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BRA MIFF
* +* NKWSPAPfl RIO DE JANEIRO ROUND TRIP FIRST CLASS TOURIST $723.60 29.60 Panama American "Let the people know the truth and the country U iafe" Abraham Lincoln. rW/^M^t PANAMA, R. P., SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1952 FIVE CENT Enlistments Extended Missouri Bursts Into East Omaha Through Sewer (NBA Telephoto) ONLY TOY LEFT-Karen Qroothoff (left) clutch the only toy she was able to salvage ironi her oodrf tome In .La r wi, tonkins on Is Judr Bel, who comant salvage i.y" Both nta ed the Mississippi River flood with their families and are receiving Red Cross care In a public school gymnasium._________________ OMAHA. April 19 (UP) The pressure o the mighty Missouri River, which could not break down the dikes of East Omaha and Council Bluffs, erupted by bursting a sewer behind the le- vee today, and flooded a large industrial area Of East Omaha. Lt. Gen. Lewis Pick, chief of Army Engineers, for several hours directed a desperate battle against the river's new attack. The Missouri, dropping slowly from Its record crest, stayed be- tween the levees. But the sewer explosion wrecked the hopes Pick and a legion of engineers had of bringing under control the worst flood hi the history of the Missouri River. A pipe which normally empties Into the Missouri at a point In East Omaha Instead became an Intake sewer. gap. Residents, watching the worst Misioorl flood white man has ever seen, hoped and prayed. In some placfle the water top- ped the permanent dikes and pounded at flimsy "fluh boards" and jsandbags hastily built In the hurt few days. Brig. Gen. Don Shlngler. chief of Missouri River division engin- eers spurred on the weary dike workers with a warning that "tomorrow may be rougher." Shlngler said the levee crews soldiers, civilians, students and even childrenput on "the fin- est exhibition I ever saw." "Our worry now la that the feeling of urgency won't W. L. he said. "It takes spirit to keep1 those people at a feverish ten- sion and that' a tough Job. The 1,200-foot bottleneck o dikes here held a river that up (NEA Telephoto) RETURNS TO POWERThe new president of Bolivia, Vic- tor Paz Etenssoro, Is carried on the shoulders of his follow- ers at the La Pas, Bolivia, airport after his return from a six-year exile in Argentina. He was restored to power after the military Junta government was overthrown in a three- day revolt. Churning Missouri wate rs stream was 14 miles wide, poured "to the sewer, bursting. Downstream the MMIburrt it In several places. out in comparative freedom and Much of the Missouri Pacific railroad yards were flooded. crashed through a dike across from Nebraska City. Neb., swamp- " farmland. rCanadians Foil Tito With/Midair Stick-up US Defense Dept. Announces Step Necessary WASHINGTON, April 19 (UP) Enlistments for oil members of the United States Armed Forces hove boos extended for a maximum of nine months from the nor- mal expiration date, according to a Defense Department announcement issued today. They sard all personnel whether now on active duty or not, whose terms of service normally would have ex- pired between July 1, 1952, ond June 30, 1953, would bo affected. The Deportment said the step was taken "with re- luctance" and only because it was absolutely necessary in light of the serious international situation, one then only for nine months rather than for the 12 authorized. No further explanation or clarification of the inter- national situation was given. The action follows Truman'a executive order issued yesterday to all departments of the feder- al government to prepare plans for continuing their essential funcltoru in Washington and; elsewhere in the event of an at-: the The reached earlv yesterday, tuatlng and weather forecasters, Weather was a refMlned from saying the long- great, suspense fills* drama awaited crest had arrived. But Pick said: "I wont be sa- (NEA Telephoto) KEEPING WATCH-H. J. Dressier maintains a lowly vigil with his signal lamp atop an emergency dike hastily thrown uu around the St. Paul. Minn., stockyards to hold off rising ' flood waters of the Mississippi Riven____________ Local Quake Recorded In US, No Evidence Here Seismographs at Carrol Uni- versity, Cleveland, Ohio record- ed an earthquake "strong "venough to canse damage" this morning apparently near the border between Panama "and Colombia. Henry Birkenhauer, head of the seismology department at the Jesuit school said tht two shocks were recorded shortly after 5 a. m. Locally, however, there was no evidence of any quake In this region. Nobody, as far as The Panama American could learn, felt any tremor and nothing at all can be learned from the meteoro- logy and hydrography branch of the Panama Canal until Mon- day. The Canal officials said that the photographic recording from their seismograph would have to be developed to de- termine the area and intensity tlsfied this fight Is over until the gauge gets down to 28 feet. The 30.24 mark wa more than 11 feet over flood stage and the highest level on the terrifying "Big Mo" In history. But it was a little short of the predicted crest of 31.5 feet. Weather men said the river still could show a rise again, but it appeared that the sister cities had passed the crucial hour. Now Omaha and Council Bluffs the latter a virtual ghost city from which 35,000 inhabitants had fledmust wait in dread- factor in the Communtrt ttomeland. A prominent Belgrade attorney heI;.t*rf roin mi not enmiari i nd his agelatant joined them in *^i$Tl?^S^to-'a,t darln? bld tor 'reedom- to affect the angry, swo len m ^^kg at 0riiz ln the e,r rft.kdBd ~* ^iwuTXrof Austraja where " , .fit it , the wearv the plane landed, said the escape BU fffi itht hew the wm engineered by John and Nl- army of leve sgangs'^t held the lco)allevBMarUncu who mlgrated m legally from Yugoslavia to Can- ada soon after the war. Army camp and all walks of life. Some 41 Iowa towns sent vol- unteers, crelghton University,at Omaha sent students and Boy's Town. Neb, dispatched youths to i tney sgid.but lhe|r hopes help in the big fight. bringing the family together Lawyers, bankers, business men. a municipal Judge and a school superintendent labored on the dikes while Army and clvil- They obtained Canadian entry visas for their mother and sister, of ln hoping the dikes would continue lan tracks churned down from any report of damages by an earthquake. Panamanian Authorities in Yaviza and La Palma, Darlen, also reported no knowledge of i quivering under a pressure damages in the area, they were 7,500 pounds per lineal foot. to hold. Army engineers warned the threat could last for days, per- haps a week, before the river had fallen enough to ease the strain an the levee*. The river coursed near the top of the dikes yesterday, hanging like a menacing cliff of water over the heads of thousands who tolled ln knee-deep mud below. In some lowland areas the wall of the water was on a level with first and second floors Of de- serted buildings. Already the 37-mile system of levees along the opposite sides of the stream was spongy and and the bluffs with fresh dirt sand for the bag fillers. Gen. Motors Head Paid $457,500 Tax On 1951 Income reached by morning. telephone this Shouting, sweating, strain- ing men labored to plug every NEW YORK. April 19 (UP) Charles E. Wilson, president of the General Motors Corp. re- ceived over S5M.000 in salary, fees and bonus for the year 1951, accorc'hig to the company's proxy statement today Wilson received 4201.200 In >a- jlsrv and fees, and a bonus of of | S365.000. On the basis of present tax rates that means he had to Canada were balked when Mar- Lunt-Fontanne Robbed In London be^joontry. they said, fhlt > take the law Into hands. They boarded the TAT plane bound for Ljubljana at the Bel- grade airport this morning, ac- companied by their mother and sister. As soon as the plane was ln the air. thev said, they burst in- to the pilot's cabin and held pis- tols at the heads of the crew members, forcing them to fly 75 miles off course to Graz. First reports had said that N1- colar Mrvoyovic and his law of- fice assistant had seized the plane. But Austrian police named the Marianct's. after careful interro- gation of the five adults who asked political asylum in Aus- tria. After keening the crew under control while the nlane was ter the Untie* txtes Air 'Force observed a nation-wide alert that started when unexplained vapor trails resembling those of aircraft engines were sighted at high altitude near Nome. Alaska. No Diane was found. faring the alert, fighter planes intercepted trans-At- lantic flights of British Over- seas Airways and Air France and United States Air Force cargo planes. Later, officials explained that portent to retain experienced, trained men to season and con- tinue the training programs for reerutts. '^R He said taf- all Increase in strength of about 100.000 men between Jo* 30. 1952. and June 30. 1953. He said there were about 3.- >00.000 men under arms In the United States defense units. Pre- sident Truman, in his order, said that all federal agencies should plan for personnel, materials and facilities they would need durlna the "civil defense emergency* and specified that plans should be made In consultation with ci- vil defense administration and three planes had '*kd to notify ;the Defense Department. the proper authorities that they __________"_______ were approaching the contlnen- .. ta. United State. |f Qtffa J0|| and landed at Graz. the Marian- anrii io cus anrt tnelT "rie" became so LONDON. April 1 luri -_p(t.j _ arriin at Graz that American actors Alfred Lunt and flted on rW|n at orz mat pay Federal Income tax of around $457.500. Lynn Fontanne reported today that they- had been robbed of Jewelry, furs and clothing worth thousand of dollars. They said thev returned to their London Hotel room from five day ln the country to find their suitcases had been rifled and thart a trunk full of clothers and furs had disappeared. The thelt was the third report- ed In thr*> days by prominent actors in London. Burglars robbed Douglas Fair- banks. Jr's town home of $5*00 worth of Jewelry Thursday night and Peggy Cummins swank May- fair apartment of $5800 in Jew- els and furs Wednesday. Trenton 'Mutineers Give In; Prison Farm Cons Holding On RAHWAY, N.J., April 19 (UP) [the prison hospitals and sent because he was HI with a heart Sixty-nine convicts who ran out home In "good condition." condition, of food and drank rusty water Officials here began broadcast- The uprising here was the from radiator pipes ended a four-tag word of the Trenton surren-fourth within a month in New day mutiny at Trenton State pri-'der over loudspeakers to the riot- Jersey prisons. i -i_ -ld todav at an auc- Hundreda of spectators gather-! J"r' w Eastern Defense Command ex- ' plained that the Air Force alert aj al 111* was ordered Thursday after the MAUntlIlfl JJ detection system developed a lw,m"S m "* "pattern of unknowns In both the j __ ' Northeast and Northwest which! WASHINGTON, April 19 JTJ apoeared potentlallv dangerous A North Continent Airline They said a "period of special crash near Los Angeles gave t flown across the Austrian border:readiness" was cancelled after government and company nev, the unknowns', were Identified, headaches todav as the 1952 air So far these developments have: travel death toll rose to 147, not been given anv special pro-1 Civil Aeronautics Admlnhn mlnence or significance by the tor Charles F. Home, cith United States press. ["violations and accidents," sua- The Defense Department said pended the non-scheduled Ita the extension was authorized by operating rlehts for 30 days afi President Truman in an order one of its C-48 Commando Planes he signed Thursday. crashed yesterday, killing 2per- Prevlously there were authorl-isons. at Thalerhof alroort. Izatlons for extensions in 1950 j Previous accidents this yea The plane with Its four-man- and 1951. The Department ex- have Involved non-schedulejB- crew and five other passeneers,' plained that during the Korean, linesone of them exclusive was permitted to flv back to Yu- War the Armed Forces had beenlfreleht carrler-and have takes oslnvla after interrogation by building up rapidly, and the 118 lives, compared wit British and Austrian authorities.' high command considered lt lm- this time in 1951 they forgot their lusesee, includ ing at least $37.000 belonging to Mrvoyovic. sAfter the plane landed the five adulta and the 13-year-old girl auietrv turned themselves over to Austrian and British authorities Sequestered RP Vessel Held In Italy Auctioned GENOA. April 19 (UP). ThejJ Panamanian passenger steamer Roma," sequestered here for a son yesterday, but a bigger riot,ers In the Ranway prison, hop- at another New Jersey prison Ing it would Induce them to give continued. up the wrecked dormitory and the nine hostages they seized The noisy mob of 232 prisoners Thursday night In a riot to show ofThe auake if nicked o here wn V^terday barricaded them-sympathy with the Tienton up- "iffi w^keislfnorma?lyU?aSj^ves Jj^ .^llory ^ | tag- oat by the Office ^Blneering ^ ta^Pr^" j^^iS: niuisinn inK ail nana I offices Iuca. w> aejy armea autnonues The hungry Trenton rioters story dormitoryone of the pri- son's three wings. From broken windows flapped de 8an Miguel, of Panama. docked here on April 18. 1951. and waa sequestered following Division and all^Canal offlcesand unurle rom smashed wln-lgave up after authorities prom-|slgns. lettered ta bright paint cu- requests by numerous Italian are closed until Monday. ,dows ^a sheets painted . _.__ _.. signs demanding prison changes. A spokesman at Tocumen air- The state's penal authorities port said messages exchanged, were cneered wnen the 69 pri- between the control tower here joners at Trenton yielded to star- and one ln Call, Colombia. In- dicated that no one there had Wildkatski vation treatment. They surren- iy si dered the wrecked prison print shop where they, had holed up for 72 hours demanding Warden William C. Qarty be fired. The Trenton mutineers releas- I.ONDON, April 19 (UP) ed their three hostagesa guard The Russians drilled the first and two printersand shuffled ail well in the werM, according off. to isolation cells under the ta a Mascow radia broadcast muzzle* of submachine guns. with ised to arrange an impartial in- bed sheets, saying: vestlgation of their grievances "Investigate mass beatings here over prison conditions. But the In segregationa doctor will ver- convlcts were not promised that ify lt." "Stop beating cons." "De- Warden Carty would be fired as mand impartial investigation they demanded. |not state-appointed whitewash The negotiations at Trenton committee." "The parole board were conducted with the convicts isn't fair. We want a change. aenitored here today. by F. Lovell Blxby, Deputy State Commissioner of Institutions, and Robert B. Hannom, a repre- sentative of the Osborne Asso- ciation which studies prison re- forms. The Trenton rioters originally held four hostages, but released The hostages were examined at onea guardThursday plght Superintendent R. W. Lagay and other officials at the Rail- way institution have withheld food and water since the 232 rioters took nine guards as host- ages during the uprising ln which they smashed cots, chairs, win- dows and fixtures and started minor fire% and foreign creditors. Face Value BRUSSELS, April 1 (UP) Young; King Badouin will ap- pear an his first postage stamp without his horn-rimmed glass- es. Today's announcement end- ed a hat debate in Belgium whether the king appeared -nare dignified far the stamp Issne with or without his glass- es. The stamp will be May 14. NEA Telephotos) JAILED FOR REFUSING TO FLYLt. Verne Goodwin (left', first of 13 reserve flying offi- cers to be court-martialed for refusing to fry. U shown ta his quarters at Biggs AFB. Teau after he was sentenced to two years In prison. Goodwin testified he refused to fly bocana he feared his nervous and pregnant wife would lose her baby. Mrs. Goodwin (right hold two-months-old Roger, born two months prem aturely when she learned hex husband waa b> be court-martialed. FAO1TW0 THE PANAMA AMERICAN ., ..i. TRE MANAMA AWEP.ICAN AN INDEPENDENT BALLY NEWSPAPER SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1*5 NW< *N6 AUAhfAMtA IV TMf PANAMA AMIWICAN AA' runeie y MUM INC. _ aounasvAvi IN HI H-nStoeio AMAS, cito B7 M ITMIT A O A6 '|A PANAMA A A A>. TLtONi Panama No f-074 u-i> CAtLI ABOAH AANAMIWI-AN. AANAMA CALAN ornei it 17 CINtaai AvtKul aitwiin itn anb 19th trAAfTS AAAtiAN AtAtt*TTiva JOSHUA A AOWlA. iNe S M6lOM Avt NtW VOAK. r*a nAnt in advanc* _____ PA* All MONTH. IN ABVANCI . >_A At va lecAt t I 70 A AO A AA v ma A I 80 ti.oo AAOO THIS H rOUH KM>UM THI gUPtAI OWN COLUMN THE MAIL BOX TM MaH . A) AA AAAA torHNl fo* rAAAf* At T*A PAAAMA Afntt- tAA-. Letter* AtA CHOrVA. fruitfully AA. AA A.nAtA. A- A wholly AA- If TAA AAAtfTAAN t MttAI jAA't AA HWBBTWJAt M It wAAAA't oBptAI t_A AAAt A_y LAWiri art A-AHiInmJ m lk< ArAAt paccivaa *MAA r> tA MA rht lAttArt limit. M ANA Ml* l*NftK. lOAAtlr, At MtAt WfttAft A) hl ill rtnettit cAtlAAAAA. Tlt AA-AAAAll AAAAIMAf AA MtAAAtibillty TAt l+ottmentt At AptltfOAt -AS.....' '" lAttAra trAM mltri. -------- 0 -------- Labor News And Comment By Victor Bleed TOODLE OO } Sir and Other Interested Parties: I Well, boy, I'm on my way! . .-?Ur*' y'-r8' r*-ldenee under the restrictions of your little dfctaterihlp h4 been long enough for me and I'm rttignlng be- fore I pile up too many years' service to aaeriflce. I appreciate that thla la tne situation which bind* many Of you and I don't want It to be my fate. [ I will probably find that living in the United States proper also entails some sacrifice, but at least I will know that some pkrt of my Income tax, be that portion ever so small, will be expended toward supporting the privileges I will enjoy. And I can vote even If my ballot does count toward put- tffrg a few more grading politicians into office. Among the advantages I can count being able to eat fresh vegeiaoip.s and lrull purchased at a reasonable price instead of forcing myself to swallow the half-rotten and battered stuff that your commissaries sell. And the meat I buy will not have been in cold storage six and eight months before It reaches my table. If I want to buy shoddy shirts with unfinished buttonholes and seams ready to burst at the first washing. I can do so, but they will be sold as "seconds" in a basement store and not as first-class merchandise. the money I now pay In exorbitant rent land it's going up, lent forget i on my frame shack will to toward the eventual ownership of my home and its upkeep. The walls will be finish- 4 In siucco or paper and I won't have to hang a teneatry over the nail ho.es and weather cracks. Once more the Good Wife can fill her kitchen bins with 10 lbs. of sugar and 25 lbs. of flour without fearing that ants and cockroaches will get away with It before we do. I ean even take my shower in the morning without listening to my neighbor up-chucking his copious libations of the previous evening. In short. I will enjoy precious privacy instead of living in a goldfish bowl. Be.oie departing, however, I would like to ask a few ques- tions of the deml-gods at "the Heights." Well 1 know that, prior to my departuie, 1 will be visited by one ,or the other of my good nienas, Messrs. Garcia and Naiighton, yho will query me as to my reasons lor resigning, why I do not like the Isth- mus, etc. ' But well I know, too, that the duties and obligations of their respectiva positions prevent their answering these queries with Aplomb, so I am thus saving them some embarrassment. Well, here goes: 1) In the face of mounting prices and operating costs, why _o Canal authorities persist in contending that an increase In tolls is not necessary? The only recent revision In tolls was a downward one to 1987, while the depression was still rife, com- mercial passenger fares have tripled and freight rates have moi e than doubled in the subsequent years, but tolls continue as be- fare. #.**> * Can it be that the authorities are hood-winked by the powerful shipping lobby? Do they really believe that shipping through the canal will be withdrawn and does the fact that ever $*IO,000 per ship Is saved by eliminating the round-the-Horn trip mean nothing? Even our doughty supports of the status, quo, the Finance Bureau, admit that an Increase In tolls would reduce overhead costs now exacted from the ultimate consumer I.e. you and me, Brother. .-_.., .__ Of course I would not be so brash as to suggest that a rew leas campaign expense checks made out on shipping company encek forms might have some influence In the opposite direc- tion, nor would I suggest that a few leas free trips for ''high brass" might go far toward cutting down shipping overhead. : Could It be that all these features are contributing toward the intimidation of our good benefactors enthroned at tne Heights"? _) Now that we are getting right down to brass tacks, how s A-out that little deal tne Army pulls with regard to their civilian Afcployes, and why can't some such set-up be made to apply to Canal smpioyes likewise? You haven't heard about It? Well, Brother, It's really some- _ou are hired locally as a civilian employe. At the end of two years you resign, but at the same time you sign a contract re-hiring you locally, don't forget. Then on the basis of some sort of finagling called reaa- jUgnmenf you get a free trip for yourself, plus freight on your ear, via transport to New York, New Orleans or California. You get mileage on your car while In the States, and a free return trip plus the freight on your car, from any of the three ports .designated above. Hows that for stretching the taxpayer's money to the last tfallable penny? At least you have to admit that somebody gets full value out of your taxes but It won't be you! 1 t) Since the subject of economy Is a touchv one with our good friends at the Heights, how do they Justify a few of the -following examples of waste? _ Por example, how come some $800,000 (and probably more. If the truth were known i were expended before thoroughly gifting the matter of obtaining a site from the Army? And since revenue Is now the crying need, whv not I*_?__?7 tton the surplus 3rd Locks quarters and rent them to provisional jte-pants'* We hear these are to be torn down, although they must rtalnly have a few remaining years of useful life. There are many retired employes whose only relativaa are still on tha Zone. Key would be willing to pay even Increased rents rather than Be separated from those relatives. _____ __ In addition, there are many non-income tax-paying tm- Uoyes of outside agencies (Le. shipping, cable and ol compaas, Pv Aeronautics, concessionaires, ete.i who would also prefer increased Zone rental rates to residence In Panama. , All this would swell housing revenues considerably and at the same time eliminate what appears to be a wanton waste A_td destruction. > i While we are on the subject of housing and rents, by what confused and ridiculous processes of reasoning does the sub- committee justify Its statement that rents on these frame shacks should compare wiyh rents charged in the States? Even my six- year old child recognised the fact that these jerry-built frame Structures can in no wise be compared favorably with modern outing. at. Merely as an example, only a year ago and during the ao- d "season" (December to late April). I wa able to rent a -furnished -room apartment in an exclusive residential ef Palm Baaeh. Pia.. for $75 par month. It included one sOdroom, on* small bedroom, larga living room, small fast room, tiled kitehen and bath, plus a garage. furnishings were modem overstuffed and included ln- brar_-g mattresses drapes, lamps and rugs TBe kitchen eoateined a large electric refrigerator, thorough- ly.modern electric range, double sink. Ironing board and broom Eageets, and more than ample eupboard space. Turn was a basemen laundry room, with washing machines far us* at so much par hour. At the same time we could have rented unfurnished apart- gnu In almost any section of the eity at prices which ran as low as $>8 for rooms, kitehen and bath, to approxtmate- b for a Urge place with 2 bedrooms and dining room < with almost no exception the kitchens and baths were all- ied. Moat of the apartments had permanently-fixed metal Ml, and many had tiled floors How I sk you. outside ef the new concrete quartan in Dla- , hew ean any tone quarters be considered comparable to fit furnished apartment lust mentioned' .' 4) Wall, now we have rolled around to the dear eld Com- rrontta-ed ea Pate THREE) An Angered move by non-Com- munist nations to siash the in- ternational courier system now running and *mnggling billions of dollars worth ol dope around the globe is being boycotted, fought and sabotaged by the So- viet Union. Aroused by the way the Rus- sians for m.re than e year have stymied coordinated action by the United Nation's Commission c Narcotic Drugs, our own U.S. Federal Narcotics chief, Harry Anslinger, has driven in from Washington to pound some UN desks And get action regardless of the Soviet's attitude. He has documents with him proving that "new trends and new traffic" of a heavily grow- ing opium trade have had "ter- rific impact" on the Japanese economy and its people on whom our nation is dependent for back door security as we faca the enemy on a dosen Oriental war fronts. There Is speelfie evidence to prove that much ef the So- viet's Chinese foreign currency to par for war equipment comes from profit on opium deals in Hong Koflg and Ma- cao. The rolden "Junk" is pur- chased by a Sovietlied Chinese state trading company with headeuarters in Kwangtnng. This outfit buys up raw opium in the heavy producing areas of Yunfou, Loting, rengehuwn, Kai- chien, Yunan, Yangahan, Lien Hslen, Llenehan, Juyuan. Yingte, Hulyang, Hoping, Lungchuan, Tapu, wuhua, Pingyuan, Chieh- yang, Chaoyang. JaopMg, Pun- inr Hsinl and Maomlng. The stuff is bought by the ton -'it*rally in lots worth HUfty millions of dollars. it is processed in two or three big cities and sold in British and Portuguese markets, where the currency pays for foreign arms, metals and oil. Much of it, even now, finds Its way via San Pranciseo to school children In the U.S. As recently as last month, for example, San Francisco's cus- toms Inspectors assigned to the Post Office suddenly noticed a flood of tightly rolled, very much out-dated magazines pouring tn from Hong Kong. This being no isolated African coast village without news stands and libraries, the inspectors de- cided to look at some of the an- cient magazines which some Am. erlcans Were Importing from Hong Kong. The agents found, nagly cached in each bosk, an ounc- of heroin e ounces ef the pere steff in an. This is an mormons haul end If let through could have brought the smugglers hundreds ef thousands of dollars. TJnfor- tunatrly, even the expert cus- toms men ean't nab every batch of the Communist Chi- nes* narcotics run In by Chi- nese-British rings onerating eoeilr tn Hong Kong. Nice allies we have. A'ermed by the military and political impact of this dope trade, the U.8. back in earlv 1981 demanded that the UN move in fast to cut the opium courier net- works. .Our reoresentatlve proposed that the UN: Having been Informed by the commission on Narcotic Drugs that there has been an increase in the illicit traffic in narcotics f 82?,pi- ;fnd tnat tnl4 increase is principally owing to smuggling Bgr merchant vessel personnel.." requests the Secretary General to compile a list of merchant ves- sel personnel who have been eon- Ti_wi "I"1? the years 1M to 1950 (Inclusive) of crimes involv- Pg _, """"gllng of narcotic* 'and(...instructs the Secretary General to transmit the list to h.fw fi_'ernnient* of - -tes Ith the recommendation that they take appropriate measures to revoke seamen's certificate currently held by such persons " Virtually all other democra- tic governments bseked theTJ. ' *5___w-ftt '-rther and urged maritime union in their ter- ritories to bar smaggiing offi- eera and seamen permanentrr freaa union membershie__end therefore jobs at sea. Thev also raed all steamship companies net to employ men listed on an Interntfonal dossier which weald be compiled. All this would have meant, of course, a series of investiaatlons and pooling of Information. The Russians and their satel- lites would have none of this They even refused to answer a letter dispatched to them asking for a noint of view on the global crusade. Bxcept for the Csechs. whose Skoda Arms factorv now supplies the Chinese Communist armies with their most modern, moat rap'fl firing guns. The Csechs said, "No com- mento." Why should they? Those ooium dollars are part payment for their tuns! But this week, there'll be plenty of comment from our own nareetlcs ehief ltd be a pity if It all stayed off the record an. behind the scenes. /What Price Wage Increase? A Don't Look Now By BOB RUARK NEW YORK Although some may see a hor- wife, or is it true that you passed the red light riu curtailment of ihe rreedom of communica- doing 90 miles an hour? tlon by a recent act to prevent the broadcast, Face the witness with the staring orb of the televising, or filming of any clambake where the camera and those big hot lights, and even a witnesses get hauled In under subpoena, It looks bishop is apt to stutter like a thief. With no to me like a swell idea. uuuwe at an you can magnify a sllgntly guilty This means that in these parts we won't have conscience into a damning confession of un- iny more gaudy hearings like the Kefauver comnuneu crime. crime committee vaudevilles, which accomplish- Beyond the fact that a man is not at his ed very little outside the entertainment field &esi ui a uiuammar medium Is a basic prlncl- except to solidify KCfauver's preliminary pass at P w n-v* not yet licked in the television bus- the Presidency. "Vi -_.___. I believe that we can muddle along, somehow, .Ism much economic as anything. Nobody without televising stuff that Is serious enough ?a" i*11 ,'"e thata lellow may be forced to work to warrant a Jail sentence if you find yourself *? Pro.vl?e entertainment for a sommerclally too flustered to answer up bravely like says. It was my idea when Frank Costello was be- ing sweated by Ketauvers road show that no matter what you might feel about a man's guilt or Innocence, he deserves better than a d product without receiving compensa- tor his chores. * e are coming back to coverage of the polit- ical conventions soon in this country. It is not too early to Insist that the TV boys cover their own press conferences and the other chance to prove himself before a battery of gla- p,rofesfi?na,1 eventf. without the involuntary help ring lights, prowling cameras, and the disarm- ' a * f' **<> do \ wo* of TV, don't ing knowledge that fils every move is being flash- !* abo"tl 1 viJfn* ^0 & not wlsh * Pro" ed to an audience of millions. vl?e,a ,10t _! > .r V'^ _ You have to appear before television a couple tin.S? .,_!?) a^ho.le otof ***** ln M*.ih8: Pfr_ of times to appreciate truly the strain of being Hnen Sf^SSJ,,*' .nteces's,ay;,ln. orde,r an unpaid actor ln a drama that might con- tot g'vve ffi?,r^i?n'%_**^hm publlc, ,lrst "** ceivabfTwlnd up in a Jail sentence. To put it . Thy. ri M,f 1 .,HLv*nBt??loyeri wont bluntly, an amateur is not at his best. Nn? d i L i22iaS* vitLu?tn J0010"0*- More in accident than by intent I have ap- wr,,i0 .Le' that Eff 8nlr_K f*ce at Some peered on some television shows, and by ex- Km.'h i a, p?iltlcA'rcoc^1 party, ia of freme luck nobody was accusing me of anything ^L-STlmf ,*pk_h ^t. &udl*nc- you ean go to Jail for. ^ ,**l "J^,*'nJhlladrlP,hl_ ?me dame sat brief- . .'y,ln-the lap of a dignified friend, at Perle Mes- But the mouth dries up, and y0g pit blobs -t_Krti Stvir *htt there u f *"a *"* _?St K^truSon o1? s^rs? as S^ Missouri Valley By Peter Ec!.on WASMWOTON--(NtA) Flood waters swirl- __."______?_ ssi- -" __t_S__?.aassa,-in5! Wl IJlT Trumui .M? Miourl BUI Sur- _,,n.a S^.'r,*"" .'," f0"trel " BmsW-msft aJ9f3S____F Its chairman, James K. Of the Lincoln (Neb.) Star . _.... _*-sus 5?S: sssrr S_ "-- KSiiJSS SSr-^'saft _3r?'&3 ^Mawaiiiu. _.-_r_r__s_s'_rt,'. SSsemssff_?_sr_a E_T___v_wanK^ AfeasSeAftwasras ^'^i2PSSt**- S-jjTm taro- Sslss m^ *_sn_?ss!s2S s ?"-" eh*- The $137 million Fort Peck dam was con ole- ______? Um vB s*n*tor J"n Murray of TiSShI*. oaoea ln 1*vor of Missouri vailev Au- Bureau of Reclamation has thorlty noover Commission Uoas wXhrun^frof the pUlru-_ndCVhant___w STK ' M ffi * ff__j mountains etui to come. Slnee the it rt of th- Coob^TSSLJSSiS. J5_"__5,5la to Korean war. there has been a free on funda wut^Tfi^e^rt^r^I^r^^ T*uW to start new projects ln this vast undertaking. I"".*" *|00d S0?**1 wWk ta DeP-rtment of In- lt U today the only complete plan in existence. P-rtment of Interior. Ijqy^WSlMTOM, ERRY-G0RMD y DIIW PIARSON Drew Pearson soys: Truman paradox is combination of courage and corruption; American people do not realize what Truman has accomplished; President's mistaken loyalty has undermined administration. WASHINGTONThis month the Queen of Holland told the President that historians would credit two men with doing more than any others to stop the march of CommunismDean xche- son and Harry S. Truman. In a sense newspapermen are day-to-day rilstorlansthough not always accurate ones. They have to write fast, make snap Judgements; but, from piecing together these snap judgments and judging them through the vista of time, history books are written. Seven years ago today, this columnist was in Pittsburgh on a speaking engagement when called upon to make a Snap Judg- ment regardinp Current history. Franklin D. Roosevelt had died, and I had to go on the air immediately without a prepared script to predict the future of tha new President of the United States. _ I predicted that he would be another Andrew John like the turbulent days which followed Lincoln, his l tlon would be feautured by strife and dissension; he most be Impeached, but that his basic policies would be right. Today, seven years after Mr. Truman took office, I haUevg both my prediction and the Queen of Holland will be proved right. , COURAGE AND CORRUPTION The paradox of Mr. Truman's administration is that he has shown great courage and wisdom on his major policies, but has sabotaged his own greatness by terrible publlc relations, person- al spleen, and the appointment of mediocresometimes corrupt men to carry out his policies. And by so doing, he has helped sidetrack the course chart- ed by the late Franklin Roosevelt, Just as Andrew Johnson un- wittingly sidetracked the reconstruction program of Abraham Lincoln, thereby setting the South back two decades. For what Harry Truman doesn't realise is that when he doesn't clean up corruption, he undercut* his greatest goalin- ternational cooperation. Or when he writes a snide letter to Bernard Barueh or to the Washington Post music critic, he undermine his program on Civil rifhts, labor and everything else.'.. For, as any President loses prestige and popularity, in di- rect proportion he also loses the ability .to push his program through Congress. Statesmanship ln the last analysis is the ability to leek ahead and solve a problem before It becomes lnsolvable. Herbert Hoover proved himself no statesman when he let unemployed veterans concentrate in Washington until they formed a Bonus Army of 20,000 and had to be driven out with cavalry and tanks. Franklin Roosevelt, later facing the same problem never let the veterans concentrate ln Washington. He sent them outside the city to Fort Hunt Vj\_ 100 n day, to be rehabilitated and returned to their homes. He met the problem before It became serious. Likewise Harry Truman showed great statesmanship when he threw American weight behind Greece and Turkey In 1947 when those two key countries were about to topple Into the arpia of the KremUn..He looked ahead. ... i:. *.i*<>. iits Again Truman established p. mighty milestone ailhtCom- munism when he had the courage to pioneer the Marshall Flan, undoubtedly It saved Western Europe from Moscow's grip. The same was true of the North Atlantic Pact and a united West European army. Thla was what Queen Juliana had in mind when she told the President that he and Qaan Acheson would go down ln his- tory as doing more than any other two men to stop Ule march of Communism. She Is right. And the paradox Is that the American public, thanks to the fulmlnations of Senator McCarthy, probably doesn't appreciate It. MISTAKEN LOYALTY ^ By coupling the Secretary of State with the President, the Queen put her finger, probably without realising it, on the fun- damental key to Harry Truman's successes and failures. As he has picked good men, so he has succeeded. At he has picked poor men, so he has failed. Dean Acheson, despite the McCarthy critics and some per- sonal idlosyncracles, will go down ln history as a great Secretary of state. Acheson once tried to have me jailed for contempt of court, at Felix Frankfurter's request, so I am not personally pre- udieed in his favor. I am sure, however, that the aboro ap- praisal Is correct. On the other hand, the greatest scandals of the Tftuttan Administration have involved income, taxes. And at the head of the Treasury Department controlling taxes, sits a nice but complacent mediocrity, John Snyder, who holds office only because he Is an old Missouri friend of the President. The President has supported his Secretary of the Treasury Iust as vigorously as he has supported his Secretary of State. lls loyalty to neither can never be questioned. But sometimes loyalty to the country and loyalty to great policies must be placed before loyalty to friends. And loyalty to an old friend at the head of the Treasury Department has weakened Harry Truman's courageous major policies more than he himself will ever know Likewise loyalty to another friend, Tom Pendergast of Kan- sas City, has weakened his effectiveness, hurt his prestige, sabo- taged his own program. For, when Harry Truman flew to the funeral of Boss Pen- dergast, the ex-convict, using a government plane to do so, ha set a patterna pattern for lesser men to follow. And when he fired the U.S. Attorney Maurice MUligan, who convicted Pendergast, and ousted the attorney general Francis Blddle who Insisted on retaining Mllligan, Truman eut that pattern deeper. Ifvery politician, every official right down the line saw the precedent and many followed it. 1 ' Those two cases delineated the corruption pattern for this administration. And when President Truman cut it, he did not realise that he was setting back some of the great policies of the past two decadesinternational cooperation, civil rights, social welfare The tragedy is that he probably does not realise It eveh to this day. THERE'S MONEY IN THE STRANGEST PLACES I Orandma't trunk wat full of lank and cluttered op the attic. a pa classified ad sold the let to a happy antique addict! Every month . every week . every day THE PANAMA AMERICAN carries MORE CLASSIFIED ADS then all other daily papers in Panam combined! * TT lATIIRDAT, AFKIL 1. 1S !" THE FANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER PAOKTHR1 i i i. SO" WHA1ZI1 P yttu^f:! ::MANYj ii'iwiu VtANCE i"if" ITALY:! lilllPIlPfillf wi M MILES y0MmmM%, \ Steef Workers9 Pay Goes Up Next Week; Firms to Object SAAR. om of Europe's hotepote, became an ietue again i* aLS^KATO confciwe. a. the French-German dispute over IK Warn,the"worstbarrier to European unification. Thisrich ISSSmS^Vw iu.r. mite. He. acre ,natural pathway ))> rrtnct and Germany. Trade flow across the Saar in Itto^wa^l^a* ararte* march row It during time, of war ltanan* anToTul* fought Germanic tribe. In the territory. French tare^mte Lou XIV and Napoleon battled the German, during hTrr^Pnlaaten war.. Allied force, marched into the area urinSXworidWar? vered from Germany after World War I theSarwaa made a aeparate entity and governed until 1934 by l!**V" Nation.. In1136. with Hitler and German nationalism on tnTriaY a plebiscite wa. held and the Saar wa. returned to Co" U"ter term, of the Versailles treaty Gonnany bough backlh inr mine and paid France for damage .he did to coal '2Lin tottJFrance. After World War II the^rla^er. ,votad overwhelmingly for an economic union with rranci. Urn ng lit*, agreement* were .igned between France and the Saar giving the territory a larger measure o autonomy, while France got a aO-yetx leaae on the coal minea pending a final German peace treaty. The West German government protested the leaae, claim- in. their eonatitution provide that Its government take over all the property of the Third Reichand the Saar wa. part of that state. Frane* want, the tend becauae of economic necessity a. weU a. fear of German aggrearion. The U. 8.. In It. attempt to make NATO an effective weapon against Soviet Imperially, found Itself caught between France-, desire for the Saar, and Germany a threat te refuse NATO partnership if Ue Saar tent returned to her. ~ _____________ i "' > i THE MAIL BOX (Continued frdm Page 2) 0 WASHINGTON, April 19 (UP) Secretary of Commerce Char, les W. Sawyer announced today that the government will give the 650,000 CIO United 8teelwork- ers a pay increase next week If the Industry does not settle with the union before then. He did not disclose the amount of the pay hike, but Informed sources have said that It Will match management's "best of- fer" before wage negotMuons collapsed UYt cents In straight hourly pay and 5V cent* in fringe benefits. Sawyer said he will act Mon- day or Tuesday. The companies are prepared to go to court In an effort to block any steel wage Increase granted by Sawyer on grounds It would do them Irreparable damage. They already are contesting Pre- sident Truman's seizure action in the courts. Despite the apparent impasse, there was some feeling the com- panies might settle with the steelworkers if they could get some assurance of somewhat more price reller than the gov- ernment has been willing to give so far. How much this Would have to be was not known. Both the union and company officials agreed with Sawyer's suggestion that they make one last-ditch effort to reach agree- ment. Sawyer, Who acted with PresU dent Truman's approval, said the Industry negotiators agreed to the meeting only on condition that they be allowed to "clear questions" on what price In- creases they will get if they ne- gotiate a settlement. This made It evident that the seized steel companies will con- tinue their effort* to get a price Increase to compensate for any wage boost they are forced to pay. If they fall, there is little chance of settlement. Price controller Ellis Amall said he Is considering giving the companies a uniform price in- crease of about 13 a ton instead of the varying amounts, ranging from $2 to $3, which he says they are due under price regu and "Impeach" Mr. Truman as a number of Republicans, includ- ing Sen. Robert A. Taft, have suggested. Sawyer made his announce- ment after an 80-minute meeting with Industry officials and a 35- mlnute talk with CIO President Philip Murray, head of the steel union. He said afterward the big stumbling block was the question of price Increases. Unless the industry can pry a bigger price boost from the gov- ernment over the weekend, Saw- yer Is expected to order Into ef- fect 18 cents of the 28-cent hour- ly pay Increase recommended by the wage board. The companies are firm In their opposition to any pay hike. (F.-Mlch.) oharged that Mr. Tru- man had no constitutional auth- ority to seize the Industry. 8en. William P. Knowland (R- Callf. suggested banning the use of all appropriation funds to en- force the seizure order and said any violation would be grounds for Impeachment. TO HMKI TOOTH DKAY eWKTIVttY- No other tooth paite, ammoniated or regular, ha* been proved better than ipanaI < HM* I PAN A TOOTH PASTE Their lawyers are ready to go Into court for a temporary in- junction the minute 8awyer an- nounces a wage boost. Stating his position, Sawyer "Ifeel that I should, under the President's (seizure) directive, begin consideration of an action upon the terms and conditions (of employment mentioned here- in. After consultation with the President and with the Attorney General, I propose to undertake to do this on Monday or Tuesday of next week." Amall said he is considering giving the various steel compa- nies a uniform price Increase ol about $3 to avoid making the price situation any more compli- cated. Normally, the increase would range from $2 to $3 among the various companies. The Senate debate was heated. Republican leader Styles Bridge (N H.) and Sen. Homer Ferguson pUsary. How I am going to miss this absorbing topic of vltu- L"*tlve discourse. i But, a lot f it I won't mis at all mainly the lousey legetabtes and fruit and the .meat that has all the succulent V*<* of sawdust and Is Just as tough. 1 wont have to pay first claia price* for soap powder that i water-Soaked In transit. I-won't be .racking my brain* trying to figure out what pack- j company put up the label-les* can* that crowd the canned |oodi section. The Little Woman will not be annoyed over having to re- urn canned milk which has soured before opening, eggs which Ire ready, to hatch, dry staple* which have become maggot- L-Teteo\ arannteted ua^r-liimpeel pa^remptlon', bread which rw moulded or is full of flour limps, spices staled from the [fleet* of climate, etc., etc., etc., ad lnfinitum. I The beauty of It all Is that irOm now on I will be paying lompettttve prlees and not a king'* ranaom established by a Ion-competing firm. I Tee, Boys, where the ultimate consumer is concerned, healthy lompetttlon certainly has It* value. Incidentally, the argument Ihat w pay no sales tax lose* it* weight when one considers lhat this saving Is absorbed by the higher prices necessitated, te are told, by freight rate*. 6) Last, but far from least, we come to the subject of wages, thlch really should have had flrat place In thla diatribe. In this connection, a* with everything else on the Zone, the luthorlttes have adopted the lf-you-don't-ltke-lt-there s-a-boat- ut-every-week attitude. .._..: i When It comea, to lable commodities, these are bought in Ihe New York market where the highest prices obtain. But rhen wage* are considered, Brother, you wlU find lt*e a different [ >rThen the standard is an average obtained by lumping to- lether figures secured from four or five se ctlonsi ol the United lutes, dividing that total by the number of dlatrlct*. and adding [lS%8lu?ethwUldUtrlcU usually include two o the lowest-paid m thVUnited States the "deep South" and the southwest Iheemploye bound to come out at the mall end of the horn 1 Thu* although the northern ate* may be paying as high j $190andI |J.iff per hour to the crafts, Zone pay will average round s.2 50 for the ame class of labor, ^hte wasn't > bad when the Income tax wa* not applicable 3 the Zonejbut since It has become effective a Zone Job Is no than n average-salaried job anywhere and oftentlme. l'" In addfi', income taxes and the exorbitantimt of:aa ex- leniive vacation mceasitated by year-In-and-out Isolation In a Ironical climate having no seasonal changes of temperature very Ihorougnly eliminate the possibility of saving anything over and r And" wh^The^merlcan workingman arrive, at that impale. L ceLes to have an interest in hi. job becomes dissatisfied. Lnd begins looking around for greener field. ,,r { Even though he may not be able to: ama** a savings account If u. rental money can apply toward the eventual ownership T, w. home hi tul feels that he Is accomplishing something. " ^wheTevei thi i mal .Tul[action U denied him, working for living become" a vicious circle with neither incentive nor rtUso you can have your little "tropical paradise," my friends, lnd if it eventually revert* to it* original settler* (which seems lo be the present plan and trend), I wteh them well with It. r The next time I hire out for foreign employment, 1, U going lo be with an outfit that Is either fish or fowl _^but deftaltely- Ind not with an organization that operates by robbing Peter In K. p\Aon of the employe to pay Paul In the person of hlgh- llarled overhead. I It la no wonder that the Government I* always clamoring lor bona fide highly qualified men. The qualification* for a C8-7 Job approximate those that any other outfit would require hf a man drawing OS-IS pay. i However, from now on I won't have to spend my leisure Irying to solve such conundrums, thus upsetting my digestion vlth exasperation over your unbalanced set-up. Also, I won't have to work 40 hours before I can draw over- time pay and I'll get paid that overtime In cold cash none bf your compensatory-tlme-for-overtime deal. | Well, toodie-oo, fellows let me know when you get enough Of It! The firms have demanded a $12 a ton price hike. Sawyer's announcement came as Senate Republicans opened an all-out drive for a Senate vote of censure against Mr. Truman for seizing the steel industry. They offered an amendment to an appropriations BUI barring use of any of the funds to en- force the seizure order. They were answered immedia- tely by Sen. H. Humphrey (D- Mln..) and other Democrat*. Humphrey-, q>red them to try George Smtih, 62, Dies In Hospital, Services Tomorrow George Smith, a long-time employe of Novey and Luttrell here, died Thursday afternoon in the Santo Tomas Hospital af- ter a brief Illness. He was 62 years old. Plans have been made.for burial at the Jardn de Paz Cemetery after funeral iervices are held at 4 p.m. tomorrow In the Cristo Rey Church. He is survived by hte wife: three sons, Gerald, George and Herbert, and one daughter, Al- ma. Telegraphers Reject Western Union Bid For Strike Truce WASHINGTON, April 19 (UP) Negotiations in the 16-day-old telegram strike today remained broken off after AFL commercial telegraphers rejected Western Union's proposal for a 60-day truce. J. L. Wllcox, Western Union vice-president In charge of em- ploye relations, said the company still maintains it cannot offer "one red cent" in wage increases "without first knowing where the money will come from." W. L. Allen, International CTU president, said that in view of the company's stand It would be "silly" and "ridiculous" to return to work, as Western Union sug- gested. The truce proposal was made Thursday in the first joint talks between the two parties In al- most two months. The company offered to pay 30,000 clerks, mes- sengers and telegraphers at their old rates If they returned to work to permit bargaining by "calm Judgment." Federal Mediator J. R. Man- delbaum called negotiators to- gether for another session yes- terday. A company spokesman said after the meeting that no further sessions are scheduled. Allen aid previously the union wa* prepared to come down on' lta demands for a lC-cent hourly wage Increase and a 40-hour week at the present 48-hour pay. But he said "the company has i offered nothing." Long Gone TOUGH ON TIRES-Thl. pic- ture, taken at a speed of 1/I5,ooo of a second, shows what hsppeni when your auto tire, properly inflated, strike, a brick at a speed of 40 milea per hour. It Is one of a series of photos made by en- gineers at Seiberllng Rubber Co, Akron, O, to study effect of ob- stacles on tires at high apeada^ sTOOOTOJfOU-; V04)0QnVmVfCftVg2A Faltering Philip! it* i. ruled with brutees. wen step* aad ruge he uses. nil Iwree Me home like new. A. CUaalfleda. feat eke right eluet QJabuh Mal I. 1 ous new .* HUDSON HORNET u A 'U ere t . n E ". -. to . -c ' '. 'fi t These brillant new cars with a stunning new COMMODORE and a thrifty new PACEMAKER make the < most exciting array of value in all Hudson history 1 AUTOS OMPHROY, S.A Justo Arosemena Avenue and Eart 26th St., Tel.t 24)610 i wlltMj HI, NEIGHBOR!! FAITH FOSTER '4 ' ' .- SATURDAY APRIL 19th. Is ft * SATURDAY APRIL 19th. - . e # ** 1 i -i -- c WELCOMES YOU TO THE GRAND OPENING OF THE Faith Foster Cocktail Lounge - IN THE REAR OF THE "LOUISIANA BAR" - 177 CENTRAL AVENUE Facing the Panam R.R. Station HI, NEIGHBOR!! I want to take thie opportunity to meet old friend and make new onea, when I hold an OPEN HOUSE on thi* opening night from 7:00 to 8:00 P.M. Drop in and have a drink on me. FAITH i - :. Delores Leacock At the Piano Ray Tico Wizard of the Guitar ,, - P4GE FOOT ..- THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 19gj I n: HOLLYWOOD BY KRSKINF --------0 JOHNSON dLLYWOOD. (NEA> Be- herd of a thousand reindeer hind The Screen: Other movie stampeding over a cliffIn "yal- queens may shrink, cower and ley Of The Eagles Rita Hay- hedee but Irene Dunnes glow- worth has a new ghost singer, lng about her brand-new career Joan Greer. who does all of her ,s\ television star. singing in "Affair in Trinidad Irene's the biggest Hollywood Nan Wynn and Martha Tilton tar to date to sing the "I-love- preceded her. The studio appar- TV" song and told me on the "It ently doesn't worry about.Ritaa Grows on Trees" set at UI: Ringing sounding different in 1 fcve it! Making films for TV every picture_____ ts, sutSnsf^^- n*w Tyve ffarsnia UW nrod,u-t on fiirn^' mad-life-in-Hollywood e x peri- T%Kta^ has completed 13 ence. After starring on Broadwav till, m thi -Irene Dunne Tele In "Mr. and Mrs. North," h Theater1' rtea has; an- came west for a movie career IItTr il in do a. d Vants it One of his first casting calls, a- Sln ?h* she does a lot more long with another young fellov big check and percentage she re-| ^geriv and the ottJer actor Her prologue stints give her a who introduced himself as Mont- S& * SfiOVS SfcMSfUB ahe plavs a scene with a chlm- ne- anzee escort in a night club se-, . Publicity release: "Alan and cowboy in "Red River" and Hag- Sue. Ladd celebrated their 10th eerty was signed to p ay the role treddln* anniversarv. They gave of the shoot 'em up villain in five each other gun racks." other western films! I Charles Laughton sings tn; Bob Hope's definition of a ml- " Abbott and Costello Meet Cap-;rage: ; tain Kidd" and Lou says: "He, Margaret Truman singing the sounds like Leo Durocher seren- National ding an umpire." Marilyn Monroe's September- Morn pose on a calendar glvos her the off-screen-pin-up-of- the-vear title, but Mary Castle's got the pin-up-girl role of the year. Anthem at the GOP convention. Helicopter Does It WALLINGFORD. Conn. enns Marv a dead rinrer H. Curtis couldn't flrid a suitable for R?t.Havl"rth'Plays a <% ;'te STZ^JLv riJew ewntaiinerlntendent in nearby North E. StathirSti' Haven. The two pooled their re- towns an* bathing salts. !SOUrces hired a helicopter and Jildv Garland's favored by the took to the air. They soon had a Fannie Brice estate for the star- Mnft eye; view of several likely ring role in her film biography. The Bob Lemons he's th" Cleveland pitchine ace have dated the stork for the third lime. school locations. One woman in Marie Wilson's: professional life (Cathy Lewis' cm the "Mv Friend Irma" show) is enough. That's Marie's explan- ation of whv she turned down an offer to do a movie with Roz Russell this summer. Says Marie: T love Roz. hut I hist couldn't work with another woman." rortuce-r Sam Katzman to Jotvi Derek abont the bfl'-e-torso advertising pictures tor Prince of" Pirates": 'You've seen the ads for 'A Streetcar Named Desire.' Well, we want you to look like a front- wards Marlon Brando." hector Lloyd Bacon told a, friend about the promising young; actress whose career was ruined; when she was discovered by a big | producer. "But that should have help- act her career." said the friend. ?Yeah," said Bacon, "bat you; don't know what the producer discovered her doing." I'The Fighter." starring Rich- ard Conte and produced by Alex' Gottlieb. Is a sneak preview bell rimger. The fight sequence out-| nocks the one in "Champion."... The "King Solomon's Mines" in- fluence Is still with us. Now it's a TRAFFIC VICTIM-Immanuel Lutheran Church of Agnew, Mich., becomes a victim of high- way progress as it is moved to make way for widening and re- location of highway U. S.-31. A total of nine buildings must be moved so that the project can be completed. THE SAVINGS BANK CHHis WELKEN Planet Fair Shake Iiisiiiniion Guaranteed by the State Pays 2% Interest Annually on Savings Accounts INITIAL DEPOSIT,$5.00 We make loans with guarantees on first mortages or other securities. CHRISTMAS SAVINGS 25c 50c. $1.00 and $5.00 deposits are accepted thru a period of 48 weeks. Individual safety deposit boxes, for jewelry and documents, in 4 different sixes. OFFICE IN PANAMA: 10 Central Ave. at eorner of "I" Street. G. R. De ROL'X Manage*' COLON BRANCH: Front St. at eorner ef 7th St. CARLOS WOUYNES V. Sob-Manarer. OCRS t From 1:00 a.m to 11:10 p.m. S ATURDIS: from 8:00 am to 12:00 p.m. Everybody Reads Classified* BY RL'SS WINTERHOTHAIH MICHAEL O-MALLBI ----------- SATURDAY, APRIL 10, 19 TOT PANAMA AMERICAN AN INtlPfeNDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER ____ PAGE PIT pacific S^ocietu ! & 17, BafU D.I &&~ 3511 AMBASSADOR AND MRS. WILEY TO BNTEBTIN The Ambassador of the united SUtestePanam and Mrs. John Cooper Wiley bare issued toTlUUon. for m din- ner Monday erenln; in honor of the Gorernor of the Pan- ama Canal and Mn. Pranela K. Newcomer. The dinner wiU be held at the Embassy Residence en La Create. Mrt. Plnchot la Visitor Here Mrs. Olfford Plnchot of Wash- ington, DC, arrived on the Isth- mus by plane Thursday evening , from Miami for a visit as "*e house guest of the Ambassador of the United States to Panama and Mis. John C. Wiley. Luncheon Honors Visitor Miss Pauline^ Kearney of Ev- anaton, 111., who Is a visitor on the isthmus, was the guest of honor On Thursday at a lunch- eon given by the Ambassador of the United states to Panama and Mrs. John C. Wiley at the Embassy residence on La Cresta. Covers were laid for sixteen. Dinner Party At Army-Nav, Club Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Beau- champ and Miss Lucille Heam entertained several of their friends last night at a dinner party given at the Army-Navy Club at Port Amador. Miss Wood Honored ' At Lawn Party Miss Ruth Wood'of Memphis, Tenn.. who la a visitor on the Isthmus and the house guest of her brother and slater-ln-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wood of Gamboa, was the guest of honor at a lawn party given rentJy by Lt. and Mrs. Clarence Howell at their home. , Mr*. Wood Hostess For Bridge Dessert Mrs. Ernest Wood of Gamboa was hostess to a group of her friends on Wednesday at abridge dessert given in honor of her sister-in-law, Mlas Ruth Wood, who Is a visitor on the Isthmus and also in farewell to Mrs. Je- rome Prager. who plans tp jail early in the week for Berkeley, Cal., whore she and Mr. Prager will mate their home. Retirement Party Honors Jerome Prager Mr. Jerome Prager was the guest of honor last night at a re tlrement party attended by more than a hundred of his friends and co-workers. The buffet din- ner was held at the American Legion Club at Fort Amador and was followed by a full evening of entertainment, which included danclni, group singing, square dancing and three special songs written for the occasion. Mrs. Trudy. Roberto presided at the plao. Mr. L. Forrest Hallett was the master of ceremonies. He pre- sented Mr. Prager with a per- sonalized face, engraved Hamil- ton pocket watch and a large bok containing Mr. Prager's serv- ice record and certificate from the governor of the Panama Ca- nal, pictures of the Division of Storehouses and Scrap Opera- tions, pictures of the Storehouse logging operations and of em- ployes of the oil handling plant* and tank farms and a letter of commendation on Mr. Prager's good work as Scrap Administra- tor of the Canal Zone written by the head of the salvage division of the National Production Au- thority of the United States Government. Mrs. Prager was presented with a Royal Doulton figurine. "Bu- rette" a gift from the assembled group. Mr. and Mrs. Prager plan to ail Monday aboard the Olga Maersk for Berkeley, Cal., where they will make their new home. Until their departure they are guests at the Hotel TivoU In An- cn. Mary Officers Wives Clab Meets The April luncheon meeting of the Navy Officers Wives Club was held Tuesday at the Fort Kobbe Officers Club. New members Introduced at this time included Mrs. C. L. Crayne Mrs. J. M. Cummings, Mrs. Wi H. Johnson. Mrs. J. A. Maloney and Mrs. W. Oyen. Following the business meeting a short program was presented, consisting of excerpts of select- ed acts Trom the variety show which will be presented May 1. 3. and 3 at Cummfngs Hall on the Fifteenth Navel District Reserv- ation. R.O.A. To Meet Monday The Naw PacKlc Chapter of to.A. will hold Its regular meeting on Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Army-Navy Club at Fort Amador. Election of permanent officers will be the first order of the day. " Members are asked to attend this Important meeting and to bring a friend aa a prospective member. Club rules require a coat and tie be worn after 6 p.m. Garden Groan T Make Field Trip Members of the garden group of the Balboa Woman's Club will meet at 7:45 a.m. Wednesday at Morgan's Gardens to make a field trip to Venado Beach to ga- ther driftwood and shells. "Hardtlme Dance" Tonight The Pedro Miguel Boat Club will give a gala "Hardtlme Dance" tonight at 6:30 In con- Junction with a buffet supper. Prizes will be given for the best costumes, special dances, etc. Tickets at $.60 a person are a- vallable at the club. The regular free party will not be held this month. Spring Training In Girl Scouting Begins Monday All new Pacific Side Girl Scout leaders, troop committee mem- bers and neighborhood commit- tee members are invited to at- tend the opening session of spring training for adults in Girl Scouting. . The meeting will be held In the Pedro Miguel Girl Scout House Monday evening at 7. Benefit Card Party Friday The Balboa Woman's Club will sponsor a card party Friday at the American Legion Club at Ft. Amador, for the benefit of char- ity and the Maltland Twin Fund. Tickets are $1.00 and may be purchased at the door or from any club member. Refreshments will be served and door prizes awarded. .. ,. . The public Is cordially invited to attend. Bridge Tournament Monday Evening The regular bridge tournament will be played Monday evening at 7 p.m. In the card room of the Hotel Tlvoli. All Interested players are In- vited to attend and play. All are asked to be prompt. Tenth Annual Camporee At Fort Kobbe Fort Kobbe Post has the Boy Scouts and Explorer of the, Ca- nal Zone Council as guests this week-end during the tenth an- nual Scout Camporee. Camera Clab To Meet Thursday The Diablo Camera Club will present Bertll Mae**** of Mex- ico City, a member of the Club Fotografa de Mexico, who will show color slides of Mexico and Central America at a meeting Thursday evening at 7:30 in club headquarters at 5030 Halns St., Diablo Heights. __ Card Party Tonight The Fern Leaf Chapter No. 4. OE3, Pedro Miguel, will sponsor a card party tonight at 7:30 In the Pedro Miguel Lodge Hall. Tick- ets are $1.00 and may be pur- chased at the door. Door prizes and table prizes will be awarded and refreshments will be served. The public is cordially Invited. Tower Club To Meet Monday The Tower Club of the Cathe- dral of St. Luke In Ancon will meet Monday evening in Bishop Morris Hall, with dinner at 6:30 Guest speaker will be Chaplain W. W. Winter, U8N. Bake Sale Tomorrow Tomorrow morning at 8, mem- bers of the Court Santa Maria No. 447 catholic Daughters of America, will hold a bake sale In St. Mary's Hall In Balboa. They will be assisted by other mem- bers of the parish. Proceeds from the sale will be used for the benefit of Radio Station HOLY. Mrs. Vivian Hay del. chairman of the committee, may be con- tacted by telephoning Balboa 3384. _____^_ Third Armed Forces Day To Be Observed Saturday, Hay 17 ffi-r--"nr FAITH AND A HELPING HAND-A group of Manhattan College students makes possible this scene each Sunday at the chapel at Veterans' Hospital, Bronx, N. Y. The chapel Is filled with wheel- chair and bedridden paraplegic veterans, who probably wouldn't be able to attend divine services if the students didn't pitch in and I help move them from the hospital. A shortage of help at the hospital makes volunteer help necessary. Armed Forces Day will he ob- served for the third time on Sat- urday May 17, Commander In Chief "Caribbean Command, MaJ. Gen. Horace L. McSride, an- nounced yesterday. The official theme for the ob- servance of the day by the mili- tary and the public will be "Uni- ty-Strength-Freedom." Emphasis locally will be plac- ed on a well rounded community level program. It Is expected that many Organizations on the Isthmus will assist in fostering cooperation in the local observ- ance. This year, as In the past two years, Armed Forces Day cele- brations will again be held at Al- brook Air Force Base and Coco Solla val Station. race. A joint planning committee Both 8en. has been working for over 30 - days on the project and has sta- ted that new exhibits are being arranged and that a dynamic display of moving events Is being scheduled. 'Miss Panam'To Gel Complete Wardrobe From RP Merchants Panama merchante have con- tributed an entire wardrobe for the winner of the forthcoming "Miss Panama" contest. Jointly sponsored by Pan American Air- nays. Catalina swim suits and Universal-International Studios. Miss Panama, who will leave for Long Beach, Calif., to com- pete in the "Miss Universe" con- test, on June 8. will get two evening dresses, two cotton sports dresses, hat. shoes, under- wear two purses and two valis- es, all contributed by Panama merchants. The winning girl also will get a charm course from Liona Sears and a "pollera" from the Pana- ma Tourist Commission. On May 26, which has been proclaimed "Dia de la Belleza," contests will be held In the nine provinces of the Republic to se- lect 27 girls for the semi-finals at Hotel El Panama on June 1. Of these five will be selected for the finals on June 8. The winners and runners-up In the Miss Universe contest will be awarded five motion picture contracts with Universal-Inter- national. Entry blanks for the local con- test win be made available at El Panama and several Panama Ci- ty stores within the next few day. ' ^Atlantic Society Bo* 242, (jalu JtLpkon* (JaluH 4 72 NA\AI NURSES INTRODUCED AT COCKTAIL PARTY Nurses at Coco Sole Naval Hospital entertained the hos- pital staff last night with a cocktail party given from until 7 o'clock at the hospital. The art> was given to Introduce four nurses who re- rentlv arrived on the Isthmus: Lieut. Mary I.angton, Lieut. Dorothy Couthlin, Lieut ' Mjrtls Beaudrot. (Jg) Irene Walker and Lieut (jg) Mrs. Dagnall Is Honor Guest At Toe Mrs. C. O. Kelly and Mrs. John Blennerhassett of Colon arranged a tea last Wednesday at 4 p.m. to compliment Mrs. T. N. Dagnal. The party was given at Mrs. Kelly's home. Mrs. Dagnall plans to sail from the Isthmus to make her home In England sometime later this month, following Mr. Dagnall's retirement from the W. Andrews Company. Mrs. OTIayer Is Complimented Including the Carnival queens oi 1952, will participate hi the mo- deling. Dancing will begin at 8 p.m. to the music of Angelo Jaspe of Pa- nama City, whose orchestra baft been called "The Orchestra or. the Year." A door prize of $50.00 win bt presented as cash or may be used renman nd Mrs. R. H. Brown, for merchandise at Motta'a hi hostesses for the evening, served Colon. Tickets are $1.00 pe per- refreshments of cake and coffee, son. _____ The next meeting of the club I T~r ~ will bo held at the Block House Important Rain:bow Reheerial in oatun Mav 1 at 7 o m A rehearsal for officers and "ouests prweVt were:*?- Mar- choir r mbers of Cristo tin Sawyer. Mrs. J. Wi Dwyer, Mrs. H. E. Small. Jr.. Col. B. O. Souernman and Sgt. L. C. Love- Joy. Members who attended Includ- ed Mrs. Ralph Graham, Mrs. George Radel, Mrs. E. A.. Cox, Raul Orvls. Martin Sawyer. Sgt. Clyde Wood. Mike Dare. H. B. Small, Jr., Brian McNamee Mr. sembly No. 2, Order of the Rain- bow for Girls, will be held t the Cristobal Masonic Temple tomor-' row at 1 p.m. All girls concerned must at- tend. Mrs. David Kaplan of Coco; and Mrs. Thomas Lutro, Mr. and Averell Harriman Is NY Democrats' Pick For President NEW YORK, AprU 19 (UP) New York State Democratic leaders yesterday picked W. Averell Harriman for the party's Presidential nomination and said they meant to boom his candidacy "throughout the country." Harriman, 60, is the govern- ment's Mutual Security Admin- istrator and former ambassador to Moscow. He has indicated he Is available. The Democratic politicians emphasized was a genuine and not a "favorite son" candidate chosen in order to avoid com- mitments until the convention showdown on a nominee. Some political leaders were inclined to think that Harri- man has become the White House favorite now that Presi- dent Truman's reported first choice. Gov. Adlal E. Stevenson of Illinois, AARtd out of the BUS, CZJC Students Give Ike Win Over Sen. Estes Kefauver Balboa High School Presidential Prefentlal Primary Gen. Dwlght D. Elsenhower was proclalmea. by 858 students of Balboa High School and the Cana1 Zone Junior College as national the winner of their presidential prefentlal primary on Friday. Instead of an lnter-party con- test like in the primaries In the States this primary was a bat- tle between Eisenhower and Estes Kefauver. Elsenhower out- polled Kefauver 3 to 1. with an actual acount of 366 to 148. Seven candidates were nomi- nated by the students and were placed on the ballot. At the voting booths, however, eight names were written In. On the ballot were Elsenhower, Ke- fauver, Earl Warren, 68; Harold Stassen, 31; Eleanor Roosevelt, 11; Margaret Chase Smith, 7; and Richard Russell, 6. Write-ins consisted of Robert Taft, 11; Harry Truman, 4; Dou- glas MacArthur, 2; Henry Wal- lace. 2; Robert Kerr, 1; Sam Ray burn, 1; and George Allen, 1. The primary was an experi- ment carried out by The Ameri- can Problems Classes In Balboa High School. .. H. Lehman and State Democratic chairman Paul E. Fitzpatrick said they would push Harrlman's candi- dacy nationwide. The Democratic meeting fol- lowed a $100 testimonial dinner tendered Harriman Thursday night when 1,800 persons pal tribute to him. President Truman aided the Harriman boom by praising him warmly both at a Washington press conference and in a testi- monial message to the Harri- man dinner. Forty-five of New York state's 62 county Democratic chairman attended yesterday meeting, and Fitzpatrick said he thought he could say that choice of Harriman was "unanimous." Under New York state law,. __itional convention delegates, cannot be bound to support any candidate, but the slates of de- legates are chosen by the county Canada Officer Held In $1,000,000 Theft Of Army Materials OTTAWA, April 19 (UP)A 28-year-old chief engineering officer of a Canadian Army camp and four civilians were under arrest today on charges of stealing $1,000.000 In mater- ials from the base. Capt. Donald W. Bladlock, a graduate of civil engineering at the University Of Manitoba and chief engineering officer at Petawawa, Ont. Army Base, was charged with theft and con- spiracy. The young' officer joined the Army In May, 1944, and has been attached to engineering duties since. He worked on the Alaska Highway before being assigned to Petawawa early in 1950. He is married. The four civilians arrested with Bladlock are all scrap metal dealers In the vicinity of the camp. The five were held far a hearing today. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who announced the ar- rests, did not reveal the type of material involved, but lt was presumed to be equipment, scrap and scrap metals. organizations whose leaders picked Harriman. The delegates will be elected at primaries next week. Fitzpatrick said he thought Harriman had indicated he would be available for the no- mination. Seagram? YO. CANADIAN WIIISRV Now.. 6 Tears Old! SeterteTi va uuiuswwsf r. J I 'I I V Be fashion wise and flattery wise... Come In early. Let our experts Vdma Darnell Edith Ebelinff create it for you. Balboa 3677 Armed Service YMCA Beauty Salon (YMCA Bid*.) Balboa Solo held a bon voyage party at her home In Coco Solo Wednes- day afternoon to comollment Mrs. William CHayer. who will leave the Isthmus May 9 to va- cation three months in the Uni- ted States. A corsage of hand- kerchiefs was presented to Mrs. O'Hayer. Canasta was played and tea served. Prises for canasta were won by Mrs. Isabel Castillo, Mrs. Will- iam O'Haver and Mrs. George Tully. Others present Included Mrs. George Carlson. Mrs. Fred Bell, Mrs. E. W. Bell. Mrs, How- ard Hennlng and Mrs. O. E. Ogllvle. Port Gnllek Woman's Clab Meet A picnic luncheon was enloved bv members of the Fort Gullck Woman's Club when thev met at the Officer's Club Thursday. Hostesses for the dav were Mrs. B. W. Brumfield. Mrs. G. B. Patton. Mrs. E. Luxe and Mrs. B. Marques. Souvenir spoon were present- ed to two members who wiU be lea vine the Isthmus soon: Mrs. C I. Thompson and Mrs. H. K. Keith. The door prize was a- warded to Mrs. J. M. Tower Several guests were present ana games were enjoyed by the *rMrs'. A. B. Busbey, Mm. W. D Anderson and Mrs. William O Trotter were introduced as new members. Gold Coast Orchid Society MMmbers of the Gold Coast Or- chid Society met to .Margarita Wednesdav evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Orvli\ An unusually large group of bloom- ing orchids, mostly local but also from Costa Rica, were on dis- play. A brief business meeting Under the direction of the pro- gram chairman a short skit was presented "Collecting Orchids from the Jungle to the Collec- tor's Bench." It was cleverlv giv- en by Mike Dare. Brian McNa- mee an dSgt. Allen Lloyd. They had all the necessary props. In- cluding an Oncidlum Ampliatum orchid, which was later used as the evening's subject for discus- sion. Door prizes were Oncidlum Am- pliatum plant. They were won by Mrs Martin Sawyer and Mrs. K. H. Brown. Mrs. B. O. Sau- Mrs. W. J. Wilkinson. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie W. Croft. 8gt. and Mrsh. David C. Harshaw, Sgt. and Mrs. Allen Lloyd and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fel. Margarita Auxiliary to Meet Taesday The Auxiliary of the Marear*" ta Union Church will meet at the1 home of Mrs. Henry Bell lrr Margarita Tuesday evening at" 7:30. Mrs. Roy W. Perkins win serve as co-hostess. Richard cerpeater Has Seventh Birthday Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. Car- I penter of New Cristobal gave picnic supper on their lawn Wed- nesday evening to compliment their son Richard on his seventh ' birthday anniversary. Movies and games were enjoy- ed during the evening. Mrs. John Pettier and Mrs. Lloyd Rus- sell assisted the hostess. Young guests present were Vic- kie and Gayle Fettler. David and Wayne Rice; Diane. Bobby and Billy Geddes, Tommy and Dan- ny Bowen, John Poole. Jerry Pa- bon, Lorraine and Susan Urey: Teddy. Wayne and Donna Jean Russell. Pamela Johnston, Rich- ard and Frank McGlnnls and Pat and Bobby Sullivan. "BAILEY'S BEADS" Because of it mountain, the ... --moon casts an Irregular shadow i cwmaj Alumnae 'during a solar eclipse. Just before Association tonight at the Stran-' nd after the moment of total gers Club in Colon. 'eclipse, the mountains break up Thirty attractive young ladies the sun's light into points known from Panama City and Colon,'as "Baileys Beads." IA New Electronic Organ To Be Dedicated at Gatan Church The Rev. J. Wilson L. Graham, pastor of the Gatun Union Church, has chosen "The Minis- try of Music" as the subject for hi sermon at the 11 o'clock morning worship service tomor- row. At this time the church's new electronic organ will be formally dedicated. Rev. Graham will broadcast his regular morning worship service over the radio at 9 a.m. Sunday School will be held at 10:45 a.m. and the regular morning wor- ship at II a.m. St. Mary's Alumnse Sponsors Danee And Fashion Show Tonight "April Shower" will be the theme of the dance and fashion how sponsored by member i St. Mary's Academy FASTI taaate tog- - KTTOiNsfwet! eqeatl parts c- ... carbohydrates 'dextrine. RaaJwai *) Mast $okb a i slop worrying... start tinting! Don't worry about that first, gray strand! Let it be t "blessing in disguise" signal to you to rake action and do something about ob- taining lovelier, natora I looking new haircolor! So relax and let Roux rake Over' Por Roux Oil Sham poo Tint treatments conceal every visible strand of dull or gray hair, give sparkling hiehlights and lusrre. ,add subtle, tutttrallookmg color that changes your worry to delight! ROUX OH SHAMPOO TINT COLORS CONDITIONS CLEANSES Caution: ose only as directed on label. # OMrikirtw to m* aoostfc fa* MS U Canal Seat JULIO VOS Me 2 -A" Street Telephone 1-2*11 Panam ISTHMIAN DATA MOORE, Mr. and Mr. Gran- vllle of Red Tank, a daughter, April 10 at Gorges Hospital. MOLINAR, Mr. and Mrs. JuUo of Coln, a daughter, April 11 at Gorgas Hospital. TIRADO, Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel of Curundu, a daughter, April il at Gorgas Hospital. HERRERA, Mr. and Mrs. Oc- tavio of Panama, a eon, April 11 at Gorgas Hospital. DE LEON, Mr. and Mrs. An- drs of Silver City, a daughter, April 12, at Gorgas HoapltaL CARTY, Mr. and Mrs. Kenton R. of Coln, a daughter, April 13 at Gorgas Hospital. BAILEY, Mr. and Mrs. Liyala of Silver City, a son, AprU 12 at Coln Hospital. WILSON, Mr. and Mrs. Her- bert of Coln, a son, April 12 at Coln Hospital. SCOTT. Mr. and Mrs. Basil of Paraso, a daughter, April H at Gorgas Hospital. MARRIAGE LICENSES LOCKHART, Raymond Kay, 24 of Rodman, formerly of Morehead City, N. C to HAR- 0EE, Peggy Amanda, 19 of Rousseau, formerly of Grimes- land, N. C. TOTTY. Delbert C, 23 of. Ft. Kobbe, formerly of Wasco, Cal- ifornia to EVART8. Cynthia Grace. 17 of New Arraljn, for- merly of Curundu Heights. CABO, Antonio Bemal, 26, of Ft Kobbe. to OARCIA. Olga Maria Perez. 27 of Panama. TERRY, Virgil Lee 65, of Rous- seau, formerly of Chicago, 111. io PITTI, Brgida, 19. of Rio Abajo. COPPENHAUER John C. 36. of CocolL formerly of Lebanon. Pa. to GILL, Nina Jane. 33, of Cocoll, formerly of Bethesda, Md. HTNKLE. Alfred B., 25, of An- con, formerly of Edmond.Okla. to REYNOLDS. Eunice R.. 27. of Ancn, formerly of Caro, Mich DEATHS CUMMING8, Mary Louise. 74, Jamaican April 10 at Gorgas Hospital. CARPPROW. James M.. 75. American. April 11 at Gorga Hospital. POMARES. Alice, 28, Panama- nian. April 12 at Gorges Hos- ' pltaL ON LIMITS New 100 selection juke-box ; finest music available * at the l Oasis (A Bit of Stateside a tac Tropic) Snack bar now open Curb service 5 Miles (rom Coln on Boyd-Roosevelt Highway. Ride a RALEIGH -the WINNER'S ohoice- Each machine produced in da World" n* modera cyctevlsat buih by the lame niflnn who ill liioi it sod bmk (he racard- brcakias Rakish oa *** ** Harm rode to Tictory m the World'! Pnrfraawa^SrnMChainpionahia. is IM9 and 195- Make mrt yonrchOkaiiKaWsbtbettrons- taiadiaataairntiintcyca;inrha RALEIGH THI au-itiil icveii a -~ of * h+~- i* "". **-* Radio Center NO CYCU COMW.-TB WITHOUT STUaMST a. oa i se osas amo otnohus THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER , You Sell em...When You Tell em thru PA. Classifieds! t+ave vur Ad with one of our Agents or our Offices Saln de Belleza Americano #56 West nth atrtt Service Ave.Wrone 2-2211. and Morrison's Fourth of July Ave.Phone 2-441 Agencia Internacional de Publicaciones Propaganda, S.A. #3 Lottery Plaza Phone 2-3100 "H" Street corner Estudiante St. Phones 2-2214 and 2-2708 m FOR SALE Household *#OR SAL:Corolic get Wove, looks aood, condition fair, $75. However cart "not be removed before May 1st. Telephone 3-2060. Panama, TOR SALE:Oak diningroom, meple r'jHvlngrootrt. woshinfl machine, vari- ous household items, oil reasonable. |-2232-8. "A" Street. Curundu. K)R SALE;1 Dresser, steel; 1 chif- fonier, steel; 2 single mattresses; 2 tricycles; 2 wicker choirs. 883 Morgn Ave. FOR SALE Automobile* Service Personnel and Civilian Government Employes Insist on Government Employes Finance Co. When you fino/ice your new or used car. AGENCY DHLINGER N. 43 Automobile Row Phone 3-4*84 3-4985 MISCELLANEOUS De you have drinking problem? Write Alcoholic Anenymoui. Bel 2031 Ancon, C. Z. SATURDAY, APRlI, 1, lilt 'Dream Boat' Theme Of Beaux Arts Ball May 10 Al Tirol! Anti-C Didn Newsmen ameCamblersl Carlton Drug Store 10.058 Melndes Ave'.Phone 258 Coln confidence and social inter- course." But Judge Cocke, In his decfi slon, said he found "a comple. lack of actual malice" on t RESORTS FOR SALE Miscellaneous FOP. SALE:60 cycle. Westinghouse I mangle ironer, excellent condition, $60.00. Albrook, Quarters 129-8, ! Phone 3247. FQ5 SALE:Mahogany couch two box end tables, two choirs, one oc- a eosional toble. one rattan chair, two ttible lamps. House 5426-A. Dia- * Mo Heights. To sell or buy your next automobile see: Agencies Cosmos, Auto-Row No. 29. Tel. Panam 2*4721. Open all day on Saturday*. FOR SALE: 195Q Mercury, bout 17.000 miles. Original owner. Ex eel lent condition. Priced for quick sale. Telephone Bi2O60, Panama. OR SALE:Large diningroom table, 42'* x 42", quortermaster steel, | S10.00, 5 porch screens, $15. Two quortermoster steel dressers, $5 each. Kenmore portable electric sewing mochme, rotary with all ot- tochments, $80. Night stand, steel, $2. House 821-8, Empire Street, FOR FOR SALE:1947 Studeboker Com- mander, leather, good tires. A real bargain. $795. FOR SALE :-^l 940 DeSotp Sedon Plastic seat cover. Drive-it* way for $199. :/i .. FOR SALE: 1-947 Buick, -4 door Se ; don Super. Good tires. Runs like' a top. The best buy in Ponomc, $799. FOR SALE:Westinghouse Refrige- rator. 9 cu. ft., 25 cycle, excellent condition, 2 year guarantee, $150. 218 Gorgos Road. Tel. 2-6375. FOR SALE:National NC-57 ama- teur radio practically new, $70.00. Inquire at 5444-L Diablo Heights, C. 2. FOR SALE:Portoble White sewing: machine, $90; Miniature speed graphic camera with accesories, $90. House 1457-C, Los Cruces Street. Balboo. " Balboo SALE:1941 Good price. FOR SALE:One 25 cycle, 7 cubic foot Westinghouse Refrigerotor; one 25 cycle, Apex washing machine, work bench, and miscel- laneous household Hems. Leaving Isthmus, Priced cheap. House 5524-C, Diablo Heights. Phone 2-3289^_____________________ I Bids will be received in the office of Hudson Coach.' ,h Genf'l Monooer, Commissary Di- vision, Mt. Hope, Canal Zone, until "3:00 p.m., Tuesday, Moy 6, 1952, when they will be opened in public. transportation.. $150 FURNITURE FOR SALE:5 piece rattan livingroom; 2 twin beds, cqr SALE:1950 Ford Coupe Very ,or furnishing 809,000 pounds orj metal; gate leg table with 3 choirs.! |ow m|eoge. This cor is olmost) "''emotively, 404,500 pounds of 571-A. Curundu Heights. Phone' n,w. i 200 miles. $1,195. 83-5296, after 5. Visit HOTIL PAN-AMIRICANO COOL 8IAUTIFUL. El Voile, COMMERCIAL & PROFESSIONAL A Parisian atmosphere will be (Ip^KE ??^V,^'.^,H^PtiL lent the ballroom of the Hotel ^'..T:* ^lou.lsiaSa ,ud*e ***** Tlvoll May 10 when the Canal !"** flve.crtme ". Wta Zone Art League presents Its ?ew8m,e" 0n/hai:R" of **- third annual Beau* Arts Ball ,n* three admitted -gamblers with this year' "Dream Boat" *nd, '* Parish (county) officials, j part of the newsmen and theme declaring the press has the right newspaper. Original and fantastic cos- J* comment on and criticize ac-.1 In rendering the verdict turnes and decorations and ap- *"" of Public offielaia. Dixon's case. Judge Cocke e piopriate entertainment w 1111 Cleared of the charge by Judge < testimony by district attorn carry out the theme, and a J- Bernard Cocke were co-pub- eiid he wag at a loas to "undat? first-class orchestra will furnish | hAhers of the .Lake Charlea ] stand why t have been needled music for dancing from 8 pj. American Press William H> and) (by Dixon) for my official to midnight. IThomas B. Shearman; manag- tlon." Objects of art produced by linn editor Kenneth Dixon, city artist members of the League editor James w. Norton and court Gromlich's Sonta Claro beach- cottages. Electric ice boxes, gat stoves, moderate rotes. Telephone 6-441 or 4-567. CASINO SANTA CLARA DANCI. Music by Cesin* Aces. Make year re- trvetieni early. Saturday, April WiHSji, Oceomide cottagoa. Sama Claro, to* 435 Balboo. Phon. Ponomc 3-1877, CillSSaal 3-1673 FOR RENT House FOR RENT:2 bedroom chalet with baths moidsroom with both, garage. Justo Arosemena ond via Espoa. Tel. 2-0489. FOR RENT Apartment ALHAMBBA APARTMENTS Modern tumfahed unfurnished oport- merits. Maid service opttonol. Con- tort office 8061. 10th Street. Now Cristobal, telephone 386 Colon. FOR RENT Apartment, living- diningroom, 1 bedroom, kitchen, bothroom. 15th Street, Rio Abajo 3011-A. SMOOT & PAREDES Fine Granuloted Sugar. Forms of pro posal. with full particulars, may be FOR RENT: Furnished apartment 1Pfl WANTED:Powerful business con-, running condition. Rhone 273- cern will open office in the 2180. after 4:00 p.m., or call at commercial district of Panom: Otrs. 2211-A, Curundu. around the 1st of Moy. Needs:: F0R SALE: Pick-ups of Vi ton Com p e t e n t clerks, accountant, Chevroleti Ford r^ , bookkeeper. English-Spanish steno-, gropher. olso employe for coble code section. Applicants moy send their employment history and post experience, in English, to P. a'<>* SALEDuty aid, 1950, 4-efeoi obtained in the office of the Supply & Service Director, Balboa Heights, or of the General Manager. Commis- sary Division, Mt. Hope. C. Z. Don't be a "Bathroom Jiggler" Install aa "ALERT" nosh Guide Valve. Saves water and stops annoy- ance of dripping toilets permanently. As reported by Readers Digest "ALERT" never falls. GEO. F. NOVEY, INC 278 Central Ave. TeL 3-8140 will be given as door prizes and awarded for such meritorious achievement as crossing the Equator unscathed and painting dreams at any latitude. reporter Carter George. Cocke said there was a "com-l plete absence of any testimony | PANAMA BROKERS. INC. Hotel El Panam Selling: Panam Trust Co., Abattoir, Forestal Products TeL 8-4718 8-1860 In rendering his verdict, whichCcV^he'UblIn&! VaT came after Sours of reading culeu Krisn -'^ lengthy statements, Judge Cc the scholarship fund with which | "and in some eases tha duty," to ^SlierM thenaVtahu^T ^WJ*!. * A* ** F.omment "P*> the public ac- Sove^eXt^h^o her ! talented young art student. Tickets may be obtained from the League president, B. W. Vaughn, telephone 273-3185; F. R. Johnson, 2-3484; B. & Gard- ner, 2-1457, and from other members. Governor Newcomer Urges Loyally Day Observance May I tions. and "the public conduct of public officials." "Every person in public office ordinarily desires general ap- prove statements by other wit- nesses about wide open aambllne In the parish. proval of' his conductIn tliat of- ThAifor GuHrf MODERN FURNITURE CUSTOM BITIM Slipcover Reunholsterj vnrt oua sbow-boom! Alberto aere* ^r de I oeea 7t (Ail.anmil.lt., _ eo CaUaaate* Pickup Delirar} - a.-ae eat. t tst .*_ flee and he should so conduct! himself in a manner that would draw that approval In DAhMrfal Ffif "Criticism of the public acts of *' nm * public officials mav well rebound to the benefit of the public," he said. Judge Cocke. of New Orleans, who was named by the Louisiana 8upreme Court to hear the case, said h* could find no evldenee of "actual malice" in the publl- Governor Newcomer today urg-jeatidn of material in which the ed Canal Zone residents to ob-! five newsmen ware charged with serve Loyalty Day on May 1 and defamation. But he was sharply to join members of the Veterans critical of Dixon :of Foreign Wars in the Canal i Zone in ceremonies planned as a "The court cannot accept ex- tv rededication to the principles of plana tlon riven by a newspaper- ;,,er of Jhn"? V* thei5 Americanism. iman of Dixon's experience for frL?reae"ttttl0"- Included will ' Loyalty Day is set aside each;lack of proof before publication'PfL.Ti'k ? ?'a? ^Wi. He? year by members of the Veterans of an article that contained M4edualsby ' *. Barra, direct, thai Miirf ed by celyn Johnston. Thi* Three One-Aclers a ' The ponding of ham men, eerie music, the screams and loud voices emanating from tha Theater Oulld Bhack th past two weeks should be clue enough for Diablo residents to know the Theater Guild Is again In pro- duction. Three one-act plays will ba 1 FOR SALE:One set davenport, 2 choir upholstered, tobies. All for| $95.00. 40th Street No. 14. Tel. 3-3288. national in good mechonical condi- cp CA1 c---------~-----rr;_ , '". tions. Eisenman's Used Cors, Peru ^Zjfii ~i ? Blk ,?er ,d Ave.-No. 8, Tel 2-4516 Spaniel, female, 7 months old. Tel. Albrook 5200. elolifffed section Box 134. Pana- mo. The manager will arrive in Ponama for necessary Interviews On or obout April 20th. v FOR SALE Boat* & Motors FOR SALE: 3 ft. Diesel motor louneTT Cheap. 8ox T785. Balboa. FOR SALE:Brand new. 25 cycle, ..i H.P. motors,$ 13.50. HASMO\ S. A. No. 51. Via Espofio. Plymeuth Dbeme, body u ceted, alaatk seat coren, excel- lent condrtien. Criitobal 3-1365. FOR SALE:1949 Ford Convertible with radio, 2 spores. 26,000 miles, duty paid. Price $1,250. Phone 3-0130 days, 3-4373 n/ghts. TROPIC TOPICS We hove onosher Singer roadster available for off floor delivery. Tropical Motors. FOR SALE Motorcvcie FOR SALEStudeboker 1947 Cham- pion, duty paid. 4 new tires, slip covers. Reasonable. Devlin Brozos Heights. Cristobol 3-1839. FOR SALE:Four door Sedan, green, radio, 1949 (Buick, Super. Call _Novy 354. .- TOR SALE: Bargair,! Chrysler, 4 doors. 400 miles. Con be seen ot Comiiarioto Sitton, Calle Coln ond 15th Street East, Panam. FOR SALE:A Salsbury scooter in perfect condition. $175.00. Apply to Compaa Genarol de Seguros, S^A. FOR SALERoyol Enfield motorcycle i 5O0 ce. like new. $550.00 cash TeL 2-2847. Rodelo. S. A. Help Wanted v Maid wanted for house in El Con- Pte,e|y furnished, preferred for oc- grejo. References essential. Coll cuP*ncy b'<'* J"W first. Call Pa- WANTED Mrellanp>n FOR SALEFine breed puppies, $10, and $15. Modern diningroom set. Ending of 9th Street. Parque Le- fevre, The Ponama American Set- tlement. Val orino family. FOR SALE OR TRADE:All metal heavy duty trailer with new tires 1700 x 16). For Jeep troiler. House 1552-A, Govilon RotM, Bal- boa. -i FOR SALE:6 aluminum Venetian blinds 52 x 64, 2 bamboo chairs. 1459-A, Us Cruces, Balboa. for one or two couple*. Garage. Government Inspected. Carrasquilla 642, Son Francisco. Tsf. ?-4418. FOB RENTFurnished rrteSeM oport- rnent in Bella Vista, for respect- able couple. Rented for three months, from June 15 on. All mo- dem household conv e n 1 e n e e s. Reasonoble price. Call Mrs. Mon- zn. Tel. 3-0766 or 2-3438, Po- nama. FOR RENT:Two bedroom furnished apartment. $75, including utilities. Phone 3-2051, Panama. DR. B. L. STONE Chiropractor STONE CLINIC 7th St. ft Justo Arosemena Ave. Coln Tel. 459 of Foreign Wars of the United; wrong facts, nor does the court fh^,evS.nnmCMl(r ?, *hich believe that It Is consistent with they ask all citizens to join themlthe ver* mn' n r i. in a rededication to the prin-.'tice or fal? Xv J wSWndff*the UnltCd 8UtMi 8P^'^ally,aDixon was charg- a4eUOovrnor's Vt*^^",*^?**** mcaimine- Tjwait n. r..rt. members of the Calcasieu Par- ish DOlice Jury, district attorney Orlffin T. Hawkins and asslst- concerning Loyalty Day reads: whereas, the need for a complete rededication to the principles and Ideals upon which ant district attorriev Melvln H. FOR RENT: Modern oportment, livingroom, diningroom, 3 bed- rooms, 2 baths, kitchen and moid's room. No. 17. 47th Street. $135. Transportes Baxter. S. A. Shipping, moving, storage. We pack and crate or mova anything. 'Phone 2-2*51, 2-2562, Panam. our country was founded has Wetherill In an editorial called I never been greater; and I "Legal Doubletalk," and In a "WHEREAS, the devotion and newsoaper column, "Charlie Lake allegiance of each c 111 s e n to says." these principles Is essential to The 8hearmans and George the perpetuation of our country'were Indicted on IS counts of and to the continued growth of defamation against three admit* freedom and economic opportun- ted gamblers E. J. Miller, Sam ltXJS,ii?lii1c,: and .Smith and ClautW Williams. 'WEREAS, the Veterans of For-1 It was contended that the eign Ware af the United States,newspaper published poMce ree- an organisation chartered by lords supoosedtt be thoeW MH- Congress. has demonstrated lta.ler. Smith and Wlllams but In FOR SALE:Piano Wurlitzer Spinet with bench 3 pedal. 8 months old, perfect condition. Phone Cristobal 1944. FOR SALE: Table sow, bondsow, lathe. Air compressor, 25 cycle motors, good condition. 604-A Celesseps. Colon Tel. 3-2412. 3-4021. WANTED:Cook with loundrywork. References required. No. 37, 44th Street, Apt. J. 184a Dodge Z-door Sedan. Good transportation. For sale at Smoot y Htmnicatt S.A. 16th Street Central Ave. Caln tel. 8M. nomo Coca-Cola Bottling Company Tel. 2-0750. WANTED:Panama city, three bed- room house furnished. W. G. Dos- well. International Hotel. American family wants 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment. Tetephone day 3-3297, night 3-1373. Bargain1848 Buick Super 4-door Seda.!, with Dyna- flaw, radio, seat covers, good Urea, exceUent shape, easy payments. Fer sale at Smoot y Hunnicutt. S.A. lth Street Central Ave. Coln tel. 880. FOR RENT Miscellaneous FOR RENT:Effective July. Premises occupied by Chas Bonk. Coll 3-3191 for InformoNon. US Advertising Mag Praises Displays Of Propaganda, S.A. Evangel.St WilsOn The work in display advertls- Arrives Here Tt>day;ndrseT%nash PBt To Help Campaign " HX HOUSEHOLD EXCHANGE For the best values in both new and reconditioned fur- niture. WE BUT AND SELL 41 Automobile Row Tei. *-4811 patriotic devotion to our govern- ment and unquestioned loyalty to the Constitution of the United States; id reality were those of other men. The Information waa used af- ter a check by George and after it had been .paiir This part was what prlmand from the J Norton's Indictment charged him with defamation of Sheriff Henry A. (Ham) Reid In an ar- ticle he wrote for ^he Louisville Delta Psi Omega Gets 2 New Members "WHEREAS, the members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States have determin- ed that one day each year should be set aside to give all citizens an opportunity to Join them in,._ _ a solemn rededication to the ^ 0U*?*LJourn*1; v principles of Americanism, and!. sa,ld Norton published in- ihave determined that May 1 1982 ' formation that the public-ree- ahall be observed as Loyalty Day. ords ln the-sheriff's office eold "NOW. THEREFORE. I. F. ."?r * located when a report- Newcomer. Governor of The Pan. Ier sought them and that the re- ama Canal, do hereby earnestly i cords were kept secret. urge each of our citizens to sup-' The indictments against tha Dort this moat worthy and so-:newsmen resulted from an antl- Music Program Starts Tomorrow At! USO-JWB Center The USO-JWB Armed Forces! vice Center announces a new Former frinnl Vnt monthly program, "An Intro- [ormer VOnOI Vet, , auction to Musical Masterpieces,' to basin tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. In the OSO-JWB Building on La Boca Road, Balboa. Hans Janowitz, well known lanist and a professor at the anam Conservatory of Music ; will be in charge of the series. , Locad artists will play selections rom operas, concertos, ballets, chamber music, sacred and , symphonic music. Musical rec- ordings will also be used to il- lustrate the program. The program for the first ln the aeries of musical afternoons will be the following piano se- lections: Baathoven: Piano Sonata Op. M in A Flat Bortkievizs: "From My child- hood" Suite. Oarshwln: Prelude No. 2. Mlfnone: Tango ANsaniz: Seguidillas. Members of the military, their families and the public, both of the Canal Zone and the Repub- lic ot Panam are cordially in- vitad to attend. FatACnCAM.Y NEWasi Cfcevredet Station War on Delmre, with power-glide. ffr sole at 8moot y Hunni ertt, S.A. 18th Street Cen- tral Ave.. Culn tel. 888. Dr. T. D. Casserly, Dies In Pittsburgh Dr. T. D. Casseriy, long-time Canal veterinarian and former manager of Mlndi Dairy, died Monday in Pittsburgh, Pa where he had lived since leav- ing the Canal Zone ln October 1B50, according to Information received by friends on the Isth- mus. He was 78 years old. Feneral service were hd in Pittsburgh. After Dr Casserly retired ln February 1848 aa Manager of Mindi Dairy, he was placed in charge of the Quarantine Ken- nels at Corozal and operated a small animal hospital there un- til be left the Isthmus. He is survived by his wile. Elder Ernest L. Wilson. Jr.. a noted evangelist, is due tp ar- i,'we, tl, Tocumen import from Philadelphia at 9:30 tonight. This will be his second visit to Panam within two years, 2fter emigrating to the United Steles approximately 25 years ago. Elder Wilson has successfully conducted evangelical c a m - paigns and youth for Christ ral- lies at several points of the United Sutes. He is scheduled to participate ln a campign currently taking place under the auspices of the Evangelical Ministers Council of Panam and the Canal Zone, as he did on his first visit. During his stay here, he will be a guest at the Christian Mis- sion parsonage In La Boca. Two college students were i added to the list of members of a iouS nf .SS.rtE i.he B*1** Psl 0me- national B^R journal of advertising dls-[arama fraternity ln the Canal plays. play carried away all the blue ribbons at the Isthmian Drama Festival ln Cristbal last month, and is being repeated for th benefit ot those who could not get to see Its first performance. The two other plays included are: "Goodnight, Please", a co- medy by James L. Dagget, di- rected by Arthur Payna, with the following cast: Bruce Car- penter, Tom Greve, Ann Stapler, Nancy 81debothan, Charles Smallwood, Muriel Treadwell and Duane Koucy; and "Murder mt nr. LoriniV' a mystery by Blmon, directed by e. Hhe oast for this Laura Crartshaw, Ouldlce.,Jerry Barona ose, rerrllli-and Marie K. Jones. BUI Taylor, who it la charge backstage, will welcome volun- teers to help build sets and e* * the Shack any Satur- and Sunday1 month* until time of production. Presentation of the three ne- act plays is set for April 24 and 28 at the Diablo Theatre, Last Two Sessions Of YMCA Flower Classes On Monday The last two sessions of thi flower arrangement classes, which started seven week* ago at the Balboa YMCA under tha lemn observance and join mem-(gambling crusade led by a pet . bers of the Veterans of Foreign pie's action group and backed by at ie B.,lb0*.TMCA. und,r th* Wart of the United States in the the newspaper. urtTfp,of Un- fkt 4ortn Canal Zone ln those ceremonies,1 National attention was focused: J* ftel? **<* which they have arrantred to re-;on the case after a Calcaaieu' pr^JWt for these twa maind each of us of the prlvl- Parish grand iurv called to in-1 ci**s**' ont ,l "> *"< * leges as well as waponattHlltiea!$Si^^ other at 7 p.m., will be "Cor Zone Junior College, at a formal w "Ipy a*-cit^fn ottne Unlt" turned the tablas and handed ed^rttr^?t!,Vl-W?t.1,lu"trl1." nW*tfcm on Thursday night. ed statM oi America. maCltv said- PV P*-, wards successfully passed the ma wy, sata. eaamlnation and were initiated "Variety and quality In out- by a teara consisting of Wendall door advertising is demonstrat-1 SPT^hury. cast director, Ron- ed In the displays.produced by 1847 Buick Special 4-door Sedan with radie, plastic Seat Covers, spot light, good tires, good guarantee. Smoot y Hunnicutt. S.A. 18th St. Central Ave. TeL 88 Coln. WKXT tWRTS W6iX6 UKE ' VOaiaiV Wrt CfRVEXA Propaganda, S. A The idea of building comfort- able traffic police booths on Central Avenue with advertising signs around the top "repre- sents... a project... which comb- ines some valuable public sre- vlce and provides advertisers with some choice locations," ac- cording to the magazine. The article also tells the story of the Max Pick, president of Propagnda, S A., who has been ln the advertising business for 30 yean. nald Angermuller, stage man- ager, Barbara Ely, acting busi- ness manager, and Subert Tur- byfill, faculty sponsor. The addition of the two new members brings the totel mem- bership of the local cast to 12 active members. Czech Court Deals Out Ufe Sentences To Black Marketeers Polio EoMemk Hits island Ot Mauritius: 140 Cases Reported down indictments against the five on Aug. 27, 18*1. At the newsmen's trial in De- cember, which was marked by sages." Members of the classes are required to bring copper wire, one yard of ribbon and flowers suitable for corsages. At this session, Mrs. Morgaa will demonstrate various ar- violent exchanges and threats, naeme* .Th ^T?.* nriMx>t.inn witn... .m k^ nementB which can be mad* prosecution witnesses said the editorial and column by Dixon. Norton's article and the stories about the gamblers "exposed to h ' with one doaen gladiolas. The flower arrangement clas- ses last 8 weeks and ends with a Flower Show, which this trae the first of the month. Authorities said that mosti of the victims were children below the age of two. Mauritius has a population of 458.000 Inhabitants. As s result of the epidemic all travellers to Madagascar from the island of Mauritius have VIENNA Anrll li ttTPlA been bann*d. nd transit pas- CZecf^mmAunst c'ourTdellt ?"??e riving.by plane will be PORT LOUIS. Mauritius. April lng them of the benefit of public 18 (UP)Thirteen new cases of| noliomvelltls have been renorted; here during the past 24 hours, making the total 140 cases since them to hatred, contempt and'faiis on Mondar am-im ridicule, with the view of depriv- The shoV wl h^^nln t'r. . ,_ iiu- . .w. lu-uu .* ."o,. *v,e snow win De open to taf public from 8 p.m. to 10 pjn. T Good transportation1841 Oldemobile 2-deor Sedan. Radio, seat covers, good res, for sale at yonr local dealer Smoot y Hmnnicntt, S.A. 18th St. Central Ave., Colon tel. 1*8. "He Immigrated penniless from Germany to Panama in 1939 and founded the first and, at the time, only advertising agency in Panama," the maga- zine said. Most of the big displays signs produced by the company and ... f aneeung u used in some charge and sentenced four to cases to accentuate the display, death, one to life imprisonment BARGAIN1848 H Deluxe 4-door Sedan, per- V^SZ* " menta. Fer sale Hunnieatt. S.A. 18th Central Ave., Colin tei, 888. sru fay- out four death sentences to black marketeers found guilty of printing false ration cards. The official Czech radio said held in quarantine while transit passengers arrivine: by boat will be confined to their quarters aboard. Ships which have navigated ln FOR ALE: 1888 Buick 4- door Sedan Special, in ex- cellent ahape. at covers, 5 good tiros, low mileage. For demonstration call or see it at roar local dealer weet r Hunnicutt. S.A. 18th Street Central Ave, Colon tel. 888. Here is the baya beauti- ful little 1848 Chevrolet Sport Oswpe, hi perfect condition, with seat covers, radio. Spot Lights. 5 rood tirea, obit payments, for sale at Smool r Hunnicutt. S.A. lath St. Central Ave.. Colon set. SM. Jap Merchant Fleet 40 Per Cent Away From Prewar Level TOKYO. April 19 rup)_The Transportation Ministry said today that Japan's ocean-going merchant fleet has reached 60 per cent of its prewar level. The ministry listed 1,056 ships with a gross tonnage o 2,541,188 tons, as of April 1. This Is an increase of abuot 1,170,000 tons since the end of World War n. 1847 Dodge Pick-up in good condition. Fer sale at Smoot y Hunnicutt. S.A. 16th St. Central Ave. Tel. 88* Coln. and six to prison terms ranging from 8 to 25 years. The 11 were convicted of sell- ing illegal printed ration cards for moat, sugar, butter and meat and making a "profit" of 31,000,000 crowns at the ex- pense of the working people." Displayed in courtroom were old and currency. Including a $1,000 bank note hoarded by the group. Those sentenced to death were Jan Valek, a printer; Adolf Do- brovolny and Vilem Knobloch, both drugstore owners; and An- tonln Drahonovsky, a butcher. Mrs. Anna Trathchova, a wait- ress, was given a life sentence. 4 Cylinders OPEL 6 Cylinders MADE IN GERMANY BY GENERAL MOTOUt HASMO, S.A. - Jtch, Mtattr, mirt. jrj*k. Pl and M*4 b4 th.y nearly WEu^' ""f1' eU1** -Athlete's 'oot (AUpuBa-a) Slnraoor. It**, ate, la a rnnern, (arm or oaraalta that Krnai "P.*wa la the akin. Don't worry ana Job t aurter aaothar Say without urine Nlxooarm. Thla -raat medicina ti Jjft down throufh Ue akin and am nd of tha raal rauaa f your trouble, rhat a why Nixeoerm warka ao faat to pva yoo a aoft. amooth. dear akla aa loot, feoe or body. Alee great tar eroteh SPivF0^"* tP< aut "ktm nwablea. et Nix.e.rm from rnnrdruawtet t~1r. FOR SALE: 1946 Stude- bakor 4 door aedan, (ood transportation. Easy pay- ments. Sioot y Hunnieatt, S.A. loth street Central Ave. Coln tel. 886. 1*48 Buick Super 4-door Se. dan la good condition, lew mileage, teat covert, good Urea, for sale at Stnoot y Hennirutt. S.A. 16th St. Central Ave. Canea tai. 8*6. WANTED SALESMEN SAURY PLUS COMMISSION Apply Sales Maaaer AGENCIAS PAN AMERICANAS, S.A. (Betow El Rancho) 2-08325 p.0. , 42# FOB SALE: 1*47 OMaaaabito 2-aoer Sedan, good iras, seat covers, radio, esce*sat shape, e a s v payments. Ssaoot y Hannaetitt. S.A. l*th Street Central Ave. Coln tel. aa*. SViUROAY, APstlL 6. 1M< TRE PANAMA AMSR1CAN AN INDEPENDENT DAll.t NEWSPAPER wmm PAGE SEVEN i i ISTHMIAN CHURCH NOTICES Cargo and Freight-Ships and Planes-Arrivals and Departures Salvation Army Panama oi> tnt id at ei>iio Service* at 11 m and iM pm (Mai er tfilaeni, Sunday Schoei at I p.m. . Service at 11 am and i* | w. Sunday School at M cm Bed Te.nk: Service at 7* o.ra Sunoa Sekeol at a* e.ra Services at------- lit m4a colon. itth Street Anda School at........ *** em CalOn. *rd Straw i at .... II am lit am gdrVica ai Slivei on * Smnol at V3.S- Churche a Mm many tari** In ta* Canal Zana, and Mm torminal tie at Pneme and Catan, Reeerellc a Panama, attend a walcoata at all lima re mad and weman a the armad servkae. and e civilian nnajnkon. friends and strangers. Ai a analic service, tha The Pneme Amatkan nata nata, a danantmatlani, nerkee at haun at warship and ether regalar activities Liatir.fi ara reteted tram tinta fa tima. DanamhtaHana having anly ana a tv/e cenereaetien ara Ihtad Miar "Othei Charcbaa And Servket" A speciei littmt la iacleded far sarvicaa at Army peat. Air ferae beset and Naval itatiam. MliilaHii. chafen totntaiHi and ehealeias ara aafcad fa tnlarm tha nawa daak by Wedaeedey naan at tha latent at any ahanfat far tha earning Saturday'! church sago. Jewish I Jevriah altara atoara. Mida. ilKt-x, 14 Jaca Road. Sainan cl SakM .__, Tlttm dlractor. I Services 00 Friday 1 m pm* (Baa alao listing ol Jewish eanvte I indar Pnata Baaaa and StaUona 1 Canataaauan K.01 Sueerlih tana. An ! mda Cuba and Stth Straat. Salla , Panama City. Babt Harry A I Service rm Prldav a 0.m vna Unitarian im UNIT! socim ' II) .SO a.m ' jVYB Armad torcaa Sarvlca Jeniei Ubrary Sal boa. Ci religion Catholic (Lisiad ocio* ara iba lainoui Churches n tha Canal Zuna and those in tha tar- mina I citlee of Panama and Colon rbom onaregaiiorui ara primarily tnginh. peaHing Baalda* ibaaa. tha Cathedral in Panama City, tha Cathedra) of tha tm -naculat Conception In Colon, and num trot pariah churcbaa In both tie, 1 .in English speaking visitors, though :bali rongreaUon ara orlmarll .nh-naaklri. art. MAJII-S Baptist hAllWhAt -Arju. *Jf*2L*a Panama Manual, ,fin>ei ttaetintj a amBWlna 8*rii, 3U a rn Divine e Span Sunday II..... * l*:0*. it-an 1Z:*0 am. Benedicuon; ten em. Holy Day Kama a*!. 140. UM. 11 a Contention. Saturday S:3U. t:UU u 7:0, tM p.m. Thuraday tor Flirt rriday-7.00. t to p.m ialraovlou. Iltdai Novena-Monday at * t Hfe! " -"lEBff&iS tha Lord Supper at ooih Sarvlca Sun day School ai ;< .00 o m am Ueneua, Ci-, Divma service im. end J* on with Sundav t> cree*. Matele SI rouai Cocall :30 am it j.-oo ojb a. A. lb AB-jO :H cm COCOLi K.P. Sunov acnuol at Sunday mata y Day: . tHAfrjL Curundu JO ajn [Vil iund> iralwnt Uruo; *raachin| barvicr Srotharhood 1:00 pjn raver ^4tln- '" Wadnaaaav cv (v own. Minala! BtUtMrTtO> nAll-1 CHIMCH 2*, f Iraat (ataaiot tha National tnatuuiai Box 1442 Panama City Rev .loe* Prado Cinara. Paator .Sf.lCBS IN BFAItlSH ^.ida> sarvlca Sunday ^ .joI ......... IJ-J m PrancuM, .-.arv.. _.,.v .. -. ,'"P as-. Podro htlfue) Sundny Mi HoryDay _ Saturdaya M AMISl CHtSLH luildtnn 4\> Siuja Reno RtvTS. O. Van Royan u,uu' ......... irttM,CM&aeaiaa: Saturday-?:, 7:* pm SIT! atan *'" l Roaaryi Monday. Wadnaadav and Satw Sunday -10 JO. 11 JO Maw M am JO am Episcopal A.OLU.N, CJt rHI. CAfHUtRAt O* Ml LUSA roa Rt Say R. Haber Uoodan. Betnop Tha Vary Rtv Raymond T. FarrJ Dear 7:10 am Holy Communion :u a m Cathadralichooi IS.'iaMartunt Prayer and Sermn (fire! Sunday of the month Hoi Cam munlon and Sermon 1 T*> am-- Cvenina Prava ano Sermon CJtfeSTOBAl. R^ CHURCH OP OUR BAVHJR ard St nan Q. Navy Rev. Milton A Cookaon. Paetoi Holy Communion 7JO am Church School 30 a.m Momma Prayer-Sermon u.itti am IHC fint Sunday In " Tauna Paapla' vaaaj Posts, lasts And Stations PAC'lflt ft FORl AMAJOR Sunday School Mornlna Worahin i-oaw ctnypoN Sunday School Mornlna Worah U. S. HOSPITAL Mornlna Worahlp aujt it Pretty Blonde Kicked In Ribs By Departing Bank Robbers LKAK8VTX1JI, N. C, April 19 and they taped my wrists and (UP 1 Two methodic bank rob- < ankles. bera held up a pretty blonde tell-1 "Then thev pulled the phone er and looted a branch bank of 1 front the wall and started fllllnr an estimated $66,000 In cash dur- the bag with money. They ot all lni the noon hour here yester- we hsd about $60,000,1 frusss." Ins and Outs TORT KOKB day. Half an hour later the highway patrol arrested two suspects an- swering the robbers' description t-u'near StokssdaleN.C, J6 miles R- _ loli? wsy. They Were taken to Jail Rt It. "They cleaned It out. ... Reldavllle, N.C.. for questioning.: "After that they went through iKS* :?.. ...":::: itJ2 Police said the two men, one all the drawers again to make a "sawed-off squirt," slammed sure they didn't leave any," she Bn..iB.j k.iAoi, lalt "TVi* Vinrt nn tnlrt me 'T.a- she ssld. Mrs. SutUffe said she had left the heavy. roUered safe open, having ooened It about five min- utes earlier and had not closed *, tha month 1 Service Jti numor S:M a.m A Houae of Prayer tor all eaopia ,:H the door of the Boulevard branch (said. "The short one told me La Sunday svhoo. ................ 10 oe of the LesksvUle Bank And Trust dy. I hate to do this but Im t-o omtn^ v.'.-nhip ................n :N co locked It. drew the blind* despondent I've got to do some- and held a ptatol on blue-eyed Mrs. Bybll Sutliffe.^he only em- it:* COBOEAL * oiarup ........... OOK A7R rORCI BASB ,_* Vhoo: Mamlng Youth Oroun ................ 4:*t t B. NAVA J-1'ATIOM. RODMAN Morning Worah.n if:4l|ployeon duty thing.'" She said he was able to scream for help because the tall They rifled m opened safe and robber Ignored the short one'* went through drawer* at the preteetant Buncay School STUJC n CtthaUr jncay lMk NAVAL 0IBTRICT hfarnlne Worahit ........ PORT CLAYTON Daily Mam cucul Sundny Mv __lfh at St Aadravr tj. B, HOSPITAL the Rev David B Read Sunday htnae . Holy Communion 1 tv a.m COROZAL Sunday School M a.m. Sunday Mam SMIc Worahlp1*:4* w rORT IOUBP C tlrat Sunday In tha month 1 Dally Maa* ................ Toun Pooplaa Pallowahlp 440 p.m Sunday Maraca ........ 1*0 and Chou rehaanai Waoneada eveninar ALSROOK 41" WRCE BASS SiSO p.m InKfiy yun ................ :ll Woman Auxilian ano and 4th rhura Sunday Maaaa* .. 7 0*. 7:4* and 11:4 Ian at 7:3* p.m. I JevrhaV Heuaa of Prava and Patloarahip tm an PORT CLAYTON oaopla Saturday ............... ALSROOK AIR rfjRCI BASE 'fiJi'teller*' cage* twice, scooping cssh I Into a white cloth bag. ,!U The men. both white, slender and wesrlng brown cloth gloves, !*jstrck when other bank employes * were at lunch and all customers hsd left the building. They fled sfter the short one, whs "gvr all the order*" and appeared to be the leader, kicked Mrs. Rutliffe In the aide THS l*:M 7:M ttt COROEAL Oaad Skaphard rae Van. A r Nighienajal I.J0 am tverv PVIday: Momlni Pray- er. ihc tal Priday.i irday PORT KOrtBt Thuraday . JWB. Balboa, C Prlday..... as she lay beund on the floar. order* to gag her. "The tall one didn't say s. "I kept Insisting they leave because I was afraid that some eme might come In and heshBt. ! No one came near the door the whale time they were there. "The short one told the tall one I to get. the csr snd he remained i in the bank a while and then I left," she said. I creamed for 10 or 16 mln- Mondey. day at :0t pm Ca tech lam Clama' ' ST. OBBPtJ'B Paraato Sunday Mate, id am Holy Day: MB a.m Catechlmo CTamaa Sundav-10JO. US* Weoi Siiidv m i$n*$' iiVsT Baptist chcbcr Balboa Heights, C.Z." I Bouli tn A neon ulevard Diavar * Balboa Height. Phone Balboa lfn "Vaar Church away from home- vrltk a welcome Jut aa friendly. William H. ~ Stmday School .. SfoTfltnt WSfshtp* T r.'.'ii. m amtAiaVVntnina- Unten .... *-* p.m. UcrVd Heart D. Evangallstif Service........ 7:* p.m. Prayer Meeting Wednea- _#ay,.....;.........;...... 7:80 pm Confeatlon. Wl|IA BIMa Study Thura- 00 p.m !. VINCtNTS Panamt Sunday Mame: 1*0. SJ0 am Holy Baya: :*. g:J0 a.m. CerSamlon.: Saturday-3*0 *. 7m I'OO pm Before Holy.Daya. 7I,, t:00 Roaary every evening: T:*0 p.m BT JOSJN BAPTIST DC LA BALLS ml Maaaaa: *V '* Moa: 4:0* nan SSlSm rrlday aftar Miraeulj.ua Miracule'u Modal NovanaPrlday 1M Roaary" Monday and Wadrraaaay-7 B OJB ^jealon*: Baturdaif-I Jo. 3>i,- frlaay aftar Mlnculou Modal Ifo- ... aVMpm.'tanVt aig&t rjarntiana. Prldny 7J p.m Sunday Mat .. .. SaturdaySJ*. I4t am t:oe. /Jt UAJtetOA Bt BUaea'i Chejnh Rev Lmarl B. Shirley, Holy cuuunutuor ... Sunday School ........... Youth OrannlsaUonii t:00 * iaenina Prayer BlbMe and 4Ui Sunday........... Women' Auxiliary ........ Sad and 4th Thuraday TLANTH BIDS Protntaat Prim IFURT DAV'r lUJuam pratotUui Worahu Sarvlca ... IHpmpOaW QJLJCK tOom Sunday Bcliool............. 1 Morning cfrvtc* .. ........... COCO SOLO NAVAL STATION 4.00 SJ* tH fJO t:0t , 8il* 'uLwf. a .nrf riertedlO bUU Including $5.000 worth of &^^^^^&i,T ttxa- ^ ,fnored word but the little one .aid: tnJflwJlU,,#t w the short wore s wine oorduro.v laundered blue overall gfORIZONTAl. lincean* 8 Outlei* 15 Lacquer* 14 In full tores 16 Disagree 15 Name 17 Inane perton 16 Venture SO Marsh bulrush SIOtiMttStJ SSBeeeor SSFoantaB Frsnee M fertaWng t apurpoae M In football, dtotanH MFroarue* SSUbored M Outer cavtrlng for arm M Outcome J7 iBUfidation St Great artery 41 In astronomy, The Altar 44 flat-bottomed boat 44 Thailand 47 Out of order, condition 46 Exclamation I iBCmive tool SltnaiBT* tdRheef) wool oH M Weird MClroar SChcMlai plat raSbuird VBWriCmL ISVMI SISBtate In feudal a 4 In printing, type measure* 6 Inadequacy 6 Arm bones 7 la law, lost animal 6 Container Outpour 10 Innato 11 In farming. cultivation liKachooed 16 Inftate 21 Worker in water 14 Grayish mineral 27 Inlets 16 Antics SI Female servant Answer to PrsvrSus - ft.' n t'< ' Tti I ! . a.',' 38 Indented 34 In Crsrsaan. a iren 35 In writing. exptmgdrs 36 In bookbinding, a decorator 40 In Italy. Grand Canal bridge 41 Pilot IshjSJet off 43 ReparathMi 4S Mammal in 46 In The Levant, a SO Units S3 In Freneh. from M Month (ah.) you be quiet snd don't make "*,*" "e* noUe you won't get hurt. It you robber wore cost. SS.S ti* tojrterj^tBB^oiiJhf^ ttt Sunday bcftooi Proteatani Wo.-l.l St Pater Charch rja||. Mam Rav Lemuel H Shirley Prieai Sunday Mat* a.m.Holy Coaununloo, roRT OUI.1CK T amChoral Buihartat ana Sormon. Sunday Mam .... Service CathaMe Jti ll:lli It am.-Mornln Prayer and Church School, t am.-Holy Haptiam Communion Tueaday and Thuraday. t o.m., Wddnaaday and Friday S a.m . Girl Friendly S and 7 aja Monday. * p.m. Tumday: Vaapara nightly n t. cent Saturday Compline fjO am ro: as- iHERMAN crycS ioto NAVAL STATIOW Sunday Mam .............i... Naval H *oitai felt hat. snd R gray at Margareta Chapea. Sunday School S jn Evening Prayer iiOSo.m. PALO SRCO Charch ad The Bali Ceaatartw r. n The Van A vary Meada tJO vmr TORT OUL1CR Tuaadav ewtah" t:t* 11:1* : Com day ...... .............. 1:00 a.m. Man's Brotherhood (Laat Monday In month! ........ 7:30 p.m. ATLANTIC BAPTIST CHCBCR Salivar Ave. at 12th Street Cristobal. Canal Zone Rev Fred L. Jone. Mlmionary paator. Bundpy School Roaar.v"every mraning eareept Tueaday e!,^ ' TOtom Mind. PABA1SO Bev. D. A. Oaaarno a.m. Holy Communion Sad Sunday a.m Sunday Sctioal o.m Cvanlns Praver and and 4U> .OlSOLHO I at j rum cm !i4 am 45 tit .............. f:46| ...v........... M:4S, URt Worahtp .......... y Prayer Service JO 7:St 7J0. Methodist I'M* V...1HUU1SI CHCRCtl . anti'b Conicrcncr Miauater Wii-uim H Armatrons 1:10 on. Mariutur Prayer ano Sermon 10 pm. Bund School 4:00 Mao Meeuna. _____ til* o.m Bvcnlna Pravo ano bertaan. ratNITl aavTMUOun CHLKCM TtB total and Malenaa Avenue kov Norman Pratt. Minium t JO a m^Morping Sarvlca ad Holy ^"p4"' fv-r- S^icc. Gu^ proechar Chaplain Ralph C WUon of Fort Gullck. Tuesday S a.m Morning Sarvlec. "spedaT Young Peoples' Service to- night. Thataday am.Mornmg Service. Service will alao be held each even- ing during Holy Week, Monday to Thura- day. Paator. Rev Sivlco. irrturaday night nraaalnn before M* _. cbi'Rcs oe no boli Atn t Margarita. Ci Rav William J Plnn. CM Holy Day Mas ..... *wsm MIRACULOUS MROAJ. CBURCB Nov. CHstbhal. *th a * Paator Rav Vlneant Ryan CM Sunday Mame 7, d> 10 SO a as Weokday Mam *. ** 8M- oTySU !.*.- jdon. Roaary. nightly TSOin iday School after the S am Mate __iiculou Medal Noveno enrice *- Men S0 7:00 pm __ 1st Sat Devouon every un Sat tn WMACtlLATE CONCEPTION CHCRCB Bolvar Highway. Getun. C* Pastor Rev. Franela Lvnch. CM Sunday Mam. R:O0 a.m Weekday Mama* Thura Sat 7:*0 a.m ftoly Day Mam. 7:*o a.m Mlraculou Medal Novan Mori 7:11 p.m tit rrlrlav. Conleaalon 1:11 om ^ Confamlorv Si :*0 am arvlee Communion 1:00 o m THOMAS' CMUrnCw Catun, Neat Lock Putoi Ra- Prancl' Lvnch CM kSt.NUi.K ata.iMouuri church Slver City. CJL Sunday Sarvicaa gam and 1:1 PJ unday School for all age at g.s* oto "tockuT:** om P^veiMeetln* -Veae taihgdtia Te Wasahlp- ID! School .. orahlp ..., .. ........ naming UBlee ........ Sarahjp ........j.. ... aver Meatinr iThor 1 t am 11 KM) am. Union Chuithts flbord all t> mvHy .Hal, liberty rial and charity m all tMna* rHI ArULNTIC SIDI the Rev Phillip Havana Phone 3-14*3. 11-45 Worhlo arvic and Church-tlmi S v.1,,11 HOnnia* MaatMp The Be J wtUiam C Uraham Paatar fjte0* 30 Broadea! co UOK. HPtR t 41 Sunday Scnooi Ills Worahlp Sarvlca. J:0* CnrtoUan emdeavor ra Rav Honrv Bait Paew Phutta S-14M f y* Btblt Schoel ^ . 1C4S Worahlp atrviee ana Cbureh-umi "Tari'vouth eaii*whia tHB PACIFIC SIDE ^SaV. Alexander H. Shaw. Peiter ailhaa Rd. at San Pablo St. Phone I-14**-Church Office S-SUS J* Church School. Free hue aervice. 10 je Worship Service. Junior Church. Primary Story Hour Church-tune Nur- lige Chi Rho-Senior HI Fellowahlp. J* Poet HI Fellowship. CAMBOA * ATI aervice at the Gamboa Union Church, earner of (aillard Highway and Blhert Avenue. ft Rev. Raymond A Gray. Minima. Phone a-i. PM Sunday School. t jo MorrdngWerahip. --SCaX Sunday Mam. S-4 a m Ho?,k^,-c.ror.*mrr,^~,,* Mlraculou Medal Novena arrice - rri. 7:15 om Contamlon Sat. li *:00 pm Ut Sat Devotion ever lat Sat eft* "*** trOLV PAMILI CHUBCH MargarlU. C.Z. Pastor. Rev William J flnn. CM Sundav laasaea. 7 Je S:S0 e.a Holy Pay Mam. :*0 a.m Mlraculou Made' Novan enrice - Man 7:00 em. tnatrucuon 01 adult t*n I 00 p m t om 1 confeaalon Sat 4*0. g-00 7J0 to >JVl lOSKPHh CHUBCH Colon, lOtn 4k Broadway Reel **werdl Maehate CM Amlstant. Be* Robert Wlsjola. CM Sunday Maaaaa Stt *-*o am Weekday Mam S:tt am Holy Day Maaaea. s 45 St t On a in rri mama. MB SV a-eo am Communion. S-Ot o.m Bapllm Sun.. 4:00 on Mlraculou Medal Noven enrice - Wed I *t5 70 om Noven of ft lacrad Heart > om Contaaaion bai Hm * 1A to *00 om Sunday School. l pm Diacumlnn Club Voun men ol Parian -- ano. rate entk In IwtruoUon tor adult easalns I iedge of the Catholic Church Mi Tttur el 7:1S pre lat Sat Devotion on * every ii Sat after on putcsfirs cmurch Silver City. CI Paaioi Rev Raymond Lewta CM Sunday Maaaea. 5:45 *> 00 om BcekdvMam :00 am Da Ma Holy taaaas. t'JO SV m Sunday School. 11 00 am Mlncalou* Mda< " PKDRO MIG_ Rev- Raymond A Gray a Slated Paa- Nmeu TAiea. 7 om 1 Baottenv Sun *o pm Confwmnr. Sat SJB S-.0S o.m 7 * to :O0 om Instruction to adult ruca A Prt IJO a.m ' lt Sat Oevotlon every In Sat afler Ham twR i.abv op odvon couNsn Gamboa. CE Paetm Kv Tharle Jacnoa CM SBaday Mama Irte A S JO a ca Weekday.Maaaa* (JO am Holv Day Maau S'4f, d> 4*. a m Mlraculou* Moda' Novena enre iTuee 7*0 om Sacred Heart Novarte enrice Prt 1:00 Conleaalon Sat 7S p.m _Ut Sat Devotlnn. very 1M Set anal Monday: '-1 pro Wadnaaday JO iodety Youth Mawing o m Olrtr rriendlt Christian Scientist cHBimvN BCUtNca cmurchss Iret Church ot Christ. aMentJat Anear tee Aaoen Boulevard Sunday 11:1*: Wednaneav Saw em Sundav Seheel StSS a.m ^^_ t'taat c narra at C krtet. awuatlat, CrkMafta 1 ChrietUa Setaei Sacteiy, Osss>ss Civic CttMar BsiaMbu Sunday 11 JO am Plret Third Wed Liithtran BD TANR St. Jam- Charch Rav. D. A. Osasen ajad Rev. C. A. Crag-well XASTRR SUNDAV g a.m. Holy Communion Celebrant, the Ven. J. H. Townaand. S p.m.Children ervlce. PrasentaUon of afite Boxm The Rev. C well. H. T. Barnthal. Pastor UO Belbo Road, Balboa. Sunday School and Bdbl CJaa. 1 am Wetttup tarvle 10:U nte-, Xoa Thou _, With Oe snd We Will Do lmW taeetf.'* A ^CrM- frlendl* welcome wtlt all visitar. Pet- " *" C luck tronar second Sundav each nent> rmon The *> b>-. Same night, fourth Stmday IACMY OH WlPt By OSWALD JACOBY Written for NBA Strvit* 11 , NORTH J16432 K84 4>Q66 eh 104 ID) BAaTt tS e>7 ?JAQJ76 1SS *)K7 6 J 10 5 8 3 + AJ6S 4BQ667 4MJTH dtAKQIS 3 4) A44 ejrX32 Neither tide vul. Weat North Cast lea.. lty Pas* ***** 3* Paae 3 e> P** *? Pits Pas* Pat Opening lead* 6 preacher S p.m.Committee mooting. need through Sunday aatand* s ear ilal welcome to H mttttarv neixmnel ATLANTIC StDB PANAMA Or* ST. PAUL'S CHUHCM A P. Nightengale. d.U MBX and rhe Rev Bib Reginaio Atwall Venerable Arcbdaacor CHRIST CHUBCH BY-THR-SKA ColS, R da P. lOppoelto Hotel Washington > The Rev. Malnert J. Batanea, Rector CHRIST CHURCH BY-TWT.-SEA - Balco6el - Colon, R. P. lOppoaite Hotel Washington) The Rev. Malnert J. Peterson, Rector SUNDAYS S a.m.Holy Communion. a.m.Choral Eucharist A Sermon. 10 3* am.Church School. . 7 JO p.m.Solemn Evenwng A Sermon. WEDNESDAYS 4 a.m.Holy Communion. 7JO pm.Evenaong at Sermon. :3o p.mAdult Confirmation Class. THURSDAYS I p.m Guild of Prayer. FRIDAYS ' B a.m Children's Sung Eucharlat. SATURDAYS 10 a.m__Children! Confirmation Class. 7:30 p m.-Compllne a Meditation. ST. MARY THE VIRGIN Sliver City. C.Z. Rev'd Arnold C. Waldock, Prlest-ln-chargc. ST. GEORGE'S CHUBCH ' Gaturr. C. Z Bev'd. Arnold C Waldock. Prleat-ln -charge. RIO ABAJO ' I Chnstopher'a Cbarrh 10 as Parear lefrvre Bev. David A. Ortira. Prlaaf tlolv Communlor....... 1 JO a.m Sunday School......... 10J* Bapiim 5 to < o m Snd A 4th Sim-; Everuii Prayai-Bible Study am. m and Srd Sundaye Woman Auxiliary Snd 4th Sunday 1:00 pm Holv Cnmraunino Wednaaoava 7 a en Most mood player* will respond to'pRrtnsr's opening bid even with r very poor hRnd. Failure to Service and Sunday School at Mrg- regpond indicate* that the hand \lltmm^^&TZSE of 1 hopeless rather than just poor. 'Uby. rn^;.."" R T Information of thU kind was tho Holy Communion will be eelebrsted the 1... fa the winning maneuver In Radio Programs Your Community Station HOG-840 aVhor. 100.600 Beayaie Meat Prtswrs at.rdav. April 16 PJf. 3:30 McLean's Program j;4A_Mualcal Interlude 4:00Musle for 8aturdy 4:30Whst'g Your Favorite 8:00 Guest Star 8 15__Master works from France 6:46 American Folk Songs 7:00Gay Paris Music Hall 7:30Sports Review 7:45Jam session 8:00 Newsreel U.S.A. 8:15Bing Crosby Show 9:00HOG Hi tParade 9:50VOA Hit Parade 10:00-HOTBL tX PANAMA 10:10Having a Wonderful Crime 11:00The Owl's Nest 1:00 A.MSis Oft. COPA i*' o1. Announces that the following change in schedule will be put into effect on May 1st. Daily Departure from Tocumoa.........8:M a.ai. Departure from David: Every day excepl Tuesday ft Fridays. 10:00 bm. On Tueaday and Friday............12:45 Compaa Paifairib. da Aiiadn. S.A. #25 Par Avenue Tel. 3-0097 ______ gaaday. April 36 AM. Musical Inter- Other Churches And Services 5:00Sign On lude 8:15-Newsreel U.8.A. (VOA> 8:30Hymns of sll Churches Apartment Drake 1* no shrinking violet, so; 9:oo-BIBIJ: AUDITORIUM OFr ha bid the South hand with per-1 TH1 a hap* B shade more enthusiasm, j i5_oood Neighbor than It really called for. It should. 9:30London Studio Melodies ,ant fuls sTiiawg! sao. siree. be admitted, however, that North BBC, - Monea.: Lactute and ote. might have had slightly more 10:00In the Tempo of Jasa ESS! "iass Ckrk. at watts o strength for his raise to three ,0:30_Meet the Band Cfc"5a2 tSZSXVUT* " spsdBS, |ll:00-NATIONALLOTTIRY Sunaay Sehoai *a* am Moreover. South actually made n: i5_The Sacred Heart Pro- gram 11:50Your American Mule 12:00Invitation to Learning aanaay scxwei v:ae .* Moreover, aoutn ctuauj m aTjwS Arr&'rnre Sarrlea Cant. hU sketchy game contract and Inn u ane .o there Is no great virtue In quar- rvanlng Sarviee at pm at a olaee;,..iinr ith success of grita, tnaune- a. aw* m. t*g*'t trump, Snd vlca CMUBCM Ot IJUUSI OSfl Balboa BoaAJUlboe 1UNDAV SCBVTCBS Preaching and Cornmuhion ". 1*:4Y am Pn~Ua\aamu*Bmfiem '^"" ataia Stu*> ...... ttadneadav li pm Ladle' Bible CUa Thurdav VM at* GSmaca OB CmUST-OW Crtstaeavi BOWDAVS: We maet in tha American Legion Bali m front of the CluaJteuee 1 VOA 1 F.M. Drake drew two rounds of trumps. He then led a heart and West took the ace and got out; with the queen of hearts. Declar- 12:30S alt Lake Tabernable er won In dummy with the king choir of hearts and ruffed a heart. I 1:00The Jo Stafford Show Having stripped the spades 1:15The Choraliers Iba Pacific Siaam Natfgtiiof. Company OICORPORATID Bit BOYAL CHARTCK 1646 Royal Halb Lines Ltd. FAST FREIGHT AND PASSENGER SERVICES BETWEEN EUROPE AND WEST COAST OF SOUTH AMERICA TO COLOMBIA. ECUADOR. PERU AND CHILE MV. "SAMTANDIR".................,ff........4jPff *>*" TO UNITED KINGDOM VIA CARTAGENA. KINGSTON. HAVANA. NASSAU, BERMUDA. CORUNA, SANTANDER and LA PALLICE M.V. "RUINA DBL PACITICO" (18.000 totTJ)......May 3rd TO UNITED KINGDOM DIRECT m. "crzoo".................................. ROYAL MAIL LINES LTD./HOLLAND AMERICA TO NORTH PACIFIC PORTS M;V. "LOCH AVON"........................... April (ICA LINi S.S. TO UK/CONTINENT "DALERDYK" .......>.................... All sailings sabjeef to change wHhoat aatteja. PACIFIC STEAM NAVIGATION CO. Cristbal TbL 16$4>1 i PANAMA Ate. Pave #H Tel. l-lmtt PORD CO. INC. BALBOA-Tarm. Slag- Tel. t-1666 Seventh Day Adventist Sunda> 11 no a SrVtoTTH-OAV- m first St Third Wad- Morning Worahlp 10-4S am Visitor relcome Ladles Bible Studv at Oatun. Phone Oatun 41* or ft OuHek to* Ct/BUNDO PSMntMAtrl COMMUNITT CsTt'BCB Chaplain William Blali Swadav School ............... Marnina Worship............... Voun People Sarviee......... prvarMeatmg^hujsaaaj ".'''.' Choir Practice. Wedneada at ItO* em and Saturdav *J am and hearts. South now laid down the ace of diamonds and led * low diamond towards dummy. [ 1:30 Rev Albert Steer 3:00Drama and Symphony Hour West won with the king of dia-| 4:30What's Your Favorite Weeklv **rvlce in all Churches, as follows: Saturo*} Saobath Schoo. :J0 M. JJ1 Divine W,irhlo 11 00 a to Youth' Heat- ' ina 4:30 o .i. Sunda: neaday - vice 7:St 'i i. yBiole Lecture '.SO pas tfad- - Bible Studv and Prava Sar- OLO CA mot-U. CHUBCH St. Baahee) The Areaaagel IStrTSt Rest Me 1 ^_ Holy Bueharlst: Sunday at iM us Tuasdavs. Wadneadaw and rhuradav Saeriant ot unction (Mealing Bar- _ vice) Pipo Suaeav of each month a i 00 m' Youth SUUkat: CtMHtlaa Panama B. P _ _ T. jmes. D C Parlfic aid. Pamua A Balaea '..'.' ^MJS?rTSn Cku'rchS. Cano Vade. Ara i t tta'f^*^***'" la Oasa; Jamaica Society Hall; Chorrillo: fX5*"vSSSSi > Rio Abalo, luehlo Nuevo. Balboa Chapel I fT*"* ' - t*44 Javlln Rd Balboa (Saturday * Meeting -nlyl Panama Snaniah Church J B Cae- Mfton. Pa!or; Calle Daran Ctemboe n Prliol- A UrlarJe.i amMr English Oiurehe S P Clarlie. Ola- Sattnon from >......... I SKI am trict Partor------------ _ Churches Color BnMish rhlrd Slspat; BABA'I CBNTBB Cristobal Bugjllah isifc St A Bolivar I-ux Building Ave.: Cri*i->bat Spanioh lath St A Be- *4th Straat. Panamt City llvar Ave Public meettaga and dssauaaiona every monds and now had to lead a heart or a club. If he led b club. South'* king would win a trick: and if he led a heart, dummy would discard a club while South ruffed Either way, South would looe only one if club trick. , s5 The key to the correct play was * ths knowledge that East could not rjoaslbly have the ace of io;00Hotel El Panama clubs. He had failed to respond io: 30Time for Music to the opening bid of one heart ii:00Sign Off and was therefore bound to nava. 6:00University Theater (VOA) 7:00Musical Notebook (VOA) 7:30Thru the Sports Glass 7:45News Out of Africa 8:00Sport* Roundup and New* (VOA) 8:15Show Time 8:30The United Nations (VOA) 9:00Canterbury Tales Holy Communion at . Memsav Roll art ea jt meeting a *edao*dav< EvaneelutJr Ser *:*am JO am. z:z .3K. seam IBS a hopslaa* hand. The only chance for the hand, therefore. wa to catch West In, s throw-In and make him lead clubs. ThU was possible if Wet had the doubleton king of dia- mondswhich fortunately hap- penad tobe the case. Inctdentslly. Drake held his breath when he cashed the ace of diamonds. West could have set the contract by dropping his king. Bast would then be able to take a diamond trick eventually, and the play of the clubs would give Weat two club tricks. Sunday afternoon Stt i ctutraB BABA'I AT Front Street. Colon | Upstair American Berear Public meeting every Monday at IS .m Study claeeea every Thursday at 7 M pm. All are cordially invited. TAGAROPULOS INDUSTRIES, S.A. CVa Phones: 1002 1003 UNITED FRUIT COMPANY Great White Fleet .New OrleaRs Servica Arrives Clm4tMU S.8. ChiriBHi .... S.S. Lever. Bead S.8. tgillrigBa .. .. S.S. Ftador Knot 8.8. China! .... i a a e a e a a a -* t><4* a e a e a 6* a a a e a a. a ........ .April 36 New York Service Arrives Cristasil S.S. Capa Abb S.S. TaVSJtM ...... S.S. aTerettla ..... S.S. Cape Aviaof S.S. SUaola ..... .aeVaeeaeeaaaaa.a* April It ABctl t April St April 16 April St' #4041 Feo. Boyd Ave. Coln. R. P. FRESH Mil K FRESH BUTTER RICH ICE CREAM Every thing Inspected a the Health Dapartanenl HOME DELIVERY. Weekly Selsmga t Mew JeeB. *S^ CSsarlaataa. Ceatral lei arle a Cristbal to New OrkaM via Tela, HotidJuras S6ihfr6j6ai* i"***? 5.5. *3en*itjas 5.6. Qsjirig.a 8.S. Cturitnai (Paasenaer Servlee Only) CRISTOBAL 3121 TELEPssONRS: _ PANAMA I- COLtW PAGE EIGHT THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILT NEWSPAPER SATURDAY, APRIL I, 115* j Dodgers Edge Giants 7-6 In 12-Inning Thriller Indians, Browns Triumph B|ack Bill Gets % Keep Records Intacta Test A9ainst Green Tomorrow By UNITED PRESS EW YORK. April 19.Andy Pafko led the Dodgers with otters yesterday to Rive the Dodgers a 7-8 victory In 12- ;s over their traditional rivals, the Giants, at Ebbets Field. I Dodgers were trailing 6-5 kees opener 3-1 In a pitchers' whaji Jackie Robinson's homer in'duel between crafty Cuban Con- the Eighth tied the score at 6-6. rado Matrero and Allle Reynolds. PakA's second homer broke up Although Marrero allowed eight Pabst Bops C.H.S. 12-2, Evens Series; Final Game Tomorrow the me. j hits, they were well scattered and Braves topped the Phils, he bore down In the tight spots. On the other hand, Reynolds contributed to his own defeat by forcing in two runs on a pair of hit batsmen and a walk. The Red Sox topped the Ath- letics 5-4 in ten inning's. Clyde Vollmer starred with a game- winning pinchhlt single In the tenth. ie Cubs put on a ninth- rally to nip the Cardinals, id the Pirates blanked the L3-0. Friend pitched fire-hit and 19-year-old roofcle n Del Greco delivered of Pittsburgh's hits, in- ^ng a triple. t Cubs edged the Cards (Harry Brecheen tired after fine innings, a single by prena brought in the tyln? and winding runs for the Cubs. In; the American League, the Indians topped the Tigers, 5- with' Bobby Feller pitching five-Ait shutout. Harry Simpson * ""Boston Marathon Field Of 198 (Competing In BLACK BILL of singles and scored after draw- ing | walk. The Tigers have yet to win a game this season. Ike astounding Browns wal- loped the highly considered White Sox 7-1 behind the five- hit pitrhinn of Duane Plllette. The punch less White Sox have not come through yet this sea- son. The Senators spoiled the Yan- Buzzinq' Jockey Barred For Life MIAMI. FIs.. April 1 The Florida State Racing Com- mission has barred Jockey Napxio Pariso for life. The Buffalo, New York, jockey is charged with attempting to ase an electric "buzzer." AH members of the National Association of State Racing Commissioners are expected to honor the Florida action. Officials at Gitlfstream Park a* Pariso had a battery- ehak-ged "boner" strapped to htt wrist while riding Violinist In the second race Thursday. Galfstresm police say Pariso took full responsibility for the incident. BOSTON. April 19 (UP) A Black Bill, Colon's 126-lb hope, will tinaliy get his chance to- morrow to pruve whether he is of championship calibre or not. He (angles with Bantamweight Champion ti.tb< "Mambo" Green in the semi-linal ten-rounder of ti Ciro Moraciu-r'ederico Plum- field of 198 runners hit the road m*r "* fc today In the 66th annual Boston' r}** **nl "oil saw.' who was Marathon with an International t0 Poor start after gradnat- entry again threatening to make ln iro the amateur ranks, It seven foreign wins to succes- seems to have finally hit his ATLANTIC TWILIGHT LEAGUE STANDINGS TEAM Wen Lost Pet. CHS.......... 1 1 Pabst.. .. /..... 1 1 . THURSDAY'S RESULTS Pabst 12. CHS 2. FINAL GAME OF SERIES PABST vs. CHS Tomorrow night at Mt. Hope (7 o'clock) Elks Come From Behind To Nip Philippine Rattan PACIFIC SOFTBALL LEAGUE 8TANDINGS (SECOND HALF) TEAM sion. Although sailor Johnny Laf fer- ty Is almost unanimously consid- ered the favorite to win the 26- mile 385-yard run, little Jorge stride and has won his last five outings. An action fighter of the Arm- strong type, the 20-year-old fisti. coffer can generally be relied on Velasqueza 22-year-old Guate- to supply thrills galore, often malan time keeperstands the driving the fans into a frenry. best chance to continue the for- \ Bill's new handlers have re- eign domination of the race. ported that he is in tip top shape, Lafferty, an aviation machn- so local fans can look forward to ist's mate stationed at Quonset. a thriller that may well steal the Rhode Island, has been the first show tomorrow. North American to finish in the past two years. He was second be- This excellently balanced pro- hind Shlgekl Tanaka last year gram, put together by match- and fourth behind the Korean maker Louis Craig, will go at the grand slam winners In 1950. popular general admission price This being an Olympic year, of $1.25. the foreign representation In the Hopkinton to Boston run Is greatly limited. Among the more familiar for- eign entries besides Velasquez are Sevy Koru of Turkey and Wans Chen Ling of the South China Association and two other Gua- temalansDoroteo Flores and Guillermo Rojas. The Pabst Blue Ribbon nine returned to action in the Atlan- tic Twilight playoffs and evened things up with an easy 12 to 2 win over the Cristobal High School team. The CHS team, fresh from their thrilling 5 to 4 win over Pabst Tuesday, looked helpless against the nine-hit assault of the beermen, booting nine for a 1952 record In errors for one team in a ball game. Jack Pescod was the winning pitcher, going all the way for Pabst. Pescod turned In a neat one-hit performance, allowing only Bob Bailey, in the sixth In- ning, to get a hit. Bailey's hit was of the fluke variety that dropped Just out of the reach of the In- field, and too far from the out- fielders. The High School lads scored only two unearned runs. In ad- dition to pitching his team to victory, Pescod was a busy little man at the plate, pounding out a total of three base hits In four official trips. Noel Gibson hit the third home run of the series, which now makes it one more hit in the playoffs than were hit through- out the entire regular campaign. The Balboa Relays were run| Medley Relay: 1-BH8 (Ray- P*?8*}!" ^^'^^IJ^Jt into history last night as 2.500 bourne, Albritton, Mata, Cruz),'tne tna fr.ame with Louis Hoop- fans were treated to thrill after 2504th. 3Panam. Time:, o.11 board- ... _..... ,..,. thrill as the brilliant array of 3:52.3 (new record). iaciosel-li and hUGftnU during an exhibition game with the Indians. (NBA) Seven Records Broken. One Tied At 3rd Balboa Relays athletes ran, jumped and threw. Balboa High School emerged the victors after results were in, as they came in with a five-point High Jump: 1Hymison (P), margin to beat Panam 35-30. 2tied N. Gibson and B. Gibson These were the only two teams both (AC). Height: 5-11. in real contention for the tro- lee Yards: 1Swaby (AC), 2 phy, and it wasn't until the final Grennlon (P), 3Ostrea (BHS). two events, the mile relay and Time: 9.8 (new record), pole vault, that the autcome was| Discus: 1Htggins (AF), 2-7 known. Panam probably would Burnham (Hosp.), 3God by High Hurdles: 1-R. O s t r e a * (BHS), 2-Sobers (P). 3-Hughes th" ram? h*d b"n ****** (CHS). Time: 15.5 (ties record). Won Lost Pet. Firemen's Insur. .. 11 1 .917 San Liquido..... 9 4 .892 Iks.......... t 5 .815 CAA.......... 2 11 .154 Philippine Ratten. 2 11 .154 THURSDAY'S RESULT Elks 12, Philippine Rattan 11 Thursday the Elks recovered from a one-run deficit in the sixth Inning to put two runs across the plate and defeat Phil- ippine Rattan 12 to 11. Johnny Janssen started on the mound for the Elks but was re- lieved lh the fifth by Ray Bvans who was the winning pitcher. Evans now has seven wins and one defeat. Gordon Smith was the Initial hurler for the Rattan team but after only one out In the third, was replaced by Bobby Ganss. Ganss was about to be credited with the win but the lodgement Bair of runs in the sixth cost him e game. Leading batsmen for Phlllp- fime Rattan were Doc Jutzy with hree for five. Bob Medinger with two for four and Bob Lawyer with two for five. Bobby Ganss had one for four a foul line homer to left In the fourth with a mate aboard. The Elks' heavy stlckmen were Ople Herndon with three singles for four tries, Larry Chance with three for five, Dom Roberto with two for four and Ray Evans with one for two. Bob Taht. promin- ent in the one-base field, chalked up a solid four-bagger in the fifth. The box score: Elks Taht, ss....... Chance, If....., ., a Roberto, 2b....... 4 Boyster, c........ 3 Evans, ib-p. .. .. .. 1 Hemdon, 3b t\ MeArthur, G., cf. Batterman, rf-lb. Janssen, p-rf.. .. Copello, rf .. .. ft "HE 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals..........31 12 13 2 Philippine Rattan AR R H Jutzy, 2b......... 13 3 Lawyer, If........ 5 1 3 Ganss. c-p........ 4 2 l Bio, lb......... f 0 1 edlnger. 3b...... 4 1 ! .'.".'. 2 v.:::: M -rf .. .. 3 0 Fraser, cf........ S 1 Engelke, H ss .. .. 1 2 Cacobon, rf Nichols, c. Smith, G., p Pabst Was leading 4 to 2, and from there on out CHS lost all chances of winning. Continuing with three more runs in the fourth and five big Insurance runs in the sixth, Pabst ran away with the second series game. In addition to Pescod's three hits, which was tops for the On The Alleys... 164 161 117 224 172 102 128 154 140 164 110 McConnell Bembenek. 137 139 129 114 192 110 vs. VFW POST 3822 CURUNDU MEN'S OPEN BOWLING LEAGUE 'Torlan . Ifl an unusual night of league Norria. T. . ilay last Wednesday at Balboa, Zomes . our teams managed to take Kelsey . three points from their oppo- Glelchman nents. Handicap. The night's competition was: highlighted by one of the most Totals. . crucial contests of the year in which Carta Vieja cut the lead margin of the first-place Bud- weiser team from four to two points. "Roll" Glelchman led the Stahl . Rummen in their win over Bud Steuwe . with 214 in the second game and Bryan. . a slice 522 scries. Ho van. . Kelsey of the Rummen rolled Walker . 224 in the first game but failed Handicap. to btist 500 for the night. Dick's' 224 game was second nighest in Totals league play so lar this season and tied "Rocky" Bryan's second place standing In tne competi- tion for individual prizes for high game (with handicap). |Woner (Bd.) Sam Torlan was third high for Studebaker . the Rummen with 481. Sam's 104 Colston. . and 173 In the first two games Handicap. . helped to subdue Bud. Ray Walk- er was the lone star for Bud with Totals . . a race 511 series. Jnder the leadership of Cp- tala Chuck Lavallee, Acme Paints slapped the shellac to Balboa Beer. Lavallee's 504 series toge- Moss (Bid.) the* with "Dude" Borgis' 476 (50 Hannberg. pink over average) contributed to th .Painters' retention of their second place tie with the Rum- men. "Raisin'" Cain was high for the Beermen with 471. BIRy Coffey, rolling a 495 ser- Totals, les, led the American Clubmen In their victory over Canada Dry. Preond of the Clubmen rolled a 473 aeries, his highest In eight Week, of league play and 44 pins over average. Freund with 174 and Tom Vale with 160 were re- sponsible for the Clubmen's one- pus Victory in the second game. "Mac" Lane of the Sodamen topped his previous high series Totals for the year by 13 pins to turn in the most outstanding perform- ance of the night. "Mac" rolled 2 pins over average in games of I, 192 and 163 for a series of Carpenter 139 Smith .... 112 Dick A. Colston with a spark- Schoch ... 116 ling 537 for Angellnl sent VFW Stanley. ns Ba% 3822 home mumbling to Cam.....153 selves. Dicks excellent bowl- Handicap. 142 lag gave him his seventh series! ------ gOO in ten weeks at Balboa. Totals. ... 775 tala Wltzig, high man for the I bowled 42 pins over aver- age. With only four weeks to go Allen . the Rummen and the Painters Hicks . expected to give Budweis- Murdock gtlff competition for the (Blind). league championship. Similarly, Henry, . the Llquormen and the Sodamen j Lane. . give the Clubmen plenty.Handicap. JSpetltlon for fourth place. The sts CARTA VIEJA 173 109 134 129 214 102 144 481 150 420 154 405 144 497 138 522 102 306 American League TEAMS . 940 861 8302631 vs. BUDWEISER 125 121 139 385 157 163 448 148 128 430 146 161 447 151 196 511 110 110 330 Cleveland...... 4 St. Lewis...... 4 Boston...... .. 8 Washington..... Z New York...... 1 Philadelphia .... 1 Chicago........ Detroit........a. Won Lost Pet. 1.800 l.aoo .754 .333 .333 .too 64* TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at St. Louis. Detroit at Cleveland. Washington at New York. Philadelphia at Boston (t). 821 833 8972551 ANGELTNI 149 133 129 149 155 110 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS "* (16 Innings) Philadelp'a 020O1001004 8 Boston 000 010 00314 12 have won if they hadn't been! (B^! Distance: 31 ft. 9V in-iSS^ft^S^^hh.* disqualified from the mile relay 1 (new record). 'P*r.-th o **** each had for an illegal baton pass and 8M Relay: 1Panam (Rich- lW0k J* ards, Grennlon, Wilson, Jacobs), running off the track. Tied at 30 points each with on- ly the mile relay to go, the Bull- dogs team of Edgar Kourany, Jim May, Pancho Delgado, and Bill Dawson pulled In to first, and thus won the meet for their school. Other teams that scored points were: Athletic Club with 19, Albrook with 14, 504th with 6, U.S. Army Hospital 3, and Cris- tobal High 1. Outstanding performer for the meet was Oliver Swaby of the Athletic Club. Not only did he run 9.8 for the 100 which Is a new Relays record, but he was al- so the key man on almost all the' A. C. relays teams. His anchor! lap on the half mile relay will long be remembered as he closed the tremendous gap between him and Csar Von Chong of the Boys 2BHS, 3504th. Time: 1:34.3 (new record). Shot Pat: 1Godby (BHS), 2 gains (AF), 3Morris (BHS). Distance: 44 ft. 8 to. Pole Van It: 1Bettencourt (AF), 2tied Hooper (AC) and Maphla (BHS). Height: 11 ft. 9 in. (new record). Mile Relay: 1BHS (Kourany, Delgado, Dawson, May), 2AC, 3Albrook. Time: 3.47.6. FINAL SCORE Balboa High........ 36 Panam............ SO Athletic Club........ 19 Albrook............ 14 504th.............. 6 Hospital............ J CHS.............. 1 903, B.C., Coco Solo, P.C. 486, Club, and George Bennett of Summit, and J.C. failed to score. Cristobal. --------- , On the track, the mile and the) Events that did not count In medley relay would take the scoring: ... .w_. l... ... BHS (tnilman. Rnmw HnviP Rvrrf -i) nnrt I honors as being the most thrill- Football Relay: BHS (DUlman. TlDton' SfcarborouehDeLock: ln Bob Ransom was upset cotton. Jones. Fox), 2CHS. 3 151 437Kinder, Wight 183 455|Nlarhos. 129 387 176 439 Detroit 190 537 Cleveland 120000 20x5 110 SSOi Gray (0-1), Littlefield, Hutch- inson and Batts; Feller (1-0), (1-0) arid White! by Faustino Lpez of Panam In BC. Time: 50.3. u uj ana wnwe,i'nce that wm nJp and ^^ a ^^ m_yi m,,. i_Tied ___ the way. Lpez, content to run Diablo and Ancon. 3Tied Mar- 000 000 0000 6 2,Denlnd Ranson untllthe gun lap,! garita and Cristobal: Tlrne'^27A 7 1 821 825 9392585 Lemon and Hegan. Washington New York 010 200 0003 000 001 0001 moved into a short lead,"only to," 7th Grade 440-Relay: 1CJHS have Ranson again challenge! (Mlzrachl, Smith, Lowe, Croft), him, and from then on they rac-!2BJH8 No. 3. 3BJHS No. L ed around the track neck and Time: 54.6. Wltzig Mashburn Rlzzo . . Handicap. Marrero (1-0) and Grasso; 125 125 375 Reynolds (0 -1) and Silvera, 146 112 383 Houk. 151 148 444 148 146 395 Chicago 122 143 392 St. Louis 154 154482; Stobbs (0-1), Aloma, Kennedy -----------------------,and Lollar; Ptllette (1-0) and 777 846 8282451 Moss, Courtney. neck. Lpez was able to throw out 1 his chest more at the finish, win- 3 0 nlng by that close a margin. Ed- 125 125 145 101 127 154 OlOOOOOOOl 5 000 01105X7 12 gar Kourany of BHS pulled Into a surprise and very strong third. nal Game Sunday Night Thursday night's game was the best attended of the season and the fans went away a little dis- appointed with the loose brand of ball they saw. But In a way the loss by CHS was a break for the fans, for now they will again have the opportunity of seeing the two top nurlers of the loop engage to another topflight bat- tle. Hughes and Gibson are sure starters for the winner-take-all game tomorrow night at 7 o'clock at Mt. Hope Stadium. These two pitchers were pitted against one another last Tuesday night In the Series opener. The fine orand of ball displayed by both clubs on that occasion was responsible for the large tum-out for Thurs- day's game. With this In mind, the Atlantic Twi-Loop Is expect- ing an even larger attendance for tomorrow night's game. The box score: Pabst AB R Hall, lb.....1 1 Conover, lb Dedeaux, ss . Hale, cf. . . Hooper, 8b. . Gibson, 2b . Welch, if. . Salter. R., If. Swearlngen, c Jaramillo, rf. 8th Grade 446-Relay: 1-BJHB S^S n" No. 4 (Bruhn. Jeffries, Manley, . P Bacot), 2-BJHS No, 3. 3CJHS. T ^ Time: 51.5. Exhibition IN: 1Qooden, 2 HPO A 0, 5 0 1 0 1 4 0 0 4 1 0 The medley relay looked like Worrell, 3Stewart. Time: 11.0. all 504th until the last 330 yards of the half mile leg. It was then 0that Henry Cruz, Balboa High's great performer, began to move and he yard by yard shortened ACME PAINTS Lavallee. . 191 164 149 504 Casten (Bd.) 134 Corn. Yarbro . Borgis . Handicap. 142 153 166 132 134 133 124 123 132 134 402 148 423 148 425 National League TEAMS 918 810 BALBOA BEER 187 476 Brooklyn...... 4 132 396 Chicago........ 2 -------------! Pittsburgh...... 2 8982626!St. Louis...... 2 Cincinnati...... 1 New York...... 1 Philadelphia .... 1 Boston........ 1 Boom! Boom! Boston the distance between himself and; Reed, 2b 136 148 152 114 187 142 112 387: 130 390 173 441 135 362 151 471 142 426 859 8432477 CANADA DRY 148 142 130 118 198 116 152 128 130 123 192 116 131 431 TODAY'S GAMES Boston at Philadelphia. Cincinnati at Pittsburgh. New York at Brooklyn. St. Louis at Chicar. Luis Cedefto of the 504th. At the Jethroe, cf. . finish Cruz was inches in front. Torgeson, lb. In the field events, Clarence Gordon. If . Bettencourt of the Albrook Fly- Marshall, rf . ers lived up to his press clippings Matthews, 3b. by thrilling the crowd with an St. Claire, c . Won Lost Pet 11-foot 9-inch vault. He easily Custck, ss . won the event, and was without Wilson, p . .6(7 doubt the best of the field event aKlaus. ss. . .50 performers. bDanlcls . . .5N Record breaking started early Burdette, p. . .333 and continued right up to the .333 last event. The Panam 440-yard Totals.....SO .333 relay team set a new Relays rec-1 -------- .251 ord of 44.2 in that event. Lpez' Philadelphia AR R mile time of 4:50.2 is another new^mner, ss. ..40 Relays record. BHS medley relay Ashburn, cf team made it another record Jones, 3b. . AB 4 4 3 2 4 4 4 2 2 1 1 0 HPO 9 31 12 5 CHS AB R Manning, ss . 1 3 Rlnehart, 2b. .0 0 Hatgl. 2b-ss ..30 Bailey, 3b-p ..30 Hughes, rf-lb 2 0 Salter, T, c . 2 0 Bryant, c. . 0 . S&sso, If. ... 3 0 Smith, cf. . 2. 0 Grace, cf. . 1 0 Blades, p. ... 2 0 Khurt. rf . 1 0 Price, lb. ... 2 0 Anderson, 3b 1 0 HPO 0 0 2 1 31 7 Totals - ........31 11 g 4 Score By Intiinci Elks 3 12312 012 P. Rattan 2 2 0 3 5 0 011 Only eight more games left to complete the season. BEAUTIFUL IMPORTED CHINAWARE USE OUR EASY CLUB SYSTEM 36 S3 63 93 p. PC. pc. pc. Set. Set. Set. Set. .60 .75 1.00 1.25 x OR 7110 Bolivar C0WENIENT PAYMENT PLAN Radio Center Colon 40 mmmmmmmmm Born 1820- still going with a strong following JOHNNIE WALKER Fine Old Scotch Whisky Jete Wsster st Sens U 000 102 1004 11 O00 100 0048 9 St. Louis Chicago Brecheen, Bockelman (0-1), Brazle and D. Rice; Rush, Schultz 134 404 (1-0) and ChitL 130 390 Cincinnati 135 376 Pittsburgh 163 553 Blackwell 1 HPO 1 3 with a 3:52.3 clocking, and Rudy Ostrea (BHSt tied the high hur- dles record of 15.5. Not to be content with that, Swaby's 9.8 for the 100, Hi-rain's (AP) 131 ft. 9ft in. In the discus, and Bettencourt's 11 ft. 9 In. In ' Heintzelman, the vault were also new records.! The last of the Relay records to.Totals Ennis. If. Nicholson, rf. Ryan, 2b . . Waltkua, lb . Topata, c. . 2 Meyer, p. . * P 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 .29 2 3 27 7 1 E> by the boards was the 880 re- y In which the team of Rich- ards, Grennlon, Wilson and Ja- 116 348 Friend (1-0; and McCullough. 0000000000 5 010 002 00X3 6 1 cobs ran 1:34J, an of which to- (0-1) and Semlnick; tais up to seven records broken standings: W. L. Pta. Mtfser. . 55 38 72 MR Viejs. S3 40 70 PtnU 61 42 70 " is Club 46 47 62 X 44 49 61 46 48 58 40 53 52 Poet 3022 41 55 51 Results lay: of Wednesday Totals. Total Pins 78836 78920 78816 Vale 78665 Jlellwlg 78208 Freund . 78392 Reichart . 77811 Coffey . 77192 Handicap. night's Totals. , 852 841 8092802 AMERICAN CLUB 113 142 145 133 180 115 160 98 174 140 158 115 137 410 141 378 154473 187 460 157 495 115 345 828 842 861-2561 (12 Innings) N. York 5000001000006 10 0 Brooklyn 130 000110 0017 12 0 Hearn, Wllhelm, Koslo, Spen- cer (0-2) and Westrum: Labine, Ersklne, Loes (1-0) and Campan- ula. and one tied. Results of 1952 Balboa Relays Events that counted in Ing: 444 Relay: 1Panam (Rich- ards. Grennlon, Wilson. Lashley), 2BH8, 3504th. Time: (new record). Mile Ran: 1Lpez (P), 3 Ranson (BH8), 3Kourany (BHS). Time: 4:60.2 (new rec- Score By Innings Boston 000 000 0033 Philadelphia 000 020 0003 aFouled out for Cuslck in 8th; bFouled out for Wilson In 8th. Boston 000 000 0033 4 Philadelphia 000 020 0002 3 0 ord). Wilson, Buidette (1-0 aod St. Broad Claire: Meyer, Heintzelman tO-1) 'AC). 2 Sobers 'Pi, 3 Figueroa Meyer (0-1). UOaacoU, Secon and Lopata, (504th;. Distance: 30 It. 10ft la.Goett. Jorda. T3.16. A-15,911. Jason: 1N. Gibson RBILopata 2, Gordon 2, Mar- shall. HRLopata, Gordon, Mar- scor- shall. SBTorgeson. SMeyer. DPMeyer, Hamner and Walt- kus; Matthews and Torgeson. LeftPhiladelphia 5, Boston 4. 44.2 BBMeyer 4, Wilson 2, Burdette 2. SOMeyer 5, Wilson 3, Heint- zelman 2. HOWilson 3 1 n7 In- nings; Meyer 4 in 8 1-3; Burdette 0 In 2: Heintzelman 0 In 2-3. R. At ERMeyer 3-3, Wilson 2-2. Win- nerBurdette (1-0). Loser The Chase National Bank of th* City of Now York Total resources over $5,446,879,593.87 General Banking PANAMA BRANCH COLON BRANCH CRISTOBAL BRANCH BALBOA BRANCH DAVID BRANCH We Specialize in Financing Import* and Exports f an^aMMMfM-MM" -----r-TiJiMiMmk THE MNAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAItT NFWRPAPER PAGE mm TtTRnAY APRIL 19 1951 B r"*w* iwgwroAii "" .w,.,! u-. WBWW ,--------------- ._ .-------_,_----------------....... ] TURDAT, APRIL 19, MCT ------.....------------ -ur-a,su. -- ---------------------.-------- '-----------------------------------------------------------rrT^TlTTI TT f I " Yugoslav Tennis Stars Refuse To Return To Their Homefofjfli PACIFIC LITTLE LEAGUE FIRST HALF STANDINGS frEAM Won Lost Hce............ 7 S re..........,., i 'GE 14.......... 8 f is 1414.......... 8 men.........JL-.f iECOND HALE STANDINGS CRAM Won Lott era............M 4 ks 1414 .......... * acota life........ lice............ r?"i.......... , remen.......... * The box score: YESTERDAY S RESULT Elk II, Sean 2. MONDAY'S GAME Elk. V-fiemen The Elks trounced the league- pesLondes, rf. idlng Sears yesterday and cutiLbvejady. lb . e tame from the lead of thelKlrkland, e. .. - -ame Ryter, ss catch to halt a Sean rally in the third Inning and Curtis Schwarz- rock of sears made a nice run- ning catch to retire Lovelady In the fourth. Players Seek Asylum In Rome, Italy ROME, Apr 19 (UP)Two of Jimmte I Tafoslavla's greatest tennis junmie.|Urg M|Un Br,noTlc ,nd Drm|u- rln Mltlc, refnsed yesterday to Don Ryter, flashy Elks ^^-^V^h^^S^^ISlS^ stop, led the winners at the plate *nd, nd t0tt'ht oU*le.*1 *"lum with three for four, one of hls|m "mly right behind Don "Mjwt: two nounced thelr deeuion to Jdln the TomSo^poVX with ffi fssrur&iiras/S: for four. Terryfcorrlgan had two !'*'^ranJ!*, the lUlffn In- [& SRt* help the winne" at tSSSttoSHdVenne ChVmp.on- 1116 p,*le- I ships in Rome's Foro Itlico. Alas Of Bears led his team at Both said th'eir decision was bat with two hits In three trips difficult because each is leaving to the plate. AB R 4 2 italog Boys. Sears has one a... (t to play and the Elks'nave Hele, If....... 'o In the following week of play the Pacific Little League The essure Is on the Elks as they ust win both of their remaln- g games to get a tie with the italog Boys if Sears win their 1 contest. 'r The Lodge Brothers opened the me scoring a run in the first sears ning and took a commanding!Wataon, John, 2b id from which they were never .Watson, Jas., p.. laded with five runs in the sec- Watson, R., as. id. The winners added to their Alas, rf. Lewis, p....... 3 Corrigan, T., 3b.. 4 Trimble, Jb .. .. 4 Thompson, cf. .. 4 ,tti-------------- Totals........92 13 10 18 some members of his family In Yugoslavia. Mltic la married, but his wife and one of their two children, an H PO A ll-year-old boy named Mladen, 0 0 0 are with him In Rome. Their two- 0 and-one-haif year old daughter 1 is with relatives in Yugoslavia. 1 Mltlc said he has two sisters and Oltwo brothers In Zagreb. 31 Rranovlc Is unmarried but he 0 MM his mother is living in Sha ii .. a. 1-..U. ,ifcr A.~all.. SPANISH SPLENDORMa]. Jaime Garcia Cruz, Spanish rider, take his mount high over the bars' demonstrating the exquisite form which won him the Grand Prix de France crown in Nice. (NBA) AB 3 9 3 3 HPO 0 2 r } (Wantage with two more runs Curdts, ef.. .. .. the fourth and put the game Durfee, 0, lb. .. 2 0 yond recall by scoring ve Durfue, .T, e. 1 -0 nes in the fifth Inning. TheSchwerzrock, If.. .1 .0 all Order lads were guilty of Mendosa, b .. .. 2 0 ght mlscues that figured great- In the scorin kovet in Croatia. "Naturally I am sorry to part with her," he aid. Mltlc said, "I am concerned about my daughter and other members of my family, of course. But what can you do?" "But we are not going back, Only Two Without Weakness; Only Two Could Hit-And-Run A 1 "But we are not going oaca," .,, Aria AorU 19 (NBA) 3 Mltic told newsmen. f am an * behind the batting 2 anti-Communist.but I don wan 8"fd = Matthews keep o ux .aa^^SSSS- ^oi: chatter wlfl In all Sears scored their first run in added th. Totals........21 2 8 18 10 lMt night Score By Innings 2 and we hava decided to lay ta8 f^ "ago Nationals' di- y Italy, rector of olayer personnel, "ex- 1 Both said they would call *, ^X agreed that only two hlt- - the Rome police headquarters.P"Mh*r weaknessl-Ty Cobb l.fl-0,2 P 0n I" 01 0 1 0 0- 2 lie second Inning and lelr final run In the fourt ihnny Lewis, on the mound for Elk*-.' is Elks, pitched very oOd ball Sears id excellent support by his animates cut off potential Sears kllles. Johnny gave up five hits, alked two and struek out five annexing his fifth game kalnst two Tosses. Jlmmle Watson pitched all the ay for Sears but sloppy support his mates kept him continu- ly In hot water. Jinuaje euf ferr 1 his first loss in nine decisions. Several sparkling plays were hrned in during the game with letiest of the day when he matte CAME Wfeauty of a one-handed stab off ____ i-tiaa' drive down the first h"' Plfciffiggi (fflAs"~JO< !ne and tagged the base forthe|ree1^^u<^!!P0W, the 5 8 Ut in the fourth Inning. George Qttp^Borchu rlrhble made a nice running WinnerLewis (5-2). Loser Jaa. Watson (8-1). Struckout by Lewis 6, Jas. Watson 3. Base on Balls offLewis 2, Watson 8. Hit by PitchHele by Watson. Two Base HitsKlrkland, Thompson, Alas, G. Durfee. Three Base Hit Ryter. UmpiresLuzer and De la Pen*, ScorerMead. Time of Game1!32. ;' FAR at Windsor, .Joe Louis night . beat him taflo. In 1934. UST PERFORMANCE TONIGHT ! of the most marvelous and fantastic review ever presented in Panam! Episcopal Softball League THE STANDINGS By HARRY ORAYSON NBA Sports Editor There la the fellow who never!2'- i*" .......! hits at a good ball; the one who 2J- _?*"*........5 never picks his ball to hit, but { lm101n ....... ] hits the pitcher's pitch. There Is 2;- I?V. v-- i t.hn hlttar whf, r.arrie* hl arms;81- ^nriaiopne* .. Toama St. James -Vi .-H'.ft thel" had no weaknessTy to register and get tneL_rt ph Ruth SSTFr^^Sa^^ -tCOUld PltChCd ,0TS ffl ffi'dld not l^'^S^^niSSK iheir'hlttlng/' to notify the Yugbslav Embassy ^".^t8 hive seen only two good of their'decision. ?ad-,[ merT-Blly Herman BATTEB GETS HIS PITCH of the Cubs and Dodgers and Ed- "' die Foster, an American League Army Sports By Mike Correa (Pie) __ FORT DAVIS The Hq. Btry of the 784th "AAA Otn Battalion were proclaimed'"Champions". In the 784th AAA Softball Tourtl- ment held at Fort Davis during the months of March and April. The boys from the Hq. Btry Red Devils won (.7) .seven out of. the i*Y eightgaiwes aWduledI to, cop the Top Honors in the League. In the laat three (3) ames played last week they de- sated "D" Btry 903rd AAA AN Bn once and "C" Btry 903rd AAA AW Bn twice with scores of: 7-2, 13-8 and 12-1, respectively. The toughest opposition came from "D" Btry 903rd who kept on the Hq. Btry tall all the way, but this worries were all over after the Red Devils beat the boys from "Oatun" to take the lead In the standing by one (1) game. The champions were piloted by the sharp eye of Lieutenant Ra- fael Petlton who accomplished a wonderful Job and kept the boys "at razor edge" at all times. Now the boys are aiming for the Group Championship and then the USARCARIB Championship. the hitter who carries his arms S'mP Lltters^ake advan^d this afternoon at the ex- 'VhavlniTe pjt^he^lfa'P^e of thejowly St. Paul team even thiugh the manage --jj-ji Boca, St. Christopher will to crash the win column when they engage the strong S. Simon outfit. The St. Simon nine will be seeking a tie for second place In the standings with St. Peter. Both games are scheduled to start at 4 p.m. James will try to widen its hole' evehn VthlughC th'e"man.r " gives them the all out to hit the Ball If it Is to their liking. There are hitters who go into terrific slumps because they worry about infl?lder of 20 years ago "The bunt Is the difference be- tween the winning and losing ol a close game. .. "Knowing the strike aone is the most important thing in hitting. "Over-striding is the only Ir- reparable fault. You can't tie the natural over-strlder's feet toge- ther. Lou Novikotf hit a ton In the minors, six and seven-eighths in the National League. "Not more than five bla league hitters strldaa much a* JD Jneh- "Joe DIMagglo never advanced his left foot more than six inch- es, and usually just picked it up and put It righ> down again. FORM AT BAT MEANS NOTHING "Relax, be comfortable, take your time," Matthews tells the ^Remember that the Pitcher can't deliver the ball until his lead foot hits the ground. "Success in hitting is control of the big end of the bat. 'Yorm at bat means nothing. Matthews says many hitters have been ruined by having too many instructors. "A manager must be careful about suggesting anything to hit- ters Without first they seek as- sistance," he asserts. "We can take them to the bat- ting cage and work with them psychologically, put across our points without a direct order. "Hank Sauer there is worried about uppercuttlng the ball. Nor- mally, there would be cause.for. concern, but uppercuttlng is pre- cisely what a slow home-run hit- ter like Sauer should do. He helps most by hitting the ball Into the! stands. "Branch Rickey made many a hitter, Pepper Martin and Terry Moore among them, by betting them a coke or something thai they couldn't hit a pitch called GIRLS/ TAKE A MAN'S ADVK r ABOU1 VOUR Bh CUTICURA^h, by him out of the Infield or hit chinaroid the ball on the ground and into a double play. "In that way, Mr. Rickey taught them to hit their pitch instead of the pitcher's. "Figures show that the batter ^^^deVhuiSSfa'aiiet. his pitch once every turn ,t effi "t an'ttinS SSw* & *s h" San the" good wood "It's the way the bat comes In- to the ball that counts. There are faults that can be lay off the pitcher's pitch." Matthews, who had a brief whirl as an American League outfielder In the mld-1920s, spent The Hq. Btry Red Devils Softball correCted such as a bat that Is 14 years as Branch Rickey's held still, not following; trouble-shooter In St. Louis and Carnaval on Ice at the 1*1* OLYMPIC STADIUM AT 8:30 P.M. with 60 stars! V/i hours of entertainment In the Super Production of HOLIDAY ON ICE PRICES GENERAL ENTRANCE .... .50* Preference .................$1.00 Middle Row Seats.......... 2.00 Numbered Rink............ 3.00 Price of I children for 1 ticket la Preforeoee and Middle Row Seats ONLY. - Tickets for sale at MAURICIOS STORE, #47 C7entral Ave. and at the Stadium's Ticket Box from 6 pjn. oa. Team which will represent the 794th AAA Oun Bn in the USAR- CARIB Championship Is compos- ed of the following: pfc Francisco Colon-Santiago, Pvt Mario Ortiz-Rodriguez, Pfc Jesus Avlles-Aponte, Cpl Nelson Marin-Soto, Pvt Francisco Cruz- Mardtlnez. Pfc Nicolas Ruperto- Hemandez, Pfc Carlos M. Chris- tian Cpl Marcos A. Perez, Pfc Ruben Morales-Quintero, Cpl Juan V. Olannonl. Cpl Octavio Rolon-Marrero, Cpl Rafael Pe- rez-Cordero. Pvt Lula A. Casti- llo Pfc Angel Anbal Mercado. Cpl Bievenido Santiago-Marti- nea, Pfc Rafael Rivera-Rodri- guez, Sgt. Teodoro Torres-Bur- gos and Pe Anselmo Prieto Saa- vedra. only all mix drinks told at Yz price from 3 to 7 p.m EVERY DAY The Boston Bar t^ugh-Tnd-The-head-Twi'Br^n.^ ^ ^^ ^ Pacific Softball League CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES Team Won Lost Pet. Army QM ....... 2 0 1.000 Coroial S. Store 1 1 -500 Central L. Office 1 J M Nary Ordnance 1 * NEXT GAMES Today: Corozal Sales Store vs Army QM. 9:30 a.m. Sunday: Navy Ord- nance vs Corozal Sales Store. Monday: Navy Ordnance vs Cen- tral Labor Office. Central Labor Office staged a brilliant comeback in the cham- pionship series of the Pacific Divisional Sofftball League by tumbling Navy, 8 to 5 behind the five-hit pitching of Oscar Clark. thla way. WHAT O0I&T5 .YOO-J 5T3RT VOflOONT SERVE CERVEZA By BEANS REARDON 24 Years in National League Written for NEA Service Question: Brooklyn Is keeping a young pitcher named Billy Loes. What is his background? Answer: Loes, ZZ year old right-hander of Greek descent, Is back with the Dodgers after nine months of Army aerviee. Lees, one of the more sought-after youngsters of recent years, was scouted personally and signed for a $22,000 bonua by Branch Rick- ey In 1948. He pitched five no- hitters for Bryant High In Sueens Farmed to Nashua of the ew England League in '49, he the loaers but gave way to the won II and lost three with an second to R Bernal who was tag-earuad-ran average of Z.M, had ged with the defeat. Christopher a no-hltter and a one-hitter. Pro- Oreaves and Bernal homered. The box score: Central Labor Office AB R H C. Oreaves, cf ..........3 2 M. Smith. If ............2 j 0 L. Edghlll. as ...........5 2 A. Foster, lb............4 0 2 A. Bowen. 3b ...........4 0 0 E. Barter, rf ............3 1 0 C. Jordan. lb ..........4 2 C. Brathwaite, c........1 0 1 O. Clark, p .............4 1 1 Totals .............3* Navy Ordnaneo AB R H F. Peralta. 3b ..........1 1 F. Ouintero, 2b .........4 3 M. Mussa. rf............3 0 I R. Benal. p-cf ..........4 1 L. Neto, If ..............1 i r. Lawrence, p .........1 0 0 . Granger, cf ..........3 0 0 \ Peralta, lb ...........3 0 0 " we*sn. ss ............2 I 0 T. P.englfo, c ...........3 0 0 moted to Fort Worth in mid-sea- son, he bagged five while drop- ping two with a 3.12 ERA. Being a bonus baby, he spent '5* with 2 the Brooks, appealing in 10 games, all in relief and without a decision either way. Q. Is there a penalty for throw- ing a glove at a fair batted ball? A. Tea. If the glove hits the ball the batter gets three bases. Q. Do official rules limit the catcher's mitt as to sise? A. No, bat the other fielders' Eloves cannot be more than 12 iches long. Q. What was the name of the, player charged with three errors on one play? A. Sraead JoUey of the White Sox in a game at St. Louis. Totals .25 5 5 BOTH ENDS Lexington, Ky (NEA)Last three-year-old trotter to cop The Hambletonian and The Kentucky Futurity was Hoot < Mon, to 1947. Pilos it E'*- " 198 COMPETE MARATHO Middle-Age Men Questioned In Vampire Hunt AN llfH'BNlMSr^; UVT KIWSPAPtE Panama American FERRARA, Italy, April 18 (UP) Police began methodically; questioning most of the middle- | TWENTY-SEVENTH TEAR age male population in this city today and asked the help of bus drivers in their investigation of the death of 13-year old Franco Negliati. The boys body was found in a park Easter Sunday, his throat slashed and with signs of suffo- cation. .. A medical examiner said it was "possible" the slayer drank his Victim's blood because there was "amazingly little" found at the place where the boy was aSffly, th-,neh ; LEXINGTON, Mass.. April 19 fFrom playmates of Franco, -(UP)-Gen. Hoyt.8. Vanden- who told police they saw him berg. Air Force chief of staff, walking with a man about 40 to estimated today that Russia U 45 years of age, a "reasonable": spending $250,000,000 per year description of the man was be- to maintain the Communist air "Let the people know the truth and the country s to/V Abraham Lincoln. ES5K PANAMA, R. P., SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 1951 FIVE CENTS Russia Pumping $250 Million Annually Into Korean War lng circulated. Last night police arrested a man at Bologna. The suspect, however, turned out to be a 50- year oW watchman from Genoa, who had an alibi for Easter Sun- day. Today police also began track- ing down bus drivers who pass- ed through Ferrar Easter Sunday and early Monday morning, in hope of obtaining some informa- tion. Meanwhile, a local newspaper said the police were In posses- sion of a photograph claimed to be that of the slayer, which reportedly was found on Franco s body or at his home. Police re- fused to discuss the report. force in Korea. He said the "Soviet-trained and Soviet-supplied" Red air force totals soirie 1,700 aircraft, more than half of which are Jets. USCARIB Civilian Workers Win $4,275 hi Suggestion Awards Civilian emproyes within the United States Army Caribbean had the highest rate of parti- cipation in the Army-wide sug- gestion program during the cal- endar year 1951, according to a bulletin today from the Army efficiency awards committee in Washington, D. C. Civilian personnel within tne command had a average per- centage participation of 15.17. This figure is based on the num- ber of civilian personnel em- ployed by the Army In U8AR- CARIB. During the year civilian em- ployes within the command sub- in itted 1,245 suggestions, of which 233 were adopted. Sug- gestions ranged from attractions hi office procedure to highly technical changes on machinery. A total of $4,275.75 was award- ed civilian employes within the command for suggestions which were adopted during 1951. The general said Russia is supplying this "satellite air force" with some 70 Mig-15's monthly to make good their loss and keep the force in action. "For us to support inis force on such a scale would cost a quarter of a billion dollars per year" Vanderberg said in a speech prepared for delivery at ceremonies commemorating the 177th anniversary of the Battle of Lexington. ' "This figure does not Include the much larger capital outlay required to create the air force from nothing, nor does, it In- clude the enormous outlay re- quired to support Communist ground forces in Korea," he the!**- Vandenberg estimated that Communist around forces In Korea now total 900000 men armed with weapons "largely supplied" by the Soviet Union.; Since the beginning of the truce negotiations, he said, Rus- | sia has supplied the Red forces With 500 artillery pieces and more than half as many tanks, plus armored vehicles and anti- aircraft equipment. (NEA Tlephoto) BACK IN THE STATESGen. Alfred M. Gruenther, chief of staif to Gen. Eisenhower, talks to reporters after his arrival at Washington airport. Gruenther flew from Paris for a 12- day speaking tour. He said he will be delighted if Oen. Matthew B. Rldgway is named to succeed Elsenhower as NATO commander. Italian Offers Large Reward For Friend's Slayer . TURIN. April 19 (UP). A Turin industrialist today offered 10,600 reward for information leading to the assassin of Erio Codeca. 52, director of the truck-tractor subsidiary of the Flat Motor Co. Codeca was shot down Wed- nesday night as he was leaving his home. His assassin fed In a car parked nearby With the en- gine running. Spectacular Fire Follows Explosion of Ammunition Dump TUNIS, April 19 (UP) A French Army ammunition dump exploded today in spectacular fashion following an accidental fire. Some 250 mortar shells and 60.000 rifle cartridges were ruined, many crackling like giant firecrackers as they whiz- zed off Into the desert One sol- dier was seriously burned. French Army spokesmen said the dump was at Pont du Fash, 35 miles southwest of Tunis on a main rail link inland. They said the soldier was making his early morning inspection round with a gasoline lamp. Gruenther Seen As Eisenhower NATO Successor PARIS, April 19, (UP) Gen- eral Alfred M. Gruenther's chances of replacing General Dwight D. Elsenhower increased strongly today as the United States gave its Atlantic Pact al- lies a cholee In the selection of a new Supreme Commander. Reliable North Atlantic Treaty- Organization sources said the United States has "Informally" proposed either Gruenther, now Eisenhower's chief of staff, or the United Nations commander in Tokyo, Gen. Matthew B. Rldg- way, for the European post. They said that the United States approaches were being made with each ally individually rather than through formal The sentinel accidentally NATO channels. ZC n.nt nn ? f^tti The move was viewed here as fuel, setting fire to the building. m attempt to give the European an auempi to give we auronewi ,--------------.,,..-----, .. allies a bigger voice in NATO af- cooperating with civil ae- Walking Blood Bank Goal of Legion For Isthmian Disasters An Isthmus-wide "walking blood bank" of pledged donors Is the goal of American Legion Post No. 1 In its efforts to en- large the present blood bank system. The walking blood bank will be serving the Canal Zone and Panama In personal emergen- cies as well as community dis- asters. "There Is no need to Walt for a major catastroph to volun- teer pledges, or to call far them," an American Legtti spokesman said today. ''Any lffe hanging in the balance 1 rea- son for a call to a member of the Bank." A Health Department official said: "It Is far better for peo- ple to pledge. blood against a time it is needed, and then fo on about their business. They will be helping by standing by as pledges. These men and wo- men will be only a telephone- call away from the hospital, and authorities can get in touch with them at once." . American Legion Post No. 1 fairs, and an attempt to resolve what might become an embar- rassing feud between the Pen- tagon and the White House. Reliable military sources said |that the double Gruenther-Ridg- fense and health authorities in augmenting the present blood bank setup. Wrong Window MEMPHIS, Tenn. (up) The !way proposal strongly Increased Gruenther's chances because o his popularity with European al- WA8HINGTON. April 19 (UP) WESTCLOX BANTAM Electric Alarm Clock A raolty dependobit timepiece in a small "package" . . Westclox nawMt, only 3'A" loll. And who o beauty he Is, too, wtth a hvo-lone dial, dear-cot brawn numerals and hand that are so easy to read. Medarn moulded plastic case * handsomely finiihd m Ivory. The alarm bad sounds clear and bright to wake you up, get you out on time. Your retailor has the now iantam and other quality-famous Westclox electric alarms and wall clocks, spring alarms, wrist and pocket watches. See them on display today. sailor was back at the auditorium ticket wlndbw Just a few seconds nis popularity wun un u- f^f^t ST" ?, *,& lies who believed If Rldgway were "*eJ- J JjC?t from scratch learning the com- :teavtt from the side ftheM- c ? ^ to ,ahn credlt lor plicated NATO command strue- dltorlum and he got the wrong ture. .______________wlndow:----------------------------------i Synthetic Gasoline Possible At 11 Cents WASHINGTON. April 1 (UP) sell for 11 cents per gallon If revenues from the chemical pro- ducts produced were taken Into TCLOX Famous Family Nan of Fin* Tkawplace. USalle. Illinois. U.S.A. Mil LNIVKKSAI KXFORT CORP JM nMitin c la Owa Call* ~0" Na. 12 Panama Cll a P. COOP. UNIVPSUAL DE EXPORTACIN a. am su sum mm him c*Ma,.a r. Secretary of Interior Oscar L. Chapman said today he was _. "very encouraged" by an engl- consideration. neer's report indicating that syn-' It added, however, that the thetic gasoline can be made to.profit would be so small that It sell for 11 cents per gallon. probably would not attract the He aid the report by Ebasco necessary private financing for Services, Inc., showed that the,the big plant that is needed. Bureau of Mines Is working in the right direction and should : continue research In converting coal Into oil and chemicals. The reports were made for Chapman because there was a dispute between the bureau and the National Petroleum Council ovr: how much ft costs to pro- dace a gallon of gasoline by a coai hydrogenation process. The Bureau said the coat should be less than 11 cents per gallon for the motor fuel, bm the Petroleum Council said h.? truer figure would be about 41 cents per gallon. The Ebasco report said the syn- IbcUc gasoline could be made to, (NEA Telephoto) MADE RECORD BOMBING FLIGHTTwo Republic F-84G Thunder]et flgbter-bombera like the one shown above made an unprecedented 4775 mile, non-stop flight Just revealed by the Air Force. The Jets took off from Langley AFB, Va., dropped practice bombs at Ed- wards AFB, Muroc, Calif., and returned to Langley Field. Canal Traffic, Tolls Established New Marks During March Commercial traffic, tolls, eargo tonnage and Panam Canal set tonnage all climbed to all-time highs last month, according to monthly statistics from the Man- agement Division of the Panama Canal. There were 13 commercial vessels of 300 net tons or more through the Canal during March. The record number of monthly commercial tansits up to that Mme was 507 In January 1920. Cargo tonnage on ocean-going commercial vessels transiting the Canal totaled 3,114,989 cargo ton? in March, compared to the pre- vious high of 3,01(5,418 in March 1937. Panam Canal net tonnage war 2,872,828 for the month of March. Highest up to that time was 2/ 839,127 in May 1937. Tolls collected from commer- cial vessels of 300 net torts or .w.'--'.'.-.--'.-:-j.-.'.-.. '...' K3- ..' '':)'*:>'/;''"; '%** w (NEA Newsmap) . FLIGHT ROUTENewsmap shows routes take n by the fighter-bombers which flew non- stop, dropping bombs at the halfway point of. their 11 hour, 20 minute flight. The planes were refueled by Boeing KB-29 tanker plane s en route. Bombs were dropped with the | planes traveling at the speed of sflnnd. ______________________________________ . more totaled $2,512,008.70 durli March, compared to $2,501,949.04 for the previous high in January: There were also 78 transite by, non-tolls-paying vessels during March for which there was a tolls credit of $389,119.54. Transits by ocean-going com- mercial veaaels averaged 19.77 la March, compared to 17.4* the previous month, when there were 507 transits. Canal traffic has been climb- ing for several months. Starting! in September the number of large commercial ships has ex- ceeded 500 every month, as traf- fic figure which had been reach- ed in Only two other month since the end of the war, in March 1949 and July 1951. One of the factors believed to have contributed to the record figures was the high proportion of tankers in the period of heavy Canal traffic. Canal observers believe some of this traffic may have been diverted from former oil trade routes as a result of disturbances In Iran. Other notable increases, which are believed to have swelled the total traffic, figures, were in the number of coal Shipments from the United States to Japan and banana shipments through the Canal from Ecuador to the Unit- ed States. Some of this increase in Pan- ama Canal traffic Is also believ- ed to have been caused by diver- sion of traffic from the Suez Ca- nal because of disturbances in the Near East. Morgans Garden O pen Today] For St. Lukes Spring Fair Biting Denunciation 0< Truman Unleashed By James F. Byrnes Yeu might as well lav* your enemies remember you made fnerw - of trying to claim credit or the Byrnes "get tough" attitude towards Russia, by making re- peated "untrue" and Inaccurate" statements. | The former Secretary of State,; now Governor of South Caro-, lina, unleashed a biting denun- ciation of the President In an article In the current Colliers Magazine and in an accompany- ing news release. He charged Mr. Truman with appeasing and "babying" Rus- sia alter Byrnes had adopted a "patient but firm" policy, and then trying to falsify the record to make the President look good, in the history books. Byrnes also asserted that a rceently published statement by Truman that the United States was "almost forced" to agree to the Russian occupation of Poland and Eastern Germany will come as "welcome news' to the Kremlin. Byrnes, who has split sharply with Truman In recent years, uncorked his strongest blast yet as a result of the publication of a presidential memorandum in his new book "Mr. President" by William Hlllman. In the memo, dated Jan. f, 1*44 and addressed to Byrne, the Chief Exeeutlce criticized Byrnes lor hi alleged failure to keep him Informed during the P45 Moscow conference. Morgan's Garden, at Galllard Highway near Fort Clayton'was scheduled to open at one o'clock this afternoon for 8t. Luke's Spring Festival, when will con- tinue the 9 o'clock tonight. Featured o this years fair include: Pony rides, courtesy Pacific Side saddle Club, from 1 p. m. to 4:30 p. m. Farm-zoo-pet show, direction Ajson Sears, Jr. "Marplosa" will be milked between 2 p. m. and 4 p. m. Bohio, attendant* in native costume Mrs. Leonard Martin in charge, will sell "bateas", silver Jewelry, and "mollas." Brak-the-dlshea, a new at- traction, under Edw. Lucas, Su- perintendent of the Cathedral Church School, will release In- hibitions by providing a smash- ing sock, at crockrey on display. Cake Sale, bandied by the Morning Guild, Mrs. E. G. Ab- bott and Mrs. R. M. Hawe, chair- men, will stock cakes, cookies, pies, and candles. White elephant sale, directed bv Mrs. J. F. Phillips and Mrs. Fred Gerhardt. A Bazaar, Mrs. W. Q. Roire and Mrs. W. D. Wright, chairman, wi sell mis- cellaneous articles and hand- work. Over 100 hand-made aprons will be on sale. Parcel poet sale, directed by Capt. and Mrs. James S. Guy, will afford an opportunity to purchase an unopened package from the United 8tates. Religious bookstore, Mrs. J. B. Fields in charge for the Altar Guild, has acquired a new and varied stock. "Feed-the goose," a repeat attraction, will have twice as many surprises available for the children this year. Mr. B. W. McMevln will handle this for the Evening Guild. Silhouettes may be secured from a team directed by Mrs. V. F. Shaw. Movies, with a continuous Srogram of cartoons and short eatures afternoon and even- ing, have been arranged through the courtesy of W. B. Mallory, chief, motion picture branch, Panama Canal Company. Fortune teller, Miss Dorothy Moody, foretell chairman, Will fortell your future. Information booth and man- agement office win be ttrally located urider /the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Aberna- thy. A prize will be given the person who most accurately estimates the number of beans in a Jar. Barbecue pit wUl sell food under the supervision of trie Tower Club, Douglas Johnson chairman. Soft drinks and Ice cream will be sold by the young People's Fellowship, Miss Ann West pres- ident. Balloons may be purchased from the children of the Bella Vista Children's Home. 3 Vietnam Columns Open Drive On Reds HANOI, April It (UP)Three mobile Franco-Vietnam columns drove against units only 12 miles from Hanoi today as strong re- bel attacks were reported in several other regions of north- ern Indochina. "Operation Poto'" Jumped off at dawn 12 miles east of Hanoi with an artillery barrage against three villages bordering the "Canal of Rapids." Firing of V. 8 -made 105 mm- guns could be heard In Hanoi. French headquarters said the operation was continuing "sa- tisfactorily." High 12:17 pm RAUOA TIDES Sajsday, April M A popcorn machin will supervised by Miss Annie- Allnut. Evening entertainment will provided at 7:30. The trail through the G dens will be marked and tl flowers and shrubbery mark! with descriptive tags. Camera fans will have an portunlty for colorful shots. The festival committee, C4 V. F. Shaw chairman, requ that proper care of the grouml be observed so that unnecessa] Uttering of the gardens may avoided, as well as destructlcj of plants and picking of flo en. Owners are requested to ketj dogs out of the grounds. O ONLY KLM OFFERS ALL THIS Four Wight weekly from the Coribboan a Choke of Compilation or DC-* SUopr tarvice en Southern rout* available Sfpewr an route arranged at no extra coat b Unmatched KLM tarvice On fil routes ... excellent meals, delicioui drinks and famous KLM service. Lew 4:18 am I:IT pro. |
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| MILLISECOND | CLASS.METHOD | MESSAGE |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Application State validated or built |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Navigation Object created from URI query string |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.display_item | Retrieving item or group information |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | Retrieving hierarchy information |
| 0 | sobekcm_assistant.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | Found item aggregation on local cache |
| 0 | item_aggregation_builder.get_item_aggregation | Found 'all' item aggregation in cache |
| 0 | system.web.ui.page.page_load (ufdc.page_load) | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_style_references | Adding style references to HTML |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
| 691 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |