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" BRANIFF ll GUAYAQUIL URST CLASS $223.20 TOURIST U7.40 TWENTY-SEVENTH TEAR "Tel the people know the truth and the country i$ $afe" Abraham Lincoln. S CANADIAN WHISKY -/fawuMi6l /fo0^' |Wsri< . PANAMA, It. P., SUNDAY, APRIL I, 1958 TEN CENTS Corozal Confirmed As New Townsite Prio Aide Allegedly Lit Out With $51,000 \ NEW YORK, April 5 (UP). Policetoday arrested Cuban lawyer Jose Ruta Galera In a Newark hotel and said he was wanted In connection with the alleged en,- benlement of 51,000 from deposed president of Cuba, C,rlAnthortttEaE"*ult Galera. , was picked up at Hampshire nouse and charged with a beinga fugitive from Florida pending the arrival of a wartant from Dade Count police. \ tw<,h nnnipl Murnhv said not a member of\her uncle's to information!government whlch\went into uiz had received exile when Gen. Fulgencio Ba- that according from Florida, $51,000 from Prio Socarras In Miami on March 31, to be de- posited in a bank. . ge said a warrant Issued by Srfirlff Henderson of Dade Cofcnty listed Prio as the com- plainant and accused Bulz of absconding to New York with i money the same day. Police said that Ruiz denied whole story when he was apprehended. They said no mo- ney-was found on his person or In the room Where he was ar- rested. a use P thj PaWo Suarez, a former major In ihe, Cuban police force, lo- cated mulz Galera In New York. Polictsald 8uarez, a represen- tative Prio in this city, re- ceived a "telephone call from the deposed > Cuban president ilri Florida, directing nlm to locate Ruiz. \ \ Suarez tOU local authorities When he firsV.contacted Ruiz at hote I I another hotep the latter hung up. However, R"uiz' was traced to " shire House, Where he was d on Suarez' ldentifica- "Howi tie Police Bill Norton said Sra. Graciela Fonseca, a cousin-in-law of for- mer Cuban Finance Minister Antonio Prio, filed the charge against Ruiz. Norton said she accused Ruiz of taking $50,000 from her at Miami International Airport, then secretly flying to New York. Norton said the woman Identi- fied herself to him only as 'S'e- bora Fonseca," but Srta. Zoe Prio, daughter of former Presi- dent PHo, gave a more complete Identification and said Sra. Fon- seca Is her mother's cousin. tlsta came Into power. An entourage of Prio's,relatives and former governmental lieut- enants is now living with him in Miami and Miami Beach. Russian Silent Film, Voted Best In Last \ Half Of The Century BRUSSELS, April 5 slleftt The Russian silent film ' ship Potemkin," produ years ago, was voted th motion picture production last 50 years by an interna jury of movie personalities. , In ft referendum, organize*" the World Film Festival in B sols to determine wnlctfr were best pictures oj the Vt half c tury, "Battleship Potemkin" talned the largest ;number votes. Charlie Chaplin's "Gold Rush, also a silent film made In 1035, Chief took second place. Third place was given td the Italian film "Bicycle Thief," di- rected by Vlttorlo Dl Sle. Fourlh was Chaplain's "City bights." "The Great Illusion" by France's Jean Renfllr was fifth. nne Clalr's "Le/Millon," sixth. "Greed," by Etlen Von Strohelm, seventh. Hallelujah" by King Vldor. eighth. "Brief Bneounter," by Noel Coward, ninth, along with "Drei- groschepoper" by Germany's WtlheUrf Pabst. "Intolerance" by DavltfW. Griffith of the U.8 j. (NEA Telephoto) IT FROM THjfDEEF This dramatic photo o"f the submarine US Pickerel surfacing from a depth of 150 feet with a 48- decree up-angle was captured by a Navy photographer aboard '.he accompanying sub USS Sbalo. The action took place during a routine training exercise off Oahu In the Hawaiian UN Takes Air War 15-6 8TH ABMY HQ Korsa, April (UP) Two United States Sabres were shot down by Red fighter pilots over Korea last week, but the Sabres handed the Mlgs their biggest week's hiding so far in the Korean War. Fifteen Mlgs were shot down, four probably shot down and 21 damaged, making 40 planes hit in all The only higher week's bag was last October, when 48 Mlgs were claimed hit. But that week the Sabre pilots had some help from Superfort gunners. Also last week one Royal Australian Air Force Meteor flghterbomber was shot down by Red ground fire, while two U.S. Air Force B-26 light bomb- ers and one shore-based U.S. Marine Corps Corsair were loit to unknown causes. Thus the week's score of kills was 15-8 In favor of the United Nations. / J- Islands. 3 Librarian Will Be Booked ?or Pistol Kilting Of Wjk CHICAGO, April 5 (UP) A i stenographer so she could take librarian student at the Unlver-ja trip with him. slty of Chicago confessed today "In the argument I reached that he killed his wife and then over for the gun which was in a penned her a note reading: "It holster behind the bed," Mark- was lovely to know you, my only," ham said. "I fired once and hit Srta. Prio said Sra. Fonseca's ano? "The Man From Aran," husband, Caesar Fonseca, wasroftde by David Flaherty. 4 I Harold Roland Markham, 35, said he slept, ate and studied for eight days while his wife's half- clad body lay on their bedroom her In the face below the tight eye. "When she had fallen P fired two more shots and threw the floor before the slaying "began to' gun under the bod.' bother me." The librarian said he lay down Mrs. Markham had been shot .on the floor next to his wife's three timesonce in the fate body, placed the gun against his1 and twice In the body. head and then lost his nerve Another of Markham's notes to when he tried to pull the trigger his dead wife read: your comfort. "Three for to commit suicide. "I came home every night and The couple had been married went to bed uitll yesterday when U years and the dead woman's it began to bother me," he said, parents said they "never saw ("Before I left the house I plug- them quarrel at all." Red the keyhole with cement so They had been sweethearts In i no one could get in." college. Markham said he lived "an Markham said he killed his; eternity" during the eight days wife In an argument over wheth- after the slaying. er she should quit her Job as a (NEA Telephoto> TELEGRAPHERS PICKET Pickets' of the Commercial Tele- graphers' Union (AFLi march outside the main Western Un- ion office In New York after some 30,000 employes went on strike, shutting down the firm's nation-wide telegraph and monev order services. - Labor's London Win Taken Seriously LONDON, April 5 (UP) Con- servative newspapers here ad- mitted today that the defeat suffered by the Conservative Party In the county elections Thursday was of national im- portance and tried to find an ex- planation for It. Labor newspapers, on the oth- er hand, were Jubiliant and be- lieved that the Labor Party could win now If new general elections were held. Labor received an overwhelm- ing majority of votes in the first and most Important election for councllmen of the London County which Is the biggest mu- nicipal government In the world. I wish she were.alive." he said. Markham smoked endless cig- arettes and consumed hardbqlled eggs for his meals. "It began to bother me- yester- day,'' Markham said. He went to a friend, David Kronlck, and told him what he had done. Kronlck at first re- fused to believe the story, but later advised Markham to go to the police. Markham, who recently chang- ed his name from Macha because he "didn't like It." was taking advanced library science courses at the university. Police said Markham would be charged with murder. The student told his story to police without emotion, but lat- er gave way to remorse. "I'm sorry for her," he said. DOUBLE ACECol. Francis Gabreskl of Oil City, Pa., be- came the eighth Jet ace in history by shooting down his fifth enemy Mlg over Korea. Gabreskl, who also shot down 28 enemy planes dur- ing World War II. called his triumph "Just part of the business." RP Covt. Offices To Close Thursday; Banks On Two Days Government offices in Panama will remain closed from Thurs- day of this week until Monday morning, it was announced yes- terday. Commercial eetabllshm e n t s however, are only under obliga- tion to close on Good Friday. Panama City banks will not open on either Friday or Satur- day of this week. Skaters To Do Water Ballet At El Panama Some of the versatile "Holiday on Ice" troupe will stage an In- formal water carnival at the El Panama, at one o'clock this af- ternoon . Mary Maclnnes of Brookllne, Mass., is the moving spirit be- hind this idea. Mary took up swimming one time, when she was forced to rest, after break- ing her knes on the Ice. During the "rest," Mary developed her swimming so well that she took up water ballet and Joined the "Water Follies" cast in the States. The troupe of "Holiday In Ice" had a temporary setback when they came to Panama and found that their lce-makkig ma- chinery wouldn't work. While they were waiting for It to be re- paired so that the show could "go on," some of the cast spent many hours revelling In the swimming pool at the hotel. When' she noticed there were some talented swimmers among the skating stars, Mary started teaching a small group water ballet routines. From this, the idea of a water carnival develop- ed and now a gay show is plan- ned with comedy acts and sing- ing, as wel1, as water ballet All the girls will model Jnt- sen bathing trunks. Joe Hecht. El Panama's male lifeguard and ex,-ntght club com- edian, will be master of ceremo- nies, Ray Carter and Lucille Falln will sing a duet, Dagmar and Tacho will give an adagio number and Kenny Rogers, Ar- mando Phllhert and Tacho will provide laughs with their ludi- crous clown diving. The water ballet will consist of Mary Mclnnes. Jean Curtis. Nor- ma Maxwell. Nancy Wilton. Ma- ry Ann Carrol and Terry Love- lace. Audiences who have seen these i girls In the sparkling Ice show ("Holiday on Ice" win be anxious' to see them perform as mer- maids. Even though they say "It Is all in Fun," these good troup- ers, who ire as charming off- stage as on, will give a show that should be fun for everyone. And they will be in bathing suits, too. Summit Program To Be Abandoned The proposed townsite of Summit for U.S. rate em- ployes of the Panam Canal Company definitely will be) abondoned and a new townsite will be built up in the pre* sent military area of Corozal. Canal officials have not yet announced the change in plans but The Panam American learned last night from authoritative sources that the transfer of the Coro- zal area to the Canal already has been decided upon in Washington. All work will be stopped at Summit and it is expect- ed that the Canal will start immediately to survey the Corozal land and plan the new townsite. This newspaper first broke the news that the Summit townsite I most likely would- be abandoned for a military area closer to Bal- boa. That was on March 8 and a few days later It was speculated that the chosen substitute was Corozal. Sources stated that the entire Corozal area will be turned over to the Canal with the sole ex- ception of the huge Army sales store which will be retained by the military. The change In plans, from Summit to Corozal, will mean a saving of some $3,000.000 in con- struction costs because there will be no necessity for new schools, commissaries, clubhouses, and other service In view of Corozal's location alongside Diablo and near BIboa. Work on clearing, drainage and grading at Summit has already cost an estimated $200,000 but this project will be cut off Im- mediately In view of the decision by the Department of the Army to transfer the Corozal land to the Canal. The Canal had long sought military areas for Its housing ex- pansion program but in the past request had always been turned down because of "military nec- essity." It was because of this that the Canal finally decided to estab- lish a new community In Summit but recent studies by officials from Washington resulted In the Army's decision to give up Cor- ozal. 'Operation Jackpot' Set For May 8 By (Z Armed Forces Dour Minera Fear Italian Recruits May Take Their Pick-Of The Girls Indications were that, beef and &^u|*wS^^ However, it was learned that the slaughter of beef was in- creased during the last two days of last week in an effort to keep large meat market- with stor- age facilities, with sufficient meat to supply customers during the entire week. By ROBERT Ml'SEL i the goal of 10,000 was unofficial, but that It would have Hked to LONDON, April 5 campaign to recruit lOTOOO I tal- Britain's miners are notorl- ian cool miners anV-at least one, ously clammish, especially In Yorkshire and Wales, where sons, fathers and grandfath- THE COMMANDER OP THE COURIER, Capt. Oscar C. B. Wev, (right) chats with Vice-Consul Charles Whltaker of Colon aboard the ship that docked In. Cristobal Saturday morn- ing. The Voice of America vessel Is the first seagoing radio station to begin relaying broadeasts to listeners behind the Iron Curtain. Disaster Control planning by the Armed Forces of the Canal Zone will attain its highest l staging of an Isthmus-wide ex- ercise designed to test In a realistic manner the workability of existing Disaster Control plans and procedures. \ To be called "Operation .7. ipot." the day-long exercise will i be staged May 8. Virtually an military personnel and a large percentage of their dependents !on every military Installation Army. Navy and Air Forcewill be Involved In the operation. .For the first time In Disaster Control planning tactical troops I will be employed as a part of the exercise. "Operation Jackpot" is to be the highlight of full-time Di- saster Control planning a Joint Army. Navy and Air Force operation which was started in February of 1951. In the past year tests known as Command Post Exercises and some small-scale field exercises have been conducted at various military posts throughout the Canal Zone. Concurrent with these tests was the training of first aid workers, rescue squads, fire-fighting teams and other disaster units. The most extensive of these was the first aid training pro- gram initiated early last year and pushed Into action as soon as a number of qualified ins- tructors could be trained. Since that time over 2,000 dependents of military personnel have been trained to play a role In Disas- ter Control activities). Planning and supervising of all Disaster Control activities are administered by the Joint Army. Navy and Air Force Di- saster Control Center located at Fort Amador and headed by Army Lieutenant Colonel J. P. Mlal. Through the earlier Command Post Exercises the Center has tested many phases of Disaster I procedures, but never In the full-scale, comprehensive man- |ner planned In "Operation Jackppt." what's been happening In the coal fields I would say I most have It pretty near to right." One of the mines that origin- ally accepted Italians, the Bull- croft Colliery In Yorkshire, has voted to oust them, y They held a meeting of mln- member of Parliament thinks It may be because/the light-heart- ed, curly-haired Italians had too much sex appeal. I seams. " The nationalized Coal Board i Britons from other parts of the gave ayihore prosaic reason for.Islands are not freely accepted the decision to cease recruiting and antagonism multiplies for ers present voted In favor of at /time when coal Is needed foreigners who actually come keeping them. ever to eam dollars from another country. ] Patiently, Coal Board repres- er have worked the same coal ers there last week, at which all the speakers praised the Italians' ability and willingness to learn, and then only 17 of the 500 min- for Importation of food and oth- er necessities. The board sajd merely that there was "opposition" in many collieries to hiring foreign work- ers. About 1500 Italians have been accepted by the mines thus far, out of 2,210 brought here for training. The Coal Board said A few weeks ago Conservative, entatlves, such as Donald Bryth member of Parliament Victor In whose district the Bullcroft Ralkes startled the Commons'Colliery lies, have been diaproy- when he said opposition to the ing wild rumors about the Itsl- Itallans was due-to their roman-'lans: that they pull knives in tic appeal in the daily routine of quarrels, get more money, sleep woman's life In the coal districts, on the job, get better rations and He said, "I was more or less j are generally pampered. joking nt the time, but many a i "None 0 this U true," Bryth truth is spoken in jest. From 'said. "What about sex appeal?" he was asked. Bryth plied, "I don't think it is that." Sante Melandi, ene of the Italian workers at Bullrroft, admitted that coil region bob- by-soxers tend to congregate around hotels in which the Italians live, but insisted be and his countrymen weren't interested in promiscuous af- fairs. Melandi said, "Some of us have married English girls. I may 'Casino House' Ends Tonight At El Rancho Tonight is the third and last night fee the "casino house" at El Rancho Garden. The benefit gambling in- cludes a dice table, roulette wheels, blackjack tables, a chuck-a-luck counter, and a British Bridegrooms Rush Taxmans$100 Wedding Gift Tn^onrotKo'mplalnt, about1 ?'"' .Pin-th.-whee. .p.- the Italians 1$ that they spend a lot of time combing their hair "They don't understand us. We are as the sun made us." said Franco Mane la of Palermo. "We would rather go out all shlned up, even If our stomach was empty." clat. Proceeds of the gambling providing the players don't come out winnerwill go to the purchase of equipment for the baby section of Amador Guerrero Hospital in Colon. LONDON, April 5 (UP)'. The last of thousands of British! brides and bridegrooms got un- der the Une by midnight last night to heat a tax deadline and qualify for a government "wedding present" of $100 The tax year ended at mld- nlight Saturday, and single men who became married men' as of that time will get $100 back on Income tax they have paid out i already. Married men get a deduc- tion of $430 and single men only $330. and the tax on the difference amounts to a rebate of $100. In London's registry offices |one ceremony was being per- formed while the next couple filled out papers and signed i the book In another room. Most of the "beat the budget" weddings were performer In registry offices this year owing to the fact that the Lenten per- iod ends after the tax year closes. But at least one Church of England clergyman said he would relax his usual ban on Lenten weddings because he felt couples needed money. A survey of most of the re- gistry offices In and around London showed thousands of couples more than usual, and while the exact figures were unavailable, officials said more people were being married to beat th tax this year then ever before. In 17 principal towns and cities of Scotland there were only 575 marriages for the second week of March. But In the last three weeks of the tax year the number climbed each week to a total of 1,703 for this deadline week. In and around the city of Manchester there were 199 church and registry office wed- dings last weeek five times the weekly average of 40. There were 106 weddings this past week and officials account- ed for the previous peak by the mistaken Impression which had been circulating that the wee before was the deadline. Liverpool churches and re- gistry offices dealt with a rush, of an average of one weddlnf every 40 minutes most ox the week. PAUL TWO Tfll SUNDAY AMERICA* SUNDAY, APRIL 8, 1951 Comet Output DKHULCI To Double In Britain i- -.7 lei) ^ LONDON, April 5 (BIS)Brit- ish production ol Comet jet air- liners is expected to be doubled by a recent agreement between the de Havllland Aircraft Co., and Short Brothers and Harland "to utilize the resources of the two companies to achieve maxi- mum efficiency." The four-englned jet airliners will now be manufactured at i Belfast, Northern Ireland as well as at the Hat field. (Eng- land) plant of the de Havllland firm. This new arrangement will "have the effect of shortening the time required for delivery of Comet jets and make It possible for earlier dates to be fixed for new orders. Aviation experts consider It should do much to ensure that Britain retains her present lead In the development and manu- facture of gas turbine civil air- planes. A new type of Comet known as the Series II and fitted with more powerful Rolls-Royce Avon jets made its first flight Feb. 16. It ill go Into production by the middle of next year. With win tankage capacity for 7,000 gallons of kerosene, the Comet n will have a range of 2,250 2,500 miles. The Comet, whih promises to earn revenue more rapldlv than, any other air trar-sport in nvfn-| tity production, can be refueled at a ra*e of a ton of kerosene; fc minute. A pew nnder-wing presure refeling svstem transfers 21 ton* of kerosene (over 6.- 000 gallons) in 20 m'nntes, thanks to a new British re- fuelin tanker and automa- tim shn*-o*f valves within the airplane. The new 3000 (talln refel- 'tne vehicle, designed specifically for the Cornet, delivers 200 eal- Ions of fuel a minute through' each hose. The under-wlne svstem m- plovs only two refueline points and each coupling is only about 6 feet from the ground, a con- venient working height. Horseb\rgers Nose Tuft In Illinois By BRUCE BIOSSAT CHICAGO, April 5 (NEA) In Illinois' next Tues- day primary, it's officially Tafr vs. Stassen. But they're>yetting pretty stiff competition from such unscheduled items as horseburgers, phantom payrollers and the murder of a Chicago ward politician. Illinois politics never was a gentle jousting among men of angelic deportment. But the scandalous events disclosed in recent months have shaken the citizenry. They make a merle presidential popularity test seem pale stuff. TAFT IN ILLINOIS: The Ohio senator (center foreground) wears the look of a candidate who expects a cut-and-dried triumph. _a_-_______ delegate winners will almost certainly be Eisenhower men. The Illinois Eisenhower com- mittee, composed largely of businessmen without politic- al background, is concentrat- ' % tag Its fire on half a doxen Indicted on places where it sees a good Australia Strikes Uranium; Britain, US Queue Up To Buy SYDNEY, Australia, April 5 (UF). Jesse Johnson, director of the U. 8. Atomic Energy Commission's raw materials division, said today the United States and Britain jointly will purchase uranium ore from Austra- lia's Radium Hill under a commercial type contract Johnson said in an interview that Australia should begin "important" uranium ore production for Anglo- American defense requirements by 1954, but that the full potential of production is not known because of the limited exploration and development work done thus far. He confirmed Australian reports that under an agreement reached at Canberra production of uranium ore in quantity is expected to he achieved without large outlays of money either from the United States or Brit- ain. Johnson also will discuss details of the agreement announced by Prime Minister Robert O. Meniles under which the South Australian state government, with com- monwealth cooperation, will mine and concentrate the ore from the Radium Hill find. Johnson declined to compare the developments he iound In Australia with those of current major world producers, but said: "Australia offers possibilities for Important uranium ore production when you take into consideration not only the South Australian Radium Hill development feat the *Fum Jungle' in Northern Territory plus other pros- pects" A The horsemeat affair is mak- ing the biggest Impact. Investi- gations showed that some 25 million pounds of horsemeat were sold aa beef in Chicago alone In 1950 and 1051. lnce the disclosures began, 17 men have been counts of bribe-taking, bribe- chance of cracking throurh. paying, conspiracy and armed But, Inevitably, this effort 5s robbery. being met by counter-force from | The chief state food inspector the Taft group, which has such has been fired, and 14 aides dls- easy going in many spots that missed or suspended. it has energy to burn. The Chicago health commls- Since the organization will sloner Is under Indictment. > govern the state convention, all rA..BrT,T,Aii 10 delegates at large will be in COMPETITION the Taft camp. Senator Taft and Harold Stats- NEGROES DISLIKE TAFT sen. former Minnesota governor would have to go 10 rounds in One thing that disturbs the the ring to take the play away Taft leaders Is tra, senator's ovi- form this kind of news. dent unpopularity among 1111- Even without the juicy compe- nols Negroes, tltion the Republican primary race probably would not shape Here the popular Dfrksen, no- up as much of a tussle. mlnally Taft's state manager, For it has the look of a one- may prove of real help. One or sided, cut and dried Taft two delegates may fall to Taft triumph. by being elected as Dlrksen men. ........... ---'--------- Elsenhower leaders think a KEFAUVER WALKOVER good many victorious Taft dele- . gates could easily turn to Ike in Senator Kefauver of Tennessee tne Chicago convention if Taft has no competition at all m the snouid aag. Some neutrals agree. Democratic column. It's only a question of how big a showing Hence Ike's lieutenants are he can make. plugging to get names on petl Naturally the party regulars, (long to impress winning dele- offlclally devoted to President Kateg with the general's popu- Truman, will eek to discourage arity. a heavy Kefauver vote. The big write-in for Elsen- They may also try to make hower In Minnesota might sti- Gov. Adlai Stevenson look bet- mu]ate a similar campaign here. ter than Kefauver as presidential but thui fftr jt nas n0t gained timber by amassing a big vote tne leaders' endorsement for him In his unopposed race Granfatherly Colonel Guides Seoul On Road Back From Tortures Of War By DOUGLAS LARSEN natives are tattered items of GI In the past several weeks the wear. orphanages have succeeded in SEOUL. Korea, April 5 (NEA) -Sometimes the water from the getting more than 500 of the -A gruff, grandfatherly New rejuvenated city supply system waifs placed In homes with re- York business executive, on loan gets a little murky out of the latives and friends. to the . S. Army, is very proud tap many of the weakened There are now 61 schools open of his nickname. "The Father of mains spring frequent leaks with a total attendance of 39,- Seoul." but there is water available. And 000. It's the new. Seoul that Col. it is fairly pure. Classes run six hours a day, six Charles R. Mimske has fathered. The sewer system wasn't much days a week. They are run by the Seoul that is strugellng back before the war and is naturally the city with UN help. * after the tortures of war. less right now. The latest program in the ww.,. ..*. .- _m ---------t* schools is a TB test of all the The city is still horribly bat- But m Arrnv ]ln(j0 jt can be students. tered but. thanks to MunsKe said t0 be fairly operational. Most of the loose rubble has *ia his assistants some sem- ^gre ls n0 rampant disease been removed from the ruins. Nance of normal life has re- of any Wnd m the clty x^ Ar_ Dangerously swaying Walls my's busy innoculation needles have been torn down along with the tottering remains of the for nomination. Since the disclosures began, 17 STASSEN MEN FUME HARD PLAY It really doesn't take a catalogue of scandal to con- vince you that Illinois gets real bite Into its politics. This'Is an organisation state, a place where campaigns an figured on a dollars- per-preclnct basis. And the organisation plays hard. Among the Republicans, Taft- turred. There are now 850,000 South have talcen "care" of that. Koreans living here in various R_ed uu.HinM staees of normalcy. In fact, disease ls probably less ^,, -itv ? There is little activity in the than it was in pre-war Seoul, ^ honow hoVtlv ln shattered downtown area. according to the experts. scarred with shell and rifle A few ragged natives or hands There is plenty of hunger here ^arks of roving young kids pass by, but no starvation. Houam is nerhans the most along with sightseeing GIs. The U. 8. Army, through the *E problem United Nations Civil Assistance p^\t live in lmnrovised But as you get into the areas commission, ls supplying about shacksof corrueated iron knock- way from downtown the streets 20 per cent of what the people f^*"0!nieces of craUn mSrthTteemta^Ori&t0" ^ * *m" "^ ** com" ' boXd*oui struciur?' Rickety, bullet scarred trol- The rest of the flood, mostly K^Hi^.,^'^0^!!", lays rattle through the streets on rice and fish, ls sold on the open ""' Pro*ion from the Icy something approaching a sched- market in street shops and in ule. the cleared out ruins of old mar- Power failures sometimes leave ket places, them stranded for an hour or so. Munske ls most proud of the The relatively few office build- ings which weren't completely demolished have been patched Stassen's backers feel the weight of the GOP machine against them. They fame that they are denied access to the public forums enjoyed by Taft speakers, and that the press Ignores them. Ro- bert Balfour. Illinois chair- man, claims the organisa- tion tried through his busi- ness partner (a state legis- lator) to get his job. For the Stassen group, money ls the overwhelming choice of i scarce, organization is thin, the organization. and manpower principally of the The GOP does not have the 9 p. m. to 2 a. m. amateur va- leverage of state Job control, but rlety. the regulars still know a variety The office is what appears to of ways to visit reprisals upon be an over-sized clothes closet anyone, who might decide to be m a downtown hotel. "Irregular." stassen leaders concede the Devlationlsts are rare in Illi- oddg are heavy-choice strength nois. among the Taft candidates. Some evidence exists that Taft may Indeed be the favorite of STALEMATE HOPE the Republican electorate in this state. , ,-,.,,.,,. ,M ,_,_-, on stalemate in which Stassen,that he could get |M a ton for PROFESSIONALS SAY TAFT will perhaps emerge as a com- the rubber scraps. He sold two promise. 'railroad carloads at that figure. A private poll taken by one;-------------------------------------------- .. , observer indicated a preponder- ance of the professionals felt Taft would go better than El- senhower or Stassen in their areas. Presumably their replies re- flected soundings among the voters. Only rash men would hazard the strength of Taft's opposition. Jungle Tribe Aids Crashed RAF Transport LONDON. April 5 (BI8) During the three days feasting and dancing that mark their annual tribal gathering, recently, peoples of the primitive Fur tribe In a remote west corner of the Sudan witnessed a presenta- tion by representatives of the Royal Air Force to sheiks and other tribal leaders in recognition of the help they have to the crew of a R.A.F. transport air- craft that force-landed on the Sudan-French Equator- ial border last year. In a glade in heavily for- ested country in Darfur Province, Group Captain K. R. Coates, officer command- ing R.A.F. Station Kharto- um, made a speech of thanks in Arabic and after- wards made presentations t ten Fur tribesmen as tokens of the R.A.F's gratitude. Sequel to the force-land- ing of RAF. Valetta air- craft in April, mt, the pre- sentations marked the R.A. F.'$ appreciation of he\p in the form of, widespread ground searches, fond and transport hen the Valetta, in difficulties, landed in a dried-up river bed in crnb- covered plain while flying rom Kano, in Nigeria, to I Geneina, in Western Su- dan. While the R-.A.F. directed all available aircraft t scour the area, the West- ern Arab Corps despatched ground parties to locate the Valetta and villagers on the spot helped to extricate two of the crew trapped in the wreckage, afterwards pro- viding food and shelter for them and the rest of the crew. Messengers on horseback brought the local Omda, the native district chief, to the scene. Mounted on horses fur- nished by the Omda and dl- rected by native guides, the uninjured R.A.F. men set off on the second day to- wards a Jungle track down which help was known to be coming. The two injured men were borne on litters by relays of native*. Trekking through the heat of the day, from wa- terhole to ysiterhole. the cavalcade came upon the rescuers at sundown. A day later the R.A.F. men were flown to Khar- toum from a hastily cleared airstrip at Salingel. head- quarters of the British Dis- trict Commissioner. Sarge Is A-Con Man SHORT COUNT: 8gt. James J. Hurley, "con man" at Army finance school in Indianapolis, gets ready to short count a student clerk. Hurley's counting his pay out of sight of the cashier. Rubber Scrap Pays For Property Owner AUBURN, Me. (UP) To level off his property so he could build. Amedee Gobell invited shoe factories to dump rubber composition scraps In a gully. That was two years ago. Then a Junk dealer offered Go- bell |20 a ton for the filler. Oo- Thelr real hope is a conven- bell checked around and found INDIANAPOLIS. April 5 (NEA) The portly master sergeant en- tered the Army finance center and sauntered up to the cash- ier's cage. He handed the clerk on duty a $20 bill and waited for his change. When he had received and slowly counted It, he strolled calmly out of the building. Not until hours later, when he Burglars Strike Twice Same Night 8T. LOUIS. (UP) A radio store here proved too popular a place for thieves when it was raided twice in one night. " A policeman found the store had been ransacked and was standing by to wait for the man- ager to arrive. Then three men drove up In an automobile and they started to climb through a rear window that had been broken earlier in the evening. The officer fired a shot at the prowlers but they ran to their car and escaped. Not Dead, Sleeping, 'Corpse' Explains BAYTOWN, Te*. (UP)-^A car- load of youths passed a wrecked automobile and saw a body in- side. They reported it to officers. Deputy sheriff M. M. Brown in- vestigated and a Justice of the peace had almost completed his Inquest. He was preparing to pronounce the wreck victim dead. Then the surprised "body" stirred, rubbed sleep from his eyes and discovered he had slept through his own Inquest. Joseph Mingo, the 23-year-old Negro "victim," explained he had been unhurt when his car over- turned but decided to spend the night lh his wrecked vehicle be- fore seeking help. totaled the day's receipts, did the startled cashier discover-that the $20 bill was a genuine coun- terfeit. In the same afternoon, the sergeant threw three other young bankers into despair by: Cashing a forged check for $75; Palming $15 with a clvr "short count" routine; Stealing a blank sheet of gov- ernment cheeks while the clerk had his back turned, then forg- ing them in the name of another cashier for thousands of dol- lars. But the slippery non-com, W Sgt. James J. Hurley, didn't keep his ill-gotten gains. It wasn't that he was afraid of being caught; duping fledgling Army finance clerks is his lob. 8gt. Hurley is one of 25 in- structors at the Ft. Harrison Finance Center assigned by the Army to teach its student cash- iers all the tricks of cheating. It the student isn't alert. Hur- ley or one of his colleagues will con him out of cash, bonds, or other negotiables at the drop ot a wooden nickel. Graduates are assigned to Ar- my installations, embassies and consulates throughout the world. They must be prepared to handle any one of 3000 typical situations they are likely to en- counter. That's where the chicanery ot the instructors comes in handy. By the time they are graduat- ed, the students have been ex- posed to nearly every "con game" on record. Another spur to rapid learning and accuracy is the fact that the Army allows no margin for error and requires its cashiers to make up any shortages out of their own pockets. The instructors have become so adroit at their cheating job that they are sometimes regard- ed with suspicion by their civil- ian neighbors. "That's right," confirms Sgt. Hurley, calmly lifting a negoti- able bond as the unsuspecting clerk on duty listens. "Outside here, people are get- ting so they dont. trust me." (Greasy Spoon9 Gets A Wipe BY RICHARD KLEINER 17 orphanag%."whlcr: have been UP nd **en "y the A" But thev do run; a fact which set up to care for the more than ,,,-. ,,.. >,._ n ,,_., ,f has become the big symbol of 2500 crippled, maimed, homeless Construction nvwhere in new hope to the peoole. youngsters, the most pitiful vie- fwP?v m anywnere m About half the clothing on the tims of the war. But amg ^ ,,urveyorg are now starting to lay out the city for iosslble future big-scale rebuild- ng. Technically, Seoul is a closed city. The people who are here are former residents who somehow managed to stay through the various recaptures or who have drifted back after fleeing the flghtmg. to salvage what they could of their old life. More and more former resi- dents are managing to sneak I back into the city. One of the most surprising sights to the visitor is the large | number of" shops, selling bright cloth, brass and aluminum klt- chenwear. leather goods and all sorts of cheap trinkets. gauges to rely upon. SITUATION IN HAND much preliminary scouting as a battle. ELIZABETH. N. J. April 5 Outfits like Parker Brothers, The currents are running ; (NEA)A gradual revolution has of New Rochelle, N. Y.. which do mainly underground; organiza-;Just about reached its goal. nothing but transport diners, tion discipline is too tight for America's roadside diners, for study the roads they'll have to them to come readily to the sur- years known unpleasantly as travel. face. "greasy spoons," have washed They get local permita where And there are no public opl- the grease off and gone respect- needed, plot out baek roads, take nion polls or other standard able. . ."..' .. down wires. Slowly, the dirty, broken-down If a diner is more than 50 feet diners have been replaced by long, It's cut In two for shipping, elistenlng new models, and today At the site, O'Mahony mecha- they're going after the carriage nlcs put it back together again. The Taft forces have matters trade. When a diner Is shipped It has neatly in hand. In this state, | There are now about 7000 dm- everything toothpicks, menus, besides the purely advisory po-.ers across the country, serving plates, silverware, glassware, pularlty contest, 50 unpledged some 2.500,008 meals a day. juke boxes and checks, convention delegates are elected: In actual sales, this comes to Even waitress uniforms, if the on primary day. somewhere aroufcd $850.000,000 a buyer gets the measurements. Then another 10 "at large" de- year grossed by America's diners. All an operator has to do U legates are picked in a later i connect the water hd electri- state conclave. Most of these diners were built city. The Illinois regulars have put by Jerry O'Mahony, Inc. who Construction takes about three up a full slate of 50 delegates sparked the diner evolution. months, and 50 alternates for Tuesday. About once a week, a complet- The framework they claim Their allegiance to Taft is, of eri diner rolls out of the plant it's as sturdy as a battleship's course, well known. i and begins the difficult and ex-----is finished off with modern And the senator's active man- pensive trip to its permanent lo- stainless steel sides, formica ager here, Harold Rainvllle, aide cation. table and counter tops, terra> to Senator Dlrksen of Illinois, They're shipped over the road, floors and glass mirrors, believes that with a favorable an operation that requires as In their huge plant they make break the organization will elect I all 50. At the worst he sees a loss of only five, and figures moderate i luck will cost Taft Just two de- legates. NEt* STAINIJESS STEEL diner resembles streamlined railroad car. This one has been cut in half to be hauled to its site. But most of the stuff is pltl- fully cheap trash with the brass pota made out ot shell casings! and the aluminum wear out of skins of crashed airplanes. UNCAC ls working to get some kind ot normal commerce going | But the danger of being over- OPPOSITION LIMITED run again by the Communists still causes great fear among South Korean bankers. Although 41 other delegate candidates filed for the race, no other candidate has nearly a full slate. Many of the extras are Taft men. A few Indicate Dlrksen as their man, and apparently would vote for Taft if chosen. KM. CHARLES MUNSKE: New life for an old city. They will not loan any mo- ney or offer any financing to merchants and traders who want to start business on any slaeable About 10 have declared for Eisenhower. Out of Illinois' 25 districts, on- ly around half show any opposi- tion to Taft candidates for the post of alternate delegate If there Is any break to i the charmed Taft circle, the 9 OID-GREASY SPOON" style diaer resembled an M-fashiened rraOey car. These relics war* traded to for streaaaltoers. all the seats, tools, tables, counters used in the diners, everything except the soda foun- tains, stoves, ranges and coffee urns. They keep to two diner tradi- tions. Like the ex-trolley cars, which were the first diners, they still build them roughly m the shape of a railroad car. But they no longer try to make them look like old railroad cars. And they keep them mobile, after a fashion. Although they're put on foun- dations at the site, the diners arrive on wheels and can be moved without too much ex- pense. While this is a diner tradition, it's also done for hardheaded business reasons. In ease a highway is relocated, the diner can follow it or move elsewhere Secondly, a diner's mobile status permits it to be taxed as personal property, usually a cheaper rate than real estate. The modern trend in diners la for separate kitchens. O'Mahony now refers to a "front diner" meaning the counter arid table and soda foun- tain area and a "rear diner" the kitchen. An average 50 or SO-foot front diner costs about $40,000. The rear diner is a llttld more. O'Mahony has high hopes that the diner's best days are still to come. They're building an assembly plant In St. Louis and plan an- other in Los Angeles, to spread the diner gospel to the far west, where high shipping costs pres- ently limit the demand for them. Up their sleeves are diner- style, pre-fabricated gasoline service stations and roadside built and delivered on the principle. -_,_. SUNDAI APRIL 8. 1952 Mil SUNDAY AMERICAN pagitbp.ce Radio Programs Your Community Radio Station HOG-840 Where 100.000 People Meet Sunday, Apr Presents 9 OF Wednesday, Apr. 9 AM. I:8ft-6ign On -MuslcaJ nter- luda V 8: ISReport trom Congress 8:30Hymns ol all Church* 9:00BIBLE AUDITORIU*" TBS AIR 9:16-4ioodNeighburs 9:10London Studio Mel (BBC) 10:00In the Tempo of Jais 10:30Meet the Band U:00-NATlONAL ^OTTIRT 11:16The Sacred Heart Pro- gram 11:31Music for Sunday 12:00Luncheon Music PJa. U:30-Salt Lake Tabernacle 1:00The Jo Stafford Show (VOA) 1:15C.I.O. , 1:30-Rev Albert Steer 8:00 Opera and Sympnony Hour 4:30 What s Your Favorite 6:00Caesar's Friend (BBC) 7 00Musical Notebook iVOA) 7.30Thru the Sports Glass 7:46_New Out of India (BBC) 8:00Sports Roundup, News and Features (VOA) 8:15Show Time (VOA) 8:30U. N. Review (VOA) 9 00T h e Canterbury Tales (BBC) 10:00Hotel El Panama 10:30Time for Music 11:00Sim Off Monday, Apr. T AM 6:00Alarm Clock Club . 7:30Morning Salon 8:15NEWS (VOA> 8:30Morning Varieties 8:45Music Makers 9:00News 9:15Come and Get It 9:30As I See It 10:00News 10:05Off the Record 11:00News 11:05Off the Record (Cont'd) 11:30Meet the Band 12:00News PJL 12:05Luncheon Music 12:30Popular Music 1:00News 1:15Personality Parade 1:45American Favorites 2:00American Journal (VOA) 2:15It's Time To Dance . 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00All Star Concert Hall 3:15The Little 8how S: 30Music for Monday 4:00Music Without Words ^ 4:15David Rose Show 4:30What's Your Favorite :00Linda's First Love Cla. Alfaro. 8.A. 6:15Evenlne 8alon 7:00Bin Crosby (VOA) \ 7:30Sports Review 7:45Seouting at Crossroads l l 8:00News Commentary ) 8:15Halls of Ivy (VOA) 8:45Commentators Digest (VOA) 9:00Our Mutual Friend (BBC) 9:30Symphony Hall (VOA) 10:00-The World At Your Win- dow (BBC) 11:00The Owl's Nest MidnightSign Off. Tuesday, Apr. f A.H. __ 6:00Sign On Alarm Clock Club 7:30Morning 8alon 8:15News (VOA) 8:30Ctaiy Quilt 8:45Hawaiian Harmonies 9:00News 9:15Sacred Heart Program 9:30As I See It 10:00News 10:05Off the Record 11:00News 11^05Off the Record (Contd) 1U30Meet the Band 12:00News 12:05Luncheon Music 12:30Popular Music PM. 1; 00News 1:15personality Parade . 1:45Rhythm and Reason 2:00A Call From Les Paul 2:15Date for Dancing 2:30Spirit of the Vikings 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00 All Star Concert Hall 3:15The Little Show 3:30Music for Tuesday 4:00 Panamusica Story Time 4:15Promenade Concert 4:30What's Your Favorite 6:00Linda's First Love Cla. Alfaro. 8.A. 6:15Evening Salon 7:00Christian Science Pro- gram 7:15Musical Interlude 7:30PAB8T 8PORT8 REVIEW 7:45Jam Session 8:00News and Commentary (VOA) 8:16Jo Stafford (VOA) 8:30Time for Business (VOA) 8:45Commentators Digest (VOA) 9:00 Musical Americana (VOA) 9:30Pride and Prejudice (BBC) 10:00HOTEL EL PANAMA , 10:15Musical Interlude ' 10:30 Variety Bandbox (BBC) r uoSign Off ooThe Owl Nest A.M. ooslim on 00Alarm Clock Club 30Morning Salon 15NEWS (VOA) 30 Morning Varieties 45Music Makers :00News : 15Come and Get It :30As I See It 00News 05Off the Record 00News 05Off the Record (Contd.) 30Meet the Band ;00Hews and Luncheon Mu- sic 12:30-vPopular Music l:00-News 1:15Personality Parade 1:45Jack Smith Show (VOA) 2:00American Journal (VOA) 2:15It's Time to Dance 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Notes on Jazz 3:00 All Star Concert Hall 3:15The Little Show 3:30Music for Wednesoay 4:00Music Without Words 4:15French in the Air (RDF) 4:30What's Your Favorite 5:30NEWS 5:35What's Your Favorite (Contd.) 6:00Linda's First Love Cla. Alfaro, 8.A. 6:15EvenlnR Salon 7:00Over To You (BBC) 7:30BLUE RIBBON 8PORT8 REVIEW 7:45Here Comes Louis Jordan 8:00News and Commentary (VOA) 8:15Jam Session (VOA) 8:30The American Book Shelf (VOA) 8:45Commentators Digest (VOA) 9:00Shanties and Forebltters (BBC) 9:30The Haunting Hour 10:0OBBC Playhouse 11:00The Owl's Nest 12:00Sign Off Thursday, Apr. 19 6:00Alarrrt CloctH:/ 7:30Morning Salon 8:15NEWS (VOA) 8:30Crazy Quilt 8:45Jerry Sears Presents 9:00NEWS 9:15-SACR8D HEART PRO- GRAM 9:30As I See It 10:00NBW8 10:05Off the Record 11:00NEWS 11:05Off the Record (Contd.) 11:30Meet the Band NoonNEWS P.M. 12:05Luncheon Music 12:30Popular Music 1:00NEWS 1:15Personality Parade 1:45EXCURSIONS IN SCI- ENCE 2:00Call For Les Paul 2:15Date for Dancing 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00American Debut 3:15The Little Show 3:30Music for Thursday 4:00Panamusica Story Time 4:15Negro Spirituals 4:30 What's Your Favorite 6:00Linda's First Love Cla. Alfaro. 8.A. 6:16Evening Salon 7:00Make Believe Ballroom (VOA) 7:30BLUE RIBBON 8PORT8 REVIEW 7:45Jam Session 8:00World News and Features (VOA) 8:15Arts and Utters (VOA) 8:30Radio University (VOA) 8:45Com m enta tors Digest (VOA) 9:00Emma (BBC) 9:30Take It From Here (BBC) 10:00HOTEL EL PANAMA 10:15Musical Interlude 10:30Moonlight Mood 11:00 The Owl's Nest 12:00-8i(m Off Friday, Apr. 11 A.M. 6:00Sign On and Alarm Clock 7:30Request Salon 8:15News (VOA) 8:30Morning Varieties 8:45Music Makers 1:08News 9:16Come and Get It 9:30 As I See It 10:00NEWS 10:05Off the Record 11:00NEWS 11:05Off the Record (Contd.) 11:30 Meet the Band 12:00News PJl 12:06Luncheon Muslo 12:80 Popular Music 1:00News 1:15Personalit Parade 1:46American Favorites 2:00American Journal (VOA) 2:15Songs of France (RDF) 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00 All Star Concert Hall 3:15The Little Show 3:30Music for Friday 4:00Music Without Words 4:30 What's Your Favorite 6:00Linda's First Love Cla. Alfaro, S.A. 6:15Evening Salon 7:00Adventures of Richard Hanna (BBC) 7:30Sports Review 7:48Here Comes Louis Jordan 8:00News Commentary (VOA) 8:15Opera Concert (VOA) 8:45Commentators Digest 9:008 h o r t Story Theater (VOA) 9:30London Studio Concert (BBC) 10:00Cavalcade of America (VOA) 10:80Adventures of PC 49 (BBC) 11:00The Owl's Nest 1:00 ajn. Sign Off Old Legal Paper Found Penciled Under Old Desk CHAMPAIGN. HI. (UP) Workers for a furniture company found a 59-year-old-legal docu- ment penciled on the bottom of a desk drawer. Workmen were refinlshmg the big walnut desk when they found the note. It said: "October 21. 1892. $210 Re- ceived this day from Andrew Yarvls for safekeeping till his return from the state prison, : $210- If I should die before his ' return my estate must pay to . him on demand that amount. Samuel C. Fox, Sheriff, Cham- paign County." Plumber Forces State To Pay Off For His Ideas ALBANY. N. T., (UP) Rich- ard J. Glander. a state-employed plumber, has found New York's merit award program a lucrativa source of income. Glander received $800 for sug- gesting that some 3.000 radiators in the huge state office building here be turned upside down to double their service expectancy and save the state an estimated $14,000 a vear. Less than a month before Glander was awarded $100 for figuring out a plan to ease traf- fic congestion around the offlee building TMP MFN ON THE MOONA terrestlsl moon-ship hovers some 200 miles over the surface of moo* as .dentist, in p.ce suits t.ke photo, of "the msn in the moon," in this Ust's conception of sp.ee travel In yew. to come. The cr.ft would base en a man-m.de spsee-statlon vin*' "i own orbit .bout the e.rth, ccordlng to Dr. Werner von Braun. builder of the V-Jrocket would be a 5-day 239,000 mile trip from the sp.ee staUon to the moon, ccordlng to the scientist. The en- vT.loned project is one of several space-travel Ideas outlined In an article in Collier's m.g.iine. . SHIP-SHORE RADIO-TELEPHONE SERVICE PANAMA "HPC 22" 2506 Kca. LISTENS FOR SHIPS ON 2110 KCS. or 2174 KC8. 1200 to 0400 C.M.T. TROPICAL RADIO Tel. CO. Truman, Taft, Others Need Lesson In Elocution, Professor Contends Saturday, Apr. 11 A.M. 6:00sign OnThe Alara Clock Club 7:30Jasa Salon 8:18News (VOA) 8:30Britain Sings (BBC) 8:45The Duke Steps Out 9:00News 9: ISWomen's World 9:30As I See It 10:00News 10:05Off the Record 11:00News 11:05Off the Record (Contd.) 11:30Meet The Band 12:00NEWS PJl. 12:05New Tune Time 12:30Popular Music 1:00News 1:15personality Parade 1:45Tour De France (RDF) 2:00Latin American Serenade 2:15Date For Dancing 2:30Afternoon Melodies 2:45Battle of the Bands 3:00American Band Concert 3:15The Little Show 3:30McLean's Program 3:45Musical Interlude 4:00Music for Saturday 4:30 What's Your Favorita 6:00Guest Star 6:15Master works from France (RDF) 6:45American Tolk Songs 7:00Gay Paris Music Hall (RDF) 7:30Sports Review 7:45Jam Session 8.00 Newsreel U.SA. 8:15Bing Crosby Show (VOA) 8:45Battle Reports. (VOA) 9:00HOG Hit Parade 9:30VOA Hit Parade 10:00HOTEL EL PANAMA ' 10:30Having A Wonderful Crime (BBC) 11:00The Owl's Nest 1:00 a.mSlgn Off Explanation of Symbols: VOAVoice of America BBCBritish Broadca.tins RDF Radlodllfualon Francalse Corp. / START A s BEAUTIFUL MURRAY Gas Range ALL AUTOMATIC with Thermoatat Ovan Control As Low Aa 10.00 Monthly 4.00 CLUB PLAN FULLY GUARANTEED BoZr RADIO CENTER 6n CLEVELAND, O, April 8 (UP) George B. Simon, speech pro- fessor and a 25-year veteran In public elocution here at Fenn College, has listened to, and watched, the major White House contenders for 1962 and has is- sued the following criticisms and suggestions: President Truman Is advised to stop "woodchopplng" with both arms. He should learn to read without making so many mis- takes. . "I heard Mr. Truman make 13 mistakes in one short speech he was reading," Professor Simon said. . The chief executive also has a "monotonous delivery," the pro- fessor added. As an example, the professor said the President could an- nounce that "all Income taxes will be abolished first of next month and make it sound hum- drum." - .., Ben. Robert A. Taft of Ohio has good volume and dynamics but possesses a raspy voice, Si- mn contends, and he should practice less Impatience and in- sistence. "Taft lacks courtesy when ex- cited because of his concern for issues," the speech analyst said. "During question periods, he Is apt to give speeches Instead of answers." Fine oratory and good use of rhetorical and psychological de- vices are credited to Gen. Doug- las Mac Arthur. However, Prof. Simon thinks the five-star com- mander should stop Jutting his Jaw and thrusting his head for- ward and subdue his demonstra- ted tendency toward the "mas- ter-of-all" Impression. "He becomes too dramatic, at times," Simon said, "as with his old soldiers never die. Just fade away' conclusion. He didn't fade away. If he had. his talk might have rivaled Lincoln's Gettys- burg address." Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, another Republican contender, has a persuasive voice, Simon said, and is a good reader. How- ever, he advises the general to be a little less calm, try not to be so crisp and practice some effective gestures before hitting the cam- paign trails. Sen. Estes Kefauver, the tall, crlme-problng Tennes s e e a n, fumbles too much, doesn't ges- ture enough. Is too cold and im- passive and doesn't move around enough. 81mon said. Generally. Prof. 8imon gives the speaking laurels to Gen. MacArthr, whose oratorical ef- fectiveness he puts almost on a par with that of the late Pre*. Franklin D. Roosevelt. Even At 82 He Cari Still Drive Car DETROIT. (UP) Police were dubious about the wisdom of re- newing his driver's license when 82-year-old John Medwed show- ed un at headquarters. "Where are your glasses?" he was asked. Medwed said he threw them away three vesrs ago- because they were "too much of a nui- sance." "Where's vour ear?" The elderly motorist, who has had onlv four tickets trt 27 vears of driving said he left it at home because it was too slippery to drive. Skeptical officers drove him home when he instated on a road test. He backed his 1930 car onto his slippery and narrow alley driveway and took off Into heavy rush hour traffic without a hitch. Medwed observed every traffic regulation, got his new license ->ifi smiled at the polkeman: "TeH the boys at headquarters I'll be back in three yeara.". City Enriched By Oil But Can't Spend Money LONG BEACH, Calif., April 5 (UP) This city may be small but, as some say, "It's the darn- dest over rich city to America and literally doesn't know what to do with all the dough It gets." The town, which hugs a pleas- ant strip of sunny beach, Is on top of one of the world's richest oil pools. Since stumbling on this muftl-mlllion-dollar windfall 14 years ago, It has put away an $80,223.000 kitty and "kitty" keeps growing at the rate of $20,- 000,000 a year. Geologists say the oil should hold out for another half century. However, the city can't spend a nickel of the money except for more oil wells and to keer) Its waterfront and part of Its pop- ulace from sinking into the ground as the black gold Is pumped out. The cause of this frustra- tion I. that the city's location has landed it in the middle of the tidelands controversy. Uncle Sam claims this big pud- dle of oil Is his and the city and oil companies have Impounded the cash voluntarily while Con- ?rees considers legislation to set- le the matter. "Social ism," "Communism" and "nationalization" are some of the charges hurled by the de- fenders of state ownership. A former senator from Califor- nia said legislation against the states would provide "any future executive with a legal pass-key to Fascism or Communism." An important basis of the gov-1 ernment claim is that areas adjacent to the sea must be pro- tected "against dangers to the security... of its people." That argument adds that under 'para- mount right" over the property, "whatever of value may be dla-' covered In the sea... will most naturally be appropriated" for federal use. Long Beach and the states in- volved California, Texas and Louisianastand td have their oil revenue cut, drastically lnj some cases, if the government obtains a favorable decision.! This city's contract with one ma- Jor oil company gives it a fab- ulous 95 per cent return, five to, seven times more than existing federal leases bring, according to city spokesmen. The town's residents are I worried lest their city become . rearing boom town oversight I If the government loses, how- ever. BARBER LINES Accepting Paaaangara for LOS ANGELES by mTTTANM" SAILING APRIL 8th (All rooms with connecting bathroom) C B. FENTON & CO, INC Tal: Crlatbal 1781 Balboa 1065 ! 1952 1952 lOlhoHighCompMMn |\/ MILEAGE MAKEB&lK MOST PWER .7. BEST ECONOMY! COLPAN MOTORS, INC Your Friendly FORD Dealer On Automobile Row Tcls. 2-1033 2-1036 Oil .speculations have filed claims throughout the area, some, It is said, on whole city blocks. Not the least of the town's worries Is its fabulous man-made harbor. Under a state grant, the city was restricted to spending its oil revenue on Its harbor and beaches. The port, part of tidelands de- velopments valued at $300,000,- 000, is the envy of seaports the; world over. It boasts what is call- ed the world's largest transit shed with five-and-a-half acres of covered floor space on a mile- long pier. This harbormaster's dream earned the city more than $1.000,000 in 1960. However, many residents have thought the money should be spent on other things beside, the harbor. There have been urgings to make Long Beach a "taxless" city. Recently, the state legislature cleared the way for other use of the oil funds, providing that half of the money could be spent for general city use. That will have to remain a fond dream until the tidelands ownership question is settled. It ha*, been debated since 1943. The National City Bank of New York Head Office 55 Wall Street Now York STATEMENT OF CONDITION AS OF MARCH 31, 152 INCLUDING DOMESTIC AND OVERSEAS BRANCHES 87 Branches in Greater New York 140th Anniversary 1812 1952 M Branches ASSETS Cash, Gold and Due from Banks............................................. ^HiS'X?"*! United SUtes Government Obligations....................................... ^22'Si'Si Obligations of Other Federal Agencies..................................... .S'STiiJ State and Municipal Securities.............................................. ?22'5'S2 Other Securities .............................................................. iS'Si'IS Loans and Discounts........................................................ 'X2n Real Estate Loans and Securities............................................ Ji'oS'S Customers' Liability for Acceptances......................................... o <2n Stock In Federal Reserve Bank.............................................. StSSwSK Ownership of International Banking Corporation............................. m'SsjE Bank Premises............................................................ 7SS Items in Transit with Branches..............................-............... 'S'S Other Assets ..............................................'............* **" TOTAL .......................................................... $Maj,1t LIABILITIES Deposits Liability on'Acceptances and Bills.......................... f??'22 Less; Own Acceptances in Portfolio..................... 10.4j1.so* Due to Foreign Central Banks......................................... (n Foreign Currencies) Reserves for: _ Unearned Discount and Other Unearned Income.................. Interest. Taxes, Other Accrued Expenses, etc..................... capiuf^.::::::::::::::::::::""-:'^""-'--"''---^^-^ I7200MO Share $20.00 Par) Surplus ................................................. Undivided Profits ....................................... iM.ooo.oeo fl7.4M.6Jl TOTAL $5,408,887,51 28.948.940 l,ia9,8O0 20.511.381 3S.4oO.406 3.312.080 3T.4M.U1 $8,883,788.872 Figures of Ovarsaaa Branches ara aa of March 25, 1952- Affiliata of Tha National City Bank of Now York for separata administration of truat functions. CITY BANK FARMERS TRUST COMPANY Head Office: 22 William Street. Now York Capital Funda S31.07t.117 F,GE FOTO THE SrNIAt AMERICAN SUNDAY, APRIL , 13I m Borrowed Babies Get Chance To Make Happy Start In Life a------1. W omens World A Shrimp Dish You'll Love flew' cJLook -Mfoot Fiorina ^noe staled ^/rre nJLadutike jpnna "re-adopeon babies grt special rare from their boarding mothrrs as a part of the program set up by the Spcncc-Chapin Adoption I Service in an attempt to five infants a firm foundation for life BY ANNETTE GREEN NEA Staff Writer parents could There's a new look afoot for Spring:. It's the, narrow, pointed toe in company with the shaped, graceful heel. It's shown here (upper left) in a blue calf-and-suede pump with mudguard treatment by > i MEW YORK 'NEA' Have of boarding mu p.er wondered what happens ... copied. to the babies who are waiting to The mothers who board babies beadODted? In manv unfortunate m- the agency are guided by a Ins:anees thev are placed In large killed staff of workers. Careful ysteir.ali7ed nurseries, where routine and procedure are follow- they have little opportunity to ed at main headouarters in the develop confidence and stability, case of each boarding parent. " But there Is another side to the,- Nurses visit the homes of the picture, and this one offers much temporary parents about once a "more hooe. Agencies such as the month. They studythe conditions .Spence-Chapin Adoption Service under which the baby is living. Newton Klkin and in a black patent pump (upper center) by Palter Jh New York have organized ac- and make reports on their find- DeLiso that's like those that small girls wear to dancing class. It's 'tive groups of boarding parents, lnes. ^-, ||one brown silk threaded with gold (upper right) bv Palter who take these babies into their The function of the boarding DeLiso. Chocolate brown stripping sandal by M. Wolf (lower left) homes, and give them love and parents extends outside of the underscores the bare look in shoe fashions for Spring and Summer. "devoted care. home. too. Every month each - The temporary mothers and mother is required to bring her 'fathers arc screened very care- tiny charge to the agency nurs- NEW YORK(NEAl -A clean- look These new sandals are mere Its newness springs from the fact olate brown and pewter gray as fullv. It is preferred that they ery. During this visit the babies cut silhouette in shoes with tap- wisps of leather but they cling that the curve of the heel is re- well as In the favorite, shining ''have families of their own. are given a physical and mental ered toes and heels ls the new firmiy to the foot through care- versed and placed on the inside, black. In black, it gets touches of jiMA rigid requirement of the examination. ihoe look for spring 1952 in all ful design. Both for comfort and for the white in stitching and ties. Spence-Chnpin organization is The mo.hers are also question- collections the medium heel is Many of them are completely right appearance, the narrow toe The contrast heel, in bright that each family mus: be finan- id as to the development of the starre(i gut this year it's a heel bare at the back, with sling fast- is soft, adapting Itself to a sleek blue or red for a black shoe, lends daily independent of the small babies problems are discussed ,nat.s sriaDed for a delicate air. lenings replacing the ankle strap and glovelike fit. It creates a a fresh, sparkling look to foot- It's in patent, with baby I.ouis heel. Supple, polished leather sole creates a comfortable base. Combination pump (lower center) by I. Miller Guild Rail is in blue patent and suede, has tapered toe and medium heel. White kid pump by Newton Elkin (lower right) has slim black leather sole, buttoned vamp, open toe. The model wears a red calf suit shoe on baby Louis heel from J. and J. Slater. It's cut low at both sides with oblique draped vamp treatment. These new shoes have a soft, ladylike look. 8WF.ET AND PUNGENT shrimp, served with fry riee, la teete- , ________treat that the whole fanally will uk for ataba. _ RY GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Food and Markets Editor Here's an exotic meatless main water to cover. Turn heat down dish. As everybody en joys so water just simmers. Cover shrimp, this will be a big family saucepan and let shrimp cook success. / only, five minutes, never longer. To prepare shrimp for Sweet Drain and cool, and Pungent Shrimp or any oth-i er shrimp dish, follow these In-! Sweet and Pungent Shrimp struct ions: (4 servings) To Shell Shrimp: Raw shrimp, (fresh or quick frozen) may be Prepare 1 pound shrimp (fresh peeled either before or after boll- or quick frozen), following above ing. To clean shrimp, remove directions, small legs, then carefully lift off Mix In saucepan, Vi cup brown shell. sugar, 2 tablespoons cornstarch, ' !Vi teaspoon salt, V* cup vinegar, Try to slip shell from tall so 1 tablespoon oy sauce and juice that tail meat remains. With a drained from 1 No. 2 can pine- knife, cut along outside curvature apple chunks, and lift out *lack vein. Vein Is Cook until slightly thick, stir- harmless and needn't be removed ring constantly. Add 1 green pep- unless desired, per cut Into strips, 2 small onions. To Cook in Court Bouillon: To cut Into rings, and drained pine- one quart-water add 1 small cu- apple chunks, cumber (sliced), l carrot (sliced),1 Cook 2 or 3 minutes. Remove I small white onion (sliced), juice from heat, add shrimp and let of half a lemon, 1 teaspoon salt stand about 10 minutes. Just br- and Mr" teaspoon pepper. Bring fore serving, bring to a boll, stir- water to boll. Add 1 pound shrimp ring constantly. Serve with hot and if necessary enough more rice. urn offered as remuneration. and, i The parents also must under- spot. possible, solved on the Baiancing the pump with the'that has had popularity through dressy look that's a good compan- wear. In another form, the con- closed, tapered toe and closed so many seasons. Ion for spring ready-to-wear; tract heel in polished, natural FOOD NEWS by fftomCt* A weekly cohimn of 9n Wd that a baby may be taken The boarding parents do not back the open, airy sandal that I jfrf* from them it anv time, and /tee the raal motners of the in- iracneR the ul.imat? in the bare ,.enlaced fcv another ,fants, but whm their borrowed Great Improvement babies are ready to leave them, We recognize the inadequacies they do meet the adoption par- TJf trie boarding system. Nothing ents. All names, of course, are takes the place of actual parents kept anonymous. H '' 1x5 The life of a child." exolalns. Cracial Moment Miss Roberta Andrews, assistant This is a crucial moment. The director of the agency. "But we hoarding mother has become very ^"ijncerelv feel, after a great deal attached to the baby. She ls anx- -of research and study, that lous to hear about the home he ls Boarding is a great improvement to enter, as well as to observe his ..'flVfr ihe old-fashioned nursery reactions to the new parents. ' tort hods. "Although I always worry be- Mlss Andrews stresses the need forehand," says one of the board- er Immediate adoption, however,!lng mothers, "after I have met and points out that, contrary to the mother and father, and see popular belief, there are many how much they want the baby, I babies waiting to be adopted, can hardly wait for them to take Often couples feel they must have over." a "ffinde child or a yottngster "How can these boarding par- witlrblue eyes. In consequence.'ents give up the babies?" is a the browh-eyed baby remains question everyone always asks, homeless until people come along "Isn't it difficult?" who have this particular asset It is extremely difficult. Par- ta mind.. ents who board their first baby Childless parents should accept find it almost impossible. Miss a baby on his own merits, with- Andrews is only too familiar with ' out a blueprint of what they tearful, heartbreaking partings, think a baby should be, urges But, by some miracle, these fam- Ittss Andrews. Ules learn to recognize the un- But since the authorities at selfishness of their task, and its adoption organizations must face importance to the community thpsjtimtinri as it exists, the idea and the country as a whole. The shaped heel applies to all Patent leather, a perennial fa- wood Is used as a foil for black or heightslow, medium and high, vorite. appears for spring In choc- pewter patent, I *i With Vbur Own 4S9natureSi(vtr*aare TeaqmsfaQdt7g Ktfcfi'sttMETYPACKAGE rite In tod* yowr script Initial! Heavily plaud, beautifully styled... exclusive "Signatura" is Old Company Plate made and guaranteed by the Was. Roger. Mfg Co.. Mariden, Cena. So lovely, you'll want more! With lea- spoons, you receive bat of complete pattern and price Send for this ston- ing value- offered by . . KeUogg's vaBJ err,best pick V choose fun of ail! 10 generous boxes, 7 real cereal favorite. Grand anytime! GATHER YE MENUS WHERE YE MAY especially during Lent. Here's a.savory fish dish that's ideal for now and so good you'll want to serve it often all year 'round. Bound to perk up appetites, this piquant entree combines a spicy sauce with ten- der Birds Eye Ocean Perch. But remember, it takes sea food with Birds Eye's fresh, fresh flavor to do Justice to this recipe. These quick-frozen fillets make your preparations so easy. too. They come already cleaned and boned . just thaw them a hit, and they're ready to use. And there's nothing like the conveni- ence of buying fish this way. You can get it days ahead of time and keep the package frozen 'till you plan to use It. There > no fish odor, either. As long as it's solidly frozen, you can store It In the freezing compartment of your refrigerator without affecting other foods. So get some right away, and try this Creole C\3h. It'll be perfect for dinner tonight I CREOLE BAKED PERCH f * 2 packages (1 pound each) Birds Eye Ocean Perch Fillets 2 tablespoons fat 1/4 cup chopped onion 1/4 cup chopped green pepper 2 tablespoons flour 2 cups cooked or canned tomatoes 1 teaspoon salt 1/8 teaspoon pepper * 1 bay leaf t 1 box (10 ounces) Birds Eye Golden Sweet Corn Thaw fillets Just enough to separate. Meanwhile, melt fat In a saucepan. Add onion and green pepper and saut until tender, but not browned. Add flour and blend. Then add tomatoes, alt, pepper, and bay leaf. Bring to boll, cover, and simmer 10 min- utes. Add the frozen corn arid continue cooking over low heat 10 minutes longer, stirring often. Remove bay leaf. Arranga fillets in greased shallow baking dish. Pour vegetable mixtura over fish. Bake in hot oven (400F.) 30 minutes, or until the ilh is done. Makes 8 servings. , sen tne young set, wi tad i specially intriguing. It's i with Jell-O, the gelatine Glamorous Jeanette MacDonald has always considered beauty care center). a vital part of her personal grooming ritual. For exercise, she takes her dog. Misty, for daily morning and evening walks. Misty seemed to be expecting Just such an excursion when he greeted his famous mistress in the picture at the left. The lovely star And* relaxation a great aid to beanty, and her favorite pastime is entertaining a small group of friends. She loves to arrange the table herself (upper check on her make-up. hair styling and hat ward- robe, she takes time out every now and then to try on her hats (lower center). She uses them for a beauty gauge. Jeanette Mac- Donald credits much of her poise to her training as a singer Ap- pearing before audiences taught her ihe necessity of holding her hands in a graceful position (right).'Miss MacDonald's advice te anyone striving to perfect her posture, is to practi e before a mirror. EDITOR'S NOTE: Beautiful Jeanette MacDonald, star of the concert stage, television, motion pictures and radio, tells treat your family to these de- lightful Bunny Nests next Sun- never feel right without, 1s ac- Grace and poise are certainly group of friends. It U so wonder- ^'i1'*^lJ^ n^th^nack- complished by morning and eve. necessary attributes for anyone ful to eat and talk together. And Turn into shallow nan and ning walks with my dog, Misty, on or off the stage. Is there any- the time I spend planning and,***; when fimi break into We stay out for at least 20 mln- thing quite as annoying or frus- arranging for the evening diverts "' "' '""' "I"* f 1 __j______....11.,. WI, ~* .__ !__? - .nlf nncninnc honrft mv ollonlinn Irnm oil mn nthor Small IIHKCS W1U1 A lOl K, Ul luivc, THE EASTER RUNNY WILL BE'such, always give them gentl HERE SOON! And here's a des-1care. Washboards are out, but sert the young set will find you can use a soft handbrush to 's made i remove soil from slip straps, dessert collars and cuffs. Generally, youngsters love and mothers i however, you need only squeeze love to serve. All 6 flavors are the suds through the fabrics, delicious and wholesome; what's! .. .... '... more, they always look so good.!To prepare your washwater, dis- chlldren want to eat them. So "ve mild soap flakes and I to do buy a box this week and 2 tablespoons of U France t make a rich suds. La France ls a special bluing In bead form which does Its work at the washing stage, so you don't have to give clothes an extra bluing rinse to keep them fresh- ly bright and new-looking. Safe women, In this exclusive by-line utes, and cover quite a bit of ter- trating as self-conscious hands ray attention from all my other f^ro' no tato- rieer or large-for everything, too. from the ..___ w__ii.____. ..hi... Ik. Itnr,, I, thot Mma finri ffft? activities. iiuouK" pomiu- iitci ui i ;....,. n. _ ,_..., j,,j. *. story, how they can achieve the poise, grace and charm that are characteristic of her. Included, too, are special tips "for red- heads. Miss MacDonald has turned her lovely red hair into an asset, not a problem. and feet? itory in that time. Red Head I My experiences as a singer have One of my most Important taught me the value of k beauty considerations ls my red my hands from fluttering hair. Because It has many gold nusly. Hands that dangle hope- pian for It. This is an Important ilr t> meshed strainer. of keeping Real beauty Isn't something **" $* # *** "5J5 2ZL: !' l^W^7^*t Sr"? '& 3* wilt nge on pastels of your filmiest duds to ach half! *!' the pieces in your big iasB- Flll cen- Uy wash. So get a box today... whipped for "little things," and Wgl its, I like to give a "lot of lassly or wave through the air Secret of living that will make "rtak lec oconu^over^thl s^and IF PETTY PROBLEMS SEEM thought to color choices. can spoil the most attractive yon happier and lovelier than you oiae three colored lellv beans MAJOR ANNOYANCES, If vou My favorites are gray and pink woman's appearance. ever Imagined possible. (this has to be a soft, fragile Relax Hands------------------------------- tone). Though pink ls not usually Actually, it Is quite simple to L|rt|-.iiil Uinfr regarded as a color for redheads, strike a relaxed pose. My favor- neipi Ul ninib Every woman owes herself the I found it suitable through exper- i.e position, when I am before -------- right to be beautiful, to make the lmentation. I still consider this an audience or just standing wit BY JEANETTE MacDONAI.D Written for NEA Service on top Makes 6 very special find yourself getting irritated servings! over every little thing. It's time to find out why. Do you drink a CHARACTER IS MADE, NOT lot of coffee? Perhaps you ara BORN. You can help your chil- allergic to the caffeln in coffee, dren learn generosity and the While many people are not al- most of her own potential. I be- the best way to get rid of color friends, is to clasp my hands Never wash enamelled surfaces --- --r--na:"If "you occa-,fected. caffeln can cause nerv- lleve this la true no matter how cliches. lightly in front of me. Of course, while hot. They will crack or,n*n provlde*a treat for the ouaness. sleeplessness and lrrit- busy or preoccupied she mav be. I find the Ideal way to chick I vary the position. If your hands craze. olnef younRSters on the block, ability. And an allergy such as I learned the importance of color for my skin and hair is to have always been a problem I Glve tn klddles a box of Sugar this can start affecting you at beauty care earlv In my career, try on hats. Since I don't always suggest you practice in front of a Mend leather gloves with cot- t0 ufce outdoorg These any time seemingly without Singing, acting and making per- have the r~ sonal appearance tours didn't ping. I ex leave me much time for personal I already grooming. ts. Since I don t always suggest you practice in rroniui iwena icau.er R~ '' <^- CrisD t0 take outdoors These any lime seemingly without opportunity,to go .hop- i llrror until you find the best and ton thread. Silk will cut the lea- dellc,ous kernels taste like can- i warning. If you think this is perlment with the hats i tost comfortable poses for you. ther. d yet they're a wholesome: bothering you, you ought to own. eliminating those To achieve an attractive and '. Z. !anack for Sugar Crisp ls ac-start drinking Inatant Sanka which no longer seem beconvng. graceful stance, place your feet Home furnishing specialists u puffed wr,eat cereal. I was always on the run Each Many times I change a land, fust a few inches apart. A full-recommend washing a wall at K R coupie boxes on nand mometn had to count. flower or pin to achieve a differ- length mirror wUl be a help here, the bottom and then proceeding ^m t ou ,utl and "But regardless of how many ent color effect. ____ _ ^e shoes you wear influence upward^ThLs prevents streaking a deU hlfu, w,y to teach This ehV seW eat a Case! Zaa LI demands were made on my time. Helpful Hats your appearance, too. Heels that Wluch occurs when water runs It was of course, expected that II Trying on hats makes me real- are too high for instance will down over a soiled surface, should always look my best. ize when my hair needs restyling, throw- you off balance. Flat-heel. This was no mean accomplish- and It I have allowed n? make- ed shoes, or. the other hand, may Because foam rubber U long- ment but once I developed a up to get too Intense, or too pale, make you look awkward. Try to drying it s advisable to coyer pl- sense'of timing. I was able to do' If you have never thought of reach a happy medium. lows of this material with a zto- I still follow the same basic your hats as a beauty gauge, a Recreation pered removable ticking that s iieautv palt-rn Ir experimenting will show you I get my favorite recreation quickly and easily launderable in My daily exercising, which I how effective thej- can be. when I am entertaining a small hot soapsuds. this lesson In living. Coffee. This wonderful coffee. In convenient mlx-lt-ln the cup form, ls 97% caffein-free. Yet it's all coffee, real coffee, ana delicious coffee! Oet a Jar day. Drink It with meals, and MOST OF IS ARE WASHBOWL i the acid teatJust before bed- LAl'NDRESSES when small per-1 time... Instant Sanka lets you sonal items need doing. So if sleep. It's perfect in every way: you would preserve the loveli- you can enjoy your favorite be- hess of lingerie, blouses andlverage and your peace of mind. I T in* li bUNDAT APUL I. IMS rflE SUNDAT AMERICAN t aoe rirt Pacific S^ocLetu ?tM &, 17, &&~ 3.1 &tlo. 3321 AMBASSADOR WILEY TO BE HOST AT STAG RECEPTION The Ambassador of the United StatM to Panama, John < oopVr WtlfT. ha issued Invitations ta a recaption Tuesday atenifc from : ta 7:S a.m. 1m honor of the captain and afliceV of the U. S. Coaat Geera fhl "Courier" iceptlon will be held at the Embassy Residence on U Cr~ Mrs. Ollitlar Entertains . The wlfe\of the Charge d'Af- talres of France to Panama, Mrs. Marcel Qlllvjer, entertained a Sroup Of frierais Thursday after- oon with a tan given at the Le- gation on La Cresta. Col. And Mrs. Tartan Give Farewell Dinner COl. Howard JATurton, USMC and Mr. Turton Wre hosts last night at a farewell dinner given at their quarters on the Fif- teenth Naval District Reserva- tion in honor of Caiteln L. E. Dunning, USMC andtyrs. pun- ning, who plan to leave the Isth- mus Tuesday by plane' for the United States. Ouests included Lt. C. V Bu-; celt, 8MC and Mrs. Buce*;; Capt. A. 8. Baker, Jr., 8MC and Mra. Baker; Lt. J. D. Coun- selman. USMC and M. Coun- aelman; Lt. J. O. Tillla USMC and Mrs. Tillls; Lt. C. P. Haynas. USMC and Mr. Haynes Captain W. C. Kirk WMC and Mr. Kirk and Lt. J. C. Senter, UBN. ______ Tea Honors Mra. Prager Mrs. Jerome F. prager, retir- ing administrative assistant of the canal Zone chapter of the American Red Cross was the guest of honor Wednesday after- noon at a tea given by her eo- worher at the chapter office. Presiding at the tea table were Mrs. Otl Myers and Mra. Ed- ward A. Doolan. Mr. and Mrs. Prager will leave this month for California, where they plan to make their home. Mr. and Mra. Dlaa Leave For Europe _,..., Mr. and Mra. Pedro Dlai of Bolla Viata left Monday by Diane for Europe where they will va- cation for several weeka. Mra. Abell Entertain Breakfast Club Mrs. Richard Abell of Pedro Mlguel entertained member of her breakfast club Wednesday morning at her home. Guests Included Mrs. W. F. Young. Mm. J. A. Dombrowsky, Mrs R. C. Metaaner, Mrs. Doro- thy Ounther. Mrs. Donald Hutchlaon and Mr. Bwmg Jour- ney. State "Stark Cratv aa New Month*** Mr. and Mrs. Theron Wlckans of tan Francisco, Cal,, announce the birth of a aon. Timothy Ev- ans, on Wednesday. March 26. Mr. and Mra. Oeorge Wlckena of Pedro Miguel are the paternal grandparents. (Mr. and Mrs. Clark Teegarden of Renton, wash., announce the birth of a son. John Clark, on Thursday. March M. Mr. Teegarden ll the former Margaret Haw. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer P Haw. former Canal Zone re- sident* now of Seattle. Wash. Visitors Leave Fer States Mr. and Mrs. Walter O. Ross of Washington. D.C. and Mrs. Ross' later. Mrs. Philip O. East- wick, aalled Friday aboard tha S.S. Ancon'for New York en route to their homes. During their atajr on the Isth- mus they were guests at the Ho- tel El Panama. Mr. And Mra. Bovd Leave For Louisiana Mr. and Mrs. James Bovd of Panama Olty left the Iethmus Thursday for New Orleans, where they will vacation for aev- ral weeks with relativa. Clemenela Dixon To Sing Tonight Misa Clemenela Dixon of Pe- dro Miguel, coloratura soprano will be presented In a concert this evening at 5 at the Albrook NCO Club. 8he will be accom- panied bv Mr. E. H. Beaumont. Miss blxon's hour-long pro- gram will Include the following number: "Pants Angelicas ' Ce larrranek; "Kiss Walts," Arditl; Will O' The Wip." Sproa: "Se- renade," Richard Strauss; "Suin- urtime." Gershwin: "Le Cid." Massenet; "La Boheme," Pucci- ni. ______ Tickets Available For Spring Festival tickets arc now on aale for the Spring Festival, sponsored by the Cathedral of St. Luk*. which will be held April 19 at Morgan's Gardens. Admission is 1.25 and children under twelve will be ad- mitted free If accompanied by an adult. Do FALSE TEETH Tickets, may be obtained at the cathedral office or from individ- ual member of the parish. Plans for the festival Include a native "bohio," a pet show, a food sale, motion picture show with several changes of program, pony rides, a basaar, a religious book sale, parcel post and white elephant auction, fortune tell- ing and a silhouette booth. The committee In charge of i the coming benefit affair are Colonel Virgil F. 8haw. chair- man: Mr. James M. Hunter, co- chairman; Captain John Brown, nubile relations; Mr. C. F. Hlnz, tickets end finance: Mrs. E.G. Abbott Mrs. W. H. Al ves. Mrs. Leonard Martin. Mrs. V. F. Shaw. Mrs. W. H. Peterson and Mr. E. J. Lucas. Garden Club To Meet The Cardenas River Garden Club will hold its regular supper meeting Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Morgan at Mlraflores. The program ia In charge of the book review group. Dr. Do- rothy Moody will review Herman Wouk's "Caine Mutiny," Rachel Carson's "The Sea Around Us," and Marianne Moore'B "Collect- ed Poems." All members and prospective members are Invited to attend. Art Exhibition On Display An exhibition of the work of Melvln Menges. self-taught artist from St. Thomas, Virgin Islands and now of Rodman. Is on dis- plav at the Jewish Welfare Board Gallery until AOrll 12. The dlsplav includes walerco- lor. a paneled screen and a pamted skirt. Bingo Tonight At Legion Club Bingo will be played tonight at 7:30 in the American Legion Club at Fort Amador. A door price and a 1100.00 jackpot are special attraction. Member and their guest are invited to attend and reminded that arrangement, hate been mada with the bua driver to take player directly to the club on request. Canal Zone Art League Meets Today The Canal Zone Art League will meet thla afternoon at 3 in the library of the Jewiah Wel- fare Board Center. Slides of central and South America and of the Islands will be shown by Mr. Bryan W. Vau- ghan, president of the league. Plan for the Beaux Arts Ball, which were formulated at the executive committee meeting Tuesday evening, will be pre- sented to the group. All members and those Inter- ested in Joining are Invited to attend. Voyage To Moon Tough Problem (BoJ WJ. By BARBARA WASHBURN NEW YORK, April S (UP) A capacity to enjoy many klnda of music is a good bit of equipment for living, according to Nadlne Conner, opera star. "Music is medicine for many illeven if you cannot play or sing a note." she aald. "Just to listen to music I healing. When you are nervous or tense it can calm you wonder- fully. When you are troubled it soothes." Miss Conner Is the mother of Seder To Begin Wednesday The "Festival of Freedom" Passover holiday will begin with the traditional Seder Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. In the Hotel TlvoII, under the sponsorship of trie Na- tional Jewiah Welfare Board. Civilians wishing to attend the Seder should make reservations by today, by telephoning or con- tacting the U80-JWB Armed orces Service center, telephone alboa 1072. Beta Sigma Phi To Meoi Alpha chapter of Beta Sigma Phi wlU hold its regular meetiiiK Tuesday evening at the sorority house in Curundu. Ramadan Caldron To Meet Wednesday The Hamadan Caldron will hold its regular meeting Wednes- day evening at 7:30 In the new Wlrg Memorial on Balboa Road. Canal Zone College Club Tea Tomorrow The Canal Zone College Club will hold it monthly meeting and tea at the Jewish Welfare Board-USO tomorrow at 3:45 p.m._______________ Sacramento Needs No Pied Piper SACRAMENTO, Calif. April 8 (UP) The Pied Piper of Ham- elln wouldn't be hired here. The city health department' annual rat population census showed there is only one rat for every five persons. Nationwide, there is ona rat for every man, woman and child. William Conwell. vermin con- trol specialist, aid the rat pop- ulation In Sacramento is only 27,920 compared to tht 400,000 es- timate it wa In 1945. Conwell said the extermina- tion program has gone about aa far as it can by chemical mean. PHILADELPHIA. April 6 (UP) The moon, with all its roman- tic significance, Is nothing but a reat, big problem to scientists. he problem Is how to reach it. Dr. I. M. Levitt, director of the Fels Planetarium In Philadel- phia, has an idea on how to eolve lt. Speaking at a meeting of the Rlttenhouse Astronomical Socie- ty. Dr. Levitt said a rocket ship about 230 feet long and 75 feet In diameter, shaped like a cigar, should do the job. The cost would be about 3200,000,000. The major problem 1 fuel. Dr. Levitt aald the best fuel today la a mixture of alcohol and liquid oxygen which could power a craft at a speed of two miles per second. That Isn't fast enough, how- ever, Dr. Levitt said the ship must attain the speed of "escape velocity," which la seven miles per second, before lt can break loose from earth's gravitational pull. Dr. Levitt said step rockets could provide the extra push for the ship to reach "escape veloci- ty." Once that speed is attained, the ship would revolve around the earth like a satellite. Then, he aald, it can be used as a Jumping off place for other craft, saving them the trouble of reaching "escape velocity" before |soaring Into the cosmos. The astronomer said a space ship satellite could be used for world-wide weather predictions, scientific vacuum experiments, a 'radar beacon for navigators a- 1 round the wOrld and cler er ob- servations of the universe by as- tronomer, he flrt nation to put a satellite rocket into pace will control the earth, he predicted. By United Fres The medical history of the Ci- vil War is covered In many of Its phase in two books recently published. One book, Doctors in Blue (Schuman) was written by Dr. George Worthing ton Adams and deals with the triis and tribula- tions the Federals had in setting up an adequate medical system for the Union Army. Dr. Adams also write of the method Civil War surgeons ued. the diseases they came up against which ma- ny of them hadn't seen before and how the hospital system was'children, aa well as~a"busy"prima organised. | donna of the Metropolitan Ope- The second book on the med- ra. Her husband is Dr. Laurence cal aspects of the war Is Cyclone jHeacock. In Calico, by Nina Brown Baker a a mother, she has aome (Little Brown). It Is the story of ideas for other parents on musl- Mary Ann Bickerdyke. of whom cl training for children. Hei General Sherman once aid, "he idea is not necessarily peclal outranks me." jmuaic lesson, although she Mother Bickerdyke, as the sol-thinks that' fine if the young- diers called her, was more an or- ter want to play or ling. Ra- ganlser than a nurse, although ther, she favors learning to know she sat with many a wounded land enjoy music, soldier and soothed him while hei "When I was a child," the slng- was waiting for the surgeon. tr said, "time were often ha.d Mr. Bickerdyke organized a in our home and there were al- servlce to provide dressings, ways a lot of mouths to feed. We blankets and such commodities, had an old upright piano in the She had many an argument with ning room, though. One of us officers but always managed to- would start to play. Then, as come off best because she cultl- though it were a magnet, one by vated Oenerals Orant, Sherman, on* we would come from all over Thomas and Loa an in her work the house until everyone was In the western hospitals.... there, all singing together. ------, ... "At those moments we'd The Army Department' oifl- get financial worries and Atlantic S^ocietu &, 195, (Jmlmm V,t*km. Qmlmm 37$ clal history, U.S. Army In World things we lacked. The War II. has been supplemented made up ,OT every thing. I think with two volumes of photographs muIic WM the baals for our covering the Mediterranean and whole home life." European theater of operations. I MiM Conner Is horror-stricken The volumes are entitled The at the old-fashioned approach in War Against Germany and lta- whlch t cnl]d s totf he mUgt ly: Mediterranean and Adjacent practice ao many minute and no Areas and The War Against Ger- llBaJ m gpJte 0f his capacity to many: Europe and Adjacent A- enjoy or absorb the lesson. She reas and are available from the thinks it a shame to drag a child Government Printing Oi'J'.i-ioff to a symphony concert and Washington, D.C. or through bookstores. A third volume of photographs covering the Pacific Theater I m Separation. Photos were selected o give a full presentation as possible of terrain, type of riage of their daughter, Barbara weapons and equipment, living|never forced to go on. and weather conditions, combat Better a good five minutes and human Interest. The plc-!than a bad half hour and the ii0tt Roa nf Mrs Mathilda UalW%o^ea^fIV.hr0n0,0B'" Same 55.* ^^ t0 ^'^'^Sui'wSllfSS'l cally for easy reference.... 'sic, she said. - Miss Conner think no one Pansioni Depicted should ever feel Inferior or "on Hatred and passion are the tne defensive" about his musical themes of the latest wotk of ^owi^ge OT lack of lt. Francois Mauriac. one of Eu-1 flhe believes everyone likes Rock. Slid* or Slip? rASTIETH. an Improved ow fumo Mota moro flnnl* In pta mi*, aitp or reek- rio fatxe Mota moro flrmly ' . re oroai at any drug Moro. enture *KkGo.Ai: nviu, ico De not not tour. Check* attoa, ._ 1!%5La*s '" ?raMo, get 0Mf..Em W. Sraawtot at taUo rodof oa yo-j can fla*Vorlt ana lira la comfort. D*7| uSV .*,! an ftnftciVD tooor. Created (especially forU VC ou New hair- dos as dis- tinctive a s your own personality I Specially for Easter I by our expert stylist: o LORETTA GLENN ANN MADDEN JEAN SCOGGINS o CARMEN GRANADO CALL FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY! 2-1322 DIABLO HTS. BEAUTY SHOP LOUISE HARTMAN, Manager (formerly Ancon Beauty Shop) for- th music make him sit still for an hour or more listening to music he does not understand. "It la very bad to force music on a child," Miss Conner.said. When her own six-year-old son DAKE-MeGVIRE ENGAGEMENT ANNOINCED The engagement of Miss Diane Elaine Dare daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hunter Dare of Oatun to Sergeant Bernard James McGuire is announced today by her parents. Sergeant McGuire is the aon of Mr. and Mrs. Denl Pa- trick McGuire of the Bronx, New York City. He has served for the past four year In the United States Army on th lathmu, and Is attached to "C" Battery of the 903 AAA. Miss Dare Is a senior at Cristobal High School. The wedding will take place In the early summer. Mia Barbara Koperskl Weds W. E. Elliott Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Koperskl tires at his piano lesson, he is of Crist0bal announce the mar- Farewell Party Given by Colonel and Mrs. Smith Testimonial Baneaot for Pony League C A banquet was gives}fj the ballroom of the Margarita Club- house Wednesday eveninj to honor members of the Pony , League and the men who have done so much to make tht League a success. Parents and members of the families of play- ers were present with the mem- bers of the teams. Seated at the head table were Mr. Carl Newhard. master of ceremonies: Messrs E. 6. Mac- Snarran, Luke Palumbo. Carter Curtis. Chief Felix Karplnskl, William Hughes, James Camp- bell, president of the. league; Gerhardt Lust, George C. Carl* sen. J. R. Roblnette, Gedrge Wal- dron and Charles Bath, who re- present d thr sooisorlngorgani- zation, The American Legion The teams occupied sjjfcgle ta- ri 5 and were accompamed by iliplr managers and "loaches. i With the Margarita tea* were M rs Edward Blount Jfcd Noel on. Mr. David TolBjKn and Chief J. V. Berube were seated with the Shamrock Team. Chief Briggs and Mr. Eugene Didltr were seated with the C P.O. team and Messrs Irl Sanders, Jr., and Michael Oreene w*fe with the Bulck team. LA.W.f. Board Meeting The board of the Infer-Amert- ean Woman" Club will meet to- morrow at S:30 pjn. at the club building. A reception will be b*H from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday. ApW 14, at the club building to elebrate Pan American Day. This affair will take the place of the month- ly general assembly for April. Bishop Gooden Meets with Cae* Solo Ladres The Rt. Rev. R. Heber Gooden. Bishop of the Missionary District of the Panama Canal Zone, met Thursday afternoon with the Coco Solo representatives of the Bella Vista Children's Home. Mrs. L. L. Koepke, wife of the commanding officer of th* rope's great contemporary nov- ome kind 0f muslc-the kind hi lisia, to reach the United States.1 lnn.r p^gon i in tune with"-* The Weakling and The Enemy -nd tnal.B the riBhfc kind for him. (Pellegrini a"d Cudahy) consists'" of two unrelated stories. The fint hardly more than a long short story, the second a long novel- ette. "The Weakling" Is a boy of 12. backward almost to the point of Imbecility, hated by his frustra- ted mother as Is his equally A farewell cocktail and buffet [Coco Solo Naval Station, w* supper party was given by Col, Ihostess for the meeting, which and Mrs. Myron Smith at their' was held at her quarters. Jean, to Mr. Walter Edwin El-'Fort Gullek quarters last night, i The women present included representatives from the dlffer- The honor guests were MaJ. ent organizations on the station, and Mrs. Clayton Motrre Capt. From the Officers' Wlvea Club and Mrs. Vincent Oberg and Lt. were Mrs. W. E. Thompstn and and Mrs. Rov Wllkerson. Mr. H. E. Walther. Mm. H. Out-of-town guests were Lieut. Turner represented the wives of COl. and Mrs. Francis Brophy of the chiefs, Mrs. John Maok and Rio de Janeiro. Mrs. T. T. Hanna represented the enlisted men's wtvei and from the C P.O. Wlvs Chy were Mrs. J. V. Berube. Mrs. f. , ville, Cal. The double ring ceremony took place Friday, March 21. at 8:30 p.m. In the chapel of the First Presbyterian Church at Oakland, Cay., with members of Mr. El- liott's family and a few friends Dr. and Mrs. Morris attending. I Entertain with Dinner and Mr. O. M. a woman a generation his senior. a story of passion against the re- pressions of relisrlon. Dr. and Mrs. Vestal Morris of N. Johnson The bride chose for the occa-'Gatun entertained a group of Lowe, slon a navy blue suit with friends with dinner at their rest- matching accessories. idence last night Birthday Dinner Guest from the Pacific Side at America Consulate Following the ceremony they [Included Mr. George Bennett, Mrs. Charles Whltakar' w* stayed at the St. Francis Hotel In Mr. and Mrs. Philip Thornton, hostess for a dinner party at th San Francisco before flying to Mr. and Mrs. Allen Lowery and American Consulate Frlda-y ever *t vnpv /un Th uh.Lo Angele for a honeymoon at'Mr. James Smoot. lng to honor her husband, t IK, (UP)L_inesuDi t,^,,^^^, D~..ir Hnt.i.i American Consul at Coldn. on hf The Atlantic Side guests were birthday anniversary. Mrs. William Parsons, Miss A group of eight friend cele- Stella Gallo. Mr. and Mrs Sam- brated with the honor guut. uel Puller, Dr. and Mr. Harry I ----- Eno. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cana- Mr. German VWtlng la Iflaml vagglo, Mr. and Mrs. Anthonv Mr. Marie Gorman of Oatun Raymond. Mr. and Mrs. E. 8. left bv plane yesterday for a vls- MacVittle and Mr. Robert Fret- It of two weeks with her broths. backward father. Little Gull-!iet of this column U flux. Flux, thiHollywood_- Roosevelt Hotel laume sees for a few happy hours la not a vacuum cleaner. Neither i and a trm to ^ataiina hope of real life, In which heiu it a soap flake-It Is the lates !MElHotls an instructor at hope of a real Ufa, in which he i is It a soap may become a normal boy. word In American "The Enemy" Is the story of a,painting. ,., ,., for i love affair between a youth and. Flux has been invented by Elllott advanced Danville Union High School. In [the commercial department, Mr. .. i.. rm. t i it .a t. a Hum sunace oy pouring; ' Both The Weakling and The aripplng. painting is thus done Enemy, sharply characterized, 1%- gravitation or rotation. The KnurMer'r'lld.0 who SSST h5|g"[Motor Sales Co. In Walnut tttat^i^ssir*are resldin*,n flulH surface by pouring onuanvuie. land. (Contiaasd Paga tM) powerfully written, told without the waste of a word, are works which will strengthen Mauriac's position as one of the leading writer of these times.... artist may Interfere in this "au- tomatic creation by natural law" as Mr. Merrlld calls it. He may also abstain and let gravitation do the Job. Flux Is not th product of an erratic phantasy. For centuries It Is not often that the fertile field of Walts, the Celtic fastness IL'-rT eratton has" freed itself of Britain's main island is reap- from artlatlc rulM Mtabllsh- ed for material for a .first-rate . ^ predecessors. As time " went on. the pace of change has quickened. Bigger and bigger chunks were chipped off the bo- dy of tradition. Then, about 12 years ago. a group of young American paln.- ers rejected the entire tradition. Even that was not enough for them. They declared their oppo- sition to Ideas and associations, thinking and feeling. They want- ed to be free from everything, eacept their own sensitivity. Later some members of this group declared that even the no- tion of freedom was a hindrance. So we came to flux, where even the activity of arranging the paint on the canvas Is left to chance happening caused by rotation. It amount to the pronounce- novel. Qwyn Thomas, who has won a name for himself at home, has done it In The World Cannot Hear You (Boston. Little, Brown). The little town of Meadow Prospect is the setting for a rich, earthy, Intensely human comedy. Th ordinary men of Meadow Prospect are the heroes their arguments In Orlando's potato chip "bar" and In the pubs, their music and their struggles make up the book. Forest Fires Staged In UCLA Laboratory NEW ZEALAND TTWWCT wytatikti BERKELEY, Cal.. April S (UP) Roaring forest fires are being ... ---------- created in miniature in Unlver- ment of the artist s lrresponslDll- sltv of California laboratories to ity for his own work, safeguard California forests from' It Is obviously the end or tne the woodsman's worst enemy, i road. .. . Prospective fire fighters study i Paul Mocsanyl methods of combating blazes In | canyons and on mountain ridg- es in both heavy windstorms and quiet atmospheric conditions. Fuel types as well as land and wind conditions vary hi the for- est fire laboratory operated by, the school of forestrv of the unl- (Compiled by Publishers' Weekly) versity's agricultural college. 'M*ii!?, The new fire fighter sees the^ THE CAINE MUTINY &./ Se/h m large timber fire develop and then die under control in the la-' boratory miniature. He also Is given theoretical background. It enable him to gam maximum, proficiency from limited expe-, rience In the field. . Beers, Portwine Join Armed Forces MADISON. Wls. (UP) Re- cruiting Sgt. Charles H. Bond of I the local Army and Air Force re-; crultlng station had his choice1 of Beers and Portwine. He decided to take both. Bond signed up Eugene D. Beers of Deerfleld and Kenneth L. Portwine of Srn Prairie anJ sent them on their way to Lack- land Air base. Herman Wouk. MY COUSIN RACHEL Daphne du Maurler. THE CRUEL 8EA Nicholas Monsarrat. BFARKOFLIFE Erich Maria Remarque. THE SWIMMING POOL Mary Roberts Rlnehart. THE PRESIDENT'S LADY Irving Stone. Non-rietiea THE SEA AROUND US Rachel L. Carson A MAN CALLED PETER Catherine Marshall. I LED3 LIVES Herbert A. Philbrlck. SHOW BIZ Abel Green & Joe Laurie Jr THE NEW YORKER T W E N- TY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY ALBUM a new Champion in the low price field a new Commander 120 -horsepower V-l Exciting jet-streamed styling! Spectacular '52 performance! Remarkable gas economy! l Open until 9 :00 p.m. TODAY SUNDAY AGENCIAS PANAMERICANAS, SA Calle Jernimo de la Ossa Panana City (Down the street from El Rancho Carden) r\r.E six WK tNDAT AMERICAN SUNDAY, APRIL , lMfl You Sell em...When You Tell em thru P.A. Classifieds! Lave your A<1 with out of our Agenls or our Offices u, No. 57 "H" Street Panama l\o 12,179 Central Ave. Colon 1 j^pis Service >4 TivoU Ave. Saln de Belleza Americano Phone 2-2281. and #55 West tath Street Carlton Drug Store 10,059 Melendez Ave.Phone 255 Coln Mrrison's |rth o July Ave.-Phone 2-9441 Agencia Internacional de Publicaciones Propaganda, S.A. S Lottery P,aza Phone 2-3199 'S^STmSTSJ^^ " Minimum for 12 words. 3c. each additional word. r4 mi*^ cover? L (tkt kiTwdh mm OR SALE Hoiisclio'il LE: Complete houshol< furnishings 3 piece over stuife. li\hngroom set; rugs; youth bco; sttoller; carrioge ond mise items, cofrwind see for yourself. 822-/ Ernpire St.. upstairs. FOR' SjrNLE:Coldspot Refrigerotci 25 4yc?o. porcelcin inside end out $00.00. Veneticn blinds. $25 CC Mfet sell. House 33", Apt. 2, Ma- mil Ploce, Ancon. ____ FOR SALE: General Electric Refri- gerators, woshing machines. raa;0 receivers, mixers, tooster, waff.e irons and clocks at HOGAR MODERNO 104 Cent rol Avenue 104 FOR"SAL:Ook dining table, six chairs sideboard. $4C, chiffome , $10; d'resser. $14. Hojse 760-C, Barnebv Street. Bolboo. FOR .SALE:8 ft Frigidoire, colonc gas stove and miscellaneous pieces fu/niture Price for quick disposol. Leaving. Tel. Panamo 3-2060. 1949 Oldsmobile 2-door Se- dan. This car sure has ev- erything. Seat covers, radio, rain vents, spotlights, at a ver good and reasonable orice. For sale at Smoot y Hunnicutt. S.A. 16th Street Central Ave. Coln Tel. 800. FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS AiitMiimlxli'- Service Personnel and Civilian Government Employe be sote for your Automobile financing Imiit on Government Employes Finance Co. of Fort Worth. Texas r.sw office at No. 43 Automobile Row .Next doer to the Firestone Bui'dmg olso through your auto dealer We sove you money on Financing and lnsurcr.ee also direct loans on automobiles AGENCY DEHLINGER Phone 3-4984 3-4985 Now on di:ploy the new 1952 Stude- boker. Agencios Pon-Americonas. S.A. Open until 9:00 p.m. See the new 1952 Studcboker todoy on disploy until 9:00 p.m. daily. Agencios Pan-Americanos, S. A. The best buy for your money in 1952 the new Studebaker. See it todoy ot Agencios Pan-Americonos, S.A. below the El Roncho. FOR SALE:1948 Chevrolet Style- ma ter. 4 door, Sedan Perfec. c:r t:on. $950. S/Sgt. Chombers Tel, 6174. Albrcok. Helo Wanted FOR SAL1:: 1950 Chcv-olet. 4 door. De-Luxe Scdon. 5.500 miles, seat covers, floor mots, excellent con- dition. $1.500 Balboa 2370, Ca- labash St. 1508. Looking for economy? Come in for a demon.Ircton of the new 19521 Studrbcker Champion. Agencio; I Pan-Ame; Tcn=".. S.A. Do yen ove trinkm fofctomr Writ* Alcoholic Anooymom to. 2031 Ancon. C. 1 FOR SALE Miscellaneoiif FOR SALE: EASTER GIFT. Police puppies. Look them over. House i 0 Prospect Street, one woy street to Quarry Heights. Telephone Bolboo 2820. FOR SALE To person having free entry privilege: Revolver, Smith & Wesson 38 speciol. with essential accessories. Winchester 75, 22 col. target rifle with special sights, etc. Ammo for both. 1410-B Carr Street, evenings. F03 SALE25 cycle, new Westing- house Refrigerotor, 25 cycle. Norge Mongle. 1941 Pontiac, 4 door, 5 new tfres, radio, new pla;- tic and nylon upholstery, excel- lent condition. 1470-D Holdon St. Balboa. Phone 2-2635. FOR SALE: Power tools, jointor band saw, planer, sander, circular saw, air compressor, coffee tables playpen, pick-up truck. Coll 4-175 or 2-4207. Ask Murphy for de- tails. FCS SALE:-Childs bed. Mahcgony twin beds beauty rest mottresses. CLINICAL MICROSCOPE; portable lypewrirer. Othe items. 8071 Eight Street, New Cristobal. Doctor Hamm. WANTED:Good coo!-, good iolory. Apply 5Cth St. No. 5. Ap'. 5. be- Hijeen 8:00 o.m. to 11:30 cm. HELP WANTED:Cook house keep- er-live in. Must hove references Ab^jly ofter 5 o'clock corner D-l ond C-2 Street. Congreio. " WANTED Mieel!me>f WANTED:- -Solni t for Chrrtion Scifnce Church. Serviceman pre- ferred For ruHition pleo;e call Cfirtobal 3-2546. WANTED BY AMERICAN FAMILY unfurnished house, 3 or 4 bed- ropmT" preferably with spacious garden. Elvin Seibert, Americon Erjioossv. 3-0010.___________.___ '. WANTED TO RENT: -- House in ccfJWgt within driving distance of; cinE'.briefer piece where can have; !;-ns end oorden. Gen. Del. V. ') Dixon. Sii'deb''.er owners come in and in- spect cur sales o-d ;-rvice taeil- itirs. See Hie new 1952 Studcbske- now on disploy. Agencios Pan- Americanos. S.A. FCR SALE:Notional communica- tions receiver model NC240D 500 to 30.000 K.C. with speaker 25 cy:!j. House 8023-B.- Margarita. Co tcr orders for baby orchids deliv- ery onywhore United States token until April 8:h. Local orders until April 12th, Couquets, corsages for all occosions. Telephone Orchid Garden. Panamo 3-07"" I. Atlantic Side, Cristobal 1033. Here is the buyA Rood used 1949 Chevrolet 4-door Styline Deluxe, In perfect condition, five good tires, body in excellent shape, verv low mileage. Onlv this week for sale at Smoot v Hunnicutt. S.A. 16th Street Central Ave. Coln Tel. 890. :OR SALE iat> K M'-ton K(fi:FKhing boat 25 feet, llefif cond.tion. Suntlcy at Dio- h!pr*e scout landing. Coll Curun- ri(3l94 evenings. l*OR SALE -^'#trrvcli* FOK SALE:1947 Ponriac. 2 door. Excellent condition. 647 Coscades. Tel. 2-3750. ________ FOR SALE1948 FleetlinT ChevoTet. excellent condition, radio and spot- light. Phone Colon 867-B. To cell or buy your next automobile . sec: Aoencies Cosmos, Auto-Row No. 29. Tel. Panama 2-4721. Open oil day on Saturdays. FCR SALE1950 Mercury, 4 "door Seden, color m.-:oon. general con- dition excellent. About 17.000 miles. O.-igln-l .owner. Telephone Pc-nen-a 3-2060. FOR SALE: -1949 V-8 Ford Tuo'or Cuitom Sedan. 5612-D Hodge: Plo-e. Di.-No Height', cfter 4 p.rr 5-fii.V-.y and Sunday 10 o.m. . 6 p.m. FOR SALE:Smoll desk. Sofas, lorge and smoll. Teo tables. RCA 12 tube radio. Record changer. Bed. Dxeckfast set. Kitchen cupboard MOTORCYCLE parts. Lorge two plate electric stove. Misc., items I 50 Prospect Street, one way street to Quarry Heights. Phone Balboa 28.20. FC2 SALE:Must sell immediately poetically new, blondr Spinet piano, mode by Shoninger. Telephone Pa- nomo 3-2060. FOR SALE:Six piece bamboo set, two strond with innerspring cush- ion. Phone 2-2857. RESORTS Visit Santo Claro, Rio Mar. ond other beach resorts, with our Mercedes- Benz air conditioned buses. Safest ond most luxurious. We pick up passengers anywhere. For reserva- tions ond additional information, call Panama 2-4859. COSTA RICA Cotolina Holiday Ca- bins. For reservations coll 3-3794. Ponamj, Box 2075, Ancon. CASINO SANTA CLARA DANCE. Music by Cosino'Aces. Make your re- servations early. Saturday, April 5th ond 12th. PhHIiom. Oceonsidt cottage. Sonta Claro Bo* 43J Balboa Phono Ponomo 3- 187'/. Cntobol 9- 1673 ~" SPEND* EASTER SUNDAY at CASINO SANTA CLARA with Azcarroga & His Orchestra Make your reservotions early. ^UMMtKUAL 7 PROFESSIONAL We have everything to keep vour Lawn ind Harden beautiful daring the dry season ponis Wneelbarrow* Hose insecticides Fencing Fertilizers Spravers Weedkillers Sprinklers Fungicides CEO. F. NOVEY, INC. 27 Central Ave. Tel. 3-0140 FOR RENT House* FOR RENT:New cottoge in New Cristobal for three months. Any reasonable o.ler considered. Cris- tbal 3-2573. FCR RENT:Completely furnished two bedroom cottage located t U.uaguay Street No. 4. for a per- iod of six months. Coll 2-2154. Alter 5 p.m. call 3-2326. FOR RENT:Chalet in Via Belisario Porras No. 218. Coll Tel. 3-1332. I-OK KfcHT Apartments ALHAMIRA APARTMENTS Modern furnished unfurnished oport- ments. Meld service optional. Con- tort office 8061. 10th Street. New Cristobal, telephone '386 Colon. FORWENT:VAtATION quarters. Moy to September. 150 Prospect Street, one woy street to Quarry Heights. Phone Balboa 2820, FOR 'JfcLE:Harley Davidson In A-1 shofe $175.00. See ot Pedro M.-| guFi ire Station, anytime. Beware Exploding Tubes, Television Engineers Warn StENECTADY. NY., April 5 fUP)*- General Electric Co. sci- entist! warn that the greatest danger In handling picture tubes of tejvision receivers lies in ac- cidenfel breakage Trni tubes, they explain, con- tain } vacuum and the pressure of thW outside air may cause an '"implbsion."' meanlne an Inward InsteaM of outward explosion. FragiaJents oi glass living at high fceetl may ran.se serious In- jury > the person handling the tube.. Th*JOE scientists advise wear- ing gfcves and a protective fac- ial rnpsk in handling picture tube; -.<----------------------- FOR SALE1947 Ford Tudor 6. Low mileage, $750 or best offer. Must sell. House 357. Apt. 2, Mamei Ploce, Ancon. PotWymore Plans Jamaica Hostelry PatlJce Wymore has been con- ferring with architects over t"e constjbetion of the luxnrv hotel which she plans to build in Ja- maicB B.W.I. The* actress soon to be seen oppoffte Randolph firott in t^e echnfeolor urocluc ion "Man With a Gun." has already sup -- vlieri 'preliminary sketches of the hotel Miss Wymore and her husband Brroljflvnn expect to leave this KbOM for Kingston J ir lea, ^^^he will complete pi structure. transportation 1941 Super 2-doot Sedan. tires, excellent body. ale at a wry cheap Mat V Hunnic utt. roln IRth Street Cen- Are. Tel. 800. Big Machine To Ted Bisi'dmo Materials P^^HLEHEM. Pi.. (UP) _ Pind'ng the lightest, chenpest and best building materials is a goal of T.ehlen University. Dr Martin D. Whitaker. n'esident of the I'nlversitv. anno'ticed plans for the world's largest vertical universal testing machine. Which will be constructed on the cam- pus. Dr. Whitaker said the nrolec.t wouH be made in co-operation' with the Bethlehem Steel Co, and would cost about $1.200 000 The new building housing t'"r- machine Is schedul-ri to be open- ed In September 1954. Jona'han Jones chief er>tki- eer of fabricated steel construc- tion of Bethlehem Steel, said the machine will test to desfnctinn the huge columns and pirders basic to modern slruotures. FOR SALE: Woodworking lathe, .drill press, tilting arbor 10 inch bench saw. bond saw, 6 Inch jointer planer. All w th motors and many accessories. Also mony mis- cellaneous woodworking tools, in fact practically compete work hop. Most tools in new condition. Will only sell complete shop but at brrgom. Telephone Panamo 3-2060. FOR SALE:1949 Mercury Conver- tible, excellent condition, cver- rlr.ve. radio, etc table rodio. Cu- rundu 83-6179, evenings. FOR SALE:30" wood lothe with accessories, 6 ea. 60 cy. 1/3, 1/2, 1 PH. 110 V. motor. 3 ea.. 25 cy.. 1/4, 1/3, 1 PH. 110 V. Phone Ft. Cloyton 5197, Saturdoy and Sunday. FOR SALE:Walsh baby carriage, car bed combination with mattress, $20. Excellent condition. 2-2896 Bolboo. 1948 Plymouth Special De- laxe 4-door with leather, radio and five good tires, very good price. Easy pay- ments. For sale at yonr lo- cal dealer in town. Smoot y Hunnictitt. S.A. 16th St. Central Ato., Coln Tel. 800. Position Offered LUX VENETIAN BLINDS Immediate Delivery. Tel. 3-1713 #22 E. 29th St PANAMA BROKERS. INC. Rote) El Panama Selling: Rorntal Product I'urrxa y Luz (preferred) Panam tnuranre Co. Buying: Aceite Urraca and Brewery. Tel. 3-4719 3-1660 MODERN FURNITURE riviioM hiii i Siipcc-vei Keunholstery visn on* SROW-ROOMI Alberto Here i r at i una 17 (Aetonoblle Row) r*rec IMimiii- Pickup A Delivery Tel S-441* :SS .m lo l:M o.m. DR. B. L. STONE Chiropractor STONE CLINIC 7th St. & Justo Arosemena Ave. Coln Tel. 457 WANTEC: Experienced sales girl with good references. Must speak Engiiih and Spanish fluently. Write 8ox 323, Ponomo, R. P. WANTEDExperienced beauty oper-| ator. Gencll Bliss, Cocoli Clubhou'e Beauty Shop. Telephone 4-557 days. 4-230 evenings. Transportes Baxter, S. A. Shipping, moving, storage. We pack and crate or move anything. 'Phone 2-2451, 2-2562, Panam. WANTED: First closs Americon beauty operator. Balboa Clubhouse Sho->. Coll shop. Bolboo 2959 or residence. Balboa 2657. I-OK SALt Real Estate COSTA RICA the ideol place for re- tirement. We offer you beautiful landscaped homes. Third down ond balance long terms. Contact Jock. Tel. 3-3794. Panama. Box 2075 Ancon. HX HOUSEHOLD EXCHANGE For the best values in both new and reconditioned fur- niture. WE BUY AND SELL. 41 Automobile Row Tel. 3-4911 Mothers, hoppy, heolthy feet start in the crodl? Protect baby's pre- cious feet witt JUMPING JACK Shoes from cradle to 4 veors Ex- clusively 01 BABYLAND No 40. 44th. Bell. Visto Tel 3-1259. FOR SALE: DUPONT Points and varnishes "Covers more oreo" "Stay on longer" at HOGAR MODERNO 104 Central Avenue 104 rroctvf'If Keeps Guard On*** B-nc -'e DARWIN. Australia. Anril 5 hii Tt hr-s an l-'novaMon |-i watrh.- doijg to fn-rrj the public's money a c'orodlle NifOfiemus has become a staff net and has been trained to bar!: at the aDToach of stranners. Rrzor sharp teeth a^d l'i?ht- nin--like movements rh->i''d be eno'h to deter any thief, the bank thinks. FOR SALE:Safe, very strong 60 x 36 x 26". Ave. Norte No. 47. -Tel. 2-3193. Dr. E. A. PEREZ Veterinary Surgeon Gradu ed from Kansas. Cornell and Ohio State University. Day and Night Service. 42 Via Belisario Porras Phone: 3-2113 Golf Balls Provide Attractive Hobby WOOSTER. O.. fUP) What started as a paretakership of an asparagus patch has grown into a large hobby for Mrs. Beatrice Ebert. Mrs. Ebert has a collection of 1,450 golf balls of nearly all makes and no duplications. The hobby started eight years ago when a neighbor moved. I leaving Mrs. Ebert her three- acre asparagus patch. It was ad- jacent to a golf course and while tendin the asparagus shoots. Mrs. Ebert began to fl id golf balls alongside the^weeds. She started off by slmnlv Dut- tlng them in a bag until a local golfrr suggested turning the finds Into a hobby In addition to finding bails near h^r home, Mrs. Ebert trar'es some of her items for others to fill in the collection. Every 1 t'er of the ."'"hnbet is inph'rieri ex- cept "Y Even "X" and "Z" a-e rep'esen'ed with st'ch trrde- m-rks as "XX-SreMal" and "Zip." Those she Drlzes most highly h*ve vnu'ual names such as "Srtuaw Creek" and "Jack Pot " One br-11 bears the name '"Robert Tart." The brlls lookin like eggs In a hatchery in their cae. nre ar- ranged In' alphabetical order. ALADDIN KEROSNK. MANTLE LAMP Burns SO Hour on 1 Gal. of Kerosene. Use 94% air and only 6"0 kerosene SS.95 Lowest Prices Distributors: WONG CHANG. S.A. Colon: 9th St. & Balboa Ave. Tel 303. Panama: 93 Central Ave. Tel. 2-2087 LEARN!! Ballroom Dancing At Its Best! Balboa 'V r write hax Its Balboa llaincll a Dunn O a ii a la c INSTANT Fat-Free Powdered Milk (forttfleX rltb Vitamin ID tritl Fresh Flavor louche only stainless steel In ororrssing OIsnlves Ins- tantly hi roM r Ir water On Sale In P C Co I ommisurln BERT SAYS: ' "Look st mend do wfftvt I do. When I see thai FL^SH. I don't wait EVEN A HALF SECOND. I DUCK to void mote thin* flying through the eir. At the same time. I COVER up my bead end neck for protection. It'i ee.y. Now you try it. Quick noj>. DUCK end COVER. Good." ,*,, I.. gtoNTINUED IN THE NEXT ISSUEI New Asteroid Found Crossing Earth's Course Ulontic Society.,. I (Continued From Paje FIVE) j fr. BUI Badders, in Mian/l, Plo- .ida. / Mr. Badders Is a -student In the Emery-Riddle School of Ae- ronautics and at presfnt is tak- ing commercial pilot training. Mrs. Pachanee / Complimented with Shower Mrs, H. T. Jones of the Coco Solo Naval Statjfon was hostess for a shower at her quarters Thursday afternoon in honor of Mrs. A. M. Pachanee. WASHINGTON. D.C. April 5 Astronomers call them aster- oids, meaning "little stars. They are* flying mountains whirling through the solar sys- tem Juggernauts of stone and metal weaving among the plan- iets. Only rarely does one come I near the earth. Recently, one did. basket, The seventh asteroid known to gifts, cut across the earth's orbit was ... discovered on August 31. 1951, on After the Riitswerf opened, a photographic plates of Palomar Rame was played and the prize Observatory's 'Big Schmidt" sky wairwon by Mrs. D. R. Briggs survey telescope, the National, The pink, blue and white color Geographic Society reports. ^^me was carried out in the The new minor planet, tenta- Ptel coloring of the refresh- tlvelv named T51RA, measures ments and In carnations and hy- onlyone to two miles across. At drangeas which time of discovery it was about punch One corner of the living room was decorated with a clothesline holding crepe paper garments susoended over a pink and white which contained the 119,000.000 miles from earth, go- ,ing away. It had been about 1.- 000.000 miles closer a few days before. Following Its orbit through encircled the bowl. Parasols in these shades were suspended over the table. Mrs. A. J. Prien presided at the punch bowl and Mrs. K. E. space, the asteroid Is now at its Sterner served the sandwiches greatest distance from the sun' Other guests were: Mrs i. V. and beginning to swing back. al-'Bover. Mrs. W. P. Cary Mrs. J. though its distance from earth F. Cranford. Mrs. S. C. Dills, will continue to increase until Mrs. P. R. Gardner. Mrs SL later this year Gerszewski. Mrs. R. W. Hill. "1951RA probably will never Mrs. F. S. Lawson, Mrs. A. P. approach the earth more closelv Monahan. Mrs. A. B. OBnen. than 3.500.000 miles." Dr. Leland Mrs W. B. Redman. Mrs. K. E. R. Cunningham of the Unlversl- Sterner. Mrs^ J. K^ Vae. Mrs P. tv of California at Berkelev cal- A. Welch. Mrs. R. L. Oatridge. ciliated for astronomers of the Mrs. G. J. Hyfantus. Mrs. A. National Geographic Soeiety-Ca- P. Brown, Mrs D. J. Lepore Mfornla Institute of Technology and Mrs. C. J!. Cullens. Skv Survey now in its third year Friends who were unable to at- at Palomar Observatory. tend but sent gifts were Mrs. L. "Such a close approach Is not H. BeckHead. Mrs. H. DOrto- .exnected for manv veers, and ra. Mrs. D. E. Duncan, Mrs. G. cannot even be predicttd at pre- Grassl. Mrs. W. J. Nooiian Mrs. I sent," he said. Fred Bell and Mrs. L. N. Utter. The asteroid's next return to X7.T7, he point on its orbit nearest the United print Officials is,,r,_the "perihelion" polnt Return to Isthmus will take nlace in Noember. As Mr. William E. Adams, een- \t h"ots across the earth's orbit, eral agent of the United Fruit it will not come closer than a- Comoany. arrived home ve.ter- bout 100.000,000 miles. Early in day from a business trip through 1954 it mav approach to "several Central America and to New Or- tens of millions of miles." | leans and New York _____________-------------------- Mr. Samuel Puller arrived M C..* Cinmnrh with Mr. Adams. He left last Sa- 011 jQnS jTOmacn turday to join Mr. Adams in San Salvador. OUTLINES Ins .eMOu . FAITH FOSTER (above), will begin a new series of programs entitled "Fads and Fashions," beginning tomorrow morning at 9:30 over station HOG. Miss Foster recently arrived from the states where she has had considerable experience with radio programs for women. She also is an accomplished singer. ---------------- .., ,- i n Fightingest Family Has Proud Record Dines On Eggs Flips VANCOUVER. April 5 (UP> It's fortunate that William Doug- las Haining likes egg flips. They are about all he can eat. Haining has no stomach. It was removed at a Montreal hos- pital. The 47-year-old master marin- er was commanding a tanker in the Far East 10 years ago when he was captured in Borneo by the Japanese. Three years of maltreatment, bad food and hard labor in Japanese camos 'wrecked Hatnmg's stomach. His weight, withered away from 135 pounds to 85. H-ining is now home trying to nut on weight to undergo a fur- ther operr.tion. Everv two hour* he o'iaffs an egg flip, a concoction ot egg and iuniner juice gin. The e<"> flins Hiiininp says, of- fpr a welcome suoolee~it from the uninspiring o'herl'f'ids and Intra-musci'lar and intra-ven- ous infections to give him nour- ishment. Mrs. Puller Returns from States Mrs. Samuel Puller and her young son, Sam, returned yester- day from a short visit in Balti- more, Maryland. Practically new 1940 Buick Itiiadmaslrr 2-door Sedan. This excellent buv has ev- erything. Radio, seal covers. T spotlights, back-up lights. 5 good tires. Easv pavments. Smoot v Hiinnirort. S.A.. Coln Tel. 00. 18th Street Central Avenue.________ nr^mmmnmmmmi^wrr** 1959 Buick Special 4-door Sedan, beautiful bine fin- ish. Firestone WSW tires, chrome trimmed. Under- coated, radio, seat covers, low mileage. Easy pay- ments. Smoot v Hunnicutt. S.A. Colon 16ih St. Central Ave.. Tel. 800. f1i.tm.iM. Sare Thst Sausage! PAYTOWN. Tex. (UPl ,Geor~e Munier's smoked sausag- |es neardly became soaked sau- sages. Passersby saw smoke pour- ing from a shed and turned in an plf-m Mimger raied o>it in time to stop firemen from ffrenchlng the shed. It was just the curing process. Verv good transportation. 1946 Buick 4-door Sedan, seat cover, radio, good tires, at a very reasonable price. See it today at Smoot ? Hunnicutt. S.A. Coln. 16th Street Central Ave. Tr>|. taM. _____________ BARGAIN. 1948 Ford - ton panel. In excellent shape. Good paint job. Hardlv has been used. Only this week -t Smoot v Hun- nicutt. S.A. ISth St. Cen- tral Ave.. Coln Tel. HA Fernleaf Chapter to Visit in Gatan Fernlaf Chapter No. 4. Order of the Eastern Star, will be guests of Coral Chapter No. 3 of Gatun Tuesdav evening. Officers from Fernleaf Chapter will exera plify the degrees at the initia- tion. A covered dish sunoer will be served at 6:30 p.m. All members of Coral Chapter are requested to bring a salad or a vegetable dish to the dinner. The meeting will begin at 7:30 P-m. _____ National Sojourners Meeting The regular monthlv meeting of Caribbean Chapter No. 21. Na- tional Sojourners. will be held at the Officers Club. Coco Solo Na- val Station on Tuesday. The as- semblv will be held at 6:30 pm nd dinner will be served at 7:30 p.m. * This will be the president's last meeting before going on his va- cation and there is considerable business to be cleared up. There will also be action on applica- tions, a possible initiation and an assured speaker of outstand- ing ability. Make reservations with Bro- Bulck Super 1949 4-door Sedan. Dvnaflow. Good condition. The best used car to be owned. For a de- monstration call Smart* v HunniotiH. S V Coln. 16th St. Central Ave. Tel. 800. Almost brand new 19.11 Chevrolet power-glide 4- door sedan. Beautiful Ad- miral blue. Only 7000 miles. lou can hardlv tell it's been used.' Special price. Onlv this week at Smoot y Hunnicutt. S.A. Coln. 16th St Central Ave. Tel. 800. Bargain. 195 Chevrolet De- luxe 4-door Sedan. Spring green colar. Not a scratch, with a very good radio, sept. covers, and almost five new tires a an incredible price. See it 1: drive it at Smoot y Hunnicutt. S.A. Coln. 16th St.. Central Ave. Tel. 800. PHILADELPHIA. April 5 (UPl -The Hatfielrs and McCoys may have been rugged mountain boys I but this city can boast of a real 'fighting family too, although their fighting is channeled along patriotic lines. The Japanese started it. Char- lie Deal enlisted in the .Navy the day after Pearl Harbor was bombed. One week later, his lun- ther George, Jr., joined the Air Foice. I In 1944, their sister. Mrs. Rosemary Deal Scholia, enl'sted in thp Woman's Army Corp. Two years later Joseph enlisted In the Navy and the young/st brother, Paul entered the Army In 1950. George, the airman, was wounded and transferred to the Engineers after receiving the Distinguished Flying Cross for action over Guadalcanal. Later he joined the Rangers and took part in the liberation of Ameri- can prisoners from the enemy- held Island of San Tomas. Ho received the Silver Star. Brother Charlie participated in the great sea battles of Leyte Gulf, Surlgao Strait and the Eastern Philippines Sea. He earned eight battle stars. After ten years of worry. Mrs. Deal said: "Let's hope this la over soon." ther Whlttington. telephone 80- 669 or 37-88-9,13. Caribbean Girls' State Opens at Fort Davis The fourth annual session of Girls' State opened Friday at Building 235. Fort Davis. Fifty girls are attending this sessittn. Mrs. Nelson W. Magnet'-of Margarita is the director. Those a-.si.sUn gfrom the Atlantic 8We are Mrs. Roy Embury of Fort Gulick: junior councillors. Jackie Boyle and Martha Graham; and Nellie Holgerson, typist. Atlantic Side girls attending are: Kathryn Ann Argo, Harriet Burke. Barbara Egolf. Maydele Gardner. Mary Hall. Margaret Jane Joudrey. Nancy Kadlger. Mildred Marquard, Jeanett* Mc- Keown. Muriel Morland, Ruby Pabon. Petty Tarr, Alyce Tho- mas, Lois Scheidegg and Mary Sherry. va H "*> .* \ IVJll e,TJro*XP*Ri, TTTTT ', KMi M THF SUNDAY AMERICAN Decision Before Dawn/ To Explore Reason For Treason At Lux Theater PAGE SEVEN BY BEN COOK HOLLYWOOD, (UPI TlVe man who likes lo live far froto' his work must take a back seat1 to Raymond Massey, the mBw He live*.-across a whole contin- ent from his Job. "I blfejredvcan do a hotter job] In a screen role if 1 come to It with a point of view not cultiva-1 ted ih Holyrood." he said. 'I want to prepare for a part, think about It, plan, how I can best make the character" live, and all before I go to Hollywood." Thus It is that Massey reside1 between film engagements at a farm in Wilton, Conn. When he comes to Hollywood, as he did re- cently to appear with Randolph Scott and Lucille Norman hV Warner-Bros.' "Carson City,":hel takes arrapartment or stays in a hotel. Only a handful of even the greatest motion pictures that have marked the enviable history of the movie screen in America withstand and outlast the Impact of the moment. To these gracious few can now be added a landmark in that his- tory, the monumental achieve- ment which Is Twentieth Centu- rv-Fox's "Decision Before Dawn," newly arrived at the Lux Thea- ter. "Decision Before Dawn" la many films In one. It explores thei meanings of treason, perceiving with rare insight and dramatic forcefulness that people fight and suffer on both sides In a war,, and that it is frequently an al- most Indefinable hairline that sets hero apart from traitor. | It reconstructs the last days of the war in Germany so graphic- ally as to convey to the spectator I at all times an almost shattering sense of on-the-spot participa- tion. And It utilizes the vital, per-1 isonalized and altogether poig- nant story of a brave young man torn between two uttbrldgablei loyalties as the nerve center1 which ties together this panora- ma of Immense size and sheer, overwhelming spectacle. It Is in this role of the hand-i some, sensitive German youth ( who sacrifices himself to the iHH"aH?^K7-iBut Has To Be Explained To Them tor named Oskar Werner distln- .- o----- gulshes himself. The same over-1 IriNnnN Anriis itipi n.-.,<.ri ffAvrTwheX SSM wSStaffl nffia! !S#gii L?n yS PhlV.ct.rn Vrnnt" Me Madam" apparently Is set for oiraW* Wern?reStNn ^ *E run .tine CollLum The- 'Weekend With Father/ Top Family Comedy, Showing At Balboa Theater For a time he maintained a home hi Beverly Hills to use dur- ing his frequent screen Jobs, He gave that up as too expensive. "Lots of people doing all kinds of jobs prefer to live at a distance from their work," Massey said. "They Want to feel that their him. I want to keep my far-a- homes are a separate world. In way-from-Hollywood outlook, the creative profession of acting. | "Then I will be playing my No wonder Tarzan doesn't want to leave the Jungle. He's (lot Dorothy Hart playing Mrs. Tarzan in Sol Lessor's "Tar- zan's Savaga.Fury," the latest adventures of the jungle su- perman which RKO Radio Is distributing with Lex Barker In the title role. "Rusty" Isn't posing for the camera, he's showing off for Joan Rice who play* the role of Maid Marian In Walt Disney's all- live Technicolor production, "The Story of Robin Hood." "Rus- ty' also appears In he film which RKO Radio is distributing ____________with Richard Todd In the title role. Call Me Madam' Delights British 'no less'splendid in their power "Pjg? ^ StiSffifc e the performances of Richard i^L0,^^!!^0^*^U"T and Gary Merrill as officers charged with A new kind of screen romance is achieved by Universal-Interna- tional in the Van Heflln, Patricia Neal and Olgl Perreau starring comedy, "Week End With Fath- er," which opened yesterday at thr Balboa Theater. Wit* a supporting cast headed by Virginia Field, Richard Den- ning and Jimmy Hunt and In- cluding three-score assorted youngsters, the film brings to- gether a widow with two young sons and a widower with two small daughters. Despite the rambunctious In- terference of their own progeny and half a hundred other kids, a jcllmac'lc love idyll is forged for the widower and widow, played 'by Heilin and Miss Neal with de- lightful abandon. Producer Ted Richmond and Director Douglas 81rk deserve a lot of credit for the manner in which they have put together this laugh feast- wlth-a-heart-throb. It's splendid entertainment and the kind that appeals to virtually all age brackets. A further touch of the unusual . Is added to the story of "Week End With Father" by the fact that Instead of a triangle as Is customary in screen comedy- I romances, this tale features a quafl rancie with Virginia Field and Richard Denning providing competition for Miss Neal and, Heflln In their quest for a happy ending together. Gigl Perreau and her sister Janlne, 9 and 7 years old, re- rpectlvely. are Heflln's daughters and Jimmy Hunt and Tommy Rettig, 11-year-olds, are Patricia's 4 lover's spat threatens the summer romance of Patrela Neal anu Van Heflln In this highlight scene from l'nlversal-Inter< national's new comedy hit. "Week End With Father." also star- ring child actress Glgl Perreau, second from right. Jimmy Hnnt, left, Tommy Rettig and Virginia F(eld, right, are teen m important supporting roles. Critics who saw Ethel Mer- man play the role on Broadway said they never thought anyone could have equalled her per- formanceuntil now. "Call Me Madam" is a lightly- hoys. All do splendid work in the laVr^PT,^'Oar? MerYrks iormln the British pub'ic that veiled satire on the American film. American of ficen Ihiried with PecuIlar thuiBs sometimes hap-e lplomatic service and while its ..... _. ,. a. .ttmm%tttal m?euwins and coorStaaUn* Pens ln American politics. central character may be fiction- .JJ^inia.,FL'.Ll," tfTJffi, In this, the producer, Jack Hyl- rl. Mrs. Perle Mesta, ambassador ""I1?* 8ttr, d^V a fine voice -nd turns In a convincing per- irmance and Richard Denning summer camp counsellor and . i itsigned "Uncle" Sam'1'the {J. m",lc.,e1J11M.h(a' .SKAffS talintars comnarlson on7w th a|o. The British liked the setting ttory of Sally Adams and her lm- ?*"?* .?* m Wcek End g- rrvSH"S s sus* ""'"" "" ^ zs&nasCtsL*& HSSSKi": Hans' cnrlstani lech Helena Wh*t th* *'* CCP* the post of American ambassador''^ by Frank Skinner. Hans unriscian oiecu, neieu. ____ tUm #._iii..i4_ !._.._ ,.,,,u w. -..i* .iui. i_ _... Thlmlg and Robert Freytag. was the familiarity between would be oulte possible ln our With the nermisston of the Al- >"ted men and officers in the .diplomatic setup. U/arnOr RrAC RllllflC lied HtelV Commission for g"'- VS ,,eet> c"nt h'ppen here' "0ver ln the 6tat*s we have & <""' eWi DUIIQj *"' When "Call Me Madam" open-hss rigid censorship than you s: we can present actors made as living public figures, ao to sure rinnor H-ronlf MrParthv and eir Jivl"B *>c" mumcm arew rrit-iuiai ne is leant, io oe none other fmhsriM trwerLd 2 MO mil ^ "' "< "* AmitlcBn thin Dean Acheson and when ssarie traversed ,uuu uiu <,, ,,, K UA , i i.i.. j.._. __n. .._ ,./__j rden as it existed in recreated on Stage aR"neclRlon Before Dawn" reDre-*J"""^Mep^"harroc1t- ihe "is tafkiiig "T the Truans"' j at Warner Bra In oncjof the -nu and lustif e^ the ereatest teel Dolorc* Gray and BiU John- "Ih the ponversations of the vis- ^Rest single picture sets -on to stardom here kj "Annie l^ng^ congressmen and the lyricM mon onri thp cnoneratlon of all nen "Call Me Madam' open- Jiss r branches of the United States . all members of the first-night f ilka: Armed Forces even to the sup- au>"ce got a leaflet explaining in as _ nlvineof 17 k Traonnel turn-th PoHtleal facts of American when 'Mr. Secretary' comes rrt a, fors Anatoie Lltvak co-Dro- ltfc- With that background, the Madam s party vou may be si ducerF?an^ McCarthy'and1 their W* Berlin musical drew it-.that he is mean/to be none otl Replica of Madison Square Garden 1906 fver attempted What Xsuper" truagled for years to make the Is of course allusion to the facttor Edward Carrere for a rodeo .nc script , it seems to me that arrangement'roles to the people who make up phers Award novel, "Call It Trea- ts especially necessary. the biggest audience, and not to g0n." they have been Inspired to uncompromising craftsmen have' E> n the homeland Miss Vrpnmniuhfd will he treasured Worth was last In London in 1937 andnof likely Sin to be forgot- chorus gin in the Dorchester ten by audiences everywhere " thv .tin ,m t. f h. Working from Peter Vlertel's tell- they still had a toast of the ine script based on the Christo- town she would be It. "I have found that an actor takes on the attitude and way of thinking of the people around the circle of film associates who make up an actor's environment while he is doing a picture." bring forth an entertainment that bespeaks the full grandeur of the motion picture art. It's Movietimt TODAY!... @>{ an am a Canal cfheaters IABLO HTS. 2:30 6:15 ;35 Robert MITCHUM a Jane RUSSELL HIS KIND OF WOMAN!" Monde ^TH It. ( AR.NIVAI." COCOLI 2:30 6:15 8:25 Robert TAYLOR Derule DAHCF.I. "WESTWARD THE WOMEN" ^^^^^Mondj^TH^CABr^^^^^ [PEDRO MIGUEL 7:00 Mona FREEMAN a) Edward ARNOLD "DEAR BRAT" ^rida^VlESTWAjr^ll^VOMEjr^^ GAMBOA 7:00 Clifton WEBB a) Anna FRANCIS "ELOPEMENT' We ir-r if rmt OF_WOMAN^_ IN HOLLYWOOD Y ERSK1NE JOHNSON BALBOA Atr'Conditioned Ivwed: -dancer t nder the sea1 2.30 4:35 6:40 8.45 |j;c HOLLYWOOD, NEA) Guys and Dolls: If Gloria Swanson I can come back, so can Fay Wray, l^the beauty who was called the 'spitting image of Gloria back in the roaring '20's at Paramount. < Fay, who retired in 1941 after | becoming Mrs. Robert Rlskln. Is : flashing her square-mouth smile. again In Fox's "Condor's Nest," and saying to people who ask If jthe new movie speed-up meth- |ods worry her: "Speed? Back m 1933, I made I 12 pictures ln a single year. Mat- ter of fact, I was playing Fay that we are tohave a presidential sequence in "The Story of Will election ln 1962 and that Oen Rogers." Is 236 feet long and 153 Eisenhower will be orle of the1 feet wide. There are seats for candidates." 1500 spectators. The leaflet will be given to all Although the present Madison who attend the show. Square Garden is considerably larger, the set is an authentic replica of the Garden of 1906. co- pied from illustrations in Har- per's magazine of the period. "The Story of Will Rogers," based on "Uncle Clem's Boy" by Betty Rogers, stars Jane Wyman around to growing a beard yet,' with WU1 Rogara Jr. %&"* but I will his father. Michael Curtiz di- Dale on'her anti-pants policy: eta with Robert Arthur pro- "Some girls wear them in west- duclng for Warners. erni, but I don't. I have a wom- an's figure, not a man's." Benny Rubin won't be putting I on the comedy crown again. His fans have been advising, the one-time comedy star to d>e his gray hair and grab the gold new YORK, (UP) Joe Bush- that TV Is offering him, but Ben-jKm one of the better modern ny Is saying that it's too late. |jaz pianists, presents his quar- J |tet In eight all-time favorites in Hes turned character actor,After Hours," a new Columbia .Wray ln one picture after an-(and claims: "I'm really happy 'album. Backed bv the muted; llother. And each picture was a now. I play everything from olditrumpet of Buck Clayton and a . It's stultifying to animen to dialect parts. I haven'tlfjrurns-bass rhythm section. Joe Carbon, too actress." told a Joke in years. It's not that offers a tasty slow ballad version | A big hunk of Hollywood his-1 I'm not in good shape. I still 0f the old Dixieland tune. "At' tory has been written since Faylhave the comedy sense and I can sundown," and a surprising fast-; i made westerns with Art Acord, dance like a kid of 20. but I want, tempo arrangement of "Ol" Man two-reelers for Hal Roach, thin!to make with the dramanot River" ln two of the standout se- graduated to starring status in jthe Jokes." lections. Erich Von Stroheim's "The Wed- por more relaxed listening, ding March." I "Things haven't been easy," he Moods for Candlelight." a Ca-j "I'm getting fan mall again." admitted. "I hit bad times in pit0l album features smooth in-| 44-year-old Fay chortled. "Some 1938, after being a big star, and strumental' arrangemtnts by of It from very young men who went to work ln a restaurant. It prancls Scott and his orchestra must have started going to the was Orson Welles who put me 0f another group of old favorites. movies early in life. My small back Into show business. Now inciu ding "More than You | daughter is very Impressed." I'm going uphill again." Know," "I'll Get By" and "It Had: If Maria Montez hadnt met! There may be studio howls Milt Herth. one of the first to leath In a tragic home accident over Ann Sheridan's new. lush adapt the electric organ to jazz, In Parts, she and Jean Pierre Mae Westish curves, but the Tex- appears with hifl famous trio Amnont. her still-grieving hus- as beauty's out to hold on to ev- playing "Rockln' in Rhythm." br.nd. would now be In Spain co- ery ounceor almost every ounce xhe Dipsy Doodle," "Honky tarring in a movie. |he's added to her frame. T0n|c. Train Blues" and "In an The checkerboard of fate has The extra poundage has given igth Century Drawing Room." a- I .now moved Aumont back to the Ann the Venus chassis she sport- ;mong others, on a Decca album. Hollywood he left in 194$ be- ed back in 1944 when she was I On the singles, vocal honors | cause "I was homesick forWarners' "Oomph Girl." During. af the week go to Delores Gray, France," and he's resuming- his the making of "I Was a Male ,tar of the recent Broadway American movie career again in War Bride" In Europe, she be-1 hit, "Two on the Aisle." for her MGM's "Mil." came ill and thinned down toi mtlng "Frankie" and a he- Hollywood as a home base now Cass Daley dimensions. I nuin tempoed ballad, "Be- for the star? "After you've been so skinny ware.".... "I'd like to make a home here and scrawny, you feel elated." i phll Harris walks off with the for our six-year-old daughter,! Ann said. "People used to come novelty prize for his brisk ver- but I don't want a long-term and say that It waa nice to see ion of a husband's lament, contract. I like the Idea of mak-me again. Now they take a long I "Mama's on the Warpath Now ine one or two movies a year|look and say.'Ah-h-h-h!'" Take to the Hills!." with the with the chance todo stage plays Moviegoers will be seeing the juke-box favorite. "Hambone," and television." new, rounded Ann ln "Steel on the reverse aide (Victor) Town" and "Just Across the Harry James plays a plaintive . . a ...I..n1 nf "Wf\or4r\' -----------------1 MARGARIT A V :15 S:tS June ALLTSOM Van JOHNSON "Too Young To Kiss" Ma-mlar "HII.1.5 OF II Ml" Also Showing Monday! GATUN 2:30 7:00 Eleanor PARKER Anthony DEXTER "VALENTINO" Technicolor! e Tuesday "OLIVEB TWIST" CRISTOBAL Z:M .IS.- :t (AU.CIUaaid) AU SUr Musical Revue! "STARLIFT Alao ShowInf Monday! Dale Evans is all smiles about her Ko. 1 rating as a tumbleweed queen In the polls and says that ill took a complete de-sexing Job i to zoom her up to the top of the list. Street." trumpet ln a revival of "Moanln "1 hope they like what they Low." backed up by the more un- see," she said. orthodox "The Brave Bulls" on Columbia.... Ray Anthony and William Holdens beaming over his orchestra offer very dance- the no-hero-he role that he'slable versions of "Moonlight Sav- But there's not one trace ln snagged ln Paramount's "Sta-'ing Time" and "There Are Such the TV films of the cactus Garbo lag 17." I Things" on Capitol___ Tommy In Dale, who told me: "I begged them not to play me In a romantic way and it's pay- ,Doraev features the volee of "It's off-beat and different.",Frances Irwln in his latest Decca he told me. "I wish there were release. "You Left Your Brown- Eyed Baby Blue" and "Aggravat- ln' Situation".... Tex Beneke and his orchestra dress up two ling off. The little girls don't more casting like this ln Holly- (hke vou if the cowboy does. And wood. You play the same kind of the little boys Just despise you character ln picture after pic- _ "Now It's strictly platonlc. I ture, and the audience ran figure oldies, "Slngin' m the Rain" and fight and shoot and ride. I'm a how it's going to wind up before ."The Wedding of the Painted I weslern character. I haven't got the title flashes. I Doll" lor M-G-M. "I don't see how you became such i suecas* in Wall strtot you war th* dumbest arithmetic pupil I ever h AjT.F. right THE SUNDAY AMERICAN SUNDAY, APRIL , IMS 3d Captures Armed Forces Baseball Championship w tnfantry Downs Albrook ftyers 7-4 To End Series he Panam Armed Forces Basebail trophy, which has re- lated at the Albrook Air Force m--B* for ihr pas' two years, tiitountl a npw home yesterday "afternoon when ihr 33rd In- Ittntrv scored a 7 to 4'victory over thr y-.ook Flyers to make i two in m row for the Infan- ifeten a. ., Rive them the 1952 Kail ULle for the Armed 5tes in the Panam Area. The |airy won the first (tame ay by a score of 6 to 1. Jfjor General L. J. Whltlock, -JimandinR General. United ^Jta-tts Army Caribbean, presld- 8 over the presentation cere- monies when Brigadier General Til C. Kiel. Commanding Gen- ii. Caribbean Air Command, lied the huRC trophy over to Miel Robert H. Douglas, ^nmandinR Officer of the 33rd Fn-fantry Regiment, Fort Kobbe, he victory over the Flyers (marked the ouriernth straight win lor the Infantry as they von the second half tille, after Ban* Ihe first half ehampion- jiip in a play-oif with the er.v with twelve straight x The victory proved the .; anding capabilities of the JgVe team as they combined king strength in the clutch- With batting power when Ihe Jlrtunitv arose to score runs. Sbrook outhit the winners nine i six but could not make their *rts when thry counted and alto loo- finding play, which *iii mar!:ed the Flyers perform- ance (hiring the /reond half ol H* season, aided the Infantry- Bfi considerably. Albrook scored first In Ihe bal! same and it started to look as if the play-off series would *o another game. However, (he Jnf-intrv came back with a four run uprising in the fourth ln- Ining and then added three more in the fifth to win the victory and the series. Errors contributed largely to the down- fall of starting hurler for the Flyers, Joe Cotton. However, the climax of the Infantry uprising was a resounding triple off the bat of M. Rivera in the fourth inning which drove three runs across the plate and then al- lowed him to score on a single by winning hurler Max Car- (penter. All four runs came after 'two men were out and an error had given the 33rd new life in the inning. . The final three runs by the Infantry came in the fifth in- ning when a single hit. com- bined with a walk and three errors, allowed three more tal- Albrook opened the scoring In !the third inning with two runs ,as a result o a walk to Cain, Woers's triple and a single by Blnch. The Flyers added single runs in the fifth and eighth lnnin-rs. but could not catch the determined men from Fort Kobbe. Max Carpenter was a surprise starter on the mound for the Infantry and hurled strong ball throughout until relieved in the eighth Inning. Mrquez, who had won the game Friday after- noon, came In with the bases loaded and two out and pro- ceeded to strike out Stevenson with three pitches to end the threat. Carpenter was credited with the victory and his record for the season was outstanding as he chalked up nine wins against no defeats. The winning of the play-offs by the Infantry marked the close of the 1952 baseball sea- son for the Armed Forces nines in the Panam Area. :* Little League V \riFIC LITTLE LEAGUE i third inning with three mates IRS'i HALF STANDINGS aboard. Tne homers were his H*fEAM Won Lost seventh and eighth of the sea- * .Ice............ ' I 'Sears ........... 7 Lincoln Life........ 5 ' AFGE 14.......... 5 Elks 1414.......... > Firemen ir ni* m.......... ~ - SECOND HALF STANDINGS TEAM Sears............ J Elks 1414.......... 6 Police........... .. 5 Lincoln Life........ 5 AI'OE 14.......... Fiic .:cn.......... * son with live oi the round-trlp- pers coming with the bases load- ed The Catalog Boys scored In the first, third ana fourth inning to account for all their runs with Gussie Durham setting them Won Lost'down in the filth and sixth tn- ATURUAL8 RESULT Lircoln Life 15, Sears 10. MONDAY'S GAME Sears vs. Firemen. nings to preserve the win for the Liters. Tommy McKeown went all the way lor Sears struclng out six, waiting nine and giving up fif- teen runs. Ecsioes Ba teman the leading hitters of the game ware Million Oi uie Lifers with two for four ano d,. curis of Sears with a pcticci. day at bat with three for On The Alleys... CURUNDU MEN'S OPEN BOWLING LEAGUE Wednesday night at the Bal- boa alleys was without question "George Hellwlg Night." Georges spectacular performance is the high spot in individual bawling i for this season's league play and : it placed him on top in the com-, petition for high individual se- ries with 641. George's stellar performance inspired his American' Club teammates in their best showing of the year. Billy Coffey's excel- lent 556 series was high for the I night but he had to doff his hat to Hellwlg who rolled 156 pins over average for a 548 series. Their teammates, Vale, Freund, I and Relchart all bowled over av- ' erage with "Wlldman" Vale get- ting 195 In the first game for his high game of the year. The Clubmen's 2842 series prov- ed to be second highest in league play. VFW Post 3822 were the victims of the fiasco. Old Hector Cigar-Face" Downes can be Justly proud of his Clubmen for their excellent performance. The Acme Painters did it again < for the fourth straight week by . applying the remover to the Car- ta Vieja Rummen to swap posi- tions in the team standings. Cap- tain "Chuck" Lavallee, though bowling a nice 480 ha dto relin- quish the spotlight to "8tan" Casten and "Cowboy" Yarbro with their 500 and 475 series, re- spectively. "8tan" and Carl pull- ed "Hannbergs" by bowling 22 and 24 pins per game over aver- age. Sam Toria-n with 202 in the second game was instrumental in the Rummen's salvaging one point for the night. The no longer lack-luster Bal- boa Beermen whitewashed the Angellni Liquormen and knocked them out of the first division. "Sugar" Cain of the Beermen al- most matched Coffey's sparkling performance with 164, 213. and 178 for a 555 series. 105 pins over average. Captain George Stanley rolled his best series of the year with a 501. 96 pins over average. Dick A. Colston with an excellent 538 was hirh for the Liquormen. The improved Canada Drymen emoted in the secorfd game to split the points with the leagiie leading Budwelsers. Captain Jim Hicks' 195. his high for the sea- son, and "Mac" Lalns 2C0 did the trick for the Flzzbcys. Jim Allen with a nice 479 series was high for the Sodamen while Ray Walker with 483 was high for Bud. Team standings : TEA'M VV. L. Pts Pins BUdwelser 51 35 68 73639 Acme Paint. 47 46 65 73717 Tarta Vicia 49 S3 64 73757 aricanClub I 73596 Angellni. 46 56 73043 Canada Dry. 42 45 55 75368 Balboa Beer. 38 49 50 72566 VFW Post 3822 36 51 48 72236 Results of the play: AMERICAN CLUB Vale ... 195 .125 157 477 Hellwlg. 170 163 215- 548 Freund 147 149 55- 451 Relchart 156 164 133- 453 Coffev 187 197 192 556 Handicap. "9 " - 357 1st Race "F-t" Native614 Fgs. Purse: $273.00Pool Closes 12:45 First Race of the Doubles by JOE WILLIAMS 1Avivato 2Romntico 3Carbonero 4Tuira 5Duque 6La Negra B. Pulido 112 V. Castillo 120 J. Baeza. Jr. 116 E. Darlo 116 A. Vsquez 115x J. Avila 120 7Golden Bound V. Arauz 119 2nd Raee "C" Natives 1 Mile rurse: $325.06 Pool Closes 1:15 Second Race of the Doubles 1 Filigrana B. Agulrre 112 2Elona F. Rose 110 3Manolete V. Rodriguez 117x 4Mr. Espinosa B. Pulido 120 (NEA Telephoto) ACCEPTED BY MARINES Boston Red Scfx star Ted Wil- liams steps on scales at the Jacksonville, Fla., Naval Air Sta- tion while New York Yankee luminary Gerry Coleman (cen- tn looks on. Both ball players passed the Marine Corps Dhvsical. There was some question about Williams' left arm, fractured in the 1950 All-*t"r e-arr'. but second X-rays showed It to be fit. . 3rd Race "F-2" Natives6 H Fgs. Purse: $275.06 Pool Closes 1:45 One-Two 1Tocopllla G. Graell 115 2Cosa Linda) G. Cruz 115 3Carenclto) C. Iglesias 115 4Con Valor 11 G. Frescott 116 5Tapsy J. Baeza, Jr. 115 6Opex E. Silvers 115 7Caaveral B. Pulido 115 8Brochaclto L. Bravo 115 - Around ihe Majors S Minors 4th Race "F-l" Natives 7 Fgs. Purse: $275.00 Pool Closes 2:20 Quiniela 1El Mono J. Baeza, Jr. 108 ,2Pesadilla V. Rodrguez 108x 3El Mao B. Pulido 120 14Grito y Plata L. Bravo 120 5Eclipse F. Rose 109 6Rio Mar R. Vsquez 115 In an exhibition game held at Hollywood, Calif., on. March 20, the Cleveland Indians shut out the Pittsburgh Pirates 2-0 with Bob Lemon and Mike Garcia sharing the mound duties and limiting the Pirates to two safe- ties. _ Both hits were garnered by CLEM KOSHOREK who got a single off both Lemon and Gar- cia. Lemon toiled the first five innings and was the winner. .three, ana Alas ot Sears with Totals. HPO 1 1 The Lincoln Lifers downed the' three for lour, league leading Sears in a free- Lincoln Life sco.mg game yesterday morning it. Sander, It.. ,at Llule League Park and cut'Mcrlf, c. .. one-half a came from the Cat-;j. Engelke, 3b. aid Boys' lead. J. Dubols, 3o.. Bruce Baseman's big bat con-.u. Bateman, ss tinned to boom with Bruce col- Durham, p. .. lecUnz four hits in four trips to. Million, 2b .. the plate. In tne second inning, Parker, rf. .. Bateman hammered out a home|Laatz. lb...... 4 Pun with the base.; loaded andw. Engelke, cf .. 1 repented the performance in the| ------ *------------------------------------------ Totals........29 15 10 18 AB 3 4 2 2 4 2 4 3 ... 954 917 971-2842 vs. VFW POST 3822 Moss . . Hannberg. Witzlg . Mash burn Rlno. . Handicap. Tot8ls. . 117 132 140 389 156 130 161- 447 117 94 162 373 148 143 112 408 146 121 161- 428 154 154 154 462 ~MB~ 774 8902502 Panamanian pitcher ANDRES ALONSO arrived in San Antonio Wednesday night. Alonso is un- der contract to play for Rosswell of the Class "C" Longhorn League. Alonso Is the first foreign player to ewer play for this club and everything possible Will be done make his stay in the United States a pleasant one. Former Cristbal Mottas first baseman DON BOLLWEG got a single in four trips to the plate March 24 in game won by the New York Yankees 3^1 over the Boston Brayes. BolhVeg is bat- tling seven other hopefuls for the first base position on the Yankee club. Wednesday, March 20, Boll- wegg got two singles and drove in a run in a game in which the Yankees defeated the St. Louis Cardinals 5-2. Big 8TEVEBILKO went hltless m this game In four trips. m BEN TAYLOR, former Pan- ama Pro Leaguer, led the Tig- ers to a *-l victory over the Braves at Bradenton, Fla. on March 19 when he .paced his teammates with two doubles and a single. The Giants took the 4-3 In ten innings. Fine gave up six hits in five Innings. Hetki re- lieved Fine and gave up only two hits in next five innings but the Giants pushed across the winning run in the tenth on a double y Tookle Gilbert, single by Rudy Rufer, a walk and a long fly by Clint Hartung. 5th Race "1-1" Imported1 Mile ""^ Parse: $375.06 Pool Closes 2:55 verdict, iCradle Song J. Rodrig'z 114 2Armeno F. Rose 109 3Curaca B. Pulido 112 4Forzado J. Parada 106x 5Pa G. Cruz 114 Former Canal Zone Leaguer SHELDON JONES hurled against _ the Chicago Cubs March 25 in a|_carmea I relief role. Jones gave up four' 6th Race "E" Imported 7 Fgs. Purse: $550.60 Pool Closes 3:35 First Race of the Doubles 1Royal Alligator L. Bravo 118 2Choice Brand K. Florea 112 3Supersticiosa V. Castillo 112 4Rondinella G. Alfaro 120 5Hurlecano J. Bravo 113 V. Ordonez 120 hits In two Innings bejore being(741, Race h imported6' i Fgs. Purse: $406.06 Pool Closes 4:05 replaced by George Bamberger who came out winner when the Giants came from behind to nip the Cubs 7-6. Second Race of the Doubles 1Porter's Star V. Ordonez 106 2Rlnty J. Baeza Jr. 108 ,. 3Incomparable J. Bravo 111 BUD HARDIN. another former 4_Pira|!ua Jose Rodriguez 108 C.Z player saw action at short j^et^ A. Enrique 106x for the Cubs in this same game. jZPni0X b. Agulrre 110 Sam Iones to work In Florida 8th Race "I-l" Imported1 Mile SAM 'TOOTHPICK) JO*. fSJT|M ^KRSS. M\ handicapped this spring by a* T Quiniela sore arm. was sent to Daytona Beach, Fla., for what Indian of- ficials described as a "health cure" when the Cleveland club 1In Time O. Bravo 108 2D. D. T. L. Bravo 113 3Mr. Foot J. Brftvo 115 14Marlscallto Jos Rodrig'z 114 R, Vsquez 115 E. Silvera 103 rather than carry him into un- 7_ciDav0 K Flores 112 oredletable weather during the ^MfVcrlstlna F. Rose 116 barnstorming trip eastward. It. ______ was decided to send him to a Mn Rtc< opf.N" Imported warm climate In an effort to| l-5/16th Miles broke camp at Tucson. Jones re- c Puiamcttn mains on the Tribe roster, but ^^afrus Putting one little word after another and whatever became of Harry Matthews'' Nothing's been heard of him around here since the $250,000 Hollywood guarantee for a Joe walcott match turned out to be stage money. The summer boxing schedule's just about completed and the young man Is featured in none of the Important paiilngs. There is no more able manager than Jack Hurley. This poses the question: Did Hurley outamart himself or is he, afraid he might get Matthews whipped In ths big league? # # Mike Jacobs who came up In boxing with Joe Louis, la crll>cally ill in Miami. Surgery was indicated but his condition will not permit. He's In the early 70's and has been a seml-ln- valid for som-3 tlm.i Casey Stengel cut George Weiss in on an oil A-ell that is gushing dividends a mile high. There Is no bet- ter way to maintain harmonious relations with the front office In baseball. The long-rumored statement that Fred Corcoran will return lo the PGA becomes a fact at the organizations April meeting In Chicago. Whether the sports-shirt industry will be able to survive Mr. Truman's oecision lu a matter of grave doubt. A penny has been added to the New York clgaret tax, which Is another view of the smoke nuisance. Is the Russian's charge we use strange germs to fight a rap at Bugs Bunny? It's all too true you 11 find more foul tips in a gossip column than a baseball column. Our Mayor was too mannerly to mention names when he promised to cut expenses to the bone. Stanky scoffs the American Leagu- ers can't take it, yet they manage to take the National Leaguers each fall. What Mr. Truman seemed to be saying was that the Dinosaur School needs either a new coach or a new system. Al Welll, the D3C matchmaker, shoves off to visit Alsace- Lorraine this week to be gone a month. The old dancing master whs born In the hamlet of Gelweller and hell be seeing it again for the first time since he was 13 years old. Would he stop over in London to see Randy Turpin? No. Would visit Paris? Yes, one day. Foolish man. Just one day in Paris. Besides, what can you do In Paris in the daytime except sing ."I Like Ike." Don't argue and don't scold, both faves, were a winning nariay at Laurel last Friday. Predictions that local betting re- cords will soar, beginning at Jamaica tomorrow, seem well found- ed. There's more betting money around than any other kind. Florida had a tremendous season, even at the bush-league Sun- ;hlne track. Laurel surpassed Its '45 all-time peak Saturday. A fellow may not know where his next fifth of scotch is coming from but that doesn't deter him from bucking the machines. This kind of money he can keep. Mr. Whiskers hasn't yet figur- ed out a way to take It from him. This, along with the bookie crackdown, explains the sensational upsurge all around the coun- New Jersey's getting ready to legalize bingo. Can off-track betting be far away? The first robin is purely an exhibitionist, like the firs yokel In line for the World Series. Mr. Truman can also point out that It was under his administration that J.i'l Abner got married. The Derby's to be televised for the first time and Junlor'll probably think it's Just another Western. Ted Williams, who Is up for reinductlon In the Marines, Is puzzled. "I don't recall signing any paper that meant I was to be recalled." He thought he was merely signing a release per- mitting his name and picture to be used for recruiting purposes. Alvln Dark, cf the Giants was smarter, He signed nothing and na a result contines to be eligible to play. His qualifications as to age and military experience, In the same branch, do not differ from the Red Sox star. It used to be that when Ed Bradley, the old gambling man. started a horse in the Derby the hard boots automatically made the beast favorite. In more recent years this expression of sub- li ne faith was transferred to Ben Jones. If faith can move mountains it can also give the betting machines a brisk going over. Jones has hit with the big one five times, and it looks as If he has another good one coming up In Hill Gall, winner of the Santa Anita Derby. If the brown Bull Lea escapes mishap and gets to the race the hard boots will send it In but heavy. Despite- the fact that no Santa Anita winner has ever repeated at the ancient Louisville merry-go-round In May. It depends on whose ox Is gored. Remember how the garrulous Dr. Forrest Allen of Kansas University used to put the zing on basket ball guons? Wanted to raise the baskets two or three feet and such. But that was before he latched onto Clyde Lovellette. the 6 foot P Inch Terre Haute skyscraper whose play In the recent NCAA ora. is oenerea uie u":'w""v >_rhrhurn V Ordonez 127 injured his flipper but.he says hel^.th'S Jo^ Itoffi 114 eaught a cold In it during the !.__. R Vntit. im .caught a coin m ib uuims "ffl^l* Kfihavfti first days of spring training. He. t*yn*vn has been unable to throw hard^Ro.dmaater since. __ Joan Franco Mutuel Dividends Sears AB R HPO A FIRST RACE 1 Tap Girl $12.20, $5.80, $2 60. 2"Diez de Mayo $3.40. $2.60. ,'.tCampesino S3.60. SECOND RACE !'i-Golden Pick $3.80. $3.20. ^-Golden Tap $2.40. First Double.-: (Tap Glrl-Gold- jt* Pick) $27.211. THIRD RACE 4Petite $2.40. $2.20. $2.20. % Tin Tan te> $2.20, $2.20. One-Two: (Petite-Tin Tan) fi.80. _^ FOl'RTH RACE 1Wild Wire $2.80. $2.20, $2.20. aHit $2.40, $2.40. Astoria $5.20. Quiniela: (Wild Wire Hit) $4.60. FIFTH RACE tj_Paragon $1C60, $9.40. SIXTH RACE otch Chum $5.80, $3.80. arllo $5.60. SEVENTH RACE ^^ontmnrtre $0.20, $3.40. $2.60. ^Enphlrt $3. $2.20. Lujoso $2 40. Second Doubles: 'Scotch Chnm-Montmartre) $39.40. EIGHTH RACE 1Miss Fairfax $23.23, $4.60 S3. 2Montiellto $3.20. $2.40. 8 Alabarda $2.80. (Minela: 'Miss Falrfax-Mon- tlelito) $18.26. NINTH RACE ^^teel $17 20, $7.80 $5 40 retador $3.80, $2.40. ^pmpiresa S. Jfw: (Tincel-Apretador) John Watson, 2b 4 0 1 Schwarzrock, If.. 0 0 0 Mendoza. If .... 2 2 0 Roy Watson, ss. 2 2 0 G. Durfee, lb .. 3 2 2 Curdts. cf...... 3 2 3 Alas, rf....... 4 1 3 Jas. Watson, 3b. 4 0 1 T. Durfee, c .. 2 1 .1 6 McKeown, p .. .. 3 0 0 4 sBalley...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 6. 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 CARTA VIEJA ToriPn 124 202 156 4| 150 135 108- 3 145 141 121- 407 160 152 180 472 152 184 151- 487 96 96 96 288 Totals........28 10 11 18 3 Score By Innings Lincoln Life 354 12015 10 1 Sears 205 30010 11 2 aBatted for McKeown In 6th. Winning PitcherDurham (3-21. Losing PitcherMcKeown (3-6). Struckout byDurham 3, Mc- Keown 6. Bases on Balls off- Durham 8. McKeown 9. Two Bftse HitsB. Bateman, G. Ourfee, Alas 2. Home RunsB. Bateman 2. UmpiresLuzer and Francis. ScorerMead. Time of Game 1:30. Sijorfr Briefs BY UNITED PRESS CLEVELAND Place-kicking specialist Lou Groza has signed his seventh contract with the Cleveland Browns In the Nation- al Football League. Groza. a tackle, Is the Browns' leading scorer with a total of 406 points over the past six years. Lou has booted 241 polnts-after-touch- down. 33 fi-ld goals and scored one touchdown. trorrls. T. . Zornes . Kelsey . OWchman Handicap. Totals. .127 910" 792-2529 ACME PAWTS I*"n"- Wi 3 lit: SS 142 125 104 371 145 168 184 475 141 139 14IW- 426 132 132 132 396 CHICO CARRASQUEL. the Ve- nezuelan star who participated in the recent Caribbean Series here, collected one of onlv three hits mustered by the Chicago White Sox in a 7-1 losing effort against the Chicago Cubs March 20 at Los Angeles, Calif. B. Pulido 128 O. Brave 68 L. Brave HI Caten Corn . . V?rbro . Borgia . Handicap. Totals. ,' 914 845 889-2648 i Allen. . Mnrdock (Blind'. Hicks. . . Henry. . Lane . . Handicap. CANADA DRY 157 163 159- 479 130 130 130- 390 119 195 128 4*2 134 129 163 438 123 200 147- 472 117 117 117 351 Totals. Stahl. Steuwe . Brvan . (Blind). Hovan. . Walker . Handicap. Totals. . . 782 934 8442560 vs. BUDWEISF.R 145 1311 . 150 162 180 464 134- 446 129 129 122 110 128 165 112 112 129- 387 160 312 190- 483 112 336 Mf-rcr. 20 both THOMAS FINE, who rosrte Caribbean Series his- tory with a no-hlt no-run per- formance in the Panam Olym- pic Stadium, and JOHNNY HETKI. who also saw action in the Series, pitched in a game for Ihe St. Louis Browns against the New York Cants._______________ Pacific Twi Loop Series Continues Tonite At Balboa PACIFIC Tl.ILIGHT BASEBALL LEAGUE Final Straight Season Standings TEAMS Won Lost Pet. Gibraltar Life Ins. 12 7 .632 Balboa Brewers ..11 8 .579 Balboa High School 11 .456 Panama Merchants 6 12 .333 CHAMPIONSHIP PLAYOFF STANDINGS TEAM Won Lost Pc. B.'Iboa High School 1 0 l.OOu por Gibraltar Life Ins. 0 1 .000 ITS NEW! a PLASTIC ENAMEL for even/ use 16th Race "D" Natives414 Ffs. Purse: $306.60 Pool Closes 5:40 1Juan Hulncho V. Ortega 115 2Wlnsaba B. Agulrre 112 3Diana ,.J. Bravo 120 4Bagalefto V. Castillo 110 11th Race "BM NativesW Fgs. Purse: IS56.H 1-Dallda P. ft Avila 120 2Annie N, B. Agulrre 110 3Lollto B. Pulido 120 4Taponazo A. Enlrque 105x Juan Franco Tipt By(LOCKER 1Romntico 2Eloina ICarenclto (e) 4Grito y Plata 5Pla 6Choice Brand 7-Incomparable 8Clpayo 9Cyclone Malone 16Diana 11Annie N. Duque Filigrana Caaveral Pesadilla Caraca Hurlecano Phlox D.D.T. Pavero Wlnsaba Lollto ROYAL NETHERLANDS STEAMSHIP COMPANY K N S M TO EUROPE: BENNEKOM .......................April IS WILLEMSTAD .....................April 14 BREDA .............................May t TO THE CARIBBEAN: BENNEKOM .......................April 13 WILLEMSTAD .....................April 14 BREDA .............................May TO WEST COAST SOUTH AMERICA HESTIA (not calling Chilean ports) April II BAARN ............................April 23 BOSKOOP (not calling Chllan ports! May 9 KNSM CRISTOBAL, 3-12163-12183-1219 BLOK AGENCIES, BALBOA, 2-3719 (Freight Only, BO YD BROS. PANAMA CITY, 2-2008 (Passengers Only) Brush it o Spray it jn Metal, Wood or Plaster TONIGHT'S GAME 786 817 6052508 (At Balboa Stadlhm1:301 P- High School (Swalm 1-2) vs. Gibraltar Life Insurance (Leve (-2). - TENTH RACE B Jalme $5 20, $2 40. $2.20. piden Fan $2.20, $2.20. IPiropo $2.20. atEVi >TH RICE I $10.80. C2.20. Hi* $2.20. COLUMBUS. O Golf's richest iunlor tournamentthe PGA National Caddie Champlonihlp will be t <1 at Ohio State Uni- versity this year starting August 19. The president and founder of the National Caddie Association Mator James Rhodes of Colum- ba. Ohioavs this vear's prizes r-411 to'-I S5.2.V": worth of coeee ,.r,.p....,D. That's an lncr?ase o ;:.4J0 over the previous high. AN GEL! NI McConnell 164 136 135- 435 186 133 184 433 144 148 116 403 180 183 186 538 112 112 112 336 Bembenek Woner . ppiutts . Colston. . Handicap. Totals. ... 870 832 8432545 vs. BALBOA BEER Caroenter t. 138 151 150- 430 amlth 157 147 126 430 Schoch 133 123 110- 356 Stanley.' 145 175 181- 501 Cain 184 213 178- "BV lant.lcap. 14 143 143- 42' 4"olals. . .~Mw * 8-1711. Both the Gibraltar Life Insur- ancemen and the Balboa Highi i School will sv.ing Into action 'again tonight at the Balboa Sta- dlhm at reven-thtrty sharp when: Uiey will meet for the second j -pme of the three-game series for the Pacific Twilight League i.2 championship. The Balboa High School takes he field with the advantage of having taken the first game. ri3y set back the strong Oib- "-r Life assurance nine 4-1 -hind the misViriul mr-Mt - n~ of their ace Don Mor- ,jn I** weunetttaj aaiaht. your car, refrigerator, kitchen or bath, walls, cab- inets, kW's toya, ttc, etc. Brilliant Glass Plastic Smocth Finish Srcnlmg New Colors One* In Minutes For Sals in Panam A all P.C. Commissaries and Army Post Exchanges. See the big Ad Ask for a Demonstration with Fordomatic or Overdrive AT COLPAN MOTORS, INC Your Friendly FORD Dealer On Automobile Row Tels. 2-1633 2-1036 TUB 81TOAY AMERICA* ii i it an ......." wkoKimn 8TJNDAT AFRIL 19 ............. ,._ -------------------...... "T ^=T 3=K----------i^flUKin.------- T.-1................ ............-....... -.....->.....-----------_^=------- Curt Simmons Is Returning To Put Fuse Back In Philadelphia Whiz Kids Star Kept In Shape By Pitching Army Baseball By HARRY GRAYSON NF.A Sports Editor CLEARWATER, Fla., April 8 (NBA)The left-hander will re- turn In late April or early May, o the Whir, Kids have their chins up again. The left-hander Is, of course, Curt Simmons, who won n sames for the pennant-winning Phillies of 1950 before being called up with his National Guard outfit. The Whiz Kids have been the Fizz Kids ever since; for the quiet chap of Egypt, Pa exerted In- fluence far beyond his o. pitching. .. "I guess it is because we all came up together," says Granny Hamner, "and saw h fine boy develop from the Wild Man of Borneo into a great star. Cy Perkins and the older fellows ay there hasn't been one like him shice Grove and Gomez. Baseball men who saw Sim- moos, only 23 now, In Germany Just before the training season say he looked ship-shape. Pitch- ing for his outfit and a semi- professional outfit near Camp Atterbury, Ind.. last season, he worked In nearly as many games as he would have with the Phlla- delohla club. Without Simmons, shortstop Hamner believes the Phillies have the required pitching in Roberts, Meyer, Church, Rldzik, Fox Drews and the 38-year-old Helntzelman, with Konstanty and Hansen in relief. Robin Rob- erts gave the Yankees two hits, one a home run by Mickey Man- tle In 12 Innings. Russ Meyer has curbed his temper. Bubba Church has Roberts' potential. AUSTERITY PROGRAM PAYS Umpire Bill Stewart says Steve Rldzik, a medium-sized, 23-year- old right-hander up from Balti- more, Is as fast as Roberts, swift- er than any recruit he has seen this spring. Bin Bob Miller Is re- galnlng faith In the arm that went with a shoulder injury suf- fered In tripping and falling In the Boston railway station In 19R0, -Hitting is all we need," In- sist i Captain Hamner. "and 111 h8,"> to supply some of that my- e'f" k. , Much depends on Del Ennis. the. clean-up man who, slumped 44 points and 53 runs-batted-m. Ennis, only 27, reported in con- dition and his drives over the left [ Curt Simmons Granny Hamner field fence' at the Clearwaler Athletic Park is evidence that the club's austerity program Is pay- ing off. i ' Eddie Sawyer has turned left field over to the left-hand hit- ting Jack Mayo, who has swatted the ball for distance and .333 in spring games. __ Mayo, the former Notre Dame quarter-mller who spent last summer hi Baltimore, is faster afoot than Richie Ashburn, now a full-fledged stlckout. Other outfielders are Tommy Brown; promising Mel Clark, Jumping all the way from Schenectadyl Btan HoUmlg, with- Baltimore and At- lanta last trip; the 37-year-old Bill Nicholson. RYAN STEADIES INFIELD Connie Ryan Is an Intelligent athlete steadying the Infield at second base. There shouldnt be a better shortstop m the business than Hamner. Third base is in the capable hands of Willie Jones and Nippy Jones mav alternate at first base with Eddie Waltkus. Del Wllber is the No. 1 catcher Manager Sawver likes Smoky Burgess and Stan Lopata only has to hit. With a shove here and there, the Phillies could be real tough. They'll feel that way when Simmons returns. Then they'll throw a lot of pitching at the Oiants. Dodgers and the rest. But the left-hander means vastly more to the Phillies than bis extraordinary pitching be- hind Robin Roberts. Curt Simmons Is the fuse or the Whiz Kids. Spivey Declares He Is Innocent, Says Kentucky Athletic Board Let Him Dcjjv n sn Tut! MR FiA<;PRAt I 'q FIELD__Connie Mack, 89, president of the Philadelphia Athletics, stands beside l^f^totfvnSr^rS,^ot\htn^J>V*i Connie Mack.Field, formerly known as By JOHN MrCAI.MIM NEA Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, April 5 (NEA). Basketball has arisen Phoenix- like from the ashes of last sea- son's nasty bribe scandal In most parts of the nation. But down In the blue grass country of Kentucky, Bill Splvev has been burned to a crisp. The seven- foot All-Amer- ica basket ball center says he has been dou- ble teamed by Unlver s 11 y of BUI Splvey Kentucky ath- lei.t ouiciais and the New York lsirlct attorney. charges. I'll keep on say'ng it until my name Is clear. I had no part In fixing any game. I ac- cepted no money. I'd Just like to have folks know that." The rangy ex Wildcat star said that further proof of his Innocence lay In the testimony of one gambler that -he had tried to buy Splvey at $500 a game and had been turned down. "The reason I wouldn't take anv of that money sounds silly, I guess," Splvey confessed; "but I read a story once about this baseball fclayer who took sfbribe. "In the back of my asind I couldn't forget how milch he lost and how lifij he got." Wright Field, at West Palm Besch, Fla. (NEA) Making Hodges Catcher Ranks With Batting Pitcher Seventh By HARRY GRAYSON NEA Sports Editor MIAMI, Fla., April 5 (NEA) A lot of people in Florida appear to be confused this spring, In-: eluding a couple of major league managers. Charley Dressen s Idea of mak- ing Gil Hodges a catcher ranks with Lou Boudreau batting the Red Sox pitcher seventh ana hav- ing Ted Williams, the greatest hitter In baseball, swinging sec- ond. The switch by Hodges would have the All-Star first baseman understudying Roy Campanella, the National League's most val- uable player. But Manager Dressen appear- ed serious when he said he was considering 8tarttag 21-year-old piTCHINO ,iKFT SI)Kff.RING Wayne Relardl, a good^spring FROM SH0CK power hitter up from Mobile, at first base for the Dodgers. He said he was afraid of the small bone chl nelta refused from his left, The University, tat him down. he declares, Mountaineer Cageri Lose Only Five Home Tilts In Eight Yean MORGANTOWN, W. Va.. April 5 i NEA). West Virginia has dropped only five of 102 home basketball games In the last eight years. Penn State was the only quintet to beat the Mountain- eers here this year. West Virginia had a 67-game | home string going In 1948, when PlUuburgh snapped It. Kansas | j a rlUed for elght hours by 'State and Cincinnati won here ,_, DA" He kept - in 1950, Arizona last season. with th evirlpr The 1951-'62 Mountaineer edi-! wi-?, ma tlon drew 94,800 fans to 16 home " O "*"" Roy Camnanella was the Witherbee, N. Y., lad's first year out. Jake Wade, six-foot three-inch, 200-pound right-handed brother of Jake, who was with six Amer- "School authorities went a- gainst me to save somebody's face," he bristled. , As for the DA. Splvey said no evidence could be produced to show he had conspired to fix Wildcat cage games. "I was told wnen I agreed to go to New York and appear be- lore the grand Jury that I would only be there for 24 hours, that I wouldn't have to undergo a 'workout' from the DA before appearing before the grand Jury," related Splvey. "Both the school officials and DA went against their word.- As soon as I arrived In New York, games, a new attendance mark. won 16 while losing six for Hoi- couldn't. lywood with an ERA of 2.61. Bud Podblelan Is around. Left- "I told him, 'Well, bring it out let's see It.' Of course, he "When I returned to Lexlng- 'P8 HSl^ r^8?a 'can League clubs, is expected to B o b b d to naye removed e be8pcctacled clyde KlnR a'punch In ^AT^T'^ttlnand with the Vflghtlngithe Flatb haTdUedJ^hn7schm\trislhTow: ton, the Athletic Board called lug overhand again, and there Is, me In and told me they d agreed still hope. Billy Loes, who showed to kick me out of school. Then promise In the minors after col- they asked me If I had any- lecting $22,000 for signing, Is back thing to say. after a short stint in the Armed "All they ever had to go on Forces. Phil Haugstad can't get was Walt Hlrsch's (a Kentucky the ball over. teammate) story that he had . shared a bribe with me. Even Bobby Thomson's pay-off Dr. Donavan (University presl- the play-off didn't help dent) said be thought Hirsch Flatbush flinginr, and it has said what he did because he had JOOST FINEInflelder Eddie Joost, vetersn Philsdelphi Ath- letics Inflelder, seem pleased with the way the youngest male member of the family, Dean, 3. takes hold of a bat, whUeponsId, 5. watches elorely. The young Joosts spent much time at west Palm Besqh. observing the Athletics in training. (NEA) ...... + Olympic Torch Relay Symbol Of International Good Will ATHENS, Greece, April 51 (USIS)With the dramatic ar- rival of a runner bearing a flaming torch, the XV Olympic games will open this summer at Helsinki, Finland. The torch Is' a symbol for the free world that the Olympic games light the way for International good will. The sacred flame will be car- xled by more than 1,600 athletes In a relay beginning In Greece and ending at the Olympic Sta- dium in Helsinki. There R will burn for the duration of the games. According to tradition, the -kindling of the flame takes place In Athens at the site of the ancient temple of Zeus, wiiere an olive bninch Is ignit- ed by the sun's rays. At the ceremony appropriate passages are read extolling the virtue of peace. To symbolize the spirit of peace, a Greek soldier lays his rifie, takes off his uniform and appears dressed in the attire of an athlete. Then he plunges a torch Into the flame and starts off on the first letf of the gruel- ing relay. Although the torch relay goes back 500 years before Christ to the first Olympic games, it was not revived In the modern Olympics until the XI 01ymbladv heid at Berlin In -1936 The chain of foot runners linking the par- ticipating nations was regarded as a bond of strength and friendship between them. In reaent times, however, the Iron Curtain has weakened this chain. During the 1948 Olympic games held at London, the In- ternational Olympic Committee received no response to Its re- quest for relay runners from Al- bania, Yugoslavia and Bulgaria. Since they did not cooperate, the torch bad to be transported by ship across the Straits of Otranto to Barl, Italy. A similar problem has arisen for the 1952 Olympics schedul- ed for Helsinki. The Soviet Un- ion has refused permission for the torch to pass through Rua- slaii territory or that of Its satellites. The Helsinki Olym- pic Committee had asked the Soviet Union to let It pass through Tallinn, Estonia, to, sfcortear "the^ overland distance to be traveled by thousands of miles. Instead, the torch will now be taken by airplane to Denmark and carried bv runner through Sweden and Finland. Russia's refusal to allow this symbol of peace on their soil is puezling Olympic officials. ln| the relay, the Olympic torch is, banded from one national to another at each border. No run- ner crosses any but his native Perhaps a clue to the actions of the Soviet Union can be found In the latest edition of the "Small Soviet Encyclope- dia.' The volume defines physic- al culture as the "systematic and all around perfecting of the human body in the Interest of labor defense." bow, during the winter, and the chores In hls mh "r m the to be bolstered no!to be left su^ agreed"with the fixers to bring ldln Ln I'ilJ^oA n minors and at 28. Wade's fast ball < faring from th By BEANS REARDON 24 Years in National League NEW YORK, (NEA).Q. What was the shortest big league game within your memory? A. On Sept. to, 1919, .the Giants and Phillies played a full nine-inning came in 51 minutes. New York won, 6-1, Q. How many seasons did Max Carey lead the National League In stolen bases? A. For 16 jears from 1913 through MS5, with the excep- tion of three the old Pitts- burgh outfielder paced the pack. In one season, he pilfered 51 bates In 53 attempts. Q. What pitcher holds the major league total strikeout rec- ord? A. Walter Johnson with 349?. His mark is likely to stand for all lime. In 1913, incidentally, he posted an earned-run figure of U5. Q Did Larry Jojole ever play on a baseball pennant winner? A. With all the brilliance of his 21-year big league career, and his lifetime batting average of .338, the Hall of Fame second baseman was not on a pennant winner until he managed Tor- onto to the International League crown la 191?. pulled ten'.... right leg, which again kicked up on the bulky bncketop on the present training trip. "I had to take Campanella out last fall, didn't I?" asked Chuck Dressen.. Luke Sewell's comment on the proposed change is typical. "f hope he starts Hodges' re- fresher course in catching at Newport News and brings him back through Montreal, anything to keep his big bat out of the lineup, says the Reds1 manager, "but don't you stand on your head till he does It." HODGES MIGHT QUIT PULUNG THE BALL The consensus Is that nothing will come of the brash brain storm. Rube Walker filled In very well when Campanella could no longer run last autumn, and young Belardl, left-handed 'all the way and highly promising, does not yet make all the plays at first base. I Bill Terry also disagrees with [the effort being made, through Coach Billy Herman, to have Hodges just meet the ball and perhaps poke It into right field, especially with two strikes on him. The plan calculated to cut down his 90 strikeouts of last sea- son. "If I had Hodges." says the Giants' old pennant-winning manager and .401 hitter, "I'd Just stick him in that fifth slot and let him blast away. "If Hodges learns to hit to right, he'll quit pulling the ball to left, and which would you pre. for to have a right-hand distance hitter like him do?" The Brooklyn problem Is what It was last year, except with Don Newcombe In the Army the de- mand la for two starting pitchers instead of one. Unless a deal is made, or two new hands come through, there Is not too much behind Roe, Branca, Labine and Ersklnc. RUTHERFORD CALLED RIGHT-HANDED ROE Gigantic Chris Van Cuyk could be the extra left-hander the Brooks are seeking, but he has not finished a major league fame since he beat the Cardinals in his first one late in I960, and has yet to demonstrate that ha can field. The brightest new faces are a pair of JohnniesRutherford and Podres. Clay Hopper at 8t. Paul last season called Rutherford, a Can- adian-born, 26-year-old on the small side, a right-handed Roe. His sinker and other low pitches have kept his earned-run aver- age in the chain under 3.00 for three campaigns. Podres, a 170-pound left-hand- er, was considered the slickest Eltcher In a D league In 1960, but i Jumping all that distance. His speed and curve struck out 228 and yielded only 37 earned runs in 226 Innings with Hazard, Ky of the Mountain States, for the exciting average of 1.67, and it. the shock. Let us help yew Plan pr 'NIERNAIIONAl f Eucharistic Congress BAHCLKINA. MAY 76 10 JUNF For this special occasion PAA offers a dlfect ser- vice from New York to Barcelona. Or you can fly to Lisbon, travel overland to the Basilica at Fatima where the 35th anniversary of the appari- tion of the Blessed Virgin will be celebrated on May 13th...and continue down through Spain to Barcelona for the Congress. Make your visit a complete pilgrimage to the sacred shrines of Europe, to Lourdes and the Eternal City where you may enjoy the privilege of an audience with the Holy Father. With regular service direct to London, Paris, Rome and Lisbon, to every major European city, Pan American World Airways offers you the knowledge of 23 years international travel ex- perience to help you plan your trip. England m 3 In on It. "Hirsch was the principal feeder to me. He could make It look like I was in on It by giv- ing me bad passes. "I slncerelv believe the Ken- tuckv Athletic Board is trying to powderpuff the New York law officers and they're using me for the goat. 2\____ "I have said a thousand times that I'm innocent on these fix Cobb Would Not Run Wild Today, Says Rookie Base-Stealing Champ over dont tricks Happy Harvtyl Retas Harvey, all la well. A Job von found, as we can tell! Our Want Ad yon answered to a -t.- Soob yonll to president, wait * to! By MURRAY OLDERMAN 'hind you, waiting t the minute you slip up.',' fool these players with Cobb used." These words don't with brasen flippancy, modem generation. Ru>f#r Is a serious, self-effacing ypuns man. (?enulty that Cobb feels Jin ex- tinct these days. "First," begins the slender, 24- year-old, "I study the i pitchers. No matter how smart, they still develop habits that tell yo when they're coming home wit* the pitch. Vou never steal off the catcher, always the pitchW. I've ; even done It on pltchonts. NEW YORK, April 5 (NBA) "Next I get that sfdod lead. Would Ty Cobb, the baseball! Giant scout Hans Loberf taught great who's been lnvectlng a- me to get up on my toes and Salnst the modern ball player, i Rudy the Reindeer ha* pstflay- ave run wild against these same:ed his fleet feet and agile noodle present day boys? Into base stealing success whlcn "Not a chance," opines at least has somewhat nullified hi*good- one of the younger generation fleld-no-hlt tab. And he did it Rudy Rufer. the New York Giant with the sort of thinking and ln- shortstop chattel who's ticketed, prance around for a quick start, to spend his summer with Oak-1 It's better to take a chance be- land In the Pacific Coast League, ing picked off first JflaJ g Rudy, who can seek shelter be- caught noin Into senfijafv Surprisingly. Rufer lists sliding Rdy Rater Ty Cefc* last In base stealing lnttfg*nce- hind his own base-stealing his- trionics (he pilfered 53 at Min- neapolis last year to lead the A- "The Idea Is to get merlcan Association), explains: as quick as possible, and ther "Ouys are too smart nowadays., Isn't a runner who doesn't sacrl- There were a lot of sloppv ball flee some speed to go into a players In Cobb's day. Every-'slide." ... body'* a specialist now. They Rudy delays until the last pos- know all the tricks. slble moment, then literally eata- "They've got to. Baseball la putt* Hit the bag. dot-eat-dog. In every farm *y*-' Callfornian Cdbb too get a tern ther* are a down guys be- first hand look thla sunrmar. Italy Pertwgal 'am IN Ask your trsvel gent sbout 22 and 30 day tll-eiAeme pilgrimtges to Europe including full arrangement! (or your vuil to the Euchiriitlc Congress. Fof rttervationi ttt your Travtl Agent m PAN AMFHfCA/V ^atr World's Most Experienced Airline smw. L Itoet Ne. I. Tel fl-MTO Cele*. Sets* ft*., fel. lOfT xa-ivsi-r- 1952 1952 IIOMighCompratsionl | Q strato-starM'O the greatest car mr buiu in th* lowpric* fie/d7 COLPAN MOTORS, INC Your Friendly FORD Dealer Oo AatomoMle Row Tete. 2-1033 2-1I3* I V 1 i TWI LEAGUE SERIES GAME TONIGHT Globemaster, C-47 Collide Over Mobile MOBILE, Alabama, April 5 ftrPi Crash boats and hell- copters were combing swamp waters today for nine of the 15 victims of a spectacular mid- air collision between two mili- tary planes. The two aircraft plummeted to earth less than a mile from the thickly populated area, of mobile. Six bodies were in the smould- ering wreckage of big Globe- maeter transport which crash- ed onto railroad tracks. The fuselage of the other 5lane, a C-47, was believed to ave disappeared into a swamp. The Globemaster was on a routine test flight from nearby Brooklcy Field. Witnesses said a sharp explo- sion was heard as the planes collided. 7Ae SUN DA Y "Let the people know the truth and the country is safe" Abraham Lincoln. rWKNTY-SEVENTH YEAR PANAMA, R. P.. SUNDAY, APRIL 8, 1952 TEN CENTS A glowing Ol mlc Conference that Russia was oil products and asbestos. ready to buy goods from the Un_e d States. Western Europe, solWeast. Asia, the Middle East and Africa, amounting to $3,750,000 annually. He said Russia was ready to bring trade with Britain to the, 1937 level, or about $1,000,000 flame shot up as the Globemaster smashed into Mobile's railroad freight yards. Several more explosions follow- ed as the flaming transport Ignited a dozen refrigerator cars tandlng nearby. Six refrigerator cars were destroyed by fire, and six others damaged. Coast Guard and Brookley Field crash boats were search- ing the swamp for the C-47. Helicopters were co-ordinat- ing the search efforts from the air. The C-47, an air evacuation plane based at Brookley Field,, was returning from Maxwell Field at Montgomery, Alabama., An authoritative source said those aboard the C-47 included three Korean war veterans and flf fiAPItian AffflV a mother and child Ul VCI111011 HI III f Though the Globemaster is Capable of carrying 200 troops, BUENOS AIRES, April 5 (UP) dnly its regular six-man crew president Juan Peron in a aboard during the test speech delivered last night upon _____________ the formal return of the Ger- Russia Offers United Stafes $1250,000 Worth Of Trade MOSCOW. April 5 (UP)The i worth of goods at present prices, artificial fibers m exchange for Soviet Union . prepared to or- He said the Soviet Union is grain, timber and coal, der up to $1.250.000 worth of interested in buying British tex-1 Nesterov asked the delegates, goods from the United Slates in the next two or three years, according to Mikhail Nesterov. president of the Soviet Cham- ber of Commerce today. Nesterov told 450 delegates from 42 countries to the Soviet- sponsored International Econo- tlles, spices Nesterov and herring, said trade France could be increased six- fold. He said Russia wants to buy French mechanical and el- ectrical equipment, ships, rolled steel, essential oils and chem- icals, and to sell cereals, coal, who include 11 U.8. businessmen with | and trade unionists, to contact Soviet training organizations to' Fy returned from the United He said Russia wanted to buy Dutch ships, rubber, tin and make and receive concrete pro- posals for trade with their In- dividual countries. Earlier today Lord Boyd Orr, chief of the British delegation, told the conference the best way to break down the "Iron Pern Praises His 'Dear Old Comrades' flight. Lehman Urges Bill For Allowing More Immigrants To U.S. man Embassy to West German Ambassador Herman Hedenge said the Argentine Army will never be able to forget or pay the immense debt of gratitud* we have with our old com- rades of the Germany Army." Peron notes the Germans had given instruction and education, to the Argentina Army, as well) NEW YORK, April 5 (UP) as having contributed "to make i Senator Herbert K. Lehman a real profession of military! charged today that the pending | craft in this country." McCarran Walter immigration The Argentine chief said most I bill would introduce "poilce state 0f those "German comrades" i principles and methcos for deal- were killed In the First or Sec- X-l.L-.-^ I l.l,. lng with immigrants and aliens." ond Worid Wars," but that, | 6l6DnOn6 LlllKS In a speech prepared for the|..tney ve |n 0ur memories and National Democratic Club our hearts " luncheon, he urged passage of _________' ------------- another bill hi sponsored to- n gether with Senator Hubert H AnQrV Premier Curtain" was to "bust It with wagons of goods." . Boyd Orr, former head of the UN Food and Agriculture Or- ganization, said he had recent- States, where social changes "are taking place for the elimi- nation of poverty." (NEA Telephoto) WHOOPING IT UP Tait workers celebrate at their Milwaukee, Wls., headquarters after hearing, returns from the Wisconsin and Nebraska primaries. The Ohio Senator bounced back as a leading candidate for the GOP president! al nomination by winning Impressively over Gov. Earl Warren and Harold E. Stasseh In Wisconsin and tppplng Gen. Elsenhower In a Ne- braska "write-in" battle. ------------------------------------------------1------------------------------- ii* ----------------------------------------------1. Newsprint Is Like Bullets In Cold War-Eisenhower By DREW PEARSON o (NEA Telephoto) UNCHARTED RIVER Residents of Havre, Mont., use row boats to survev their waterlogged town after It was flooded by rapidly rising waters of the Milk River. More than 1500 residents were forced to evacuate their homes. Humphrey. .He said his bill would allow an jftra 100,000 immigrants to en- ter" the United States every year and would safeguard their civil rights. Lehman said the other bill in- troduced by Senator Pat McCar- Demands Ten Confidence Votes Girl With Classes At Schoolroom GULFPORT i Nine-year-old Miss. Nancy (UP) Ellen Water Alone Found Enough For Plants RIVERSIDE, Calif. (UP) Scientists at the University California's citrus experiment Du- station here have established buisson doesn't have to go far- ther than the telephone when she goes to school. PARIS, April 5 (TJ/')Premier i Antoine Plnay angrily ended The girl hasn't been able to go four days of debate on his 1952 |out much since she had infantile an and Representative FrancisI budget early today with a de- paralysis m 1950. By special ar- Walter threatens the "civil 11- Mfcrties of many of our people." _ He said It would discriminate against Negroes and orientals and establish new grounds for tfie deportation of aliens. It Would make them retroactive and could bar almost everyone from entering the United States. BALBOA TIDES High Low 1:03 a.m..............7:17 a.m. J.S1 p.m..............7:51 p.m. mand that the National As- sembly vote confidence in his government next Tuesday. Pinay asked for a total of ten confidence votes on his budget as a whole and vital phases of his program to finance It. A defeat on any one of them probably would topple the 25- day old Center Rightist govern- ment. The record high 1952 bud^t already has caused the fall of two French governments this year. rangement with the telephone company and local school offi- cials, her room at home Is con- nected directly with her fourth grade classroom at Long Beach school. When Nancy Ellen sits at her desk and turns on the machine, she can hear everything that goes on in her classroom two miles away and can make her- self heard as well. The Dubuis- sons take her papers to school to be graded every Thursday. that plants and even large trees will grow indefinitely m water' cultures and produce high quali- ty fruit. WASHINGTON, April 5Gen. Elsenhower has written a prl- j vate letter to Sen. Hubert Humphrey, Minnesota Democrat, i on the alarming newsprint : shortage, hailing newsprint as a "potent weapon" in the Cold War. "The printed word Is a vital link in the chain which unites free peoples in our common cause." Elsenhower wrote. "It is, moreover, a potent force lO our campaign to place the truth before the captive people behind the Iron Curtain." Ike's views were requested by Humphrey, who heads a Senate Subcommittee stu d y i n g the newsprint shortage. The committee has already drafted a report, not yet made public, suggesting publishers' cooperatives to increase news- print production and construc- tion priorities for newsprint mills. Replying to the Senator from Minnesota, Eisenhower wrote on March 13: "Your letter speaks of news- pring as a "bullet of the Cold War.' I would go even further and label It as one of our most potent weapons. jj "It is my firm vieio that ^Mthtng U more important to the collective security efforts in loMch we are engaged than an enHghtened public, alert to the dangers we face and fully understanding the issues in- volved in tft* Cold War.' A continuing^ supply news- Dr. Hi D. Chapman, chairman Mw.....b-s.w -*"- of the station's division of Foils print adequate to fulfill the and plant nutrition, concedes to old-guard gardeners that organic matter has great value as a me- dium for growing plants and trees. However, he said, experiments have proved that organic matter is not Indispensable. "From our experience In water heeds of the press.Nipt only in but In free-a the V. 8. over world, imnortance. "It seems is of the reas all greatest clear to me that and sand cultures," he explained, as "one of the most desirable "we know that most green plants and effective means of securing can be grown in a medium de- ] an increased production, void of organic matter." The report adds that two- A BOY AT CALVARY By Jay Heavilin and Walt Scott T>ttQu' up in the stream of pilgrims, the tour curious boys were swept through Jerusalem's gates. The current deposited them in a market- place where vendors of shimmery silks, fragrant spices, sparkling wines ond oils,squatted cross-legged. But where was Borabbos being held' Sakron asked a wrinkled wineseller. 'In the paloce prison.' whispered the vender Down Jerusalem's twisting streets sped tit* bay. , MA h>M M A full-throated clamor swelled out of a side street Sakron sur- rendered to his curiosity, shouting, 'Come, let's look A proces- sion of soldiers led o whit-robed prisoner 'lews of Nazareth'' cried a voice above the din of the rabble. Cppxayn thirds of the daily publishers favor publishers' co-ops "for the purpose of producing and distri- buting newsprint." The report hesitated to make an outright recommendation on exactly what priority newsprint] mills should be given In the de- fense scheme. However, the report emphasiz- ed: "The subcommittee can, how- ever, draw attention to the fact that newssprlnt is as much a munition of the cold war as bullets are of a shooting war. "About 90 percent of the pub- lishers think that priorities should be granted." 1. "Importance Newsprint is a weapon In the battle for the hearts and minds of men. Our opponents are using that Weapon. If we are to have any hope of urtlmate victory, it Is essential that we, too, possess and use the weapon of news- print." 2. "Freedom Of The Prets Many existing newspapers are forced to limit the amount of news they will publish because" of lack of available newsprint, and many are unable to expand their circulation for the same reason. Equally Important, the news- print shortage virtually forbids the entry of new publishers into the field. This Is particularly restrictive of the expression of minority views. Publications- expressing cur- rently popular ideas will, nat- urally, tend to have the greatest circulation and be the most prosperous. A free press cannot exist without a free market and adequate supplies for the press." 3. "Need -- The shortage of newsprint Is a perennial and this Is a matter demanding, recurring problem. Two-thirds careful attention to all con- cerned." I have obtained a copy of Humphrey's report, which cauti- ously suggests publishers' co-ops Gentle, though violence swirled about Him; majestic, though the and blows rained upon his hied this wot Sakron's imprae- Jen ofthe dork-eyed, ivory-ekmned figure surrounded by soldiers Learning that Jems hod keen found guilty of blos- pherny by the high priests, and was being taken to Procurator Pontius Frile, Sakron exulted. He was being led) I* the palace where Barabbes was m- UponeSifhl hod wriggled flicker across throne sat the heavily owUd freotroter. TW yeanejsters, who their way to the inner rita of the crowd, etch id annoyonci dot' face as the bearded Ncara* was poshed before him b/the publishers of daily papers resRonding in the (commlt- tee's>- survey indicated they could use^more newsprint than they wertxable. to obtain and that the laclt of newsprint li- mited their publication of news to some extent." 4. "World Shortage-V The shortage of newspr i rt-t t world-wide, and is far more severe in Europe and Asia^ than in the United States. The lack of newsprint is deter- ring force which it hindering education and an increase of. literacy in these lands." 5. "Allocations The present system of allotlng newsprint on the basis of long-term contracts is, in Itself, a kind of allocation which must be regarded as un- desirable. The only safe method of allocating newspr 1 n t Ik through the action of a truly free market, which presupposes the availability of an adequate supply." 6. "Government Use Al- though some publishers seem- ed to think that the quantity of paper used by the govern- ment agencies was partially responsible for the shortage the figures do not support such a conclusion. "The total quantity of news- print used by the government Is not sufficient to make a slgnifciant dlfferene in the na- tion's supply, even .were the government to cease its use altogether." Deputy Nearly Loses Voice To Get Squeal PEORA. 111. (UP)Ray Craf- on, depui> sheriff, came out of one case with strained vocal !chords. A 74-year-old woman was ac- cused of stealing $25 from an- other woman In a tavern. She was partially deaf and used an old-fashioned ear trumpet. Crafton nearly .lost his voice trying to get the woman to con- fess. After a lot of Crafton> shouting, he did. rr. , (NEA Telephoto) < THEIR AN WOK Campaign workerf for Sen. Estes Ke- fauver of Tennessee are jubilant in Milwaukee, Wl., after their eandldate posted victories in the Wisconsin and Ne- braska primaries to become a leading contender for the ^ Democratic nomination. V "*w- in W 2*?gte** rmirBTuilove ul hor-P ,rt" rS*^** ,n' or lor. ""-^.^..ru.-^.r.i-1'1 *<:> **3*fta. >V tnaine Maide'nform Brewjere o mde onlv in the United Stele ol America. . ZLES and PASTIMES -r*HK architect of * the original labyrinth of Kin*; Minos at Crate, wasn't any more clever than the de- signer of this mase. It'll fool you If you aren't patient and careful. And you can't really claim to have solved It sue- and with cesefully If you take wrong turnings that way that make It necessary for you to retrace any part of your route. You must start, of course, at X. near the bottom, and work up to the sin- gle exit, at the top. Just Imagine your- self a prisoner at X, your pencil, try to find the only opens to freedom. Til lie's All at Sea in This Pipe the Lid PR her winter vacation, Tlllle took a two-week cruise during which time she visited seven tropical ports. 8he traveled exactly 1,800 miles on the round trip, making no stops at all on the way back. The second port Tlllle visited was half as far from the first port as her Brst stop Was from the starting point. The fourth stop wag half as far from the third stop, which was twice that distance from the second port. The fifth stop was 80 miles beyond the fourth port. The sixth port Tlllle visited was only 10 miles fur- ther than the first stop was from the home port. The sevenUi and last port was 880 miles from the second stop. What was the distance between each of the .seven ports which Tlllle visited ? X|U9Jjoa mo pnjnUu *iqqo.id no* n 'M[|iu Oil P Oil 081 OS '091 o? 'oot ^l"*!}*' -j 'ti yod nA m UB9*|3q ou*i|p "U. :o||OS Brain Wracker POCKET HUlarda or pool I played with IB numbered bells. 1 through 16, and, of course, a cue ball. For beginning of play, the IB numbered balls are 'racked" In a triangular frame. Let's assume that you wanted to place the balls In the rack so that the outside Ove balls added to 38 on each side. How would you do It? .I'lll.v, Bin llll PI"* ||<1 SI P" L H oi 1 f ft '8 '* 0l-P1 "I'M.: 01 '0*11 V-"PI" Vl 1 *! -OJ doi :l luoiuafunj.i no iV Transpositions ri supply the missing words, use words spelled with the same letters, but differently ar- ranged: (for example: 1. latent talent.) 1. This child has------------------- and may become a famous mu- sician. 2. The------of the------forbade swimming in if. 8. The foolish boy got into a ----- through his-----. 4. When the man was ready to ------ on his trip he sadly from his family. 8, I ------ the manner In which that man ------ the room when I am busy. a. The train ------ came In with a -----that there was a wreck on a nearby curve. 7. The detectives had to ------ through the -----of the bridge to And the loot. 'MUM* 'OaJtSfJ I i.iml.u '.i->|.i",j 'SjaitiJ luniil g 'p9Wi1 |.iil>iri I -S.MII1M -"'"i >S 'I iiihbij Ml -n r. wii 'juis*i t " (' ") f C ,000000 t ) 9 pSij i '00.000. 52 000000 000000 PEftCM blATE- j A0000 ai oD&ooiio It IM Of WMaiMST 0*000 52 Take a Trip Via Your Imagination 'ji TAKE a trip or even a short drive on a busy highway, and notice the number of ears with out-of-state license plates. Notice too how many tags now publicize various distinctive claims to fame, such as nicknames, emblems, maps, famous places, etc. Ta test your familiarity with states and plates In general, we've assembled [above] twelve 1BB2 tags for you to puzzle over. You should be able to Identify most of them, especially with the following clues: A. Oddly, the largest city bearing Its name Is In another state. B. Keystone of the original thirteen states. C. Shrimp boats and fur trapper* sir among It* claims to fame. D. Far from the ara, but with more land under water than constitute all of Delaware and Rhode Island. E. Prominent for single product In 1MBthe A-Bomb. F. This state's name I* spelled one way; pronounced an- other. It has the nation'* only known diamond mine. 0. Also known a* the "Badger State." H. Europeans went there before Jamestown or Plymouth were settled, but It' till the youngest state. 1. This state I* named for an English king. 3. It's simply mountainous. That'* what It' name mean*. K. Famous for the Big Horn*, the Medicine Bows, the Ab- sarnkas, the Tetona and Wind River mountain*. I.. The only stale with a foreign country'* name. n.,|Bpj *o.v -q ISuiiiioXjh M :niun 'f !!joo t :suns|.iy H :u|"uorsiM '!> :mwuHJV J '"'uuox a :nios -mum a nitnoi n T|uaiAmman a :iwni3| ? ismmssv Clock Shot or Shot Clocked?You Be the Detective T-Totaling to Tease You TOMMY TUCKER took two strings and tied two turtles to two tall trees. How many T'a are <> Jur <*"'*' ^^B^ YOU'RE not necessarily low- brow If .you can't answer a question about this high hat. Is It: 1. Twice oa foil as wide' t. One-third taller than vide t S. Same height as Width t Oet it right without measuring there In that? Jnoo |0 'jwn "1 X o*kj " 'Mi :omV -n|tl l*311 Lettering Gafne for Junior Readers p EVERSE the usual o r d e r of ** things and go from "end" to "beginning" by filling the boxes at right with words of increasing length. Each word must start with the letters BE and Include, the letter N. What words fulfill these re- quirements? JBMSUB Biqmod jo iBi uo m hiiiiiiiis.mi 'jBUU|*oq 'iiienu -q ti.>i."i 'qausq 'puBB :4.V Ladder Words IT takes many steps to make a town Into a city. However, TOWN can be transformed Into CITY in no more than seven steps by the word ladder method of Changing one letter each step to leave a common word. The order of letters cannot be changed. Can you effect the transformation ? Example of ladder words: Boy, bay, ban, Man. 10 '>l 'B'lu* '1<"U '10IU ,,'* 'oi 'uaoj,tj XM buo :j9*s*V JLi y^^-v fa* J \ i 'M- : E N D >W Xj m\ !_1-----* B E 6 1 N N 1 N 6 C' EORGE KNOVEL, chemist and engineer, boasted to his friends about the accuracy of his antique grandfather clock, assert- ing that It kept excellent time. Every half-hour It struck one beat, and every hour It struck the number of the hour. At 12 o'clock It struck 12 times; at 11 o'clock It struck 11 times, and so on. George Knovel will probably never forget one Saturday eve- ning when, working on a difficult engineering problem, he lost track of the time. His wrist watch had stopped, and he did not trouble to set or rewind it, but retired to beil. He tossed around in a rest- less sleep, to be awakened by a loud noise (later found to be a shot), and to Hear the grand- father clock strike once. After what seemed to be a half-hour, he heard It s t r 1 k again: and, In another half-hour, once more. Desperately trying to sleep, he tossed about, but ha couldn't get away from the sound, for after another Interval it struck again! Unbelieving, he tried many methods to fall asleep, but aa he Anally dozed off he was certain he hesrd the clock strike once again! When he awoke again, the sun was shining. He tested the clock; it had not been tampered with, and It was In perfect working condition. He had heard the clock strike ONCE at half-hour Inter- vals. FIVE times In a row! "IM- POSSIBLE!" he thought. It was about this time that De- tective Shea and Professor Orl- pahs arrived to question him con- cerning a gang killing In the street outside. In response to their asking If he had heard a shot, he related the fantastic oc- currences concerning the grand- father clock. Smilingly, the Professor told him he could give a logical ex- planation as to how It was POS- SIBLE to have heard FIVE strokes at h a I f-hour Intervals with the clock in perfect condi- tion. Also, since the noise which awakened him was the shot, It established the time at which the murder had been committed. YOU BE THE DETECTIVE: What possible explanation could explain the five strokes of one ? ;npl jo anona i*| sqi l 'ltiJ|H -p|iu JBijs tpnOM* MBj 'Xtpuns; oo pajy n iou i, 3AM oi' I'll H30|3,0 t o buojib J.BHM in pjBsii Bii B" p9op t| v oil T '08'El JO fan'ui m um pus 'B4|8*i 10 Bl|UJlf nVNIJ 1> P-"""( 9*JO0 .OB A|B*| JO 9H0J1 XSVT "Ml B'OJ.iq Jnf pJU )oi|B i|| li|i I nop u'| MATHEMATICIANS can be men of letters aa well as of figures. They can substitute let- ters of the alphabet for the familiar Arabic numbers and work out problems In arithmetic, a the following suggests: THIS IS VERY EASY You are to convert the letters Into numerals so that a correct problem in addition is revealed. inn sifi Saiaq 'MjnoB jo 'Jil| Bin w m '.iJ'3!M.qr,?v.ulni RIDDLE ME THIS What can you hear and catch and never see? Hjuiaj Suiand v :ii.*nv o> !! \ I I I SS>J*|fc~- DRAW a continuous line that does not cross Itself, but crosses, once, all the lines and dots in the figure above, and discover something about which It may be said: the shorter It barns, the longer It In. Solution is elsewhere on, page. Just Scraps of Paper ANSWER within one minute: If you tear out pages 1, 2B, 31 and 82 of a book, how many sheets of paper will you have? 'II Suipane.id aSsd pajaqumu-ppo Bin jo Sjbo, qj oo XA| | jaquinu ue9 ay '9Ju.i : Tongue Twister p EPEAT aloud quickly without making an error: Moms supposes his tosses are roses but Moses suppose* errone- ou*!v. For Mom he knnw-.es his lueses ain't roses, a* Moses sup- pose* his toeses to be. simmo Tr Someones in for an Early Swim DRAW connecting lines from dot 1 to dot 28 to complete this drawing and determine who's in the water. Where two num- bers are close to one dot, usa it for both. By Euoene Sheffer HORIZONTAL 1Who is the "father of Canasn?" Jciu? (Luke 23:7) 9Rigorous. 14Grape. lo-Kludc. IBDeduce. 17Baby' playthings. IBWhat-wealthy Bethlemlte was a kinsman of Naomi's hus- band? (Ruth 2:1) 21Street railway iabbr.1 22At that time. 23A new discovery. 24feminine name. 25To what Ezrahite was Solo- mon compared in wisdom? (1 Ki. 4:311 Snack. 30Atmosphere. 31 -Portico. 33Birds craw. 34Coincide 38Piece of property 39-Correlative of either 40Who was Jonathans ion? 'Erra 8:6> 41Javelin. , 43Proposed International I a n- guage. 44Whose life did Joshus spare because she had hidden his messengers spying out Jeri- cho" 46Sanctified person. 48Obstruct. 4B-rSpokcn j 51Blank leaf at beginning or end of a book. StCatalog. 3-Go by 55Wing. 57-Biblical weeds. 38Emmet 59 Invariably. 80The etarnal city. 61Note in the scale 62In what month was the temple completed? (Sera 8:15> 63To what place did Crescens, one of Paul's companions, go ftter leaving him? (2Tim. 4:10) ufl up. 68Greek letter. 70 Male cat 71Small greenish finch. 72Brings Into ubjectlon. 73Masculine name, VERTICAL 1One of the men who held up the hands of Moses. 2Topaz humming-bird. 3 First book of the New Testa- ment. 4Feminine name. 5Equal. 0Ethiopian prince. 7Hypothetical force. 8Something owed. 9Lead 10A cutting tool. 11Symbol for ruthenium. 12What Jew, chief of the priests. had seven sons? (Acts 19.14' 13At what place did David and bis followers overcome the Syrians? (2 Sam 10:17) 18Conjunction. 20 Single unit 23Conflagration. 24Epochs. 25Father of the sons from whom Abraham purchased a seoul- chre at Sychem (Acta 7:16 26Pope's triple crown. 27Clay pigeons. 28Price. 30Grow old. 32Sour. 34Biblical word for Father. 35Roman magistrate. 37-Efface 38Legal wrong* 40Auditory organs. 42Some. CxtriiM. IMC. aii rmini Ardi*i. la* 45A great multitude. 47At a distance. 48 Ecclesiastical cap. 50Molten rock. 52Tibetan priest. 53Heads. 54Old-womanish. 58European dormouse. 57Anglo-Indian weights. 59British Foreign Secretary. 60Violent anger. 62Mountain aborigine. (B_jewel 04Ancient nsme of Nio. 65Eucharistlc wine vessel. 67Arrival (abbr.) 89 Mother. Diamond Words WORD-DIAMOND punles of the type you see are of di- rect ancestral relation to the modem crossword. They are in fact, credited wRh having in- spired its invention. This is one you do with "E"s, If not ease. E E E E..... .......E E.....E E E E 323 1. Female of a species. 2. To invest. 3. Gourmet, connoisseur. 4. Pluck up by the roots. 5. Religious recluse or hermit. 6. Eulogistic memoir. 7. The night before. 1 1 'oj -9tttU9JBj | 'Sta.iipaja 9jnoida t npaa i 1 T :HS|SJ nr>n HHnr.Fi- PT,r-:M 'TIE MMjri nnnnfeifti ruwr, in n EH Mili [ it t\.m mtift i i '\.r-' mi 'lib. r.'isin BJiTiHW ro i -"-iirnrii i 1 inrar.n Pi-ior- Mi H i r-M M. r -i T '.i -Tiin Ilk. i^i HI- cici iH i ''n iu-x;m .-juh --irrnin nri'inr fall l MR!- tirfFircm aunan m ccn rwws(iD pi'Mi.r son-Tos v 1 * >' . J-s-^ ^^ !' "".........."" '*"!' "i.....""w fl-!^fJ-!-l-l-!-':!:!:!''t!,!l'!'!ff e l...... ________^_____________ ,.;. '................ TMg^^";!:1^'-----'".! '-VI;!'!----'----------' .......--------------- in Pictures . .---------------------,----- lili 'j-j-l-l i i ' i mil..........-----------1------" ______________^_ ,,,,,,- - ....-.^~ ------------------' *>\-H *. OPERATING a tape recorder is M/Sgt. Raymond Starr o the White House signal branch, aboard President Truman's new streamlined communications car o his presidential train. HEADING skyward, a Super Constellation tramport in use as a flying laboratory by Lockheed Aircraft in Burbank, Cal., demonstrates its sharp-climb ability in a test takeoff., THE ELIZABETHAN INFLUENCE N& HITCH to it, ii you follow the suggestion of Nancy Diggs, CUDDLING his o&^Maggie, Harold Wenning, 13, waits for fccramento, Cal. (left), and Audrey Bashore, Mitchell, Dr. Cherry Hobper.Mrom Speyer hospital in New York, to Neb, who show how they stretched $1,000 each to cover X-ray the dog in a mobile clinic that she brings to Buddies, fare months of travel through Europe and part of Africa. Inc., an organization providing blind children with pet dogs. SPANNING the centuries between the reigns of Queen Eliz- abeth I of the lth century and present Queen Elizabeth, fashion designers are turning out dinner dresses and gowns patterned after those of 400 years ago. A portrait of Eliza- beth the First shows a richly decorated gown (top right) which is the inspiration for Jane Darby's black tissue faille dinner dress (top left). Notice the resemblance in the style of both gowns with their bejewelled hats, necklaces, full skirts and pleated cuffs. A Ceil Chapman frothy white silk taffeta gown (bottom left) compares favorably with the elab- orate Elizabeth I gown (bottom right) with its puffed sleeves and its enormously full skirt. Here also there is a remark- able similarity in basic styles. Both gowns feature shirred tucking, very full skirts and identical Elizabethan bodices; SHAVEN HEADS of citizens m Jodhpur, India, are a tradi- ^"^"-" ~* '" _ Zu. _,km^ 5MAV6N HEADS oi citizens rn Jodhpur, indM, are a xram- _.-- eW|MMING is the fad at Fort Lauderdale, Fla, where these mermaid-dancers are tUNCH TIME comes at the Newport News. Va.. shipyards and some of the 3,000 workmen fin- tional y^^ of mourning for the tate Maharajah of Jodhpur, **"' -tahmg the interiors of the passenger liner, United States, are leaving the ship for chow. wno wat j^led while he was flying his private airplane. .tm *\ fl^ng^s^rivate airplane! .8oin* though their costumed rehearsal for one of the resort's popular winter water shows. Ming Feature Syndicate '?* ^^m^ h MOMENTOUS CHOICE Cory Hutchinson has his choice of a free pie. But how to select from blueberry, apple, pine- apple, cherry, lemon meringu e, chocolate and pumpkin? (8m COUNTRY FAIR mi I'M* Iw4 1) * i: American Supplement PANAMA, R. P., SUNDAY, APRIL C, 1952 i ..... Review Of The Week WORLD-WIDE ISTHMIAN SPORTS PRESIDENT HARRY TRUMAN announced he was not going to run, and Immediately there was such a clattering of political hoofs that it sounded as if he was the only one not running. The seers and sages, still maintaining their 1948 from, had been mostly of the persuasion that the Pre- sident would run again. They extricated themselves from this sad but fami- liar situation by spieling loud and fast about the field of likely successors. 8till ahead in the headline stakes was Estes Ke- fauver, only Democrat to start running before Harry Truman withdrew. Whether Kefauver's momentum would carry him through the Democratic National Convention is some- thing again from his continuing success in the De- mocratic primaries. Por Mr. Truman doesn't like Kefauver, and Mr. Tru- man knows Just about all there is to know about the Democratic party machine, which will be to the driver's seat at the Chicago convention. But Mr. Truman's rumored choice, Illinois' Otrr. Adlai Stevenson, is reported to be dwelling firmly to his starting stall, displaying no interest in the open if somewhat muddy track lying beyond the open door. Even such a rugged political punter as Harry Tra- in'n can back an immobile horse only just so long. Not yet properly on his way, but with a thick wad of Confederate money already on him. Is Georgia's Sen. Russell. Mr. Truman's friend, Oklahoma Sen. Bob Kerr, is also on his way. But it is on his way back home. Kefauver handed him something of a lacing in the Nebraska primary, and Kerr has the uncommon poli- tical virtue of knowing when he's beat. So far has the primaries have gone, which isn't very iar, seems just about all Democrats like Kefauver ex- cept the professionals. In the Republican race for nomination Sen. Robert Taft trotted home confortably in Wisconsin, and edged Eisenhower in Nebraska. Taft forces regarded these wins as a loud and pun- .gent answer to Ike's New Hampshire and Minnesota showing, but as if Taft couldn't make a showing in the Midwest he couldnt make one anyway, this week's GOP results didn't do much but leave Taft stiS in the race. Taft is far and away the No. 1 choice of the Repub- lican Party professionals, but seems rather less belov- ed of the voters. Seems the voters of the United States are question- ing whether they should be governed by men of their own choice, or the anointed of the smoke-filled room srhemers. . Almost as If the voters feel the task of guiding the free world's most powerful nation is one for an ideal- ist, rather than a fast shuffler of post masterships. Such thoughts on the voters' part are, of course. mi orthodoxy run wild. By way of respite from their tattered form charts. US political writers had a couple of certain scratch- Jugs to record last week. In one of the loudest heavy-calibre salvoes unleash- ed for many a long day in Washington, housecleaner Newbold Morris and Attorney General Howard Mc- Grath were fired. n the modern military style, it was something of a chain reaction. McGrath fired Morris, and Truman fired McGrath. Morris, who appears to be an idealist sadly unschool- ed in the abrasive methods of Washington in-fighting, has decided that no one whatever in Washington wishes to be investigated. Or maybe didn't dare to be investigated. However this may be, there did appear to be almost \jns.?mly jubilation among certain Senators when Morris left Washington. And when he was there trying to fill his appointed task of ferreting out malpractices and corruption to government, there was a tendency for Congressmen and others to start pointing accusingly in all manner r other direction upon his approach, rather than sub- mit themselves to his cleansing process. All very odd, not to say odorous. As politics seemed to have the headlines most of the week, it is fitting to recall that in the elections far the London County Council, largest local body gov- ernment in the world. Labor tronncrtl Churchill's Con- seTatives by !>'i seats to 37. P-eviously the council was about, eveniy divided, party-wi. c. This iiRgests that Clement Attlee's men and ideas arc s. little more popular with London voters than there are with United States publishers. in Ftpnce, as usual, the premier was threatening to resign. However. Antoine Pinay postponed the execution of thio three!, for four days, waiting to see how some votes confidence go in the Chamber of Deputies this week. For a Premier of France to postpone his resigna- tion four days is a sign of unusual stability, aD things considered, and may we >- -*'-eted as a sign of whatever ywu like. THE COST OF living in the Republic of Panam threatened to rise this week when local oil company representatives slapped a one-cent increase on the price of gasoline, effective April 1. Claiming an increase in ocean freight and refinery costs which have been in effect for some time, Esso Standard Oil, Texas Oil, Union Oil and Shell declared themselves determined to enforce the price hike des- pite objections from the government. However, legal action by the government brought the appointment of Wednesday of Fernando Alegre as di- rector of a Price Regulation Office, which had been authorized by the National Assembly a least a couple of months ago. Immediately upon taking office Alegre got down to work, and Thursday issued a decree which pegged the wholesale and retail price of gasoline at prices which were in effect on March 31 32.5 and 38 cents, res- pectively. This changed the whole aspect of the affair as far as the oil companies were concerned and the increase, which placed the retail price at 38 cents per gallon, was withdrawn after three days. A formal request to have the increase considered by the Price Regulation Office waa re-submitted. Unofficial government sources'argued that the one- cent increase in the price of gasoline would have in- creased the cost of living of the Republic's vehicle owners by at least $700,000 annually. Otker wami argwed that la sedition, the la- crease probably mM eaase a hike to baa and taxi fares and send the cost ef living skyrocket- ing in mare ways than tnr. Fun-loving Panameos had some of their hopes dashed when Father Clavel, secretary of the local Archbishopric, announced that the customary secular Holy Saturday festivities were out, but definitely. Pope Pius xn has eliminated the modern custom of holding the Holy Saturday services to the morning and ruled that they will again be held at midnight as they used to be. The situation called for patting off atoas to who H a* Satarday night with dancing and drinking until dawn, until Easter Sanday. Despite the ban, carloads and busloads of people still were leaving the capital yesterday for the In- terior where they will spend Holy Week. Government plans called for closing down offices from Thursday until Sunday this week. Farmer President Amalia Arias' Panameistos tost week were barling charges at the "Pie de Guerra" (War footing) groaa the Matadero liberal Party is said to have. The Panameistas were holding an indocrtoation meeting Thursday night when they say, groups of men armed with revolvers and stones barged in and broke up the meeting. A spokesman said the group destroyed furnishings, and microphones and injured several of the 300 Pa- nameistas who were attending the meeting. Yesterday a Panameistas column to the tabloid daily "La Hora" said It was "a cowardly 'pie de guer- ra' attack." ------ o------ Candidates gaiere* 4# in ifl will be to the race far the 53 seats of the National Assembly, ac- cording to official figures released; last week. Ex-Preatdeat Itoberto Chtori's Partido liberal Nacional and the Frente Patritico lead the other nine parties ia the race with 51 candidates each. Almost one week after an unidentified plane flew unmolested over the Panam Canal, the Isthmian civilian community got action. Civic councils influenced the calling of an emer- gency meeting Friday at Balboa Heights at which re- presentatives of all communities were present. Action was the order of the day, and the results, showed progress to have been .made. Instructional Civil Defense programs will be started. The Canal Zone government's appropriation was slashed to Washington by $12,37o,3O0. The bin that was passed granted a total of 16139.500 for the Zone government. A soldier who was responsible for the death of a 72- year-old American woman was given a suspended sen- tence, and a La Bocan who struck a man with a sledgehammer handle causing serious eye injury, was given a three year penitentiary term. A visitor to Panama's shores was the transmitter vessel Courier which docked at Cristobal Saturday morning, and will be open to the general public for inspection. ------ o ------ The day of the penny post-card will come to an end, as of May 1 when the new two-cent post-cards will be issued by Zone post offices. TONIGHT AT BALBOA Stadhim the Balboa High School baseball team tackles the Gibraltar life m- rurancemen in the second game of fl ft best of three final championship aeries for the Pacific Twilight League 1962 supremacy. The High School drew first blood Wednesday night by taking a 4-1 decision behind Don Fbrton'* one-hit pitching. Hard-bitting featherweight Gene Smith of Washing. ton continued his climb towards of the 126-pound division top by a unanimous decision over Glen Flannagan in Chicago Wednesday night. Smith had Flannagan on the canvas twice but failed to keep him there. Also in boxing, Lightweight Champ Jimmy Carter eked oat a unanimous but close decision over chal- lenger Lauro Salas to a 16-round championship bout at Los Angeles. Carter was down for a three-count to the final round, but came back to finish strong. The Caterpillar Diesels from Peoria, Illinois Tuesday night edged Kansas university 02-W at Madison Square Garden to the finals of the Olympic basketball trials tournament- Seven players from the University of Kansas, five from the Caterpillars and two each from the other semlfinalists the Phillips Oilers and La Salle of Philadelphia were chosen to make np the team that will represent the United States In the IKS Olym- pic Games at Helsinki, Finland. A round-robin tournament will be played with All- star teams from the Atlantic, Pacific and Armed For. ces Little Leagues to decide the Little League cham- pionship of the Isthmus. Heavyweight Champion Joe Walcott will make his first title defense of the crown he won last July, on June 5. Walcott, who took the title when he kayoed Ezzard Charles eight months ago. signed for a re-match yes- terday with the ex-champ from Cincinnati. The 15- round about will be held to Philadelphia's Municipal Stadium with each fighter getting 30 per cent of the gate. The Philadelphia Police Athletic League will re- ceive five per cent of all receipts, including whatever movie and television rights are sold. Walcott says he will open training just outside At- lantic City, New Jersey, on April 15. Charles hasn't selected his training camp site as yet. Rocky Marciano, who probably will meet the win* ner of the Walcott-Charles scrap, has lined up an- other bout to keep to shape. Promoter Manny Almie- da says Marciano will meet Charlie Norkus in Pro- vidence, Rhode Island, on April 21. The newest American Olympic track hope predicts he will do bigger and better things in the years to come. He is Warren Drueteler, the Army lieutenant who upset Don Gehrmann in the Bankers Mile Saturday night at Chicago. I 8ays Druetaler "I think I'm getting stronger every year and my peak Is some way off yet. Gundar Haag's peak was at 28 and I'm only 22 years old." Druetaler says he is a better runner now than when he was attending Michigan State because, he says, he is correcting the mistakes he made then. "I have no fear of Gehrmann," says Drueteler. "I respect him as a good runner but I think I could beat him seven days a week." Druetaler plans to qualify for the Olympics in either the three-thousand-yard steepechase or the 15-hun- dred meter run. In Milwaukee, Gehrmann says the long Indoor sea- son was the reason he lost on Saturday. Also, lack of practice recently. Says Gehrmann "I had enough energy to go all out for about 880-yards but that's all. I knew I didn't have it when there were about three and one-half laps to go. My arms and legs felt dead. The season," complains Don, "is Just too long." ------ o -! The New York Giants' pennant hopes got a terrific jolt when left fielder Monte Irvin suffered a compound fracture of the right ankle sliding into third base Wed- nesday to an exhibition game against the Cleveland Indians. Irvin will probably be out of action for the entire season. Also on the baseball scene, bad litck continued to dog young Detroit Tiger righthander Art Houtteman. Art's seven-months-old daughter was killed Thursday to an automobile accident to Cleveland, Georgia. His wife, Shelagh, and his mother were seriously Injured in the accident also. ------o------ The Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees can for- get about two key players for the next two years and maybe forever. Outfielder Ted Williams of the Red Sox and second baseman Gerry Coleman of the Yanks took pre-toduc- tion physical examinations Wednesday at Jackson- ville. Florida. Both passed, and effective May 2 it will be Captains Williams and Coleman of the Marine Corps. Captain J. C. Early, senior medical officer at the Naval Air Station Base, took two X-rays of the left elbow Williams fractured hi the 1950 All-Star Game. Captain Early reported: "There is no significant limi- tation to the arm." The final report on the examinations will be issued by the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery in Washing- ton But Captain Early says, "They usually go along with our recommendations." Williams is scheduled to go to the Marine Air Sta- tion at Willow Grove, Pennsylvania, for.an eight weeks refresher course. The Red Sox slugger then reports for dutv with the Fleet Marine Force at Cherry Point. North Carolina. PAGE TWO SUNDAY, APRIL 6, 1%2 HO WANTS NICKEL BEER?-Crowds fill liquor tore in Washington, D. C, where whiskey is advertised for tale at IS cent a fifth, The catch is that they must then pay a Federal tax of $2.10, and a District tax of IS cents, on each purchase. Purpose of the sale, the proprietor says, is to point up high tax rate on liquor. Scholar Finds Biblical Story Of Job In Babylonian Tablet PARIS, April 5 (UP)Surprls-|ed, was only one part of a tour- ing resemblances between the'part text, so its story is rag- Old Testament story of the af-mentary. flictions of Job and a Babylonian In it a righteous man is very tablet about 1.000 years older ill and a few friends discuss with than the biblical tale are report- him the fate of man, the lan- era by a French scholar. Iguage expert said. That closely Prof Jean Nougayrol, a curator parallels the biblical story, of the Louvre Museum, said, In a notable difference, one of there was a "strong similarity"the friends takes pity on the with the Bible story in the frag- nameless "Babylonian Job" and mentary translation he recently:prays directly to God to cure completed on the clay brick lm-'hlm. printed with cuneiform letters. "Purify thyself and give unc- He assigned a date of 1650 B.C. tion," the Lord answered, accord- to the tablet because of its dedi- ing to the tablet. "Disregard all cation to King Ammiditana. a bitterness, and give sweet bever- Babylonlan monarch reigning In ages to the thirsty one; and the the 17th century before Christ, 'one who was prostrated will No exact date could be placed tremble and arise..." on the writing of the Book of The tablet continued with the Job. the professor said, although Lord saying to the sick man: sections appear to have been "Thine action is lust like that of transcribed from old folk tales a man, but your heart is ln- about 600-700 B.C. That would nocent. The years have been ful- lndlcate the Job tale existed for,filled, t'4j days redeemed the about 1.000 years before the Old sorrow. If you hast not been call- Testament, ed to live, how could thou have "The text of this Babylonian been able to endure this severe tablet is concerned with a theme illness?" that runs through the Holy Book! Nougayrol said the tablet was man overwhelmed by God.".signed by "Kalbanu." roughly Nougayrol said In an interview, translated as "Little Dog." He The tablet is a poetical pray-1 emphasized that it probably was er of a righteous man afflicted I not the author of the story but by the Lord. It Is quite similar tojjust the man who wrote It down. Job's trials and patience In theiA property mark In the foot- Bible," 'square clay shows the imprint of The Louvre tablet, he explain- a small star. Girl MC Gives Away Millions Of Dollars Belonging To CBS NEW YORK. April 5 (UP) ,and rooted for the winning cou- Moncy, you might say, means pie. nothing to Janice Gilbert. "I get so excited rooting for some of the contestants that She has given away $3,500.000 anything can happen," she said, in crisp bills in the last six years.["Once I bit my tongue so hard It isn't her money, but It's her.they had to take me to the doc- Job, as the paying teller onjtor and have It stitched, A man Break the Bank," to hand over i was up to the big payoff ques- the prize money to winners. Five tion and I was afraid he wouldn't mornings a week in a CBS radio know the answer. When he got it studio and on Sunday over tele-'right, I was so excited I bit down vision Janice clutches a -fistful hardon my tongue, of dough and waits nervously for '"> '........ ......... " " Premier Sunday Cross-Word Puzzle 419 19 47 sT bb 85 91 97 184 lib as \v> 134 in 72 r/. lie 32 bl VJ 9 IIO 28 2 91 nc 20 24 vr 71 w lib 151 135 73 74 III 39 WT z 127 10 93 34 68 loT z 112. 25 4 sT ioo 113 10 21 41 IOI 2, o 132 t6 42 SO Z IXO 12 33 TT4- lo z 89 114 m 75 61 7t 115 121 93 70 9 31 sT 71 7b 1*2 22 2b b5 90" 103 114 111 lb W 17 45 85 lb 1Book- binder's leather 6Apart 10Finely ground meal IBPierce 19Largest continent 20Bore 21Let 22Melody 23Observed 24Romantic 26Dark 27Finch- like bird tBabylonian hero (Myth.) 30Chivalrous 32Creed 34Of that thing 36Snecies of pepper 36Run at top peed 89Past 41Greedy fish 43Avoided 47Palm 48Crane's cry 60Rodent 62Eat into 83Stake 84Dormouse 86Wetter lavar HORIZONTAL 60Book part 62Firearm 63Piece of cloth 64Sheep- eating parrot 66Brownish purple 66Expand 68 Legislative body 70Lodger 72One of King David's rulers 73Pulverise 78 Rubber tret 77South African baboon 80 Starch. like au batanee in dahlia roots 81Escorts 86Plexus 86Lid 88Indian living in Wisconsin SBLuzon savage 0Town in Yugo- slavia 81Black bird 82Head ornament (var.) 94Salmon- like flan 96Rage 97Noise made In sleep 99Wing 100Clear sky 102Orazlng land 104Soundest 106Ogle 108Fowl 109Knocked 110 Initial* 112Hawaiian garland 114Lash 116Fine cotton muslin 119Defeat 121Repeat 125Barren 126Believer In thought- trans- ference 129Blrthstone for October 130Place 131Call out' 132Wharf 133Egyptian goddess (Myth. I 184Horse 188Preclude 136Long 137Take out 1Toss 2On deep waters 8Legal claim 4Visionary sealot 8Agree 8One cubic meter TCharged atom 8Love to excess 9A printing 10Strip skin from whale 11River In Ribena 12Cereal grasa 13Custom 14Pertain 18 Astral 16Saxhorn 17In a trice 18 Reedlike grass 25Dull finish 28Of the cheeks 31Bar for raising weight 33Claw 38Cover 36Dark- brown 37Dress with beak 38Requital 40Channel (shallows) 42Assam '"'worm VERTICAL 44Furnishing with papers of authenti- cation 45Elicit 46Hold back 48Table vessel 49Form into grains 81Fasten 86 Incite 57Of fungi 58Machine projection 61Absurd comedy 83Having apex rounded, with notch. as leaf 86Extremities of earth's axis 67Stuff 68Transgress 69Harden sails 71Forth 74Wavelet 75Consumer 77Coarse 78iCamphire 79High card 62Religious cymbals (Hindu i 83 Mourning hymn 84Rapidity 87Early Christian church vessel 89Catkin 92Tries 93Unpro- fessional 94Title of book by Haggard 95-Sign 98Remainder 101Abounding In prickly plants 103Not employing , afluid 105Made knotted lace 107One who . runs away 109Seized with teetk 111Thread 113Period 115Part of ate . 116Soothing applica.ioa1 117Song for one voice 118Row 119Flightless New Zea- '' land rail 120Tou (Bib. 122Part of church 123Terminal appendag* 124Instead 127Term in lawn- tennis 128 EurOfU ! mint AraragS Mate Mlallmi M alaaleaMauiuitM I* Klas r*aturi SyMlMU . n>-t ii i H.urn >n ,. ine >U'um tmeruaiM Another time she shredded what she thought was her chif- fon handkerchief, only it turned out to be the full skirt of her eve- somebody to give the right an- swers. Once she gave a couple an ex- tra $100 bill by mistake. Another ning dress, so she had to walk In time she came out $200 short. front of the television cameras People, the 25-year-old radio'with her torn skirt trailing, actress insists, are basically hon- est, however. Janice does all right on the fl- "Tlre couple I gave the extra nancial side In her private life, $100 to returned It," Janice said, since she's been a successful "Very few people try to cheat to radio actress from childhood give the right answers. It Is very gratifyln The biggest windfall the pret- ty brunette ever handed to any of the quiz program contestants was $11,500. There wasn't a "1 used to play the part of Lit- tle Orphan Annie on that radio serial, and all kinds of other children's parts." she said. "I guess my yearly income hit five figures before I even was In my teens. But I never got as excited guard or a gun in the studio-lover* earning it as i do over giv- whlle she held the sizeable sum'ing it away." FLYING WAREHOUSEWorld's largest commercial cargo ptane wfll resemble this preliminary sketch of Lockheed's projected giant transport. It will be designed to carry a pay-load of 88.209 pounds, cruise between 330 and 340 miles per hour, and approach 400 miles per hour with U loads. Two cargo doors allow simultaneous loading and unloading. It Is hoped that the aircraft will operate at an asViims low cast for cargo planea of S ceuU par ton mile. ^WV.-iMBR^ 1952 mk^fr^mum^wto"* O'affrUKiXffHKLt -. THE PANAMA AMERICAN OWN.c ANO r-UBL.SMED V TUB PANAMA AMSMICAN PMCM. IMC. FOUNDIO v NCLOOf* MMWKnu m z HAKMOOIO Am. eoito B7. H STRUT . O. BOX 134. PANAMA, f. Of P. Tmctiioh Panama no S-0740 to lint! CAt* ADDRESS PANAMERICAN. PANAMA COLON OFFICE, 12.178 CfNIRAl AVENUE ETWCCN I STH ANO 1STM TRirT Forlion ReratsrNTATivto JOSHUA B. POWERS, inc. 3*9 Madison An. New York. <|7i n. V. PI MONTH. IN ADVANCE | 7*0 | jS TO 8I MONTH. IN ADVANCE_________________ | |g IS OO FOR ONI TEA. IN Anvjur )8 5<) J4 ^ WETS' CORNER' K^S1. ONTE (When the full moon climbs (From Epos) through clouds and tries to Mow will she understood race 10, demon wind across the moor) lAnd our ship cannot leave the her need lor sterner coasts u moon behind ? honesty. Reach out and throw ior mountains of the mind, for mountain streams cold-tinctured with the light of other worlds. How well she knew. (o. moss-deep forest pool, holding for centuries the dark excaltbur of truth too sharp with stars for us to lift) how well she knew.. the silence she must keep. how she must muffle all the or- gan tones of being, how circumspectly she mast step within the fog-locked landscape of her days. And so. hair tangled with the night. eye holding gulfs of knowledge lonely as the stream of time, she went to meet the heathcliff of her sav- age purity. Evelyn Thome a rock to slow the moon. Reach out and grab myself falling star... Prom Knoxvllle to Chicago Is too soon. To coast from Heaven down where the world things are. Stoat* THE AGED (From The Morning Press, Bloomsburr. Fa.) Wt stand a long watch where the events of the night are rung out by hollow bolls and late birds take flight... Ions ago were there bonfires commemorating loves and sor- rows? They are the ashes now of oiir todays and tomorrows... we own a aparre grief acted in the present tense; nothing for us is wasted... nothing of consequence: SMALL SPEECH TO A LOUIS (From.The Beloit Poetry Journal) So you are the monkey's minia- ture. All Innocence and eye*. Carved by a squinting God With a sense of sine. Eyes button-big with Innocence. Skin veined with lace, You survive our outsize stares Simply with a lorls-face. 1 Your cogito and ergo sum (Persists, arouses curiosity That such a hardly-here-at-all i Has a physiognomy. Tailless monkeys both, lorls. You and monstrous I Spin a web of essences Before the tiger's eye. Mirrocos and Macrocos, A teardrop or the sea. The poet and the lorls mark The tiger's Inefficiency. S*l Stein Pearson's Merry Go-Round PANHANDLE COUNTRY (From Kaleidograph) We are the curled and bitter leaf, we feel chill ... have no voice to God's windy corner you might call this land v/iir -c always winter silent in the chimney comer DREW PEARSON SAYS: Sea. MeCarraa Espionage Aet to browbeat ma; Alsaa b-* thers' criticism rouse McCarran's wrat*; Fiorina shrimp fishermen threaten war * Of stark high nlains, long wheat fields, and wide sky, forgetting even the great hurt of where everv spring the sky spring. F'-anor Sands Smith moves dark with sand Stripped off the blowing fields. A land where dry Dust buries fences, and the trees are bent. call An On Wr.- Wi- UP SILVER STAIRSTEPS (From The Salarday Review) Up silver stairsteps of the wind Where lonely night-winds we rise. | you till you wake Our --reat ship leaves the earth's To curse their haunting sound. 1 bstantial floor; As hard at flint Wc climb up in the spacious This land where winds twist moonlit skies i windmills till they break. Beh'*-d four trusted engines' Where winds uproot the grass roi Hi- -.we climb until the light1; *low barnyard gear for miles. '"w i where cyclones sweep Arf h;i eggs down in a velvet Down on a town and strew debris and torn Ovor cars are bugs with stripped trees like toys. Old gods lhtg at low l who never sleep aperies north, south and Must guard this land and work to east and west... I wear away do thr-se matter when we The granite souls of people who :00m through space would stay. ~o clouds sleeo on bright! r-vtaris o the wind. Orville Pahner atnipufg Mnrva.4 3uim < painquiiKl EEEE tSEBEE EEEEE BED! E5DED FE-BES EBEBE ITFEE ecee fiEntTDcrFrrrj Eirrc EPnEEon beeeS edeeoee EEBED BEE OEDDE u zssk^jsi^^mwsr EEC BEEEE PEEESJEB KG EBDE DUE EEE EEE EDEE RECECHE TEEEJE EIEEEE EEEE CEC EEE TEE TEFE iPETEEEEE EEDE rEEBEBB CEE BEniETnni^ t- EEEE FTD EEEFE EEEDE EEEE LEQkj QEEfc' FEDEE EBEE wm fun.aasoss no rwwl 't -on '** saanng 01 nonitfOR nos ,|imj*h WASHmOTONPat MoCarran. the.,fna^Jr who rates the Senate Judiciary Committee with the same highhandedness that J^sJil**n- ination of the state of Nevada, hasdevelopefl a new technique for browbeating the PJ If a newspaperman fails to agree with mm or dares crlticias his dictatorial techniques, mc- Carran proceeds to Investigate that newspaper- man for violation of the Espionage Act. Such an investigation of two iKTwapaperooi- umnists, Joseph and Stewart Alsop, now being conducted by McCarran through his internal Security Committee because the Alsop brothers dared criticize. McCarran's highhanded meth- ods. The Espionage Act, originally passed In l17. during the height of the World War I hyster- ia against Germany, Is so broad that the press associations and even toe staid ow Hew Yor* Times unwittingly violate its letterthough not its spiritprobably once or twice a month. It is quite certain that the Aisop brothers have gone no further than such a technical V1However, It is certain that they have had the courage to do what few other newsmen have done in challenging Senator McCarran Joe Alsop, who served in China during the war and knows far more about its problems than any member of the McCarran committee han this to say about McCarran's tactics in cross- examining John Carter Vincent US. diplo- matic adviser to vice President Harry Wallace on his mission to China: Vincent all but had a light shined In his eyes and was beaten bv a rubber hose. The central issue was almost comoletely ignored. The main upshot of toe Wallace mission to China, In which Vincent participated, was a re- commendation to dismiss the pro-Chinese Com- munist Gen. Albert Wedemeyer. Under toe circumstances you might have sup- posed that this central Issue would have been examined by toe senators at some length. Had you done so, however, you would have gravely misjudged 8en. Pat McCarran of Nev- ada. "Instead, Sen. McCarran and friends concen- trated on trying to show that Vincent had somewhat misjudged toe Chinese situation in the crucial late war and post-war years." In another column toe Alsop brothers ques- tioned toe veracity of Louis Budcnz, former ed- itor of toe Dally Worker. " "Sen. Pat McCarran's Internal Security Sub- committee they wrote, 'has just finished beat- ing John Carter Vincent over toe head with its verbal substitutes for a robber hose. In all toe brutal questioning of tins high State Department official not one word was said boot the veracity of Vincent's sole accuser, toe ptofelonal ex-Communist Louis Budenz." The eohsmn con tinned with a penetral in** di- agnosis of toe peculiar manner in which Budenz had Ikuied to mention Vincent's name during 'Afc EOUK months of testimony and thoasanas of hours of conferences with the FBIantil at the lastmln- ate it seemed convenient to have him substan- tiate Senator McCarthy. .. .. . McCarran's answer to toe Aisop brothers cri- ticism was not given on toe floor of the Scnato in the traditional form of American debate. It came In toe form of aa investigation of toe coiuainlsts' writings In an effort to nail them with a violation of the Espionage Act. PHANTOM WAR WITH MEXICO For about two hours toe other week, toe highest executives of the U.8. government were trying to stave off possible "war" between the United States and Mexico. - Secretary of Defense Lovett was on the tele- phone with Secretary of State Aeheson, then in touch with the Chief of Naval Operations. Adm. William Fechteler, to head off an attack on toe Mexican coast by a band of Florida shrimp fishermen. ... The Up on the forthcoming attack on Mexico came from acting Secretary of the Navy Fran- cis Whltehatr who had received a phone call from Florida that 20 shrimp fishermen had been detained by Mexican authorities for fishing In the Oulf of Mexico, and that other Florida shrimp fishermen were determined to reecrae their comrades. Armed fishermen from Punta Gorda, it was reported, were setting sail for the Mexican coast to shoot up the Mexicans who held their com- rades. Reverberations of the 1917 attack by the U.S. Navy on Tamplco were Immediately remember- ed in toe State Department. So, after some quick consultation, Secretary of Defense Lovett ordered a Coast Guard ves- sel to stand by In the Gulf of Mexico to ward off the invading Florida shrimp fishermen- only to find that Mexico had already released the other shrimp fishermen and there was no- thing to get steamed up about after all. KICKED UPSTAIRS Ed Johnson, the hulking Democratic senator from Colorado, has a peculiar system for decid- ing whether to support certain Truman appoint- ees. It sometimes deoends on whether he wants them ousted from their present jobs. Referring to Dale Doty, recently appointed to toe Federal Power Commission from his post aa assistant secr-tarv of the Interior, enator Johnson told senators: "I would like to say this, that I have been very much disappointed in Doty's handling of Indian affairs. "I have understood that he handled toe In- dian affairs in toe Department of toe laterior. I have been very much disappointed with many of toe things that he has tried to do down there on behalf of Indiana but. as 2 understand it. toe Federal Power Commission will have nothing whatever to do with IncUaii affairs. "So, personally, I am glad to sec Doty oat of toe Interior Department where he has been handling ludan affairs and going over to a com- mission which does not handle Indian affairs. Id ptoer words. I am glad to see him kicked up- stairs." NOTEDoty, a career man, has had a long end coioe**--t record in the Interior Depart- ment, should make a good power commissioner. r SUNDAY, APRIL 6, 1962 Labor News And Comment By Victor Riesel BEAU) ON THIS BEAT: py WASHTNGTON-Apparentiy^re'sno buriness {""L*0!*1 -v business In this country. >or. according to FBI M^ctor J Bogar Hoover, the Bureau shortly, will Investigate taon separ- ate instances ol threats to ^rtcastatettuU seemly Last year his agents probed Into 74,7t such cajea- fu-1 that, the FBI handled 71* other investigations In that per- tod ... Part of the FBI's Job U to keep the country's its Commun- tet front organizations under constant aurvelUanee.___ JtaportoSceM this v/as revealed recently by ex-FBI under- cover man, Herbert Philbrlck. who reported fa* these Party fronts, and the 18 pro-Russian unions, actually mulcted tome 0 M0.OM, a year out of the public and union dues payers for Communist propaganda and organising action In the US. To keep an eye on sabotage and espionage tawj*! Soviet agents (American dttaensl were convicted last year, FBI m^harevmuntarllr forfeited 11J^tSSj^T^SSSSi^S refused to accept some $7,880,$$$ due them In overtime lor 2,250,000 extra hours. And the FBI agents can bargain collectively with J. Edgar Hoover, if they wish, for they are members of the AFLs Amer- ican Federation of Government Employes. Reporte from some of these atente have revealed that tie currentooncentratlons of Communist Parte cells are in Mew Tork. CaHrornU, IDtnols Ohk New '*" ^ nesota, Pennsylvania, and Michigan, In about that order, "eren top Communists have been convicted, seven are In hiding, and a total of 68, including some of the fugitives, are now being tried, or are about to go before the bench in New York, Los Angeles, Baltimore. Pittsburgh and Honolulu. But the actual leadership ol the Communist party is be- beved to be considerably intact, so cleverly did the obscure out powerful Communist chiefs camouflage their real importance ^One of the Party* top men now Is Hoy Hudson, peraUna freely on the west coast. Apparently he was so Important through the past decades that he would summarily summon the nation's top Communist leaders to his New Tork East Bide apartment and give them orden. ... , aSon's specialty was the CIO, until it kicked out all his left wing unions. s The FBI has checked the loyalty of 4,080 government employes. And some 80,000 men today building the atomic (and soon the hydrogen) bomb stockpiles ______ Incidentally, there have now been 52 major strikes on the newest atomic installations across country. None of them were Communist Inspired, but they hurt Just the same. J. Edgar Hoover has told Congress that there Is "substan- tial Communist penetration" in the coal fields. In rubber plants ftDdTh1 oSaununlEtParty has officially decided to attempt to stampede the steel strike, if it comes. "Bank and file" commit- tees are being set up swiftly around editing cells to as many steel milta as the Party has penetrated. They have been told to stir up a wild strike "at all costa" One third of the Communist Party/s leadership and key members are operating in the "W^mJ?*erVa?A . This should give the Soviets some MM fanatical agents in- side the USA. ... Some 5 percent of the American Communists, or a total of slightly over 15.08Q. now are concentrated In New York Cite- However, there are powerful contingente In the Chicago United Electrical Workrs. CIO Packinghouse Workers and at least one CIO United Automobile Workers Union local there. And that's where the House Committee on Un^merlean Activities has its investigators right this minute. The public hearings start soon. So careful Is the FBI with the lives and limbs of its under- cover agento that It doesnt Identify them even to the 1 Justice Dpt. attorneys until the minute the operatives ready to go In the witness stand There was no Identification of such FBI counter-spies as Herbert Philbrick, until the moment he took the stand to tes- tify or the government. Federal DA'i question and prepare their witnesses without knowing their real identities and their families live. Broadway and Elsewhere ByJackLait OsMua Wright, Sr., author of "I Never Grew etety charm on Muriel Dalsell, whose folks owa Up/' guesting with ZsaZsaOabor in Hollywood a fleet of tug-ooate to these waters. Couead Neagers favorite is Florence Sundstrom Dauphins re coming undone in the trench courts after fifteen years...Anne Francis, of the filln living private lessons in public to Bram Price, who's a theatre arta student. Helmut Dan- tlne was at the neat table In Manny Wolf's wtth Setene Walters, enjoying a feast, as I sipped my milk and nibbled on my lettuce ..Oeroge Abbott doing the rumba with March Westeott at Chat- field day all over the map. Unking pretty young Judy Balaban with every eligible available. She's in Florida, where, they say, she's being long- dtotaneed from Hollywood by Montgomery CHft So, where does that leave Merv Griffin, the crooner, who's here with Freddy Martin? right out loud: "I've lied about my age so often, T don't know how oM I really am!" ew "Broaklva" stamp has its history all gummed up. It commemorates the Revolution- ary battle in 1T7. which was a defeat and end- ed In a retreat. But the legend reads, "Wash- ington saves his army.." It depicts a victorious event, hi broad daylight. The well-established towdwwu is that the action took place on a moon- less night. Queeu Juliana and Prince Bombard ar- rived on our shores, an American had a cov- eted post in the entourage. She Is Baroness Ethel ("Pirn") Boetoelaer, chief lady In waiting to Her Majesty. Her husband Is Batch ambas- sador to France. He was formerly chief aide to Alex London, the Netherlands envoy In Wash- ington, where his wife was a popular hostess. Celeste aba, who wiM sub for Gertie Law- rence when the star of "The King and I" knocks off for a breather, was observed at the Piara, huddling with ad-man Phil LaneIn re televis- ion only, I regret to confess.. And Dorothy Sar- noff of that troupe is composing a jingle about the white and the red corpuscle that loved In vein! A tHIed ffsjlblinf. who has been In a similar Jam here before, will have a lot of over- due charge-account actions shower down on her soon. The credit managers are getting together on her case, and the more they tell each other the more they all burn. Nina Foch and Ralph Meeker, though parted by the width of the continent, haven't cooled ...Tom Hammond, producer of 'Candida" and boas at Obvia de Havllland. dines in the ultra Colony with actress Cara WUHams...Andre Mieh- atepaulea, taraste Greek minister to the VS.. Is nii-ttag Countess Eleanor Johnston von Etadorf In Palm Beach ...Anna Magnani's magnifico in orne now is Ploro LonaMo, Italian Airlines pi- lot. Barbara Freeing, the model, after shopping around, has decided Charlie Fieldman Is the Judy Sinclair, of "Top Banana," wiU wed Lar- ry Best, the comic, in September and team up with him In his act....Ctck Crdale, of Marten Block's music firm, will marry Carol Nelson, a Chicago model, July 4. (His last Independence best bargain.Betay von furateiiburgh caught Day (...Tab Hunter, here for the premiere of Thomas Owinn Curtis on the first bounce. Hes "Saturday Island," In which be plays Linda Dar- nell's love interest, is love-Interested hi Joyce Lockwood, the scrumptious skater In the Sotija Henie show... Sidney Warren, ex-husband of Mag- da Gabor doing Armando's with Eleanor Bice, who's mighty nice. George Jean Nathan's professional protege, Just back from three years in Paris. is It with Robert Taylor, and now has a biasing boulder on that tattle-tale finger to verify the speculation here. over in the over her settlement with C. Gable Walter Brooks, who was recently shed by Will Rogers' daughter, Mary, is turning his so- iiwe-ioie linger xo venry hk specmiai Attorney Jerry Geisler remained ovei Big Burg to hassle with Lady Sylvia inflated terms for a divocc settlement Jehu BaugMag North la in. ahead of his circus. No yokel county seat gets more worked up than does our smart Bast Side shout the Greatest Show. North's annual appearance is an El Mor- occo and Stork event not only because he's a genial apod guy. but because he epitomises his world of wonders. As a "celeb" be outshines any Hollywood miracle-maker. are Harvey Stone says "The Long Watch" Is a ise of how many are curious about what makes It tick. Peter Edson In Washington WASHINGTON- (NBA) Democratic Itatton- al Committee stands to clear about $S7S8$ from the $188-a-plate Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner in Washington's National Guard Armory. Cost of the food Itoelf, prepared by two Wash- ington hotels, was around $12 to $1$ a plate Cost of the ball and decorations was $11 to $12 a plate. This included printing a very elaborate menu, program and seating arrange- AUowing a total of $25 for expenses, the prof- it wouldbe $75 on each of the 9088 guests. RBCOKD-MAEJNG SESSION Present amaten of Congress may go down In history more for Mils it killed than or legisla- tion it passed. ... i Thus far, universal military training and statehood for Alaska and Hawaii have felt the &X Congress hasn't even begun to think about tax Increases which President asked for, and pro- bably wont. tkm. This authority will include price and wage control Progressive Thousands of Communists rushed to Washington by spec- ial train, bus and auto for mass "peace" demonstrations here (NEED FOR frLEVIBLE LAW *la*t week Down in Guatemala the official government radio La Vos| Beat bet now seems to be for a ^r**f- De Guatemala was publicizing a similar pro-Soviet peace con- tension of present Deferue Mobilization legisla- great, which was part of a synchronised international demon- stration against the US. The squads there take instructions from an international Red rover called Victor Manuel Gutierres who was recently briefed in Moscow In one of a aeries of such briefings of pro- Communist tabor leaders in the Soviet capital. Red labor chiefs the world over have been summoned to the Kremlin, one by one. and told Just bow to agitate their nation's working people against, the US. Most recent "visitor" is Italy's Red Labor commissar, Gul seppe Di Vittorio. Something doing all the time on this front, and the front is everywhere. place of cars run by separate agencies, the num- ber of automobiles has been reduced from J80 to toa saving of 75 per cent. GREEKS SUPPORT V. 8. ELECTS* SYSTEM Behind US. Ambassador to Athens John E. Peurifoy i recent "Interference" In Greek inter- nal affairs is an luwuteed story. Before test fall's Greek elections, the U. 8. government used its "influence" to have the King name Field Marshal Papagos as prime min- ister, when ambassador Peurifoy found that there is considerable personal dislike of the King for the Field Marshal, this effort was drop- ped. Next Nicholas Phurtirat came to A.nUainariT Peurifoy and asked American government back- ing for his political support. Plasti -';' pr. - pal argument was that it was now his turn u be prime minister. Thin appeal was denied and the U. 8. cniba&sv m Athens kept hands off of the September Dog Tired Dave! left Mas Wb* mm* eew Waal Ada Beve? But several eSnate Banking and Currency Committee members Chairman Maybank of South >Hti, Capehart of Indiana and others are working on automatic price control for- mulas. They're intended to make removal of controls automatic if prices fall below set ceilings. Big malton now Is whether to make recontrol au- tomatic, in case prices go up again. In this election, the Papagos Greek Rally ar- ta* won 114 seats in Parliament. The PI* Progressive party won 81 seats. Farmer Pi i > Minister Sophocles Veniaelos' Liberal party wan 57 seats. Nobody had a majority of the 285-memb r Parliament. PRESSURE WILL B ON Ex-Defense Mobiltaer C. E. Wilson said before be resigned that new forging and exUaakm mi caeca for turning out Jet aircraft frames are one factor holding up increased plane produc- tion. There will be 17 Of these presses and their cort is a half billion dollars. The largest, a SIMM liui pre, will be aa high as a nine-story building It will exert pteaauna of up to ten million tons. But it Is taking 14 months to build. . FRISCO SHOWS THE WAT Jeas Larson, head of General Services Admin- istration, the governments ton housekeeping a- haa had little tack in trying to set up a lor hauHnf government officials to BUI and around town. , a special MB has been introduced hi Congress to force the Washington agen- cies to adept the motor pool plan as an econ- In Baa Francisco, where government-wide motor pool has been established to take the Plastlras became prime minister by forming an affiance with Veniaelos. Actually. Plastlras has been ill much of the tune and Veniaelos has keen running the government. General Papagos has now called for new elec- tions with a simple majority-wins system to replace the proportional representation system by which the present Parliament was chaser In the Interest of obtaining maximum use if American ate to Greece, Ambassador Peur ^v has supported this reform. Plastlras favors it, too, but Vnilanhu opposes it because he would tese by it If a simple majority voting system like the American system were put into effect in Greece General Papagos' party would probably in ind he would become prime ministei. This would fit In perfectly with what Am- bassador Peurifoy has thought all along wo--Id be In the best Greek interests. He is brt - rtod by most of the Greek press and pub- opinion. DUTCB TREAT Far the State dinner which Queen Juliana and Prince Bombard of the Netherlands gave at the Dutch Embassy In Washington on April 4, some of the food was flown aver special from Holland. This included fresh sole from the straits of Dover, pate de foie gras. cheeses, li- queurs and Netherlands-grown strawberries. SUNDAY, APRIL 6, 1952 PAGE FIVE - m^ Sunday American Visits Country Fair Tea Marti won the stilt race for bis aire group, even as bis younger brother, Dong, iron the potato sack race by a tre- mendous margin. In these events, the Marti boys are ready for the Olympics. ..; .-ture bov.ling alley is patronized by Lacy HinUle. ! II Mese Walloons had been blown m:cn oin -., i-iight Me taken off for tie moon with their young owners trailing behind! (Pics and text by RALPH K. SKINNER) The Country Fair staged by the folks at Pedro Miguel was a won- derful good time for all the young people, from infants through teen-agers. From ten in the morning until evening, fami- lies of all ages and dispositions roamed the "plaza" at Pedro Mi- guel, trying many of the attrac- tions offered. And eating. And drinking soda pop. There was a ball game at ten in the morning, and two-thirty in the afternoon had another sizzler to offer. Four teams from the Fastlich Teen-Age League were the competitors and tney kept a grandstand full of spec- tators engrossed both times. Top interest to the young fry was the merry-go-round. At con- siderable expense this was brought from Panam City but It was th hub around which the fair revolved. Holding 60, the merry-go-round usually had a full load, and it lasted longer than the main fair, being oper- ated Friday evening and also on Sunday. Live horses were furnished by the Pacific Saddle Club whose young members cheerfully walk- ed their horses up and down the green with loads of either ter- rified or tittering youngsters in the saddle. For some it was the first attempt to play Lone Ranger and they took It pretty seriously. Utmost care by those In charge maintained a high standard of safety for the kiddles riding. The ducking stool was another center of attraction. Esther Wil- liams made one of these well- known in the show, Texas Car- nival. While Esther Williams wasn't at Pedro Miguel, some good looking girls and boys manned the toss board and fell with good humor into the tank. It worked like this. A target was set up at which baseballs were hurled. (Three for 10cents). If the target was hit, it tripped the board over the tank and someone got a ducking! There were games of luck rlg- Sed along one side. We didn't ear of anyone getting lucky! For small fry there was a fish pond, and strangely enough, the Eackages which came out from ehlnd the curtain seemed to fit the sex of the fisherman or fish- er-lady, with an amazing accur- acy. Even a miniature bowling alley was set up on the fair grounds. And don't forget the balloon lady who, with the aid of a tube of air, blew balloons to their utmost dimensions with speed and skill. There was also a lot of beans i available and if you guessed the exact number of beans in the glass receptacle, you won 15.00. The chances cost 10 cents. Some Boston folks were there and it was established that while Bos- tonlans may "know" beans, they can't "estimate" beans. Races were arranged by the committee In charge with prizes for the winners. Potato sack races and stilt races were equally difficult? for those not accustom- ed to such Impediments. The Sunday American photographer tried to win the stilt race, but his stilted performance wasn't good enough and Maxwell Smith of Balboa won the kewple doll in- stead! The oldsters and the youngsters had the same prizes. And the same hilarious fun! Popcorn! It was like snow.Mrs. Ted Marti handled the popper, and Brownies- and Girl Scouts did the selling. The Scouts also sold soda pop up to the hundreds of bottles. It was a hot day and with the salty pop corn and the natural heat, drinks were in de- mand. Rainbow Girls sold ice cream cones to all comers. At the Union Church, just off the fair grounds, ladles had re- freshments ready all day. Hot dogs and hamburgers were the principal Items but there were others. In the same building, the East ern Star offered a cake, cookie, pie and fudge sale. A comprehen- sive sampling of these goodieg (Continued on Page SEVEN) DRAWING CARD for the whole fair was this merry-go-round which entertained the children endlessly, M of them at a time. Back of the chicken wire in the stadium, a go odly crowd watched the two ball games, one in ?he morning and two different teams In the fternoon. Mi$m>^ lmmm*ty*$^& >u Si SrU^^^ffl^e-1952 layer Ihran testily at the target, the jwif girl volunteer rite eonfMentir ea the iKktof tori wr the tank of water. She cat imboA plenty! CHARLIE HAMMOND, general chairman of the Country Fair, *cte m hrief respite fresa Ms lewa-sseaker. hat stays teed te bis nten by the same. HArrv HORSEMEN were the otoiinotive riders who never tired ef the rwrefelly escorted rides arnad the town green. BI1X8CTK! A* the hen stniek the target, the beard wae re*c.a-ed. and here we se the rnnr hv r'w* ivt*r4 enables me to report that they were of outstanding quality. Big boss over the whole she- ng was Charlie Hammond. He was glued to the loudspeaker nearly all day announcing events, telling what was going on. shoo- ing horseback riders off toe ball diamond and generally keeping things running. After It was all over. Charlie aid that the take was about. $1500, but that was divided among the various organizations' which participated. Believe it or not, but we were told by a prominent citizen of Pedro Miguel that the Country Fair wasn't ran to make money, but to provide a good time for the town and for friends from all ever the Canal Zone. If m>, it wm a success, for ev- ervone we saw was having a good) time. It was much like a country, fair, with a friendly atmosphere, and Informal bantering going on, with hundreds of children eat- ing, playing, gawping and yawp- ing. 8everal visitors were heard to suggest that if every Canal Zone town would put on such a show, once In a while, it would provide a real neighborly spirit and In-1 sure a good time for the children without straining the pocket-: books or the patience of the par- 'I ente too much. BUY vw/ BUT OH BOT! says Gregery Sears of Balboa, as he tahes bis first merry-go-round ride. Mrs. Karl W. Sears, his soother, lends r? hii- hand to the horseman. We agree. More balloons, pop com, ball games, pink lemonade, and merry-go-rounds and Other Pedro Miguel attractions are the recipe for a good time for all. Opportunity knocks every any a our want- ad section. Hard-to- fiad teats and aataz- injj bargains a every issue. New classified ads appear...oM ads disappearreason... QUICK RESULTS! Tan aad check the want-ads now! Every month . every week . every day THE PANAMA AMERICAN carries MORE WANT ADS dl other daily papers a Paaaa combined 1 * * ',<" 1 sUSSay', APRIL 6, 1962 QOttv Ji PAGE'SEVEN The SUNDAY AMERICAN photographer takes a brisk canter on the spirited nags of the merry- go-round. Holding on for dear life is Ralph Skinner, shown in this Corn-y picture taken by H. H, Corn, Postmaster of Pedro Miguel. UH i / . Tie SUNDAY American Comic supplement HOPALOHG CASS/DY AS HOPPV LEA0S TO THE SWAYING *ia, A FW.RTY OF HORSEMEN CLOBES iw iMrniNC..... ,m r?------------------'--------~~~.-----------------r A LOW-HANG*N<> BRANCH.... * wC Kjt. ^M<. *U| / '- '-'*--" > >FTHAT RUNAWAY HORJE FOLLOW* TH* R.KSWT HAND FORK, CASWOV'LL LAND IN TH' BUCKBKiN JAIL FOR TEALIN' TH' RKS. TH' LEFT FORK WILL DROP MIM OFF UlClOK SUMMIT/ WH*r L/6I_V/X WP..-B..,I 1 L flow***; if *co 'cm jer ^ ^^^^^f PER -Oj.MiSS MOLUtf | te .; V,* pr5 SSSS^ I / THE VOLUNTEER SEARCHERS HAVE ALL GIVEN UP~ ITS AN ODD THING- LAST YEAR MR6. MARTAN'6 LITTLE GIRL WAS LOST iH THIS SAME RAREST- r NEVER BELIEVED IN VIL GPIROS, BUT rDONT BE A FOOL- HlNTlNG UT EVIL SPIRITS AND M7CH- .. IAFT- WE'RE OFFICERS OF| JTHE LAW WITH A JOB TD O, JWD WE'RE 6OIN6 TO DO IT/j E CHILD "U 60 T? BED, BUT SHE BBS6DME TO LET HEW STAY UP UNTIL MRS.MARTAN COMES HOME* I'M AFRAID THE .flTLE DARUN& WILL WAIT A kLON& LON .TIME- s> SO YOU THINK [MRS. MARTAN IS COMIN6 HOME?, rN0, SIR" X DON'T THINK IT~I FEEL IT TH4T5] WHY I'M 60NMA WASH THE DISHES 60 ^VERYTHlN WILL LOOK NICE AN' .CLEAN WHEN SHE COMESja ! filr w*. -v ** f jwaeu cann I AWtCRAFT *4 TV. |FIC*.P...IT MU* OT UEA*TW W IE MWPkE OF THE 1 TBEI0*em ANP 1 ouRMiLriAifv y/y\ j^ BUT......BUT. 1 ^_ CAN'T... J| V/^H HW _. 1 TI 1 #*" , HtS NAME JDHNEE VttARP, A PEELOT. WHO AVVtMT* TRANSPORTATION TO *0N6 MONG / I PO NT know if me i* Amiumjk FOR HWE/ I PONT KNOW, MR. GRIPPMAN. THERE* 9CMETHIN6 I PROMISE A F*L IP TAKE TvKXJSANP-POLLAR CHECKS PONT SOW FREE IN THESE PARTSJOHNNV/l CAN TAKE CARE OFSOOTTV PITCMEP PLANE FINE/THEN IT'S AU. TTUEP/ WE'U SAN THEN I WISH *XI WERE GOIN6, TO BAKE IN FRONT OF THE CAMERA INSTEAPOF**/ THAT 15 IT. BRANPY/ ICOULPMAKE IT WORTH YOUR WHILE TOSTANP IN FOR HOW ABOUT AV--I WANTED TO USE THE FRAME fOR A PHOTO OF ME/ BUT I FOUND THAT OLD PICTURE UP IN TH' ATTIC AN' TMQUGHT ITD look: nce DOWN HERE I f HANG IT BACX up again/ -its a^ore cheerful- looion' than a photo of 7wat FT HM--HE WENT AWAY WITH A BIG GRIN AN'I THOUGHT HEt> GIVE ME A GORILLA SCOWL/ Jr I WONDER WHAT'S KEEPIN6 MABEL/ SHES A HALF- HOUR LATE.' CASPtR THERE'S NO REASON SHE COULONJT BE MERE ON TIME.' SHE'S JUST INCONSIDERATE' i CM* J-ifc-- -a -'^ |
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| 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 |
| 173 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |