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,r. -..: .1 ,.i. ..~ ~. I-.. ___ vriwR w lw^^^y Lincola. ~~-. *i- * ;~ i 4 ev, * _ -O rieste !, ***|| i. -1 _ * US, British Tank it. S : .. . SPaarmm : I0 Line Italian Zone Of Disputed Area ' r .- i;. -A ' afl-rieTty oJt stX -yUa. 3,h, toa,&& SMiltyr. aj- o a Muash, t soiis . . Qt" .'; .-,. btln b SO M IN a by helt n 5,00, are OreuaIte kidm an- -mt Cty., 3L1 iect, with Catidr Stl VW^SSlb^ 0 ray, who is beim boat4 elas a material wito in the s In thnluakson County Ja at Kad- Ir. O' reponedl to have pent ihe night SHall aS he a 0tedly had received the $600- S1000Aniom money. i "* * taenlsea 's KillIers n Solitary iff N4 -. V. .. .i. -ir -S' BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Oct.10 (UP) Prneside ' Tito moved troops and armored remiforceni ent into Yugolatv arc of disputed Triee tsedy and server virtualiebft u on on the U ipd d e "t.0nd BrItAUh. accept a6 new proposal for cotrof of thi disputed ritory. . fYtoa w ed he Western powers e never will a cept the Anglo-American plon to hInd over Zene Aw Tnreste to. Italy. American and British tauks and tmeps drmw ii . position just acrs the ier dividing the two mia, t. guard all roads lding to tke Yugoslv-eccped aw '. and as a precaution against disorders. Tlto's t oos rolled fn u 4,000 --- a. Communist-led workers In the Ano-American zone of the territory staged a 24-hour r e-J teIl' test strike against the parton plan. The demonstrators, 5pU dominantly Italian, demnt that all Trieste t'rritoileryf Chaen banded to Italy. ft was feared O 2U tev Ip from the Wr eA & ttleg;d th~ l leot To _arderd three arm * p r Western frce miles apart. rorden Pmn.I ', M~u-ta..mCMel m -- bacum ,u sO)wqu SW The feeli ngl that le the better it will be whleb abLT and Itallan feeljgs ruaift~ high over the American dealMp to turn A of the tptmtory over w IttLy and to let Belgade Zona "a". Yugolavia'a ambausador V i"r PopEote old the " WOm charge late. a ibrmal statement pah asblhe the Arizoi gea e os mbIae ea t fi Wht ir at h an -di.mlup t>- ik r V t hfrlL appeal r-ud nnoer vta atm .- g appratOu l nt domoonstrm,. of th a glSM the Amn- Vg;wW A D"st -and Itahnll a w otf'T Ita In oiel's Son .,~ n .red an d o ,- ) te- A e Western obaerrd rmtd we Americ a Injured wre said thev beflmved V=7 P T N.Y. HeMnr Sr y M al]en Wwapler of El Rene, note indicated the tWaT. on POf N.Y. d Mnr. Oktl., w suffered cuts an her ment under no c n son o Crrolel o ad ort la- e fe rom flye gias;, Mrs. Thn would take diect S r. Carrold, fot Mopo -rettl, ProivdKee. IR I, who thon. Thby Md t il recent y promote Mll- wa truk in the eye by a glass conalltory ta vi SMder West Point, N.Y. her; sa Mrine St. Neil u hopra of vsto et a SWest oint N.Y. Tex., who s- ryoUnl appointed to West elbow when pelt- The "aS I 'tIn by. former Predent Harry I deUvered to s t ; I'.-al -, is acftve in them W W d a th SAcolyte. Came- UnitN t ad aBrtish It Club, Golf Cl o bLod fthe l ot" and ki the city where the i idsiaaCu visions ae housed. Mde dIfin pi da horses. In Jeeps and SfN stlyS attended Amer- niI admitted only au- In Rame Iallan Innaty. pr_ to the trea. seppe Pella anmou "---- N of demnstrators ernmeat had "mna Open HMMd the ratn-dreached cided to serept the Ntaah vig nightfall, but ~ olce pronosL" He eall -ek-end ,u f w,- tin" and 0 e." k a t-h rpen Weater de fact and m tln" and a "4eec las agsht at X ft aI e nnr a ie wM Daue e tah bit au r the neoplb nlo t towSe N lf blte be e t th Sf Itri to mn entire areas dnoi aay. ell'me all of me i In Tries. it bef Sbftftav ad, sent to the 'ealed the bnrtl 1 Ass% ati i embassle whlc theb h = .a o .ry session of A1iTe4 a e, . BuMared gut." wr to mut-s Statw and itUlna a tt5rtiIe IF,* .. F! '~ I ~ 1* 'I * 2 *4~~.** -4 nr,6nsr I(3. -'~ elmi W..r I 3 dM ,al i BBEr-f -= Iqu" U. ! E , ', . *^ . , . .- * i. I ;- ;: . -^ ; '~r l"i '.i. .~n '4;~~6-~.c,;~5__,~~I -I .r~ TOB gPANAMA AMERICAN AN INT~PDIRDiNT b& NUWSPAP' - -~- I - r..' -:r;LM-- .. T:E PANAMA AMERICAN . I AD nn Rul IWD wn iv T=H PANAMA AfhSICANlll PM INS. P onor" v N "LUON WOUN LseeL.l mso . SA 00iMO1 ARIAS. EDITOR 67 H Urrr t 0 0 O1 1 *4 PANAMA. I. * tLaPHwOqw PANAMA NO 2.0740B 0 LINES CASLi AODIPTe PANAMEPICAN. PANAMA 0 0cplc, 1 2q 7 CNAA* AVENUE IIUTWWEN 12t. AN ^.13TH Tnl emMN I[HNTATIVI IOSIW41AM P LOWERS. INC. r 24B M AnMiON Avg. NEW YORK. i17> N V. 0 tOCAL ST 10111 O nwi. IE------------ .eo l wi mm. $O ssasD o ; MONTH. OIN M ANOB E 'IA IOn OVANC 4 5 so o0 tJ'1 YOUR PORUM THE READERS OWN COLUMN THE MAIL BOX The Mail eBox nn open forum fo readers of The Peam Amer. (ie. Lettrs aer received *iatfully end ore handled his webol cof.l- dentiel meaer. if yme camn bfte a leatt don't be impaflit i it doost appea the u lasy. L ea publised ia the oer received. Pleae ton t kee the letters limited to** e p lemtlh. Identy of ette write Is ihM n ld tictM t co.nldece. This. pewspep ar ssme no responsibilityy ftr ateameatI s eopais o eMpressed ia 4ltters lfrm raeeamrs -0- ', Crw Answer to Previous Puzzlet Crown Colony ACROSS 5 Air raid British rown alarms SBritsh crown British coin A colony used here 8 Antiquated 7 Onager 11 Small space 8 Asteriskt * 13 Made a home, 9 Bristle 6 * as a bird 10Paradise 14 Lender 12 It has an - 15 Handed of 224,960 187 Is (Lattn) square miles 26 Variety of 42 Wiles 17asten anew 13 Its capital, chalcedony 43 Possessive SacL -, is famed 27 Century plant pronoun 20 Loiter for big game 28 Brood of 45 Genus of 121 Gets up bunting pheasants willows 25 Hawaiian birdl I t has 29 Plant part 46 Stout string 12 Without (Fr.) irrigation 31 Most facile 47 Gaelic 30 Bewildered 21 Grate 38 Zealous 49 Golfer's ' 31 Low tide 22 Small island 39 Large plants device S32 Dismounted 23 Chair 40 Eternities 51 Weight of 33 Lath 24 Consumes 41 Demolish India 34 Fourth - Arabian aliph 35 Was borne I :38e Fondles '37 Compass point H ,; Revokea legacy '39 Clocker - 41 College cheer 44 Cover with turf again 45 Frozen water I .48 Rugged mountain crests SO King of Pylos 3 52 Thoroughfare - 53 Scoffs 54 Worms 535 Barter I Type of Cabbage ,2 God of loye s I 4 Removed S(Poet.) SAN , SDEER BAGS HUMAN,--46 seconds after he hit a deer which was crossing the highway' near Salt Lake City, Utah, Jesse ;" James Scott, father of two.children, died in this mess of twisted Steel which was once a .iew car, a4 It smashed, out of control, . .into this bridge railing. TODAY CENTRAL CIRCUIT Presents: CENTRAL TECHNICOLOR RELEA S- 1:15 3:11 5:07 7:03 9:00 p.m. - "TlE WAR OF THE WORLDS , iMltlew Space... They're Reaehing For Yo 8_1 pII~a ~ramouint p'unb THREE ATTRACTIONS TOD 4VE AT MIDNIGHT" -- "THE GORILLA SRI 1 and - . "THE EAGLE SHADOW" 'Public Diplomacy ss World Ten8on, ,mss Taxes. ys Connectcut Senator CHICAGO. Oct. 10 (UP - Sen. Prescott Bush (B-Conn.) said today that It world tension i=a Idoes not Increase In the next few months. Cuneres should be ehle SE! to "lighten the burden of the American taxpayer." Bush told the American Life convention an annual meeting of Life insurance company rep- resentatives, that the adminls- u' tratlon is slicing fat from the defend program without "cut- tinr into the muscle." "Substantal savings already have been made. and I believe that more economics can be a- hieved without Impairing euen- 11ti strength," he said. "If this Is done. and If world tension does not increase in the next few months, am hopeful that Conres, when it recon- veens. will be aet to lghten the burden of the-Ameriae taper - ers." De, 1AY!A DE" Tends To Become Frozen Diplomay BY BRUCE BIOSSAT A lot of initial alarm was voic- ed when Lester Pearson, ft ma day's Secretary of State for Ex- -ternal Affairs, suggested that In- ternational dealings might get further through "old-fashioned diplomacy" than through com- pletely publicized Unitd Nationl sessions of one sort or another This sounded to some like a call for the return cet covenants and all the other trappings of the old-style diplo- mats who padded softly around the capitals of the world, decid- ing the fate of nations behind closed doors. Actually. however, a careful look at Pearson's remarks dis- 'closes little cause for alarm, but instead a considerable a- mount of good sense. First of all, he did not propose either that the UN as 'suc be scrapped, or that public sMeon 6f the UN be abandoned. He merely suggested that he UN "has or should have a ptt- vate as wel as as ubli face. There should be opportunities here for other than public ap- pearaices " Thenub of his complaint s this: "It Is not essential, Indeed, It is often harmful, for the ege- tiatian of policy always t be conducted in glass buses which are often toe temptia a target for brickbats. It I al too easy to strike attitude la pubic, only to find later that we are sttck with them. Open diplomacy now tends to be- come from ipa lemae." Pearson is here speskin a fact known to most practiced neoo- tiators, in whatever field, the world over. If men on opposite sides of an Issue are compelled to state a de- cisive position publicly, then they cannot 'easily retreat public from the stand they have taken. When the issue Is a bargaining matter, their first offer tends to become their final offer. They are left no room for real bar- qaining. for accepting' anything less than they have firmly de- clared they must have. Anyone familiar with the course ef important labor dis- p tes in thi country knows ey are noet settled In public. he final agreement, a patch- work of eenesslons free both sides, usually hammeetd out arfm a table nla private. *-. * . sometimes the disputants are in separate rooms and only 'a neutral mediator knows how much each ide Is prepared to It is the same In mot all hu- man negotiations. Men and gov- ernments do not relish the loss Of face, and possibly stature, at comes with having to back down in public. Any system of world dilloma- cy which does not make a place for the private negotiation of Is- sues can hardly hope to produce effective world solutions.. If every utterance in diploma- tic negotiation on the great world- problems must be spoken ta the reporter's hearing and be- fbre the camera's eye, then. as Pearsod suggests, It sim p y means our statesmhen will be continuously danwht in a series of rigid poses, like the figures in a waxworks. And Yeally fruitful action will he about as likely as a dance In the wax museum. -t BROADWAY HEARTBEAT Celel About Town: Ava Gardner, jut before winging back tMoMv .etwa. n the wtnak VCmW. ny. Feat- eg a man's pink shirt wth *aSb rolled up...Joap ChaIler (the ikMr *h" of ) Pal on e... 'l aer ete Me It. - His spd ard t Story". ..Nia.'" MM I t e I in 5th Av e ft.eeay...k Mwn" tl j a here's welme s(after hlldmeIr wth thI 6t ca Hit) b r the ~tkm ea..C.eleI Vincent Ao lkt (Jdatvei frm her wihelhe) fishing in he purse for bg ar...Irene pau giving New t'shme Class. Sophie In Our Alley: An agent was trying talk a young, talented atre out of quitting show business... "Oh," e sa e "you ant get anywhere unless yu' a M lyn a Jane Ruussel... "Z1 o?" was the reminder "How about sOphisfdker and Helen Tra t F . from Bob Sthmo to I I .. a. moorr ' u so ed i the a oil Door-toDr Tx0mX By DO S RSr WASHINOTON- (NIA) Some form ofthe "touse. this sItuati&lU- ir ,st e gil y.I .- door-to-door canvass by Internal Revenue erv- has been found. SRome eli f Ith rlilethe Ic agents is almost sure to be adopted on a na- payer hasn't been a taxa . tion-wide basiS. The idea ls to make sure that If thd latter case, is to e D everybody pay their income taxes. moves n with the i e resa ts of the.experimnent In New England proceed. . ,s, m with that procedure are now being studied b Tho New England residents W(b bve ha top R officials. But it had such obvibouly good calls from IRS men have been ve r m , resuIt4 from the U. 8. Treasury's point of view, Gallahan claims. He says MWY a them who that It's considered a cinch to be a standard IRS have beep found to have tax 6d0f n.det f.o operation. it a favor to have an ient tm arou and The studies are concentrating on removing the straighten the whoklt h t ot. . bus and possible abuses few agents bur A. Galhan. IS commissioner of thn t by Indignapt lh_.. i . New England reglon and veteran employe of the are being traM agency, was n charge of the test. He gives these it happns, thr agent details on the way it works: arr of business next day to check The agent knocks on the door&sa& aand Bo hi J euB a e. u croleWld w1ehic welade his. mt' a) been I e One of e p e abuses J a phony. us- ing this maes of getting into,a house. g e FiB rsqdupn the agent asks Is whether not tl .at t the rldethas filed all of hila federal tax ftrms. hat their rwaa- If the si t says "yes." agent the en asks the W e Hs a N him to show either a canceled check, copy o If this rt of thing was widauread the he foim, or treasury receipt for the p Lymet service, the door-to-door cavn a wuu B- If the peron can produce ope of papers self very wel to such a ..J .i and t's In order that's all there is to the visit, "-s s" rN. His name l checked off and the agent goes a- S officials, however, bout his business, haingheard of uc cases If the householder or resident hasn't filed bh # the t moths, forms, or If he has some question about Ais fer enough to wreck the ea S eral taxes, the agent seeks to get the matter claims that there was rp arepot o e it straightened out then and there. In this way England test. . the canvass purportsto be a service. allahan's agen were When the resdant claims he has paid all of meett two days.l - his taxes, but can't produce roof, the' agent Tfl S gl-round makes a note of it and then checks the official quent ast a I n i. fiAs later. If the files don't produce evidence of odiected'ari ll1t u nrii * payment the.agent makes another call to that The proft r, t" p Walter Winc l n r Y *- ' W, ,i-'., -v ,, .e3 !5 io oeqnoqoy VA 4'H - 77. dl 9-C Of I A Smd no Some homes I switches an the wol the kids. I li~YI rU~wI . - -- ;--- I---~ .1 h - - i ~eF~ t "lmag lvowe v 5ohave been .. mt^.i. of Jna n fy t : .a I am o -an wh eares r I s. tos B my. I a r cly o en , AU-JB l ag priatig-O a The meZ V- m onnea PMan niiit'I iS~ 1 ~ Sw howerCloamps H-SfopperH l rrru s Governmenters o- r's remark a ffw osafer- tomic weapons of any sort, but tary Charles rWilson's encee eesme it is large and increasing steadl- news confer e n statmim Sd hat hh t the ly. he does not believe he - r wtr ofted "We have In our atomi culd deliver an eff l ,- -by F pro- senal a number of1 kinds of bomb attack en this cmau7 A.RO Sove!t 8- weapons. suited to the special three years. bomb Io ;" need of the Army. Navy and Anybody Mr. Eisenhoyer ia r Wit v few.days the Air Force for the specific tasks could have his own ideos.- public :aJrd differing p- assigned to each service." He said he would not t.T prIsals of 14 st6tu of Sviet the threat of the Ru .m ..H-bomb 3nb Mr. Eisenhower declined to bomb is right on the do ". i '' "Defense c Charles I. take issue with Defense Secre- sa country at the mo. Wilson said th je when Rus- A .ala can wage I.bomb warfare Chairman* W.* WI ole *f INCREASE YOUR PROFITS. the Co, U. .e E.ertyI So at thetimeis By Letting Us Help You Cut Your Operation C6f On ,,,,Civil feAne Administratoar We Have The Office Machine You Needt Val Petersof a&d Defense Mobl- ... ..... .4 ....a$12o lia. lrer Arthur S. eleming contri- Sai bUt d-t o the q e ts e ,h l,, di, fnpprslo V VOt L"p In to Bhaltu entmversy. S1* ann eunmced th hbe haw Agents and Distributors for' aa;ak4a members of this S8 = 6adm M ren to retain from "BUIRROUGHS" "SMIT COONA" U"DITO "ieemment S a nmelea "KARDEX" "STME CASE" Ale .......apabiltig,-= they first Ai a e lasm ..... check theft u a with Aidi Mahl poues, iedlaeors, rnkeb iaasse. VARthe haiyper w ri (ewi L T eres.i e, Dupieabors, Pile CaWDas, SStrass) ofth the e registerss. Cemmhele. mI iv el Avenue Pheme 3s dn le8 romt The President did not ofIer A l r I4 ns ead, he strgled that "the SaSoviets b p9EUW agstoc.pile *m si Otlt'. t yps. typj h" e tested an .t .h-bom6bor the "tferanner' ofT .90814% a ft lathe I-bombu :-.,q .. the ,ie easvde that. "Lev..4 that. *lsg he". iot rbity orf *o~fe'*tack onas, and suck eabi'tlestWillIn- .. .. NO..cam .im..,. ._..ie. r o r.. s *. Oene + of the, worst diu e sso that Recnt ste-enmn bye goveea-_A_ aso s attack healthy bridge ment leader have ranged from Ine AWf hoea - ',e l nyer i, 1finesson"alt. very- openly-stated fear that Russiaw .. t ha 5e, the syiptom now can wa H-bomb warfare There's not *single vacm tube.-dihwo Splyer is unae to resist a this coun to a ca.utios es- .ing ringing sounds are completely elia- i, n it it meansjeopar- sursce tha the Russans prob- mated... cl.oting noiss ced to ewE s S-Mg (ar (or lod) hia contract. ably could '" launch an H- ne S-AM n ea.m In today'l an' we a very bomia attack or another three a? ease of ethisA u theats. i Tw thredeus pewerl The nded forbowig lr Rses r nWest openedto : hearts, Obviou' .referring to the provides the pow eeded for hearing e e . Snd declare daruU P th e or l ons. the President mild tovery svere. Si for ise, it delivm f lor 1 tc in dummy wRiEh -' qe S tr to "ou will recall that our gov- te uiott prrvi m tae jack of iesi.t my eowinent announced that the 8o- with for more clarity. e_ _odued _an atomic __xpl_ sandr -bf rla Tntl ae .?e ap r- *1 o from 11 at r 9PlOs 6 In e ub5eseplace ...as vnuo tubmaes to imm owu.p fr~. asJi aub w., 8of wnetha4r of90 batr club, Oath w th I sa a tea reI in whisk b'h l h renlu ad d i ton of s -1to te expee can enjoy enly with uthe AamR- i,,ka iem put 8i Anto fb e utem a their itor Radee. Call te& 1 aI. uPmtromg) p.h tabt 10 gladly arrange a private dena- the ac of uilfs and known autb- 't serw ke o 1 9 or club, rftorug t pag mnoT.ne s 0 EXCLUSIVE SR kadf the a -h 11 th U Street1 1 PO x 4.' -- 0Me T 2 2.i2 S 2.3264L1 i 41iag th th- dosId ha ve1 WR hiaw bt g sue a bomb. MAL, the first trick Ahi e0owl ring tAeir P^ woL feth atconclude that the pow- tae tno aug. 12a Si eneas of t con- at* Uconclude that b now have the cap- Stomice1 attackon o fi I."le will in- oncltheassagte time."t W ** by **weat aon, or e AE.our strengtn oi eatconclude that S IsI.Ilon Guarm tew hvy the State a s es U SS ..Accoua ..AtM I I AL* IT $5.OO FORCES -; .. - -, ..~~ ... .... . r M 7 ' '- *. 4 R oV. 7I~ ?(' mi + a -' 'iFr I * S aNd $5S sfINGS hru a period p : dry auid e~LW~Otn you shop for yoM most hebefld ahbdi 4 IMIOND, you mt hae FAIrTH In th Jewe I anM you'buy ySr AMND. mber a IAM - It l.Bver...nly u aert w.t itf a.i a you *W ..as t ldeiare. - D IA MON CIN TES TOR 161 C3INMtRALt -AVe MA i".. , * ... r .. w ai r vt:~p *.I if mir- ., 1i r - . ... " '<-* r s^ -/: :;'' Sri I--.^ if "Sin 'il i Q K -. ,, A. - father Kills Son-In Law Pn Courthouse Square o -- FAYETTEVILLE. Tenn.. Oct. March said neither had a per- l. tUP) A prbminent attor- mit to carry a pistol. e,, liay and his la.itL-ai-taA. La. n "Bamia" Mullins, a pushcar' ~~cdrying a pistol and a deep- peddler, was an eyewitness of ,,,,aeted grudge, shot it out on the duel in the square of this 't' public square today and the south central Tennessee town younger man fell dead a cour.-' not far from the Alabama line, housee idlers scurried for cover. He said they came face to Day Sugg. 40, attorney and fact in front of Wright's dry- son of the Lincoln County bank goods store in newly rebuilt *Virisident, was killed. His father- area where a tornado sliced in-law, Hoyle Yearwood, 61, was through the town two years ago. t t k by six shots but was in Condition. '"They started shooting right sounded like a bunch of away." Mullins said. "I ducked rackets going off." said for cover in a doorway. A fewl uty Sheriff Fred March ho men across the street on the, coming around the corner, courthouselawn scattered for, ~ the embittero( in-lawsl the bushes." e and started emptying their ----- olvers at each other with- ^ ta word. :.arch said he actual!v believ- '4d it was only fireworks until MAKE FRIENOS ')he saw a man running to the store in front of which the abots were exchanged. Then he saw Sugg lying In ;the ddorway of the store and 'Ylparwood s'arn.ing over him. "HIe shot me first." the bleed- 'Yearwood was quoted by the VOguty, "and I'm shot, too." ~ riends said that enmity be- .twen the two stemmed from --two causes. Yearwocd hadn't Iu \ \ liked it when the attorney mar- . ried his 'teen-aged daughter two years ago. And Sugg three years When you make up your, ago had defended a man subse- Christmas card list. remember quently convicted of killing!you're not balancing books. To Yearwoed's cousin in a gun fight send a card juit because some- over a dice game. one sent you one, or to remove Mrs. Sugg. sued her husbandia name from your list just be-1 for divorce last year in a bit-lcause the particular party failed 7.ter action but the suit was later to send you a card last year, vio-, ' tpdroped. latest the spirit of the holiday. SAcquaintances said that both Without heartfelt good wishes, men had, been going around a Christmas card is just a pretty armed for several days although piece of paper. SIDE GLANCES ''"*Mi W W'*bom rIn t * S oyr know- wt an *. L _lanetM :_CUMIrs WKLKI?4. Flanetie By Colbraith ter the truce-.guess she'll exciting age I lived in!" UNITED FRIT COM.NY Great White leet k NEW ORLEANS SERVICE r s S.S. "BYFJORD" ...........................Ot *S.S. "YAQUF" ............. ... .... ... ......O t. -1 S.S. "MATAURA" ... ......:.. ...Oa.. O S.S. "LEMPA" ......................................Oct. mandunsg arfei-t. Chuwd "de Gemera Carta NEW YORK SERVICE Cr'gtjeM ' S.S. "LIMON" ............................. ..... t. S.S. "MAJORKA .............................. . 1 S.S. "PARISMINA" ............... ............... t. S.S. "C. G THULIN" ............................. Weekly saillna %o twelve passengerships to New Tork New Orleans. Los Angelesa. f s fraeo and, battle. Special round trip fare from Cristobal to New York Los Angeles. San PrAnciseo and battle. To New York .. ......... ...... ............ To Los Angeles and San Fr so ........ To Seattle ..................... .. ... ... TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL 2121 ANAM A 2-23 COLON M1 the Pacif Sli.team Ni oa "mt i INCORPORATID B I TOTAL CBARTiE Ib Royal maH Lnes Lid, FAST FREIGHT AND PASSENGER SERVICES BETWEEN EUROPE AND' WEST COAST OF SOUTH AMERICA S.S. "FLAfMECO" ............................ . M.V. "SALAMANCA".................................OAt. 16 TO UNITED KINGDOM VIA CARTAGENA. KINGSTON. HAVANA, NASSAU. BERMUDA, CORUNA, SANTANDER AND LA PALL1CE M.V. "REINA DEL PACIFICO" <(A T.W TO UNITED KINOIDM DIRECT M.V. "SANTANDE ................ .......... .. ..O. ct. 2 ROYAL MAIL LINE, LTD./HQLLANtD AME1ICA LINE TO NORTH PACIFIC PORth .S. "LOCH GARTr ....... ...... ........... .Ot. 12 M.V. "DIEM UERDYK" ............................Ot. 6 OLMOL*I nf r>> j-i4 dflLo-poUHM.4i MV3-A Is<*aI wI IM4 AT -C.. - 7 . Ti ; Pii~~~l'Thu i : i ...- V r - rM ~ICL~~ A. .1 S.t '. , ' -.' 1'3 ^.i' M i >~s; /..~~~R j %4,l r3&f "I . S . A. ' ~Ci~ ~'.L~ .' :1I~ 1.~ ~ 4 - TO UK/CONTINENT \ s.. a a N .................... .MT.I A D .... .. . . All S Blia m Su bc-t to PACIFIC TEA NA C f- -. rANAMA-Avi. FORD CO. INC. 1BALBOh.TeniL I' ~ ~~ 1 i i p fEv#4y aJ.a4 .f' '' ,** ^- *. _____ *~ :".^': +./+ : .' , 4 -FO fl - 4 . Into the Fire" AMAlZA, I ANWWU LATWS TNO6usT... ...rAPAPr L4A 'TmLP TTMl6B .JOKS4S THAT I'v CO 0### TIE -0 \ 9Og-Wa.tasfe :-.''it , S JMSIlsLLA'd WO I * :-. ^^^ ^ - V/1 (. im w - --- -- -- ---- l ^.tt W^J6 -- -- ----- -- 1 _ Al wmmm z . I A A 4 0 -1i qu.. 'ie.'i ie- :'j, ..-. ' .C 'aLI~Q~' ;r,'r' r. 1~ ~ C '' f;~ ILrJ~13 I.~* 1' r -., tl - 'A , t :n~ itumping the Expert '' ie -, ~k~i~~~'' . T. fl ".~-* "j;.:A p~~4~PF~in I II .5 aw pgi r. a. ,f : k,0t1olhrstr's w 1w l aimg@ ree WRm'fo, lY. -,. of Tort Clayton, . .ht .N.Y . ,sm d l. lpC i a e etbsat epow ther 4ar e S. ,) period o4 1910-14 We Too ich, Too ec As Lead . S -.. Rankina Wo laints Te p i tuatiodt apea iere arle it Strained sped Ie said Le wa irgery is still tone l en o Ig drae "~a' I r I - 1 i QatAr 1 TMe a at Sm ... 1,++i.... , ++ ad truck driver,. ha ltrlle 4lrv. '.tt tite labhe1d do- *I":.-- ,.-; Y-3. 3Ca- Jon land : 1. Mrs. RusI Weade *lth a Ja.Cun- Iam'; t tied fur second e Mrs. H. Person and N. 0. Chapin, and Mrs Ni Leb with Mr. 0. 0. rn. 3 Rumsell Weade with mel As Oreene. e Club Announeement e. Mnd4,y Mustalca w 11 Iits reular me8I: S at So'clock, Monday at the 1 of Mrs. Alvin A. Rankien e 8227-B, Margarita. 10 Seclal Pstpaned Social planned by the in' International Zionist ilation, for Thursday, Oc- 'kI kammou, jrr "anq awe, -prjM I fB-^K!. 3rd, aile *r the t PANTS OF SCHOOLCH1MiL Protect yareles ragast heavy ftmanelal lose 305 days a year 4 hounr a day every mnate of the a a wher wM eamplete coverage with STUDENTS ACCIDENT EXPENSE POLICY i as offered by -- THE MARYLAND.CASUALTY COMPANY . For detailed InformatlMn ea: m-UtL A. SiAS- 1U3 Bolivar Ave., Box 104, Cel.a; TeL 53 (Bended llmar n Aglet) __ _____*- NO RUIN61 JUST DI AN RMSE silver, der plate, goM, copper ai kras Fw sk a yer SLohtay UL 3-4w I L N-6-1-ir Aa ihksa- * *- -S. -, L.~maaug .t * '.*w-* I~ - "POP' " A '" *.. "., .. i .? ... V . . ^Aiiiii^.ui- "aB! M^iMk^-*& *u i**' -* *" 8fl&^nrI ;-.:-** '^ . ^Pt^. &f. W{^ -: .'. ,'" .' '." -v -. - * - f -ci| * < .'+'. -'5' I , *I- , Sn *.'i -1" *'.-'UUTI.. Cn+~cr I; A-. L " -- .-.- mm m_ i!- 7 I.,. I r ". ; - .'-* .. o . 9~rl"r~ ? rua I r I L L! i^B ,'"* / .. 9jEyhw, ^tL tv : KONOMM WI VSWM AT POMT DTJS ". ",*- M IwbPlw [MuMm. 7 r " ID ------' NI lr -t fim vnnlicrlI Tll ll visit In -W 0Fe W staf uaect.ing at Fort Guliek, Thuer and Arkansas duriKt Mrs. i. fIyMr etterained with a luneleen at her Fe t liesnv. S Da % QlOa f lfr the members of the beater Comun l e-- a tLhe P~a f'tUl I s. ..Ueute it %nd Mrs. . Nor a'1gs'twlIed: Mrs. tober 15, at the Agud a Aa Monld wth r cb1lld 1 Horace L. 11 Mr. Lester Temple L. r.i. has been 'Maiaia r ne are \J. %iijlUosu. Mr. Aloerc N. postponed until further notice. to Jackxonville, Fla., to .ledsoe, Mr .Atp*ben C. Hood, ,their home. Lieutenant Mlri. h@oAiaund Uaaaho aLnu Meeting Of Isthmisan Me4 gll returning to civilian Mrs. James M ha Dstaff Workers Federaton er beti~U atoned at eordi naMt M a. Dan L. Mil- The semi-anual meeting o1 to for thirteen months ier, Fort Oullek Zone presld- the Isthmian Religious Work- . tean was.alew at. er FmedereUop will be held at' Monday, October 12. B lks Clubs IJnte Reverqun Henry Ben will be IMembers *r Pres the host, and a program of un- ci I The annd dinner given by usual. interest has been ar- the 8. PW W. to ~hnor the ranged by Reverend J.W. Lfm.- I PTy Working ntedb6bt of the Preas, emann. was held -at ttl M3kr Home at Coffee will be served at 830 A& brasos Hieita ht Thuraday eve- am., and Reverend Bill wtl aing with D I M al hosts open the devoflons at :15 a.m. M 11T ,or the occason. Reverend Norman Pratt, chair- SMr. Nathan. Ahton, Exalted man, will start the byminem *Ruler, mpeud the head meeting at 9:45 ajm. ana ev- table abd alhtrducd the guest erend William Armstron aid i .r speaker, O -Qpliar John L. Me- Reverend Walter Reltz will mcis-Above Nelal, a member of the staff speak on Methodism in Paaa- em received lu of tne USAI CARIB School, ma. elareid with who formerly served as a Pub- The members attending wt * I pfteeh Io Iinformation Officer. have luncheon at the Ma - Tbe ncede, rita Clubhouse at 11:30 a. m. in Utw direction The guests enjoyed cocktails The program features the t, lowesM dance In the 10eoue pre ng dinner. 280th Annlversary of the birth hy. the farmer Those attmdiig included: of John Wesley, a year inwhleb ed aganult hI TioastzastL George Tuley; lId wide Methodism Is ex- d in the normal Ikalted Ruleato OopeMlo,Bal- ndng and Intensifying Its boa Lodge 144; .u06s Speaker Inflgence. Panama has felt the S Autenmt 1 eal of th effect of this peat movement 'EW "OeC MANAOBRi *-----Carib '- Wilbur J. this year, both from the Brit- Da. D. Nichols. a Dockery, Meputy and ish parent organisation as well laid, Ohio. is the new l rf eh, Grand l .ler of the as the daughter church In the maaer of the Atomie Su Ianal li Bright; U.AA. Commission. He succeeds. Wfles Wl; Jl ues Wainlo, in W. Boyer. who is toUa Bnleea Ar o Hamburg; Colen Unit I.A.W.C. 'to the oil industry after fl Ili eon d M Tro -, Keelth Marcy; AnnouteAments years' service. Nichols be ed S- ..Ja7k Low of The monthly General Assem pioneer the development 1the SElks M. Deledo, bly of the Colon Unit of the atom bomb. . ilonia;' ona Mende0, Colon Inter-American Women's ClI ub ofesalon-fortun- cty Counc;l Mr. Milton N iah; will be' held Monday. October ber ai nal-,l Judith B ini, and Mrs Do- 12 at 3:30 p. m. at the Club. Sof s, who do rita L of the Panama Mrs. Hlpolto Fernanadez, pres- who perform un- American; Mrs. Rosemary Bear- dent, will officiate. ratiops and who don, and Bherman Skeete, St. r The anniversary dinner of ( At fees'for their & Herald and Esteban Lopez, the Unit Is being planned for I SPres RelatBfs, United Fruit Friday, October 16 from 6:30 e I say, is Company. to 8:30 p.m. The dinner wll be r n me *alefector served buffet style and tickets arnd unfavdrably Hll And ell are a dollar per person for a- Party at G ulick adults and 50 cents forchildren Atiet disapproval The iemaOts of the Fort twelve years of ae and under. ir branches of oulick Offier Club entertain- bht4urgal abas- ed with the traditional Pare- Departre for the States. pe a'lat year's well party at the Club Friday Captain and Mrs. Robert Hat- pda we wC e evening, to honor Major and cher and son, Stephen, of Fort A hula donme s a kind of ld to red kt Mrs. Frank Jonells, who aSled Sherman, were among the pas- waist *how. o ' i as ;e-spllr g today for duty In Puerto ico. sengers sailing today. dRnnIh ng,' Also welcomed at tbls time Captain Hatcher will go to JUST RECEIVD there as omn:- were the ofcers of the 3rd the Advanced Engineering fe"WllO hat too Batallon of the 33rd Infaltry. School at Fort Belvoir, % Va.,, Ic WE I, b 4tb real after which he has been order- and rs be that Wine aJ. DOplicate ed to Fort Lewis, Washington. FEI GQ WI nfoui "adequate- id Gaon He has served for two years la e rg.Aur meeting o the on the Isthmus. ., l" T A Ant~is BrldgeClub -- s "convifetbatat -'the Amtrican Major and. Mrs. RHmlton L. Give a new apear to too frequently trie LeagSte, was Rhodes of Fort Davis, aild your house wth t too ttle tralr- held Mondy eve at the today. They r gng to visit colors. ncee...." arrita Qbhouse. relatives in B&rrisenburg, VVa, b1 e ouir p"'ale o e -- winners of the g Imib before re~Fort e0- v ee M were: North MuR eouisr 1c nWC uted-for iad Mrs. H. fIf.?. the etVAU k 4tOVS (fSr dt) --q I I .41 .;k t11 111 .' "v .1 : . 'a .u Sell'em... When You Tell' em btu P. A. si Lea-e your Ad %ithl une of our Agents or our offices in No. 57 "'" Street- Niam.l , No. 12,179 Central Ave. Colon LEWIS SERVICE No. 4 Tivoll Ave.-Phone 1-2201. and "NOVEDADES THIS" Via Bspafia No. 34 PanamA R. P. ( la VMila Thelme id~6 r i, 9-^ a.,. aq- Ie r*w 7: CARLTON DIU0 STORE loans. Melnda*,x-A.WMtumar, Col6a Agencla Initrnciuala de PubidkhcuI No. 3 Lottery S Plea Phfo*1-tl *, :, -- "P( * 'J I'. FOR SALE FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS Household Automobiles g eve. b a* d Iihsg pombleg Wie w.m l.ee ,A.mm. em.o Fd S-E --One bedroom and one FOR SALE:-- 949 Buick 4-deeei 208 Ae C. C. iAwnoom set. No. 10, 46th. St d on, goad tires, radio, tip-tep l dition. Excellent buy. Smoet & DR. WENDEHAKE. Medical Clinic. -J.-"Y - - Hunnicutt S. A. 16th St. Ceatal Central Avenue "K" street. Comer fr t t Furniture: bamboo; 2 Avenue Tel. 800, Colon. telephone 2-3479, Panama. 06whtBwith innerspring cushions, ------------ ---- S iKech; matching ottoman, $20; FOR SALE:-1946 Oldsmobile Tudor. FOR SALE Z'~.e6l.e tables one round, 36" very good condition, with acces- i.-...er, gloss top, $40. one rec- series, contact H. Jury. 2137-8, Mlianeua 1 te gular, mahogany top, $15. Me- Curundu, weekdays, after 4:30 p. 1e_ eO ta! furniture: 2 chests of drawers, m. Phone 83-5271. FOR SALE: Continuous Fanfold S-5 each; twin beds with good FOR SALE:-1949 Chevrolet 4-depr Biller, Underwood Champion, uspd. 2ttresses, $15 each; 2 night Sedtn, good tire, metr in Bargain price, Apply Dstribuidores hands, $4 each; dresser, $15; f condition, rees y Sri. S.A. Jose Francisco de la Ossa 41. eioch with solid green cover, $20. S eet & Humnicutt S. A. 18th St. FOR SALE:-Brand new gas stoves Sinette table with extensions and nt Anu Tel.00, Clon f only $140.00, fully gurntd. .. matching chairs, $40; pictures, l A e Tel. oln. far only $140.00, fully guaranteed. *I% etc. Telephone Mrs. Stone. FOR SALE:--1948 Ford Cowvertible, Four burners, oven, broiler, storage 1 C & 7193. pricedd for quick sale. Good motor, space, porcelain finish. FIRESTONE S$-- "- .- ( $750.00. Phone 3-0399. 'Automobile Row," Ave. Jose Fco. R SALE:-Coldspot refrigerator, $ Phone 3 l-0 de la Ossa No. 39, Tel. 3-4563. S 9 cu. m t., 25 cycle, $75.00. Ironing FOR SAL:-1947 Studebeker 4- beard, $3 0C. Albrook 6296. door seden, fully reconditined, FOR SALE: For two eekr only, FOi"R SALE:-60 cye Genl E ood seat covers, easy payments "Hert Mountain Roller" canaries, TR SALE: -60 cycle General Elec- f o $795.00, like now.S $5.00 each. Acuorio Tropical, 55 ric console radio phonograph y Hunnicutt S. A. 16th. street Via Espoao,, Tel. 3-5411. speed automatic changer. 1 gallon Centrol Ave. Tel. 800 Colon. FOR SALE: Remington Portable Electric automatic deep fryer, IFOR SALE:-1941 Pontiac 2-door Typewriter, $30,00. Sunbeam wat- child's tricycle. 2132-B, 6th St. sedan, excellent condition, seat fle iron, $25.00; Kenmore wash- Phone 83-5279. covers, duty-paid, best offer over ing machine, $70.0; S -ew~ rme- FO. SALE: 3 pi oo2- $300. Telephone Mrs. Stone, Cu- chihe, pedal, $20.00; kitchen aid fOM SALE: 3 pieces bamboo: 2 rundu 7193. mixer with neat grinder, $20.00. chairs, one settee $50.00. Chaise Phone 6-241. S"ounge, $10.00. Table lamp, House FOR SALE:-1950 Ford Station we- 121-A, Gatun, Tel. 5-333. gon, new tires & body. with lteto- FOR SALE: Native more, riding Mahogany side tae, i engine, leather seet covers, horse with new saddle and bridle, LE: Mhogny side tbl must be seen to appreciate it. Call 2-3183, Panama. Child's chest of drawers, miscal- Smeet y Hunnicutt S. A. 1lth. St. FOR SALE:-Two typewriters. Can be aneous iss5-. Uig l noon SrtKody. Central 'Avenue. Tel. 800. CJlon. seen at the British Consulate, Co- Te'. 84-4290. FOR SALE:-1950 Willys Jeepster, on. fR SALE- Diniggroomn arm- excellent condition. Call Mary Alice FOR SALE:--Baby crib and mattress FORSALE .rm cAm- Arey 2287, Las Cumbres. (Kiddie koop). Phone 421 Fort Avenue. FOR SALE-1947 Dodge Convertible, *- .... ... .-- juat overhrulel, radio end teed! FOR SALE:-Livingroom, sofa and u verh ul radio end g matching chair, slip covered. Rea- mrens. ees t r Hanicut S. A. sonle. Panama -. nts. Smoot y Hunnicut S. A. unable. Panma 3-3073. ,16th. St. Central Ave. TeL 800, OR SALE:-Bendix semi automatic Colon. S '!tng machine. 60 Cycl. GodO SALE:-Morris convertible 1951 S .0765-B, Williamsoan 1.500 miles, $700. Excellent con S Balboa. edition, Panama 3-3580. SSALE:-Q. M. Buffet, all me- $10.00. Call Balboa (2) 1589. juse 0766-E. Williamson Place. SSALE:-Metal Sideboard $20. imboo cairs'ond tables. 8512 impna Place, Margarita, 3- 59.' SALE:-25 cycle refrigerator, ad condition, $25.00. 704-F, cona. Phone 3513 SALE: PIpstic upholstered venport, 2 matching chairs chest, c. furniture dishes. Tel. 83- fi~t. 673-8. C*jujnduJ-_,s. ANTED TO BUY ywyo'arr ued refrigerator and ,e u2 CROSLEY. Coll us at A. C.NOS. telephone 2-1793 venide Nacional," near Tivoli S diesel launch. Telephone V ,3 Pan am a - r-Smll piano cheap! Call l! (2) 1589. House 0766-E, ,i son Place. T FOR SALE '; Real E tate SSALE: -' Beautiful residence Si.ta at Golf Hei.ht witl-k ,ll FOR SALE:-1953 Chevrolet Station Wagon. Phone Balboo 1718. FOR SALE:-Chevrolet, 1949 2-door Sedan, blue, duty paid. good tires, nylon seat covers. Colon Motors Inc. 10th. St. Tel. 492.J, Colon. FOR SALE:-Lincoln 4-door 1951. like new, radio, perfect shape, ir- surance and duty. Fully paid. A $2, 500.00 value for $1,500.00 if you have the cash. Sosi Tel. 3-1214, Panmmi. FR. SALEc-Ded" Coronet 1949 Club Coupe, new point job, duty free',- excellent condition. Colon Motors Inc. 10th St. Tel. 492-J, Colon. /, FOR SALE:-1949 Ford V8 Custom Sedan, $725.00. 83-6277 2006 C, Curundu. Position Offered WANTED:-Experienced salesmen to sell on percentage basis. Call 800 and ask for Mr, H. Pretty. Colon. WANTED: English and Spanish speaking male clerk, must know typing. Apply oil Americ r Cables s~Rodio Inc., Balboa, C. Z. WAbiTED:-Male or fem f Davis. FOR SALE:-Motor boat "El Macho" 17 1-2 by 5 1-2, 10 H.P. Air cooled engine with clutch, 2 1-2 H. P. Johnson outboard, both for $275.00. Bush tuck, "37" Chevy, also "37" Chevy two door, both for $80.00. Winchester 22 rifle, model 63 automatic, $40.00. Rub- ber Life roft $10.00. Lionel train and track $15.00. Marshll, Gatun Fire Station, oil day Sundoy. FOR SALE:---New Hi-Fi L. P. ord just orriveo to .AGENCIAS DIAZ, 37th street No. 6-A. FOR SALE: Admiral dual tentp. refrigerator 60 Cycle, 11.2 ec, ft. .$350.00, record&, player, 3 spied * 60 Cycle $30.00 mahogony dras- se $45.00. Pontiac 1949, 8 Cycle hydramatic Ford Jeep, waffle grille mixnmter dd dishesetc. S87' Cu- rundu Hgth' FOR SALE: Polaroid Lo.adCam- erq, carrying ase, flash gun, ex. posure meter. New condition $100. 1. 157-A, P4a Miguel, 4.585. FOR SALE:-Excellent condition, 1 Coil spring double bed, $12.00. 1 radio Philco. table mbdel, 3 band $40.00 Curundu 83-5173, Qtrs. 21 39-A. FOR SALE:-Mon's all wool "tweed Sovercoat, size : 42. Worn ''. n e month.. 886 Moraonr Balbo. I tog.nge. camfotl n dor -bia. lq 30 ,> FOR INT bedrooms, hot, c - ephonr Panbrn 3.;49 FOik RENT-"Two jbe minet in Belfq Viyte. FOR RENT:-Soon vai pletely furnished,. op new .building, .cbnvwii '*ger Canal Zone. El with tbrnd new refiuju 9 cu. ft.) Gas stQve' able rents. fdeol f6r' sgnnl. -Enquire at Hi changLeIHX)41 Aut Tel. 3-4911. , No9., q '.. I FOR RENT: Furnrish e ment, I Anmericn couple;. 67 S6' St. See 4f,3':00 to 8:00 p.. |. FOR RE1T--Ur*,ini oikrt t- two bedroom, iI Glf . I.,. family pr ferr4. Cbl, "ulba 281" after 5:00 , FOR'-T cool. oall fhtrfSt.,| t.r I lm alli FORRI First .lan ell arranged garden, in- f ice work. Write "Apartado" NEW YORK (11P) -The Bor- cases, thC t exterrior porchs. 40 .3289,; Pdiama R. P., stating age galcht Gal.ery has on View 18 thetiC ers terrace. Land meo- and salary desired. tned g paintings y 18 square meters fenced contemporary Minditn artists. ln f T e wire. Call telephone NTr 'The dotmaen art of stained ahe ed. t a i ....eherire o order otftane nan City..glass has ben slowly awakening htoeIo 15,000 M2.oNationl 7ce SHenrMl tise, a few years one r nba u mrifSrejr- mer Arraijan. 8$88 01,did blS.luPetb stsJ~ed glass the ganemtu rthth an- er, CerroCrpol q "C'" WANT TO BUY S. th res, of Vence i. m Nueva Sia El Vol-n work bi orge-bA 1d01ex hotel. Holf acre 'ald suital ,- f recoandtifiQri-;E '"E A'ee ^ Pwor Lwssd who wepidbe evelabl e, the Liturgidcal Art pciety. Such tyle, it is lt a snapshot of the -CV S Srto TR t NACIONS. .b an teconruou could chaos t _ou_ _. 2n-_____ viacl nont uprodUe aas homo -.en. aultn ID, Conn. Oct. 10 WAMNo) 7 Peru Aen e CAT lephone ghw minatslsn' n -of .ebdramam a rchitect, a st oaied ilassde- Reine .. the general statutes* to 19953. Not -duty paid, 4 door De apparent w:re gelted for bste padi^ ^ktT eL chawrgs and Lu. Will see them from 4 to 7 p. their Ibfan ral ative of ness thro l e. st up- they exceed m ml m Hotel Colon (Panamo). Telephone Yet it is not ti choice but the iholda sym b i hab th a their tricycles. An 2-0770, Mr. Fonsec. handln oftbe. ubjet matter i tg tr t b has.no horn or bell. WANTED: -Hous. with two yr re plat, ng th e teoto fao ew arns new bedrooms, yard, garage, American theoP this t al oe mostg of! tea-f- tO. 1l I -- 'couple, no children. address 441she to"lomel offah irg of the v- r Ne albo or call 3-32 an.am. ~o fa to come off. Their vis ion to hackneyed, their style bor- Menace! rowed.- Y enace. O S11 ALE One wouldhave thought that RY, Conn. Oct. 11 FOR SALE non-obective art with ts geo- mea Palen, 27, of Boatf Motor metrical pattern Ahould be con- Palls. N.Y.. was fined enal to the asdilbIltjes of ren a suspended 30- FOR SALE:--1951 Allstate Motor stained l0a:. Most -of the van- itence on a reckless Scooter. Excellent condition. Quor- I uard painter c eed them- ige for flying his, ters 142-B, phone 3281, Albrook, selves, however. th a rather too low. $117.50. mechanical t'anspmael.of tlieir _I .ad per o 4 dooral e. a KanS C.ana. Zr o4 $ 2905&0o . SMOOT .:i VIOL. 0ET .t.510V'8l LET -- Y allowance fo ,. PAREDES -- OLDSMOBILE -*- BUICK I_ 4 ____ I -- Wio~r alq *v~iril Jriu .00 Law iofaa o *a. I1 4 fit aW^ A ' OCTOiER S P CI.ALS For MU day obi" 2. - ~np , IId FO I * I 11947 Biakk S' 4-doorm I Sedan, w.y- good trtMo0rtoa I ff ody S'AS. -C 4'- I ii I I LOTS MORE fOTO CHOOSE FRO ON BOTH OF0* I -^*. ^oP~~ I+1 -. v at I 4i,'; '' I... MORRISON'S Fourth of Jual Ave.-Phaoe 3-041 'I '* * a iliaa 1ra i. . -I:g;,- I I i *:i I" i- it ,'. mf.orts, w e- and re mit was 2115 racr -facin ric t;$~m~t1 , .. /,/ BUICK :V8 170 HP ~slRc~ _ i__ I* . . II 1 ll ' I - L I +| I LIt m __ r . i wS ~; ~ ~ nuM m 1: i.00 . I .I i - r It 040i. ! I f# i 'a. S ... . 1 3a1'~r1S5AT QO~c~QRE~R 19), r93. STfPAAMA AliDRICAN AN ITOPENDWPNT -DAILY NEWSPAPER 4,l rA03 sin; :('" '. Arthur Ga Rdwl iWaI nr plays th role of a Captain of. Itetivew In Arnold Lavi who last y the fl'i'e ebeof I t city crime, "Vice Squad," which will opi excellent c at t4~pattne Theater through Unite' Artist release, L Writ ng S.. Thursday. Lesser prese -I .- ;A. I~i-~LIgoM4 ,b- -F nu rdhe: en ai 'ear Churchill Expeded To Make Further Bid For Big Four Talks MARGATE, Eng. Oct. 10 (UP) Prime Minister W n s t o n Churchill arrived yesterday In this seaside resort where he is expected later today to make a new, dramatic bid for negotiat- ed .sttlemert of the cold war. Churchill came to attend the windup sessions of his Conser- vative party's annual conven- tion. He wfl' make his first ma- jor speech in four months at a meeting just after the conven- tion adjourns. Although there has been no official announcement of the suoject of his speech, everyone expects he will repeat his call for a top-level Big Four meeting and perhaps advance some new proposal for a settlement of the bitter conflict between East and West. Amerilan, British and French officials in London were ex- pected to wait for Churchill's spLech before putting finishing touches on a joint reply to Rus- sia's recent "doubletalk" note on prospects for a meeting of the Big Four foreingn ministers. While the Conservative con- veution awaited Churchill's pre- scription for ending the cold war, Colonial Secretary Oliver Lyttelton r.pbrted on the con- flict's latest "campaign" the Communist effort to capture British Gulangal Lyttelton reported to the party on the emergency measures tak- en to protect democracy in the South American colony, and de- clared Britain will not permit the Communists to impose their will on tha people either there or anywhere, else in the Com- rime film "Without W e conservative delegates eenpay for theSol IC o ed ns, d d e d emptically: "Our entation. Mus o it And Co ed io frehds can take that as a de- a H. finite statement. Our enemies -At E Panama can attach to it all the impor- S saZita and Leav 13 MNHs tance I think they should." Musical comedians Zita and MlV in s rFred will start a ten day engage- NEWPORT, R.I., Oct.10 (UP) 'Come Fly With Me' qi merit at tlh Hotel El Panama, -Frederick H. Prince, late fl- o tonight, Manager Joseph R. nancler and railroad magnate, yrnes Asks S- Cundninghamr has apn6unced. left an estate of more than $13,- /' The young Dutch couple who 254,000, an inventory filed for UN Guard--Old Pal S^ have performed in the best ho- probate showed today. Stels and night clubs of more Prince, who died at Biarritz, UNITED NATIONS N.., Oct Than 20 countries in Europe, the rance, last February at the age 10 (UP James OBv S islands of the Caribbean and of 93, left most of his estate to of South Carolina left U..^head- South Amerin o will give nightly form a trust for religious, char- quarters at noon today o a fly shows not oanlsin the Beala Vis table, scientific and educational weekend visit to his homer a y Sa Salon, but also in the Balboa organizations. None of the or- sate. He s a membe of the ...' ''Bat. ganizations was named. US. delegation. Fredt plays the guia.y arid, ac- The total.personal estate, ex- As he was leaving he turned Seordion while wife Zita plays the elusive of real estate, was made to a U.N. guard and said: Would big bass as they sing amusing up mostly of 80,000 shares of you like to fly home with ne, :songs. Fred has something of Chicago Stockyard Co. son?" the looks and air of American Prince, who lived here since "vn ir" th ud comedian Danny Kaye. 1932, once said he owned 46 rail- and quickly changed to civilian Fred, met his wife four years roads at various times and had clothes. ago. He was pursuing a stage built four. He gained control of The guard s nEward Wlliams, career while Zita was studyingg ht vst sto yad lateress ise32an ex-Marltia who Ormerly lived in South Carolina and knew-Byrnes there. They left the _'_ __.L_ ___U! U.N. together for the airport, AP, Al Jambs Stewart, one'ofthe most popular and successful figure" in Hollywood, has never given a bad performance. Despite his lasting reputation as one of the most talented stars, Stewart still is noted for appearing and behaving much like a small town fellow, just as he did when he first went to Hollywood to try his luck at acting for the screen. His years among the sophisticated surroundings of Princeton University and then New York apparently had not altered him from his boyhood days in his home town of Indiana, Pennsyl- vania. And even in the glamor atmosphere of Hollywood since, the "real down to earth" label has stuck on him, It may be this quality that is responsible for his present ability to portray the pioneer type of the Early West. Of course, he also appears regularly in modem dramas and comedies--Such as "Carbine Williams," "The Stratton Story," "The Greatest Show On Earth" and "Harvey." However, the hard-riding ad-n venture yarns like "Winchester 73," "Bend of the River" and1 now M-G-M's Technicolor picture "The Naked Spur" unques- tionably have dominated this period of his career. The latter type of picture has been coming with such fre- ' Quency, in fact, that he no longer spends days eating off the mantelpiece at the beginning of each new film. I saw it in the FW CLASSIFIED1 ADS! .. ... = -._, i 1-V A ilj ESTOS NEW JET BUZZER-~ths an.artist cepncptioae n. nw eg. Se- frteptor now in produg a in hafwtboree,1 Calif. The plane's na(i e future op1saeplon with smGe everyday llustratiom s. Sor*t' IXWU, '1t" the R'DIU, which is ctpble of dawning th.lsargest b 6& .wlthi~e Ilt of its high explosive air-to.-ar wmintip rockets. lOwV PANAMA CITY THEATRES Present IM Fl. -.- -mw mw w mw m -. discover the magic of A Kraft's fine foods! 4a \ I-111 IV R mwaden w m*IuThww ^ t KIrE Dalubm Sle- Spf8c aLem.S Al No Pu-Wy MigmeO--th. bed te Iwg pred for br"d. Frat, sw-et -m fr vegelubleu N7 fe r deee t ree - . PL k-V KfIt,.t .BI Choe-Jh,.t uWmiu&J O LUX X | 3:5-84 Gay and Lavish Musical Spectacle! "CALL ME MADAM" In Technicolor with Ethel MERMAN Donald O'CONNOR Vera-ELLEN George Sanders , TROPICAL WIDESCREEN o On the B reen at 1:00 p.m. Audie Murphy, in "GUNSMOKE" In TECHNICOLOR! Also: - At 8:30 p.m. on the Stage: LEMBER THE MGICIAN BELLA VISTA and DRIVE IN 1:30 2:45 4:50 6:55 9 p.m. 7:00 9:15 p.m. SIMULTANEOUSLY! - Pcanamna Canal IABLO HTS. 6:15 8:35 Alan LADD Jean ARTHUR "SHANE" Technicolor! SALBOA cJieatres PEDRO MIGUEL - Oho owing 7:00 Leslle CARON Mel FERRER "LILI" Technicolor! Sunday 'THE SILVE WHIP" r nia TESLE W P"*- 1," Air-Conditioned 4:10 6:20 8:35 TODA I GAMBOA . ..i R"I.--11I1v"-AN 1O Y ' 8: * BArbara STANWYCK * Barry SULLIVAN "JEOPARDY" Sunday "BAND WAGONT Added: CARTOON NEWS EVENT ALSO SHOWING SUN. & MONDAY!: V1FOR TVHE C TI V T THE INCREDIBLE ESAPES... THE AMAZING LOVE STORY ., OF THE MOST FABULOUS DAREDEVIL WHO EVER LIVED! Now the movies, mowt beloved real-life sweethearts bring the master daredevil's Life to the scren!s COLOR B color HOUDINI I- Finat man to free himself fiom Scoiland 'ard'i"scsape- proof' prion! 1J^ A New Alevnm--l IM Mteek Ptleah L W Disnevs SDRIVE-IN TODAY! LATI SHOW! "HAPPY GO LOVELY" with David Niven Vera-EJen C6sar Romero SPECIAL CECILIA RELEASE! HEROIC WAR DRAMA! "THE DESERT RATS" with Richard BURTON EAN S-- APlus: - (OeK OLOR CARTOONI1 IDEAL iark timr la in "LIT'Li EPW" ENCANTO James Stewart, In "NAEED SPUR" Elizabeth Taylor, in 'ITE GIRL WHO HAD EVERYTHING" CAPITOLIO. "FOBT TI" .(3-DipenslonA) "SPOOKS"-. (Short In 3-D) "PRINCE OF PIRATES" VICTORIA "DEAMWOQD DECK" Chapters 11 and 12 "Pat O'ren, In OMnaL LAWYBB" 1 VwkttAXT wawrM OUDINII-Chained in a locked Vunk. suspended bencah the i c oli l.., river-be c.ape: TUNY CURUS -JANET LEIGH f STAGE SHOW 8:35 P.M. TONIGHT & TOMORROW! 0 SZI.'A AND FRED P * MUSICAL COMEDY STARS! * * MARGARITA 6: 15 8:25 o John WAYNE %0 Donna RXED "Troamle Along The Way" I - ._""" CRISTOBL 6:15 3:15 Air-Condlitoned Barbara STANUAYCK SRichard CARLSON "ALL F DESIRE" ^A^^^vfsw^^moll. HOUDINII- Bound \ hand and fool... he ecapeas Ihe deadly 1p.0aw.' SA c roldfight another Ionmat. ,. but not his lov of danger! GATUN 7:00 e Jo)cr HOLDEN Glenda FARJLLL "GIRLS IN. TLE NIGHT" I Thea" r. M IL I I -1w w w w w w w w __ ~ . " .%, g .! a 01 I .! i "- ' -* . ,. -wb.. ,- . .;'. SMilwaukee *," & uPANAMA AMUICAr : -o gMM Braves V '' ". * ' i. -o - Ted Williams' Comeback, S )Xankees 5th Title Cited i **- 0 NEW YORK, Oct. 10 (UP) Milwaukee and ; -,the Braves provided the biggest boom of the 1953 baseball season and once again the Pirates were the biggest bust. trlcktly on their playing field missing rookie pitcher last year successes. the World Champion won only 11 and lost 20. Yankees exploded the most sig- Joe Black. Dodgers National Significant bombshells as Casey League's rookie sensation a year ;.Stengel racked up his record ago. he never got off the mark. fifth straight pennant and Finished the year with a 6-3 rec- SWorld Series triumphs but even lord that gave him a winning ,.that-tanks second to the boom record but won him little praise. of the Braves, The Braves who finished se-'His Boots' ins fventh at Boston in 1952. leaped if Win Sll the way to second place this season and their new host the city of Milwaukee backed them to the limit with an all- timne National League record of US Grand National 1,2I3B97 paid admissions. Elsewhere on the final ledger It reads this way: RACE OF THE DAY BOOMS Thi Dodgers Brooklyn's "'greatest team" rolled up its highest total of victories In his- ltory (105i and had the pennant nearly all the way. Eddie Mathews, Milwaukee - 'his 47-homers, tops in the ma- 4ors. a aln revived hopes that Babe Ruth's record of 60 still Smav po by the boards some dav. Ted Williams. Re Sox his Sdraiatic return from Korea ., for the final 37 game hblos- S some.d Into a sensatlonul p meback -" 13 homers, a .407 i*voqre. SHarvey Kuenn. Tieers A- l_ ,me'tcvan I eairue's leading rookie. the led both leagues in base hits *;With 209. Al Rosen. Indians Led his -.'league with 43 homers. scored the most runs (115) and knocked .ftr the most 1145). Virgil Trucks. White Sox - With a 5-19 record at Detroit est year. he made the year's top *fWemheck to a mark of 2n nitch- 4nwrvictories and 10 defeats. Oil Hndves. Dndrers Pelo- ass In an early slump. he wound with a .4an average, 31 hom- asahd 122 RBT's. BUSTS -l~ Pirates Didn't figure to - o anywhere. It's true. and would uno with the lowest per- centage in the majors 50 vic- torio art 104 defeats for .325. A '"l Browns Drew only ,3M,128 customers and had to S m e to Baltimere for next 9.. NEW YORK, Oct. 10 (UP) - The 1949 winner "His Boots" -' has won this year's running of the nation's richest steeple- chase. The eight-year-old geld- ing beat "The Mast" by two and one-half lengths in the $25,000 Grand National at Belmont Park. His Boots took the lead mid- way in the race. Jockey Elwood Carter had the gelding three lengths in front after the final hedge, and the favorite held on In a driving finish. "Mighty Mo" ran third. Only eight of the 11 horses finished. It's only the second win in 14 starts this year for His Boots but he 'has run In the money eight times. Time for the course - about three miles over 19 fences was five-45I and one- 'fifth seconds over a fast track. That's almost six seconds off the record. HIs Boots and "M a n k e y Wrench" ran as an entry. They paid $6.50 $3 and 32.50. Thie veteran campaigner "Roy- al Vale" heads a field of eight in today's closing day feature at Belmont Park the $75.000 Jockey Gold Cup stakes. "Fisher- man" and 15 other two-year-olds are entered in the co-feature at New York the $25,000 Cham- pagne Stakes. Jockey Tony DeeSpirito has re- ceived court permission to mar- ty Doris De Cld re on No- vember first. Court permission is required under Massachusetts State law for all males under 18. DeSpirlto becomes 18 on De6. 24. *. -, @I'.--I For Footiffers qHAPEL M N. C. Oct. 10 S(NBA, -forgeBarclay. .- tuon as mean fe defet e . S a. simpifled split-T a minimum of plays," said .ort-s Qarollna coach. "A plays earned wqil are much t loa t of formations f4aemrned. The gokme is con- ted eonough..without piling aM."* THE M IS THIlUI '.M .. e AND AMto ve while yu h ENT earnn to drive while you have fun. THE CRAZY CARS (Auto Shoote) Bring the whole gang PRICE 0.20 NOW AT PLAQUE LESSEPS Ame... "o" r ,u0 LUNU onniu e mie waved goodbye to. Yankee Stadium after fve se ns as ,many world championships and .22 years in baseball. The big first baseman and great inc L hitter retired at 40. ( j Wndn r DPrall Wojey, LaSorda By UNITED PRESS The Brooklyn Dodgers have sold three players to their Mon- treal farm club and brought up seven more from their minor- league system. Joining the Montreal roster are catcher Dick Teed and pitchers Chris Van Cuyk and Johnny Rutherford. Al three played in the minors this year. ,The Dodgers recalled ftchers Hamp Coleman and Tom. La Sorda and outfielder Vic Maras- co all from Montreal tch- er Fred easent and first base- man-outfielder Ted Barts fom St iPatl,; pitcher Pete Wojey S .I=% en staples from The Dodgers no have 45 era o' their roster, I ing seqn ret serl.cenj The lwalukee' braves have brought up three players-third baseman Blly Queen of Toledo, outflelde 'Dick Sinovic of At. lanta and catcher Bill Casey of Jacksonville, To make room, the Braves sent Toledo four men - pitcher Jim Kelly. catchers Jack Parksand Jim Bolt and outfield- er Chuck Tanner. Fostlich League By MIKE BRANDON The Fastllch Teen Age Base- ball League held Its third an- nual meeting. Wednesday eve- ning at the USO-JWB in Bal- boa for the purpose of electing officers for the forthcoming Baseball season. A representative group of pro- minent men from the Pacific side agreed to serve on the exe- cutive committee. Officers elected were: John E. Winklosky. president: R. D. Parker, vice president; Mrs. J. B. Hinkle, secretary & treasurer: Theodore E. Hotz, player agent; Charles S. Magee, business agent and Dean of Umpires; Mrs. Jack Sutherland, score keeper and Mike Brandon, publicity, assisted by Mrs. Mark Brandon. Names for the pattions of managers and coaches for the various teams were submitted for action at the meeting. Adalbert Fastlich, sponsor of the Fastlich Teen Age Baseball League, gave a brief talk on the responsibilities of the adult in the field of athletic and the advantages of the modern day over the past. It was proposed at the meet- ing, that the Faptlich Teen age league be split into a minor league carrying the thirteen to fifteen year olds and a Major league for the sixteen to elsh- teen years olds to broaden the field for players. Open discus- sion of the Issue was held from the floor. A motion was made and car- ried that Winklosky, president, appoint a committee to investi- gate the possblIties of a Major League, acting on the five points of: availlibilty oa players; dia- mond. umpires, coaches'and e- qulpment. The committee will make a formal report of its finding at a general meeting to be held for the purpose and action will be taken on the movement to ep- large the Fatlch Leaue.. The meeting will be h Wednesday evening, October at seven thirty p.m. at the JWB on La Boca Road In boa. All parents and supPf intarerted members of th ces are cordlilly inVyUIt '4-e,:-4 "0 ~aehiiW~4~W#4!I~~eifas PU.t sean.I counted for two e counted for tw-'of Saddler Pl s 1Beyou'4 In Discharge ch W-i oon '' * : ". '' : ^ . .-* * ~ _ All Except 1, Ua eaten . Team Favored T To yI By UNITZEDV p S s All but one of the major un- of 'ar Cqnfer- beaten teams are favored today. ltate That exception Is Pennsylvania ia c k Park- which plays host to Ca ornia eor od one down In a toss-up game. Each team .(ete art r Oa cos- has lost one player because of ed 32 i injuries. Captain George Bosler, Plttsburgh, Wich ield Okla- a Penn wingback will mim the to I urt ame because of a gimpyknee. Jim Baxter remained i lMii California ft6 the same reason. (13 The longest winning streak i the countUio on the ne at Baot Lansing, chigan. The Spartans of Michigan State are tnree touchdown (21 point) favorites At D to make it t7 straight wins aTexas e OOing a l 1% Q la a Michigan State Is ranked se-S ond. The Buckeyes of Ohio State are two touchdown (14 .pol favorite over visiting Illinoi burn -.T Imre '-1 Roe""U 'a 9 -r ~fl?~ ,n~2i~~ ~ I ~II 'I' I : Jvuun is ex * ww vkied ..* '7.,. as .~ E~Sg;IVO rnA4:?a ..'; 'V. P~-'V LA'.4 I~ (By U. P.) . Third baseman A signed a new centre Cleveland Indians sight on two goals: ican League batting 1954 World 8erite General Manager 1 berg sa~y Rosen "handsome" raise.I to Wbe $Io, which Rosena' salary h40A The htaky third 1 the Ma3Jsl. In. with 14 and toppa lean League la Rosen Mtted S * point bhi A promise V nei I'll do i very b improve i' Rhd i. biggest 854 the rule* 3g After thb comel tie. G Ing Al win or l ' make b non-flt* In except f -.ra earned year as How' year? "I" of the Rosen, players and I kW.tw. feel the M V to beat more." made since years a e . IJ1.' .. ? -. "1 ; *_ .. , - V 1 J*; :.. -: . .. I _ , mommmom :-- -- ~1-' .-----cr*--r-- - ''Y . r: ~ja~ " ^.^ i. i,~AYL-- "5:ili' ''''s~p 'I-~' - .. - .1 -. ... .**\ j "^.. '%. > :-', *- + "vT.'.,, .-i-..- "-',. i;' "** *;" -"':'-' .1, ','. .,...' 'c ,F?"--w,-:,.. +,-+. .: -' ","i .' *-- '- ' ',& ' .."" ** ** ""-,-' ,- '.. .^ -'" .*** ** * .. .. ,- .. ** ^ ^ -. .,* ,- -: p;. ... ., ;! * ,, ftJ( h ', ," ' -.'-. ."' (L ** ^IM~ BH iTiHM~Cu.,.' T'c'*. ~ : *lW ~ **9. - C., ,-LLL3.14eI~ sMM. -Co. a- " "i3' nlnt J ik athletic Coast Confere k .l f t ,,, ,, . "-- i. +! i++ +. ................. ,. ., , r .' tw .-, hr w ~Darn h ate W I, . one ;iFw f the am m IO wUW formed lau lf VIAdt w 15er U "iUf and w atlo. Is extended.". " '_yedlic"1 would b per- k confper. at 0reensbor. N. 0., t.h inritatinn .to, i.I uence mueungqf t be withdrw or cpntaeuwenr it.d the. eaapui ~ uw- ,. ,"S CH-- UHU n. i mm ^ *Mk. . -~ 1"* a -w-*-.- -- - -m *rS s ..e -W( CHARGE-UCLA has one of the nation's top pas-rushers in Tackle Chuck Doud, left MenU Mavrlades, center, is Notre late's answerto t he All-America question' at gadt 'and "pl ce- S kicks. SLeve Eleart er is out to repeat in the same slot for Navy. (MA). t Morri, Georia Tech's Best Never Playe osing Ga me S-b R ON cOa racing car tin a pine 4 Years i Natloaal lm e Sr u. Ri s-uualyo not.0 Written Sr Nf A Service -y.. anyBa s orris tack- SATLAZIA Oct. 10 les them. Question: The bases areemp- Morr t rred a The big boy has speed, desire, ty. The pitcher goes into his l a orl llig'I e nO and 1 He runs windup without having his pv- S co t e.OyaId d A a sade ot foot touching the rubber. It wa an au ous .be r 1 eca a, fine The bal passes through the ning, but oventhat faded lga er. He strike zone and the batter iss- hi subsequent performance blocks dyastatingly In scrm- es. Wasn't the pitch illegal?- The io d Junior oeate aage, will be sharper downtleld Jim Doyle. 1Lr-j a -0AiOat- tl n iort experience .udde ft; the cam 000- Answer: The role states that t two-y ~iman o At 'least through the SMU the pitcher shall pitch while et that er- ame, he never had played on a ftelng the batter and having a aen strak lsing football te- through his pivot foot on or in front i MQ Wr'I *1raeot high school and three of and kn contact with the ,m '. ^" ___ ylrs of college rubber. Since the pitcher's pIv- Mortis mue 74 tacl in 11 ot foot was not in eontaet games last fall. This season he with the rubber, It s a ball. brought dow nball-carriers 25 Q. What is the longest team times I1 the first three games. losing streak on record In the Last autumn The Bull shared American League?-Bob Pear- billing with George Morris) no son. Skin). This year it is all Larry A. Twenaf straight by the Murris, 1 Red Sox and the Athleties And he ha another year. of 1916 and '43. No Longer AnA Substituing' Is Fine Art - NEW YORK, Oct. 10-(NEA) Replacements are i and losing college football game and they aren't beg t to the front in hordes, either. Substituting with the platoons was ioare or leg with specialists for offense, defense, kick-offs, Ing and whatnot. Until the game was pretty well only changes made were because o Injuries, for the "Now, especially among schools which aren't tit1h material to develop two teams of two-way plaeMrs has become a fine art again." pohits out Andy Miami of Coral Gables. "It is putting even mo r the coaches." s - The master mind no longer can press a button. "l i know and in a second carefully pick his man. A poor and he may be beaten before he can get the bey wflitheIM i ness back to the bench. are "Take T quarterbacks," says Oustafaon, the old Ar ". 'Few of them have even a smattering of defensive iootbi other side aims plenty of plays at wherever you put them. "Coaches have not had enough time to teach two-way foot- ball, so all are going to be caught at times. smart aoutiM and quarterbacking enable the opposition to capitalize on such tua- tions." . * With unlimited substitution, when a coach needed a pnter, extra-point kicker or a light, fast but fragile scatback. bh ,E ed for the situation to arise and then tossed him into tbEZe. Now he must- olan his lineups and substitutions to take ot such eventualities. '"lhis a great year for the really smart quarkrback 4hoe takes advantage of some All-America offensive halfback's weak- ness on pass defense before his coach can get him out of there, concludes And) Gustafson. "This stirs up more nightmares for coaches." Charley Dressen and his coach. Cookie Lavaetto. hamiU B Martin in Oakland. so knew as much about the anke w Series star as anybody else. 4... " Yet Martin took liberties with the Brooklyn pitclhigJ, ing his season's average of 259 to an even .500, settn- game Series record with a dosen hits. Billy the Kid blossomed into a power poker with two home runs triples. Five Brooklyn scouts were not in agreement on how to to Martin. "But I knew his weakness," says Manager Dressen. .1ft: fast ball high and Inside." ....,, The trouble seems to have been that the Brooklyn IlAim couldn't get the ball there. ha b o Ten years ago. more than 4000( boxing managerliseld throughout the United States. They handled1l'M0 boxen i- than 500 clubs and arenas. 50 or so of which werens i_,t weekly programs. "'; Now there are fewer than 1000 managers, around 1504i ators and less than 100 clubs, only 10 of which stage. weekly. So the International Boxing Guild, which is the -ir' union, has launched a baek-to-the- ym drive. Looking at the bulk of today's ihters It's about tg&i, wenb back to the gymnasium. ..'li . --:'*? ApIfs L I * L' T ~~~r ~ -ege itenlaga. FWIt' vmu Ws w 4- I were or the sara tnute hear I. u: i R' M~ 't~~~~ ?O' a for C -- 1 F~PW5S r4P A= I. CASA ZALDO AV CamNffnL Nt. a FARMACIA LUX AVa. cmmNAL U SERVICIO L&Y *. AVL. .VO tr. , S NOV DA"..mmm LIBREIAOI .. i; No"OA o. S caU a. ft.4M U4mmU HOUSEHOLD '9E NOVEDADES MORRIM *' AV&. 4 D UiLO FARMACrA VAN-DER.DI CALUIN.I MNS = i1 k n a aLa FARMACIA ESTADOS UNIDOS 648. CAIAL S0 ' .- : SAGENCIA INTERNATIONAL DE PUtLICACIONES MAIU Dw LA .LaTmB A l. I YOU CAN PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS . .. I I--f . 4.1~ .iENT I -. .-."^ -~ ~ ~ i * "Sti! NATIONSS IN PANAM. . .. . ... ' -.--^ *" alta 1 "-' *' S CF .1 -1 11, II III - .. . S , I . i. ~'I I ;:r., 9 $1:,sri ~ ~l~a s 0144 \y~. * 1 AI , Fw'S ~ 'ioagers lo . h. s .? I, ,' : ,.I -*, : .- -77 T- L '-*~. * St(REA'Y JabIes t -above), o f Spring A'4, his been appoift- y of Labor by mes- Esenhower. Mitchell tle vaean y in the Oa- let ;by Martin P.. Dur- in, who designed last month In dispute over the Taft- mrtley law. iss M. E. Pitney SBe Buried issouri a"body_ of MisA Mairy Eliza- tit ,Pitney, an American sflddoteacher who died at Gor- Slt H6spital yesterday will be ten, to her home town of Co- l~mbia, Missouri, it was learned today. . ",er brother, Walter M..pitney, OWa alrived on the Isthmus last ek. after- Miss Pitriey Wa Si wkt1 a with a cerebral hemOr- ,l ,will accompany the body. ,l i.emorial services ; will bt lAlh Miss Pitney, who wks 4 tIe-a-id, taught English atI panatma University for the A~4 ive years, 0lboa R.O.T.C. fi Honor Col. Selee October 14 S Balbqa High Behool R. .0; wt corps will honok ,Col son Selee, Civ'l Affairs with a fareIl -r- ,held at 1 v mi..Oct S6tu m. . ht resigned from the s et9 and i t-l a- a- i of this ionth. .As hI f. Civi-Attairs Bureau, O AIn thl organization ri l often O. .C. Iits A d Cristobal Htgb T Craundho O ,'Cr6w Boit' _t AINM SPRING. Pa. Oat. |I _DP GO e Protector R. F. ar l lmi he was "-ptacked" lfgrtund hog recently. prob- *'Y17 e Ihis crow call were s o r ic. was crouched behind Sabhe aust after he had ut with a volley of laud ,. Out came ground hoM headed right fol hl., q against ila leg a d then and disappeared. Sfound the animal's dug hole. He theo ize4 may hale been "tVybl to away from the lviiiitl den because Orpw kill oqundhop.,, . Pan ma O*l.e the people know els truthE e ounty fa At ,.w -- W.. TWNTT-NDITH TYAB --- -- - -i-7 ~-----T~- --T~- .....n.L. Communists Ready To Start Brain Washing Ad PWs -- --' - = -._ 5h ._. -i. I.h ... Mi-nhai tat o the PAtNMUNJOM, Korea, uct. 10 (UP) The Communists lndil cated today they would be ready to start the long-dplayeO brain-washing interviews with 22,500 anti-Red war prisoners Monday. The Communists' apparent wilingnen6 to go ahead with the interviews and the with- drawal of anti-Indian South Korean marines from their positions near the compounds helped ease tension in the neutral one. The United Nations withdrew the battle-trained ROK marines from the area. Friday and as- I sured Indian guards they would be protected from "external forces." South Korean authorities, In- cluding tough provost marshal Lt. Gen. Won Yung Duk. had threatened to take unlatera action and free th anti-Cn- munist prisoners from Inda custody. Iri Washington, the U. 8. State Department cautioned Squ',h Kotea to use forbearancee and moderation" toward the explos- ive prisoner question which threatened to erupt into an armed clash between fIdian 4ndc United Natiohns command troop United NationsCommand troops Nine' eaped aLst-Commun- ist prisoners have charged that- Indian ustodial troops openly eneouraged. them return to Communaism the South Korenoff oicof i b- lie information said today. Thti eha ea were made In u letter whic the infornation ministry Satd was written Koreesf an4 C"l.01e prtlODi to Pa ldenist syti Rhs. 1 An 'Indian tan fWatiT nepled the South Korean offi- cial release a, "absolutely 'n- torrect." To prisoner- !l forced to. g either way," the 'ndian spokes- man sMK.' "The prisoners have been told repeatedly that the choice rests entirely with them.' The le'ter released by' thl BeSth Korean government said 'On the day of our arrive (S tt. 18) an Indian major spoke to u> In JaDanese. He said it would be bad for us if we should resist repatriation. He explained that the North Kor- ean army had many guns and would shoot us if we refused to llstP to him. "In letters circulated severs days ago in the name ofthe Neutial Nations Rebatriatlor Cammlsdon, our (status) wai explained to us a thought we all wished to b reps'riated wblah was bvlobulv aimed al intUmidat'ng'us with threats and blackmail. Premier Jawaharal Nehru slid yesterday "reept devel- onments irie the IMpresslon" that the Western. Allies ai IKorda'Lyor South kHea's de- ,I j 7 ~E~r 1 i I..e ET 8 ?MENT of 1110 pounds of powdered milk from to the Riepubl of Pnnak arrived here yesterday on ed rualt Line's Cape Avinoff which brought the ship- a tf-of-pharge. Shown at the unloading, left to right. etoi faob Z gre, olf the t oir t dueatin. Dr. Victor rt___ V. T. Mal of the Caloqlt Land Co. and Mrs. who is reprenataM Mrs, Alen Lowrie. chief .: 1Uj the CARM ditoMa l Panama&. 0 msaa ror udeemive d MeUu 6 0v14y. as uw*t"ie A' Communim in the war-tsmoni "iW i I Asidati peninsula. UWd niUbi I Kehru, speaking in BbdL atte South Koe SBombay's Chowpatty Beom, as- & Ge 1M. 1 sailed the Allel for delwyngr .Mi 5Unl. H ti. the constructitofo huts Where tMtli oaHer, ot s the Reds can "explain" to un- .Uned m' willing prisoners Oy they 1 should rere- eurnhome r t re- fusing to extend the explana- a i tlon tme beyond the Christmas tnUmy iP i l ua aM k I 'Eve deadline set by the armis ofv. I tiee agreement. twou be h tft He pointed out that Southste If yo were w Korea has declared 4 enly t wheh would nd does not want peace withoutson or confuse ' ------- i-^ .. g" * Foreign Air, Package Pos SDue For Jump Nov. 1 I CZ Increases in International m a at two cents far-smg.an 'postage rates and fees for Post- ftoui 4ents for doules caaz. al tUnion articlea-and asl mall ._ rates to Canada including New- 21ey. M .bs i foundland and Lrbrador will gz .o inte effect in the Canal Zone Nov. 1. The increases will not s t5ct Spotal rates to Panama and the MA. United Btates. Pare. These changes will repea nt an inefeas of about 4 can In air mail ratst to Canad apd an Ptt I increase ogftom three tb cents w eQ s on rq lat..ma to ig. m lga ato.b countries except PaluIt. Air mail rste to Cada. wR'. .o be increase to 10 cants a b~alt ounce or i bti n wt hno 5 I, cla njte K" pual u.S and Sprvate mallngf or post card. - Previouslvy n air mail letter -.to cpnada "wa six cents an ownce. Postage on elar letters to any country in the wor. will be . elght cents for the f n ounce A .r and four cents for ehch addl- wMllbO tional ounce or fraction there- las :of. r No. ., This means an increase of five Scents an oLnce for letters be- a L e sent to to e countries l which are members of t4e Post- Nov. . al Union of irtrlcal8nd Spain , anrdan Increale ot three cents th Dfor aU others. It wl eot i to mail a sut card aft;, Nov. 1. ates hae .ben baued to four sent fet .i card fand eight e Ipts ; ,S SThe old .rate as two and four Cents to Aovnltra.iin th, postal Ualon of tba ae and Spain and t=4=dr 4 V for all othlie Iareigg c e Rates on letterfto Panai a will remain tie ar at three cents 'P ae or fretiont the reo d Vpot 9ardt w1 e Ie- May Waer Better Than Moonshine PITrS RO. o .C. Oct.10 (UP) --Shariff JX.n W; Maorson, Jt.. recently got hot wip about where he cold hfid qsoe .icitl moonshine whisky in Chatham County. He made a thorough search of the house to which he wad di- rected but fond nothing. Ju before leaving, ho w er, flashlight caughta half-gal jar hidden in e attic. The owner stood w cojdiladent ly as the sheriff iffed' at the uag. Plain water. "'That's m May water," the owner said. y May catch Sme a jar ftal ofr -0 Icures anything. est ataiE y6u ever saw, Small Al miw' s i Small Talk CORVAILJ, eOre. 4 I ) -An Oreal St ne logist has gone Ito the listen to asual as i-sk Dr. Kenath ord ll. beasts of the ifte9 iWiAUP3Eb that cannot te unaided hbn4 1%r I wants to know wirhat th#- y 13 private. 80, with assistanCdQI sound equipae*. ?-Bt,' hopes to Uangor@ concerning aplzati 4 at ila... ' a,. J; '- I 1 1 1 1 I :i flu blo OUT te WACs , they dm I.I r ' c' .1 - I' r i LI^ &.. 5 ,. . -I ~' '^tlr^^kol 4 '*IlWU0 * 4Wt' noua- NB 19hei k on" ,~bir~i~S~'trFORI i .:^bSS~~liddYP "be PANAMA R AT AT. T OAT. OBR 1. 1MU. ..: ... ,.,, ,r ; * r^^ I K MM M 4 4W i . thhlar-ian col- the d Watum P ,w. MOIL _T [: -, A; ^ ~vlc ~m~s . I ;I |
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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 |
| 18 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |