anita Handicap Hill Prince, Bed O' Roses Favored In $100,000 Race ARCADIA, Calif.. March 1 (UP).A surprisingly large field hat heR entered In today s S1H.H4 Sants Anita Handicap. Eighteen horsesheaded by the highly favored "Hill Prince" passed the entry box yesterday. The added potential starters ame with the rains and a prospect for a slow track. A light driatle started falling early yesterd.iy and the weatherman says the showers will continue. Hill Prince has boon declared "fit and ready" by trainer Ca- sey Hayes. Some observers claim that Hill Prince Is lame and will not go to the post. Hayes has until 45 minutos before post time today to scratch Hill Prince. The hone has been assigned top weight of 129 pounds. The rick California race may be the vehicle for Alfred Van- derbilt'i "Bed O' Room" to achieve lasting recognition. No filly or mare ever has won the mile and one euarter elastic and Vanderbllt'i five-year-old mare Is rated a solid chance to be- come the first. The rallblrds are saying Bed (V Roses has everything with her. Trainer Bill Winfrey says the little daughter of "Rosemont" Is in top condition andwith an Impost of only 114 pounds- should go well. Jockey Willie Shoemakerwho has preved he and Bed O' Roses get along wellwill be In the irons. At an added advantage, the mare's stablemate, "Next Move.." will be entered and la expected to set a fast pace. A victory Would give Bed O' Roses another first. The five- year-old could boost her earnings to about S47,M*enough to make her the biggest money winner or her sex in racing his- tory. Calumet's "Bewitch," who retired with $482,805 last sum- mer, is the present top money winner. LAKE WALESIf you had enough Berle In you you could properly say the onus is still en the bonus. You don't hear as much a* you used to about club owners throwing helpless mop- nets to the ground and stuffing their gullets with gold, but the practice continues nevertheless. Not precisely, however, in its original form. There have been changes in fiscal procedure, As, for instance, the way the Yan- kees dealt with Id Careghlno, 19-year-old high school pitching aensation, out of Redwood City, Calif., one of the youngsters Casey Stengel had in hand at the rookie camp. > Cereghlno got 170,000 for signing but not in one vulgar hunk. It comes to htm over a period of seven years, whether he makes tood or not, whether he plays seven years or none. And there's no clause holding him to maximum pay; he can make more If he shows high ability. I haven't asked what the thought back of this type of bonus 1, for no matter how you count It, when or where, $70,000 guar- anteed is still $70,000. Maybe the thought is If the youngster gets it in small pieces he won't rush out and buy a yacht and marry a blonde in the Une of "Guys and Dolls." Maybe it will help to keep his mind on baseball, dreary as the choice might be. A num- ber of clubs are laying it this way, though when they run up against a precocious Scrooge who adheres firmly to the blrd-to- the haad-'SlSflosoaSjr lhay till get It up IflUct. It wa old how the bonus custom started. One yesr eager kids were signing for car fare: fijiTj^xt ffiy j?e> bringing satchels and saying, "fill 'Mai Up.' Paul Itltcnell, Yankees* head'ScYjut,"still .cased1, by the phe- nomenon, '#na recalling the other night ver a Small beer the time he signed Charley Keller. . "And I jbpught he wag the most unreasonable brat 1 aver dealt wihyn- l ** -' ***.' THE GREAT KELLER HOLDUP Kritchell not only had to five Keller, starring On the Uni- versity of Maryland baseball team, $3500, but the coach $1500. "That was an awful lot of money in those days (It was only tome 10 years ago) and riding back on the train I was wondering how on earth I would ever be able to explain the deal to Ed Bar- row, i was sure he was going to throw me out of the office." Barrow was then watching for the Yankee treasury. He even thought Babe Ruth was shockingly overpaid. "No ballplayer ever was worth more than $25.000." he once told me. . I don't know what the balance shee,t would show but some bonus players have proved excellent Investments, and even when they fall, the money losa is considerably less than 100* because income tax regulations permit writing off deficits. There Is no such thing as a sure guess on a young ballplayer, no more than on a young race horse. Some guesses will be better than others because they are backed by more competent judg- ment. But not even a Weiss, a Rickey or a Hornsby can look at a youngster and guarantee you he can't miss. Some youngsters can't stand prosperity. They regard a fat check an automatic passport to success. They tell you that's what happened to Dick Wakefield, first of the gold-plated bonus babies. Detroit gave him $52,000 and a custom-built car to sign and the late Wish Kgan. no better Judge of talent ever Hved, threw In a kiss for the boy's mother, being both a generous and romantic Irishman. Wakefield had one great year, or rather half a year, when his bat lifted the Tigers from deep in the second division to near pennant victory. He certainly had the look, manner and style of a big leaguer, especially at the plate. GOT PAT ON WAR PITCHING Even when he started to go bad In Detroit the Yankees still thought ho could do It but he failed in the Stadium, and when he dropped out of the main tent he couldn't help Oakland In the Coast League. He's back with Cleveland this year on what base- ball calls a look and the scribes are writing about his long drives off practice pitches. Maybe the quick dough did ruin Wakefield, and yet It may be that, In spite of expert opinion to the contrary, he never did have it. for his best work was in a war year when all the good pitchers, or most of them, were away. A lot of crazy things happened to the record books in those days. One year Lou Boudreau was the batting leader with .329. Another year George Stlrnwelss topped it with an incredible .30. Anybody with a 10-cent curve and control was a great pitcher. . Undaunted the Tigers paid $75,000 bonus to Prank (Pig) House, a high school catcher from Bessemer. Ala. There wasn't much wrong with him except he couldn't hit or throw. Even In the minors he was a bust. Remember the uproar Pittsburgh caused by giving Paul Pettlt, California high school pitcher $100,0007 The youngster came up with a sore arm and I don't even know where he Is today Naturally the bonus business brought no cheers from veterans and others wno*had come up the hard way. Johnny Antonelll's $5.600 pickup evoked such a storm of clubhouse protest the Braves' owner had to raise salaries all down the line. Ivan then 20-gme winners Warren Spahn and Johnny Sain remained un- appeased. In three years Antonelll won only five games for the Braves. Maybe the part-payment plan will make a difference But the onus is still on the bonus just the same. lent that a tUly Une? On The Alleys... CCRUNDU MEN'S OPEN BOWLING LEAGUE After one week's rest the Bud- weiser Plver came back stronger than ever to wallop the second- place Carta Vieja team for all four points. Walker, anchorman for the Budwelser team, rolled 537 high series for the night. VPW Post No. 3822, fighting to Set out of the cellar, shellacked m third-place Angellnl team for all four points also. George Moss, leadoff man for the Vets, had a 201 and a 300 series and had sec- ond high series. Acme Paints squeezed out one game from Balboa Beer, enough i to put them back In a tie for third spot. The Beermen were in there punching all the time. Canada Dry, bowling with on- ly three men, managed to sal- vage one game from the Ameri- can Club team. Freund, replacing I Art Prltchard on the Club team, 1 rolled high game for the night, 205. The alleys were extremely rough and dirty due to the wind blowing dust from the ball park all over the alleys. Quite a few of the fellows fell and others fouled. This condition Is quite | noticeable when comparing' scores of previous weeks. Total TEAM W. L. Pts. Pins Budwelser 47 25 62 Carta Vieja. 43 20 53 Acme Paints 38 38 Angellnl. ... 38 38 American Club 35 37 Canada Dry. 34 38 43 Balboa Beer 28 44 33 VPW Post 3822 29 43 38 PACIFIC LITTLE LEAGUE , (First Half Standings) TEAM Wn Loot Police Scars...... Lincoln Life.. AFGE 14 .. Elks 1414 .. .. Plromen (Second Half Standings TEAM Sears .. AFGE 14...... Elks 1414 Firemen Lincoln Police . The game has been declarad NO CONTEST as the Lincoln Lifers forfeited the game to Sears by using an ineligible) pitcher and the Sears team de- clined to accept the game. The game will be replayed en a Sat- urday morning in the near fu- ture. The Firemen scored.their firs* 4.......... ...... * Ufe........ t THURSDAY'S GAME Sears Linala Life (no contest) FRIDAY'S RESULTS Firemen 7, Police I. 50 5? 80082 80953 80795 60339 80493 60481 59536 59835 CANADA DRY Murdock 140 157 134- 431 Hicks. Henry. . Allen . . Lane . . Handicap. Totals . 138 135 125 386 138 123 110371, 140 140 140 420 147 147 147 441; 121 121 1B1 363 (NEA Telephoto) JOINS NEW TEAM Don Newcombe, ace righthander of the Brooklyn Dodgers, (second from left) Is sworn Into the armed services at Newark's Army center by Lt. James R. Huey, Big Don, who won 20 while losing only 9 last season. Is a resident of Colonia, N.J. LSU Advances To Semi-Finals Of SEC Basketball Tourney 812 823 7772412 AMERICAN CLUB Vale. .... 144 a* iaJ 373 Prltchard. .118 118 Hellwlg. 145.117 140- 402 Reichert 151 142 127-420 Coffey .190 144 134 468 Freund. 128 205 333' Handicap. 128 128 128 364 Totals ... 87$ 74$. $642478 ACME PAINTS Lavalle'e 135 170 124 429 101 111 119-345 134 13S 112 378 133 154 181 459 135 135 135 405 Casten . Corn . . Yarbro . Borgis . Handicap. Totals ... 757 $49 $202426 By JOHN DIETRICH LOUISVILLE. Ky March ll (UP) Mississippi's Rebels held sophomore ace Bob Pettlt to 16 points here yesterday, but Jojo Dean got loose for 20 to lead Louisiana State to a 75-60 vic- tory In the quarter-finals of the1 Southeastern Conference Bas- ketball Tournament. Mississippi assigned two men to cover Pettlt, the nation's No. 2 man in scoring who registered 36 against Mississippi state Thurs- day night. They succeeded In holding the six-foot nine-Inch Bengal to five points In the first half. In other quarter final games yesterday, Florida met Vander- bllt. Alabama played defending champion VanderbUt and top- seeded Kentucky took on Tulane. After setting out the first sev- en minutes of the second half, the All-Southeastern Conference forward came back to hang up 11 more points and cause Ken BALBOA BEER 134 143 133 410 US 147 131 391 115 124 165 404 140 124 171 435 11$ 138 132 388 148 148 148 444 Cain. . , Carpenter Schoch . Smith . Stanley-. . Handicap. Totals ... 768 $24 8802472 CARTA Torlan ... 137 Norrls, Ted. 94 Boney. ... 128 Kelsey ... 142 McCarr'gher 183 Handicap. 95 VIEJA 165 134 112 168 172 95 120 422 116 344! 148 386' 172 482, 138 493 95 285 Totals . 777 $46 7892412 BUDWEISER . 179 138 169 483 . 180 13$ 140 488 . 134 141 141 416 . 152 156 182-^ 490 146 202 189 537 113 113 113 38$ Stahl. Steuwe. . Bryan . Hovan . Walker . Handicap. Totals ... 904 885 934-2723 Why Exquisito) CUTICURA TALCUM is letter-for BABY'S SKIN Catkura Talara it *w, mfur, uaeotbar, art *brtnt, aiort tait- iasly Inpni. Soot an ins prevent! heat rath. chafing", skin irritation. Keep* baby sweet ad im!. Suj today. ANGELINI McConnell 162 164 174 490 Bembenek 113 127 110 360 Woner ... 124 140 121- 385 Balutls ... 114 125 US 364 Colston. 166 171 141- 478 Handicap. 110 110 110 330 Totals . 779 $87 7712387 VPW POST 3$2i Moss . Hannberg Witxlg . Mashburn Risco. . Handicap. Totals . 201 118 155 144 500 136 16? 421 12$ 140 120 383 98 149 136 121 355 156 169 474 160 160 160 480 849 883 8812613 33rd fjeads Armed Forces Baseball League 2nd Half ' "^rl"" FORT KOBBE, C.Z.Getting a The flraworks werea't ovar tremendous lift from Its Fort With John McCabe taking over Kobbe neighbor, the. 604th Field the Signal Corps hurling In the Artillery Battalion, the 33rd In* seventh, Carlos Lpez doubled,! fantry Regiment moved to the went to third on a passed ball top of the second round of the .and scored on Alex Renfro's, Canal Zone Armed Forces Base- grounder. ball League, Wednesday, Feb. 27, Signal came back to make Its! The Infantry downed the Signal, big threat In the bottom of the! Corps, 8-6, at Kobbe's Rencher eighth. Madeline, Rochlnsky and' Field: while the 504th was beat- Robben singled off pitcher Mr- lng Albrook Field, 10-5. The 33rd quez, who had relieved starter lost a special playoff game with Jerry Shepard in the first ln- Albrook to decide the first round nlng. One run scored and, with title. men on first and third, Lpez, ' The Infantrymen came from came in from centerfleld to take' behind again to win their third over the 33rd's pitching. Oyamal straight. Signal Jumped off to a1 tried to bunt; popped to Lpez, big lead with a four-run fourth, who doubled off Rochlnsky at: Inning, featured by Henry Made- third. Bob Mohn grounded out to line's steal of home. The losers end the threat, scored again m the fifth on a. walk, steal and wild throw by The winners got one more run | 33rd catcher Jorge Toro. for Insurance In the last of the Signal starting and losing eighth. Toro walked and Rees fltcner Earl Trotter lost his con- Jones laid down a perfect bunt, rol In the third Inning. He walk- He raced to third on a wild throw ed three men, and together with! and Toro scored In front of htm. a single by George wlthey, and; Mrquez got credit for the win. an error, the 33rd Infantry scor-; He struck out nine In the 7 2-3 ed four runs. The Infantry fin- innings he pitched, ally took the lead in the sixth1 Lin esc ore: when Arturo Vega-Rivera tripled Signal 410 000 0106 8 1 Toro home and scored himself on 33rd 004 002 llx8 6 3 a squeeze play, with pitcher 'Leo' Shephard, Mrquez, Lpez and Marques bunting. I Toro. Trotter, McCabe and Mohn. TRAIN PLAYS BURGLAR OKLAHOMA CITY (UP) Po- licemen investigating the appar- ent burglary of the Mud Prod- ucts Inc.. building were mystiflad because whoever "had pried the back door open hadn't stolen anything. Officers finally dis- covered lt had been done by a freight train. A plank Jutting from a car on the slow-moving freight bad Jammed against the door, forcing lt open. TUH44 svlikft*"-/ only all ix drinks sold k at Yi pnce from 3 to 7 p.m. EVERY DAY The Boston Bar Robblns and Ken Lindaey of Mis- sissippi to foul out. The double-teaming dn Pettlt let the accurate Dean also an All-SEC choice, cut loose with, his favorite set shots for 20 Eolnts and kept Mississippi's re- minding weak. Mississippi led in the early, minutes of the game, 3-2, but three free throws and a field goal, by Bobby Yates and another | charity toss by Dean put the Bengals out front 8-3. After that* the issue was never in doubt. Robbins got 12 points for thel Rebels and Jim Chllders collected 11. The win moved the Bengals, who finished the regular season in a three-way tie for the SEC runner-up spot to Kentucky, Into the semi-finals of the tourney. Flamingo Stakes To Be Run In Two Sections Today HIALEAH. March 1 (UP)For the first time in history officials at Hlaleah have been forced to split the $50,000 Flamingo Stakes into two sections, The move was made necessary when a record 22 thoroughbreds were named for today's mile and one-eighth test for three-year- olds. Each section win carry $50,000 in added money. The winner of each will earn $47,500 providing the full field starts. . The first section wUl be run as the sixth race on the Hlaleah program with the second section coming as the seventh race. As a sidelight to the race, jock- ey Ted Atkinson will be trying for a clean sweep of the win- ter's two big races for three- ear-olds. Atkinson won the 100,000 Santa Anita Derby aboard Hill Gail last week and will ride Closed Door in the sec- ond section of the Flamingo. Jockey Jimmy Stout will be out to break a Jinx in the Flamingo. The veteran has ridden in six Flamingos without a winner and is expected to ride Armageddon in the second section. Won Lost win in second half play yester- day afternoon edging the Folie 7 to 6. The game was a thrUler with the daring base running of the Smokies and fielding gams of both teams featuring the play. The Smokies got off to a run- ning start in the top of the Mrs inning scoring four runs on twe> hits and two walks and soma classy base running. After th first four men had scored, Bobby Klelhofer settled down and A change has been made In struck out the next three batters the standings of the second half to retire the side. race in the Pacific Little League. The Coppers, not to be out- as a result of Thursday's game done, turned the same trick on between Sears and Lincoln life, their opponents scoring four runs on two hits a walk and an error. Webb almost duplicated Klelhofer s pitching feat by re- tiring the last two batters of the) Inning on strikes. There was no further scoring until the fifth Inning when the Smokies scored three times to take the lead and the Coppers --------' scored two runs In their half of b.ik^. ut.h .* th. done'the lnnlng- Roth teams were held h SffihSlrtfast ntaht when oreless to the sixth inning with ,hfukH.aftth.rrhtobar" th* COPP" gattlng the tying lya a ta an in^hotaafe run to *A hMe wlth two "* ers 5-2 to an .*r*S^n.d but could not score. ^XUlv^M-wfAtn?han-' Webb ,Urted on th O"1 SfS1 wfh2 h^ft?m hie mas- for tne "man h *> *- dily. ut *ey,ht 'rouble mas de, coml t h &&L ?& Morton P|tcnln brUUantly, Schneider P ri m th?Me hero for the RltChed the ,,xtn nd lMt S2r. he hi lita\ire flw "ndel WM th* "inning pitcher. winners, as he hurled a nice_nve Kielhofer started on the mound failed to ,or tne Pollce wltn 0wen **-- Balboa Bulldogs Upset C.H.S. 5-2 The box score: PO 1 0 hitter and for 5t,r?ighti8oen HthMWe o MYaitog Ver' 'inftt. hatters got to theCristobal ace "*& ^^^^[^ Tommy Hughes i eight Mn- ,n f, ht eld ,n th f t^ gles. The Tigers;al hurt their, Wfb 0l|bU( hlt d Unf f owneauaebyeonmitttogatouUitta ,, running cate* of six errors to the severt-lnning nMr tft# fou, |lM ,n baekof ngJ contest. | baje in the second toning. The big toning for the BHS team was the third frame as they pushed rn three tallies, Flrtl__ which proved to be enough to Terry, cf...... win. Jimmy May started tntais: Wallace, Sb .. .. off with an Infield single, stole Ltofors, sa..... second, and came home on Bob Schneider, lb-p. Carlln's single. This was when Sehoch, e...... CHS started throwing the ball McHail, 2b .... around, and to the process were RandeL p-rf .... guilty of four errors, which not rundalbwskl, rf.. only allowed CarUn to cross the Chase, If...... plate, but also shortstop Bien webb, p-lb .... *BaJboa scored their first run Totals........ In the opening mning, and then ------ added another in the second. |f,Hce_ CHS pushed over their first run coln, 2b...... In the third inning dn two con-lp corrigan, rf .. secutlve base hiU, the first by B Barnes, c .. .. BUI Price who scored on on Sutherland, ss-p. Smith's single. Klelhofer, p-st ,. . The final CHS run was a dl- Crook cf...... j rect result of two errors by the Ammlrsti, $b. .. 1 Bulldogs. After getting the first p,,ierson> $b.. .. I two batters out, Welly Kuhrt got pri,at, lb...... $ on by ah error, and then scored Roe_ ]f........ > on another bad throw to first. E corrigan, If .. 1 Price then.grounded out to the _ shortstop to end the Inning, and Totals........2$ IB R 4 1 0 2 $ a N 1 o s a 1 0 $ $ 0 A 0 1 a s 0 0 0 0 1 2$ 7 4 18 $ PO 1 1 1 1 1 11 2 the ball game. Bigger Apricots Coming 81$ Score/By Innings Firemen 4 0 0 13 07 4 4 Police 4 0 0 0 2 08 $ 2 Winning PitcherRandal. Le*- , tog Pltchei Klelhofer. Struek- DAVIS. Calif. (UP) Agricul- oul byWebb 2, Randal 4, ture specialists at the University Schneider 2, Klelhofer 8, ORrth- of California's College of Agrl-: erland 5. Base on Baila offWebb culture say apricots "the size of i. Randei 1. Klelhofer 4. Hits and peaches" may be available on the Runs offWebb 2 and 4 In 2 to- mar ket within the next few nmgs; Randel 4 and 2 in 3; Kiel- years Julian C. Crane, hormone: holer 3 and $ to 4; Schneider" 0 specialist and Raid M. Brooks, and o In l: Sutherland 1 an* 2 let cherry and apricot authority. 2. Three Base Hit-Sutherland, made the report after studying Two Base HitRoe. UmpaTas-- the effects of a spray solution on Luaer and Francia. Seal the trees. I Mead. Time of Oame1 :K>. Cla btoVUn *K oR.M.Rj^Co.^SI Teaejaou,, Coetea *7. m y>tccrmjL4t.*a$ ordons Along The Fairways GAMBOA GOLF AND COUNTRY fl.t'B NOTES There were 36 entrants in the Point Tourney held during Feb- ruary 22, 23 and 24. A few play- ers entered twice but In only one instance was their point score bettered. Capt. Davis won first prise with 41 points: Charlie Inamora- tl finished second with 40 points; and Pete Cooper ana H. I. Peran- tle were tied for third money with 39 s. Many legitimate birdies were I made on stroke holes which gav* the players four points, but only' F. D. Fletcher was awarded five, points for the equivalent of a hole-to-one. Fletcher Is a 24- handlcap player who reeelvM two strokes on Hola No. 10. When he sank his approach shot for birdie three the stroke allowance gave him five points. This is our first trial of the Point Tourney, but lt is evidaert thst the scoring for this typo of play throwa the field wide opsst and a high handicap player was* gets hot on few holes reaJJ* scores the points. Prises will be awarded to ttw highest scoring fifteen psayep. There were so many ties tba Tournament Committee believed this to be the moat equitable way of making the awards. Those to receive prises are: PUTTER THERE Bobby Thomson shows pretty Cather- ine Fox Park of Now York where to grip her putter during a links aooston at th* Miami Country Club. The New York Giant itar slugger so*mi to have the situation well I in (NBA)- " Mep. Points J. C. Harrison 17 41 Chas Inamoratl a 40 Pete Cooper u 3 H. I. Perantle 10 $8 Dale Bean i$ $8 M. H. Mahone 12 3$ T. L. Craft 1$ aa H. T. Hart 12 aa Tony Jankus $ $8 F. D. Fletcher A 3$ P. M. Ben $8 J. C. Harrison IT $8 Ruth Daniel as W. S. Wigg IB $$ Jim Burns If 33 Piiaas Sport Shirt. Sport Shirt. Sport Shirt. Sport Shirt. 4 Dunlop Balls. 4 Dunlop Balls. 4 Dunlop Bails. 2 Dunlop Balls. 2 DunlOD Balls. 2 Dunlop Balls. 2 Dunlop Bails. 2 Dunlop Boils. 2 Dunlop BoRs. 1 Dunlop Bolls. 2 Dunlop Bails. Three of our lady members en- tered the competition and did very weU. Ruth Daniel scored 35 points to win two Dunlop balls: Cleo Burns and Ruth Lincoln Iust out of the prise rangaboth Idles scored 32 points. It was a pleasure to see "Rob- bie" Robinson, J. K. Lally, Jack Smith and big Jtm Rllay poond- toa the ball down the fairways on Friday morning. Our inviUttsei to members of ail Isthmian eiub is still open. ., : -.--' SANTA ANITA H A N DIC A P OFF TODAY Metal Prospects Brighten For Civilian Goods 2?aaama American fvVENTV-SEVENTH YEAR PANAMA, R. P., SATURDAY, MARCH 1, 15Z "Let the people know the truth and the country u tafe WASHINGTON. March 1 (UP) _ Civilian industry may get more metal in April, May and June than in the first three months of this year, marking the turning of the tide of con- sumer goods cutbacks, it was disclosed today. An official of the National Production Authority, which parcels out metals to industry, expressed the "cautious hope" that makers of consumer pro- ducts will get more metal dur- ing the second thrtl months due to an easing of scarce steel, and aluminum supply condi-; KNOXVILLE. Tenn March 1 ed, and the agency does not tions (UP)One or more persons in an handle domestic situations. Abraham Lincoln. FIVE CENTS Pinkerton Detective Named In Kidnaping of Young Boy I, so, it would mean a slgni- automobilewhisked away a nine Flanders, if he had anything pea to. ficant new stage in the nation's "gray" mobilization that began alter the North Korean com- munists invaded South Korea In mid-1950. In effect, it would mean that mobilization planners now have reached the point where they have enough previously-scarce metal to take care of the "guns" program they have laid out {he father said, while giving civilians more In-- He gald he saw a man forced trad of less "butter." tne yelling boy into an automo- The NPA has allowed civilian | blle and sped away through the goods makers enough extra steel. | school zone, aluminum and copper-hitherto; Templeton tried to chase the the most-pinched metals to car but lost it in the traffic and permit thdn turn out Just about called a policeman, who also lost as many stoves, radios, refriger-| the trail, tors and television sets for the vear-old boy todav almost from to do with the caseIs "certainlv since he wu warded temporary; the abduction and said he was custody by the state court of ap-; leaving the car he had rented at the corner of Qulncy and cen- the arms of his father who later out of bounds and will filed kidnaolne charges against suffer the consequences, ....,.._ a oVate de ective | Pinkerton officials said. custody, he said ThVhriv w,Clarence Temple-I Templeton said he had never Police sad that a man tor^so^ T a tome" Jerome been Served with any orders identified himself as Flanders Templeton concerning the child's custody called a rental auto agency after Templeton had just dropped his son off at the McCampbell rata. i *- v--" His custody is to last until the tral Streets. '" he was calling from the have to! court rules on his wife's appeal' He said .. s," the of a lower court order giving him airport and SSyaKte^S9 9 Hurt As Hong Kong Cops Battle With 10,000 Rioters HONG KONG, March 1 (UP) I personnel to return to . Approximately 10,000 Com-(units immediately. Radio Hong the fullest. ?Hh ,. , th. ., munist-led studenU and brokers i Kong meanwhile broadcast a' Both Templeton and the of0- government ar (til W'" 1M --------------- "- send the bill to his Albany ad- who dress. Meanwhile, ho waver, the child was taken In a taxi to a downtown garage where the party apparently got another car and left Knoxville, police said. Highway patrolmen were con- centrating their search around Greeneville, 80 miles northeast of here, en route to New York. Templeton said he would have the warrant for Flanders sent to Albany and "pursue this thing to their ators and television sets lor me. B0ln17etmPiel0"a,'a!;', "'"^battled police for two hours April-June period as they were cer aid they aw a nan^ and Kowloon station today, In able to make in January, Feb- woman in the abduction car. rusry and March. Top production officials also have said there is a "good chance" the government may permit auto makers to produce as many cars during the sccrid quarter of the year as they were permitted to manufacture during the first quarter. a riot during which nine per- After police roadblocks and a sons were injured and military check at the airport failed to chicles and Police traffic turn u the car or its occu- stands were damaged Police arrested many rioters. One unidentified European was beaten by the crowd and his ca- mera seized before he was rescued. turn up l Cants, Templeton swore out a Mnapinr warrant against Thomas j. Flanders, identified as a Pinkerton detective from Albany, N. T. wouirreTersrVhe pre- ^Xl^fT^X^ The police battled the rioter, vlously-announced plans to cut M z Lynn and her present hus-,down Nathan Road, one of the back still further nearly all ma- Dand who Is also an attorney, city's main thoroughfares, for jor civilian production during Reached at Albany, Mrs. Lynn two hours before dispersing the April, May and June. 'said she had not seen the boy)mob with tear gas andI smoke > No exact figures were avail-, recently and "I have no com-: bombs. Rioters were finally stop- . able on the amount of extra; ment" on the abduction report.Iped by police squads and lire- I metel that may be given to ci-. In New York City, the Pinker-1 men marching at them in ranks, , for April ton National Detective Agency across the road. said that if Flanders had parti- a number of British soldiers clpated in the abduction "he did also Joined in the battle against it absolutely on his own." the rioters to avenge a British Flanders had taken a few days truck driver injured by the mob. off from his Albany post to visit i i the course of the riot, the his family in Baltimore because1 unruly crowd smashed and one of his children was ill, the Durned a traffic stand at the HOG Announcer Len Worcester Has Stage Role or ^ent bus, love May Laugh At Locksmiths, But Not Lock Guards government announc e m e n t warning all people off the streets except IC ness. vtlian-goods makers May and June." The final decisions must await official determination that es- sential defense demands can be met without drawing on the re- serve "stockpile" of strategic metate, i H i.v > But producers of aluminum, agei!ii *; and sheet and strip steel three of the prime essentlaV for civilian production -have re- ported recently that they have more metal on hand than has been called for by manivfac- tj ->.rs with allotment grants. NPA Is considering reassign- ing this extra metal to those who want it such as the .uto and construction industries and also handing out extra alu- minum being turned back by the military because of the "stretch-out" In the plane- building program. It is this extra metal which, expert/ said, would turn the tide civilian cutbacks for first time in a year. The agency would "not per- mit anything of that kind," Pinkerton vice-president J. O. Camden said in referring tfl the abduction report. Mrs. Lynn is not an agency client, he add- Chinese Red Regime Make Children Spy Against Parents HONG KONG, Mar. 1 (USI8) B . The Pelping Regime, in Its tne so-called campaign against cor- . u,e ,., ,Car. ruption, is dissolving the,mm Future military demands, plus between parents andl children. An increasing number of chil- dren in Communist China are denouncing their parents to Red officials, according to Commun- ist newspaper reports here These denunciations pave the way for admission into the Com- munist Youth Corps. The Communist newspaper Shangai Yipao reported that a junction of Nathan Road and Jordan Road. Several hundred demonstra- tors separated from the main ranks of rioters and attacked the Mongkok police station, breaking all the windows. They were finally dispersed with tear : gas shells by police, who be- sieged the station for some- time before they were success- ful. The unruly demonstration was led by two prominent pro-Com- munist Chinese, Y. K. Mok. a lawyer, and Chan Man Han, a local businessman. the speed of expansion of metal producers, would determine the extent to which civilian indus- try could be returned to "nor- mal" peacetime status- Plastic Ball Subs For Heart Valve; Keeps Woman Alive _________ !lli'i:i:unv, x i|/u icijvi.*,. The same newspaper later BOSTON. Feb. 29 (UP) A ti- praised a girl for publicly de- ny plastic ball inside the heart nounclng her mother for pro- of 37-vear-old Mrs. Mary Dan- fiteering and tax evasion. aerean is keeping her alive after "She discarded private leci- unique operation performed at ings between mother and flaugn- the Peter Bent Brigham Hospi- ter and stood firm in car- ta l rying out her denunciation . The lucite ball was secured such a praiseworthy attitude rear the heart valve which had should be followed by the mas- been injured in a childhood at-'ses..." the newspaper remarx- taek of rheumatic fever. ed. . The ball slips In place during I Arrivals from the Mainland each heart beat to prevent the reported that many enmese blood from flowing backward. youths are coerced into malting The inlury would have proved .the denunciations by the corn- fatal to the mother of two chll-!munlst government. Under tni dren had she not undergone the reign of terror created ny rei- The wild demonstration was WHITE HARVEST This farm near Marshall, Minn., lies Isolated from the outside world after storms fenced It In with 30 Inches of snow. Much of the area was hard-hit by the severe storms. ' __ Plans for Cub Scout Rally In April Told By Chairman Cox Plans have been completed for the annual Cub Scout rallyjn the Canal Zone Council, Boy Scouts ot America, it was an- nounced by Richard E. Cox, council camping and activities chairman. The rally will be held on Saturday. April 26, at the Dia- blo Heights baseball field. Twelve events are planned in- cluding uniform inspection; pa- rade review; pack song; package tying; stilt walking; use of knife; knot tying; wheelbarrow race; dress and undress relay; nail driving; hop, step and Jump and rail walking. In. announcing the schedule of events. Cox urged that Packs make this a Joint Pack picnic and rally with each family bringing a box lunch. Dens that qualify In 9 of the 12 events will earn a proficiency or blue streamer for their Pack. Six of the 12 events will earn a red or standard streamer while! Because he was In a hurry to marry his girlfriend in England before she left for Egypt, a British seaman Jumped ship yesterday at the Pedro Miguel Locks. But lovesick Charles Franklin, 22, was taken into custody im- mediately by a lock guard and delivered to the police who put him back aboard his ship the S. S. Chulmleigh. Franklin told police that his .girlfriend is in the armed ser- : vices in England, and dir to be sent to Egypt. The young sea- - man was anxious to reach there 4 of the 12 events will earn a and marry her before this hap-1 participating or yellow streamer. Dens will be competing against The ship Jumper was locked |a standard and not against each 'up In the ship's hospital. i other, Cox said.________________ HELPING HANDS , I. T. Williams of Portsmouth, Va., is helped from a Coast Guard "Duck" at Norfolk. Va, minuta* 'ifter being rescued from the sinking trawler Belle Isle. The trawler, a 110-foot fishing craft, grounded and sank in the breakwater near Cape Henry. All six crewmen were rescued. LEN WORCESTER Field Marshal Alexander Takes Over As Churchill's Minister Of Defense LONDON March 1 (BIS) A He was wounded several times "Then you enlarge ne rider on a white charger during World War I, was decor- soon as you have maae a iarg* rsed by a banner on wnicn HOO announcer, has a fat, also.trotted through a battle on a'ated for bravery and was pro- enough hole in the enemy s^de- written: "If the hundred imt-headed part In the Theater French beach at midnight Junemoted rapidly. At the age of 25 fenses, your armored divisions go ' debt is not paid, no mat- QuUd's production of "Spring-,2, 1940, and helped to write a he was a colonel, and later he through, ow they try to hide it, we Mme F0r Henry." | page in history......was vn a command in India. Alexander's maxims In- was written: years ter how it and as nean battles owed much to hit original methods of training. remember'^ rferrin, ob- ^ST.d.edutod for .^'mou^as lit up sharply fttfiW^^SrlSfc Two of Alexander's maxim, In- A. C. Maxwell, deputy com-1next week. mlssioner of police, was one of those injured. The situation was brought un- der control at 4:35 p.m. At glare of star-shells, the death- 5Xt ween. gime i ow..-......=, - ~~-v..- Worcester plays Johnny Jelll-'oyre of the burning town nearby, well, a put-upon husband whose But horse and man moved as if blonde wife has more than a on parade. onangai xipao rcuuimi mi --- ,;. i v l a 23 vear old youth accused his i present heavy police details are a 5 year oia youui ki **> "-::r - --< : .- father at a public meeting of i patrolling the streets and warn- taking home a half bag of gov-1 lng people to stay Indoors, to ernment-owned cement and two i keep order. bottles of kerosene. His appllca- A British Army Jeep armea tion for membership in the, with a loudspeaker also was Youth Corps was approved lm- [ broadcasting orders to all Army mediately, Yipao reported. Two Die In Detroit Gas Explosion, Fire passing fancy for a riotous-liv- ing college classmate of Jelll- and Belgium. When the German armor broke through the Allied defenses, Alexander led his men in the or- wi'lf'iemember;" referring ~'ob- "*The"ahow"is' scheduled for I His mount was lit up sharply At The beginning of World War >" Ws^pprch toThe"proI vlously to the cession of Hong two-night season at the Diablo!by the orange> of artillery burste.;II he "^^^K *g blern^ of baTtfe Kong to Britain a century ago. Theater Thursday and Friday .the flicker of tracer-fire, the the British 1st Division in France a0Uble-handed punch w--------1 .?..--------1_ .. that appeals t0 me And Qood Generalship depends on mysti- fying the enemy." These were the tactics he ap- plied when the Axis forces at Tunis were smashed. First came the British 8th Army attack on the right flank to draw th' enemy's weight; this was fol- lowed by a sudden secret trans- fer of crack divisions to the cen- ter. well's. Worcester, who was born in New Jersey, came to the Isthmus In 1943 with the Army. He was first stationed at Ft. Davis after which he was asso- British Army to leave Dunkirk elated with a semi-professional Alexander was to meet his USO group which presented "My' enesny again. Sister Eileen r_rtnm_l\ He was the man who outwit- T,ii\Ero2p n oV perforrn,ed. ted and entfoaght Rommel, the at all the bases in Panama, but SSj.."-." " also traveled to the Galapagos to i "Sf ,-'rt't he Jananesr to DETROIT, March 1 (UP). red to Albrook. Field where he( "^ISte, unitT his command Two men were fatally crushed was music director and assistant] _t the fnt fUCCesgfll| Und. in the basement shooting gal-news editor at A.FR.S. for ovet , F,uropean soH and after lery of a sporting goods store la year. He was discharged from ^'y ine SicU,^ broke through in suburban Royal Oak last the Army in the States in 1945. | _t gifenf0 ,nd Anrio to drive night when a gas explosion' In 1947 he returned to Pana- theJr ,u|y _B lhatter brought the walls and ceilings ma and since that time has been th stPongly-held Gothic Line. manager and program director Today March 1. Field Marshal of Radio Station HOG Viscount Alexander of Tunis His role as John JelliweH,,a)cep ia new p^t as Britain's marks his first appearance withlMln,ster of Defense. Although his career has been Maior-General Alexander was ...^-------------- inspecting the beaches of Dun- derly retreat to Dunkirk, and was , l -..___ i. _._______^ t.. .*mhaami4 H ii vino InP f ni kirk, to make sure that as many men as possible had been saved, before he himself took a boat to safety. He was the last man of the caving in on them. The blast started a small fire that touched off live ammuni- tion stored in the basement. Bullets exploded and whistled the Theater Guild. CZ Police Ball operation descrbed"bv'surgeons ping in its current _%__*" " tor the first time yesterday ruption" drive, the families or through the air as firemen The operation was performed these children may be the ob- waved spectators back. Itec. 20 by a surgeon who asked Ject of trumped-up charges by with the aid of a crane, fire- that his name be withheld. A Red offtclals. ,.'men Ufted huBe chunk oi re: lc I IcrpH For month later. Mrs. Dansereau was If this happens, then me mforced concrete and removed > --'a sent home and doctors said she is children also are Judged guuty recovering rapidly, though not for the failure to expose tneir completely cured. |parents or other relatives. In command during the final stages of the evacuation. After Dunkirk, Alexander was high in the military planning staffs of Britain. Then, he took over comand of the British and Indian force In the Jungles of Burma. Twenty- four hours after his arrival. Ran- goon fell to the Japanese and at the head of his men he brilliant- ly fought his way out of a death- trap. In August l4t, Mr. Churchill appointed Alexaader as Com- man/r-ln-Chief in the Middle East. The sequel, at Alamein. was one of the turning points of the war: Rommel's famous Afrika Korpa was utterly rout- ed. "It was Just like breaking down a brick wall with a trowbar," During the period between Dunkirk and Burma, Alexander held the Important Southern Command In Britain and origin- ated the Battle Tramine School which proved to be a valuable preparation for the real thing in the African desert and Italy. It was at this time that Alex- ander laid down the maxim: "At- tack even in defense at- tack!" A master of tactics and a brilliant administrator, Alex- ander also had a profound sympathy and understanding of the men under his com- mand. ter. Characteristic of the man was Finally, the: knock-out blow the anecdote told by front-Una a swift annihilating punch in the.Midlers of the British Eighth middle of the defense line pler-lArmy: now during the early clng right through to the enemy s,stages of the muddy campaign '*"' "'-"" in Tunis the General Jumped rear positions. After being Chief of ground fo.ces in the Tunisian campaign Che UB. troops forming jart of his command) in November, 1944, e became Allied Supreme Com- mander. Mediterranean Theater way he trusted his subordinates from his jeep to help a group of artillery-men pull a gun out of a ditch. One of the secrets of his , ularlty among all ranks was X and was promoted to Field Mar- shal. Thousands of Americans form- ed part of his International army. The German Army, driven back through Italy from one defense line to another up to the valley St^aB^^inSL^'sBI-HS5^8^ i the two men pinned under- , __.,-. 1 i , Id neath. They died a few hours tl rCHiama FAQT. It later. __ There ure exactly two weeks '-** for the Canal Zone Police Association's 14th Annual Ball at the Hotel El Panam March 14. Tickets or reservations msjy be made by calling Balboa t YOU GET EXTRA CRANKING POWER BATTERY THE LONC-LIFE ATTCRY! KrMMBtf MTTEIKS FM 1 TUMI A floor show, prizes and mu- sic by Joseph Sudy's Orchestra 'and Angelo Jaspe's ' will be featured. For those who want to leave their automobiles in the Canal Zone, parking facilities will be available at the Civil Affairs Building, with guards to watch the ears. confined to military operations. The first Allied general to re- ceive a major 'unconditional sur- render' from the Germans, he once said: "Ninety per cent of my lob in the Mediterranean was politics." In 1946 he was aprjolnted Gov- ernor-General of Canada. The confidence he inspired in the soldiers of all nationalities who served under him during the war| was matched by the popularity' he has enjoyed among Cana- Orchestra i dians. At the age of 60. he still has the youthful energy and activity which has enabled him to lead an active and adventurous life In all pirts of the world. In his earner years he was an allwound athlete and Is still a far as possible, then you lever this way and that way until a small hole has appeared and the cement begins to fall away. May 2, 1946. The military forces Alexander _ commanded in the Medlterra- ter. and gave them credit for their achievements. Lord Alexander speaks fiva 1: r.fuages. including Russ'an and Hindustani. He is a talented nalnter and his military field sketches ara expert. He has been married since 1931, and has two sons and one daugh- TO MMKI TOOTH OKAY WICTIVEY- No other tooth paste, ammoniated or regular, hat been proved batter than irANA! Special taxi service for J5 first-class horseman, cents a person will be provided Educated at Harrow and Sand. from there to El Panam begin- ,hurst (Britain's West Point he ilng at 7 p.m. lantered the British Army In 191L I PANA TOOTH PASTE / |
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| MILLISECOND | CLASS.METHOD | MESSAGE |
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| 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 |
| 219 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |