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BRANIFF
T MKW8FAFIB mW ORLEANS round n\r FIRST LASS TOURIST *' "Let A* people know the truth and the country Is $afe" Abraham Lincoln. SeagromsYO. b CAMBIAN WHISKY PANAMA. R. P., MONDAY, APRIL II, 1952 FIVE CENT Enlistment Extension To Hit 125,000 JACKSON, April 21 (UP1 More than 600 Inmates rioted at Southern Michigan prison here today, seizing control of the dis- ciplinary barracks and main din- ing hall while holding four guards as hostages. The conTlcts threatened to tor- ture the guards unless food waa Canal's Next Governor THiBM Tur FIRST PICTURE received on the Isthmus o Qen^'stXseybold, who will most likely become the next nomffl iTifofbefflre the Senate Armed frcrvlCes Commit-- tee and must be voted on by the 8enate. fc The general, who has had no previous_ service with th^Pa- nama Canal, served here with the Army in 1922 to 1925 when he waa attached to the 11th Engineers at Corozal.___________ World's 1st Jet Airline Service Has Preview Run Prison Riot Hits Michigan; Rahway Mutiny Still On Meanwhile at Rahway, New Jersey, a prlaon official said the morale of 231 mutinous convicts holding eight hostages in one dormitory of the New Jersey prisin farm there was breaking. A minority of the mutineers .was reportedly In favor of sur- sent to them past the cordon of rendering, state police surrounding the cell p. Loyell Bixby, Deputy 8tate block. i Commissioner of Institutions, The rioters, wno have access to sajd that the first evidence of water but not food, were quiet a ap]lt am0ng the mutineers through most or last night ex-;came yesterday when one of the cept for short outburts of Jeer- convicts shouted to him: S.2 m,orH. Bixby had thought thirst Pf.tg^?" might drive th* men into sur- wlll pay if we do not get It.' I ..iU-.u,- Three prisoners, inspired byr tag., But this morning they demand- ed food and said: "The guards prison rldfs in New Jersey, over- powered their hostages while the He said they had drunk the last available water Saturday. Si%aseVlng fnlnged lt but how believed the mutineers R'hSSSAT r ,nMrrll ^U^fTSarave^So-mis- Tl rioters said their action/ ed the prisoner* tooAand' waa/a jrotest against Inmates' when the* apt*** _ reeeive no _. However, the mutineers have been warned it will be a serious matter if any harm comes to the guards held as hostages. PRISONERS PROTESTNew Jersey state troopers guard the gates and patrol trie wall at the state prison farm in Rah- way as 232 rioting lmmates hole up" on the second floor of a dormitory. A bedsheet slgp displayed at a window reads: "We want a new parole system." The rebellious con- victs were holding nine prison guards as hostages. Draftees Not Affected By Newest Order WASHINGTON, April 21 (UP) A Pentagon source today estimated that 125,000 servicemen would be af- fected by the latest extension of enlistments for mem- bers of the Armed Forces. The extension of nine months, which was announced Friday, is expected to affect 60,000 in the Army, 25,000 in the Air Force, 3,000 in the Marine Corps, and 35,000 in the Navy. ^ The order does not affect present maximum author- ized active duty tours of reservists and National Guards- men, nor doesn't it have any bearing on the programs for separating these personnel from the services. Neither does it affect draftees. been beaten a y guards and other prisoners._____________ LONDON, April 21 (UP) A BOAC Comet Rave a preview ol the world's first jet airline service today when it carried 38 passengers 915 ralles from here to Rome in two hours 17 minutes. The London-Rome leg will be the flfft tage of the 6624-mile London Johannesburg Comet service starting May S. The journey is scheduled for 18 hours 40 minutes. Also todav a British flying boat took off from Southamp- ton on the first stage of what may become the first air service between Britain and the Falk- land Islands, one of the most southerly portions of the British Empire. , The Falkland Islands' only touch with the outside world at present Is a monthly sea service to Montevideo. 106 Today; She Saw Doctor Only Once BORDEAUX, France, April 21 'UP). Marie Dubernet cele- brated her 108th birthday today at nearby Sainte Marie de Gosse. The mother of nine children, she said she visited a physician only once in her life when she broke a leg in 1935. Runaway Fire Levels Barn. 36 Horses Die CHICAGO, April 21 (UP) Stablehands counted 36 dead horses today in the ruins of a stable that was leveled by a spectacular runaway fire in the stockyard area. Nine horses, some of them badly burned, were rescued when flames flashed through a large stable known as Jim Mc- Philllps Barn yesterday. Firemen said the blaze was evidently started by children playing with matches in the rear of the stable. Las Cumbres Council Lists Meeting Tonight The Las Cumbres Civic Council is .to meet in the Las Cumbres Town Hall tonight. The meeting Is expected te devote much of the meeting to civil defense matters. Rainbow City Name Choice Of CZ Residents Local Dynamite Fisherman Loses Hands In Explosion A 30-year-old Panamanian lost both hands Saturday after- noon when a stick of dynamite he was preparing for a fish- ing trip exploded while he waa installing a fuse. The youth was identified as Oreste Ventre an employe of a food products factory on Via Esoafta. The stick of dynamite ex- oloded Just as Ventre was tel- ling a co-worker: "this must be handled very carefully, be- cause an expert told me it very dangerous..." One of Ventre's hands was amputated up to the elbow. The other up to the wrist. ^__^__ Paratroops To Jump Into 'Hot' Point After Nevada A-Bomb Blast Tomorrow NEWS KNOB, Yucca Flat, Nev., April 21 torces in an assault on "enemy" positions only a "short-time" af. ter the most violent atomic bomb ever exploded in the United States blasts the "enemy" strong- point tomorrow. It will be the first time that fiaratroops have dropped from he skies Into a blast area. And for both the paratroopers and the ground forces it will be the closest approach any mili- tary force has ever made to the radlologlcally "hot" point at "ground sero" under the explo- sion point. The time gap between tomor- row's nuclear air-burst and the parachute drop was not an- nounced, but it was learned un- officially that the paratroopers will "hit the silk" approximately one hour after the A-teomb is US Civil Defense Officials To Get Practical A-Lesson WAfCHFVL WAITINGA state trooper and a prison officer stand guard atop the wall surrounding the Prison Farm. Officials said the outbreak was staged in sympathy with a rebellion at the state prison in Trenton, where con- victs seek "reforms." Airborne Division, will make the,not be at the "ground zero"polnt,i A total of more than 1,500 parachute Jump. where the heaviest radiation Is troops will take part in tne Exactly how close to "ground berfcved to collect. maneuver against a theoretical rero" the paratroopers will land! Exactly when they wili^Jump "enemy" stronghold, was not given but an Army depends on wind and radiologlc- Infantrymen storm out of their spokesman emphasized It wouldlal safety factors, Storke said. foxholes on one side of the stronghold at "ground zero" and paratroops on the other side ef- fect a princera movement. 8torke said the foot soldiers I will be In foxholes 4ft to 5 feet deep watching the bomb explode! labove them and then move into| assault "through or near ground] zero." Sailor Swaps Loyalty to Brooklyn For Texan's Pledge to Back Dodgers in Brooklyn when Texas had Puree) ^nnfrhpr been there all the time. ,,nattn That was what Tucker had after a reasonably solemn ship-been waiting for. By MURRAY M. MOLER The "enemy" strongpoint la supposed to be a key position, the dropped from a superfort an'ri ex- the reaction of the visiting hub of a network of communlca- LAS VEOAS, Nev., April 21 to the people about the destruc-tions and roads that has beenj (UP) At least three-score civil tlve nature of atomic weapons," i repeatedly bombed and shelled; defense officials will get a first- the spokesman said. |wlth no weakening of enemy res- hand closeup during "Operation Among those in the civil de- istance until at last the A-bomb Big Shot" of what an atomic fense group will be at least four I is brought Into play. omb could do to their cities governors Charles Russell oil Both the Infantrymen and the across the nation. Nevada, J. Bracken Lee of Utah,, paratroops will move Into the Federal authorities hope that Johnston Murray of Oklahoma target area and see the weapons ploded 2,000 to 3,000 feet above this Nevada nuclear proving ground. The full-dress atomic show, dabbed "Operation Big Shot" by newsmen, will be witnessed by nearly 160 correspondents and cameramen and more than state and local defense direc- tors will be to go home and get to work bolstering preparations that now are admittedly "woe- fully inadequate." "Not having a complete de- and John S. Battle of Virginia, that had Been placed beneath the Reports that a replica city has'A-blsst as a test of their survival been constructed on Yucca Flat powers. A machine gunner, for in- stai ce, will see his gun before and after the A-bomb is unleashed. to be demolished by the nuclear explosion were stoutly denied by the FCDA representative. "We would have liked to have thus gaining an intimate know- fense setup." one Federal civil built sample structures out there ledge of what the nuclear weap- defense administration spokes- to show what would happen tolon can and cant do. hundred civil defense leaders and man said today, "is like putting various tvpes of construction." he| C-46's will carry the paratroops other invited guests who today screens on every window in a explained, "but-Congress would over the target area for the lump made a "dry run" preview of the!home except one. The flies get in not allow us the money.** |exfrclse and the troopers will be anyway." The civil defense appropriation loaded aboard at Yucca dry lake He explained that the defense for fiscal 1952 was cut by Con-in view of the official observers officials will be guests of the gress from a request for 535 000,- and newsmen. Atomic Energy Commission at 000 to a grant o$f $52,000,000. The explosion, expected to be the big blast. | The spokesman said that even|hle^er above the ground than "What they see first hand, for f Korean peace talks should eon- j n' I ther atomic burst in history, area, that 120 troops of Company .the first time, should make their ^ lude successfully, there still, will come between 9 a.m. and F of the 504th Regiment, 82nd better qualified to carry the word,would be a'need for civil defensa 10 a.m. weather permitting. previously off-limits test site. Brig. Gen. Harry P. Storke, executive director of the opera- tion, announced to the visitors assembled on News Knob, a 75- foot hill looking into the blast NAPLES. Italy.AAprll 21 (UP) A Brooklvn-bornjEllor today was a "naturalized" Wizen of Texas board ceremony,-uthe pledged he'd always be ffflthful to the Dodgers. The sailor is Radioman Third Class Thomas M. Graham, 21, off Brooklyn, who struck a hard bar-, gain. He made the Texan who proselytized him pledge allegi-! anee also to the Brooklyn base- ball team. In a ceremony aboard the USS! Adirondack, flagship of Adm Robert B. Carney, Graham re- ceived an official document in, which Texas Governor Allan^ Shivers proclaimed him an hon- orary citizen of the Lone Star slate. Carney waa converted by a sea-; eotng missionary named Coy L. Tucker of Odessa. Tex., Yeoman Third Class, who promised in re- turn to give up allegiance to the Cleveland Indians to swell Tex- as' population by one. Tucker looked on proudly as the ship's skipper, Capt. Roland F. Pryce, solemnly handed over the documents forwarded by Mrs. Ray Braeriy. secretary of the Chamber of Commerce back in Odessa. The proselyting began when. Tucker told Graham Texas was a fine, big place, full of space and spectacular girls. Tucker was' 'o persuasive that Graham -aft- er two or throe months of this, lamented the fact he was born Rainbow City la probably the new name for what aje pre- sently the adjacent communi- ties of Sliver City and Camp Coiner. Residents of these two areas voted Friday and Saturday for a| name for the new town, and; Rainbow City is understood to have been a 3-1 favorite. New houses there are painted in various colote. Other starters in the name contest were Silver City. Folks City, Manzanillo, Granada and Mindi. Even before the ballot resi- dents had dubbed their locality j Rainbow City. The vote did no| more than confirm this practice It was the first time residents in a Canal Zone community had had a direct say in the naming of their town. Practically all the hal'ot. oa-| pers, which were distributed Friday and Saturday by Boy Scouts, were illled in and re- turned. Chairman of the vote count- ing committee. Judge E. I. P. Tatelman, Cristobal magistrate. Is expected to turn In his formal voting returns to Governor Francis K. Newcomer later to- day. Newcomer has already said he will abide by any overwhelm- ing popular choice. The 3-1-selection of Rainbow City is expected to be over- whelming enough. It was the third extension of I enlistment terms in three years. Similar orders were Issued lr ! 1950 and 1051. By law. no enlisted person may ! be held in uniform through mora than one extension, so this order will have no Influence upon those affected by either of the iWi* two. *rne new regulation does, how- ever, as reported in Saturday'* The Panama American, cover a- llke enlisted personnel, whether on active or inactive duty, whoa original tours would have ended in the specified period. The Defense Department soft- ened the blow by saying it moved "with reluctance" and by olede;- Ine that not all men affected! would be held for the full nina months, it promised to keen no man on duty longer than "abso- lutely necessary." The department pointed out It could have added a year to th terms, but settled for nine) months instead because th* Armed Forces have reached a le- velling-off stage and will re- quire an overall increase of onlf bout 10.000 men In the coming fiscal year. Enlistment terms for all brpnehes of the service arethree veers, except the Navy which has a four-year term. "It still isn'tjtoo late," he told Oraham, and he shot off a letter to Mrs. Braerly. She came back with the governor's proclama- tion and a certificate from Odes- sa's Mayor C. W. NfcCollumn. be- stowing on Graham the rights and privileges of a native son. "Odessa is the finest place in the world," Tucker said last night. "Brooklyn is next best. I used to be a Cleveland Indians fan, but after talking it over with Tom, I'm all out for the Dodg- ers. They are a great club." He said he didn't have any more converts In mind yet for the Naples branch of the Lone Star State Club. Indian Gold Miners Given Up For Dead BANGALORE. India. April 21 (UP). Twenty txm miners who were burled under tons of rock Saturday were presumed dead today. The managing director of the company running the mine in the Kolar gold field in Mysore, where the accident occurred, said there was no hope of rescuing anyone. In Panama Makes Haul-Of 15 Cents A purse-snatcher who got away with a white pocketbook late Fri- day night near the National Sta- dium in Panam must have been sorely disappointed when he ex- amined his "loot." For the only thing of value in the purse, that belonged to Polly Michaelis of Balboa, was 15 cents. Mrs. Michaelis, the wife of Bal- boa Court Clerk John Michaelis, reported to day that all her iden- tification cards, licenses, and commissary privilege authority, that are non-transferrable were in the pocketbook when it was snatched out of her hand by a young boy. A reward is being offered to anyone who returns the papers to the Balboa Magistrate's Court with no questions asked. Ike Abed With Severe Cold PARtS, April 21 (UP) A se- vere cold and sore throat kept Oen. Elsenhower from his N&rth Atlantic Supreme Headquarter* today for the first working (lay since he took over the post on* year ago. He was taken ill Saturday. A headquarters spokesman said the General was improving, but would remain at his Mame La Croquette home for the "next day or two." Eisenhower's projected fare- well trip this week to Norway, Denmark and the Netherlands has been postponed indefinitely Flushed RALEIGH. North ^gl April 21 surprised an oatdofl party here figured ttsfl ably saved the coro*m work. For abandoned at they found <5 cents) sleek of cards that five Balboa Heights Office Reports On Saturday Quake Officials of the Panam Canal Meteorological Bureau at Balboa Heights todsv reported that Sat- urday's earthquake took place at 5 a.m. Their seismograph reported th* earthquake as having happened about 500 miles from Panama, and lasted for a period of 30 ml- asMates- [he earthquake, which hit th* partment of Santander del rte in Colombia, violently k up four towns In that re- st. JUcords at Balboa Heights wer* got available over the weekend JKcau.se the seismograph record* m photographic paper which Sust be processed before It casi read. I'M* TW> 1W* PANAMA AMERICAN f iT "PENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER - - yiti i HE PANAMA AMERICAN T.....-TiiNiM MONDAY, APIIL 11, INt NKin NO -uPLltMID or TNI PANAMA AMBWICAN **IM. INC. FOUNOIO v NILSON MUMIVIIL IN it HAOMOOIO AMIAS. CBITOtt 7 H II.HT P O IS4. Manama, n. P. TLfHONI PANAMA NO. -0740 COLON 0*MC*i 12 '7t CBNTPAL AvCNUr BITWCCN llTH ANO iSlM SmilT FMiit-i DiMuiMxin JOSHUA POWERS. INC. ll MABIOON AVI. NIW YORK. IT N. V. LOCAL %t HAIL * MONTH IN IIVNCI__________________ '.70 S.SO tC l< MON'Nt. IN ADVANCI-----,. ..-- S-SO IS.OO - r* 'M ABVANCI____. __ ! SO 14 00 Labor News And Comment Walter Winchell In New York By Victor Blstel Improvising y.j.n About Town Th mob take car of ita brood. Each day the underworld reaches up into the routine life of the big cfty and "makes a fix" In soul- curdling drama that would make a Jim Carney climax and those TV suspense seem like a ladles club meeting at the local tomato and watercress sandwich shoppe. Like the afternoon, not too long ego, when Albert (Murder, Inc., Executioner) Anastasia and his late buddy, Willie Moretti. sum- moned the leader of an APL In- ternational union to a mansion in New Jersey. The Executioner sat silenthe Franchot Tone is rapidly recovering from Faytonitis with Havana heiress i.tn;i Guldero The Robert Taylor-Linda Dar- nell ignition Is the talk of H'wood.. Mrs. Gary Cooper and se- rjf'lite Novell van Oerbig amicably cancelled the Whole Thing.. Brenda Frasler's "Shipwreck" is being consoled by Pancho Villa's if~hr..'i;i My Honard-Gloria Graham romance has them stsrine. Krlher Williams' husband (Ben Gage) delivered a ter- only looked daggers this day. rMr r-.eit at it ill 'tilden in a H'wood spot..Mira Stephens, vvillie talkedhe always talked. recently of "Two on the Aisle." quietly married Dr. A. Vernet That's what killed him a few In Mor da a i>n weeks ago. Faye Kmerson sails Wed. Husband weeks later. He couldn't keep his Skitch joins her in Rome May 7. C. Chaplin Is readying a pub- mouth shut. nV annoiinie-i-ntallarklng Stalin and Communism..The gevt gut that afternoon he turned will press this week for an immediate retrial of Wan. Remiag- (0 Hymen Powell, leader of the ten. APL International Jewelry Work- ers' Union, and screamed: "Who the hell you are. any- way? You don't fire nobody out | The Washington Wire: The Federal Grand Jury is reported tf> have returned another top secret Indictment against F. Cos- tlo..The United Nations will be the scene for a bombshell any|tnat union Brooklyn. Behave moment. Concerning Red espionase in the U.S..If the McOar-|vourieif r}in Comm. succeeds In 'getting an ex-Red to come over hereJ verv Wphistleated chap la to "Finger" certain suspectseditors can expect several suicides. ;pl, He n,d bein tround the Iha rii.i.i.1/. no t , 'i it nnninil >hnnt mnnav rrtt* the 'si 'aun Trio ^. .a 5he Democrats are worried about money for the '52 race. The epub.- have plenty. Senator Duff tells pals If tht GOP dis- owns Elsenhower thei "any Democrat can win"..A female em- ploye at the White House will be microscoped by a Cong. Comm. Thev hear she allegedly was engaged in Red activities during ^'orld War II. Mrs. Winthrop Rockefeller, estranged from the millionaire, asphalt jungles long enough to know he might not go out verti- cally into the Jersey sunshine He had a problem. His Brook- lyn local, as was later proved, had been taken over by some of "the boys." He waa trying to shekel them out, quietly with no trou- ble. Someone had made a "contact.' this a shadowbut be isn't her love-life. He is Chas Dorfman, k-N.Y. detective. He dwells en ber Indiana farm..They keep Hnkinjr Kir't Douglas with coast beauts but head-man still is Tmi"y\iZLii' hiTTi^T. hli- sjetty Threatt, Manhattan model.. Billy Roae and Joyce Mathews ffi^"2ET .lfn ^hsfef Sent, are dating steadily again Ruth Cosgrove Is the one in M. Berle's.svnlc,te chle5,!2 2Eiii , SM but Joyce is still in his insomnia Mrs. Richard Reynolds w^.,"t7r i!iiPi.. nlVv-,, in larlanne O'Brien), suing the clgaret tycoon for divorce, is be-i ltbor, '""uY'i.^ ,!nJ" tag pursued via the Florida l.d. phones) by the prop, of Giro's.. '3nMlC?niJl,*l**6.? w AX. Alexander, 45, creator of radios "Good Will Court," was something. Heroics were the last felled by a heart attack Just as he banked his first million!, thing he thought of_but he Never took a acallen. He Is at Lenox Hill hosp.It's another olurted out: hey (their th! for the BUI (CBS) Leonards. Most Gruesome .... .... , ^ht Of The Week: All the husbands who brought their. "Loek^Mr. Moretti, 1 respect es for Johi.ny Ray's Copa premiere. MERRY- GO- Kim lv MIW PIAIION I District Attorney Hogan's investigation of the New York Tax Depi. has resulted in four deaths, one attempted suicide, and ene nervous breakdown. Several persons became desperately ill before and after, questioning. .The boxer who beat up actor Robert Preston (in a Broadway bar recently) was knocked out in the ring last week. Rocky Graiiano's manager (Jack Healy) will be final decreed on May I..Many a one was missed the other nirbt at "Point of No Return" when -a stage hand drop- ped dead just as the curtain went up. The show went on with the body in the wings.The Ann Sheridan-Steve Hannagan ru- shers (of a secret merger) are around again but intimates doubt It because he i:, so attentive. The Shelley Hulls (actress Con- stance Ford) ar being civilised. ."The Continental" and his teevy sponsor hi-ve parted The fee for the lawyers in the Ford set- tlement suit was half--million. ; Ethel Mercan has decided on one of those quickie Mex- lean-cellings after "Call Me Madam" ends its month's run at Washington \ leading TV personality is scared that his wife spay be named in l.enore Lemmon's battle with her groom..The apart Incipient Widowhood By BOB RUARK your influence and want no trouble. The Brooklyn boys have get to go. I can't do oth- erwise. I never obligated my* self to yea before anywhere. What happens happens. The Brooklyn outfit has to be clean-" New YorkThere is an except :?lly intelll- I ain't naming any names, but some wives S'..n i.m nm. n- th. w nt 1My n,me oi Ruth Mlllett who ulta ,the *re hickier than other wives, because some wivet Z. tlLi hT Mitr. rotor? jd for 0r JPer' "d J wUh to- *'*te her aren't allowed to handle the finances and walk were filedbut Moretti s reto: t l0r the i,dy-oi-the-year award. the dogs and generally rule the roost, was lost a week later in tne She has recently propounded a powerful piece Some wives have husbands who gamble away crackling ot guns wnicn cut. mm 0l prost that will make her no enemies among their substance, and svay out all night rioting d0P- .,. .[the males of this female-badgered nation. around with sick friends, and who play the hora- Ppwell didnt quite clean out Migs Millett broods considerably about the es and drink that old whisky to excess, his well-connected Brooklyn lo- number of widows she sees around and about, cal until one of its organizers got -,nc; suggests strongly that a smart woman will himself mixed up In a charge of;start right In to take care of her old man be- tamperlng with a wltnesa In a fore It is too late and she la trying on that black murder casethe knife slaying of! crepe bonnet for keeps. garment union organizer Will This exceptionally brilliant lady says that Lurye in a Manhattan phone wives should worry about their husband health, who criticize their hats and quarrel with their booth. They should take special care with his meal'., elatiyes and who bury their noses in newspapers cemRR Some wives have husbands who complain bit- terly, about no buttons on shirts and anemic condition of the coffee and the ateepnea* of the irocery bill and the tilt of the tab at the dress- maker's. There are some wives who have rude husbands Sess of the Kenyon i, Kekhardt agency on the 19th A prom- n-n -vorv from a rival for his wife's- affections. The April Harper's Basaar has a photo on page 14 that has the Gay Set In stitches. Truman Capote and Cecil Beaton Eee In their best kittenish manner..The gal on the cover Is iry Jane Russell, the wife of an exec at the Grey Ad Agency Don Sylvio, the batoneer (once wed to Margaret O'Brien's mother i, la courting Oklahoma socialite Olga Stewart. Her daugh- ter Joyce is the Riviera ahow-gel. .Morton Baum of Newbold Morris late Washington staff and Heddy Florea will blend.. Tho L Devises i Met star Regina Resnik) expect their first Image this Summer. .Add local glamour gals: Gillian Alexander, dghtr oi Lord Kemsley, the British newspaper tycoon..Pier Angel tne^star. did the Embers with John Erlcson of "Stalag 17" Her Without the sympathy of the community, without public in- dignation, thrr frequently is no peliee protection and the mobs reach up and rule. Who cops wer- summon*^ twice to the Central Park.South apart- Powell certainly i open to They ahoulel opoferate with him to eave today* end just grunt whep spoken to. ""J. ' ew-fa. last week. Ber gentleman friend was beat- searing crlMcuim. *e should have to come, so tMe^oor bhm won't beat his brain* I have even heard of wives who have htia- S., Jfc ** i ? * T.. i"ln/ 5*7* P"lig troubles in-|moved more swiftly. out in the trade marts. handa who beat them up occasionally, but am 2S- -lJr il " "'*" ihlb mT*** he has a 1| But so should the 14 big towns' "She should limit her material wants," says Prone to doubt thia, having never seen any man 55L 5?.2.wZ ""The weeperwhen he worked there at'in which anti-crime commissions Mlas Mlllett, "instead of pushing him to make with courage enough to take a sock at a woman. -# El'srii ilM i m*r e"T,) ^f** ,#bn D' find that such "incidents' 'hap- more and more down payments on more ana There are some wives who complain all the time about not getting the new drapes or tht iew car or the trip to Europe. They do not realise that a husband is such i delicate mechanism, that the slightest extra .tress on his nervous system can send him into ick bay, perchance to emerge on a alab with i lily In his clutch. There are some wives who nag and complain nd ask questions about things which are none i their business, such as why did you pay so iuch attention to that little blonde hussy at .ne party? There are some wives who never have anything to wear, despite a ahopplng trip that last from ./lay to December. These are very stupid wives, because they are husbands' graves with their in so doing, insuring their Ion, lone widowa. mes, but unit fortn crises with the cook ana the hairdresser, 7or~papaYheallh7comfortand happlnesaTlcan- ptPiraU" Thti ^~le*wA*JT m "'!.' "" One document aays to a former no the presence of a kind, industrious, not be held responsible for the consequences. ;Hed There's? new ,n u"r.7 hUnfifP ^Ud!* l,to.com; ""^ial: "You are charged with thoughtful male around the lodge to provide I already fee/a little faint, due to \iiss Mil- - tejevv ol aid5 tauutJ? ^SL u 'n1ok ,0"> signing checks for uneuthoriied Pretties for deseryina wives who refrain from lett's article, and may not make It untilpyday, "TI^r*ll0A"_d.*"e,tr.P"Pto- ie.alx Inches wide. penSiturea. You are (therefore).' warming their cold feet on father'a spinal co- at which time the Insurance premium cornea more things. "She can shoulder most homemaking problems herself, Instead of unloading them on him each night. She can encourage him to find a relax- ing hobby." And so on. This is to serve a little notice around here that unless this kind and brilliant lady's advlci will step forward and aay they which spinned onto the connubial checkboo! would have screamed at Anas- in order to insure readingis followed to th. tasia and Moretti to mind their letter, I am Just going to pine away and ma> own business* There are some eventually die to prove a point. labor leaders who fight back and there would be more if | Widowhood is not a desirable state, especially they had crusading Distriet At- for the older girls who are neither so narrow terneye behing them. in the beam nor so nimble Of foot as they uscu I have before me a sheaf of re- to be. The menfolk are getting tougher to slip ujR"- ^H,tM '' nueunced it but he's given the go- B?henatXlrmi SSJl'^^P^L '""1 _W "?.-& '? ''ckbe.rd. "on^ doume". UB, writers, secretarios, et al, suspected of being b get S:.-.,eef) for that ghosted blast against today's hi a recent Life. Joe MMagrio waa offered S59,eM for 19 blasting back. He refused. Said the only time he ever -as when he once looked over his shoulder and gave re a glare. .The literary aet's eyebrows are beyond reach of the cosy arrangement between a book editor, his I a female writer. .Gev't contempt eaees against ether 1 5"fler T*"** w,u * held up pending final de- Costello. who expects a reversal 30th Century's Fox's Johnson is in town talking to Greta Garbo about in "My Cousin Rachel." It will be filmed in England rrill. the hit songwriter, is pining for Marcia Henderson with "Meeni is Bl..'' In *8unl.y'a TW *Sma eUStaW!," dr?.m'. "fU61 P*rt ' * heloe of "best" l. In it he says "Patat Tour Wagon" is the best musical eojgj)dLy of the year' But he voted for "Pal Joey"! """""a' IHE MAIL BOX eL She Ue a., i, ,n eeee tereei lot rsedeea ee The Pi a or. eeseived afefstuNr eed ees beedled hi See esetribeto a leMet dee't be isspoHeat M P deeaa't eesjjMeT Ueite. .r. ,uiMi... n ik. .^f ,,<. 'eeejtry u keep the letteea IwaBad to eee pete leaejrh. ^MeatHv or letttr wnttea m halo n itricirrl asfiaaM. wbehV r: SUBSIDIZED SHIPPERS M.i*.! ES"* }?****!* 'oday amass huge profiU. thank to un- reapticaiiy cheap Canal transfer tolls, while PanCanei em is today go into debt to maintain their standard of^vhT," Pap- increases were not sufficient to keep up with the ever- mo2SS.n.e?st of nousln. ftd. commodities and services mS&^SSSiST1 u not r,,1,ct,d ln lolu ch,red to ffi ^l tne ahortcut through the Panama Canal, a shipping Ms to count on doubled operating expenses compared to ^ther words, if the Canal used" to save a ahip owner $10,000 may the Canal Is saving that same ship owner $20.000. IwstBuently. a ralM ln tolu u mtn(Utory u be ln Une with incapased costs all over the world. y not a 10 per eent surcharge on tolls to help pay for the neestsities and facUitlea of those who maintain, operate and im- e service on the Canal, instead of taking the aurcharge from the employes? Isnployea muat finance and subsidise two-thirds of the -11 expenses of the corporation, necessary to keep the Pa- nana* Canal Company on a break-even basts. nee when does an employe pay his employer for his Job' Smploye group representatives, Civic Councils, shirtsleeve eondtrees. let a lnveatigate and act to halt this accelaratlng ex- piOofoWtan of those who have some here to work for the Panama nal Company. - A. Wake expen&.vM- -- .--------------. . ineligible to hold any office in lurnn this International union, any lo- cal. Joint board or state council or be a delegate to any AFL affi- liate." u Other documents charge offl- lals with misappropriating funds and, "We hereby judge you guilty and penalize you by expulsion. This goee on and on. There are others. Joe Cur- ran and Hedley Stone, CIO Sailors Union leaders, have warned against new infiltration of professional gamblers who saga en freighters and big ships, carrying crooked dice and marked cards on the Eu- ropean aad South American runs. Harry Ansllnger. US. Narcotics chief, never hesitate to talk well of the Seafarers International Union, which cooperates closely with hla department ln the ap- prehension of dope smugglers among crews and along the wa- terfront. In New York, a young labor leader. George Barasch, head of the AFL Allied Trades Council, has hit the airwaves and TV lanes ln an effort to arouse the house- wives bv telling them bluntly how labor racketeering corrodes their bread-winners and flattens their pocketbooka These are but a few of the many who fight back. There would be more. But they get no support. Never did they need It more. It's easy to be a herobut not In the parlors of ae many An- astasias. due. k*. fl^r-4 it o enon progressive or eoev aevotive when he wears lost year't , dome, drives hi yoer't cor and lives on next yeoe's income* Diplomatic Crisis By Joseph and Stewart Alsop WASHINGTON'-Without attracting much, ae- time. And the thought is that the Kremlin in rioua attention, the foreign policies of the United the last analysis, understand."no^lanrSiVex- Scates of Britain and France, have now enter- cept the language of superior power' ed a truly agonizing crUls It Is argued that the current peace offensive hJnh/e?^!rtWi.hLS0,;Callei,pe'CfAfen^Ve,,!?W (a*?ul phr,LS" lely mtendedto embarrass being carried on by the master* of the Kremlin, and impede the Weatern rearmament effort. And The gravity of the situation may be measured the conclusion Is drawn that the onlyThing to by the remark of one of the wisest American do. for the time being, Is to Ignore the peace top officials -that "The crlaes now confronting offensive and go forward with rearmament us are probably Just as serious as the crises pre- lr the first place, however thisis probably rasaltm" W*de and tht Korean not a practical courae to adopt. 'the most urgent choice, of course, la that There la no use saying. "Wed rather have concerning Germany. German divisions than gamble on German free In two critical notes which this electlon-ab- election and German unity." if the Soviet of- sorbed country has hardly noticed, the Kremlin fer of free elections ana unity is likely to mean hss offered the unification of last and West we cannot get the German divisions. Germany, on the ostensible basis-of free else- In the second place a minority of the Amer- tions, with the sole proviso that the new, uni- lean policy makers, which nonetheless Includes fled Germany shall not enter any such combi- several of the most Judicious men in the gov- nation as the Atlantic Pact. ernment, holds that this Soviet peace offensive Acceptance ^of the Kremlin offer means sa- may mean a great deal more than Its predecea- crificing the West German divisions which are sors. Intended to be the capstones o Oeneral oi the The test, obviouslv. Is Korea, if the Corn- Army Dwight D. Eisennower's NATO edifice. munlsts come through with the concessessions But if America, Britain and France reject the needed to end the Korean fighting (which many Soviet proposal, the West Germans, enraged at people now predict may happen before May 1) being disappointed in their hope of national uni- this group of policy makers asserts that the So- ty, are unhappily very likely to refuse the NATO viet peace offensive must be taken really serioua- divlolons anyway. ly. Moreover, this Is only one part of a much They argue that the Kremlin may already be target pattern. genuinely alarmed by the new unity and strength The recent Moscow trade meeting dangled of the West, and may even be prepared to talk tempting offers of much-needed business before turkey about a serious world aettlement. the assembled British and European industrial- ists. But if these offers are accepted, the exist- They do not suggest slowing down the NATO, m*\b*I,wl.11.be brolten on tretegic shipments effort or abandoning German rearmament at to the Soviet empire. this time. Under any clrcumatances the rebuild- Almost simultaneously, Stalin a reply to the ing of the strength of the West must continue; recent o^tlonnalre by a group of American and the bold decision to include Germany ln editors has Indicated approval of a meeting of NATO waa precisely the final push needed to the Soviet, American, British and French heads bring the Soviets to a ..ew frame of mind. To o- government, to try to bring the cold war to change course now, they therefore say, arould be *" ?/*. -.i. to throw away our whole bargaining power. Stalin himself has made the same point, la At the same time, theee men add, negotiating even stronger language, in his farewell Interview with the Soviets will risk nothing tfwe avoid with the retiring Indian Ambassador to Moscov.. making Improper compromises. That, of course And the Communist negotiators in Korea is not a great danger any longer have hinted a new willingness to compromise, For the present, pending a clearer position ln thus vastly raisins State Department and Pen- Korea, It is utterly uncertain what choices will tagon hopes for the long-awaited settlement. finally be made. Bat it must be added that the ln the face of these developments, a strong auguries are not too good for the bold and crea- body of opinion in the American government tive choices which the changing world sttua- stil' opposes negotiating with the Soviet at this tton to probably going to demand! Drew Peorson $ayt: Attempted oi$a$$ination Helped de- cide Truman retirement; Bolich collected from for- mer Harding gang member; MeKellor and Connolly cloth over military aid. WASHINGTON-An unreported factor behind President Truman's decision to retire was the anguish and strain the Truman family still feels over the attempted assassination of the President on Nov. 1, 1950, when secret service agent Leslie Coffelt was killed. Truman sadly recalled the incident during a chat with De- mocratic Congressman Morgan Moulder of Missouri Just before he announced that he would not run again. Moulder had asked the $64 question but hardly expected the revealing reply that followed. "I-have been a candidate for public office since 1M3," Tru- man began. "In every election aince that time I have been actively en- gaged in the campaign. I think that Bess and myself are now entitled to a rest. "We have about ten remaining good years of our lives left and we're entitled to enjoy them without any more of the strew and strain of this Job. "Why, a fellow can't even go out ln the garden without a secret service escort," the President added, hall Joking Then his face became grimly aeiioua aa he recalled "that shooting scrape that upset my wife so much and has caused us all so much worry and anguish." "Did you ever stop to think how you would feel if another man laid down hla life for you? Well, that's the way I feel about Leslie Coffelt. "It's men like him or some other good man who is really in danger in situations like thatnot the President, but the men entrusted with his protection." The talk veered again to the back-breaking routine, the heavy administrative chores and responsibilities of the Presi- dency. "You seem to have stood up well under the terrific strain of the last seven years, Mr. President," Moulder compuntaajad him. "You appear to be ln good shape." "The ton it has taken on me doesn't show on the ouj replied Truman. "It's inside." NOTE: Oscar Collazo, the Puerto Rlcan assassin whdj Coffelt in the attempt on Truman life, was originally aer to die by electrocution on Oct. M, 19S1. However, the ex waa postponed pending appeal to higher courts and Collaso is still in the District of Columbia Jail, awaiting a final decision by the U.S. Supreme Court. REPIRCUISIONS FROM HARDING Reminiscent of the famed Harding regime was a develop- ment unearthed at the King committee's probe ot deputy tax commissioner Dan Bolich, showing that Bolich had received over $90,000 from Carl Routzahn, department-atore mogul of Mansfield, Ohio, and a leaser member of the Harding gang. Significantly, Routzahn was made collector on internal revenue for Northern Ohio, and almost Immediately he appoint- ed 32-year old Dan Bolich of Wadsworth, Ohio, as assistant col- lector. Whereupon, Bolich shot up the promotion ladder like a me- teor. %. v PI He Jumped from grade to grade until he landed one of the top tax JobsJft ttefbaimtfyhead of the intelligence tax unit in New Yortirtvesfere'lf Sad tic power to investigate or turn his back on some of the, nation's biggest tax cases. He got this prize at the age of only 24. Interesting thing is not only Bolich's miraculous promotions but the fact that he has since been getting paid by the man who helped promote him, to the tune of $400 a month or a grand, fetal of ajire ** H0O0. ^ SENATE riRE-EATEBB The two most blunt-spoken, fire-breathing members of the Senate are Texas' Tom Connelly and Tennessee'a Kenneth Me- Kellar. When either goes on a Senate rampage, other senators duck for cover. But when the two old curmudgeons turned their caustic tongues on each other recently, then the fur really flew. The quarre1 started over who should have the biggest say-so on military aid. "The Committee on Appropriations is not going to give over its duties to any other committee," rasped McKellar, the Appro- priations boss. "We are going to appropriate the money.'' "If senators have made up their minds ln advance they are going to appropriate it, why should the Senator bother having the bill referred to his committee?" shot back Connelly, the Foreign Relations chairman. "We do not want to have appropriated so much as appar- ently it is sought to appropriate," retorted the aged Tenneas- ean. "I have heard that many billions of dollarsmany hundreds of millions o' dollarsare to be appropriated." "I think it is unfortunate," snorted Connelly, "that the chairman of the committee on appropriations does not know the difference between millions and billions." "There la not so much difference ln these latter days whan it comes to giving money to foreign countries," shouted McKel- lar. his face reddening with rage. "If it is the senator's view that it does not make much dif- ference whether it is billions or hundreds of millions, I am afraid we ought not to refer the bill to his committee," snapped the Texan. McKellar was left sputtering as Conn ally out roa red him. It was another five minutes minutes before the angry Me- Kellar was able to get back into the delate. "The senator seems to think that I approve all the appro- priations which he is undertaking to make," bristled the Ten- nessee senator. "We do not make appropriations in the Foreign Relations committee," Connelly blared back "We make authorisations. "After the authorisations are made, we must go before the committee on appropriations on our hands and knees and sa/t 'Oh, Mr. Chairman, we have authorized this. WIU you make rat appropriation?' " The Texan dramatized his point by crouching in a half- crawl, half bow toward McKellar. "The chairman of the committee on appropriations sits en his" Connelly paused for dramatic effect, " dala, on the rostrum, or on his throne, and aays, 'No, you cannot have it. It la true that the senate has authorised this appropriation, but it has not authorized me to do anything with It that I do not want to do.' " McKellar was fit to be tied. "The senator from Texas need not come before the commit- tee on appropriations on his hands and knees," he sputtered. "Whenever our committee makes an authorization It is sent to the com, lttee on appropriations. "We do not send a guard with it. We do not send a mil- itary Hquadi on to present It to his highness," roared Connelly. He amplified this with such vigorous gestures that New Hampshires GOP Sen. Charles Tobey broke ln sweetly: "Was that a left hook the senator was delivering, or a one-two punch?" WAGES VS. PRICES Regardless of whether Congress continues wartime controls and th* Wag* Stabilization Board, the interdependence of prices and wagea is going to continue just the same. This is the real issue ln the steel dispute, in the Western Union strike, i nd in the railway labor arguments. Regardless of government controls, the latter two cannot greatly raise rates without pricing themselves out of the mar- ket. If Western Union, for instance, hikes its rates, it loses out to the long-distance telephone on one hand and to airmail en the other. The airne. already get a $60,000,000 subsidy for the gov- ernment, which Western Union doeen't get. It also Iuj the competition of the Army-Navy telegraph system, and finally has to go before the Federal Communications Commission to get a price increase to compensate for its wage increase. Likewise, the railroads can't boost their freight and passen- Kr rates to- high without losing out to buses and trucks on one nd and airplanes on the other, the tatter enjoying a lush government subsidy. Finally, the railroads can't increase their rates without aa OK. by the Interstate Commerce Commissionexactly the sa problem facing both Western Union and the steel industry. Henee the need for package wage negotiations. ^ m MONDAY. APRL tl, 195t ------------ ^~ l^vuific <2>{ otietif ** fft C~Jt KU TFir PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENnEVT !>*!* t N"v?' SCH GLANCES ipa>kr PACE TRUER Bv CtHrn-ii! AMBASSADOR AND MRS. WILEY TO ENTERTAIN The AmbMMdor f the United States to Pnm end Mr. John Cooper Vlcy have Utued invitations lor adlnner Tuesday evening In honor of the Comm%ndr-ta:",e*j'*he Caribbean Command, Maj.-tien. Horace L. McBride and Mr. MTheddinner will he held In the Embaa* Retldence on La Cresta. Farewell Reception At Venezuelan Imbawy The First Secretary of the ve- netuelsn Embaisy and Mr- * a parents meeting at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow at the Jewish Welfare Board Center. Mrs R. T. Wise, neighbor- s^SHct safe sv'J. -a and Mrs. Enrique Castro Gomez. ^^^ parlorg tonight dt Farewell Champanada At French Legation The Charge d'affairesof France In Panama and mm. Marcel Olllvler were hosts re- cently at a champanada given at the egcllon on La Cresta 1 Lodge No. 1414 wUl hold their semi-monthly meeting Wednes- day evening at 7:30. Bridge Tournament Tonight The regular weekly bridge tournament will be played this evening at 7 In the card room of the Hotel Tlvoll. All Intsrested players are Invit- ed- to attend and play. AH are asked to be prompt. Tower Club Meets Tonight The Tower Club of the Cathe- dral of St. Luke In Ancon will meet this evening at 6:S0 for dinner In Bi-hop Morris Hall. Chaplain W. W. Winter. USM, will be the guest speaker. , Gsrden Group 7A.i members are reo.ue.ted to Ta Mate Field Trip attend. Spring Training In Girl Scooting Starts Today All new Pacific Side Girl 8cout Scouting. The meeting will be held this evento* In the Pedro Miguel Girl 3cout House at 7 p.m. Kot,w,r [leaders trooo committee mem- frewll to the French ba^nker 'aaers nborhood .mmit- Monsleur Rn^h^," ^'tM membersSre invited to at- dameIWrnuier.whopmntoiea\e opening session o the Isthmus In the near future, wnu^ training- for adults In Olrl Venezuelan Ambassador Host For Champanada Mr. Enrique Castro Gomez, ine Ambassador of Venezuela to Pa- nama, wa the host on Saturday at a champanada given at the Enbassy. ..... i At this time MaJ. J. M Pin- ton and Cent. Victor M. Mjtaof the NaUonal Police were decor- ated on behalf of the Venezuelan government. Cantata We* Is Heat For Dinner Captain Oscar Wev, command- ing Steer of the "Courier en- te-tatoed a group o*.01"^*'? from Panama and the Can': r.meT1 r;ii.h Zone on Saturday evening a- 5_"*/," Benefit Card Party Friday The BPlboa Woman's Club will soonsor a card party Friday at the American Legion Club at Ft. Amador for the benefit of chari- ty and the Maltl?nd Twin Fund Tickets are $1.00 and mav be purchPfed at the door or from any club members. Refresh- ments will be served and door prizes awarded. The public Is cordially invited to attend. Members of the garden group of the Balboa Woman's Cluu win meet at 7:45 a.m. Wed::day tit Morgan's Gardens to nrke a field trio to Venado Berch to gather driftwood and shells. Orchid Chapter To Hold Annual Party Orchid Chapter No. 1. Order or the Ep stern Star, will sponsor its annual card party and dance next Saturday, May 3, from 8 to 12 p.m. at the Hotel Tlvoll. players will have their choice of games: bridge, pinochle rhum or canasta, and a pnze will be given for each table of cards. Mutic for dancing will be fur- nished by the 71st Army Band. Tickets are $1.00 per person and may be purchased from Mrs. Charles' J. SerreU. telephone Balboa 4387. or at the door. The public la cordially invited to attend. Steelworkers' Union Shop Claim in President's Hands board nil shto. I.apadula-Wolslffer Engagement Announced Mr. and Mrs. Vicente V. Lapa- dula have announced the en- gagement of their daughter. Yo- lpnda Lapadula. to Corp. Roland E. Wolslffer, son of Mr. and Mrs 8ylvetre B. Wolslffer of Toledo, Ohio. To Meet Th rday The Din'-' Camera Clb will nresent Ber!M Man'rln-- of Mex- "Don't tall me you had to buy all that stuff to wear off that spring feeling! Couldn't you go out and pick dandelions?" RUTH MILLEH Says Wives are forever being told to build up ueir husjaudt.' egos lco City, a member of the CUiJj; w mA^e tnem feel Important. _.>___._*!_ J if*rlnn mlin rill i. n _:^_i_* 1J. (hira Oft Fotografa de Mexico, who will -how color slides of Mexico and Central America at a m-eting Thursday evening at 7:30 1" the club her^qutrters at 5030 Hains Street, Diablo Heights. Elks To Hold Meeting Wednesday ____ Elks of the Balwoa BPO Elks Picnic Luncheon Honors Traternlty Memberi ----------- The members of Delta Psij gSRiSiSl %J?sn Red French Pahrters plcnH lunoheon aturda,y at Ce- rro Pea given by DJvand Mrs.- Lawrence>Johi*on-end Mr., ano Mrs. SubertT TarbyfllL Special guests were Mr. and Mrs. Oeo. O. Lee. Those attending Included Peg- By McCubbln, SOnia Mendleta, Annie Niccolson, Carmen Recue- ro. Jimmy Seat*. Ellen Cltoe Donald Angermuller. Edward Plummer, All McKeown. Wendell Poreadbury and Edward Casta- no. volted against - dictated by the Kremlin, It was out In the open today. The disclosure came when the French Communist Party an- nounced plans to bring the rebels into line. The Party called a full-blown meeting of its artist flock for Hospital Club Sponsors Dinner Dance WrHaVverevenln5, aTW"Inner Wedn'e'sVy" f0Iiowing"comPralms hat's all right. But there an- other side to the story. Some men turn into stuffed 3hirU under that kind of treat ment. And the wife who sets signs that her husband Is getting a little on the stuf iy side because he Is so Impressed, with his own importance, Is down-right obi - gated to separate him from his ,jlg-"i" attUudes. Some-lmes It can be done by good-natured kidding. Sometimes it can be done by Just falling to be imprecsed when a man is too Impre .sed with himself. Sometimes it helps if a wife is clever about reminding her hus- band that she has some pretty good Ideas herself. Look at the men you know that 'n Revolt Against Kremlin-Ruled Art phjh Anrll 21 (OP) Com- Look at the men you know m*\ mu^ FVffi llIl^J you "W^**** volted against the form of art shirts and see It they aont an Officers Club. Master of ceremonies was Dr. James B. Hampton. The commit- tee to charp'e of the affair In- cluded Dr. Earl C. Lowry, Dr. C. V. Lasley. Dr. I. R. Berger and Mrs. H. J. Siczukowski. Cor! tall Buffet Honors Visitor Cdr. pnd Mrs. Joseoh A. Ma- loney of the Naval Reservation were hosts Saturday evening at a cocktail buffet given at their ouarters to honor of Rear Adm. John M. Win. U8N. Visitors Here From Jamaica Mr. and Mrs. Frank Melhwdo with thel* children. Rpb and O.K.. of Kingston, Jamaica, are visiting on the Isthmus with Mr. Melhado's parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. Melhado of Bella Vista. The visitors were the house guest over the weekend of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Toledano of Colon. porters were openly critical of the "photographic" styles they were required to adopt. Aragn, former surrealist ex- ponent who Is now leader of the Communist-backed "Soc 1 a 11 s t realism movement," first reveal- ed the Hit when he wrote in the Communist weekly "Les Lettres Francalses" that a party of Com. munlst painters he talked with In a Latin Quarter cafe were have wives who continually ca- ter to their egos; wives who do nothing at all to help them get a clearer view of themselves. EGO-BUILDING HAS ITS LIMITS Sure they do. So this business of building up a man's ego has certain limits. SOLAR COOKERYLifting the lid to sec what's cooking, sci- entist demonstrates the solar domestic cooker invented on India's National Physics Laboratory at New Delhi. The sun's rsys, reflerted irom the four-foot polished metal bowl and concentrated on the pressure cooker, have power said to be equivalent to 300 watte In agreement against me." Aragn said the cafe acqu tances derided him for publlsh- Mrs. D*mbrowsky Hostess Te Bridge Club Mrs. 3. A> Dombrowsky of Pe- dro Miguel was hostess to mem- bers of her bridge club Thursday evening at her home. Those attending Included Mrs. Robert Turner, Mrs. Donald Hutchison. Mrs. H. H. Corn, Mrs J. H. Million, Mrs. J. H. Jones. Mrs. B. B. Powell and Mr. R. C. Melssner. Parents Of Girl Scout To Meet The parents of Girl Scouts who use the Balboa Orrl Scout Little House are Invited to attend ing a print of the Soviet award winner, "Meeting of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences," and des- cribing It as a "good picture. "When I said I published the painting because I thought It was good there was a chorus of exclamations and Ironical re- marks." Aragn wrote. "They said It would not be accepted by any French salon." Panama City Orks To Play For Dance At Club In Colon Two Panama City orchestras have been engaged for a barn dance which will be presented at the Club Tropical, Colon, on May 3 by the Debonair Social Club. The orchestras Armando Boza's and Victor Boa' aie scheduled to stage a "band bat- tle," with continuous mualc from 9 p.m. until 8 a.m. A surprise basket for a lady and a $15 cash prize a man are being offered as door prizes. If his ego needs building up. then go to It. That's your job. But If It is too Inflated already, it la time for you to stop mlrrow- lng his exaggerated Idea of hi own Importance. No man can stay a stuffed Ehlrt for long if he has a wife who Isnt afraid to kid him a llt- all tie1 now and theit. You cftn, to a nice way, inti- mate that maybe his opinions are not the only ones in the world worth considering. SCHOLL'S SERVICES Panama No. 68 Justo Arosemena Ave. Foet Treataient, Cera, CaDouse, Ingrown Tee Nail, Arch Supports REDUCING Treatmenta. Massage, tenderizing Machine, Turkish Bath. Male and female, operator* For Information call: $-2217 Panama. * It *.m.; Z pjn. ______________ Are you travelling? offc- you a lovely aaeortment of LIGHT SUMMER S17/TS WASHINGTON, April 31 'UP) Sec.-etary of Commerce Char- les Sf.wyer said last night that the CIO United Steelworkers de- finitely will be granted a wage increase but that President Tru- man must make the final deci- sion on the union shop. Sawyer, nomlnrl head of the seized industry, said he has not yet decided how much the 650,- 000 steelworkers wUl get In the way of a wage hike. That decision, too, wl'l be made I In large measure by the Presi- dent, he said. Te Secretary denied on Nation, al Broadcasting Company' "Meet the Press" program that he had given th steel industry an "ul- t.'matum" to accept the Wage Stabilization Board's recommen- dations. He said he had tried "to get t'.ie two sides together" but had delivered "no ultimatum to any- body." Sawyer's statement followed a charge by Democratic Sen. Paul H. Douglas of Illinois that President Truman made "in- temperate and exaggerated" changes about steel profits. Bat the Senator also criticised the Industry for demanding a $12- I a-ton arle hike. Douglas, who has differed with | Mr. Truman to the past, said the Chief Executive did not take into account the serious Impact of in- creased Federal taxes when he claimed the Industry earns $19.5 a ton. He said steelworkers actually net about $7 a ton and would need an increase of about $4.80 a ton to meet union demands. Sawyer refused to say whether bo agreed with Mr. Truman' de-, cisin to seize the industry but he said he will "follow the Ins- tructions" of the President a long as he Is to the cabinet. He reminded reporters that In a 1949 speech to the 8teel Instl-' tute he declared that business- men "should be encouraged to run their own businesses." "Those are still my sentiments," he added. But, he said, "I would certainly not sit by and see cur economy disintegrate" If industry proved Itself Incapable of meeting de- fense need. . Asked if the seizure might mean the "end of normal labor relations,'" Sawyer said he saw no reason Why ft should. He said he hopes.lt "won't be too long" until the government can turn the mills back to their owners. Sawyer said that under nor- mal circumstances collective bar- gaining should be allowed with out government Interference. But he said In the preent case, "we were faced with a crisis" and | the President considered con- tinued steel production vital. Asked whether he thought the President had "usurped" powers not granted him by the Constitution in seizing the steel mils. Sawyer said "no." But, he added, both he and Mr. Tru- man weald like Congress to deal with the problem prompt- ly and give the President spe- cific authority In such cases. Sawyer said he was taking the word of CIO president Philip; Murray that the steelworkers would not strike against the gov- ernment even if they do not like the wage Increase to be granted. "The only and vital matter la that we continue to produce steel," he said. "That Is the Job that w given to me." 8enate Republican leader Styles Fridges of Nev Hampshire mean- while said he believes Mr. Tru- man had r|o legal right to sei'e the steel mills and cal'ed tl-e seizure the "gravest const'tntlon- -1 qvestlon since the War Be- tween the State." Bridges and Sen. William Ben- ton (D-Conn i debated the Issue i on the Nat'onal Broader itlng; Co.'s "American Forum of the Air" television show. Benton replied that the P-esl- i rfint had plentv of precedent for [his action. He said Mr. Truman1 acted to a "de?perpte crisis" toj '?ep the 'eel mills operating' sndmaintain defense production. The President's rlirht to i seise *be lnd-trv wl'l be chal- k lenged todv to the Senate where a vote is expected on ap- nriations bill amendment eny Mr. Truman funds to operate the steel ptente which he seized to head off a strike by the steelworkers. Sen. Homer Ferguson 'R-Mlch), J sponsor of one of the atneifid ments. predicted passage. .- He also said sufficient support \ 'i : \ "11; b!e ro override any Pre- > -.ld"*tlel veto.Ttls "vould requir J a two-third vote of both House , and Senate. Traffic Light In Air LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP) Rfifl and green traffic 11-ht are be- ing used up In the air by the OB,, Air Force. The llphts help plane keen proper p-sitlon during- night In flight refuellrn opona-, tlons. The lights, four rea one green, are connect* to m' flying room through which tbJF fuel is pumped to the receiver" airplane. 1 At LA MODA AMERICANA New DRESSES 1 , Cotton Is your tsste! 1 Enjoy that fresh feeling... Enjoy the prices. La Moda Americana 102 Central Avenue Panama ' .H. , SALE CERAMICS CRYSTAL LINENS TOYS BOOKS MONDAY APRIL 21 TO SAT. APRIL 26 TIVOU AVEMJE STORE (Only) Alirn-MAE/E No. 5 S9 St. Vista del Mar AVEkT PRECIOUS ERFVM- COTY Distributors: CIA. CYRNOS. S.A. Telephone t-1792 DISTRIBUTOKS: CIA. CYRNOS, S. A. 5T .... *. T^wr" The machine that works by itself . . embroiders meods stitches button holes sews in buttons and does many other things without changing a part. ^ AT VERY LOW PRICES ^ SEEING IS BELIEVING. It COSTS NOTHING TO SEE CASH CREDIT AAAA wv CLUB 'I " EUROPER FURNITURE STORE Central Ave. at 21st St. Phones 2-Ulf M833 pM.t rovn THE PANAMA ttfERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAIL1 NEWSPAPER MONDAY, APRIL ti. lili Cargo and FreightShips and Planes-Arrivals and Departures IJ HOLLYWOOD BY ERSKINE JOHNSON HOLLYWOOD (NEA) Guys and Dolls: Throw away your gir- dle, Mabel, and let the flesh fall wnra it may rm still goggle-eyed, but that s what Hollywood designers Billy Ttavilla told me to pass to the nation's women. 'The new fashion changes are going to occur around milady's middle. Travllla Is predicting that Singing Star Antwar to Pravioua Puzzla klslvlftlNlluM lyjMjMMl ^ACOBY ON IRIDOt By OSWALD JACOBY Written for NEA Service NORTH It *J32 Al "?J9I54 41094 f WEST D> IA8T *KQI0f7 *64 /J1065 V9433 ? None Q 3 AI7 KJ632 MUTI ? AS KQ7 ? AK 10782 *Q5 North-South vul. tWett North Bui Sooth 1* Piss 1N.T. Double '2* Pass Pass 3 4> Pas 4 4> Pass 5* - Pass Pass Pis the natural body look, even with a bit of avoirdupois spilling over, Is about to sweep in. "Half the women in this coun- try should throw away their gir- rles," aaid dapper Travilla, busy checking gowns that he made for Marilyn Monroe and Ginger Rog- ers in Fox's "Darling, I Am Grow- ing Younger." "Unless a woman has a really bad body, there's no excuse for all that elastic girdling and fea- ther boning. It elves a staid, stiff, unnatural look. It's time for wom-i en's bodies to look like women's1 bodies." As Travllla sees It: "Women don't have to be all pinched in and squeezed tight. A woman can be completely cover- ed, yet you get an idea of what's going on underneath." Opening lead* K Hollywoodites who choked on their caviar a couple of years ago when they heard about Jean Parker landing the role of hard- as-nalls Blllie Dawn In the road company of "Born Yesterday," can get ready to choke again. jean, who won critical nuzzahs for her Billle and freedom from the title of Hollywood's perennial ;! Ingenue, has bleached her. hair and now Is giving out with a Mae ^est, western-saloon type char- acter in Vaughn Monroe's Repub- lic western, "The Toughest Man in Tombstone." "I'm a buxom blondeand I'm hiring a ball," beamed Jean. It's back to movies for Jean. she said, after a long fling on on the stage in "Born Yesterday" and a tour of Australia as the wife in "Detective Story.'' "The theater is such a luxury," she said, "that I just can't afford it for a while." Diana Barrymore's blasts about Australia? HORIZONTAL 1,5 Singing star 9 She appears on the----- waves 12 On the sheltered side 13 Indian 14 Low lSHoitelries 16 Vipers 17 Terminal 18 Endured 20 Food fish (pi.) 22 Bitter vetch 23 Entire 24 Diadem 27 Small bird VERTICAL 1 Prison 2 Arm bone 3 Low haunts 4 Day past (poet.) 5 Conducts 8 Periods of time (ab.) 7 Tipple 8 Cuddle 9 So be it! lOHebride island 11 Wands 19 Age 21 Rubber trees 23 Scope M a i? 31 Scottish alder 24 Makes lace tree 32 Pedal digit 33 Painful 34 Children 36 War god | 37 UN official , 38 Flouted ! 40 Short jackets 42 And not 43 Goddess of infatuation 44 Lariat ! 47 Her singing is stopped at -----on her program 51 Boundary (comb, form 52 Wise men 55 Diminutive of David ?6 Lubricant 57 God of love 58 Goddess of discord 59 Manuscripts (ab.) " 60 Fruit 61 Communists edging 25 Press HBHnHsHrar_lE3MI3M[-l, hhi ir-mu anSissssisi HL3U, lulu? r.v-iuaa acLir dHMEurimigm cuy l JnfflraMEiRaBnaa snuBn ljl irjuaaa 41 Locomotive fuel vehicle 43 Get up 44 Chamber 45 Flower 46 Feels sick 48 Challenge 49 Roman poet 50 Disorder 53 Brazilian macaw 54 Obtained 26 Poker stake 27 Stout string 28 Horseback gsme 29 "Emerald Isle" 30 Scottish sheepfolds 32 Binder 35 Dispatched 39 Wandered 40 Greek letter TERBW THE SONG BIRD 4/OLONSi- TSvHPT! A Vtxn/VICTOWA TRISf *\4y/*> THAT YOU rVIU-'NOW \TO BKAPt.lT'i CTKTIPyAVIW W!*. ilttt-X * A&WIION Ot HIT. 'tv* uaaaov b*t m THay* car/Ma quit www I WANT TO, THI* rVOUUNY K4V* HAfnHmP... Berra* 6r out your notebook, majc*, rto o ti no MMmiANP VHELU.BS AND HIS f HUMOS No Soap BY MERRILL HLOMM Mere combs that wear/ ]Twisyl guy now,cookie.' strut | be a your. stuff we'll breeze see vou later. / a i The ou> hanky drop mu- do FOR THIS SIMPLE PEASANT/ "I was there at the same time." What are the rights and wrongs of this situation?" asks a CBJcago correspondent. "West oponed the king of spades, and T 8o5th won with the ace. South J.e TreP^dH1SI?'s *5 KSSl dnww two rounds of trumps with ^'L^,^"1 the **Ple were thj ace and king, dropping East's wu"omul' . quSen on the second round. ..That o]d ,,oob fejlow-s gone." Sovth then led his remaining stuart Erwin talked about hls pfde. and West won with the switch-over from the bumpkin qu#n with hay wisps in his hair that West now had to pick the he played in dozens of Hollywood right defense to beat the con-'movies to his understanding-fa- tract. He decided It was too dan- ther role in the TV film series, getous to lead clubs from his ace.; "Trouble With Father." so-* he returned the jack of1 As a small-screen star. Stu's hejrts. been able to change types, real- This was duck soup for South. |ize a long-time dream of work- of Jourse. He won with dummy sling with wlfey June Collycr and ac, pitched a club on the Jack'enjoy spells of home life in New of-spades, and willingly gave up York-'We moved there because one club trick we thought that's where TV T5a ^fursEt^s/ ssrasasr a r. self by stating that he had for- snowln of thelr vl{feo Bhow? gotten about onefool ..you bet stu sald . lng the ace of clubs? Is It tne!tilng between New York and Hol- correct play or is it Just the Iuc- iVWOod and working like beav- ky play?" 'ers." It is the correct play to lay--------------------------------------------- down the ace of clubs in this sit- uation. If South has any single- jack or queen. So. again, it will ton club. West can lose nothing cost West nothing to take the by taking his ace. If South has ace of clubs, although in this any doubleton club. West can a- case declarer will make his con- tain lose nothing by talcing the tract. ace. since South can always get| The lead of the ace of clubs a discard of one club on the jack loses only if South has three or of spades. more clubs to the king, but not Jf South has three or more. Including the queen or the Jack, clubs to the king-queen or the king-jack, he will surely finesse through East for the missing UNITED FRUIT COMPANY Great White Fleet Arrives New Orleans Service__________________Cristbal S.S. Quirigua .......................,.........April 27 S.S. Fiador Knot ..............................May 2 SS. (hiriqui ..................................May 4 Handllni Refrlf*ratl Chilled and Grnnl linn. Arrives New York Service_______________ Cristbal S.S. Veragua .................................April 26 S.S. (ape Avinof .....................,.......April 26 S.S. Sixaola ..................................April 26 S.S. Fra Berlanga.............................. April 29 S.S. Santo Cerro...............................May t Weekly gallina* la New York. Mobile Charleston, Los Anieles, San f rancheo and Seattle. Frequent freifht sailings from Cristobal to Weal Coaat Central American ports. Cristbal to New Orleans via Sails from Tela, Honduras________________ Cristbal S.S. Chiriqui .................................April 22 S.S. Quirieua .................................April 29 S.S. Chiriqui...................................May 6 ________________(Passenger Service Only)_______________ TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL 2121 PANAMA 2-2804 COLON 20 roots and her nrnnim Who? BY EHGAR MARTIN >\WO VlMttrVEMOt ,GO\A>WOR\v\ MV r*M.\.Y TO A E,\\.VV^ US\Nfc&S OtftV WK tHty nao ttOXVMttG TO OO WVTH A IONI*T. APRIL . W? THF MNAMA AMERICAN AN INTPPENDFVT OAtTY NEWSPAPER PAGE Uantic ^Joaetif m"w & 242, fa** 31*1 &* 472 loAPT. AND MRS, SCARBOROUGH COMPLIMENTED BEFORE DEPARTURE Cant, and Mrs. William J. Roberts of Fort Gullck enter- tertained at their quarters last nifht with a cocktail and dinner party in farewell to Captain and Mrs Earl Scar- boroafh, who will leave the Isthmus May 7. Capt. Sbar- borouah la belnj transferred for duty at Fort RUey, Kansas. Other (vests included Capt. and Mrs. A. A. Davidson and Capt. and Mrs. A. W. Baabey. Icrasy Ht Luncheon The Naval Officers' Wives Club ta entertained with a luncheon at her home Thursday to corn- Mrs. Percy A. Lawrance, No- ble Orand. will preside. Margarita Auxiliary Meeting Tomorrow Mrs. Henry Bell and Mrs. Roy W. Perkins will be hostesses 'or the meeting of the Auxiliary of the Margarita Union Church to- morrow evening at 7:SO. The meeting will be held at Mrs. Bell's home. Imet at the Officers Club at Coco pllmett Mrs. Anthony Fernn- Solo Friday noon for their |dez. who will sail May 2 to make ( I monthly luncheon meeting. The her home in the State Canasta ------ and Mrs. Fernandez and Mrs. Ernest C. Cotton won the prizes Mrs. Harold P. Bevlngton and ter Sunday. Mrs. James Fernandez were the other, guests. occasion was a "crazy hat lunch- eon," the definition of a crazy hat being anything that was not really a hat. There were many beautiful and unique models worn, and the members voted to determine the prizes. Mrs. E. O. McKay was awarded a gold compact for the prettiest hat. Hers was a halo-type, fash- ioned with tulle that held col- ored eggs. ... ... A half coconut shell filled with a bird nest and a Uve bird that llew around the room formed a beanie that was *"ded * He Is visiting his mother. Mrs. prize of a china vase for the Boydst0n and his brother, most clever hat, ThU was the > Boydston. who resides handiwork^ Mrs. I. M Rell Boydston will be Mrs. T. L. Applequist receiv fmllv until May 5, S |0l?Mkteh.Cthash "am* he Ste ftportto hVnew KtSaSrin^^tffi: Z nation in New_Jersey. wore a rubber sink triangular | Mrs. Shumate And Daughter Return Home I Mrs. C. C. Shumate and her infant daughter, Patricia Ann. games were played returned to their home in New ~ c siobal Friday. Patricia Ann was born on Eas- Corv- Boydston Visiting Mother and Brother Corp. John C. Boydston arriv- ed on the Isthmus by plane Tuesday from Wetzler, Germany, where he has been stationed for almost three years. Civilian Defense Subject for Gatun Meeting All members of the communi- ty are urged to attend a meet- ing which will be held by the Gatun Civic Council at the Ga- tun Clubhouse at 7 p.m. tomor- row. . This meeting has been called for the urgent purpose of ar- ranging civil defense. Mr. Ray- mond Ralph, president, will offi- ciate. Radio Programs McCarthy To Move This Week In Libel Suit Against Benton Your Community Stotion HOG-840 Wkar. 100.000 Plank Moat Presents RADIO PROGRAM .. ....... Today, Monday, April I P.M. 3:3Music for Monday 4:00Music Without Words 4:15David Rose 8how 4:30What's Your Favorite 6:00Linda's First Love Ca. Alfaro. S.A. 9:15Evening Salon 7:0-T?n.?ing Cr0'by 8h0W,the suit actually goes to trial -tin dpst IUE RIBBON!be,ore Judfe. But he added 7:80~oprTt REVIEWT tnat ne anticipates some move 7-45-SScPouKaftheEc*ssroads ** "* the8e "* 8 00News and Commentary, (VOA) 8:15-HaUs of Ivy (VOAi 8:45Commentator's Digest (VOA) WASHINGTON, April 21 (UP) In announcing his decision Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy main- i McCarthy said he wanted to tained today he Intends to move "call Benton's bluff" on the . swlltly this week to press his question of bringing the suit to $2,000.000 llbel-slander-conapl- trial at an early date. He challenged Benton to have Davis and Van Arkel Join with him in a petition to the court to have the suit moved forward on the calendar. racy suit against his arch foe, 8en. William Benton (D-Conn.). The Wisconsin Republican < tola a reporter that as soon as the legal "waiting period" ex- i pires next Thursday, he will subpena Benton to appear at a pre-trial examination. "Unless they agree to that," McCarthy said, "the ease will He said he has not yet decid-' come up in Its regular order ed on a definite day for the and it will be almost Impossible examination, which ta designed! to get it settled before the elec- to clear up some Issues before tions." The suit Is only one phase of the running feud between the two Senators which has reached a bitterness almost unprece- dented In recent history of the Senate. McCarthy filed hta suit last month. He charged that Benton! only last week, the Senate willfully and maliciously" sland- votecj unanimously to give a ered and libeled him laal August vote 0I confidence to the sub- testimony before a Senate committee which has been in- vestigating Benton's resolution strainer filled with egg shells etc.. and a veiling of water cress The award for the most edlb'e Cristobal Rebekah Lodge to Meet Tomorrow The monthly meeting of Crls- Joy Group to Meet Wednesday Members of the Joy Oroup of the Gatun Union Church will i meet at the church Wednesday A.M. 6:00Sign morning at 9. Mrs. Walter Watts 7:30-MornlnsSalon and Mrs. Frank D. Harris will 8:15-News (VOA) 9:00Our Mutual Friend (BBC) in , 9:30Symphony Hall 10:00-The World at Your Win- At that time Benton accused f0r the ouster of McCarthy dow (BBC McCarthy of practicing "fraud 11-00The Owl's Nest and deceit" and of committing Midnight-Sign Off perjury during his two-year- -------- campaign to prove the State Tomorrow, Tuesday, April tt Department Is infested with Communists and fellow-travel- On Alarm Clock The ward for the most edlb'e to^epXkTh LodVe wRl be held be hostesses for the meeting, hat went to Mrs. David Hender-, '"eM", ., 8 al tne Members are reminded , nKt^^ed0wUrSors C^barMasonicjemple. o'oeuvres on toothpicks around the edge and two tiny Jottte wine fixed in the center Mrs ,derson received a bottle of if as a prize. Iter a short business meeting rs Rov Nielsen, the president, Produced three new members. Mrs Leon Utter, Mrs. John F. IblpandMrs. J. F. 1Tones Hostesses for the affair weie Mrs. Robert D. Kunkle and Mrs. L B. Boston. .. Others present included Mrs bring food for the chlld_ project. Boy Scouts Save Farmhand Who Went Over Waterfall CASTILE, N.Y.. April 21 (UP)]Rochester NY and had been| -A strapping farmhand who was camping In the park,'lBi!al.^, swept over-a waterfall and trap- Twittys ***% pi Ight and a P Anderson Mrs. John P. JSgg & T^v he almost des- worked, Mrs. Lena Fuller of Cas- 2;15-Date for Dancing Barlow Mrs Wendell W. Bemis. M eTot his life when Boy'tUe. five miles away,.had notlfl- 2:3o_Sp.r.t of the YJkTnp 8:30 Crazy Quilt 8:45Hawaiian Harmonies 9:00News 9:15Sacred Heart Program 9:30Fads and Fashions 10:00News 10:05As I 8ee It 10:30Off the Record 11:00News 11:05Off The Record (Contdi 11:30Meet the Band 12:00News 12:05Luncheon Music 12:30Popular Music 1:00News 1:15Personality Parade 1:45Rhythm and Reason ers. Benton urged the subcommit- tee to investigate McCarthy and recommended that he be ex- pelled from the Senate. The group's Inquiry is still going on. airarl nf his Ufe when Boy i tile, nve mu away, uau u- 2 au-epim ui c >B- caou[secdame ^^T^^W'^fit^^^^ "2 ^"^^S MrsT-R'DanTy,Mrs. Paul Cur- ry, Mrs. W. Erb, Mrs R J}!: &- ^m^'Srw.^: nasiMa ^'f^rc^t KM Kine Mrs F A. Kraft, Mrs. G. weighs 200 pounds, was pulled by firemen from Castile hurried to, SSWHSt W&S3ESS SBsiwik Mrs. Ernest W. KV\ TwTTtv Other, state police then he asked Twltty.. William D. Ropayne, Mra Don- Twwy ""gmt fet" But hc reported the farmhand M E. Sabln Mrs. Ernest W. P**% }$ UJ nope was too bewildered to answer Scott. Mrs. W. E. hnpson, Mn.I ^3-J&^aSJffiw Browh- He secured a second rope L. N. Snead, Mrs M. E. ^* haldngfa55*and. 1 around Twltty, and both men McCarthy at that time coun- ter-attacked with a resolution calling upon the same subcom- . mittee to Investigate Benton's income tax returns, contribu- tions to his campaign and his behavior as Assistant Secretary Of State from 1945 until 1947. The subcommittee has not taken any action on McCarthy's resolution as yet, hut influential ruups inquiry m sun guing un.i- /- --'........._. Normally, Benton's testimony committee members have agreed would not be subject to a libel j that McCarthy should be given or slander suit. But he offered! the same opportunity as Ben-. to waive his senatorial lmmun- 1 ton had that is, a chance to itv and McCarthys suit follow- 1 detail his charges publicly, 'd. TODAY PANAMA CITY THEATRES Preterit CENTRAL Shown: 1:15, 3:4S, *:. S:S4 a a. MONTOOMKRY CLOT ELIZABETH TAYLOR, la "A PUCE IN THE SUN' with SHELLIY WINTERS M-6-M't , AN I AMRICA* IN PARIS ! ,: -' >Wi TO TNI *->! Or CCOMC GWWlWlM GENE KELLY ' -D.xlBOCK 0*0 LESLIE OR0H Benton promptly called for an early trial so that the case would be decided before the November elections, when both are candidates for re-election. He recently retslned John W. Hands Across Sea TIFFIN. O. (UP) An 11th- grade Austrian exchange student at Calvert High School here tied Davis, noted New York lawyer I for first place In the annual j and 1924 democratic nominee;American Legion essay contest.] for President, and Gerhard P. |She is Anita Sbaschnlg. Her co- Van Arkel, a well-known Wash- winner was a 10th grader, David ington attorney, to represent.! Drake. Each pupil received $10 in him in the case. McCarthy In- cash for writing "What Old Glo- tends to act as his own lawyer, ry Means to Me." LUX BELLA VISTA 1:1a, IS, :M, :U, t:H . A Nw Screen Scorcher from Warner bros. 1 Joan CRAwroao Dennis MORGAN Divld BRIAN, In "THIS WOMAN IS DANGEROUS" |- CECILIA THEATRE - [Amazing action as amazon beauties lead Johnny Into strange battles! "FURY OF THE CONGO" with Johnny Welsamuller Also' Pirate Queen vs. Racket King! i "CHINA CORSAIR" -JKs with Jon Hall Lisa rerraday Atlantic Jaly tth Committee To Sponsor Variety Show A variety show will be present v-----._ ed tomorrow night in the Mar-. H- sllppPd on stones in the gainst the cliff to keep from get- earlta Clubhouse and Wednes-1creei and was washed over a 20- ting our 'aces scratched. t .%_- ...rfUorliw nt _. .,, ,..1^_________.u*.*. TKo ftrct thinly tnp 3:00All Star concert Hall 3:15The Little Show 3:30Music for Tuesday 4:00Panumuslca Story Time 4:15Promenade concert 4:30What's Your Favorite 6:00-Llnda's First Love Cia. Alfaro, S.A. 6:15Evening Salon 7:00Ray's a Laugh (BBC) 7:15Interlude Musical 7:30PABST 8PORTS REVIEW! 7:45Jam Session 8:00News and Commentary] (VOA) 8:15The Jo Stafford Show (VOA k 8:30Time For Business 'V<> m 'anamn Its Mov/eiim TONIGHT! K^anal c/heaters BALBOA Air-fenitltlnne* :1S S:C Susan HAYWARD Rory CALHOUN "With A Song In My Heart' Tuesday "LAW A|fl> THE LADY" Creek in Letchworth state park about 70 miles east of Buffalo, i* N.Y., Saturday. We were hanging straight up \ 8:45Commentator's Digest and down a dead weight - and we Had to hold one hand a- fi-arita uiuououse ssuu ..... creen ana was wasnea over a ai- dav evening in the auditorium or foot waterfall Into a gorge whose Cristobal High School, both per- \ ,ide8 rose 200 feet, almost straight lormances beginning at 7 p.m. up. The proceeds of these perform- Unable to climb back up the anees will be used to provide slippery falls, Twltty started up funds for the Fourth of July ce- ,the face of the gorge, lebratlon on the Atlantic Side. He managed to climb 100 feet All residents of Gatun, Cristo- to a narrow ledge. Then a back bal and Margarita are urged to injury suffered in his fall, along .n.rt these ahows with exhaustion and the steepen- Tkket fo?aS a $.75 and1 tag grade prevented him {Tom i-MWran i*vv climbing farther. ,0UCi who wfll use their tal-1 Neither could he find footholds ETrn^k the sCw a success to climb down without falling enU ta make tlie show a success braced hlmself on the include: Bob Whitehouse of T. V.; back ,nst the cllff fame; Bob PaelonT ana Mrs_an| ^ on sma 5S? hlsrgvtairn. Supine trees jutting from the gorge Lust with harmonica tunes; H gta d ,n tnat pos|(lon an Coach Moser, Yolanda Diez and Saturday night and yesterday. Al Plnchot. accordion duets; T had Just about glven Up hope Margarita Square dancers. Cor- wnen g^ut 4 o'clock yesterday poral Velasquei and "mambo, aftemoon some> boy scouts saw and Warrant Officer Rodrigues me Twltty said and his 60th Army Band Mrs. Fernandex Guest at Luncheon Mrs. John Purvis of Margari- "I waved, and they waved back. They didn't realize I was in trouble and went away. But they returned about an hour later." The scouts, who had come from The first thing the relieved Twltty said was: "Gosh, I haven't had any breakfast." ,. , He was taken to a hospital at Warsaw, NY., where attendants said his condition was "fair." He was suffering bruiaes and shock. Navy To Accept Bids On Material Tomorrow At 10 Bids for the purchase of mat- v erial put on sale by the Navy will:d.sorder]y conduct, be accepted tomorrow at the U.S. Naval Station, Rodman at 10 a. m, according to an announce- ment by the Headquarters, 15th Naval District. The material consists of 402 tons o structural steel. 64 tons of cast steel, 607 pontoons, and, hauling chains. More informa-, tion concerning the bid sale can; be obtained by calling Navy 3888. the V-M tri-o-matic (VOA. 9:00Musical Americana (VOA) 9:30To Be Announced" 10:00HOTEL EL PANAMA 10:15Musical Interlude 10:30Variety Bandbox (BBC) 11:00The Owl's Nest 12:00-Sign Off Explanation of the Symbols BBCBritish Broadcasting Cor-' pora tion VOAVoice of America RDFRadlodiffusion Francaise Father Does Duty MOUN DCITY. 111. (UP) The Rev. J. H. Copeland showed no sign of recognition when he met; his 28-year-old son, Thomas, in; court. Copeland. a Justice of the peace, fined his son $32.20 for DIABLO HTS. IS a 7:15 COCOLI t-.U S:t Dick POWELL Peggy DEW "YOU NEVER CAN TELL" Tuesday MY OUTLAW BRQTHEsV TROPICAL THEATRE THE TANKS ARE COMING" STEVE COCHRAN -- PHILIP CAREY ENCANTO THEATRE " Frank Sinatra Shelley Winters, In "MEET DANNY WILSON" Dick Powell, in YOTJ NEVER CAN TELL1 TIVOLI THEATRE Maria Antonieta Pons, in LA NINA POPOFF" "EL AMOR NO ES CIEGO"________ "BIG TIMBER" and "TaWM! TsMH'BI.E" Tuesday ;Hsyn <-u Lovely GAT UN im CTa assist) John WAYNE Claire TREVOR "STAGECOACH MARGARITA :ll IM f Charles BOYER William DEMAREST "THE FIRST LEGION" Tuesday "VAaiETY SHOW" CK/STOBAL Alr-1-oadltli.ned 1:15 S:M Cary GRANT Betsy DRAKE 'ROOM FOR ONE MORE Tacada)' "TANKS AKE COMING" CAPITOLIO THEATRE James Mason, in "DESERT FOX" Cary Grant, in "PEOPLE WILL TALK" VICTORIA THEATRE William Holden. In "FORCE OF ARMS" James Cagney, In "COME FILL THE CUP" Dog Tired Dave! David was a busy fellow, shopping never left him mellow I Worn ont. weai/. tired and brava. Why not read onr Want Ads. Davet asar Dodds KIDNEY PILLS or Cat Sounds Alarm GREENWICH. Conn. (UP) An early-mordning alarm sent, 11 nollce converging on the Round , Hill Club. They caught the "bur-, Iglar." It was Minnow, a pet cat.j which stepped on a floor alarm; button hidden under a ruf. | ACKACMI MEADACHS MMIinM MITUSMC TIKinUM ,la*IMf atm \lAMiiarru H U I Pl( I II R I USE OUR EASY PAYMENT PLAN , _ WANT 1 ir......iiiiiiiiiiillllllllllllllllllllllll CLUB SI.50 Weekly 25 or 60 cycles you should have Hm V-M tri-o-matic 955! your home entertainment picture just isn't complete, without facilities for playing your favorite recorded music and the tri-o- matk 9)) fit the picture perfectly! Equipped with a six-foot plug in cord and four-foot phono-cord, the tri-o-matic 99) plays through the amplifying system of any T-V iei or radia Completely automatic for all record' aii sues, all speeds and shuts off automati- cally after Ian record has played! 7110 Bolivar RADIO CENTER BUY Opportunity knock every day in our want- ad section. Hard to Find items and amaz- ing bargains in every issue. New classified ads appear ...old ads disappearreason .. QUICK RESULTS! Turn and check the want-ads now I Every month . every week . every day THE PANAMA AMERICAN carries MORE WANT ADS than all other daily papers in Panama combined I OFFICIAL LIST OF HE NATIONAL LOTTERY OF BENEFICENCE Complete Prize-Winning Numbers in the Ordinary Drawing No. 1728, Sunday, April 20, 1952 The whole ticket has 44 pieces divided in two serles "A" a. "B" of 22 pieces each. First Prize Second Prize Third Prize % 44,000.0 $ 13,200.00 $ 6,600. Pttae. I m.st i:i2 a is2.se i as ist.es 1.12 at 1S74 1174 1274 IST4 1474 I 1ST4 132 as 1474 132.44 1274 IS2.W 1S74 2.244.44 I 1*74 I Mas. S rn.se 474 122.es I 1174 IS2.eS | 8ST4 lSS.se SST4 lS2.se ' S474 132.44 4474 lSS.se SST4 132.04 8774 132.se KS74 2.244 44 j 474 s 1J4 13244 132 44 132.44 132.44 132.44 132.44 132.B4 132 44 2.344 44 Approiimations Derived From Rrst Prize 2S4S I 444.44 3SS7 444 44 aval 444.N 3S74 444.44 3*71 3*72 444.4* j sen 444.44 [ 3*14 444*4 3*7S 3*74 4 44C.4 44*4* '31*1 Approiimations Derived From Second Prite 3341 33*2 % 31*44 11*44 11444 1354 224 44 '23** 3343 11444 | SMS 3344 114.44 | 334S 23*44 I 4US* 22444 S3S4 224 44 4334 224.44 I 7344 224.4* SSS 23.*4 S3** 114 4* 3S47 114.4* 3S4S 1144* ; 334* 114.4* 3341 114 44 3SS2 114.4* 33S3 - ||*4* 33*4 114.4*1 S34S II*** 3SM 114.4* 33S7 114.1 1141 114.1 U*< Approximations Derived From rhird fnze 132.44 1S47 132.4* 23*7 S 132.4* S*.**| 73*4 44.44 7341 44 73*t 44.44 7343 * 112 44 73*4 4 132.44 ss.se 734* 53*1 7SSS 7314 132.4* HS.44 4347 132.4* . 7311 7312 SS.4* ss.se i 132.44 7313 7314 star 731 7314- 1 iss.se **.* Prlae-wtnnlne numbers of vesterdav's Lotterv drawina were sold: first in Herrera^acond* third in Panama. The nine htudred whole ticket endinr in 4 and not Included In the above list win I The whole ticlcet has 44 pieces which comprise the twa series "i Signed by: FILIPF. ROMERO LOPEZ. Secretary 10 the OoverntsJ ANTONIO MOSCOeo B.. RepresenUve of tne Ministry of sViTsicccec. Simn VargasCdula No. 47-28758 WITNESSES: oiih-rtn PereaCduU No. 28-7507 a tpiFt JOSE GUILLBRMO BATALXA ^FAEL TERAN A. Notary Public. Panam Jpcretary Ad-hoe T\t SIX THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER ' MONDAY, APRIL 11, 195t' B You Sell cm...When You Tell em thru P.A. Classifieds! I e.ve yuup Ad with He of our Agento or our Offices i*i No. 57 "H" Street Panama No. 12,179 Central Ave. Colon lewis Service *4 Tivoli Ave.Phone 2-3181. and Morrison's Fourth of July Ave.Phone 2-8441 Saln de Belleza Americano #55 West 12th Street Carlton Drug Store 10.059 Melndei Ave.Phone 155 Coln Agencia Internacional de Publicaciones Propaganda, S.A. - -* "H" Street comer Es Phones 2-2214 and 2-2798 Lottery Plasa Phone 1-8199 H" Street comer Estudiante 8 Minimum for 12 words. 3c. each additional word. FOR SALE Household FOR SALE Automobile FOB.SALE:Larga dinlnoroom table, -" x 42*', quartermaster steel, $10.00, 5 porch screens. $15. Two qu"artermo:ter steel drapers. $5 aoch. Kenmore portable electric aewincj mochine, rotory w..h an ot- tochir.8r.tl, $80. Night stood, steel, $2. House 821 -B. Empire Street, Balboa. . FURNITURE FOR SALE:5 piece To sell or buy your next automobile ration 'hvlngroom; 2 twin bedf.l see: Agencies Cownw. Auto-Row gate leg table with 3 chairs.! No. 29. Tel. Panam 2-4721. Service Personnel and Civilian Government Employes Insist on Government Employes Finance Co. When you finance your new or used car. AGENCY DEHLINGER No. 43 Automobile Row Phone 3-4984 3-4985 ?ieta . 71-A, Curundu Heights. Phone Sj-5296. after S. FOR ^ALE Leaving country. Rotten liingroom set, ofo, 2 chairs, 2 end tcbles, coffe toble, one month o'd. Also rotten dining toble 6 chairs, 60 cycle Frigidoire ond ges ove. Must sacrifice. 49th Street rfr. 28. Phone 3-4909. FOR SALE: General Electrk Refri- gerators, washing machines, raco receivers, mixers, toaster, wofte Irons and clocks at HOGAR MODERNO , J04 Central Avenue 104 i CHEAP MUST LEAVE ISTHMUS, 9-, it FRIGICAIRE, 4 burner gas stove. First reasonable otfer. Tel 2-2; 2. fed-SALE: Complete set "Old Leeds Spring 'old- pottun Jl h.-. Call. 2-3414 5511-B. Dioblo. FCr"*' SALE,:6 piece bambeo set,! Venetion blinds, I bed, I dresser,| 2 wicker chairs. 356, Apt. 6, Co,-.- crete Cts Ancon. P.O. Kathleen Baxter, Box 643, Ancon, C. Z. FC2 SALE:Bendlx. automatic wc-h- ing mochine, 60 cycle, $12500. Tel. Albrook 86-5146. Open oil day on Soturdays. FOR SALE:1949 Ford Convertible with radio, 2 spores, 26,000 miles, duty paid. Price $1,250. Phone 3-0i30 days, 3-1373 nights. MISCELLANEOUS Do yen have drinking problem? Wrfte Alcoholics Anonymous. Box 2031 Aneen, C. Z. TRAVEL OPPORTUNITY: Enjoy your vacation In cool Costo Rico. Fly LACSA. PAA offlllote. onh/ $35 00 round trip. Inquire Pan- ama Dispatch, Tel. 2-1655. across from Ancon bus-stop. FOR SALE MfaeellaneoiiN FOR SALE:Piano Wurlltzer Spinet with bench 3 pedal. 8 months old, perfect condition. Phone Cristobal 1944. TROPIC TOPICS:Another shipment of Kin Pin ond bushings will arrive on Monday. Moybe your model are among them Tropical Motors. FOR SALE:New Ford, 6 clyd., 4 door, immediate delivery. C. Z. Price will take trade-in. Telephone 86-4239, Albrook. FOR SALE: Table sow, bondsow, lathe. Air compressor, 25 cycle motors, good condition. 604-A Delesseps. Colon Tel. 3-2412. For your car:Leatherette Celluloid- face vehicle registration card hold- ers COLON MOTORS. Inc. (Dodge- DeSoto). Panama Colon. FOR SALE:One native bred and one quarter horse which stands 15.1 hands. Both children's horses. Tel. Balboa 1835. Sunday and Monday. Mrs. W. B. Rogan. FOR SALE:1947 Ford Tudor, V-8, Super DeLuxe, undercooted, origin- al owner, phone Balboa 1789. FOR SALE:1949,_4 -door Sedan! Plymoulh, leather upholstery, w/w, tires. 25 cycle, Westinghouse Re- frigerator, Tel. 2-2984. FOR SALE: DUPONT Paint and varnishes "Covers more oreo" "Stay on longer" at HOGAR MODERNO 104 Central Avenue 104 FOR SALEFine 4 months old ducks. Mustcovy and Pekn for breeding. Tel. Panama 3-0771. FCR, SALE:C'osley Shelvador Re- frigerator, 25. cycle. Five years, $90.00. 1521-A Gaviln. 8olboa. FOR. SALE:25 cycle fan, refrige- rator. 60 cycle refrigerator, clock. 3fi" x 60" mahogany desk. Ca- mera and equipment. 6 Von: lien bunds 26" wide. My price or best offer. 2-3602. 0851 Bolboo Road, ' downstair*. ' FOR SALE:1942 Plymouth Sedan, good condition. Price $400. See it at Motores Nacionales. Ask for Robertson. FOR SALE:Two Boxers puppies, seven week sold. Phone Bolboo 3791. FOR SAL:1950 Chevrolet DeLuxe Srylcline Seden, radie, ploitic teat coven, good tires, looks end runt like new, '1.350 $450 down. $49.50 per month. Home 205-C, Pedro Miguel. FOR SALE Motorcycle FO* SALERoyal Enfield motorcycle 500 c.c, like new. ,$550.00 cash. Tel. 2-2847. Rodelag, S. A. FOR SALE: Lightweight Indian motorcycle, good condit.cn, $400. 8052-H. 3rd Street, Morgorito. Tel. 3-2487. Sundoy. ofter 3:00. HelD Wonted FOR SALE:1950 Mercury Conver- tible. 1 5.000 miles, rodio and over- drive, excellent condition. Will sa- crifice. Coll office 82-3137, Qtrs. 82-3180. after 6 p.m. FOR SALE:1948 Ford. 4-door 6. Excellent condition, $850.00. Tel. 3171, Cristobal. WANTED MrrplJjnf*.iej M*li|. wanted for house in El Can- grejo. References essentiol. Coll 3-4021.______ WANTED:Catholic wom-n g-n;ral hfsework for couple. To live In. f'ng references. Apply 50th St.. 53 house. I I 1940 Dodge 2-door Sedan. | Geed transportation. For I faale at Smoot v Hunnicutt SA. 16th Street Central I Aye. Coln tel. 800. WANTED:Panamo city, three bed- room house furnished. W. G. Dos- well. International Hotel. American family wants 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment. Telephone day 3-3297, night 3-1373. FOR SALE:Piano upright grand, sewing machn* motor 60 cycles. Underwood typewriter, youth's bed. Colon 916. L Si fir FOUND LOSTBlonde, mole, Cocker Spaniel, one year old. Name Lico. Reward. Call Ft. Clayton 3188. LESSONS Learn shortcut method of popular Plono ploying. Zez Bennett's Studio Tel. 2-1282. 1947 Buick Special 4-door Sedan with radio, plastic Seat Covers, spot lip;ht, jrood tires, good guarantee. Smoot y Hunnicutt. SA. 16th St. Central Are. Tel. 800 Coln. Used Kardex (Remington Rond preferred) 8x5 stock card, filing cabinet. Tels.: 3-0383 3-0382. Panama. U.S.S. Wisconsin 3rirgj 2,300 Vets Home From Korea LONG BEACH. April 21 (UP) .The mighty battleship U. S. S. [Wisconsin lay in port here this morning after returning 2,300 hanpy but battle weary men home from Korea. The 45-000-ton ship, with offi- cers and enlisted men standing in formation on deck, glided into the harbor at 10:20 a.m. Satur- day. While the ship was being made fast, hundreds of spectators nshore cheered and waved as the El Toro Marine Band broke into "Cftllfomia. Here I Come." A letter of commendation from the ^ovcTtor of Wisconsin. Wal- ter D. Kohler. offering "heart- felt thanks for eoorl service in a eood cause," was delivered to the sklnper of the Wisconsin. Capt. Henry C. Broton. The presen ta- Meetlngs will held at the.tion was mnde by W. J. Bingham. Ita Clubhouse from 9 tolnresirien.t of the Wis-onsln State Society of on? Bpach t * i Course For Adult Girl Scout Leaders Begins Tomorrow V training course for new dult volunteers for Girl Scout v,..".. begins tomorrow and con- tinues through May 13, Mrs". Jo- seph Bialowski, Atlantic Dis- trict chairman, announced to- day.. Possible Rebellion Plot Against Malan Reported By Paper PRETORIA, South Africa, April 21 (UP) The Nationalist news, paper "Transvaaler" claimed to- day to have uncovered a possible rebellion olot against the govern- ment of Premier Malan. The newspaper, published in Johannaesburg. said it possessed a sworn statement by an uniden- tified person who claimed to have read the letter in which the anti-government "Torch Com- mando" asked if the recipient was prepared to undergo flight training to assist the commandos in the event of a rebellion. Another letter In the paper said it advised the recipient to collect provisions apparently a- gainst a possible time when the commando would not be able to buy food through ordinary chan- nels. RESORTS Williams' Santa Clara Beach Cottages Two bedrooms. Frigidaire, Rock- gas ranges. Balboa 2-3050. Casino Santa Clara Dance. Music by Casino Aces. Make your reservo- tions early. Saturday, April 26th. Philips Oceomldt cottage. Sonto Claro Box 435 Balboo Phom ^onomo 8-1177. Crwobol 3-1673 Visit HOTEL PAN-AMI* IC ANO in COOL BEAUTIFUL, B Voile. Gromllch'i Santa Clara beach- cottages. Electric ice boxes, gas stoves, moderate rates. Telephone 6-441 or 4-567. I-OK RENT Apartments ALHAMBRA APARTMENTS Modern furnished unfurnished opart- menti. Meld service optional. Con ?act office 8061. 10th Street. New Cristobal, telephone 1386 Colon. FOR RENT Rooms FOR RENT:Cool comfortable roomt entirely renovated, now available for bachelor. Reasonable monthly rates, porter service. Inquire at American Club, near Hotel Tivoli. FOR SALE Real Estate THOMAS REAL ESTATE AGENCIES CENTRAL AVI. 259 TEL. 1-1069 Cheap houses'for sala Mortgages, etc. Real Estate Advisers. 11 |"jn. on Tuesdays and Wed- nesdays. Miss Mary Pat ton, exe- Pnrcls of Wisconsin cheese cuiive director of Canal Zone were flown to California from Girl. Scouts, will conduct thej'he dairv state to be distributed course. A general orientation of girl touting will be given at to- morrow's meeting. Subsequent meetings will Include panels and round table discussions on out- door trips, program planning and neighborhood committee functions. At one of the final sessions troop leaders ?ted ae members Scouts. *o the men before thev were re- len'pd for a weekend leave. The Wisconsin will leave for tb< Eart, Coa.** this week. Renreeontattve* from the Wis- consin 8*te Chamber of Com- merce. Wlscon^n State Society and Sm'thern California alumni ch?"tr 0f tne rrnlveratty of Wis- consin were on hand to greet the men. The y.Sflfl veteran* were given a hero's we'eome after their six duty off the The classes are open to all troop committee miners .id Btajhborhoo'd committee mem- bers In the Atlantic District. n addition to the new troops leaders. will be in-;m0Tt'h's; roii'r'of ol the Gill cop from a direct hit bv shore bat- teries March 15 when enemy OTTMM -runs found the sbip's ranee. The ship's gun crews, however, continued to hammer Silver Death Benefit Groun Meets Tonight At Silver City Hall The annual meeting of the Silver Employes Death Benefit Association on the Atlantic Side will be held tonight at the Silver City Lodge Hall at 7:30. A large number of delegates are expected to attend to vote for new members of the Associa- tion's board of directors. Also Included on the agenda are a financial report, the secre- tary's report and an organiza- tional report from A. B. Will- lams, president of the associa- tion. US Phone Strike Fades As Workers Win Pay Raises SAN FRANCISCO, April 21 (UP) A two-week telephone strike in Northern California and Nevada ended today after a 24- hour negotiating session between workers at the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company. The CIO Communi cations Workers of America and manage- ment reached a wage agreement providing 15-cent-an-hour wage boosts. They came to terms as CWA of- ficials tried once more to settle the nationwide strike against the Western Electric Company in New York talks. The California-Nevada work- ers agreed to a one-year contract providing a $4 weekly Increase in starting pay and a $7 increase in top pay for 6,500 exchange and plant workers. The new contract becomes ef- fective April 27, if it Is approved by a vote of the union member- ship and by the Federal Wage Stabilization Board. It followed a general pattern set in the settlement of strikes against the Bell system in Mi- chigan, Ohio and New Jersey. Still on strike was CW3 District 11, representing 5,500 Western Electric distributors. District 10, representing 10,000 telephone installers, reached an agreement early yesterday, but the smaller group apparently was having trouble ironing out fringe issues. , District 10 settled for 31.1 cents an hour in wage boosts and fringe benefits. Also on strike were 1,300 work- ers at Bell Telephone laboratories in New York City and New Jer- sey. Negotiations were underway to end this dispute. Federal mediators brought re. presentatlves of Western Electric and District 11 together for an- other round of talks aa officials of the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. said telephone service was returning to normal. The District 10 strike had ham- pered telephone service In 43 s' r- tes and the District of Colum- bia. away and soon devastated enemy gun emplacements. The Wisconsin was launched Dec. 7.1943 and was commission- ed April 16. 1944. at the Phila- delphia Navy Yard. 8he was de- commissioned July 1, 1948 and was reactivated March 3.1951. Capt. Bruton is the holder of three Navy Crosses earned dur- ing World War IL PRACTICALLY NEW1951 Chevrolet Station Wafon Deluxe, with newer-nine. for tale at Snteat y Hunni- eatt. S.A. 10th Street Cen- tal Ave.. Culn tel. M0. FOR SAM: 1950 Bnick 4- door Sedan Special. In ex- cellent "hape. at cover, 5 rood tires, low mileage. For demonstration call or ee It at our local dealer Smoot v Hunnicutt. 8.A. lOtb Street Central Ave, Coln tel. KM. Here is the buya beauti- ful little MM Chevrolet Sport Coupe, in perfect condition, with teat covers, radio. Spot Lights. 5 good tiros, easy payments, for ale at Smoot y Hunnicutt, SA. 10th St Central Ave., Colo teL Mt. Welcome Service For Rev. Wilson Set For Tonight A welcome service for Rev. Ernest Wilson, Jr., Canal-Zone- born evangelist, will be held tonight at the Panama Chris- tian Mission Church at 7 p.m. Rev. Wilson, pastor of the Christian Union church oi Philadelphia and international organizer of Christ for Youth Fellowships. Is here on a praching tour. He visited the Republic two years ago to conduct a revival campaign throughout the churches of the Evangelical Ministers Council and another denominations. COMMERCIAL b PROFESSIONAL Don't be a "Bathroom Jiggler" Install an "ALERT" Rash Guide Valve. Saves water and stops annoy- ance of dripping toilets permanently. As reported by Readers Digest "ALERT" never falls. GEO F. NOVEY, INC 27 Central Ave. Tel. S-01M LUX VENETIAN BLINDS Immediate Delivery. Tel 8-1718 #22 E. 29 th St. PANAMA BROKERS, INC. Hotel El Panam Selling: Panam Trust Co., Abattoir, Forestal Products TeL 3-4719 8-1660 MODERN FURNITURE CUSTOM BUU.7 Slipcover Reunbolstery visn ova show-room Alberta Here t. S*. * la Una n Tel -** urea - to 1M am DR. B. L. STONE Chiropractor STONE CLINIC 7th St ft Justo Arosemena Ave. Coln TeL 457 Transportes Baxter. S. A. Shipping, moving, storage. We pack and crate or move anything. 'Phone 2-2451, 2-2562, Panam. HX HOUSEHOLD EXCHANGE For the best values in both new and reconditioned fur- niture. WE BUY AND SELL 41 Automobile Row Tel. S-4911 Windsor Club Holds Formal Anniversary Ball At Clubhouse A formal ball will be sponsored by the Windsor Social Club on Saturday night in observance of the club's second anniversary. The dance will be held at the Pacific Clubhouse and is sched- uled to begin at 8:30 p.m. with music by Armando Boza's orches- tra. The management of the club- house is said to be preparing a special menu for the club's guests at the ball. Bargain1949 Buick Snper 4-door Sed... with Dyna- flow. radio, seat covers, good tires, excellent shape, easy payments. For sale at Smoot y Hnnnicutt, S.A. 16th Street Central Ave. coln tel. see. 1947 Dodge Pick-up In good condition. For sale at Smoot y Hnnnicutt, S.A. 16th SC Central Ave. Tel. tee Coln. Dr. E. A. PEREZ Veterinary Surgeon Day and Night Service US Governmenl Lifts Controls On Rubber Due to Ample Supply WASHINGTON, April 21 (UP) Controls on natural rubber, in effect for 11 years, were lifted today because sup- plies of both natural and syn- ihetl care ample for all civilian and military purposes, the government announced. Henry H. Fowler, adminis- trator of the National Produc- tion Authority, said all restric- tions on natural rubber will cease with the exception of pale and sole crepes which are still scarce. He said the order will pro- vide "relatively free competi- tion" between natural and synthetic rubber in the United btates Controls on rubber were the only World War II allocation restrictions kept in efiect al- ter the end of that conflict. The government maintained them to make sure there would be a market for its own syn- thetic rubber products, which have been in the development stage until recently. With gov- erment synthetics now In ma production the need for those controls has Just about dis- appeared .. . Fowler also announced that his agency will maintain, for security reasons, a minimum annual consumption of 4ao,ouu tons of general purpose GR-S rubber and 60,000 tons of butyl synthetic rubber. Fowler added that the Re- construction Finance Corp., which has a government mo- nopoly of synthetic production, will produce no less than 600,- 000 tons of GR-S rubber an- nually until in addition to satisiylng all other require- ments a government stock- pile of at least 75,000 tons H accumulated. . When this goal Is reached. Fowler said, GR-S production may be allowed to fall to 450,- 000 tons a year, but only with a corresponding increase in the government stockpile to at least 122,000 tons. The order continues the ban on private imports of natural rubber, which will be a gov- erment monopoly until June 30. Florida KKK Dragon Kidnapped, Beaten MIAMI, Fla.. April 21 (UP) - Grand Dragon Bill Hendrix of the Florida Ku Klux Klan held today that the three men who kidnaped and blackjacked him at gunpoint are Miami Beach rack- eteers who "don't want me to win my race for the governor." i The 41-year-old "white su- nremacy" advocate limped into Jackson Memorial Hospital Sat- urday night end told police three armed men enticed him Into their car, drove around Greater Miami while slugging him with a blackjack, then push- ed him from the car about 25 miles out In the Everglades. "I really think It was someone who read the stories about my not liking the Miami Beach rack- ets," said Hendrix. one of five candidates for governor in the Democratic primary May 6. "I think it was some of that beach crowd because I don't get along with racketeers." The husky Tallahassee. Fla., contractor said he was walking along a street in suburban Hla- leah last night. shorUy before he was scheduled to make a cam- paign speech, when he heard his name called. "I thought It was one of my friends so I went over to the car," he said. "Then a man in the back seat opened the door and shoved a gun in my belly. There were three men altogether, two heavy ones and a little guy wearing glasses. "They drove all over Miami telling me how they had warned me to stay out of town and hit- ting me with a blackjack," he added. "I didn't pass out but I got a lot of bruises." "Later we started out Tamlami Trail and they slowed down to about 15 miles an hour and pushed me out," Hendrix aid. He said he flagged down the first car he saw. an Illinois tour- ist heading West. Hendrix said the man turned the car around and drove him to Miami where he caught a cab to the hospital. Doctors treated hU bruises and dismissed him., Hendrix assured police he would press kidnaping and as- sault and battery charges if his abductors are caught. Hendrix. the only candidate who has made "white suprema- cy" a plank in his platform, u not considered a strong conten- der in the governor"- contest. He is under suspended Federal court sentence for defaming Gov. Fuller Warren, columnist Drew Pearson and a Tallahassee at- torney. Has Twins At 16 LOGAN. Utah. (UP) One of the nation's youngest mothers of twins is 16-year-old Mary Lou Colson Shaffer of nearby Pres- ton, Ida. Mrs. Shaffer, married at 15. is the wife of Neil M Mons. Francis Beckman, Archbishop of Panama, visited the Courier, the first floating transmlter Of the Voice of America now at the Rodman Naval Base in Balboa. Mons. Beckman is shown here saying farewell to Captain Oscar B. Wev of the Courier who took the distinguished visitor over the ship explaining the modern transmlting equip- ment. HST Faces Senate Showdown On National Defense Budget WASHINGTON. April 21 (UP) President Truman, backed by his military leaders, was headed today for a showdown with the Senate over the price to be paid to be prepared for peace or war. Aroused economy-minded Sen- ators hit back sharply at Mr. Truman's threat to keep Con- gress In session until it gives him the money he considers necessa- ry for defense of the nation. Sen. Robert A. Taft, who is seeking the Republican presi- dential nomination, exclaimed that Mr. Truman "seems to have gone! completely off his head." "He'll have to take what mo- ney we give him," Taft added, "and he won't get any more." House members also hit at Mr. Truman's threat. Republican whip Leslie O. Arends (111.) said Congress recognizes the "deadly peril" of Russia, but the "coun- try's most 'deadly peril' is the suicidal spending policies advo- cated by President Truman." Rep. Clarence J. Brown (R-O.) said Mr. Truman's warning he would keep Congress In session "sounded like one of the tyran- nical outbursts of King George the Third against the American colonies." Mr. Truman warned last Thurs- day that he would keep Congress in session until the Senate re- stores to the House-slashed de- fense appropriations bill the mo- ney he believes necessary to con- tinue build-up of the military machine to deter Russia from aggression or meet it should Rus- sia go to war. The House cut Mr. Truman's $50.921,000,000 military request to $46.207,0000.000 and put a $46,- 000,000.000 celling on the amount the military actually mav spend in the fiscal year beginning Ju- ly 1. Chairman George A. Mahon said Mr. Truman was "entirely correct" in criticising the House cuts and the ceiling which, he said, will "retard the delivery of jet aircraft, tanks, guided mis- siles and other scarce and essen-1 tlal fighting equipment." But Senate Republican leader | Styles Bridges of New Hamp- shire, said Mr. Truman "has I thrown the Constitution to the winds and l attempting to seize the power of appropriations, the power to control the purse | strings." Sen. Wayne Morse (R-Ore.)! said he was sure "several bil- lions" could be cut from Mr. Tru man's budget request. Good transportation1941 Oldsmobile 2-door Sedan. Radio, seat covers, good tires, for sale at your local dealer Smoot y Hunnicutt, S.A. 16th St. Central Ave, Coln tel. 800. South Africans Say Russians Kill Blue Whales Out of Time DURBAN, South Africa. April I 21 (UP). Authorities revealed today that crews of South Afri- can whaling ships recently com Elalned that Russian whalers I ad broken International laws! by killing blue whales out of-l season. They said the Russians killed whales before January 1, whlls; the legal' season is between January 1 and April 7. The African crews took photo! graphs which they hope to use] as evidence against the Rus- sians before the International Whaling Commission. SIGNING PRESIDENTS Two signers of the Constitu- tion later became presidents of | the United States: George Wash- ington and James Madison, bota of Virginia. BARGAIN1941 Chevrolet Del xe 4-door Sedan, per. feet condition, seat covers, 5 good tires. Easy pay- ment!. For sale at Smoot y Hunnicutt. S.A. 16th St. Central Ave., Coln teL 800. 4 Cylinders OPEL 6 Cylinders MADE IN GERMANY BY GENERAL MOTORS HASMO, S.A. INCREASE YOUR PROFITS By Letting Us Help You Cut Your Operating Costs. We Have the Office Machine You Need. V BOYD BROTHERS. INC Agents and Distributors for: "BURROUGHS," "SMITH CORONA," "DITTO." "KARDEX," "8TEELCASE." Adding Machines, Calcuators, Bookkeeping Machines, Typewriters. System, Duplicators. FUe Cabinets, Cash Registers. No. 14 Tivoli Ave. Te|. 2-2010 42 Beiisario Porras Tel. S-2113 Shaffer. 20, himself a twin. 1941 Buick Super 4-door Se. dan in good condition, lew mileage, seat covers, geed area, for sale at Smoot y Hunnicutt. S.A. 16th St. Central Ave.. Coln teL 9H. WANTED SALESMEN SALARY PLUS COMMISSION Apply Sales Manager AGENCIAS PAN AMERICANAS, S.A. (Below El Rancho) Tel. 2-0825 P.O. Box 42 FOR SALE: 1947 Oldamobile 2-door Sedan, good tires, seat covers, radio, excellent shape, easy payments. Smoot y Hunnicutt, 8.A. 16th Street Central Ave. Celen teL 900. BARGAIN1948 Dodge S- door Sedan, excellent shape, radio, seat covers, good tires. See it at your local dealer Smoot y Hunnicutt, S.A. 16th Street Central Ave. Celen teL Set. Wl ^w DAT. APRIL *1, 1HI THt: PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER ;- i ii ndians Stretch Winning Streak To Seven<*ames tag* trriat odgers Lose 1st; Reds ake Two From Pirates By United Pems NEW YORK, April tiA fonr-way pennant formula which H be mighty devastating as time goes on was sweeping the veland Indians along today ai the only undefeated team In Major Leagues. _, w .,<.* The Indiana have won seven in a row and a quick check n less than a week of play revealed that they haw hit more ners (nine), gotten more hits (05), turned In more icomplete net (five) and allowed fewer runa (14 In seven fames or two game) than any other team in the league. American League TEAMS Cleveland .. Boston .... St. Louis .. Washington. New Tork .. Chicago .. ,...,., ....... -.., -......------ Philadelphia hat mean, trouble ahead^.^T^f A'f^c&tS^ Indians pretty soon. Sunday nomer ,or Chicago. .Indians kayoed the Tigers n h ^ t tne Dodgers .have yet town game, 3-2 ^^ 8lx tlme, la8t season 7-2 while getting outstaiid- h m lifetime 10-3 nt^* lS?%Son" "Se Sver them nut them out In bleheader from Bob Lemon gown paric jor the first time,petrot Steve Oromek. in 177 eames or since the 1949 Cleveland i the opener, Luke Easter : &""$,, and Hank Houtteman (0-2) and Q hshed > bases empty homer to ^0S^np8^V%las ed homers off I Lemon (2-0) and Hegan. ak up a tense duel between *"^."""I-hl. Ben wade who Teco'Sr? nTtSIndian" cSteV^t" hTown dflcul- uTnS^1 tSst^"Saties with iive waika- imek won without pressure. _j Th< surprtoing Reds moved In- to second place Dehlnd the Dodg- ers with their two victories In Pittsburgh In which Ted Klus- zewskl arove In nine runs with two homers, and two triples. Kluszewskl hit a grand-slam Dick Dillman, Cristobal Winners In Jr. National Rifle Championships emon's victory was his second I Oromek picked up his first. en hit two homers and Pete ser and Ray Boone got one h. teanwhile the Indians were ! tho'^ve'wrsfi and ES KTffThWei and yesterday breezed to a victory over Washington on margin of Billy Goodmans ee-run pinch homer. TODAY'S GAMES Washington- at Boston. Philadelphia at New York. (Only Games Scheduled.) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS FIRST GAME 100 0010002 7 000 100 1013 8 Houtteman (0-2) and Ginsberg; SECOND GAME Detroit 000 020 0002 5 0 Cleveland 013 001 02x7 13 0 Trout (0-2), White, Hoeft, Lit- tlefield and Batts; Oromek (1-0) and Tebbetts. Harry Perkowskl, with relief help, won the opener while Dutch Hiller went all the way to win his -run pinch homer d on geven hlts The I other iuntor circuit gamM. oyer rung m the Yankees topped the At letics Mmw gy Smok In a batting battlewhite ne h tne for iwns blanked the White Sox RnBerta In the tenth on a AILING CLASSIC WINNERMain Road, under a brilliant by Jose "Paco" Bravo, streak* across the flnUh line a long neck ahead of mutuels choice Cyclone Malone (Bias Aguirre) in the most important local horse racethe annual $10.000 added President of the Repub- lic Classic over one-mile-and-nine-slxteenths yesterday at Juan Franco Racetrack. Main Road who has been a sick horse for the last ten days, demonstrated the class and courage of true champions bv toting topweight of 128 pounds in coming up from last position to score grtE away. The Don Antonio Angulzo la-owned Henry White-trained five-year-old bay son of Falrway-Superbe returned $15.80 win, $5 place and $3.20 show. Pavero was third and the veteran Pinard fourth._____^___________________________ Washington 010 002 000-3 13 0 Boston 000 200 40X8 8 1 Hudson (0-11 andGrasso; Par-; nell (2-0), Wight, DeLock and: Niarhos, White. Plummer Captures Central American ? Mickey Kiernan'f Coneja tied'Mageecoredjjrtf Goodin goton,4.]J.PoUfld CrOWsi Fastlich League Philadelphia 201100 020 New York B-2),Byrd ananpion, at Balboa Saturday arternoon;ooDDiea a ny. via nenaoie ne Asthroth; Miller, Hogue (1-0>, with a 6-2 win over Mike Dew's yes connected for a triple to dee -in..... in______ riohl si>nrlncr thrfp and iiu Sain and Sllvera. Robin Roberts In the tenth on a single by Willie Jones and a tri- ple by Del Ennl. But Ennls was the goat In the second game when the Phillies led 1-0 In the eighth behind the tight pitching of Karl Drews and 8am Jethroe singled home one run, the other scoring on a wild throw by the wjio wmucu v*.~ ----- --. on the second straight shut- by Ned Garver, then lost 10-2. In the National League, the ants finally topped the aera - on Sal MagHe's fin/ two-hitter while the rds edged the Cuba 2-1 on a -hitter by Gerry Btaley. lie the.Phillies rallied late to : _ rt from the Braves 4-3 in ten. A onQ The rairWOVS in then lost the second *""" it 1-1. oodman's blast, coming di- sagea as piayea ui wic i"> 6='"c 2 which resulted in victory for the 0Pumas, Hill and Fears for tho FIRST GAME Chicago 000 000 0000 2 St. LOUls 101 121 20X8 14 -r-umas, mi siiu m>a w . Holcombe (0-1), Judson, Brown, Pumas with Hinkle and Goodin Grissom and Mas!, Sheely; Gar- for the Conejo, ver (2-0) and Courtney. l (SECOND GAME (7 Innings) Chicago 003 502 010 13 0 SL Louis 000 002 0 2 3 1 Pierce (1-1) and Lollar; I nln er JUU1B" a fw>< w.---p, -- uy after the injured Ted Wil- ns had delivered a pinch sin- enabled MM Parriell to score , 18th straight victory over kshlngton, which has not beat fhlm since May 28, 148. The winners of last Thursday's Ladies Day tournament at the Ft.'Amador Golf Club were: First Flight Alyce French and Grace Mor- ir! with 80's tied for "low gross" net" i Yankees reared up out of i honors, littlhg lump and made 14 hits.i Blrdlc Hewitt took "low hiding, six doubles and a triple with a 73. old. man John Mlze .led the, second Flight f by batting in four runs with I pat Williams won 'Tow irosa louble, two singles and a long with a 94. Dave Phllley hit a homer for, Mollle Vandergrift wa the , A'a who lhade 12 hits In de- ..low net" winner with a 75. Garver, who pitched a aix- tter on opening /' tournament rt'%xMVn.r , rookie* Jim Rivera and Tom rright hit homers, Marty Ma- in and Gordon Goldaberry ieh got three hits, as did Rlv- Thls Thursday's Ladles Day .jurnajnent (April 24) will be net scores on odd holes. hlladelphla zoi iuuikuo i Mickey Kiernans uonejos utamasm tuicu iuw *"k,u," ew York 23100120X9 14 1 p the Fastlich League layoffs when Puma right fielder Selcls Kellner (0-2i,Byrd andTlpton, a{ Balboa Saturday afternoon'hobbled a fly. "Old Reliable' Re- Lt- 111.. tTn., (1_ni .ii_ o n lH > %M\\rm rianr't'irac >nnn#>f/l frtr a t.rinll tn deCp just Dick Dlllman, 17, the local freahmenta were served to alL smallbore champion rifle shot.lAfter the inner man had bee was winner Saturday of the Can- fortified, the presentation of tha al Zone Junior Gallery .22 rifle award took place, championship, in the regional] Harry Townsend, Exaltad Ruler competition fired on the Balboa of the Elks Lodge made the pres- ROTC range as part of the An- entatlon of the Ik;s, marcban- nual Junior National shoulder to dise prizes, and addressed a few shoulder rifle championships, words to the assembled ahootera. - The team competition was won Townsend made the point that by the Cristobal Junior Rifle Club the lodge was very happy to con* team with a score of 709. Dick's tlnue the sponsorship of the lo* winning score of 187 was compar- cal competition in the Junior Ri- atively low for him. In fact, while fie because of the Importance of the match was excellently con- marksmanship In the present tested, the overall scores were condition of the world, low compared to previous com- Jaffray presented the medal* petitions. awarded by the National Riflt John Hatgl, 17, of the Cristobal Association and stated that thia Junior team, was second in the was his third year serving In thla Individual competition with 185. capacity. He further said that ha Joe Fuller, also 17, of the Balboa hoped to officiate for many year! Junior Division, firing under the to come. handicap of being barely recov-. The scores In the individual ered from a fractured arm, took competition follow: third place with 182. The high Prone Stand Tatal girl's awards were taken by Don- Dick Dillman na E. Geyer, 15. of Cristobal, who (Balboa Jr.) fired 171 to also take ninth place. John Hatgl The Balboa Gun Club's Junior1 (Cristobal Jr.> Division team took second place Joseph Fuller with 890 points. Due to our dla- (Balboa Jr.) tance from the United States, the j. Fahneatock Canal Zone Regional was fired (Cristobal Jr.) one week ahead of the various Jhn Scheibeler tournaments to be fired in the (Cristobal Jr.> continental United States, and Bart. P. Smith the standings of the local teams i Balboa Jim nationally will not be determln- D. Tagaropulos ed until the scores country-wide (Cristobal Jr.) are tabulated. |D. C. Greene Canal Zone tournament, (Cristobal Jr. 100 $7 117" 1 v m 90 78 ITT 96 79 175 n u 100 82 98 fl 98 n .Pumas tight scoring three and The same batteries were en- barely crossing the plate eaged as played in the first game himself on the throw ' Panam Featheiwelal m- was sponsored by the Balboa^D. Geyer, hl-girl igni; nnmjw-j^ k^ ^^ Qf the Benevolent, (Crtat0bal Jr.) 97 71 17 total of five runs Insurance. The Pumas collected one tally l^'^er Cuban Champ Ciro Mo-; for the In the second wheti Rigby sln-;;.'^ln their championship boutshopters Elks. _j and _ medals Individual The final and deciding game of the Fastlich playoff series will open at seven o'clock to- morrow evening at the Balboa Stadium. Magee opened up the initial i (0-1), Hudson, Harrist, Sleat-.frame with a single to right field and Moss, Johnson. and was advanced by Scott who; 'hit to third base where Rlsby In the second when Rigby sta-ffiXthK^ w"e, Pr?vldef tlby % gled through third and scored on'^^p^P^ivmptc Stadium National Rifle Association of ' 'ore a fair-sizedI crowc" da. soon Plummer outboxed, two Cone o errors The Conejos & T K P ilc., sponsors of the Nation- got this one back in the third M^ai Tutboxed. out- !al Junror Gallery championships: with two walks and an error. Pu- phei \n outclassed his They also presented a medal for mas threatened in the fourth when afte rscoring one run Sales was called for the third out for interference and three Pumas died on base. From this point on both I rival throughout the almoat uneven contest. The highly rated Cubanwho Is claaslfl- fled fourth in the world in hie division bv tho esteemed flge magaslne "The Ring"did --------- ;nre to mira amoc whcic N AtlfnA LeaQUe Hammond advanced both men to two men were allowed on base- glmn* ' llCIIIUIia. wcayuv i beating out a bunt Smith in the fifth when he sin- * dlct of the three 0ffl Brooklyn .. Cincinnati. , Chlcagw.. St. Lenls .. Boston .. New York .. Philadelphia Pittsburgh. I 4 S 3 2 1 2 2 3 4 3 4 5 .833> .667 .600 .500 .429 .400 .331 .286 Juan Franco Muluel Dividends two men were auowea on Diue Smith In the fifth when he sin-, "^ dlct of the three offl- gled to short, stole second and a^eW8 unanimou in favor of reached the hot corner whenfl,^ ',. piummar weighed Goodin overthrew second On the *'-'? L. Constantlne (Cristobal Jr.) 99 J. Schmidt, Jr. (Balboa Jr.) 98 D. Eggleston. Jr. (Balboa Jr.) 91 N. Dlllman, girl (Balboa Jr. i 95 M. Gardner, girl (Cristobal Jr.) 93 Yolanda Diez, girl 98 96 71 171 87 TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Pittsburgh. Now York at Philadelphia. (Only Games Scheduled.) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS FIRST GAME The Mixed Scotch Fur8ome,g28n. i nnniftfttul* 11 1 which was to be held at the Fort ^lladelphlaOOO 010 1-4 iw Amador Golf Club Sunday Apr Bgjord CM), Bu deUe a 27, has been postponed until Cooper, ooe u 2_Honey Moon $520, $3.40. in the second game, lefty Billy Sunday, May 25. SECOND GAME 3Rinty $2.80. 000 000 0202 7 0 FIRST RACE 1-Tulfa $4. $3. 2Embustero $7. SECOND RACE , 1Petite -(Excluded from bet- ting). 2Annie N. $4.80. $420. 3Filigrana $4. First Doubles: (Tulra-Annie N.) $8.40. THIRD RACE Goodin overthrew second on the"" J*~f" M0racn's 125>'. The steal. He died there. In the sey-:2bfwnaVon thcanva twlce- enth Cazorla beat out an Infield o'l. for a nine-count in the 11 eked out a hairline spilt decision 2over Black Bill in an old-fash- niioned slugfest. X1 Green, 123'/a, finished stronger than Bill, 122, to earn the nod. However, many fans s The box score: Pumas AB Salas, ss. . Cazorla, cf . Hill, p . . Smith. If. . Huff, lb . . Rigby, 3b . Selcls, R., 2b. Fears, c . . Selcls, O., rf DesLondes, rf sipo i i 2 3 0 0 1 0 1 11 1 1 the high score by a girl. Fifteen prizes, including in . award for the high girl, were (Cristobal Jr.) presented by Lodge 1414, the lo- M. J. Brians cal sponsors. (Cristobal Jr.) N. E. Dlllman of Balboav Lodge j. ciemmons HI 1414 and Junior Rifle Instructor (Balboa Jf.) of the Balboa Gun Club, func- H. F. COdy, Jr. tloned as Range Officer. Gene' (Balboa Jr.) Derr was Chief Statistical Offi- Bob W. Bailey cer, and the National Rifle A-| (Balboa Jr.) sooiatlon was represented by Bill chna. E. Phelan Jaffiay as Official Referee. I (Balboa Jr.) Afte' rfirtng and scoring was William Derr fS? rounri and for a five-count completed, shooters and officials (Balboa Jr. first round ^ana ior a i t'uu au journeyed to the home of wm. H. Gibson Balboa Lodge No. 1414, where re- (Cristobal Jr.> If. A. Graham, giM V Hoop League c*M,,r " 57 54 1M 184 1". 1L iir.: nf 14 l 87 let: 91 N 94 M O.perta" opined that the Coln lad. Totals.....27 2 7 18v10 2 k. I. CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES Atlantlcs (The Standings) Kullg, If. . Pabon, c .... o _tXAM Won Lost Pet. Brians. 3b ... 3 0 If. All-Stars.. ..1 }-*n'Wall. ss-p ...31 AB R . 3 0 3 0 HPO clfic All-Stars [tontk All-Stars. 1 0 MOO chase, cf. . 2 0 2 .HbF. Leves. ... 1 0 __ laHadarlts, lb 1 0 SATURDAY'S RESULT French, 2b ... 2 0 aeifit All-Btara 5, Atlantic ;Maloy, p-ss ..20 All-Star 1. c. Leves, rf . 2 0 XT GAME (Saturday)Arm-j Forcea vs. Atlantic AU-Stars Totals (Margarita, 2:30 p.m.) Boston 0CO000 020 2 7 0 One-Two: (Phlox - Philadelphia 000 010 00016 1 Moon) $37.40. Cole (1-0), Donovan and st.i FOURTH RACE Claire; Drews (0-1) and Burgess. i_cipay0 $2.80, $2.20. 'arS0* KToK I o2"K^^r.Sy8.-Perter'. BrMague nT^r^trlJ. ">% RACE Wade* (0-1), Us and Campan- "J} 4RAf0. |ella- 12Avenue Road $280. J St. Louis 000 020 000-2 7 I SIXTH RACE 1 Chicago Conejos AB R H PO Magee. If ... 2 1 1 1 Honey Scott, 3b. ... 3 1 1 0 Hammond, ss 3 1 1 5 Ooodin, c 3 10 6 Reyes, lb. ... 3 1 1 7 Hinkle, p ... 2 1 0 0 Hayden. R cf. 2 "0 0 0 McKeown, 2b 3 0 0 1 Sorrell, rf. .2 0 0 1 000 010 00O-1 6 ri-Wild Wire $1140 $5.80. $3.60. StX (2-0. and Rice; flatten 2-D.D.T. $4.20, $3.20. 3Pla $440. 141. m 84 M 144 M M 141 R. Williams, girl (OrUtobal Jr.) $7 The Balboa Armed Services YMCA Warm-Up Basketball !o^taUndadrrw.reCelVed SffiS" JS WpW^ S WOrfe four-rouSd preliminar, ,leagne standlna;, j..follows: was won by Al Hostln, 116% over RED LEAGUE Melvin Bourne. l.lS^-.HosUnwasJ^TEAM- Won Lost 1 2 2 2 2 2 117 11 fol- p ?cit ,a pro^s^ct-o^the-month^MWth FA ...... .. .. 3 Hn the most relent issue of "The-lSth Naval District. .. 2 u Ring" Marines.......... * \ The other four-rounder was an'A.B.G............ a i T easy unanimous decUlon for Beau A A.CB...... .. .. i a i Jack II. H7"4, who was making Harbor Defense...... 1 ? g'hto pro debut, over Cisco KhLllC 1st Rescue........ 1 Baby Green was fined $151 by ..., the Boxing Commission for using BLU1 a robe displaying political pro- TEAM The team scores were aa lows: ' Cristobal Jnnler Rifle Ctab (Team 1) Prone Stan* Total Jim Scheibeler 97 J. M. Fahnestock 98 John N. Hatgi 98 L. A. Constantlne 98 Team Total 82 0 0 71 17t 17. 17' 174 ~70f,. BALBOA GUN CLUB (Junior Division No. 1). Prone Stand Total Joe Fuller 100 Dick Dlllman 100 Won Lost Bartley P. Smith 09 n (1-1), Leonard and Atwell. FIRST GAME J Cincinnati 002 021 0218 10 Pittsburgh 000 000 0830. 11 .....23 1 4 18 11 Score By Innings , Pacifies 0 0 0 3 2 05 lOwen Sutherland scattered Atlantlcs 0 0 0 10 01 |ur hits to hurl the Pacific Lit-; aOrounded out for Perkins In Perkowskl (1-0), F. Smith, By- erly and Semlnlck; Dlckson (0-2), Werle. Sucheckl and McCullough, Mangan. 6EC0ND GAME Cincinnati 202 040 30112 15 0 Pittsburgh 000 002 000 2 7 1 Hiller (1-1) and Rossi; I lr hits to hurl the Pacific Lit- aOrounded out for Perkins in ,_, Carlsen, Wolfe and Gara League All-Stars to a 5-1 win 4th; bStruckout for Chase In 6th. ,-'; \foSEk. the Atlantic All-Stars to RBICastleman, Bateman. 2B i we into a tie with the Armed Bateman. SBBateman. SH hrces LitHe League in the Canal Schneider. PB-iPabon. ERPa- lme Little League Champion- dfica 3. Left-Pacifies 3, Atlan- ta! Dlavoff serles. Ules 4. BBMaloy 1. SOSuther- [aruce Bateman, with two for land 7. H. i R.Maloy 5 and + in Lree Including a double, was the 5 innings (left 1 on, no outs in ladina hitter of the winners. For 5th); Wall 0 and 1 in 1. Winner- losers Wayne Wall with two|8lltherland. LoserMaloy. Um- les in three trip was the top piresMay, Lewes, Rathgeber. Itfer. I The box score: acifics bvelady, rf . lyter, ss. . utherland, p ateman, c Fills. If Elrkland, If astleman. 2b llcGriff. 3b . Iiurfee. lb Ichneider, cf. Time1:0. AB 3 3 3 3 3 0 2 3 3 1 HPO 1'otal* .24 5 5 18 7 2 GUN CLUB NOTES CRISTOBAL 1 For the benefit of shooters iak- kg part in the "Canal Zone State hooT' at Balboa on April 20-27, doubles ahoot will be held op he Cristobal Gun Club range, Inril 23. Wednesday, at 4:30 p.m. Also today. April 21, the month- r Stag Party will be held at the lub for members and guest. A T-bont steak dinner will be erved also sevlche. There will be Uovles. Party starts at 7:30 p.m, n't forget Monday. So come M and enjoy yourself. glola., Mangan. He Should Know MLWAUKEE, (UP) f Ar- thur Butler won first prize in tne liars' contest of the Milwaukee Round Table Club. Then Butler noticed how late it was and ask- ed, nervously. "What will I tell my wife?" SEVENTH RACE 1In Time $3.40. $3. 2Breeze Bound $5.60. Second Doubles: (Wild Wire- Time) $16.6. EIGHTH RACE 1MAIN ROAD $15.80, $5, $3.20. 2Cyclone Malone $3.20, $2.40. 3Pavero $3.20. Quiniela: (Main Road-Cy- clone Malone) $20.60. NINTH RACE 1Montmartre (e) $5.20. $360, $2.40. 2Montielito (e) $3.60, $2.40. 3Begonia $3.20. One-Two: (Montmartre (e)- Begonia) $18.40. TENTH RACE 1Mon Etolle $4.40, $2.20. 2Trafalgar $2.20. ELEVENTH RACE 1Tao Girl $9.40. $9.20. 2Villarreal $760. Totals.....23 8 4 21 11 3 Score By Innings Pumas 0 10 10 0 02 7 2 Conejos 5 0 10 0 0 x6 4 3 RBIFears, Reyes 4. ERPu- ma 1, Conejo 1. LeftPumas 7, Conejos 3. 3B Reyes. SBSmith. SO Hill 1, Hinkle 5. BBHill 2, Hinkle 3. LoacrHU. Winner Hinkle. UmpiresNeville and De la Pefta. Time1:40. paganda. Dans Dilemma Dan's pockets lining. For some money ho was pining! Then a P. A Waat Ad he sighted. Got a job...now he's delighted! 0 1 0 1 2 2 4 J. C. Schmidt, Jr. 98 Team Total BALBOA GUN CLUB (Junior Division Na. t) Prone Stand Total 70 3700th M. to B....... 3 Como. A.F.B......... 3 Air Police.......... 2 Signal............ J 764th Btry "D"...... 1 Far Fan.......... 0 Naval Station. Rodman 0 Schedule For This Week N'rine E. Dlllman 98 Tuesday, 7 pro.: Harbor De- d. Eggleston, Jr. $8 fense vs. Air Base Group; 8:30 j. Ciemmons in p.m.: 504th FA. vs. A.A.C.S.. |H. F. Cody, Jr. Wednesday, 7 pjn.: 764th v. Naval Station, Rodman; 8:30' Team Total p.m.: 6700th M. to S. vs. Far Fan (Navy). Thursday, 7 p.m.: Marine v.| A.AC.8.; 8:30 p.m.: 15th Navali 4 96 19* 187 * 3 Cristobal Junior Rifls Crab -"-* (No. 1) ,,""> Prone Stand Tata*-/ District vs. 1st Rescue. D. Tagaropulos 07 Friday, 7 p.m.: Comptroller vs. R. L. William 91 Far Fan (Navy); 8:30 p.m.: Air D. C. Greene 100 M Police vs. 7461st Signal. |H.L. DoBoyrie 82 28 The public 1 cordially Invited IT W 1 110 I 3 to witness the games, and there Is no admission charge. PROTECTION Team Total m Yolanda Diez Properly Installed lightning Donna E. Geyer rod would reduce the annual May F. Gardner loa of farm building through M. A. Graham .fires by 35 per cent, according toj 1 estimates by fire expert. Team Total Cristobal Junior Rifle Club (Girls Tea) Prone Stand Total 96 96 89 8 84 4 52 32 18T 14 IS soy GOODYEAR DE PANAMA (Juat below "El Rancho") Tal. 2-1221 AGENTS: AUTO SERVICE CM (Corner of Ancon Avenue e\ "H" Street) -fl j^H.1748 2-1881 I IMMis. V TRACK MEET SET TONITE IN PANAM A trmck and field meet will be held under the lights at 1 tonight at the Panama Olympic Stadium to help raise funds to send several of Panama's top track stars to the World Olympics In Helsinki this July. The meet will be first of Its kind ever held under the llsrhts in the Republic of Pa- nama. The best track stars in the Republic and several of the top Canal Zone athletes will be seen In action. Admission prices will be 25 cents for adults and 15 cents for children. Youths Pace 1951 Upswing In US Crime Panama American "Let Iht pi-ople know the truth and the country it $afe" Abraham Lincoln. Jfc fWENTY-SEVENTH YEAR PANAMA, R. P., MONDAY, APRTL 21, 15 nvi CENTS Ft. Leavenworth Airmen Fight Day-And-Night Flood Battle WASHINGTON, April 21 FBI director J. Edgar Hoover todav reported crime increased S.i per cent In the United States iMt vear and said the number of Leavenworth. Kans. youths Involved is "a tragedy of our times." During 1951. Americans com- mitted major crimes at the rate of 5.157 a day. Hoover .aid Th-re was an estimated total of 1.882.180 serious offenses, an Increase of 92.130 over 1950. ST. JOSEPH, Mo., April 211 over their banks In North UP i The boiling Missouri | South Dakota, Minnesota, River bore down on St. Joseph braska and Iowa, today, and airmen fought a day- and-night battle to save a huge Air Force installation at Foit and Ne- Amonjr, the criminals arrest- ' ed. the accent was on youth. There were mor* 23-year-old ; persons arrested than any oth- er a*e rroun. Persons under il m^i'e un M.4 per cent of all arrests durlnr the year. 'A traeedy of orr times is ex- press-d in 1951's fingerprint sta- tistics on youthful offenders, Hoover said. i The FBI's annual bulletin on uniform crime report showed tthe arrest of 119.678 minors. Ol these. 37.259 were under 18. IBM. Many of the youths arrested were "two-time losers," the an- nual crime report showed. Hoover's agents examined 26.- tn cases involving 20-year- olds and found that the FBI al- ready had fingerprint record on 44.9 per cent of them. Murders and manslaughters took the lives of 12,330 persons during the year. Another 147,530 persons fell victim to felonious assaults by rapists and "potential killers." rhe national crime rate was given the blsgest push by a 15.3 per cent Increase in auto thefts. Larcenies Increased 7.1 per cent, negligent manslaughter 3.4 per cent tnd rape 1,3 per cent. Oth- er major crimes showed slight decreases. "An average day In 1951 saw I liI57 ma lor crimes34 felon- ies homicides. 1.115 burglaries, 143 robberies. 3,04 larcenies, it rapes 54* auto thefts and 215 ravated aasaults," Hoover Renorts compiled from 376 ci- ties showed 50.136.172 worth of property stolen in 1951. - gome $90.385.558 worth of au- tomobiles alone were stolen in these cities. The average robberv netted It?* the average burglary Si39, anVi in average auto theft 965. rrime In cities rose bv 5.2 per per! and In rural areas by 5 per There were 11.3 per cent more women arrested than in 1950. Arrests of males increased 4 per a*Bnt However, male lawbreakers outnumbered the females, 746,055 to 85,233. The chanees of being mur- dered or killed bv non-negll- gent m'snslsurhter were great- est In the Ea*t-8onsh -Central region. Th rate in thee states was 2.45 offenses per 10.000 In- habitants. New England had the lowest rate of 1.24 offenses. Jn burglary and breakine-and- ntering. the Pacific states led with 510.4 offenses per 100,00 Inhabitants. Middle Atlantic states, with 318.3 offenses, reported the low- datrate. _ * ' Europe's Lonoest Car Tunnel Opens In French City The mighty Missouri and Mississippi Rivers relentlessly continued their two-week ram- pages, which have wrought an estimated $200,000,000 damage, routed nearly 100,000 persons from their homes and wiped oi't spring crops on hundreds of thousands of acres of rich Midwestern farmland. Rivers already have surged The Missouri River fight ap- parently had been won in the twin cities of Omaha, Neb., and Council Bluffs, la., however, as the record wall of yellow water pushed Into Missouri and Kan- sas and moved toward a junction with the swollen Mississippi. In many places, the Missou- ri twists between bluffs on the Missouri-Kansas border that are a mile to 10 miles apart. The water poured into this channel and spread from bluff- to-bluffthe way old-timers PRAYING FOR HELPOn an altar of sandbags, the Rev. R. R. Brown (left) leads weary laborers In a prayer for strength for both men and levees as the swollen Missouri River ap- proaches a record crest of 315 feet at Omaha, Neb. always describe the great flood of 1881. The U.S. Corps of Engineers at Kansas Olty said 16,600 per- sons were homeless between Ru- lo, Neb., and Kansas City. A total of 148,000 acres of farmland between those points were under water. East of Kansas City, down- stream toward West Alton, Mo., another 167,000 acres had gone under. Damage in northwest Missouri and northeast Kansas was set at about $13.500,000. Army engineers said 10 high- ways and five rail lines were closed In the flooded area. Service was halted on the U- nlon Pacific, Missouri Pacific, Rock Island. Burlington and Chi- cago Great Western railways. The most serious new threat was to St. Joseph, Missouri's third largest city, wtth a population of 78,588 persons. Sixty-five dump trucks were sent to Kansas City to load dp with sand to help in the fight to keep the spreading water from mandating Sherman Air Force Baa at Ft. Leavenworth, a few miles downstream from St. Joseph. The greatest battle since the river threatened the Omaha- Council Bluffs area was being waged at the air base. There 600 soldiers from Fort Leonard Wood. MO.. 150 riflemen from Ft. Rlley. Kans.. and 550St. Louis. ried woman's vegetable garden luring the night. The clav was slapped on the sandbag dike to plug up holes made by the river, which was six and orle-half feet above the field An emergency air base opera- tions office was set up on a plat- form atop oil drums piled two- deep. Orange life preservers hung on all four corners of the im-i provlsed office. St. Joseph's Rosecrans Airport, was counted off as a loss. I Elwood Kans., a town of 1,200 acres across the river, was flooded. A few rooftops and tall chim- neys were all that could be seen of Elwood. Still farther downstream, the twin Kansas Cities, bigrest target in the Missouri's 2,400- mile course, showed outward calm. But many businessmen and residents were ready to move from low-lying areas, as they did in last year's devas- tating Missouri flood. A crest of 29 feet was expect- ed at Kansas City tomorrow, but no fears were expressed by offi- cials, thanks to a levee system designed to withstand a 40-foot crest. The Missouri winds eastward for 377.5 river miles from Kan- sas City to Its junction with the Mississippi at West Alton. Mo eight miles north of downtown *r* NEA Telephonoi THIRTY DIE TN PLANE CRASH-A11 that remains of the North Continent Airlines Commando the crashed near Los Angeles, Calif., with 30 persons aboard Is mute, tangled wreckage strewn along a grassy hill. The non -scheduled craft crashed on the last leg of a flight from New York to Los Angeles. There were no survivors. air base personnel reinforced a dike holding the river back from the multi-million-dollar installa- tion. The flood water rose to within a foot from the top of the en- dangered dike and hope was patrols walked the dikes strong that the field would be saved. Crews dug up clay from sur- rounding fields and a 20-foot hole was gouged in an unidenti- T-l The Judges' Bench BUILDING UP THE LEVEEIn a scene resem bllng a wartime battle area, TJ. S Army barges "ing In sandbag" to bolster the levee In flood -threatened East Omaha, Neb., where rain and mud added to the flood problems.______________________________________ Queen Surrenders Colonelcy Bus Driver Fined Of Guards In Birthday Rite j^^"9 Despite flooding along the Mis- sissippi, the big river was expect- ed to carry off the Missouri's flood waters without serious trouble at St. Louis. At Omaha and Council Bluffs, itfols walked the dikes and watched the danger spots. The vigil was to continue until the river fell below 26 feet. It reach- ed a crest of 30.24 feet and today dropped to 26.9 feet. A valiant battle was being waged at Sabula, the eastern- most town in Iowa, which is on an island in the middle of the Mississippi River. Mayor George Ulmer said the village dikes were holding off the swollen river, but many leaks had sprung. Volunteers arrived from near- by towns In such great numbers that Ulmer had no idea how ma- ny were helping the 900 resi- dents. "There's a big wall of water a- galnst a little earthen bank," the mayor said. "If the dikes hold, everything will be all right, and if they don't, everything will be all wrong." The Mississippi reached its crest at Winona. Minn., and re- sidents gave thanks at their church services. Officials said the town's bat- tered dikes apparently will hold out. having withstood flood pres- sures for a week. Red Cross officials said it would be Wednesday before 40,- 000 persons displaced in Omaha and Council Bluffs could begin returning to their homes. Malayan Communists Step Up Attacks Against Railroads LYONS. France. April 21 'UP> WINDSOR. Eng.. April 21 passed in review and their chief (UPi Queen Elisabeth gave took a salute. |up her colonelcy of the Grena-: Elizabeth will have her idler Guards In a rainswept ce- clal birthday" June 5 when the remony at historic Windsor chances of good weather are : Europe's longest vehicular castle todav. her 26th birthday, better than at this time of the funnel. 5735 feet, was open for After the Guards had marched year. business today as a bypass for(PMt. the queen made a short Rain and blustery wind today the cltv's crowded streets. ispeech announcing her relin- bore out the wisdom of choosing The four-lane tunnel passlnt guishment of the colonelcy of the latter date for the annual nnrirr Crolx Rousse Hill took 12;the regiment. As sovereign she celebration, which Includes ye?r.s to build at a cost of now becomes colorl-ln-cnlef of "trooping SINGAPORE. April 21 (UP) Communist terrorists in three at- tacks on railroad installations In Malaya in the past 24 hours de- railed a train and disrupted services between Behau and A Panamanian driver whose,MeJ?lakab-, moc H-r.ii.rt he bus damaged two passenger cars' The train .was derailed be- offl- Friday afternoon was fined $2S'twm MengkuanK andI ang. In the Balboa Magistrate's Court but no casualties were reported this morning for falling to keep A mail train running from to the right when meeting and Kuala Lumpur to Penan* also passing. was fired on by terrorists ye? 94.300 000. no casualties Ipoh today, but were reported. Yesterday a patrol of British troops disturbed a Chinese band attempting to remove the posts The damaged vehicles, a 19491 of a railway bridge near Nege The accident occurred on Gail- Ion, which includes lard Hiphway at the intersection the colors" to Morgan's Gardens. .11 British re*Ureats. MlA,,t"h? review the celebra-, Tht darnaged vehlcie8, i949,0f a rai.w Queen Elisabeth celebrated Immediate members tith Pnlla^ edan n U5 Ford Sembilian. heF birthday-her real one -In- ed foTTuncheon Present wer^ 8edan' betongea to two Amer- Meanwhile, a British official formally at the castle. The only fheQueen Mother the Suk? of cana. Bgt- Bennle ^^ Johnson, recently returned from Slam .). nln nd ce.cirony was the in- Ed,nS S cHarlM ('h with the 5700th Medical Sq. at said in Singapore about 200 spedUni of the migrant thto j'D^ Field and Col. Virgil communists were known to be BttrnkM on the quadrangle n "nM'ZwtoiSSf""' that was1CoffEic?anySinfaonrmaVen "" tSS fitrthe* ffirabie thOn5n Vo waVh th? show artillery Company Royal Horse were iOO old comrade." of the Ari.lc ^ fhed a -J-^lte Farrar Shaw, of Quarry Heights. Col. Shaw's car was travelling training just across the Siamese border in preparation for an in- filtration movement Into Mala- -The mornoge won't losl if rite ferio* soys "I do" while still look- in around to see if she could do Guards Enxabeth was made colonel of .the regiment ten years ago and Is a*id to have promised she would hold the cesemony if she LoecMSe queen. Now as monarch Ishe has become their colonel-in- ehief 1 p.m. BALBOA TIDES Tuesday, April 22 High Uw 2.02 a.m. 8:18 ajn. Aliar the inspection toe Gua/* 2.24 pjp a-W p.m. north on Gaillard Highway and ya. Sgt, Johnson's car was going. He said Siamese police had dlf- south when the bus driven by flevity In arresting Communists Edwards cut in between the two,since their powers were not as cars and damaged the fenders of both. Edwards has a long record of traffic violations and convic- tion, with the Balboa court wide as those of their Mayalan and British counterparts. He added, however, that bor- der patrols of Siamese and Ma- lav police have now been estao- lished to round up Communists. For speeding on Bruja Road Lt. Ernest Cec'l Chappelle, Jr., of Albrook Field, was fined *10 this morning in the Balboa Ma- gistrate's Court. And a Panamanian was fined $10 for failing to have a valid certificate of inspection. He was a truck driver, Gerardo Jim- nez, 24. For failing to stop at a stop sign, Marta Aragn, 25, Pana- manian, was fined $15 In court today, and Jose Vicente Correa, 36, Ecuadorean, was fined $15 for driving his motor scooter without a license. And a loitering charge this morning netted Vicente Marti- nez ten days in jail. The 35- year-old Panamanian was found loitering in a La Boca labor camp Building 905-A. He has had similar convictions twice this year. Local 900 To Talk Wages, Housing, With Newcomer A request for a substantial wage increase and demands for mote adequate part-time employment for local rate workers will be brought up at a conference between Local 900, GCEOC-CIO and Governor Francis K. Newcomer, a union release said today. The conference is scheduled to be held at 2 p.m. Wednes- day between the Governor and a committee headed by Ed K. "Welsh, CIO International re- presentative, and Edward A Gaskln, president of Local 900. The union's announcement said the wage increase and part time problems are sure "to consume most of the conference time." The housing situation of loc- al rate employes also will be discussed, particularly the com- plaints of the residents of Rainbow City on the Atlantic Side In addition to plans for the projected Cardenas town- side, the release said. The conference is the result of a request submitted recent- ly by the union. i - Exams Announced By Civil Service Commission In US The U. S. Civil Service Com- mission today announced ex- aminations for filling vacancies in positions of Airway Operation Specialist (Communications) at grades GS-5. GS-6 and GS-7. Salaries range from $3,410 to $4.205 per year. Positions to be filled are in CAA facilities in the state, of Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma and New Mexico, as well as Balboa Heiehts, and Swan Island, West Indies. Additional information and application forms may be ob- tained from the Civil Service of- fice in the local post office building or from the Executive Secretary, Board of U. S. Civil Service Examiners, Civil Aero- nautics Administration, Fort Worth. Texas. 145 Passengers Saved As Waterbus Sinks In Harbor HAMBURG. April 21 (UP) The harbor waterbus Wittenberg carrying 145 workers to their jobs sank In a heavy fog here today after-all the passengers and crew had reached safety. The harbor vessel .truck the pier heavily as lt came to the landing and ripped a hole In its side. More than 100 of the early morning passengers Jumped onto the pier. Others, along with the crew, stayed aboard as the ve&sel drift, d into the Elbe ertuary and lowly unit. Three r:ue craft arrived and took thorn ofL POOSIBLE RIVALSW. Averell Harrlman (left) hakes hands with Sen. Bates Kefauver of Tennessee at a Democra- tic Party dinner in New York. Harrlmtn, among those hon- ored at the function, was boosted by Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Illinois as a possible nominee for President, an honor al* ready sought by Kefauver. At lower right Is Secretary of Labor Maurice Tobin. Stafford Cripps In State Of Coma At Swiss Hospital ZURICH, April 21 (UP) Sir Stafford Cripps, Chancellor of the Exchequer in Britain's post- war Labor government, was re- ported In state of coma today at the Blrcher Benner Clinic where he was hospitalized for medical care. The former chancellor, who will be 83 Thursday, has been under treatment here Intermittently since November, 1950 for spinal tuberculosis and another "rare and dangerous disease" which has never been Identified pub- licly. Tavernilla Street To Undergo Coating A seal coat will be applied t<| the surface of Tavernilla Streell between Balboa Road and L I Boca Road, and San Pabl I Street, between Tavernilla Streel and Balboa Road from 7 a.m. tJ 4 p.m. tomorrow and Wedens] day. The pavement will be Upper while the work is In progress. To avoid traffic congestion and construction hazards, th<| public Is asked to use the are:] as little as possible while th seal coat is being applied. Feeling Miserable? ^^ TAKE l^SAl HEPTICA! No n*d to f..l htodochy, miserable, b.caus. you n..d a laxative SAI HEPTICA brings you gcntl. p..dy rafiof. SAI HEPTICA sw..l.w o,oJr stomach brings you th. smil. of h.alfh! SAI HEPTICA Th antacid laxot.v. .Sal S Itpalta > ,*r itit* ,. luidibuM* ;: "*1ISMI1'** i-n NOW... Years Old! ...But No Increase IN PRICE A You'll enjoy Seagram's V.O. ' Canadian Whisky ccn more now that it is 6 years old! Honoured the world over, Seagram's V.O. is the lightest, cleanest tasting whisky you have ever enjoyed. Try it... it's aged longer. ManawtWatPaMnaayf COMPAA CYKNOS, S. A. SeagrattrsVO. CANADIAN WHISKY . |
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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 |
| 40 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |