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Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 Page 5 Page 6 Page 7 Page 8 Page 9 Page 10 Page 11 Page 12 Sunday supplement Supplement 1 Supplement 2 Supplement 3 Supplement 4 Supplement 5 Supplement 6 Supplement 7 Supplement 8 Supplement 9 Supplement 10 Supplement 11 Supplement 12 Supplement 13 Supplement 14 Supplement 15 Supplement 16 |
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a. . OF*- '": 72'oc21i .4 'a I~% - 11 I A. I --*Ugtb TRIP 111,00 e1 the people kmow he truth and 4 country is safe" Abrahamn Lineoll". Now6... Year OldJ I *,Yr -I -- ; -- PANAMA, R. P., SUNDAY, NOVEMBlER 1, 1953 4- i-l - I I Instance i z Rates Not Available -6 - PANMIMSNON, Kores, Nov. 7 (UP)-4u,8. -all to A'mrlesn war Ift-rwas stopped today after a pMetlIt from their amp T;a theI home folk Were' to "oefrce, slander and i tuI their itWto leaving the Cmun A M protest Was deliered to the N$atlons Repatria- Cbulisi whose members er lbe camp of the S1 the da % by the Mselare SftrodIanofffeer3--. shq.*the .*'wts S"W will Mo all mall to 'Al e petition,was .emLc Gen. K. 8-hThinayya. the ?one M th comBsnao i n W*Routh Korean.lCim r their coniplaint , da ueq thqt the ma tobe nbOiove bjthe ia dicated, however, th~ ,piana t a of the mail wetre4 in- ur, an aI were i Ite wiCB*MwAOW t U.e- wiwn ae host -i e -It to iy wet not tre n any y. aR nUfpr the XMtages ere T one brita prion a dmanl tc an the* ESa in the ha I* coftlaints d, C tfm@ agtrlat sollon ap f us mtral Njaoyeu p went o wtt to he o- hUOAm er- oe prisoneAo handed them extlan- larte p velope contain- w w they said ex- ertm W .r o a s5f of the let- e~ntr*~ -niirf Icagnead LRichard gT order tt t r- e may be lly n- and ntorage is trylag to ts. ila it W fa"&that u irged that km Wki~ti- oft re the pribon- -pubmitted was from Mrs. .r A A. Regan of We.W W lvne, (' Her own Snr had' ome Wei ar e Une Mrs. Regin d, "I jut wrote a one page letter to ea h of .he boys. and seked them iT they wo p-,lease come home.'" She said she was only trying to help a bunch of lonelyy boys" make up their One envelope contfied a copy of a newspaper featuring an ar- tcle quoting Army spokesmen as Wang te prisoners might be a s a deertek. *'l b are violently opposed to 'jhis," the petition said. "We' de- mnand to be protected from anv asuch methods. It is our belief i writtenn materials should be cen- bored y the neutral commis- alon." MSIlionaire's Blue-I Suflw Her Relations 1 -I 141 UIb-I 4 t. #-I Ihe attractive swathetl u With her - Ifrom Seattle, Waht6 I A =me. andI myw S- F ' S, (NEA Telephotos) AI&RIK DjIONN, TODAY AND YESTERDAY -- Marie Dionne, first of the famous quintuplets to leave the family group, walks the Convent of the Sisters of the Holy SacrAment in Quebec City (left photo) after iddig'f well to two of-her quintuplet tra, Cedile and Annett41 l-r tn background) Later (center p hto) she posed in her robes. 8'xteen years ago, when Marie SS only three; her deep rltgious future was foreshadowed in the&photo at right as slhe prayed before an image of the Blessed rn at the quint home in Callander, Ont. (Rightphot9 Cop right by NEA Service, Inc.) Cogressmen ADM)Am5t RbOMTING Ti., Nov. 7 (UP) - S ilda congressmen, said y A istration Is fir- ngs leV and stenographers a- broTjf o0rft to keep high-sak- arled on the gevernu. ment'i )ared-down payroll. Re O 'Robert iL. F. .Bkes a d WUil UarC. Lantaff, ,both D 6O- crats, deodnced the practi as a "she ae which. m eS money-~uts "look good on .- per" bA slashes operating eff' clency, . Sike] a member of the Hrou5 armed services s appropriating sub ttee. Lantt A v s a member Of the government operatiOns commit- uw mum Drummer Kral Fron n Florid Declare: ION .IRING CLERKS, STENOGRAPHERS, i1I-SALURI MISTAKEJA&t*S In a Joint statement. they a In ithe p It t the Cha- so reported: roux Air ofte Base in 1. The armed service at Lelg France where they were "ruined" '* horn, Italy, ordered auto heaters, by the weather. He said the Air which coat about $25 each, but Force did not eyen know how instead got $300-a-piece Arctic many such tanks it had. heaters. No one in the United States, where the order wai fill- Lantaff today- ported what ed, caugnt the error. Thg total Sikds said previoM -that little cost for the wrong heater was if any effort was made to disci- l million dollars. line persons responsible for ' 2. Also at Leghorn, a message malfeasance or negligence in was received from Washington handling equipment, eating that a certain battery : failed to meet military reouire- "The attitude of ?transferring metns. More than 2,000'Vatteries and promoting an :ficer who . were destroyed. It was found la- makes a serious error still seems " ter the order specified the wrong to prevail," Lant ft said. kind of battery and they ha ben destroyed needlessly . 3. In a supplyJ of Air Force uaeou wingtip tanks in France, one out of eight of the $U,000-a-blece *IL[ R tanks were corroded and one out! ledBvu y of six had defective weldin . Sikes previously reported that rU Alm many of the wivg-tip tanks were S*ALMIRANTE, Bocas del Toro A E Nov. 7 A 65-year-old Guade- v loupean resident of: this town Ai. rw, Lledhere "rh day after- Agi Yo n P r noon when a diesel railroad en- gine of the Changuinola Railway .Inv o B y o run over her. a---& lInvolvw Boy Sco*t e s The woman, who as identi- "LET TRY TO GUESS wlpl S.. tied as Madeline YVflto. had her ftn .i *, exp t, "i (UP),- andsome-Lord Monta- gu of Beaulleu, descendant of a noble lhe that extends back to 1296, wpI arraigned today on a morare charge concerning B'y Scouts who camped on his Hampahie county estate. Montagu, 27, and filmii produc- er Kenneth Hume, also 27, ar- raigned 'wtthhim on the same charge, wenr remanded in ball after a formal hearing until, next Saturday. Montagu came back, from France to accept service of a warrant charging him with "a serious offense with a young piale person, contrary to com- mon law." Montagu said he is innocent. The peer who descends from the Dukes of Buccleuch and Queensberry, boarded a plane In Paris this morning with Htmae after telling Hampshire police he was coming. He registered for Sthe flight as "Mr. Douglas" and SHume. as "Mr. Kenneth." Mon- tagu' family name Is Douglas- Soott-Montagu. * Three polite plain-clothed d4- tectives met tMontagu at t4he feet completely sev Qd and t'V upper portion of her body badly mangled by the time the engine came to a stop. The accident t(und 45 min- utes after the enene, which runs the. passengerervice to Guabito on the' inamanlan frontier, had let Ha Mile, Al- mlrante. 7 Engineer Basil Hu Wet Watson are'bedlcg held un arreSt, while the torney conducts a of the accident. C Donrss LOS ANGMl ld Hume to a motr t i. Con Ov tem tod Lymnigt i1 he eeel ea AJarraignd attn of indecently assaulting teferrkg ar-old boy and a 15-year, against the I liew Jerwey,I gu was granted b ell of coin, Mor P n ext :s 'trdays tion Io exp Sand u t'st was act roots revolt * iring admi Hindi 'Imond, while he care arta cOp110ollo served at a buffet She Union Club by the -- 0 - Companies Must Await Release Of PC Charges An insurance agent said today it will be impossible for companies here to submit "any sensible" group hos- pitalization rates by Jan. 1 because the Panam6 Canal Company has not as yet released the exact amounts em- ployes will be charged for medical care effective with the New Year. Group insurance rates, the agent pointed opt, are computed on a basis of the actual hospital charges and he said it will take at least two months before an insur- ance company can compile all the information necessary to determine group premium rates. There are about five local companies, he said, which could offer such insurance. Meanwhile, the agent warned, employes will be left to carry the burden of payhM for their' mam - ical costs out of their pocket at a very highrate As an example. he said, al a'- erage individual policy for, a man with two ckldrez_, which can offer him MtOaqtOehoSpi- t's In this," Gaynor Maddox, in- he Panama American's reporter 'ully examines a dish of native et for visiting newsmen given at United Fruit Company. SaIocho, Seviche May Make "American Menu' n - nductor n mnporafy Gaynor Maddox, international umn in New York, his young son, poral at y food expert, whose column "A- Patrick Dana, age 8, is consider- tIpal at- merican Menu" appears daily in ed one of the youngest acknowl- stigatlo0 The Panawmi American, was busy edged gourmets. Friday 'gathering recipes of typi- "Pat l o v e s anything that's cal Panamanian dishes which good," the proud father stated. he will include in a Central A- "He eats snails, crabs, cheeses, merican series beginning early anything and adapts easily to lse next year.. the habits of the country." The Jovialicolumnist, -who pre- Maddox has a particularly S fers to think of himself as mak- warm feeling for Panama be- Ing "food part of the national cause his grandfather was a new"a, .Wa oe of a group of 49'er, and his grand mother Sewaen who arrived crossed the Isthmus on a mule here TIfraday as guests of the when she was a baby, bound- for United f'-tu Company. They left California. '-(JUP) yesterday for Costa Rica. His main preoccupation here, Senator Maddox, who says he is pre- while other newsmen explored that in maturely gray "premature by the situation in their particular fa Dem. AX, moaths," has just finished flelds, was gathering recipes of Sa e a an extesve tour of France and savory y typica Panamanian can ad- fgt d r he was interest- dishes. ed In t ltical aspects" of As a result, early next year, rence e. readers here will be seeing-their ted the The 'food editor is con- everyday fare such as seviche, another vinced t Americans are still arroz con polo, or sancocho de- 'utJday th beb ted In the World. scribed as part of "The Amer- In Call- "We vthe best and finest clan Menu." diet I nthe world it's just a Maddox was particularly im- matter of applying the French pressed w it hthe ingredients rolt" a- technique. which is excellent, to which go into the making of Party in our' A lctn food supplies," he "Sopa Borrachp." but since none ad Wis- added. was. readily available during his the na- Diets do not have to be boring short trip, the food expert could gras s Maddox' contention. And only smack his lips in anticipa- oe a is whole family agrees. Besides tidh, and wait until he gets back Le wiLe, who writes a food col- home to New York to try it. ed out, the same man could bave complete coverage at a premim between $90 and $97 per year. The- insurance gent said It was up to the Pandfma Cant4. release the new hospital sory" charges as soon As poss b= if employes are gol*g to be -ile-t0 take advantage of a gr9p pA l- NEW YORK, Nov. 7 (UP) - Wh!olesale gasoline prices went down by bout 1-4 oent a gal- Ion on the eastern seabord to- day and the price to motorlxts was expected to see a corres- ponding cut. The Atlantic Refining Co. cut tankwagon prices on regular gasoline 3-10 of a cent in, Penn- syliania land Delaware effective today. Soconoy-Vacuvm Oil Co. and Sinclair Oil Corp. announced price cuts yesterday of slightly over 1-4 cent a gallon and the Texas Co. and Sun oil cat tleir prices from 3-10 to 1-4 cents. An industry spokesman s4l service stations are allowed.-o set their own retail prices en gasoline and they were expected to pass along the reduction to motorists.. The spokesman said the price cuts reflected a general soften- ing of the market due to over- supply. Negro Lieulenanl War Velran Gels 30 Yearsfor Rape FORT BRAGG. N.C., Nov. 7- (UP) A general court martial sentenced a young Negro lieu- tenant to 30 years of hard labor for 'raping a German war bride While her corporal husband stood guard duty. " Lt. John R. Oriffln, 28, at Memphis, Tenn., admitted he as- saulted attractive Christiana B. Schuster 27, four times in a car after a drinking and dancAta party at the officers club. Griffin, a graduate of West Virginia State Teachers College and veteran of both World War II and the Korean War, testlfed she danced with..him and en- I courage his advances, but ro- jected fur thMc tcMacls. Ii*-.-- , .ff --" -" J-" '. I;ii,' L Iv n -P-%-. .__ ^ ..- -. EcaIt * K< ca y Ce Pit n I -- ::-: i i 79 ._.. i mm m i '4.,. a ~k '~ * ~~rJ Wf-4s4.,. ~t'~ *.'W't. A r- U.' 'CM It i I, S'a w,,o 4.- TALK ABOUT "rough duty," Plc. Mike McLeer, an MP with the First Army, really has it.,During the baseball season (above) he hands out free baseball tickets to servicemen at Yankee stadiuip. In the off season, he reverts to regular MP work, joining a guard detail to escort prisoners to Fort Dix. FOOD AN MEQICINE gathered by women.in Dallas, Tex., on it& say to. orphafl in Korea as Pet4 OBrsfeh (left) gets a cle.Tane ifromi ,tt aspecfrQ, Art enuvie for the 2,144-pound shipment at the Seattle-'I comaairport,, b All irmns dnutcda ipues. ;USTOMS ARE CHANGING, at least one of them, for European travyelrs. These French customss officials exhanine the first European passport issued for eqal "and steel officials j traveling within Germany, Italy, France, The Netherlands, Luxembourg and Belgium. The ew passport, valid only for the Schuman Plan nations, replaces old4 national passports. IN LABORAT OR Y and KITC HEN g10,vkes8wn uidfed qs9 .wor l #toM-ls rAnirrcI'wM areas *tth h Gel.,1n, 'o s sciAw petroleum distillates and aerodynamics as they are' with ample is physcaistoaeear&'p.~.f aniprt onphoa- kitohent Utensils'in their own home. Prior to World Wt rII, phorus, the chemical lement.. She ..lda tleh ititnqction of many Unite4 States industries were reluctant to bire wo1en having had an act of Congre pesed to peratit er to remain, for scientific research projects. Today, however, woman's In the Vnifit States., typical of women's inragis )nto seien-' place is also in engineering, e.hemical. and electronics firms tite research are position reresented in these photos below. AS EARLY STORMS threaten the high altitude grazing areas in the Rocky mountains, herds of sheep leave their summer pastures and start for home ranch at Independence, Mont. $4 1 SING2l James Melton, also an old car collector, takes a look at one of his favor- .1te, a pint-sized 1903 Oldsmobile. The old-fashioned, curved-dash automobile still can run, I it 4' ,I '. c, , 1; -! + ., '4e 'I ^*' I s ' ~Cu .., I 1 -* .. * . '. : -.-" y" ."'. ",'-- : .." f -',; . .r "' "- *- ' "" " I .- ,2 SUMT AMRICI N A f "...... iFren e Resort Enlivened '"MELBA THE MOST MAGNIFICENT MUSICAL SPTALE OF "....... .. -, wBy 'Battle Of Ballets' THEM All. OPENING NEXT WEDNESDAY AT THE CENTRAL .. ....... '6 1"TAIL PAR b1.The tople W .... AN MON ". 5A 4 tin will be nonlctlnn odM, PL at their oa he cI N l Station, any "iale f wr dis nn d n Press Staff Coespadeqt billt troupe. e Cuevas joined abot at their Barnett, who are L they desire. PA I (U. P.) A "battle of theMonte Carlo company in 1947 ,.b i .ntU Sve i. ti5on Nolember- I the ballets" has been touched.. off He took control and, in 1950,- ". "t i .. Atlantic Camera Club by-the. millionaire who bought "the dropped "Monte Carlo" from the S ls tridedonatin nd we g n o w bank"- at Monte Carlo. company's title. Vthe party. o orP aUtIon y M Cmera Cl u b Aristotle Socrates Onassis, 47.- : You ost can't build ballets g. ir.= K e ,i rroaw at 7:30 year old Greekr born Argentine' with mere money," spokesman It s Club. The lack ship itapn who purchased con- for the .Marquis snappe "Inspi- tas e sa ..i.'a vision will have tre h'tthyMonaco's Soety Ds ration i what you need." n'.s "now, Mratars I t 1e Bains de Her 'and direction of the He announced de Cuevas is plan- .Vf Franc o, AIlegre oadoch, ou%-^o Los Anle& She was 1work for ,Onasals. manager of Nora Kovach and Ist- yb~3B^5pe a .Corian.h, Halntb ?at-Ue h^_ that brought t hos ndst i ,h" sar toamd tces two, who -te : Ptl" leiv,. behind d the yvIron sur- l Ceo. RnLck Eds their Abou-c n .white A s born Mairile George de Cuevai center before World War I when 't .u k .elprain .ahd ose tbii ibr rtm : awyh Mointe C rlo' DeV a created the original Bal- -" ... .j a-- . 00: Nora. c- Sift neioel~erd f Tibi i e'Casthrap.s, poslesnor e let Ruhse de Monte C iarlo. S" r lb. a fortune st a at $300,000,000 Onassis want h troupe ready Ptrie Munsel as Cherubina it.'atrice Munsel sin the "Vis Patrie nsel n w C*i Ui Wting d ba bett fr the winter season, starting i Mos "Th Mariae of Fig- e am a p i ' De uev responded by an- December, hoping it wil be a lure are." "Toea." verdi's "tolete." n gave Writn Group M L d i nosunc& n he a improving his own lp bring viqitort s 4t ronte Co.I.n. "qish Oilorary4,me rol in College c T. rssb The Maru. land of a "MELBA" the golden voice of a golden era... coming to the screen o the Cetrl ah1e9yI'N0 He$seekstorbor rnvGeorghe.fdme C fovahn D. 016A l ly a' n dsl id n wh ite mbertarosis ict e the oria ala- - l it the Red r aulldl .i O Sa Raeftr b he the eodss Theatre next Wednesday, November 11th. Aet. SPars teawon fsom now until Janu-s c i s S1 n 'ting 0 C h rlo t w t ar y. t In Fepbruary,' he Will take his ari tVee tary In Berlin Fary'hlt h "freiedhis --- 1^ 4 1 Cor Mo Phopf ra troupe tl nd yo Cannet .- 30 mAied fr om UTH MILLETT Says,... Monte Carlo.a e. .he ITHasACA, N. Y "P.) Ce Cor- ell UtilveritV sc t-s say ex- - S Asks an older wwman:" What's lient sport fishing ithe Atl an- na r the mptIte with ete 'o young men 't 'ffir nor theirr New Jersey islA Mr pect their wives to help support o add od. .a a a.urvey J;!te elk 1 K LJK f ol .AM l, d or splneles e ta ye coa lawy, or pitetween ess por atthe tha.iI par ents Just o tan-s de n I CiPacsta san New Jeersiey,C iUt i Sded the everythll they.drM- It was newnomeri who'was si. atportd t.at a tto11g, pe-VrelTrsrer hel 1 X.' *L ..q Je .tte forto-alMny y r they ex- talkipge love it here," ste lgiu i the ar ea tnlt %tJtA. s ao help they 4,We o ee bae tw. Sendy Hook. and. Bay ' wh( d. es to hel the s e. 'opheae so friendly. ~Iea, hries off sir taee water ATLANTA,. NOV. '7 (UP) - 1d- IJestnmpt (I.) .R. Mre- in 'iIhat 'slougldbe the aan'sres- -An We ve SreUeh COn c10.1- anda deeper water to rise. se.Tresury'sei. tary Qeorge Hun- a4li 'i H rpd werte h' bya trd tjoo- tt rfo earning a uving? s twomnan may ie ia s ji t dt New phrey assured a Repub can gath *l l'.4w'L t g down" pa t uen' .i.I.thlt, reldoly a ht accmusa- erohbut shewonwth be i te. such t ra erlni thati the s "l te t" -!o.o Q o!o .'ffiV er Club. tio a1lnat the avrtge young cloag. 8he is b enthu Sme m cip atefue s uclly n vs rrion has "haltedth th wer Swas,' recent lth a working wife? Let'7 s It0 _ei n ew omel ando *iqw i ean.Ione nflationary trend and sodnh w l W fOr e occui W re llth 'l, who sm fairly ypa- atle her. ri $e lt lowering ta o es l r a- ta -j?,'- 1 *ilnlba b the 0h tuhQ wil tk hiso i teh rf at e thousands of yon heo c iia new iEdse it serves He said the fact that dollar le E d ee al s e ond M HuasMont e C arlei .eae me It &Beetbflballf, ol Wh wpare at on Anorstewith watersflow, a hy Admi thetrti one h f4. sttheel CORNFUL Ara valruesure to exerre the owlyah traet ~ au t f pfwr e Jtftionhed Jim 4 2e hs wife, Jane inr, f uatefs wohiscndh blsd oe n cr1 per-cent durin 1i "aelharel rc tes t aen c i f w Bt g ot "r a .d 3i.i ml-2. c ThlPi. l been 'Mharried g en ad. i. n a L d I cll +do tuds lib proome of stability," while thle b-e. .. .C'v"-n 3 "inteLot q ei anab a j o tnb *ithe .e teoes,, n liee it coe ar d prici oec.e p o d a Ietndex rose 34- Ba pontB Inn the W^ reBAA Yr,_ (IQ. P. )' Car S' a : I dpe *nsdWilh'aotse eractt whre Ted.Cc rmes.rnher.ix yekrsn before tihe e publ cans WW IyArIAs kanol derwpanog : u h "Nt$adrtshtobeh took over. 't sh uart o.a t e h als o loe cated a s ha b h TW. '- t-1t. i1'teTeo t5 '-a emaare a wter- i Th Jearseya the TosA dmre i sra e in Mr. acthted:I Ag.. **** -". .. el sr dWh ots~.. nrat n im e o i t s ti ot a l waters r t F S tbb Me ahe o os rs t with waters ow the Admltrate hs sucee SORNFUL SRIBBERS--Sure to 8.iL~ i the M T .verte t n out of tLonhsland Sound just D reducing expenses irt s a n scorned, these unsuspecting pave eint scribblers don't know what they're rl i o ll. repr li' l es mP ob Jn Bu oBntau Polt. They caed will be able to make a "pt n o, est wind of developments. Hdwoe vreiowever, they've etonteiade afriendofwhomtheyse toBudrS. .. S AI w n the "Montnuk Converhoence." start" on a "pattern" of tax re- penboy. The scene is r s In a Ri ecin o ro l n .l p h l BS.t i d B"i in t he ufa .' ote B saying the rated s a nts, ductiia . . W.edfriB ya s t they e, reaI a "W e w sr dlo a estipu led that more trA Ati he entw ol eg.el a ctt; g asi 11 buat th"ir ""e " r l i' iluo bn lis o new .... j ').. he.r j o dw otrt hei lis of water low daly thliout h the u m enters Asked, .. .T ( t ttlrgy aabo Shp famt istsoiH New York ight, an area a jacent LIAM. Mt .0 ).P .O tyhooub t eA w st deepr .w k'..r r W edFa me srg H rn W. sN.O. a the Teniple a- homemaker.n NeT Je's1 Hrlo Spasred Rua nre g a t l woAmanhou wa y, th t r t s ng al new NOksOnmrR4WHN1ew esWAi pth e as OF MAR BEa.LIN ( U- tPe- At night the .- |t MeNe e Bf Et - o- n theaveagIe Yo nge She ls se chtor tt t Loi s W holoping Ceratrdion ers h lAd, i GH, th .-. d tu oPsnte s ) -*k.AI ocs. P,.A.a o ". e s d esi p onwe flies n oow ov r tea coiyb o'.Tta lt u8 oepa te r eli elty t 0 7 m a U, r r si-theoctewe r e o sgew h aveAfirly n te sety c tmte W s rm CHCe (U ,mov,-at.rnW. P.e -- e-loe ringFaxts sth t of ben el prt- te ter. atios clearly as the brown- parking lots ma. offr a artial sp east in pelor n o E.,ly so t thptrirorld the see- cles, e bacr movIJ to theneat? toothe ir winte O rteinga e tormede C. "People's ,olutaon to ira e s e-on io h birds n slidrtatd sou rteachtother'o tor bordesnEiTetnn U oP rli ds on the a aTexinaos Gubnlf Coast wITzTl O. IOIeJilmtIs F2*bdhe Jane Wut iest o ee r li ol-tter ne sh ele s l e f lots, whie rsfh do away T c tr i ni ra hs a helpngij ma es lilssabtar e- l thb e '-4 f tar is career at-i Nfestlonnl Audubeoo Societyhe ll, sliving, hehs be~at .helpu her or a cl k other DTen mt ll har .spcunr ber h- says thelroe are ef 21 of the m tca- Mad"e paye g n d ItaI oud T es o l rds r dem ad-iningrntn LInIwuad erany d aisoltahe luWo ti-he on the eoatnen t Some of them i hat a rke o' Im k a tmile"-O- t i it e tso o stand four feet height and t aveeo tdle e d ateri l et r tteo t, s m wing spread o t seven feet. so M UrnStEs u sci NEment ri completion in Atitene na, i itit" lne le7, d thegayesomus Yoe Two oran. were killed laeaoamst yedthemre t h 'eJo rf.i n ost t -s toa n lots he t 'na antear a ameic n dollars. The structure s . Of W.uW 1 *l l afwa e ir flowu t araei ayl t t ters _,..ghtthe to o i the public in 1954. On June 4 5 th P laid t .e...... -At' t..... ayt hai com te, ,eseI to, ds-,a,, a ,, -,-t.w, -t .,.Asked first-'o- l"tseaodmn tti"" Trn,.sued Martna ow to wfk oWt their own lives iP thhiP coffee, and .tr et Snut d 0t0i ' W.i ,r.thOot anybody's help, thet .CoJeunrm, ba.ke t s. So eys have l tedt..ToSp SN."-oster Typho "he-MOeTE bMrrinrs iToA gathe a oe eln -umes, "" o-merAn 7the a] fb'anywilhv cann. er t w not miteree wi n'wfl To. .o e n-e a"signsin....r4.... . ,a:h7.,1MarIaget postotrl c ih, e t. p e e-d en develop r iraor disoder + ree rty pae i- fethehaittel= t .a bleak,C o,0runisd t, o out eraiUse Hts rZ.neVO LibarTis ea -P.)- Janiceu whele.-chanism thdt rowl th e sv-ar s .e-, pdto or rarte bo on 'And en ecnd laerimchadorethm ocntpob,'rAsroaeafokes )*oetheefttn- PoTno s hout, P esi"Y' 5tre f Airrvenue t, -the '. To levi Aut .os according to a report in..te J our- cnss and costumes by i" 10I er ihoty, desis t pace esu- t..rhted -it-gtes, -. nl .o th e AMnercan Medcal Asso- Dr 'nerds. Mason; The Con- .*9i k dp 1M (*171) a square meof 'b ll i th able pylt ffrm which a ear's Dyr..Robert Carr, Philadelphia, rcs. --. Lesirr Marg fl U' is the world's ~ t Nr the barrier moves to one aescribd seven cases 'of welaers t. ,itr b B N. t rts o "e d th eW s f rns- t develepd breathng dificul- ,rt.ofb ei nre ngk'drtwA an. Wersrclst __ . ed s ecuse of the fumes connect- -.rr: lamefft Yo. se_ by SLo gieeCp ii wormm o~ rUnieopl eleto Short o t In three ot the cases, he said, b.e' nal.g n Zoine liblns also .' .at. ...go mtthe sy ptaZoms Were serious enough .are.. dt U's P co.lectons of aiieri lnhion r mboing. SELo ER Ty m. (UP) Yy- Jeri' to neasitiate a change in jobs. boTex asGulferne.. withoartsand iwar Bertln. + ranklee r, once ee inaost. ionoxide, (harsi-- procE l Mcel ial-d ;of W.rtaZ.n0 Butevi o ta aue erilest o ntainn mint.oa te the fe tbod on silkdscreenociet hasds thatof situated na the Unter D r.itden mother was a ountrybarberoforTeetrod aloicaedwhmno c a, Itissof&aNe now in the Ru* iah sector; Hotel years," Ho ael e d "Onepl vario. s materials, as, Weioahbool on wood cut- . li ha d brokelpbfg here I l aa'L ._p J ecatings n re h le most irritate. "t t Dorlithreahad r o ke lit Malesd s son to believe thait ehrom Hf endtis egt n ha Wrought Iron W-.48 a twho had reneited r gakeytherthroesn"uoma y cau sevenmeet. MIMI MUSEUMo neyn1 .co ltni fltatons, .... 'a "- w ,Yea# W 0 s. Home Crafts- ,t0 vast moofcai's. "+Ku- t isten. MkonitSYoud rtelf i Stedollars' The sreo a valuableand thalt 4cTin 1 trnsth ayopnd istmplmfr eandcn r SYAL t Collecting eand store The radiance of the holiday season never end rCOiAidNS ei44ba 193 o tre nue- gotiartons be repSEcingN Sng ernitean Furtes and itLook over our complete stock of thur pro .'- X14drr i.U l t "i ofKIawhen you give TowLE Sterling. For this fine solid SC O M l N A i S. .I , .r'c lubsoea-*&-- d wiol. ei er"- STN S--t, and Costumes M ason silver is crafted for lifetime beauty, never to n e tiI~pflt, Wng ~teSB COWlit-I. M "Treatses: Fifty years (1903- abe 4-dof: a1953) 0 treaty negotiations be-1 replacing. lTe ,uft'ar tt. ..A. tWean the. United States and Look over our complete stok of thls proud TNb "aORTES" ...................N6v. 20 ma. Pana Wester-sterling. Be amazed at how little can cost. IW a I felted f.i" our tub). i i's first P. | 9 n 3 Anautio: The Spirit of St. Place settings start at $24.79,. teaspoons at $3.08 WaTIOR *orp nd"ORANJESTAD" ..........Nov.23Lo py d Hi- and serving pieces at $3.33. We gift-wrap and Sp : iT Nov. 26 ttcy; Activities of committee In deliver. ro to dln.fio~ 1a fad n at the _ *_ **_* baitU of nomination and elec- Ic lolhe an tion et fleetOr William Crawford q. ., "" orid' t w Jew 1or'k University THE aft h'TQm aWaTCOAST SOUTH AMERICA: Ira nN o"of -19a 1 DU-T omitte'a Frl The." Xre~t:depresion,1929-1941 "O ...... ............Nov. 10 Ho Robvet and the REE DIAMOND CENT e R '.n iWarmtrvius story -Walker .. .!.S.. .m.. "BAARN" ......................Nov. 26 i 8. nv eatw STORE 161 CENTRAL AVENUE, PANAMA '"" I O' M GM II -- Morrison ,aa Z*f^a .W t "'ODEN K" ...............Nov. 29 'Fla(: You too cab o rluc ci nt" to re fnae NI>an inft Al8__J.* I ;. fm --r: 'l4e lady of You too can be o 'I ,+ ...... + -~Kane: Too Late the OF LOVE" Diamond Ring for Christaa e e l7 S'hli. : M -- R MhI eoilm U 3 -2-an W ,"."s. ..V.rton; COkd moun- free of charge. t5 -t P8 Bafa 2-3719 PandA =4l taiie Pai; The (Phone (Panami 2-0193) or come in today fr detaL S' th* -WAk iai t; The Big Ear i-.:-^. . .. * . - .'i ... -- .- .. i 4 . I U '. ~ - -. ~- -- .. ~ t~7a341S:~31duIe -0 - S-* *> I , J, ; . u '-, t '(' I , ," . , '.-r ,,- *' .,**** * J t .'K I .. '..n ,.. r . -,f' -VJ ChIA W4 fl. ." : .. .. . BY FLORENCE V. Ao- ENl NEA Staff Writer If you think your first or sec . ond grader wants to help around the- house just to4 ltate 'mnom- my," you have a pleasant notion, but like all sentimental ideas, it is rather unrealistic. This is the contention of Dr. Phyllis F. Bartelme, child psy- ZVvLUltP1v. 13 G CU1.U.. 55ns usirIre m one M 5 .hologist ieuiiai p-alpklia pie fr Tnkimevita duiamer. -ret v ermg Ira. hogist. According to Dr. .artelme, a Instead of the traditional ounce size. Bake in slow oven. child acquires purpseitiness pumpkin pie, you may like this 325 degrees F., fdr 50 to 60 'rip+ when he reaches the ~g of sit, new pumpkin dessert foarutes, or until a knife Inserted In other words, he doQeanot act Thanksgiving. Lucy M. 3Maltby, near center of budding comes out for the sake of action Itself but of Corning. N.Y., asked us to clean, Serve with whipped cream. in order to achieve an 04d. True, try it. We think you will enjoy In many homes, the vivid he'll imitate hisjothe"Imeth- it. bowl of fruit will serve as a wel- odsr, but the result i vwhtt really come dessert-apples, pears and interests him from this age on. Pumpkin-Nut Pudditg grapes withtateris of rofair .l .Two thirds cup sugar, 1/ tea- over them and shell nuts in be- The psychologist says It a of spoon salt, % teaspoon ground -tween. With the fruit bowl, a utmost importahce t eiiearage cloves, ,/ teaspoon ground cin- cheese tray goes perfectly. Ched- this stirring purposetfulnletIf it namon, 1/3 cup chopped nuts. dar, Camembert, Swiss, port du is not recognized, a' child will ,2 cup fine dry bread crumbs, 1 salut, and blue are varieties you grow up handicapped i his at- egg, separated. 1 cup cooked or might try. tempts to handle responsibility. canned.pumpkin, 1/2 cups mil'., Eat a slice of apple wl
; tablespoons melted butter or of cheese, or a pear slice spread Tasks should be at-nlaed foi | rtrgarine, with Camembert. After the fill- the youngsters that will brig ing Thanksgiving feast, this type theft satisfaction With little e' fvtix together sugar, 4alt,. spit- of dessert is refreshing and easy fort. Cleaning. oft e n 6. i. K nuts and bread crumbs. Beat on the tummy. chromium or clay. tile sauces yolk; stir in pumpkin, milk i melted butter. Add to crumb TOMORR 0 W' S DIN NER: xture. Beat egg white until Grapefruit juice, poached fish alght and shiny peaks are fillets, spiced tomato sauce, boil- nrer when beater is witty- ed potato_" with parsley butter, ,*n. Fold into pumpkin-crun'b buttered beana, crusty bread. rture., butter or margarine, m I xed 'irni into a1leht wOllgreased, greep .sa4d, pumpkin-nut'pud- .resirtnt Eitfargtcdij1, five'- dnl .coffee, milk. Live Happily With Just Follow Thes ies S ow to live happily with a husband- .: r* y to think of ,timt always as a man, not just as.a husband.. If MMWalways think of him as a main you'll automatically know' hpto please him, and you won't be hurt or angry when you dis- e f. 4i-oesn't think- exactly like you do. Ste your best manners during any- discussion so that discus, sipps don't turn into useless and unpleasant arguments. Often it's not -what you say but hbw yofi say it that makeS a husband get his back up. teart to take kidding good-naturedly. Men like to kid wornt. en 'ut.lWI no fun if the woman, instead of taking the kidding li '. feWlv she has to defend herself with sharp words; Never let him see you feeling sorry for yourself. A man ca68 res- eft a iOman who gets mad .and tls* him -off occasional, bit he won t respect a weepy-eyed martyr. Cultivate a sense of timing. When he is grumbling over the month's bills n -time lI mentic tha he living room- hao to be repainted. / .. SKr' T- E SELF-PITY - If you feel you aren't getting a fait amount-of compliments and praise-don't sulk. Start handing out a few more coenpli- ment-, yourself. The man yho is pleased with himself is more likely to be pleased with-fili wife. - Never say, "I told you so,"-when something goes wrong. May. be y u did. but if you did, forget it. "Dn't always insist on having the last word. Let him have it now and then. Don't worry too much about whether he loves you. The quick-. Alt way to make a man doubt his -love Is to start dbut~i- it t course. (Alled, -. (All rights reserved, NEA Service. Inc.) I /J,7AA ?-7 r -'.* ',.('* ", *'*?. a! ;,.:** ^ .* *r - f..f ..* :. t ;r %:."t:<..f ^ * ( U. '*"'^* .*t.' ^*/,. Y' include eliainga the detaable parts of t range and keepig I4 -surface free Q ga, an helping mothW to pp fruits and vegetables. - In the bathroom the six or seysn-year-old boy or Irl can wipe the tile wall amd flor and keep the basin clean, O Might be asgled the ; f polying the towels and wash cloths. As laundry asUtant, th. child could carry clothes frbm the washer to the dryer ay r srtt Among the chores &oughput the house that. arn i4d. the capacity Of a. dvaa'-o). are cleaning and V It plates and iw and rooeUtl ars ann books on sh a and easily accesdlble w~l do.' Good rainy-day fbes Include anpolesngl AlFbruhc i f md owSx and cleaning brushes'aid eombs. The jidece de e. nee among the tasks, from th'Vlapolint of littUq girls eplhl isL h~ipng mother to b1t1t i bab and prepare him for .Tha might a asifned in aaem to a reg. Sthe kitcheak -r. batbon ur dutv as a i for s jub j brings that all-porta ense well done. of accomph t quietly, D'. Barteln. points -out, Mixed Other kitcben jobs that prove HOUSTON. Tez" ~IU)-4-, Maxle satisfying to the youngsters an1 Champagne recalmid alleame to of real service to a busy mother opei a beertaver here. ---- !A &4* l "4dSt '" *" Be Baudge nc Ievamp 0/ kttneq 1JE51 . ', ,' "* ,. - . - A wool dregs is t en a-C*i ra.es is tW-> 4 date. The roled eti- at IeIt M*e wea sMe about 12 s'td lJ iipkro aw*", *~v w dlnn - -_ r.& aTcm n r jvv *->^ ^ '- *^L _- - / l' .(d ~y ": M"y K HY oW D I/ftd Xrc.ae fjtht NA Staff Writer lo j F-i.r Up to your neck in neeW ur fashions? That's where any . . gal with a weak budget andI r a strong desire for a newI dress can look for remodel- The mistaken nolton that mid- ing ideas to put fresh spark dle-age sprelid is inevitable isn an old gown. appareushintly still cr lating. What's more, thelocal sew& brsin toof exercising atoo in -center expert points o1. borirlng tootime-contudming orirevskmping a neckline is on to d. ctrin, soi-wome n th lettht of the easiest and most dram- uOds- ome theyirofrigh ntatic transformations a semi- ht in their flesh It skilled home sewer can per- tight foundations. form. Yet doctors assertthat extra Y ca ope neck- n tYou canom up theoneck- jweight puts- a .str~tn-on the line of a simple high-collared turn heart and that VlIlM exercise, -while helping o ward off that excess- encotUrage goor circula- tion. awui or crepe tale.-and frame U^ ^--. e of . A, do to. At . ia Smrels Or- tha. .puk.k oit"'! ow. S - These. exerclaes will accomo-1 , date the heaviest schedule be-lmmm cause they' are done in bed during the time one takes to 'cVe to" In the morning. Try; - mhem inr this oraer: 1. After pushing aide covers "ad plow, stretch your legs One at a tnle down to the heei, faen to the toes and wriggle 'them.- 3. Throw your arms over your head and stretch toward the headboard. Then fling your Oit wide, as poaslsle and d m close the fingers. ,..Now reJax .onpletely, mangs and twiing. -- *. . .... ;. ", - F'~~ ---- - A ,ii' *-. .. '.. r .* /;. :- .' . " CLASSiFIZ S .. .. .. --' - ,.- "-., 4. Place pillow under but -- tOeeks. Go limp all over: then i nhal S owiy. Ipulling bo we r abdm' r ," bon.. Leet - i utle., r Lrk slowly.Doi V = -i times; lat- .lat at lI up to 12. ..' " L - - --C ftiI- a(,,a'Aniy 1ch -'y -?,'-"a iirb~n I I .1*; i.'. -5 a,' - *~t.~.. S* A At i W ' *t~.i- .A4 "s'-a 1 Me U99 *slr, ow sq r a'srw d m * **W - a '- *.'.. ' --S.,r I ..! ^kJq j - -- --- ~''' I __ - i *1 i - --- -----1 pppmp- -iL .- 1- t1 M 40,, .97k, rINvUT PUDDIn nv -s i i . I VAL A- %.AI ~F L ; 3Bi~ I.!I i r-r . ., .1 i' M..^ S7rpie .... RE..f......(. IM NO m111'Wi mt nstically difctt By United Press 04r I *Ibw f Kka *g'to an atomi c scientist -V W ^^e ridet n th e In Tb Revnl_ tb epairin a damaged gasket t tnd ima-lsi f or we Itw ShAtomic Products At ttis oun try, by p his Dro er and 11, 4M. Item *0;;; "W OOSdW. e I 1 14,e4 t.; i me *to t, raonfSer aond b al-rn wrlti ng family o theo goen- i h r pected to rre Nober 19, rris, who left mecha king for eight e tmposeria works.n lmae ,to rom the United tefor the Isttb Noveer 3 for hour shifts aus e each man S quality and Eimt ddal, BEAUTIFUL AHER-Rai autfl rain, the t "soker in nearly two months, derich ior la he director h lon eion, tools unds the wrks of the youngest pr seasn it nd growing or the year to com "taw1- ano Mesereof te "I waterolA in a concrete Sitwll and his it fwo evmeig, r t onal Council o Churches tua Washington tryang"to use a four- in. a few sentences, an atomos- of the'*11o in tie Used tates. .Mteg we ajtoS t ar t to *s att a tff ong n sraw& bb N ounce the Cit o o ere wsll be a thanks t i mel electcal .are included among other SKeith Alan on October lan elf and bulp by Ju- eIn sothernmainten dressed n ra-tins in an excellent select W9_1 00-000at, t an oIm]p lllllA os o ,sof t ma r td WIs..was-Fe- saidk ( ;,Mfl gv es arMaternal r rnt e an .t thown)e A qir oe repe a ba-b g lm dith Bry ooks always been a boverne Sf MrndMrS t 12 nto rves and sh lmne Job Gany- eore DuPoyers. another of the Lln tiM woney o Pe 1 Campbe to re ble en who wored or sot t impose upon her the dir in his int oe- e a nd aWhon t powe iti llice in W War ip of an nner reticence Sh 1 Ia Boblet Ih a frerma o north- toeIFULwho weAtuld HER-Raveautil her towardtheA Ae" in nearly . Sthe the U d ates i ld safely s d the radiationGabriel tti, downtown Denver, Colo writes.a water ish to the ugt. To lateto ad st en during Sth iabl tars later g it, Reno e a and more glowi ng, --e a e 1nv. iapes 1nd ,....s.t.....h. Dunn w t5 1 er Mr- vstotIMn Wthe.director oldf the ArIt I W s t m1 a- WINmtTaen ia udo oueis lines more and more whirinssoatg. Her tg e.es rof j int ere hosto brthd mettor of DP creeras a ting hasmecan been like a dance, the AF rild a horeas of their ar dra craft of a n in Beau Br m o which moves stee; t ,W blm, Mr m t c DebovrsasndotAhn uat the Hartn|- Wslti to fair inu etan e ,o ad.r yf-st h lwdek at'At thatttoo MorocO; essays on _ _ _ _ I h.,U Anae, the -me Of at, = o n" Wnmight ting and ,musiandanng as bn a danc, Made G Md" ar h Oerhart* te bke re rea -n- atGermany aToiIs its h rrst rhyt which moveS miteadily wE EIa l Oputh Mrs...WI, Mr. Sd N. Jacob Delvae ^. . ^ ed only 0ee, a yby a- faster.. 1A CMrs. Antheb r n of suits Vof. -- m a 0lu. dent. ofGe htrderer lov er him At this oint A her career a Mrs dwrd Hadel Mt. Mar a r t y o an- lwla ot eause he waded In rup- ch atf her seatf-chosen aim-Miss I at .t o' J ver damn tla k i. L heon Io rubber go io bt o te o the that he Bry Stsnt -n her first trip to Eu-A enl. are-will, be a 'thitnikes elt a, kh ow sh e tein -of al SMrs. lton the io e ii re th tle electrical are included among ,other y wol 1kelth'lan Ol 8 ton pOtob er i i pdande bue tlca a sr dressed n writings in an excellent selec- 20, at the Fpjt lV9yt 'AAhamy ros adhe sa i dr Ton.....7 i-. m niNe .(l. bo.nt c 6, Aoo the U r tQ& rOsmaloparttaNEWt YORK(UP)m n Thestr Bo the W 4' requiress calm M ir sR Ieturkley Ur. c Is rin t"athe pro- oservies wu be pade e." George DuPre Is another of the Miss Brontento betweands those who honey oor pori The grdup me at offices touet the nadon' to remrkable men who woreind hir ought t impose upon her e ease and natural a. rs. *ad sraymon eon utfol owwriitishnIntonce in Wo War cle of an Innr reticence'and ILtleoad JoyInlW dtonat pWs lI. e 01 of eM ac tlian efU3Py0 andc D *H ri e onb "b 1s by sarveStee ck:W&4 hr tnorth-e w; itho woulddrive her toward i ohn: eandthepartyWest CanadadWho was transform- a dfnamic emotional expression- Sai aret h oet ,l le g 0ate a sismur 'access-e al ed ito whisky Tous distilled ette, febbottdis in J or Mrs. bat-tue home of t99ler with ei rlceent, d Nmgara atte dint" In the course of the last few rs. t. a ol od,1r fat lSOe e y, di sent to ve completely new ars the latter seemed to be vi S1 dat apan M in o an, behind enemy tourious. Hercolors became 'Mr. lWo. )An. Mrs. vdt' '- ayn4In 0dat Talk"- (RaadoHouse) is lin es more and more whirling. Her SfTsld, t hwa iss toaA "In #Atho e e j ** TImof Ti t g n l ofor fam ariltenne ' 121 Oerh atthheolu le mn ue-d ,ir %,ne srhnyton', o it m thwe t teaSdT WHISKY \*o e the la I T .m. OAnl bb amdairbyB.Tse en!.l. fasthter.e.tostriketetste .era nd essful , 4 t.ele lam alb o rtue rs ve hitAtithi, s p ointhoier career - A' A' elt- f 's4e I0 lU3l6 a 4' "g a ills l_ ;cruel wo -ver mature artist who has achieved h sydel b-Pato 0olJ tBBh, eihPicude a e.we ww $.u.muc..h.. of h.i.tss#......aih t o t Saa Hadatnd jemian Crya .m heCwmU ambch-on hesolfthosen aim-Misr rih note sohon Mrs.. TJlr.Pe P';de .Linm; heA Civl tshs d soowas bombarded by the whole rei .tTlmf f Brikh opsy ehiatrisetos and inell. g. fat a European art and won- mr Asays O'say* gene. expert had spent nin a dered what the effect of this mass- ... .a 8 man, R tt a d ae'. baly 1 onr ths prearing him for his exposure to beauty would have on rop I Hl man; de e $ acemt o ureaus for t e str ange double and they did my painting," she confided tol a rZM W no%#n; ddotdlO !uW the ,ptbthey have fied their work Well. Even under the friend., nd Debby S der the administration's cut- vilest tortures, he neither cried Out e first pntngs she produced 1; 6The oos oftIoback.Ti Msry t ahl; tth Walker. ndofthe The assembly said two such em In English nor said'a-word th in- after her return from Europe, are z ia s o" l t, "M b thas ..s wloyment effort already arc it he was supposed to be. by the marvelous 6th century b.,_oliF1q derway in ruip. It.tpied that' It took more. than a l ear, In mosaics in Ravemna, Italy, the lrmp.t u-~heM i t0rom '! o mlnier 9 to the civil service commission esti-act, for, Prp doctors to lrcon, great .exlresive force of which MJ' +Wtl. ,l~e ylulh e- tovenb ilr b.- l ates that 80,000 glvernnent emditlon him rth reurn to nor- stms from -a powerful restraint. 'VRanoeon vt tivh ciul Tb h lr a t prs. a ready have been s mal life after the, war, but again These pastels ,miaor a world in 0*n 4hs ub' Noveui- bIoz..eth .ic. O, 10 Anooi "The-chances are that fer eessful bt iessman and Boy Scout reticent but meaningful gesture, p e a r atmp o v e s f or b i o m ad e b y ett wh ey IwithI iii e a Coreona moves for informal placerpen leader in Calgary, Alta., with only qpendg itself inglowig clor4, t. fc~Ise evlr tp .Um.he t tfse r atfficest lout te nad on," e lthe alsear or two and a head of prei Bry tnesthis msac cellatl : se lo. the d swhen he wa ness of a born, mosaicist. Mosaic VWBMy 30 one ofoTheClmia region ota the Bu- sofcourse, as no i. ahethr X. E... +r t d t h ortu-b at r other nadhi t erhaps ..jaand a a' av't ou alo ,e rob '7 pblet - a. Tb&I n 0'n' '!uitl acnap- The good host strikes the right Itsl:, 40 NXW OA.K'(Up.)TpIeiul *havew ] .+ .-career iafnote by serving 'Black & White"; it aw" arkf Of d stike gla )ss might is-the drink most appreciated by his =Aeir4b ants.-opes. se his a gues Every drop of this famous :.+t A ew indoor TVtntemia.of the v C f # fr,"or oreer, Skira,rhase. ,-att IN w zWe U ah"any In his, -dtdof Our Time." SCOtad "atnrnewe A" iAmu:l - -10 t. pARl ove r .base smallou,-med Distilled #md Bottled in Scotland t heavy w td[sl s11 n pmapad. I Sear 7 -(bt. thehe *Idl great b lass tot"at te lo ,- 'twIu rfet Desiree- uemarte Selitko fo w-wfwks and it wil y thiS gret.ecstatie SCOTCH WHISKY Iiu T1 th' at the tao oreivrf ami IM~t-oleit, -- : .ti... -i- Williams vl-b 't o t. oto misery in the aW k l pS mT ime and Lat e *t h *hal r-- lain Kio 4potm.M SV.h WhI.I, Dra I 'S IUattle*.d PatootM.V., -nothelwlke o!the9big-9e- thec 4t+r* .tBatl' useo.ouaeC ry- iEncyc. 0dia, V o +le that.imed T het Num ig Prss has bhdo- e ead oM the isial aoile- same l rlnlWil l as AdI ler - ; __ e bl e rsery in- ontaind in the h. I d~~o 'brtm ofrml '.+ 1.pnil: ~ ~i U.' mm 1.+ __.- + ..- w -* t for Km!st" -- ANhN7 AW6Sr MUML' RHYTHMICAL "0 $91.00 .RAIMW CENTER S -.. - I - ". .' ' L,:-_~ .+] .... YOU III Leave your Ad with bE of our Agents or our office i'7 t LBWIS SERVICE No. 4 Tivoll Ave.-Phone 1- 29 -and ,-. r 1. (X" I,' MORRISON'S Fourth of July Ave.- No. 12,179 Cenr4t olo "**NOVEDADES .WIs ; i CAR Via Espa No. bNo. ,mlOLdp -- - AvWmWor.aciolI d9e PUR W Phone 2 0441 te lasa Phoae - t 1... - '4 . * -d'ugsu A; FOR SALE FOR SALE MISCELLA Househeld AtAutomobiles ,ok '" he* -OO* SALE: Very clean mottress FOR SALE: 1951 Mrcunitu't 2011- - for, double bed Zenith shortwave radio very.good c6ron. flt .l ortable rad.o 168 V.a Porros ,owner: House 16, Gamboo. e- DR. WENOEHAKB ephoane 6-139 D Central Avrue "K'" se.fp t- _-- _-- ------- _--;r - Corner telephone -3479, Pga 1 1'OR SALE -- Mahogany furniture FOR SALE.-1952 Chevrolet 4 Door --Cone-tle-h-e -3 --- | honr. 3-364;, form 10 a. m. to 4 Sedan.'De Luxe mngdl tg r $1.550 Sealed bdi; art triplicate, till i* r1 - p..n, Con be ti-.onced if yott"have one ce.ved in rhe office of.the.Enrineer- Ho p'.,F-r niAL- .third cosh Phone Gombco 274. .ng and Co.istructlon Director, Pan- FOW SALE -Yourh beci complete, .in ama Canal Compogny, Balboo a j&od cndolion. Apply house 24 5 '.OR SALE T7 HIGHEST BIDDEfl. Heights Canal Zone .until 10:0QQ A. BoboO C. Z ne 194A stake body Chevrolr a. m. November l17 1955, and Foe FOP SALE -- One I.v.ngroom, cne' truck. I ,. ton. One 1946 stake then nubli iy opened, for furni h- m ingroC.in and c..,c bedroom suite I body Chvcdlet trudt.'$ ton. Onr ng oil plant, tools., P "ui t. Ifens a- .r ne desk, cne chetr of drawers. all 1948 stalp body Chevrolet truck bor. services, anrd'.ntris fex- o S tnOhogany. card aord o:her small 2 fan. One 1946 panel hevr6let cept certain Government furnishe "' Stoles, kir:nen table and chairs truck. 1 ten. Two fork lifts,.Clark materials citedd in the stcifecoi tao glum ..um blinds 100 x 59 and 35.00 lb. capacity. One 'poIrtble I olns, and for perJprming el work r i x 59 ri.ches, two metal chairs : light plant. 5 KW. Seven g for preparation of hold Wi' future and other icusehold articles. 0314i pumps. W.yne One gasoline stor- plants. plating topsoil and grassing . Cable He.gr. Ancon age tank, 3500 gol capacity at Corozal Forms pf pos - ^L -- ,r a moat~c Items listed may be inspected at secifcan, and fu.p cars SSALE Kenmore automatic Ithe Central change Warehouse may be otoained from Sqg ofice vshing mrch,n% excellent ConO,- h r e h ouse. o the C..nfroC at ryl k t~oatlon *itI last mrcie.celncoG Post of Coozal Bids will be open-Dofh CRacm 34SIM tices.oBest ll. gr Ro -tr6l ._st tr. 9-6ed at 10.00 .A. M.. I December Division, Room 34-9. tFbo.l-4!t cw tOR SALE.-'.,a!rnul dn ng table. 1953, at the Co-n(rol Exchongj iTplephone 2-3739 or2-2B. jitre bears for ei;e.-'.n. Tel- Officer. 'Coozal Specificaions and drawings will b ephone Ba'boa 2850. Good con- be issued nodi.ro c.--co Perfect condition Mu.t sell. Best specifications and. drawings., lr . -SALE--Furntrure lames. cob'- otfer buys. Qtrs 375-B, Fort Kob- rnt returned within 40 leindr F fneft'., p.c.urer. lu l\ greater., be Phone 21 76 dayo after opening of bkc. i' r Dutch on ~.s let, err s.e, FOR SALE 1941 Chevrolet Club FOR AL E -* In plated c.r.,ng set s a cpars ddo, Cooke. 204-B, Rio Grande. Phone FOR . gl:3s r pa.n-prleim : r Arcke. Pedro -ig,.el, 4-i55. ,. N square azc .arm r.,':. r 0. An .;-ee cc.i i-an Jun Are FOR SALE: -- Kaiser 1951 4 door. , S C -,..o' Hdres:- a-d. Wil accept trade-in. See -it at FOR SALE -- Boxi Puppies, --.'a co-mbined Hc -e1488' ,- 712 -A,_Loca --$80. Telephone 3-0717. C'" SIbo telephone -42f FOR SALE.-Military Jeep 4 wheel FOR SALE:-1950 Ford Sation ,A4- O-.-ALE -Piano $85, bs.u 3 Dre A-I condition. Excellent for gon, mahogany Raftan furnit S. 4 wcker chirs, I dreser interior. Caoil Clayon 4268. bet of Go'f Clubs" including r. f beds, 3 chests of drawers. large FOR SALE OR TRADE Kaiser 1951 Phone Home 3201 office 5150,A I h S"wejian bIn.d. 2 large cedar blinds. Must sell before my new Kaiser ___ 1 high CPr- i. 4 fo'ding chairs, 4 arrives.- A,chley. 2712-A. Cocoli FOR SALE--Piano. Bhmboo frnifiur F afgight ch.ti,.- set of crystal $25 Lamps. Fans. Various. 'Ph~e 913. u crib. '", b la-ric tittcr |O ST & FOUND I * tr, e r mailer iFosr & O UND ORSALE: As6drftmjtofgo SFC: FALE I.%e vergetin blind LCST:-Wor, hair terrier identifica. used ofica furniture consisting af ' vao:r..ce. Very reaonabt ton plote NO. 1482. block and 3 metal ecretaorial desks, 3 wqod- . lige gren shade, $2 00. Phone white. Col atb6ed 6374 en desks. %R SALE. Must sell practically BJdg. 5142. Dablo Heihts. Tel-. OR Snew. dnirflgroom, hall, drawing-. | A le nal Zane Alncya.. b L sho roor complete guest "room, indi- b n 34a8 or Lincoln' iLf Belf 4pr .vidual esy chairs, airfoom cush- U - baultiful rugs. swedish Chi- OR SALE:-Bicycle, tricycle, radio, g' l ~li'oate, floor and tabre V a electric tramn, toaster, louvres, AtK I ips. Mu.t beq egn to be appre- n589 Boyano, Ancon. 2-3715. r w Phoe 2-2"798 otfce, hours | lV niu s ii OR SALE: Electric Sewing Mo- FOR 9 chne oiDesk aobneti; Reftigeratr ro< Position Offered sing1eb =, no, l des WATpt-Pcrson expert in color-M a li- .otes. Good salary. App House 95, nmear tbor , p ftsaMlty, Foro Sosa, 4th of July tio " 7. ITHACA, N. Y. (U.P.)-The old -- ap2. barrel, once a familiar fix- r SALEi- aat dei R y *-' T- J.i -. ji-'- ."J *M000, C.c at" ,. ,ry.. s ^, v196 o EsipaftNo, I 'also rn per-enneit"r g 'OR SALE-eB. { dependent corre'pbnden a a.OCentE m dnthsj 0 d. Lore children, kt "SpenCrh. German Seek .(.ag3oe ,tFi '. 42-7 P2 Bello St.. ti. et Moiton Wrm to Secre- as Others v e.- n-- and paper-wldow bao.1 COMPA d ... ... ..- be L Poapn J(s or b.hlP i BC1H TOOiSMR clTt Tht'. *JAr-cr '-cm y W AN tED he u' "th"e"P'c u l*m c e.aledbids, fa0 opening in pubNlis, "' W .W n, o sl0il i nAlds in bu'ki llrC i 10 30 A' M. pit oSof N r0 tree-pa .n ber .4. 93. in the office onea Revolution lW- t i perinrtandent 'pf -Storehduses. U1s i* j ;ri-% iro11ty ?dpR- .-uijrei IItI for, ,Sa*f of miscellaneous, ,' be a.. .r a S%1" "llBStorehous.. In- -ng ste-dily.,It' i aSir ful|prticoam n 'case-w.t' h by t yo 'irds l 'toffu off u. ic Clubs Form f-"serice :ors. Enjoy Kobbe i 1I 1 ord Library e bw as resigl thed isi'ot the apple brrel. e expanding their record . tion ua more than four, TIt eNason -i simple. CrocI the .liumoer they had an shoppess expressed a efe *. dt gR9 d,.y. the Fort Kobbe 'for pre-packaged apples Room has been doing a .-ighnt lnoO yietha fruit tice busl oss.'..a.crdinRg m' oly e gs. A.ple . .C:herine Btown, Post eer. their M P.) - i e UU- a uct, gladly ob e e of s a *1.micr teaords ranging WT e eredft dcv"kinu iot te 4 pt r tya aba~ dFlino problem. r Jee edeve *A spected to demand for uie of the under the s DvS D:. VM Insight in H rol l is so greal that Brunk: of the tme AfL irr- pduc- imWarI' music .-luos have ;C V. e Cc-h'e . cfrnatd so that a greater I.Wferoty, 1 4q a and r. ft- people maiy enjoy '1Wil sell hf-blvi es m. Pra .tkll& - without long watts. Iig 16la 1rge key-n s l Present time the music aslk.d O.t -o ta. i of every hbrary is open daily offered di thie anborn to 9 p. m. Sundaystoe p1 1 Is ey ro ., t e fl. S e from the lA ;ouI M es d i e for, ry m:iol acid . City w rank' iong t. g thhtg. r _ oi Nes X 2 Polythflup was ke most ef- .rt. S s, d 4i - aMgfr ^ ^ rc C*0^ ^^^W Sf .t we An bn ch., Sntoi Wat As or se carmtokr the'. . ivfr Cottaoa. 4e t Santa Clara. PleMsa brn ytur inens. Phone'Balbe 2*1 . LLIAM Sontg Clm- m&. atoBg. Loam. cornfeobl. , or boeh. B,.l h 0 M*e-. t veukuwn&t ,. I -.. I FOR AENt i Hwn,---. | I RENT:--Fucr~hed robrn halet. correr al 1..1 StrAt '-d tb Avenue, -$*sl Pranseo ltne lock 50th street Cor.'e *en oorh 9 to 12 noin & lC 7.:; . Telephone 3-4UM R ftENT:-Modernr. chauit2L d- oeh. .maod'e room' bht er staojiotion, good. via Panqmoa alf C4, b. r C I Mcguel lfve. Phane 3-4 OW ,, \ - B~c~h jU [ t-R- j WNTIW & .Jab~f~ tithed aparfhttfg ttwo idrf -ha. e & ThI. ihbne. Panama. 3R 417 I -I. RENT.-- ApartwnitNh furni- ire,*, for couple witp4t chjk*en. all fori, iwo te.uI'-Chirfal Ave. o. 4.. IRENT: FuInlsW M rri iartment for fguji or. mall I mity. Pat,11 0 'dab* IW.oi * RENT:-Army Cokili wish a. Sre apartment -fUsh*d. with va entrmanj 3-344. | RENT:--BeltIfilly .fuished )m for c.cupleq Kitchen privwftl . Ia Vista, Mtce AyvAnnNOR . Phon '3 . a . . ll *"Ii "'.A if'-.. IL .7._ * i 341 ett ggla tal5 qskt No. I phone S ot Crii N ' I^^^^^^f*j S. A\ i' 01i -'-SO C. - 4.. i,.~ -.4 4 Sw';.Pun^J ti FT" , 2J MiAX. ha. m ,-tlM . aot be II S.. I. W m-It S *;,i I. ff *JlW M S % ..I * ~i- ,en .. ** '-% A t .....f "' -'^*' ,"-' 1 'l, l K', t. ( i.t rt. .. " j '"^ 'i r,"ls a p-K. ^. itt '4{^ I. > -, -, i 'u f t if hif. '* -1 * .4eANHU ifl ,,*l :., Fs-.. *'ii*i- ii t at"e:. nd : W s the apperaaM Ms -Ye un i. ". Thc ;s also Beet 1 S. l ti be I. i f' housewives for Sbhe ** -s after the apple or I Ac t ount- -' .4. r'" I, *- ...4 'I -aI mY "-l __ _ 'I I1 .v *^ 'k&- ij- .. I I i i rmruch Santo electric refringteion, mpdeWote ofes, PhtJ 4-567. - Ino Ocea-oide um&'.. Cars. Bo3 B Panoma 3-18-77, Cit 6. ~Y I., *8IN e* ew ,waT'I' I~'aI :i i KIN t ;.~ rpmv I W.5 due*st. rw d NZih M Jb !.'. . . .' . '4,. ,.-... .i .. A AR... .. ia ... : , -- m L a ! A A&. LU * ** I e "', :< Your eyse -". -~~y we '' A motion flr a. 2 "SAL OM:-E 4 In TECH1(dtm*Wi -wi- MAYWORTH Charlea IAMM - '"d A Cat .40 S'~ ~ L. -* "dW with dr64n aw . . .. i......... Sh- gy m .e at. tbf ^ - OWLS VISTA T I.* :4:W, : 0 pMom. S*p M-O-M's big pectmular TODAT st a"M *.A 'U~SONAL APPRAL Ci . LOS 3 DIAMAN .| A RaLAU PiCTniut...r. KaMA mon.. in "THE FIRATEF- REVENGE' ... -. g; a*a 2t VE N 'I TOD#Tr.&&OMQPtSWI JUANNE CRAIN.-- DALE .KROB3lIeK ,n "CITY OF SADMEN" Sift If? V CA inr? 'L I .' "WWm Ia" 2 Ch ,-^o' Alm V'~ 79 t :|"WC fIe d on of hbi it MI to di ?w..eR. 't,- nj,, oa* uok L (St ti at .00 p.m.) . - . EMEUNM I ,; wM.HN in. 15, s<; Kd KU.f~ Left IgfW * : *' - .' Via" , ' * * -'-- Fi*- ,e s.. 1 - w l w in ", N 1 rw * ,- -lH-.. . ".- - s Big Box 0C if S 'anee' ha," t t Turn W A eincahd, W l-'.. a., .pbn t .. --- h-e f oi l oSok. -iikeliie t. ,1 -,i t aii, c e .. : I oey, wS. os o thrd A roud to -htEae ptgea dalab n r h s?. s a a ~e t R LMAD oEI wNit hiut ral ty sthrrings h" q... r..... td. hW ithl .nga S o i t e Fi "a a) e In A ask s polite n. three mo- practical phesn et I- d o W erCa) ia mghr di the trick. Tho UyF ar And 5. he bn ox e ho the Datitm5- n .e ar Td.3 Fal ot thet tia y n or '.-~ $' g r.mt riety of apprisrh. AIm W th ie Co 3_. T,,he ,Tor ranmnt conhfnd any IncWro4 u1c4 -1 1 r1lad tnobe of qu sl toce ao e n p NoD .it. .. ers have w look le the INt fIs VC n-7.hat a o o rar te a wsasts of Uitin a t necea . sSS.: y s In Pnt.te o 04 4 t er- holfude d to a Whrlen thWear panceh the Ro.- t a''st ts'" rat Pea look xat t^w boe roentB My DaeiC eas get ohe o tenie s ee d elc d u e ai rndebut a few years p5ro prN ,, a y ( M s mtne ae e ulande ths i y. e lat oes vUteal- f u r thr oaloa ie af tBh s R S m 'u a are e e ars toa lael i M oa t't id l n o b i.sad --,ee flebr-aso teb u .h v on .-- mane. hen, Si n wld t aP hdke ont P h ean, A), ec aorac e-up t ha ate* disl torfld to hS t ,nlop Wahi tgo e al snr At f ait t he la tw t s .... t-rh hu..o ud 'o },-- After ..... .d t. _,. ........ ta me My Lovee (L.u th audhne would have lwS o Id t th h cTlubr _to'n Aa .ke eTrm oallU. .ae o est. e prctc Pllefper FOI n Its W t'yor nthee oo f d .. all th' utnrtafos g r.Two i n along tp chimlg al that. . ... ..at cc, o ).m ite m L a a lthe8iti c inh is ow3 esor n ta-ld od rte orn net reIrf or A lined tempLorri s crei etae Ltiin of Pewotli* "Cesduc- twirwdB uaatt. h baa gotqin tob Ta aeestty dr rHe s t henterd~cf, f reom h NevteddiethisMount. S s frare oiftp and when b-e tack mTh a nreaTmalied (Ta -I& "Thr Sat occ.A un il "-" t andanh heo I n. S3 and t sUts -I U Ltedt one would tohim n dsrmnk nhis era- ti a S-% -iS" except lfo o ethe yb d^ Iv In L'r ncdhten.ta, Instead pi Ch SSUU'4 out lur g this i t treyd. h. 9 iglual heo M i -&o to th ie Wayfld' epparmiiac ato the R ertg n l5 al C wmni t a S an *a K00 to 8 Ton tr are co9ufa1ioratlv1 o( thi Re- m.. may be a great msicktol.i ..,F l i r .M r t there'm aenr even tre ive h,.h wg n;haeat th xats t aged aed wate to ha r n artt o right for the f. tut appeWr e the Ar- M lC rearvd tate in A m r A SN" 0 rn wii eralned .cthe o ra ae already con- oi u o y W a a d -inZu r rit,. Mi rbe aotcled from .eredacds rea prwro d A -ftk es"he" Ad hs -. ali Was the. ey flds i c ey theb "Yu' B a oed i E "ft wo mha . SHts t 6M. Theonnr hat0edr. lm'tov. d rre t Ilght'9Jda N o Fee r"thsrnTe tole "elfi eotihr. albo at SSoen.to wofw o the lh U. InitytC S ,I Wa meartidt Iand pS Wfull tL- -o- tl prwt O lat d ates.t t o % 'I~r> al heou d L- bald to "81*- "Youl Cosi dC 'i W BeM Ln (La. th a e cie i cierlificate.r all. he fwas ooun- Cla 2 lue of dies aje a,,,o doogoe ?.% Ths =cfac Rtong Hey "ex sole rd, X heo kn dL -"L .i,. &CK8" Ma ,fi rl) tom e sk pl lw Inal C, tchangea lltat tHerltwi aske 0l 7l5 Couny sanas ity A'O an v !e mulfern. Worth T"( -P R I bood ais-, hrem e Mtore he doesn't s ad mWomay, H man and C to or n th b ar. The .riI a lk.03cr0u. backe m He ia kupluae uvrAo"nM- 01acs toedd This hwbr jit Mwhch (stiaYrn .Hi4 ,e0nC OM to the lm under dtr e Is time60Y Canaf4aierft"ds - ..Ap,-Ws artsraisp *="d g tets oe iwe .. rare Ru. ..o and whenlbe Aackle a great wo died st a -r .i hemld W theT -UP IAravi Cit ,1, t ~J .' n ~' So ii* ^ti~afWp f v *., *' di, ,qlda-/ *i . * ~ ... -~ I *~ ~ - J. ~ -, 'I- 'Ic iD~.i --, --., .. .. * Wrra Seeks 3rd Victory TeOxas Etno "" i. I r yk" At L i F r -. W' ;L jumi iu- m ...- -- --'-" --'. ..... ..i -.,-WW A sizzling Class "B" $7 0 six-.ind-one-half fur- *'Juan Fr a eO Graded" i g sprint is in store for Juan Franco race track , Ia .this afternoon when Don J-liu Mercado's star- - AB< Chilean-bred three-year-old filly Florera goes Ist Race "G" Nav.e .P 4,M.Pil .g. 8'&:",s.or A after hex third straight victory in one week. Menr .o tf toeu .I .'o . f The speedy filly will set her feat such mood foreign-bred :t1uthcst test to dte. She will hor-es as Vampiresa, Bedlam nin4hb striles the also fast start- and Henry Lee. Tilts race shapes ,'Chir?.ri, which will be ridden up as a potential thriller. by you.t.ful. F. Hidal-o Jr. --- under t1-" ea.he, vimoost of 102 Yesterday Augusto Newman's *,.Htind,: 'o- All Vin. Luis Giral- Pl'Pmbaro flP~hed winning form ":dt p wl' 118 pounds, and An-i to rare to an easy post-to-post ., v*', V'"ill be guided by vl-tryv In the featured $500 one CPoepR"' "uiz. '" gallop for Class "F" Im- ,.C'ohi A a"n r Anglia have -":rts. %oat I' n r'-'.-l es'bv it'- r" r nero chased Plambaro for itr!"'~- e -ir oni,' pftci: ipsu ---nuprters the distance but ce-ft' .- ts it s 1 tl-*. rich. r'. ned in the stretch and lost -dim ''tIlce Cl5sh&c wlilch'wa -cond place to impressive Chl- aron'by King's Prize on Tlesdal ?' -i newcomer Vuloanizado. ,; F'ambaro paid $5.00. $2.80 and .* .ii Was no nrath fbr'Fl- "1.60 The quitlela with Vulca- a rs ay ih the "Conw Cl- il-rdo returned $20.60. The day's ."tI~i pr'1 He was next b.t 'est win dividend was Tln ti- *t eoiat4 not 7et nrar the (1'v,- ln's $11.80 as favorites dominat- W1ner. TIh time Florera. Unde ed the Drograln. 110 Pvoinds. gives away eight, p ed~ to iChingri insteadof re- Alfredo 'Chinito" Vasquez was tee1t'e welfhts like she did the 'he saddle star with three vic- *t.j'. time, A. Vasquez will aqr.in stories. Sarn the Mercado filly's pilot- The dividends: hc FIRST RACE . I,"'er interestin" +ace o" "- 'lmp- 20. 5.80. 3.40 .,'*-' e'rd Is tie fchCditedu i." n -DMlino M 60, 3.60 ri 1-9"n fo" Cla.s "E" 1t" '-Sin Fin .5. 1 "- Dir';r*ive natitv fi'v SErnND RACE AC' -1 Ta- ltie favorite to de- '-Golden Pjetr 4.80, 3.80 S2- mazona q3.20. S. Second D-nb'e: (Riomqr- .Golden PlejrIr) .e.860. TIhft RACE T Roly $6.40. 3.20 2-Don Rafnel $5.80. One-Two: (Rely-Don Ra- fael) S3.M. FOUT-LTHR PACE -Tiln Til" 11.80. 7.80 2"VlllaErr.n I $0. 2-iV T oIlln Tillr" "' '- rreal) 170.6Q. FIFTH RACE 1-Golden Fan 1.5, 3.60 12, -Sixaol T5 E 40 SIXiirR BAC9 1-Albeit $5, 4, 2.20 2-True Blue $11.40, 3.40 3-Double In 12.40. SEVENTH 1ACE 1-Newbriht.on S&20, 2.80 2-Draco $2.60. Second Double: (Albeit- Nev brirlitanl g19. EIGIT11 RACE 1-Flambaro 85.60, 2.80. 2.60 2-Vulcanizado $4.20, 2.40 3-Granero $3.20. Quinlela: (Flambaro-Vulca- 1asdo) 36.61 NINTi RACE --Co po $4.60, 3. 2.20 R THE TOP -.When 2-Tilama $5. 2.40 ore Galuska couldn-t t 2-7-Tn TIme $2.40. nd or through the Brgha' One-Two: "(Comlo-THlama) Younglhjie. the Wyominba-k $.'.2-, wan( over0theI hear - 'La:.,nte The..Cowbo ,' '11l 't, Omied three time eagih' -his e~ -. I By UNITED PRESS "v 0. Duke 0 33, Kings Point 6 .ne 28, Pennsylvania 20 j 1. Vermont 0 ,., E dioi 13 i. North Caro. State 7 n.a 21, Q, Washington 6 . r <- I iOiJ. -Virginia'u uu (,ard. 14, North Cato.4 0 Weatern reserve 14, Wester Micalgan 14 I .;.\ ',' s '. ",.' ,,-'-'* ^ ;--;;I.0; _-w-. - .. Nr '.ir..z :-' "Iw..-. it f' P.j. Horse Jsey *. COMMENT 1-0. Wonder A. VA. lt2 -ChampionMhip fltB' even . 2-Romantlco E. Orttegl .lflx-or recent res ,.10-1 3--Dainiel 0. B. m -x--Rate outside cia- S-1 4-La. ra R. I 3-i1d do beti' '- -1 5--Aonsito O, C 1. 1--) -,ta-eroua ceatdr -1 6-J. Hulne' J. IR 0 I -i-ou]i ut* ratl ,. "-L 7-iDuque C...ia 1i2 .-Noihli jBW. f" 1t IW 8r-(Coran J. Goo 1 i--App.reantil, 10-1 2nd Race "C" Natie 6.i P. Purse: 125.M L MO 'LbeU: ,1::15 Seoamd RMie of the Double . 1-Yoalklto R.- (.l4401 -Dangeru r to4 3-1I 2-Don Jaime J.pg. USam-Needs plenty M1C tinh w 3-Moailto A. EMtu 114 -Beat early ape-' '2-1 4--Valaria A.. Va. ---Jn lnning 1-2 CIlOsb 3rd Race "U" Native S.P UPie: 3178. 6A:elwea. v:45 Ian' * s u r e 4- anoletE PNat. i dm $15.00e.upsetter.' 1:2 3-Maa E.3 *-fAl- anhtlit I' ,W'1 h"ad. 4-W. Fleet y I. MIS -Ithl. toI U 1- 5 io RC l -0e ."u- 0 '- l fs 6-(Cd. .aond A,. AMg2-Bsutt0 D ,1- 4th Race "," Nap te MU: SI.-. t i: o:- 2-- Manrgete 4.VTdl..1- hrM uptt- ,. .1 ' 4--W. fleet 0. Maople' 07 -,l*Iamms t.l.iI- .:, 5---llkin 0, C 112 t7 ,i ii. '- ._- 3-Florera F f..dT10 --ai_ h "Ii.h a. 4-Anagla u. . 61h 'ae "E" ,Ip. ftpei 1 F 4 e.: $is -ofo 1-S. Chum IM. s. lb -1 to :. . 2--, Bargef V. ..115 --at:' "; 'a 3-Bcotch Chium M. Took. l65x-3l h o ea -1.. 4-Q. Prtce 0. Mue, 187 -- es o r ---Mallin O. Caft. 112 ,-W'IIet .1 6---Forzado F. Hidal..104 1~Pl eha : l.rl 1 7th J. "D" Imported 7 i ;: tu:n 4.0 -I i ." I 1--4cythia "-A. V a. III Tbtzw ouatt," T W .I 2--Patriot, E. Corchb 10-H w'kout.... Hi W.1 S-Plropo3 i .. Natm W1lAoen . '^8I 4-R. i/fht L. Ortli. 115 p for Bow 2-1. 5-PnPo ej Ict. Ill C-AM II Ibt 2.I 1 ; 8th ise r ln..mted 41 ,.. l. Po : rid .s. ?~ rr ~:bE Us A, 'waT7Uj ' the i V.ilente i4 thedl I qUINILA l-- ur Fancy 2-Astoria 3-Bendlgo 4-Pepai.ola 6.Ifgpportn* U MICh. ~ ae 20, Unlo h tate 13 North Caro. Col. 47, J. C. Smith 7 Fla. A&M 33, North Caro. A&T 13 Syracuse 26, Cornell 0 West Virginia 12. Virginia Tech ? Colouambia 25, Dartmouth 19' BOQtan College 20, Wake Tech'6 Rufters 14, LafayeLt' e a1 Pefl State 28, Fordham 21 Wilna laU Weatoan 0 3$,Ma.ri Ha Whnesets.1i se a 0 Texsa 21, laylbi 0 Abilene Chr)stin S, Auastin Co': lege 1.3 .*".t .1 Al- :'ema 21, Chattanooga 14 ". .St te 2 Memthis State 0 S -t 1 piulate 1.Tulane ; -ti 32. Dickinson 0 I 110. W&M 19 0 IiSH -- Adding to ",'est Virginia State 13, Virginia late at Th title Down. 81?. Le 6 SO.,are the identical Mriucette 19. Detroit 0 lpjoekeyni, Don. left, and R Pn' "nTfrrq tte 7. Kansas 0 tiglity. (NEAt 'not 2.1, Cornell (T.l 714 v 47Ilpnaratom 32. Wheaton 0 S_ T.' ?wrence 7, Coe 7 y""' -horma 14. Missouri 7 '- -s!ra 27, Iowa State 19 .v':.n Methodist 23, Texas P&M 0 '"" -R A&M 20. Wyoming 14 -:. '-y 40, Vanderbilt 14 e. T40., North Tex. State Hoy Crose 20, Boston U. 7 NANS! TER Col-ate 19. Bucknel 12 ANSWTER Pr ineeton 6, H ,rvrd 0 Brown 42. Connecticut 7 -Ad Lehlg 1IS. Muhlenbg . Heldelrg 27. Sowlna Green. 6 -orthara Mb. 21, Ret el 7 Ohio Northern 20. Fndleay 0 dorgr Sftte 7, Virginia Union 0 Georpta Te.j 20, Clemoon 7 lorla 21.t oergla7 I ge t4r 1, Me- ^^^^^^^^^ ^^*M'^r T IF~*^i ,1* 0. Mazue. J. Reyes H. Reyes H. Ruiz L. Giral. F. Hidal. .. 1, . 105 -bShowlUlg 114 -Favprise 107x-Wid 114 1 103 p i .t "I" Iaprted 4% rEp. ONE' . A. tlcUda 112 - I rfax R. Guerra IIIx- -m H. Ruiz 112x- e B. Aguirre 110 - S sanch" w t -I ... o. ed i'lt. at i*. at tIla .*. ;"f'f~'K or on NIoollI. S 0 !k 4) o It' O'sLZ Ak .qmina 00cr of ."r *A H *I L .-A. lm .; mLL..a O'rf^WN,-^ tAi~~liSiLh r ^y f ~i. S w '"-"' .-'. WW ^ -M ^l^ .~ f ,.,l taamr Into If-de 77~ ** vbI..mI fh. ft t<.4m Mrn w 4 .^ a -. *?*. " "-. .: "-" f. ..; ".a.'.'s'. . _,- ; . .., ,, , i t4.'. ~J1~Q .41 * .'; ^.M".K-a ~c;I cf;~; I yWt, ~ae' I I : .. ,:- ;- OP.M . I I ,"a, 1.--- !". - ". -4', K -.a, aE ____^* - t -r I, -' .-~-- ~. *q fa. -t .;. Rad tei 1' ,~ Nox. A (>A)- ' LE i2Liwh ,.d eSa," 'Eli U U Ifatfdo away #-frpm iroe. t na an abe 0 qcmbatere . tbo taken dol.tb~tfad ttitfby^ tv t gthS ra. was an USqm Maily Eid -w< im., v d., f. , fanUnt amIfht.4 'j won abd at tha 'p1 misl a ilh~, 31 .~ ~i .iigemeVraob . IIbis, .000 o8 i Atlank P League Those poy; 'who ,a. no reached ihMlr nIxee oa by Aug. 10, 1954 and dm t4 play in th. Atlantic PonI Leagui tha coming season ae rquest- ed to get t belt appdlatiofs tn to Mr. Gibson at te rstoba ghB Sehool before the Nov. 9. Those boys who get their 4p. tons will be iud to team. ThL3 doeLpot ap[ly t players who were da s las year or who nh Lttl EAigue pla7. This augMte oal to boys Who have not playe POfay or ut$Je bag e bS on the Atlnt 6 . The Pony League i nheed o utnplaes,( adorekW ah d of we do not have i secretary. Any one desiring, to flU ay ofthese jobs are rques to attpd the meeting Nov. 9 at the Margarlta Crubhouse, at 7:30 p. m. It In hop-d thaf hjr r w ill h If he8sflthern , e i-fted. al. W 4 It= vIfor th_ b By DEANS =A*DON SBtIaN n ,d toA* called Writ 0,r LforU eae 4 World of y Wa t the 0 MWre atSi- am froM him. nm r Sat ahy r ate tries to take a-n tr bAe on rtN vn ee the play and the shortstop r- C1D mo5t trieves the hal al trow.hbinl I.s -s out at second. Bneet- batter The Los Ang w eoM was eventually thrownout any- ed sodlo b aifu E ay thi ahort4to Penalised Si ehise ver g error on pl py9- i t he mns -V .. th- en etcher. &tthel mn_ -P t tO the Ahnwer: Yes, because the -ph Wpqr f uhertsto terror eneaI the thoB aa t nre beaiune J2 n Sbeeh&n Jumped di- th re are a 3 i r it h- rectly tranL the miot league@ wed i' one-hour .. lno las Wl C ere:'ota w our. me with BWn .lwt Cleveland v..Loaott e nd' B, i J without haVlo firrt pIed a f ttng Li on tfew gu et with the ogera adSsI l5'1its dodring he regular season? - S be trsth t the Roger White. udla.nepeh rumor that the iK- . M SS.?!.' Thom1sr 0leban' played four jo ZMxs A US M. will lWrd up ganlaM for Brooklyn dudtb the =In-o Army's bahedddo of t _o a appeared tn yea an I2 a U*.M. l Seres l"games and ifA. CjLON MO NAdd v -~-T~ TORS INC. *- U 3^* i for VtuWNC * M-srltl 4 f1 . .1 I. I,! ..~ lab '1~ at 10th Street- Col h ;PRESENTS " Ths i w.'54 Do a .... -V. .ft Ow 1' -" ,. I- a I? -. ' Ni *F: 4~ u.bwm.* o- .pow wob b *ims. ~ noun~ -' 4. 'i.. ~1. MA.VA& TURN I TOOAMYI asg advanma that males the '54 Dodpe the aluhis-bt atiwArt Eep fIt4 e legaut ew '64 Dofie today! S*ORE THAN EVER BIEFOREI 'a C:\ '. W rJ ,o , Auto. rFlito IP.W'DABLI maw 154 'x.... % Ifni *coN'Owi.d 0s4 ^*I ^ .1 I l r a.-,, , ,.. '.. uh "I zu W se I -I- 1' ~ 11 ~r *~ 'a.t ". i __~___I~_ .6.U&A h~d.. 4 cal 1 3 . .,. '.-^: .? . wlB! Pat Smythe, BritiGSid, k Jumper In NtionalHoiesi NEW YORK, 1Nov. ?I (NZA) eldn, hi e Pa 8Smythe is a pretty miss Ilr Charn W uih a twunle In her eye and ag. a e a the heart o: a rodeo performer. hiW looks, brought Those who have een Miss pounds, now h iAs Smythe call her the greatest or insured fogr 1IN0 thing to ride a horse In a hone -- .-. a 4ow since the nventionofthe o TOSA ViAS o cowboy. Tne 24-year Eagltih manage t the outetel .las made them look-like stuck with It aMd h Snulae experts captulng the e gray mare into e women's lntrnatlomal jumping $aln's finest show beot . champlonshp of the Pennyl- vania National Horse Show In MiUs 8mne optp rftrdubfrg house for tourft in She mowvd into- the National Cotswold il of O SHorse Show, ening Nov. 10 at taxing over the reoulM Madison ,Square Ol den, con- r0ing th family's i dered the toughest to beat a- dower house when her among men as well as women. dord a year ago. . The champion of Europe. she . land Shirley Thomas. 18, of Ot- 2', all part of the dafl tasa are ihe first two foreign gram when she drives her women j amprs to engage an orse van far four or five International compsetMlon the opt the jum g 5-year history of the Nation- 4r place. e hArft al. They represented the first to their aboes, rides I real challese to Mrs, Caro horse two or three romiudj Durand, 35, the American chanm- diden fenes, drives home. Gpin and t he first woman ever ht to make an international jump- This done. she tackles Sla team. administrative tasks, swul %Miss Smythe trains her own fan l msall requests for h J umpers, never j" them al- graphs oc "a bit of Toeca's ti ready brokeni- n." 71 "I tutor them first on the flat A note from British Wh for general confidence in the stationed tn Malaya arrived rider." shq explal s, '"nd then "Please," It requested, -i Jump then, over a plain pole u a photo of you-without 4 stretched between barrel. A set horse!" of horse show lumps costs too much. I hu Wth my hei n A E the winter, ptactloe Jumpingn 0m with t then. Wlen I see Something I want to jump. I 1 -oOo- MISS SMYTH BOLDW the lBTLLWATlR, Okia., European ju ping record-six ( m) j. .t W feel 10 7-2 inches. w x t amounts to a What ar.i the requlutus for to pe with football's International; show.Jumplag? dibet t n rule, ,'Good .ludgqnenta" testifies Misr Smythe. You mast rate When an. A. youi mount correctly bringing player goes im up to a barrier pad batting site on as lA him over 1'.. You need physical a b som strmegth to insure the horses's shoulder He. obedience. Homies nearly always and geOes G1 u get too close to the Jump too be'w wheaw bo 1i sorn unieua you have the turn to i e ay. strength to Stop them. - 'Wlng.twss to have a go Is Thi hoops are dof another. Ho ses sense hesitation wir%. Wqverd with In human beings as unerringly W. as do, oth'r humans. A rider '" I wateli ee wlihoiu course doesn'tdo well oach MddI with the fix.est horse.' Mn a r-at brditkt two, or th lest k jumpers Into ur thisa!n- try. Prlc HId,8 Jea*. Prince Hot U aaMut A.IM - I -- .:= A *'* .r~~i~\ -~~~~:uu F ' J '* . '., ^ ' ** *", 'IF : ', .'- ;, "Bt'. , Puzzles L--.. S" . .-t . -'A' e Dame.. 28 Navy nsylvanla. 20 Duke - '5' 5 U IEEE ....ums *. .1-i.: . .'-; .-, .'' I A 0 Ar.my ......, 8t. ; 0 N. C. St.... Ohio Stat . A:,- U_*-' \ ~ (NEA Telephotol IKE TAKES COVFR President Eisenhower ilefti and mem- bars of his .-tjai ,..Ik briskly tov.ard the White House bomb Shelter duri ;. a iocrk atomic attack on Washingtcr.. The Presi- dent spent 15 niliutcs in the shelter, which is designed to with- stand just aboiu anv known e.:)losive force. Wallkinp beside the President i v .1 N .en. Wilton 2. Feisons. h:-. special LasssI.. ROME Nov. 7 (UP) ,- police fired tear a mob of 12,000 dents attacking the bassy today In the e is but Ver an Mriotsa .: ad t n. tw d the - Ike's Men Readying More Blasts 55 ed when t ese face to lae Damage ra withed Laa s Against Truman Administration 'a.*o*fi"="-.". hnrthe r WASHINGTON. Nov. 7 (UPj --'ministratlor source Indicated.pose the Republians predocach. the'sur ge acrmeMt v behind and r A high. iaa.in~a...1u.i so.ce i-e s2id e.vr ilve series havesor. in Office. the Col tieum. s.eh Triesteand said today that ex~aC..Ave ae- begin .!.-arc. .ng their files ever- The administration source- Poce staCon. ed thery wouldet police statoned theywould see apartments ana atEc15s are since the Pepublilcan admin- dLated the possible the students ad as It preparing new corrupLion or ist.ation toJr over last Jpnuary least part '.f the teXt Vhi bombs Into their tbrak ritish co Communism u:asts at tre ad- f-or eidene of corruption and legrd 1945 BI re~ .W ite march on the Archibald ministratiUo of oiomer President Communism In the Truman ad- may be mnde publicI DbXt week. rn eso we M t InItaian. Truman. mi iL-tratioi. Brownell iaid in Chiag t the baatie. Th Ad I and It Attorney General Herl.rt He noted *hat the Elsenhower the FBI twice Infor td Mr. Tr- hasb a high wall btdi e toF terms tid BrTwneUl, Ji changed in a adninistrR'.on has fired as se-man of White's atIv h and ere unable to sa io the Ish q speech yesecuay iaa Mfr. Tru ,u.ity risk; hundreds of federal thot copies of the reports are aly man promoted a hign Trea.sui y mlo: es, hired by the Dem- In the I files. A earth s be- .. o official despie FBI wamin ,.. ocrats and -id this was part of ini conducted for the originals ThbM hurled coasl Oi the consultai that he was suspecLed to t. a -. con inrt campaign to ex-at the White House. wll bat did no a lge. The Russian spy. theLonda Browunei'. charge. Involving alBa l. ordered stoari and a clash between Mr I and ly T Truman and the Whhle Houe. orGOP In Pennter sylvaBroniane speech, chairman William E JVtler (R-hAd.1 anncanccd that the enate Internal Security o I subgommitic. v.ill quiz Ma]. BY DREW PEARSON 4ma wf Brownell said the FBI In 1945 'Pennsylvania now faces one of the Grundy faction of the Re- aln" a s y r.tewd Oi. te t sent Mr. Truman a report the most difficult decisions of publican party and chief master- Britteh elbai . through Vaughan saying Wnite his life He is Sen. Jim Duff, the mind of teoptlan to Dulff. was a So ~cr spy. Vaughan de- Republican ex-governor, w Its.w "Io,' t De rnied rejlv n Pnv such com--has been asked by President 1#t- heard f OwnE *Bwu munlcation. He called Brownell'sienhower to go nack to Penn .-- the ballt =a Wa a I e statement "d lot of malarkey." Ivania and run for govern..,- did." Mr. Trunman, in Kansas City.jgain. In view of recent Repuai- W water, Dufit t on theia pt-L Mo. also denied Bronell's ac- ean defeats in New York and for i-with othddlgttart &T cusation. He said White was fir- Neu Jersey, this Is considered .iga game of ihong up a ed as scon as it was dlscoveeed more Important thpn ever. Wh a lkene of his head ot It he was nt loyal. TlN' White! etty time hitmame was calla, House reoored, that White was But at the age of 70 this tI a He igt a big had every time hi not fired'but resigned two years totgh decision t6make. The al- he appeared. Senator Mrt after the reported FBI warn- ternat.ves are: *. got tttle applause and Governor ing, that Mr. Truman accepted 1 If Duff doesn' run for gov- pne's head came off the stick. the resignation reluctantly, It erncr the Republt4ns lose from. People tittered. Some even said cited a lett-r v.hich Mr. Truman three to five congrebmcen at a t w s symbole. Fine, once a W. .:'".- sent to White nt the time. time nen the Eisenhower, ad- Duff protege, Is not on good The White charge i~ just one ministration can Ill afford t to term with the senator today. of several to be aired. th.? ad- lessen t.s narrow margin in Con- -'t's the reason Republican ri t. v ---- gress lea ..reso anxious to have p .- INDuff-rin er ernor. His I:-.IPHIS. Tcnn. (U. P --Thc 2. If Duff doe. run he loses a larity, they would swngth first draft of the state's anti rebie'secure place in the U.S. Senate state definitely and decisively bill was wordcrl o Ihat it required which he could occupy the rest into the Republican column.- II the dogs not their owners to of his life. He also faces a tough Iowerer, the OGundy, high- pay inoculation fees. primary fight inside the Repb- t wing of the Republican an party in Pennsylvania. opaz '.t only s but is wo- __--- _-_ _-_ _--J As a result you can't blame lte imlned to run a competing in5 I f for being a little slow a&d Rhpublica in a primary aWaIadt .e E rl IM45r n making a decision. As a matter, ifr. Recently Oruny ade ao 4 iof fact. President Eisenhower tett annopced that he - )ot rcalizlng the fight he faces talked with three OOP co y to save Conress. hasn't pressed leaders wo Indicated thPey ? him too hard But other GOP opposed to Duff's candidacy or -i leaders have, and Duff has got governor. Some of the . e to make up his mind soon. Ite denied making the te. DUFF VS. GRUNDY ment. The incident only Meanwhile, the senator's an- to make the senator from a pearance at the President's sylvania score. T iJ.0 birthday party in Hershey gave "If Owlett kicks Jim Duff a- rt hot rost people are looking 'rple pruoif of his popularity. 'o," remarked one It bllo. AN h formsareductionenthedeductions When Duff walked the length cf f "t, will be the b wayr - I fro areiopaycheckpr the arena the applause was as to kick him lnto the rgite fc, I _rom their pa rheckr great as that received by Ike. governor." p..tf I tomo: ta mInw, hw .ne&arn...n K FA 0000 THIN3 Overflow grain frem a elevator forms a huge pile on the ground. Despite Idi prea lom r grain storage, dealers Ina east M bIMw ftee to store more and moe of the ~ofu Zimss DeseL' The '".*. , Ai7 -'F*. A-. A- ~. - .1 * -. .5*~'- -. ..~'. - ~i-rn ~~2 21; - t 5- ,, " .,. ,,' .*X: f . +. . .' -. . . -9 ;' ~~t' 1. .'0 ' :-i -,+ -lao 'v Ma port tht he ., t ot it s a vsstior fret .utar pus. with no atring a- ,: f t ta _wyI ghl I@ 9', M T-A a NUOMR' TM: sad ba-4/4 or 7/4 la. p11 0r ifm'ar ,aft swod. Apptomw25 .rew Oyes for f-teiag purt tether. Plano .wire. Cold Waam tMMr jar t6r bhed. Cloth for upper ams. A few sheet na is or tacks. SoM hbws i het led for wdeght. "Uj oitucTI4- o cut out arMa. Isi fet nad body to ar pprM ppr0iprm of gure parto to- '. thid~ ior be ds: nal utep the cold re ja s a ., mm.an dreptog aW l-fW irIat .gprow thi to thbe i* nal.fln It with1 throe t na (Ittft -t I awmsW- BUILD 1A LIVELY SPACE MAN rd VI * . . -.r * . ,U. Iab .. m' ar ii your 1, ad-9 -Ny1%to r 'hnd you cn make , Paint on Mee with Mpolsb mausm * r aroepmmb d, gluel o. rurdr -opoaL. J JIN IN THIS AN ki~..~ Ie" "3 7 / *2/ *3 I26 * 15 , 01; .1?4 . Zr, S33 CU a it' You Be the Detective DROQFESOR ACTONA, math instructor and S--tatIUcin, had volunteered to place before the autherltes the data he had gathered op municipal corrupt n But be never got the chance. On the eve at himsacheduled appearance he was murdered in his study. Unknown to the killer or his victim l_ l,., v' 1 4)( .+ 2 ' T ,+.-,,-,-,. a chance remark by the latter just before his dempe was recorded by a machin4r bldej, th e room and led to the killer's apprehension. w-ee is a transcript of the wire recording aw played for Detective Shea who was apsigned to solve the murder: "I mo0es that one-half the time from Now to aoM- night ptl eme-fourth the time from mdlnight to .ow gives me the present Utime. I must present a similar problem to my claes tomorrow aiorming." The lead dog of a doorbell was then heard. The voles of Pofessor Ascons continued. "I don't ex- pect yon toolght." After a pause, he exclaimed, "I demand to know what you an olng here. - Pat away that gun! The explosive solse of a pistol wa then recorded. Three pects who had motive, and opportunity were confronted by the detective. No. L Carl Tureno, waterfront racket boss, had an .alibl for the evening except for the hours 6 to S 8 p. m. No. 2. Dan Roberts, notorious gunman and goon, could not account for the time between 8 a"d 10. No. 3. Tony Cantillo, a go-between for criminals and politicos. had no alibi for the time 10 to 12. Aspuming that the guilty party was the one who could- not. account for his actions at the time of the murder, which one was the killer? *oTjnli, .l et sea J|lil eaqu, ('pa.j) -"1ill | t1eU jBJSepJnWu aq JluaQ| nopinbe tL.) *tu d SIR** IMERlIN *l Jo awll *I)UlxJdoj ddI O, q lliq* 01o einod "in muomurm E.Jouajbaid eq*q womoW,4 :aamsav Waist Not, Want Not /AEEBURE your walat. Multiply your meaure- PARTY IF YOU think the cat at right 1 il both tired and bored you are probably right. But If you think the cat at right is a common housecat, guess again. Actually, it sl a member of the Bengal branch of the cat family and is more commonly-known asa a * leopard cat. What about the other animals shown-can you. establish their identities? *enwuodridtnH '3 n;4a9qs wntv a f n4vnqMl4 3 1ouWI "a "'uqaz "Y :oeoasuv rlVI A eby 6i. Write down the sum of the digits SVIn the oduct The answer i given below. ,r C m"us qit!aiWaessV . ysbeid CA YOU SEE THROUGH IT? onduth WEOLIb teefu r. ', W /lu sM o n r We ow .r ce r tC" A nor i tail. -ialunco :srnd 'launoa ra AJJs MAL UUNT 'Tr auasm of a weU llnIoUw a animal sa hidden in these letters: EJ.IRQ URS. The same sani- mal is hidden in the picture at f t, To find the animal's natwe, dImply unmoMrm- b* i, the lettok aboae. To ind the 4a*ial's pictun, start with a pan- cil.at dot 1 and draw- a cataiu* 0 a line arom dot. to dot. In conase. utive ordder. Where two B um- benr appear. be. de a eing.)S .t, ,., use the ,4ot~Wlbe To iiy wlahto color the picture later. RIDDLE Tommy Tucker took two strians and tied two tur- tles to two tall trees. ]ow many t' are there la that? 1 .i m I atn *j*qj t say CLP DL. TONGUE AfE steadily at the m4.-above and you will get S TESTER G the illusion of looking, through a long hollow i E PRAT rapid- tube. Let us suppose you etre an insect standing I ly aloud: at one end of the tube (atIthe bottom). Can you ( IT sara" h ,,ag And your way to the other, opingn -center), with- e n v e- s@My Bomp out turning back and without orofling your own S" o. t lo sz s a k path at any point? - SBalors. Give yourself a time limit of Ave minutes. Two Syllables My FIRST to my SECOND w like a twin brother; Each seems 'but an echo-the one to the 6ther. My WHOLE may be heard 'mini the tu'id surgiug throng, Or where the spring rivulet dances along. 'Jlnuinflu V :JaIuuV CLUE-DOODLE By D. K. Woodman THE Pentagon In Washington is often described as one of the most confusing buildings in the world. Keep this in mind as you solve this Clue-Doodle and perhaps it will take some of the sting out of getting the wrong answer. Can you draw the outline of a pentagon tfive-sided figure) in the diagram above so that Its lines cross TWICE all of the 'lines except one? You must miss one line completely. One possible solution sla given elsewhere in the page. Brain Teaser A LADDER rests against a wall. with Its top projecting. When the foot of the ladder is 16 ft. from the wall. 3 ft. project over the top. When the foot of the ladder is 9 ft. from the wall. S ft. project over the top. How high is the wall? 4ll 1 ZE 1 Ilu( 'iOJL J"mEM Takes Figuring 7/bI b /6lb /Ig!/'6 EE if you can figure Inis out, that Is, count all of the sixes and sevens correctly and reach the right total within six or seven minutes. We'll tell you this much-there's a se' en in the answer. pa.punq .nmoJ Hi 1 oI bq.L aJssoV A d ic tWay t! poNes.". thef.f -4fa -ww' mWbL. im' jejt Wto stasthe ma pahli -moe aS m aAtg lwip. ;" t part of- t.e, quip y,o.Yafl read - ,. -.i~is ,W .01MM - 'added elue, dWte7 " Idmutpt of oane- th ubt.tted lets: whw tLattr A the letter O Now sm If yar cam decipher the .pst. E-a's wie: 'She- S ie . hipa to feel et"a.s ewr . wl myslg ales 'abet t1h' -- .m wt wee a O amsa " O-'gs 0WI. "AYV LMP ! swm ps mm -." for anM .. aMay a p -gam= the A*W of Puaing It -......*^ ~-n .* LJL Try, d Do It: * .sfja. tow Wet " .i lt thn-1eths. TThe deos ka' 3q1e th ebp.. et.. r of the -afl .. N*m w ilt .i which 0r4 tw t fme won cc T 62-Nautical command. 42-Prospectus. 51-Antitoxins. 63-A top man of the Cleveland 43-Note i the scale. 52-Persian poet Indiman. 44-Eucharistic wise vessel. 53-Town in Italy i 84-Sailor. 45--Mohammedan prince. 54-A son of Adam iGen.5.3) 65-Place of bitter waters (Ext 4-Norwegian Viking leader. 56--Pastry. pal- 15.S) 47-Scolds. 57-He had a wife who turned into .48-What did Noah build after a pillar of salt iGen. 19:15) * Wal VtIt hbookI t leaving the Arkt (Gen. OM0) 59-Topaz hummingbird. 1--What is the fourth book of the , Now Testament? I r r Sr r r 5 t r r 2-Extent. 3-Ster p- Lazarus (John 11:2 t -- 4-Bummer (lr.) V 4 1 5-laos of verse (pl.) V4 6-Boa of Adah oGen. 4:20) - 7-a chamber. -ertal"pas. IF us -M l 2 - SaIL 11-Flab et. - - -7 I o" -' -- - i covein. 3 -- 10 25-Continuuous noises ~ 26-Not sleepin& lit me Z8S.vLn lTl -l I n -I - U nose. U - - 42 - - W 0 iast ba L 1: 141 I M -" in e to -ea I -"Ta. -- - -: -,a-,, doa staaZ-- 1, 00 y.M ealrs? Hloa w ilm. ea 2 y a c "41 a i- , Amputant 185 Kla m ,.mw Syarflase. taI. It's Your Move By M*.I' H T 309 ^ ^^ By MUlard Hopper W HITE checkers, moving up the board, move and win in four moves In this problem. Can you figure out the strategy in- volved ? Ti-S ArM MCi i 6 -M 'a 'M-9 VlIIIL O'1-9- ia 'l "i9 l .U1 HflO it-6 I- aIS a'Illia .0n-i i oa 'ilUontu t U* II EZLK il I I "* " 4S , / . .* . / . - - 7 t .4. j-UZ1SapSIr 0--mw--V- , .. * 0, * .8 I .I I *r*, '.4 t2''t '~ '-'I lews of0th Wor t'L . : ":. '" '": ': "" : : ' ;. "" ."" :"'' :"i: !.:::": "i '' : . t !v-' *, .% , .' " ** -. 1 in D:.... *~*~**I-~ jf - C- x ~ ~".- I f -', '.. 1"y" ,., ',, T. .4.A *^ . J "*' A / 4% * '- I. 4 1. *'.y 4 rwM Y.-ALr'nela oy r ranges jfay it was. bpwn. In contrast, r i , THREE of Italy's loveliest models (froiu tRp) ',ZtM rtinelli, Luisa Cerasoli and Iris Bianchi show off .owns at ew York exhibit. Elsa's wearing a white, and rpen org gown, Luisa's in a dance dress of pale yellow.oranzan d Iaris tas a ball gownh of violet net lace. Creations- are tv Fontata. IVER HEAR of a highway tunnel that was built on land and then floated 125 miles down t4he.xiver to its site? Such a tunnel was installed recently between Bayton and La Porte, TE. QOne of the bulkheaded sections of the half-mile long tunnel (top) is launched into the Sabine river at Orange, Tex. Bottom photo shows interior of the tunnel, which is com- pletely encased in giant steel tubing. Tunnel was constructed at a steel plant in Orange. 3 ;*, r" " f L *A ais s ' ' ) F?4.. -a . ALTHOUG BU'iTS have stopped-ff)bitn .W -their viglhmce there. Recently some 380.,pvatrq icut'alt went throuAgh airborne training. includtaig att' REMEMBER that tlip ipratr* adbiWg tht p-A eye? Weil, this is d sin3n ttat qUa s the W -' hole three to sti inches deep, put your aoart.'RentlAee the i moyu movedd and s . YOU getting that Christmas package ready for mamllig a serviceman overseas? Postmaster John Sheehan of New ork accepts the first of such packages to be mailed. Mrs. ione Schwartz and radio's Harry' Wismer (center) look on. WORTHLESS WOOD is turned into useful articles for the household by Ivan Rudd, of Ogden, Ut. In spare time, he builds floor and table lamps as well as other pieces like these. ; i'S AIMING foi a bachelor's degree, but. in the real sense of the word. JiA Lewis, oft Loveland. 0. <4 far from being a bachelor Jim hs five good reasons for bearing down on -F" his studies at Univeisilt of Cincinnati. Rea..on. are his sons (from left) J3i. John. Dej- vr. Larry and Maik. Vruerity fagiaiat Betty English is enrolling Jim/n his claqes. -- - "ma- 4. 9. /, -;A .. APJRCMR Janet Leighi gleefuiy iuceledhs khtr 4 into a't engine block at Willys plant in Toledo, 0., ashir hus- ban" Tony 'Curtis (center) and company- executive Vieg. Priehttt Rayihond Rausch' wlato. The youthful-stars are at the Mtcbnobile factory for location' shots fot a future movie. S ., f ag turS a iA l . ; *." . * : ,-. 5 :.- : .. >3 ~ ~ ~ .1 ' -.. II hc4 ' 'hJ 11 - V ' .' '. .* Pounltervwn Aid cat4Li zoluual N il I iJ] . 'hy net :, ., - --- -- .. i . { ' * : > * i,;4~;4~e, J .-. " j. t -/A .'-~X~- T .f._ ________________________ 0I \ J 5j AeJd In Ancon Belod T n ad 15 I-- A~sus ou And Von .Ild r ;. I. a LJ 4U I . .eIJ-___ 2 ** ^'1'" *" *- *** .' I *':' *; * ^i e.jH t; -k -' ...e. ; ., .. A' '*., ** .:; m' .i.,:rlw^ '*?,;*. . w ' I. J~4. I I i f r~-ru.l~--~nrreucc ,rrrr~-m*r~-rrr~Re~rr*rru~rre : ------ ----- -- , >aiP I "-' 1 -: Review Of T e* WORLD-WIDE SPORTS JI:Mial . STODAY WE HAVE a direct quote from the Krem- CLASSY KING'S PRIZE, owhed"by Carlos Albe 'o Fo p-I lin, and a rare and beautiful thing it is. The words Duque and trained by Alberto Pereira, proved golden its are set down with nothing but care. They merit care- much too good for the opposition Tuesdayy afternoon U- h na- Jul reading, for they bear directly on the prisoner of at Juan Franco for the richest horse race ever runm llala o.T .ed t tePub war exchange process allegedly In train in Korea, and in the Republic of PanamA the $20,000 added Clt- the colorfulaads S t..r view they bear to a lesser extent on the discussions pur- cuentenario (Golden Jubilee) Classic. the colrtral rdes a t M ones porting to be directed at setting up arrangements for King's Prize, under perfect handling by ace Chilean anmd t a permanent truce conference on the Korean war. jockey Jose "Paco" Bravo, broke fast, was rated Pin With 'Ps Ce So, as has been said somewhere, sometime (it could closest pursuit of peacesetting Great Game during the With tand wo Anastad SO o t- a R ic conceivably have been right here, a couple of lines first half, took command with ease when ktven his and Anasta ooa rations back) this exclusive expose of Kremlin thought merits head and breezed under the wire a six-length winner. from 34 countries, the Holy .a Order Kzothing but careful reading. Valley River, which finished second, came froa o: Malta, official ceremon.ebclmns ana Kremlin thought, currently, runs along these lines, far in the ruck to easily take the place without the exchange _of deoratiped the "Oh dear," it runs. "Oh dear, oh dear. oh dear ever menacing the victor. Am ori or close up 0oday which trted lat aset d ded on deir dear." throughout, didn't have It in the crcal stages y -by attending This is not all. It continues: "Furthermore, oh sad and was a poor third.' and cramming the beer and til the sad day, oh hapless moment, oh horrid goof off." Goyboder was fourth and Royal Alligator, Main early ho.r o1 the morniai . Road, Great Game, Anglia and C'oq Au' Vn trailed Int At bIg olor 'c ed .lifghbt Wbe s..6_ .Centrala Classic, is the mood of the Muscovite moment. that order at the finish. The winner paid $9.80, $8 80 Ave. from Cinco 4e Mayo PIaN to nam Plaza, Look again at the tremendouss appeal of Conunu- and $4.40. The quiniela with Valley River returned givbw he Panama. ty a Mardi leo.W ,e nism for the onnressed and enslaved of this all-too- $68.60. WM I.ia --m's .alsl.'is -M " inequitable world. Pitiful little Chinese and North Costa Rica's President Otillo Ulate. on whom the : lem aini g 43i e the ge ph-u Korean privates of the line, perhaps the cheapest honor was conferred by Panamai President Jose Anto- tu r sand ge 'lpty lyOTbeS th e' .pawns in today's conflict, should their value be esti- nio Rem6n, .presided the trophy presentation ceremno-. *.htre mMny Cainal Zone reldent tak- mnted in maintenance and replacement costs. nies. A third President, Gen. Anastasio Sozoma, look- ~g auatage of the holiday graol a Porry sufferers, to whom any sort of pie ilt they sky ed on. aWpA Ca nal on No. 3, to sft.yi h, o ""-ruld annel more than their present humble lot in It was the first time in history that three presidents As the Independence Day stiv l to 0- WiK- virtually unimprovable except at longest- shot in office simultaneously witnessed a local horse race. 16n on Thursday. near oradt cSide le - odds. m Railroad trains to the Atlantic Side 'lle bun- Former Panama Featherweight Champion VPederico dreds of autos ammmned he Trans-lIthmian Highway. If there were any men to whom the-pipedreams and Plummer finally announced that he dan no longer - promises of Communism should aoneaDj ore than make the 126-pound weight limit and gave up his Despite the huge crowds aid heavy vehicular traf- their handful-of-rice daily lot on the o=*rearth title. Plummer will campaign in the 135-pound class tic only four deaths were reported.in addition to sev- they know, they would seem to be the Chineis and in the future. --eral injuries from tight, auto accidents and oldups. North Korean privates of he line. Meanwhile, the two leading contenders tr the One of the deaths occurred n the City of oon w Isthmian featherweight title Isidro Martinez a boby boy drank kerosene, the othei three 1 the .. But what is the coolie private's answer to the large, and Peduq Tesis signed to meet ina .1940wnd interior -. one man was found dead with LO bullet economy-size Nirvana offered by the Red regime. champlonsilpf at the Col6n Arena to settle tlhe holes in him, another was kli. .lnto duel right to wear the crown. and a third drowned In Rio neat A chair ovdr the head of the representatives of such The bout is a benfit- air to collect funds for % anam& enchanting ways. Spittle in the eye of a pleader for the construction of a new Col municipal library. The injured ncuded 11 msebers of anmu the peace-loving people's republic. Nothing but un- c. o 4 City pole .ban who .wti llurth" _at - printable words (they're in Korean, you see, so we Reaction to baseball's first rule chaingb t two years swelyed to a hi lttingR Ma. w t o -crn't oblige in English type) for the gentle mission- indicates batting averages may be a little i l next side street and oorturned .ida .t h br of aires of the Siberian wastelands., season. Imusical en*trutab. There of l."tini re in- Rs The Major and Minor League Rules Committee pay.- Aca! y enough to require hospit Right now, the Communists and anti-Communists ed the way for a change by reinstating the old sacril- l seem to be about in exact agreement about the future fice fly rtile. The change means a batter will not be a the a 0"ed to . of the prisoner of war 'explanations" in the Neutral charged with a time at bat when he fies to the out- t~eflbo,:lnMi,* territory between the occupation zones of Korea. field and a runner scores from third base. The nnule b" .t does not apply If a runner on first or aeond ,ae sUwy. Neither side wants any part of the affair. advances one base. m e**w e ai Is The Chinese and North Korean prisoners did not Manager Marty Marion of the Baltimore Orioles phere. want any part of it 'in the first place. Seemed to says the new rule should help some batter.as much 0 o -ii i.- think it was going to be an international shanghaing as 20 points in their average. & It will raise averages The Canalsr d- = a expedition. Sr'h is the warm sweet confidence on for good hitters." says Marion, "and serve the same. was f Se 'ws0 orce-oopressed people under the fruitful sun of Corn- purpose as a hit." .t.' at- munfsm. Former Cleveland manager Ossie Vitt agree...but U! Vitt doesn't think the change will bring bkt hme .400 Now, having seen the results of their efforts, the hitter. Says Vitt "It should boost average abott . Communists seem to want the "explanations" even 10 points." . Tles than do their former adherents, pho at least ex- o --0 tract from the occasion the pleasure of spitting in a The sacrifice fly rule originally was adtIto4-W, as* . Ccmmunist eye. 107 aad remained on the hooks until 19*. It wan SL restored for one seasonW a 1939. . .5 a 1 Last week the Communist, interviewed about 500 General Manager Jim Gallagher of th C f '-. 4Chnese and North Korean prisoners of war. Of these, Cubs chairman of the rules committee aa. -- - some seven elected to return home. with, these who say the change will bringtoW1i99W Big dialectical triumph. ting. marks. de.* re t- Fw ee nthb rg h Five n whI iu. One- splendid dpv. they retrieved three out of about Gallagher points to the 1939 season when the Five. xen who burgblaHet *o -. 1G0 interviewed. This massive average was bent some- was in effect. "The American League's overall batc Co. in 5,ta.d, wevre t S J, Swhipt when it was discovered that one (or S3 1/3%). average dropped from .281 to .279," says Gallagher. ranging fram fou r 'to e bi .. of the parentt re-converts had been certifiably in-, .'But in the National League, the overall average went gas, 20, .M2. sane all along, anyway. u;" from .261 to .272." year terns for ,.M a i o -- which lrthey sold to & e t a rim u S.M. Great stuff this, for the Comrwinists' world pro-, If Illino*s and Stanford meet in the Rose Bowl, that Sppeanda. "How popular can you get?" they might well New Year's classic will feature a top rushing tea a-. The other tree defedatllats., Iamon todriue. , ask themselves. against a oo passing outfit. Thiophiht i orM s, aM Uatn B. -Garcia 36, who. Latest NCAA' figures show llinois lead the *A each were gten one u et-Eittalty tl entpet fOr The answer would seem totbe the'mocking laughter in rushing' and Stanford is second only to College stealing $8 worth .. yS Oguipment. presented in choral form. of wlat mav be the most of Pacific'-In passing. 0 - hioless eroun of its slse in the world today tho*ie The Illini have'gained 1,WN yards by rushing in six Capt. John Andrew Jr. rlved'P JathbmuaS. no thousands -of former Chinese and North Korean, aol- Rames. That'Oin average of 29M-pofiht-three porgame. was named sucessor to r sap Wsaoia saui d.'ers who hpve been left swinging In no particular Fvrman o iseconl with Cincinnati Univerly trD. Captain -of the Port abR Cr . direction at all. In passing, Colege of Pacific has gained 14 yards ... on 71 completions. That's an average of 12y t- A gro f ofwom tent US. ewasien td -Pan- Eight now though there have been a variety of of- seven for 8lx games. Stanford with 80ompletioms ema bi. a etsof the U t Fruit o , If's and non-watertleht promises, they know not in seven games- has galoed 11-hundred abd 4 yards before atd .o Costa R ica WhOre th w re 6t- wyat their future la. They have the faintest notion for a 160-polnt-slx average. ,... tel4 n the laUsufttilPna rt Ps 'JoNere. of whpt nn-t of the world it will he In. let alone wheth- ' er they will ever see their families again. Cincinnati Is the overall offensive leader. Th4 Ohio _pe W 11_at- ll h to..rw I school has averaged 311-polnt-fouir yards er e a 4I la ot- the ew aOrlean I ",-- o"lite a few undercut Communist promise. of re- seven ganeej Utah i se ond with a -37.- a . tl"rtion to the delights of family life by pointing nut average and Illinois ranks third with 71-poht-two. .t h trl th-* .'ame Communists have already killed same fa 0 and . allies). The future of the Philafdelb o- A's has been- laeed t t e In the hands of veteran leaderr Eddle Joust. Life, vet. despite the thin trosprcts for the future, they ExeuUtive Vice-Presdent Roy Mack anma j and T" i" the fattest promises and persuasions of oinm- before noontime Wednesday that Jooet"had a foren * wn ism. one-year contract as manager. The salary isn e.at- aYB l .'' in the light of this reaction of men who know ed at $30,000. JImmy Dyke whom Joost replay, ha-s s 1am h communism truly and bitterly, what matter the 400 been asked to stay with th A's in a t off ob. o' so Americans. Britons anl South Koreans holding Bytes' contract has one- r to run. for out pgainst repatriation? Joost, Dykes and vice-preeident HIlearl tQ FnB 7* . a -ommnittee in charge of deciding on player srades ined. '**; Look at the thing percentagewise, if no other way. and theirr policy matr --- -- The fight for human hearts in Korea has been a tre- W ier ;" of altap mendously greater victory for the United Nations then Jost says the announcement surprised u as a t ever was the fight for a few chunks of undesirable snuch as anybody ee. The 37-year-old . real estate, like Porkchop Hill. says he was at his home in tdlagain'sev m. on t-eo . nl whef he received a all t I -a-e .Jtr n he o o i, ,, great and small pleasures of aa eT, though season. Thea admittedly in rreater or leon degree, to s w "pti-Communilat world. io..--... r. Sea 'Nlaeploy, uthat e-Ited Chin.t hes I Pfwer Suinday Cross-Word Puzzle "" g to g __1_19 _AIS _ Sl 'z t I S34 35 39-140 41 4Z45 444546 SSp g 55 56 60 6 62 6 67be 69 70 (FUTURE CSLA8ROOM-'pctional l"n and moenm patter ns Mak this "elmasnoftomabrrow," which perinitt greater r om s s % U t %a *'n .wn. Important testaruw of the room are uniform natural e 9 - lghtin and porta ks and. .h- which can be arnraed 108 109 III I IIS - It 1 2 b 171 w blaekbqard or *I*e. UP WID ism um. Daly. nto 6ee. i IOkl4"M wears. InspiratiOn for ast6r btidete jtgMlbn, ptawbet is Yugwmkvia's ~'I. httWetf~Ht R e denmanstraing against -Ttt@o B @ S anmmd dItrfenng. in the dispute. A By Calbrait - -- -_ _" 5 -- - I .._. -* ,. .. OV . .. n --9T ,,. ^* ,, -' ---v. .,.. I -.-" Mi '" S. to hit -Silent S --Co-Herb 15-t t IS--a.c. decree 3t-H erb S. alaa i -Use p-U--olct 1-Admit dr"'s 67-ThiS Which melikae 4-.laat earwetty aigvo i. egitp HORIENTAL 53-Bright 95-Silent 1- Staf colored 96-In this oalt Ash place 2-Wild S"-Sprinkle 97-Toughen goat with 90-Floating 3-Dry oar box for 4-RagF ST-Veltic fsh 5-DialI e- 100-Bleak, 6--Occu guage rocky 7,-Situa 58-Jot hill tion --Wrarmth 101-Pigment 8--Moun e0-Shelter 103-Licit rang 41-Glut ;Q0-Face (Asia 8-wie*n value Mino *4-Frz' 106-More 9-Most *ulneg reliable' strain . 4---ocal 107--Spply 10-Very 4--Put new 108-Ti mue -X-onfl calling 110-Garden 12-Sooh in brick. pant 13--Recu work lii-Wiht i ifac 71-Enlrge feet 15-Tin hole. I-f yffi TS-Mahajn. 8-bal... 6.--Cem eda 119-Concert 17-Wadi month p"rform.. -4. 7T--Pealed ers 18-Larg 76-Bird of 1226-4C1 d ua 4)pal 1" iamU- ' .-n2g- IM-Setyle- 31--PHi PA ,ate ment in 3S-0ah 814-U .. 4---klM 128-Alack --All S--Jotr ey 1X2-Flshing 37-Quid 87-QCal net 38-Plere dtllateU 130-Asiatic 40-Eloqu 88--1M lemur speak 90---ul'o- 1l1-Alone 42-Finisl pean 1~g-Muddlb 44-Indicl sefgull 133- Moun- .. mentt S9--Cut ot Lain 45-Vegel pte nympk - exua 9-Vttree"a. .ss tion ,. ag p .'6.--Watc). for Ing itan e or) ned pale tict r ey lug dy is kly ing lent ker hes L. able I- hful VERTICAL 48-Fish delicacy 50-Walker 51-Thin out (mining) 54-Light caress 55--Of a dean 56-Pikelike S fish 59--Courage 0O-Boundary setter 62-Moon's t zinrgof year 65-Of that girl 67--Ga-he of cards. Et3-Btrueeaf ....1. gopd. LO-Undi. vided Mate 7--Setrub of fornla 77-Disposed 78-Attain 80-Buddhist column 82-Interior tirfplate 83-Pledge before God 86-Semi- nocturnal rodent TAZBGI.BMA.- GOPIV:I; BHFMp ,H 3NCNATM; MS OWAH'S VSCg M; I V A' -'SC ZB-Q' SqW.A. a.ft- .l ..te jt .dhen Sa I- Mmt* s M ra.ur de ar.aiesi 89-Thing. in law 92-Order. lineal 94-Retfus from grape ,' pressing 95-Unit of quanti. tative meter 96-Rashest 98--Fish pickle 100-Under. ground passages 102-Religious .image 106-oPoint * .. of d er' .. .. antler gT*pe 111-Bearded 213-Faded 14-Silk filling 11--4'nctiep " 116-Tree of 117-City in Penn- sylvania 11 9-Perstan fairy 120-Portaes I 1---High 122-Pbot . covering 125-Miscel-. lany 126-Present tAB MaI S. e f Afl WU . r ^ ~ ~ ~ ~ *~ U -** *"U-. ^- d*^ .r eI WK *- m gu fa AmericaR) - l, ".i -- ---IL "' jt *-- -* -- *-*il -*-M ** -- V"'= t 5 ... ."" % : .,' _ u ..:_ . y~1,-~4~ *j SIDE GLANCES It I, ~J -.i. '"'A'- I 7'' . mfi-s ali . ....... THE PANAMA AMERICAN -o- OWNe AND PUwLItH, or ENo PfO AMNS ANS UMM. aN. 1oUNDIEO av N& =ON MOeMaU I& .iIN tseam 4NAMtiO Aale#AauMto. U?. H aT *' .9 p ". *oMs, Ro. -J P. Tit.LotSwm PANAMA t o '-74- f. N~> CALS AoEuss. PWARAtSaM. PANAAe COLON OFFICI .;2.17a CeNftAtl APMil aewrwmngr *ae-r tSio 'Mu *m- FORtNIN REPRESENTATIVES. JOSHUA a. f)WERS. INC. 948 MIADIMO AVi. NIW '-A*n (97 **Y V. Ot # MONTH. IN ADVANOs 1.70 r. W0 1 *1i MONTHS. IN 4DVANOM *&.1 0WW00 aom -p a movw OVANC____e._ 4 00 POETS' CORNER -0- TIME AND MY FATHER Time and my father were always good friends, Ever aware that friendship depends On giving and taking; my father knew well That time and its ways could always compel. His deepest respect, for whether or no. When time was ready it always would go; Nor all the-persuasion of eloquent rhyme Could sway for one moment habitual time. My father was clever, he never held back Nor even attempted to alter time's track To one of more leisure, for tact was a thing My father employed with the grace of a king; Of time he could make a friend or a foe, So when he grew tired he simply let go; And-the* i e crossroads where grass soft and high Offered whImiMes and star-clustered sky, With no Interruption to time's busy trends, Time and my father partetbgood.frieods.- je sFarnham t * , ROP 14 uuOmuae-^e.xrnui^ti ~eml Zifferblatt lawd it gently m the sam.desk of a huge houswl ville, N. Y., Pasienger Douglas Storer was to uprid b HEART (From The Bookman) Remember the pure machine, That brief and dogged thing, yewr ~w t. When fear In windy at your bones, Or when your lips are wet on lips .Remember it: Asking no leave to throb And, throbbing, stil unconcerned With purpoese beyond its stroke. Renember what It Is that drives You to you grief and joy; And how it thunders, desolate as waves; ' And stirs, remote as south wind, through your breast. MaKnight DMack TIME HAS NO SHADOW (From NY Herald-Tribune) Cloud shadows move across the hills, Slowly changing, the shadow of the straight tree marks the grass. Light sifils small-winged fluttering shadows between flowers. The dial throws a dark line on the hours,' And steel wings mark the earth over which they pass. You stand between me and the sun, T bear your shadow as a cool caress. But time, so long ago begun And swiftly moving. * Only time Is shadowless. Kath lae GarriUu Capln R EN RENT -IlA WTSK S",s'P flappy landlords and tenants get together through our want-ads every issue. Tur n to the want-ads. Check thAem now Every moth ... every week.. v .wry diy- THE PANAMA AMERICAN carter MORI WANT ADS than all other daily papers-il PaaM, c.abmd I - earsonisMerr Go-Round eleoft. " look out of his office on Sacramento'Bias u-tree- 'It t.flingit t Sstudded- capital Squre,. w I t m d i, Supreme out bi looking oet sei ei.e.- hand eue l1 what surroundings the tired fa el- mageS At of Washls .,nD Across the Capit plaza from the Sutmre lUdfre ii ing, and he looks out on row of moeftye N e .L. tlo Ings, neither Colonial nor Moer er, ~ed d&e- a. l W i5abp ing Whgta growingala. m hi rM M r t- The do chief 1ustiehoever, doest bale N l en i bee. afiidM *Saspes^a OucehE I to look a the scenery. Swoenly ap- pointed to the nation's hlofe t bncb. d h. A we a i. brief and write of ctlia -o *h f5 that o I wt ; se hne en tde.g m ert lo t ate t. : inter. ,u J was 4 f to t. a u Sheldm does e get to bed ore al, across th .inB maotr e1a doe. he out to dinner. h. o oe .- r te l c era, o W h harrn sonce aointecomSle _y. Ohmh*e owota 0, hCafor e utirtem.Theyasewther *rosec ioot a t ereenioMb $ h o "ver r of PCalifornia at Lo eles defeat pea *t, i on, I Blnhozw leaden t w aTMa S t, an thechiefJ justice felt r. B a- n Warren i still in Sa mento k ttate hat -there delay in Sa fter mtany yrs of eaU Iwth uggatr tiaI order _manathe " ee t~ 'nthe ite a e I tlhng Three the War dre-two and a ce oer tn borde - The ..ther attracttle Wawna children, who _As a regrit, It looks as. if not merly Al phe Owa -eio, ilntio miuoef plt A.r WasOgn eety od looked forwd oentr- u oner o the tprc catte ud talmn p for 1te sow ssalttan 4ta inTi sed. at the i lke must chieifasUee Is lving h a ohe-roo start ero the line. mayor ot a ment on 16 r a town, d one ba If it wasn't for aU he hd to do, War- ari for e cattle asnce e ve Wa e aolng hio m o1on an "- -. s,, Is t le reason for delay in Meahe hisoere o messenger, cuton ot an itervento by Jhn Mor OGeorgae Bwna a Pu do ef enhower leader In oillea portr o the tarfth te r no ailt a oa bou V- s friend, Theodore Lyons, was ". peIutstegaOioctr 0. p(stom e New Orleans rthrll et ther e we of m after lthe eatties were smubgged into trtherrreneao Lou ana stated that Lyons hd been. r 2ew it over eai r te cas ot.sxniho n en'd n fSoe l o n t e l e l a n .a Th60io h w of plt de sustoml poe," said Wisdom. ':tbat a l rwawat y ofn, cth pr with the Repubib an Peflta are a x $dIW ethte up. aaVON, -dut the treW tplayno nrt ins d emibnated the air figtg tnJ a w & t merits. ... Mere are pertne1nthexcerptss trOn i5 Id b a reed o f cattle" wiedo 't.;feore c rte was only trying t i n- one n f Svet ant crat gun all h any ene aAntung. -.. .Q f eatw mUn. ea, Wr"ate g~e Svies o.were trying to -:t*e1s the ZT b .1118Wayn tuinra onfod seelkto -MMt eh i to Siet personmes was clad It Is ui. t 4anterv or eter the Cubtomis eoo *7 rd,. in gt v-aub te Set aeKorea pJoOm ethae 1- CLOU amr Rstd&\ft) Lynshi rd. t wrw Only the on ta h e SuOforexe, .Bon 0%^OfSit!t guns' t s ng; Un atInu s ee muee,- he -', 4 14=Sve 71"t.,b w. lo04e *X"I ~ t tr heter o Vt ~T2~ ~ -3 a- P.P AA O" * --lb * * Sr~l Vhtm}. '41 .--- ,-A The Phon Bv go01A - -oygg )wy'o-.Things are becoming more corn- S. There a fresh industry conduct-. Si a business in teaching g people how t *0 manyieeks ago j stod the b k of gp the telephone. this Is long overdue, Jok I a. disobleyeed ome Iea e sOld4.eU LIn ainmshamed didn't pioneer the field my- wal to Ii the border Bridge of the of J bself.. beWI iUh M a Syrian fort., An Arab Legn Iate b o the . n W.' lwa4fy unalung hib rifle. My friend g tbbed me and The science of telephonic conversation, and pul e bk. he denMon of telephonic manners, has lagged W a7 t r~~teaoble or Incedents, they told me. We-wAit iad behind 1e I development of most modern ap-- can -te,4hey said. The Arabs need our machl es', t misges w to daily living. There is psbly more Indtia need thea food. United the Middle agt can rudeness and inefficiency channeled into Mr. a gret rket for Aberica. -I BdlU's laUenton than in any other form I know, 1Mo r, I a ke at length with the Israeli foreign minister,. Inouding global diplomacy. Mo a L 'Wht was said was off the record. Buta& th. . er hen war seemed imminent on the scorched Holy Land Not many of the gripes can be laid to the h otke heavier with history than they are with rock, 1 service Itself. The gals who handle your call are i to Wshlngton to offer what I knew to some friends In almost 1 per t wonderful In their patience t Department. s. .d system, where it exists, re I rned that the CPO had Invited Secretary of State is al o a-ei.ect &s ehanics cap provide, It Du to Its convention--and he will be there unless a NATO In the cussters wh. use the spoken smoke eo m takes Him to Europe in mid-November. Dulles want signal re at fault. h to sonak to CIO, his friends Ray. For, they believe, it : - m one of Ins t major *leeches as our foreignp minister." n Distanc hWs w in the sys- The believe be will resign about the first of the year. te.m, and o e Is notb.. ou .e Ia se say- S enough, if Mlues does come he will be one of two ofI lng: "Call orator 0oubl4ro i= ton." SPresi were's lIepubllan Canbinet who will be warmly You call Opetor Double.Zerff .he asb left for re nation's most militant union chiefs. the year, and; her auccesaeor- ne -eard f you. The e will be the new Secretary of Labor, Jim Mitchell. After long and troablo" session, wich who V W, l, with-bhim Ike's message to the gathering C0tve- Itivolves your name. address telephone num- land week f Nov. I& Mitchell will tell the convenn that ber, and a wild guess as to who might be calling th te is ready to revamp the Taft-Hartley law ald to you. the gal sya oh, yes.wlUlyou hang on please. armanumepts for consultation with labor leaders on while they dig the cyphers out of the file. r tha p* for Mitchell and Dulles will not deter Proel- You wait and you wait and you wait, and final- dent Wan Retthe a her CIO leaders from launching ly she says that your party Is DA., or don't an. the neA IW M bgJar'i war on Mr. Elsenhower. From then on awor. An hour later she calls back and says: out, tWe NhOIN elf. "Ready, anw, with Houston." Youwait and you So vi personal blasts. Now the wait some more and you bear her saying: "ar.. PresMent to ha-. the country "to unem- ty's oh the line," but somehow they can't dix up ploment atta will be bitter, Indeed, the devious dope who originated the call. Then 1 The uweh nit Duiles' resignation are say- the por girl adnits failure,.and 1if you arn smart Ing th t a GoVernor of New York you ring off and wait forthem to locate the and qt aorhft^ fhafre I a tof course, a chance that he originator, which may or may not take a week. ' wltO aVI tof chair In the cabinet. be rp diff se-.between the APL and CIO It is my belief that people who call you on couvn mWattida Senator McCarthy. The long distance should bear th brunt of the labor Sr r41201 crAt tlom of the investi- involved since it 1 their private proposition. Snatfth eWE o i and that, they should be ready, on the line be- cmI L of'= course0.b1a Br W19ooa0s1 fore the operator corrals the re-elvin% end. This duow rorM i t. uio me of Rug- i- Thee t r movie- severmuaattfbakth .T age now constructing aipe".,llerse-mers i U adand Kiev. only trpad ls IhM hav't yet produced any -D feature films forI WA GEc75Y^OP iree Edsover pon les Q: P.e *k nI Conres cr c e imate-timated. With only a four-sea e i i and aquay a minority In the Senate. the Rme a to matck the labor co- WA INTON (NA)-Lidles in Republican SOOP s weakest. The quarters here have looked over the figures S. Jan a, t as tbV powerful salq. that ls--of women members of state l a riweating with a travel- lel re. S. pical lady lawmaker Is about 53 years a 4r9at iamit US Republleah workers old, married, the mother. of two children. The Its memia ea s repremtatve rom average has a igh school education with one year of pec ad tul. About half hadbeen7 IUB 1W) U eMM area. f a w eseloa, five schoolteachers. an'itag Rl ot17rtr wit meIw nprbe- 'tbs survey also revealed that women politl- W saumodlsl to cis hav a wide range of legislative interests. thlls wm gor whal .B tod to pon ~etrate. hoWever, on anti- i ti s .n absntee voting. women's rights. eue0watter, e health, aid to the handicapped: -ia nto P later- o IMF _11r-_.- away hubl the Sodal pa% the other day. .W .nu. t M military kt tache of the Yugo- eon Nou paroles, l me e- si bwy gave a diplotittle tea. Az.ist- portt only alabird wth l us h ess -wee the wife of the military , otha Otde. att of the Soviet emhasy and -the wife of Toe Miaden auturitis are being pressured t free Jaues mltary attache from ehosovakla. M nard Van Dan Dterhd. as Frank a Jacmt,. Murdered I '. ze -,hs Bolshevik leader Leon ATr8 13 years ago a r' sharp' IRlSzAlI AT WORK . alpenstock. Jackson, sent up for 2 years, in e lille tor parole "~ -~ nh ~ Jt r "bureaucrsy works in Soviet Russia TOdAte, Attorney General Brownell has put I3 of the coun- iltsted by-t s t from the Moa- stry p aketeersin the docket for deportation, including All cOin* "L aerery G_ 4 = ft eeMutiener) Apastias.a and Joeotoals Adoni a. The goy- -B .stores in Ite R.i have been flood S ernment now a. going afterrTrank teuo. a pu hed by e ukraan Acad Sfa rwor Ps ,No. W-RelsaS agept ifuewit asi M tiUlS to adapoy oemmwer Pu iW e N .40 . ihibiie ,TIy. o.(:~lM -'X |8PRU 1~ a'. emy oU a leeOW caiq. 'rhe Fecundation of Jaraw Herngo Ite.m *7 "A far,-away MongoIla. bc, which has' bem zten w n(or brochure' on unth d fsh- Ing. emm I =thou=an>1 2,es aof a book a- 16hItpriet In Baa Taic In. Moscow.' auita without a theater concert Se getting pies of ar. whose ppulatIn la Ientirely Rus- Sreceived all its sehoolBooks t Yakut S TuJa and. Oriol, two regions which Weuhg t calendars. have received them at last. The t the year INS.9" e, Business RUAMK _~ __ __ _ rISOM t PROBLEM P: eorwer Congreuwoatk a Mary Norton of New *do ~f wit. ree-ftly testqd to C*er resl-netion as a Sbt of whM to do with tbe mB-9M W- ie of the DeOtic Rational Committee Ita bomber O whah w nb he made 4ith ts simple ax*Iiatton: Oeft f ta t oMbe hasiM bn a woman to be 78... she should :'*** \ -_ '. 'S .. *re__ i,__ .~'- I- C~ASSIFJEDS ~24 M- - U, r especially applies to people who call you at mid- night and chuckle: "What time is It ,'" 'ou are?" A special hell must be devised'for ai or,,aia- tors of phone calls who preface their remarks Switch "Q4ess who this is (giggie, giggle)" or who give fictitious names in a spirit of high fun. This punishment win be shared with the un- couth louts who call and bark. "Who isthis?" or "Who's speaking?" without any proper- den- tification of who-the-bejabbers has the crust to Inquire. A slightly less unpleasant hell has eot to be pooled with bibulous boys and girls who call tUs Just to gab. and then persist in putting com- plete strangers on the line to say hello to Good Old You. I have noticed that Southerners are most disposed to the mass telephonic interview. unless you count people from California, New York and Miami. - In the East we have another lovely little piece of rudeness, in which the tycoon commands his slave: "Get Armbruster on the phone," and the slave gets Airmbruster on the phone, and says: "Mr. Terwilliger calling." Then Mrj Terwillfer finishes his dictation, has his shoes shinec. -pinches the stenographer and absorbs a sma)! slug of nerve tonic before he lounges over to the nhone. In the meantime Mr. Arm1"-ser's ^-""'e could have crumbled while he held the 9'. I 's my expefilenie that nobody but the British really knows how to use a phone. When thew answer they don't say hello, or yes. or nii to you. They say: "It's Smith, here." there (",- -. pletely identifying themselves, and declar;nv themselves ones for business. They waste sm4ll time in aimless good-byes. meandering through, each others a pedigrees, but bark "Quite" or "Cheerio" and blinking well ring off. The telephone Is here to stay, and it's about tin'-' we learned to use it right. The first step. should say. would be mandatory capital nun- ishment for the. Guess Who kids. as an example to the other sinners, some of whom hang up v,,en a man answers. n Washington The bomb bay of a B-34 is big enough to car. ry an P-84 Jet fighter. A B-34 mother ship could thus fly 5000 mile towards target, launch the fighter to fly. 500 miles farther, drop a bomb, then fly back to hook on to the B-36 again. AGRICULTURE ZEORGANIZES Department of Agriculture reorganization sill make a number of changes in the names of old- line government agencies. The changes wil be a- follows: ARA to ARS-Agricultural Research Admin- Istration to Agriculture Research service. JE to FEB-Extension Service to Federal Ex- tension Service. OFRA to PAS-Office of Foreign Aericultural Relations to oreign Agriculture Service. The old PMA. production and Marketing Ad- ministration will be gll split up. New agencies created will include: AM---Agricultural Marketing Service. C88-Commodity Stabilization Service. The'old PMA Committees wil become CCSC- Community; County an-' State Services. BLASTS GOP POLJCI8E Any doubt pato .hither.the 1954 election cam- patikhas started ...n now be dispelled. Political .seots coing Jackc to W hiqngton from the Northwest have brought .sinle of a little pink card being passed out by the thou- sands It reads: Omese te the DAM GIVEAWAY .t te- far fro Team Donme Plaee: Niagara Falls; them HeIs Canyon It i enobler to give than to receive. Lew-set, power makes *oly the peemle richer. so eIme Me the RepsMteas pwrify yve by 81v0n1 yfr water wssres s to the --V-The Cadillac Crusader. n the ever side of te card is a post-script wich re~lds: A4y skrteumeit that we will alse ve sway roar tral iTietrteatie and r ral telephone nre. raoi at' this time Is pnoltlvely premature. ,1 TI2 o NOW : : ~~II L Ancbn (Text And By Ralph K By the time the Ancon reM.w- voir had been removed, the hill taken away, the trees along An- con Boulevard removed and the slopes of the hill changed beyond recognition, we knew it was nev- er going to look the same again! How right we were! It looks better riht now than it did dur- ing the past 20 years anyway. The new houses look real nice" and for those who can fit Into them must be most welcome. Fori myself I like a house with stilts and space underneath with room for the clothes to dry. the chil- dren to play, and a little storage space for an extra pair of shoes, a trunk or something like that. However. my neighbors In An- con with the new houses aic happy. One can see their satis- faction in the pride with whi. h they are improving their homes, adding features to please them- selves, spending many hours and, much olata to enhance the ve- getation around them. Flower raising is unquestiona- bly the most popular outdoor sport in the new area of AnconI these days. Mowbin lawns even gets an assist from many h,1s- bands. Everyone appears to be. doing something to. or around. his house. In fact, it appears that these houses In Ancon might better be called homes, for they seem to have claimed theI affection of the dwellers there. Yes, the brave settlers In rejhu- venated Anconr are becoming sol- id citizens. Some are apt to be at the Commissary, or taking aI drive but we can walk around with the camera and visit a few. Care to come along? In the cottage next door, tVic Friedmans are working hard on their lawn and flowers. Paul hai been on his knees many houris digging holes in the ground, re- placing soil, and planting flow- ers. But he wasn't home when we calle dso Beverly, his wife. we called so Beverly, his wife, chore of tending to the flowers. Settlers D or d Pictures ' . Skinner) eat, up everything choice he plants. He has strung pieces of glittering tin foil oh strings a,- round his land -to discourage the nightly marauders, but it does not help too much. Straw-hatted James A. Lyons on the corner told us the same sad. tale. The deer eat most Qf the better plants and flowers as fast as they can grow. They come down .from Ancon Hill nightly and clean out the work of the Ancon gardeners. The on - ly sure protection is a fence a- round each plant and- this is -both expensive and displeasing to the eye. One resident of Ancon pointed out that in Pennsylvania the deer are so numerous that every five years there is open season on does. He intimated that he would like to do some prolific shooting on both' bucks and does that are eating upr his lovely plantS, Is. there a solution? An- conites would like to know it. A real showplace in Ancon is the Harry A. Dunn residence with its two orchid houses ias well as plenty of lovely ones Jn the patio and the Tivoli Hotel in the distance. . Harry Is more than an expect orchid fancier. He is a recorder of orr.,'ds. Each new one that Le handles, and they are many, is photographed several times In color, and in black and wHite for future reference. Aq. result, the. Dunn collection of orchid pic- tures is a museum piece, Around the circle lives AIt 0'- Leary, who likes golf. There'r a nice level lawn behind his house and so Arthur, his son, is getting plenty of instruction and hopes to get good enough to trim- his father one of these days. iii Robert Van Wagner shows the string fence with tta foil wblehf mle iSf tU Wi from raiding his flowers. .. .. ,, Down the sharp hill we can qee white, and all the intervening a .windrpill It belongs to Aloysins shades. Then there are violets S. Zon. In gay colors, it makes a which are white tipped with merry addition to the landscape. green; Each baby violet has .its Jimmy de la Pena, who lives name and planting date on a nearby came along just rn stick in the small pot, and the time to serve as a scale to show lady keeps strict watch Ave'r her the true size of the windmill. pets. There were holes dug beside the windmill which will be filled John F. LaRue, Jr., likes to ex- with roses, we hear. periment with auto engines. His And here are the neat hedges, Mercury (no ad) will do 90 in the well-watered plants of Wil- one mile from a standing start. liam A. Gribbons. He does a Or mebbe in a quarter mile. Thle yeoman joll of seeing that U1.i day we photographed him,. fe flowers get all the caie tlu'y was arguing with M/Sgt. C ! need. And he works in shorts.so GArringt6n who has a Henry J that he may absorb the same car with a Ford V-8 engine In ..t. sunshir.e as his flowers! Who' could do the fastest mile? Up tl e s'npe is Robert Van They explained that most speed- Wagnei and lie has the sau-e meters indicate a. faster speed problem as Grilybons. The deer than the ear is actually making Wiitart A. ribbme- agi- he plUants livingg eMer t the joer "a'uali 6-- ,-- .1l the amera. flag I Joihn F. LaRue, Jr. (left) talks hopped-up engines with Clif Garrington. Nin-ty mies an hour is their aim. but they have theirs regulated diences even as it does nis days coming and It you'd like a for the real McCoy. Neighbors and nis cute face ano picture report on -the Empire Now. note that these fellows red hair would wow a television Street new houses or later, -is don't do 90 around Ancon or fan. Corozal townsite let the edior Balboa. They belong to the Timn- znow. Ing Association which uses aiir Now we didn't get to inclu"1 strips like Chame or La Hovr. many of the Ancon settlers. fr; One tnling appears sure. Tnl for their tests. The',' runs are one reason or another. TherC.'s Ancon settlers have derived straightaway- without curves, lthe fellow who lets his kids ruri:more pleasure from their n-w and safety rules predon4nate. out on the driveway in Septer -I homes than most Canal Zoners. Fiber morn attire and the maid They have "fixed them up." Heading for home we sawiwets them down with the hose Icherishea them lavished attei- "Snuffy" Chase. If ever there It would make a cute picture' tion on them in a way that iV- was a TV potential star on the but meb'oe he wouldn't like it ;dicates basic satisfaction at ..- looie, it'a Snuffy He has a voic rupying the houses. For to them. 'that would delight listing u- Besides there are other Sun- they are homes! '-----S i * -------m--4 a. - a -- -. A - A L - Amu. I ~1 IF` "Wafft '/- ii _LI I_~ I *A '^. ~4 "SEE OUR NEW'-JNI9M 91 THE WORI MGWY For the first time the Working Boys' teamhos-e citing Marie Wnrikt, Eiea z Eo Jeamk. P awf . . VIA .I- FL^^ir ~- ,P I TI OOFEl. WOUL rt F "Bi| AL | t\ ABC ESOP) w ?- B*0". 1 i dist^ rrI mrLT AHWb-IW RAMM THe.- LASrWOTO~aH I SAsot (T ( t mm,. SHUT,. 1 V ~~ - if. 7 ITrS WORTH A TRY, CASPER, OR OU SAKEAS WELL AS e-IhM C RE PRMWI6TH. ^*^ihan rlEATV WITt-l *f A Tal r WfC . lii .- 9W .60B ^^-__ - -. -L .. .,, ,O lL 1 V, - .: I-' a .2 ,, (I; A .",a 9oEZ_ OF- FIRST lol I 'SFS"M HA!-ITSATEM COLD D-,D. " 'OI t *PILLOWS TO SLSEP ONJ . R. -T -. ., . a *lSr OE 0 .4: EI -Cippi,-- 8thefT.. ;' 11H" CRCE 15.-ARE dN 4 leaGLY .. ... ,,TERM AN I AMd T'KEEP' 1" 1 r 1h THAT E.art .s u.tt vim, ogl ME GI AME4w HI,DAD. E;t~:ffffeI 1- ATS F THg EATS -. RFu U4,!r .s TI"CIT" FOR ALu~-NLMS PAW ING.' A~5 'u Me. You MEAMN DOA0 E(pemC He SAYS HE AS)DE D M I) PAY ir- uF MY YOU TCO AOL40 W PUr THE ANCEF.T CAA 22W 1T r '~~iuw- ., i~r ;_. ~ b. i " :: - c~ I; i..' " ~1 STCNCAJ A 0M 4W! ::3CT^^8^^ ALWM ~-- -- --- ---- -- --, ---~ 1,6gz^-'^c - -- ~ANNE / H - --- -- ----- LII . % F luir- AF. 1~11~ --T TAMMMMM PAM * CNAwtTP J3Ait . wra PO YOU WAW1rA !RTvA Jliprp-" Il A~~dlLUI I owr B:30s, HAMW*ia STAm S WILLu -u TDA SttA. FIS.P/ UN' 0 .- u-ieL es - Tw ew5Tim4 __A I T CAiiLLLTTMA MA^^r'flWW i^^^^| IJAr^ IMLL W ) ,U.LL CT t^rlalyre nstem O kJTW^E esUfielsfOR B ' EWl#- u~'~ "^P w'N k) WO~hfr MrCC--^ s|^K Aw^, I FUKOMM MA AN UNCNIRTEP JMM.t.lSIMS IF I AfK YDtUR RWf ?d 'di PI .-.1., rlj V ^ jic. -'I k-. -. -"- Y- _- U. ~- i i -- f I WWRCOMALL" i 'w -A, mow; A9Wep9fY - < It ) 1, ;1- .1 -Nri .i~ j. r., DIIla 4e tr r weA I "Tp, 7 A lrk2 : ~~fD rplzJ AIM dee MAM!.NO I UR asWrHQU OW 10P 6eo~ar~ *41530 e4 oH,PLEASE 0OtSAY ntW* TALK UKI THAT SELL LIT U SCHOOLHOUSE WAS ALAUNTED AN' THAT 'OU AINT 6LAO TO BE ABLE TO 60 TO SCHOOL-, I WOULD MIND LEARMIN', BUT 10 S NO FUN IN4 IT! SBUT IF YOU DONT b TO SF EVERY NIGHT AN' WAKE UP EVERY MORN I YOU'LL BE SIC 'Ai'.BE=IN' SICK AIN'T NO FUP N I KNOW# B TrBOT-* MAYBE GOING' TO SCHOOL AIN'T Vl RJNNY- BUT IT AIN'T VERY FUNNY N TO GROW UP AN' EVER LFARN NOTHING' ABOUT HE WAIT L \ ANYTHING A MINUTE, l^ cLISTEW 9BUT p ,,tU GO TO - SCHOOL. evB~Y WHEN OCURE Bee, YOU'L. KNOW SOMETHING' ABOUT / EVeRTHIN' ANAl' ~' '' -*i it -<-Y *- 3t-. |
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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 |
| 48 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |