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to p "", ri r, p p h DAILY KEWSPAFEE i ; : f ? .! Ji ihi iw ifci Mil' ej '""l e"" B" 1 V f '"""W 1ST" ' MM- i WA U -J k-i kJ Lul 1-1 INTtRNATIONAL AIRWAYS Let the people know the truth and the country it W" Abraham Lincoln, Hit IE A.I PANAMA, R. r, TUESDAY, APRIL It, 1951 Five ckxts n i:::efe;:dent 7fHE Canadian V v-h- n mnsicY IT -o-- 'Mi Watt K S - a. Mouth without malaria FIRST lit 52-YEAR HISTORY -'':'. "''v ; - For the first time in the 52-year history of the Canal .; Zone .Health Bureau, iull month has passed with not a. " single' ease of malaria being reported among employes of the Canal organizations, military personnel or other res)-" - dents of the Canal Zone, r -' .. The perfect record was set in March, according to an '" announcement by Col. Charles O. Bruce, Health Director... : 4 The malaria, records are compiled In the Health Bureau offices and cover both sanitated and nnsanitated areas. -The Health Director warned that despite the perfect re- ord for March, everyone should continue to exercise earo ' in malaria prevention. I Malaria can strike at any time of the year and its eon- - trol 1 a matter of constant vigilance not only on the part - of health authorities, but of all residents, Brnce declared. Ike Asks Congress To Speed 'Military ,Career C6nie-0ns WASHINGTON April 19 (IT) president Eisenhower appealed to Congress today for speedy action on a series of long pending administration bills to make military careers 4 more attractive. ,5 Mr. Eisenhower said the new legislation la urgently needed to "stop- the wasteful flosses" of manpower resulting Jrom the low; re-enlistment ..rates of the trmed forces. V ," He said the personnel situation In the. services it "serious and "we cannot move too soon in our efforts to Increase the number trnd nuality of volunteers for innr-term military career serv ice." -'-",-r"s---:-:-, The President's plea was made In letters sent to Vice President ' Richard M. Nixort and Speaker Sam Rayburn from the vacation White House at Augusta, Ga. ' Mr. Eisenhower also forward forward-( ( forward-( ed a long 'letter from Defense . Secretary Charles E. Wilson outlining in detail the difficul difficulties ties difficulties the military ts having in; attracting- and holding able; yog officers and men, k 1 a '. -: r r the susviv titUH,;s bul, ai- ready approved by the House. It brins servicemen under the so social cial social security old aze and surviv survivors ors survivors insurance system, and offers other improved benefits for serv servicemen's icemen's servicemen's widows. a. Senate action on t h e 'House-approved 1 bill to assure government-paid -, medical care ; f or dependents of all military ' personnel, '.- -. "' '. 3-Actlon by both Houses on FciriiT CZ Enbya,: h :n h Al 62 y I .' Robert E. Dawn, wno recently retired as foreman lineman with . the Eflwtneal Division in Cristo Cristo-bal bal Cristo-bal died Sunday in Jacksonville, Florida, accordinff to news reach-, in? the Isthmus. He was 82 years old. t ' Mr. Dawn was born in Saranae. New York, and had 22 years of service with the Canal organiza organization tion organization when lie retired at the end of February. He worked for seven years in Chile before he was employed by the Canal in 1029 as a wireman with the -. Electrical Division t,in Cristobal,.'- He left the Canal 'Service from 1930 to 1934 and was reemployed as a switchboard operator at the Gatim Hydroelectric Station, v He was promoted to transmission line-1 man in l'J39, to general operator in J!M2, and. to foreman lineman in 1951.' v;. :- --'' i He is survived by his wife, who can be contacted at the Hotel SeJ minole in Jacksonville, Florida, where the is staying until next Sunday. ... , I!:cy Grass llms Ccr,!:rs As 8fC!3 : S!:ro AVcrkers C:;i NEW YORK, April 10 (UP) Some 8.000 employes went on strike today against Macy's. the world's largest department store. The president and board chair chairman man chairman manned counters when the main .store opened for business1 at 9-45 a n. An estimated 30 customers passed a shouting 2,500-person The assistance- rendered by picket line around the full-block1 the association has included fi fi-Herald Herald fi-Herald Square store at opening jnancial aid to the families of time. 1 patients, a-program of occupa- A store spokesman said 150Otional therapy at Goras Hospi- members of the executive stair, led by board chairman Ja.ifc Straus and president Wheelock H. Bingham, had taken over sales, stock room and elevator . loh The store normally has 100,000 to; 150,000 customers in a 9:45' a.m. to 6 p.m. day. Al.'O affected by the strike of f thp Retail. TChnl. !-ae and' Tie- partment Stcre Workers Unior.' were three branch uteres in oit- lyine section cf the city and cue 'in Westchester county legislation to raise ceilings on regular f officer- personnel, so that thousands of reserve offi cers may be given the more de sirable regular status. ,4. Enactment of hew career incentives tor medical and den dental tal dental officers and nurses, who' are leaving the services- at "an a a-larming larming a-larming rate." 5 Legislation to authorise a partial refund of rental al allowances lowances allowances to servicemen whose families are quartered on "sub-, -standard" hous'ng on military' bases.'1'' ; . 6. Extension of the law, now flue to expire Dec. 31, which per mlts officers to retire at the highest "temporary" rank which they have reached, rather than having to revert to their usually lower permanent rank. v. ...... Gitce To MselRcck As prly-t!:d ti::r :,. ( o'i'. AT b-A, April 10 U : Tt Tt-bride bride Tt-bride i&eeU The Rock, touay,. This party-mad llnef bearing Grac Kelly to prlncg' Rainier III of Monaco scheduled its first European stop .today at Algeci Algeci-ras, ras, Algeci-ras, across the bay from the tow towering ering towering Rock of Gibraltar, Miss Kelly appeared upset last night for the first time since the Constitution left New York. She bristled when someone told her that her father had told report reporters ers reporters they had had a lQ-minute heart-to-heart talk. ;r "What my father and I said is strictly between us," she said. Apparently she had asked mem members bers members of the wedding: party, In Including cluding Including ner family, not to talk with reporters on shipboard. She was disturbed that stories had appeared in print quoting mem members bers members of her family. Ccnvdr GcIscJ To r.!:o rjjlrzxz Fcr AF A-rr.a ; WASHINGTON, April 10 (UP)-i General Dynamics Corp, annnounc- ed today that its Convair division has been awarded an Air Force contract to build the airframe for an atomic-powered, airplane. The airframe will be built at Convair's Ft, Worth. Tex. plant. Amount of the contract was aotl disclosed. "1' .; ; August C. Esenwain, Convatr vice president and manager of the Ft Worth plant, said the -contract resulted directly from intensive research and development work by Convair under a 1351 contract with the Air Force. ;! The Ft. Worth plant has- been conductins flight tests for months with a B36 intercontinental bomb er equipped with a Convur built atomic reactor. r..,- Canal ZQne Tuberculosis. Gives Extensive Aid In The recently organized Canal Zone Tuberculosis Association has Just completed Its first yew of operation durinsr which a di- versified program was instituted ; to give aid to employes and tneir famines wno are airicsen. tel. and the distribution of edu- cational literature on the pre- vention of tuberculosis. in addition, several pairs of 1 glasses were bought lor patients in the rhest ptinn t th hos-' pital. v According to a report of the association, slightly over $2500 was raised during the annual Chrfsf.ma Ppal sal v s Of this amount, six per cent w?s forwarded to the National 'Association for use in research. The remainder is kept locally Army To Slow Of Civilians ; i Secretary of the Army Wilber M. Brucker announced today that, the Army Is integrating it3 civilian employes of United States citizenship In foreign countries into a single, world worldwide wide worldwide career system by inaugurat ing an interchange program be tween employes in tne unitea States and those In overseas areas, '. ..--." -f-- This development is made pos possible sible possible by a recent Civil Service Commission decision to bring the Army's approximately 12,000 ci civilian vilian civilian positions in areas overseas Into the normal Federal compe titive civil service system. The Army plans to staff Its overseas portions almost ex clusively by reassignment from activities in the United States of qualified employes who vol volunteer unteer volunteer for service overseas. Hereafter, recruitment from other sources will be limited to vacancies which cannot be filled by the reassignment of career emnloves. Brucker pointed but that this will have the enect or placing only those employes of demon strated ability in tneir wore wun the Army in the United SUtes in critical positions representative of the Armv overseas.- ' "The new interchange system also will enable the Army to con serve within its civilian work forre te valuable skills cf em- seas Vur. ei. loyes or piovui a uim.y wui ub assuicu oi f mmi- mum opportunity to cdntinuft their careers within the Army." Ctt P rf if To A!;::.J Fcr:;;;!! VI Jvt ImiVI! PARIS,. April 10 (UP) An as assortment sortment assortment of French htersry and entertainment figures will pay $14 a seat at a vaudeville theater here tonight to witness the farewell performance of Josephine Baker, St. Louis-born Negro singer. After the 50-year-old entertainer has finished her act, various oth other er other performers including Negro bandleader Sidney Bechet and French playwright Jean Coctesu will put on a special show for her. Baker, now a naturalized Frenchwoman, plans to retire to her country home to devote full time to her family -- her second husband, bandleader Jo Bouillon. and seven adopted children of va-j nous nationalities. Littte Jock Little Dies Of Poisoning X HOLLYWOOD. Fla., April 10 (UP) John Leonard, 58, known to a wide radio audience as piano-playing "Little Jack Little," was found dead In bed at his home here yesterday. An autopsy report today indicated the en entertainer tertainer entertainer died of poisoning. Police called hli death an ap apparent parent apparent auiclde. -- ,.--: ; The police report described In tne autopsy said Leonara naa been In a "hideously depressed" state. to aid patients and conduct an educational program. The opening of a recreation lounge at the hospital where pa- tients may engage In some use fful and entertaining work was maae possioie a lew monuii go through the cooperation of the Tuberculosis Association, the Red Cross, the Balboa Woman's Club and the hospital. The Tuberculosis Association, sponsored by the Balboa Wom- ans Club, provided funds ior tne occupational therapy, while the program is supervised by the Red Cross Gray Ladies. A loom for weaving cloth ana a sewing machine have been purchased and made available for the patients. In addition, materials are fur furnished nished furnished for makine billfolds, key cases, baskets, purses, and van- ous articles of clothing. I Other patients are provided with games, such as checkers A livy Britain AYdccqps. Ike's OppcsHIin; Tn A trtrmefl LONDON, AprU 10 (UP) Britain today officially "warmly welcomed" President Eisenhow er's statement that the United States would oppose any Middle East aggression "within consti constitutional tutional constitutional means." A foreign office spokesmen announced at a news conference that "Her Majesty's government warmly welcomes the President's statement" H noted that Mr. Eisenhow er's statement had set out. Unit United ed United States policy on the Middle East "more clearly than before.1 But he declined to state whether the President'- stand fully meets Britain's earlier appeal to the Un'ted States for a firm alignment of Anglo American Middle Eastern poli policy. cy. policy. ." v" t . He' also declined to, reply f to questions on whether Britain now considers Washington and London in, complete accord, on tne Miacue east. -The spokesman would not in dlcate whether Britain had been informed in advance of : the President s announcement, say saying ing saying only that consultation be tween Britain ana tne unitea States on the overall Middle East situation were "still continuing.' Conservative circles here gave much of the credit for Mr. Eis Eisenhower's enhower's Eisenhower's new Hough line" on v the M'ddle East to Prime Min Minister ister Minister Sir Anthony Eden, who returned to the political wars when Parliament returned from Ms Easter recuse t 1. !jn to ask CoI ;reM for Aiar i-by nthnrlt.v fhr nnxsih! military intervention la any Arab-Israeli war 70,000 French Reservists To De Called Up For Algeria PARIS, AprU 10 (UP) A de determined termined determined French cabinet yester- datr decided to back Algerian governor-general Kooert Lacosie to the hilt and approved a mo mobilization bilization mobilization plan that will., send 70,000 French reservists to Al Algeria geria Algeria in the, next month. r The called uv reserves will be reinforced by 30fi00 men scraped up rom France's two remaining NATO divisions and housekeeping troops in France to make the lOOftOO men La cost has said he needs to pa dty)Algeria: The reinforcement will be de barked for Mediterranean ports and ferried across to -Algeria as soon as they can be mustered into units and issued equipment. Sealed envelopes from the de fense ministry to the troops who will be called back are already In the offices of the Gendarme rie throughout France, awaiting delivery by the blue-uniformed national. police to their recipi ents. J.t.,,.." :-.', '- Plans for the i mobilization were drawn op by the oeiense ministry and officials have pro mised that recalled troops will not be held idle in barracks'. Meanwhile, French troops, Association Its First Year and bingo, and reading materi als.. The program being conducted Dy tne association nas tne en dorsement of doctor( at the hos pital. They say that patients stand a better chance for recovery H they are free of financial wor worries ries worries and have something to oc occupy cupy occupy their time during their hos hospitalization. pitalization. hospitalization. The Tuberculosis Association board of directors includes the following members: Leonard M. Brockman. chairman; Dr.A-V. Mastellarl, chief of the chest sec section tion section at Oorgas Hospital, medical advisor; Cdr. John Eant, 15th Naval District representative; Lt. C. Kotsoko, Caribbean Air Force representative: and Capt. Maurice Patten, USARCARIB representative. Mrs. MaryU. Parker is executive director the association. no o F 1 n j n v r"- I I''.' : 1 -Vl.l I : r m ..... A... .. "' .. ".. .'.. ... ..... .. ..f ,, t. ' t (NEA Telcphoto) SIGHTING IN- An Egyptian soldier alms his weapon from a machine gun nest on the Egyptian-Israeli truce line. The white - blockhouse (arrow) .is an Israeli armed position. : Eisenhower Schedul Foreidn Poli AUGUSTA, Ga;, Aprtt 10 (UP)' President Eisenhower, d e e p 1 y u,cd a maior fonnin pui.cy s;-rcch to the nau.n lioia Washinglun A Dni 21 The President will speak to an I evening oanquei 01 me American hopping from hill to hiU by helicopter, pursued the rem nants of d strong rebel force routed in the biggest battle of tht.n-month Algerian revolt. The battle In the wild Nemeni cha Mountains of eastern Algei ria highlighted a bloody week weekend end weekend of rebel fighting and ter terrorism rorism terrorism "that, took a. reported death toll of more than 300 per sons ... First official reports said more than 100 rebels were killed In the four-day battle near the town of DJeurf.. 'J i'. '- j v .... ;. 1 The French losses were ap approximately proximately approximately 30 killed and 40 wounded ihe highest single single-battle battle single-battle casualty toll for, the French since the beginning of. the Algerian fighting,- ' A second' major battle raged In western Algeria, in woods near Nedromah, some 70 miles west of Oran nea the Moroccan border.,.;. ,r;v;;;, -v. fyJ fyJ-Preliminary Preliminary fyJ-Preliminary "reports' from the western fighting said the rebels lost at least so killed and 40 wounded. French losses were set at several dead and five wound ed, ', '4 v t J, In the Nemencha Mountains airborne troop tightened a noose around the scattered rem remnants nants remnants of the routed rebel unit. More than 100 insurgents were believed trapped, In mountain grottos. Wounded French soldiers evacuated by air to field hos-. pitals said they had to fight hand-to-hand with the fana fanatical tical fanatical rebels entrenched behind boulders in the thick bush on the eastern slopes of the moun mountains. tains. mountains. .-' j The battle was touched off late Thursday, when a force of 300 i rebels ambushed two trucks cartying soldiers of the French 2nd Colonial Infantry, famed for it World War I stand at Ver dun. Fifteen French soldiers, in eluding a captain, were killed In the rebel ambusn. All the men aboard the first truck either were killed or wounded. But' the drivel1 of the second truck, although wounded, man aged to reverse his vehicle enough to permit his comrades of; to take cover and return the 'fire. es cv Soeech t -. Society; of Newspaper Editors at the Statler Hotfl. m. tira.t worked ovtr by his foreign policy and speech advisers in Washington was scheduled to reach here today by special aerial courier. 'V A-lf He will work on refinements of the text during his golfing vsca tion at the Augusta national golf course. (,.,, Presumably the President'! AS NS speech will be, carried trans transcontinental continental transcontinental by television and ra radio dio radio and overseas by shortwave ra dio outlets. ? ., 4 Meanwhile ia Washington, Secre tary state John Foster Dulles discussed with high Congression Congressional al Congressional leaders today the possibility I of Congressional action to cope with the Middle East crisis. Uulles, however, did not reduest any legislation action at his time The nature of the Congression al action was not disclosed. But there was speculation It referred to possible standby au authority thority authority for the President to send American troops into action In the, Middle East if necessary to keep the peace. ;; Dulles called the urgent confer conference ence conference with: 14 Congressional lead ers.' lhe Congressmen refused to give any details after the 90- minute talks were completed. But Sen, Leverett SaUohstall (It (It-Mass:) Mass:) (It-Mass:) said in reply u 4 Question that there was dncussion of pos sible congressional action in the Middle East problem. Senate Re publican leader William F. Know- land (Calif.) confirmed the state statement. ment. statement. ,, But Sen. V'alter, F. George (D Ga.), chairman of the Senate for foreign eign foreign relations committee, observ ed: "There was no request for any legislative action." House Republican leader Joseph W. Martin, Jr., (Mass.) said there was "no particular pressing emer gency that we know of at this time." But be added that such an emergency' could, come up at a time when "nations are shaking their fists at one another." Matin said President Eisenhow Eisenhower er Eisenhower would request Congressional action "if danger" arises.' But he said there was no reason to expect such a request now. r -1 The conference came only hours after the President -issued a for mal warning that the U n i t e v States would "support and assist" any victim of aggression in the Middle East. ; Townsite Meetings On Civil Defense Set For April 12 Civil Defense meetings for the week are as fellows: GAM BOA AprU 12, at 9 a.m. at the Civic Center. SANTA CKUZ AprU 12, at 8 p.m. at the Service Center, i All members of the lespective townsites Civil Defense Self-Protection programs sre urged to at attend tend attend as there will be a practice drill in message composition and map plotting in preparation for the forthcoming National Civil De Defense fense Defense exercise. The general public is invited to attend. ; n Warned Delay May Be JERUSALEM (Israeli sector), April 10 (UP) Israeli troops clashed with Arab commandos today in another cf, the border skirmishes that have imperiled Dag Hammarsk Hammarsk-jold's jold's Hammarsk-jold's peace mission to the Middle East. : -r :i The U.N, secretary-general arrived early today in Bei Beirut, rut, Beirut, Lebanon in face of a warning by Western diplomats that any delay in his negotiations to prevent a war between Israel and Egypt might be too Before he could fly on to army spokesman announced, redaeeyas or commandos r in which one commando was killed and another wounded and captured. The fighting broke out at dawn 50 miles north-east of Beersheba, close to the Israel-Jordan border ; Israel announced : it killed nine of the Arab commandos yesterday and told the U.N. Se Security curity Security council their sabotage at tacks constituted premeditated aggression.,'- ::':- Cairo radio replied to the charges with a broadcast state ment nat the "war against rapl will not necessarily be con- tiw'1 y,Mi shnotx-T ri ne r liwi I.51 a rl Ui. ... ; Cairo radio sa'J I.sraell prime minister David Ben-Gurln "had not foreseen that cc -mandos would spread panlo and terror In Israel when be ordered Israeli attacks on in innocent nocent innocent civilian populations of the Gaia strip this week." ;The Egyptian army "stands ready along tne will not hesitate to drive back Judgs Rejects Appeal Of Gl Who Paid Fin Judge Guthrie FV Crowe today rejected the appeal of an Ama Amador dor Amador soldier who was convicted of drunken driving, and remanded the case back to the Balboa Mag Magistrate's istrate's Magistrate's Court. -;,-'."'., A s)100 fine which Set. Samuel E. Harris, the defendant,' had Said and then withdrawn when e appealed the ease to the higher court, wa returned to Balboa together with the rec records, ords, records, for disposition. A. i 4 v tm Deming to decldl what action to take In the case. Harris, through his attorney Woodrow de Castro, claims to have evidence which would vin vindicate dicate vindicate him. The courts have ruled that wherever a fine has been paid for a conviction, there is no right of appeal. Harris is attach ed to Hq. 7440 Army Unit. He was found guilty on March 20 in the Balboa Magistrate's the fine hefor. the five-dav ne- iodinhichhTcoappear; his case expired, but later re quested the fine be returned be because cause because he hd decided to appeal the conviction. Open Air Concert Set For Thursday Arrangements have been com completed pleted completed for the presentation of an open air concert which will be held on the campus of the University of Panama Bummer School on the evening of April 12. t The program will be presented against a backdrop of brilliantly illuminated flags of the 21 re publics represented and will be under the capable baton of Ma estro Herbert de Castro with the collaboration of the Department of Fine Arts of the Ministry of Education. Those expected to attend, be sides tne general puouc, are up lomats accredited to the govern government ment government of Panama, and high gov ernment dignitaries. The concert will be given un under der under the auspices of the Loteria de Beneficencla de Panama 1 (Panama National Lottery). Fatal late. Israel and Cairo, an Israeli a new clash with the Arab any aggression In the future," Cairo said. Hammarskjold's plana srt down early today In Beirut, Le Lebanon, banon, Lebanon, where he will make his headquarters. - His schedule called for him t-i fly -today to Lydda airport a 1 to Cairo tonight. His urgent mission, tsWn ; aiKn tSte I 1.,,. J iaati s v i oppose Middle East asgre Maj. Gen. E. L. M, Burns. UJM. truce supervisor for I,-. tine, said he would travel 1 1 Lydda airport outside Tel Aviv for a fast round of talks on tna blazing crisis before Hammarsk fold takes off for r.m ni frontiers andltalki with Egyptian Premier C4 mal Abdel Nasser. 1 .western diplomatg In Jerusa Jerusalem lem Jerusalem said despite the threat of war. astute diplomatic action by Burns backed by Hammarsk. Jold's prestige could still pre. vent or at least postpone a war, Tvo Former Albrc I. .A Employes Sentence j To30Dayslnkiif Two former Albrook sales" store employes are in the Balbos jnil today, each serving 30-day srn. fences imposed by the Balboa Ma. gistrate, for stealing merchandise from their sections. j; Both defendants, Bolivar pn. man, 26, and Ernesto Yee, 38, al. so face additional charges of em embezzlement. bezzlement. embezzlement. They were each bound urcr wr uihi in u. o. uisincc . comPIeti Roman, formerly acting general storekeeper for the sales store, was 'found guilty of stealing hacksaw blades worth $46.80 -and sentenced to 30 days for the petit larceny. He admitted taking Ohe blades and making an' effort to sell them in Panama.; They were recovered In a hardware store. Another charg of grand larce larceny, ny, larceny, in which he was accused'.' of stealing 476 rolls of scotch-mask ing tape was dismissed today m, Court. it- .':.' n The embezzlement against -Ro. mta .for whicn Pwbab e causeHas stock. This section, the govern- ment contended, had been under his control by virtue of his em ployment as general storekeeper. Yee, who was general storekeep storekeeper, er, storekeeper, was given the 30 day sen sentence tence sentence for stealing 24 rolls of scotch masking tape worth $8.40. Yester. day he was charged with embezz embezzling ling embezzling a lettering set from stock worth $86.05, and the case was bound over for trial in U. Si Dis District trict District Court, : ; ' J i Flash Fire Breaks Out Near Atom, Sub GROTON, Conn., April 10 UP A flash fire broke out last night near the world's second atomio submarine, the Seawolf, but the $58 million craft was not damaged,-. . The General Dynamics Corp, builder of the hull which is in wrt dock, said the blaze was confine i to an electric pump used for test testing ing testing operations at the pier where the- submarine is being outfitted. Two workmen were treated for face burns and two others,, for smoke inhalation. None was in se serious rious serious condition. V ':' vi : fir, i two TBI fAA'AMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY XEWSPAFEli Tt'ESDAY, AFEIL 13, IKS -THE PANAMA AMERICAN ' ;Tt0 AMD PUSl l"f 0 THt PANAMA AMCMICAI Mm, INC. V ' OgNriO NELSON AOUNMVCLt ,! 1 n MArUloOlO ARIAS sorroa M H THtT O. BOH 134. PANAMA' 'CP M Til (WOW 2-O740 9 LlN M C.ABII AOOfttSS. PANAMIRICAN.- PANAMA V 0Bwa Orrics 12 t?a Central Avinuc arrwttN 11th and IStn awn aA POAAION RmtKNTATIVn, JOSHUA POWSRS. INC. ! ; 343 MAOIAOM Al. Ntw Von A. 1 17 N. V. lOCAl tVWIt PinMMONTH IN 1IM.IW 1.70 I 1 SO MOMTU Mi tn.yr aaa S 00 a"ll VtA. IN AnvAMf 18 BO 14 OO THIS" IS YOUR fORUfti THI RIADERS OWN COLUMN Tae Mad Roi b aa forum for raaaen at Tea Piaama Amtricaa tatteri at rtecivaa aratefalr ea ara fcaaalae' to a whall caafukaliai Matter. .. ... "rJf.yaa foirtiibuta a (alter aaal aa Imaoticirt 8 ft eoata't aaatat th- ail V Letters ara published in the artier racaivaa. a Platte lr la kata tha letter Knitted to aaa aaae kmetk : ..l4tntit at laltar writtcs is Mi in strictest caatidaace. rTha acataaapar aoama aa raipoaiibilit lar tataaaaats at apiaieai aaa.Mta m lerfti mm raj it art. r She mail box' Sir POEMS AND POETS 1 j t r- line editor of Poets' Corner in last Sundays Panama Araer-icab-probably switched the authors of "A Leave Taking" and "topme of 'Breaking of Nations,' I do not think either of iheMoeta will or can .object. jlji. :- .- -.--.jr -1 rThis is Just to keep the record straight, so far as "A Leave TarJJig" is concerned; it was written bv Algernon Charles SwiA SwiA-bunse. bunse. SwiA-bunse. and was printed in the American edition of his Poems And- Ballads, published in 1884. X do not know about the poem "In Time of 'Breaking of fffatjons; hut it was not written by Swinburne. 'Q Crede Calhoun v Bin SAN ANTONIO BUGLE -Never felt better, and both sight and hearing have improv improved, ed, improved, but a week of cloudv weather is the eye remedy. The glare of the sun on the white-painted houses is what hurts. Suits the Air Force, but not me. -' Talk about curious weather, we are having it. Yesterday now and freezing from the Texas Panhandle to the Great Lakes, and today but j few spots in the country below freezing. The weatherman says prospects for a big peach crop neve? were bettMr. Haskins writes the dry season Is' at last on, and the roads are lammed with country-bound vacationists hunting fresh air, and that brings to mind the air condition here for " thejiast month. Dust from the West Coast, visibility to a few miles, and gas fumes from cars do the rest. The market for exysen is good, and who would ever have thought of selling the . stuff when I came here in 1882? ,. I have asked no questions, but it seems the Air Force doesnt intend to let my son-in-law Frank resign.,. He goes out reaularlv and nuts in a few hours most every day. f 'juvenile crime is running wild, and BB shot, from air guns hal caused damage in the millions to auto windshields and glass windows in the past month, and it's all over the country. Pop Wright m4 j - Jj P 3 4 ; v N i V jl HE COT BANDITS' NUMBER An alert newsboy in Memphis, ii Tenn, shows how he helped police track down the car driven by f i bank robbers in nearby Hernando Wiley "Peck" BouchlUon. 14,' ?! was on his Press-Scimitar paper route when he saw the bank 'j! president rush from the bank, shooting at the-fleeing robbers' 1 'car. The auto headed for Wiley, who fell upon a parked ear to I avoid being hit. Aa the robber passed, he wrote the license number in the dust on the parked car's fender Wiley missed l getting the correct number by one digit, because dirt on the I plate made a "7" look like a "1." Police found the robbers' car, $ '-Men had been stolen, abandoned and burning. r wr.:,-:'-: f t . 1P : 1 f. i... SEWING IS HIS HOBSY Home-sewing advocite Is Pelle Bogren, 14-year-old boy in Haelsingborg, Sweden. He is shown at his own sewing machine on which be makes all of his clothes. He has even made an evening gown for his mother, fclle hopes to study fashion designing in.raris, after first being trained as tailor, in Sweden. a V Labor News And Comment By VICTOR RIESEL A powerful bloc of Southern la labor bor labor leaders is telling national union chipfa in Washinirtnn in minH tfiair own business ami shut up on the ; ,. negro issue wnicn may yet trigger a violent civil war inside tarwr. A n0Tv f trro m e rcn1iitinna anI 0 j waO a44tk a vaviuuvua auu letters are pouring into the ATL- uy s wasnington neadquarters and the other labor buildings which snranf tin in thp ranital last vur when labor developed an edifice complex. l:;-. .. i All thift im iAualoit in a mm,. firlpntial rpnnrt nn lnhnr'a hAtir role in the fury over desegregation of Negroes. The report has been chnum tn thn Inn AFFIA lparl. lers who have learned from, jt mat inj same soutnern dioc1 ot second echelon union officials, rep representing resenting representing some 230,000 followers, wants a statement from labor's hieh command vhirh will civp them the right to work openly, and in labor's name, with the White Citizens Councils. : This amaTintf rotvnrr i rivn full credence by the nation's top : L:.r- 1 A.r v.:... k..n. uiuuu villus ill nasiiuiiuu uniusc it was made by an unimpeachable official H I. Mitchell. He is lead er of the AFL-CIO's Agricultural workers union. -,v -Mitfhpll riisrlnspil that there is a annd nossihilitv that the southern revolt may lead to a labor split below the Mason-Dixon line which would Wipe out the official AFL- CIO there after 75 years. specifically ne saia: -'.Uime of the union leaders want to work out a method of operation whiph will nprmit them tn live with the White Citizens'. Council move ment. This would involve a public statement by the president of the AFL-CIO to the effect that there ia rnnm fnp riisnpnt on the civil rights issue and that traditional procedure of the latror movement permits local, state and. national autonomy by affiliates on all issues. u i Mr, Labor, George Meany, Alf CIO president, will never issue a statement. Reoorta are that. quite to the contrary, he is ex ploring ways 01 Hgnung aoumern labor s cooperation witn me couu- pilc This is quite a job Meany has taken on. mere are ago woiie Citizens' Councils in 15 Southern states. .; They have 250,000 mem mem-Kara Kara mem-Kara a orpai number of them are labor members who, from time to time, have threatened w tnrow northern unionists out of .meetings tuhon thpv've ennp South to fight I the councils and push desegrega tion. ... Mitphpll in his resort sunmtttea nn Miroti i? full details nf which arc being made pumic nera ior the tu-st time, pinpointed uie nlonta uninns and cities in which he says the White Citizens' Coun cils have strong laoor support. Mitchell reponea: ... n I A 1 b I. M nn eirnungnani, n i a u a m workers employed in the steel mills of Fairfield, Tarrant City and Bessemer are the base of organi organization zation organization for the White Citizens Coun cil. There are two tactions ot ine 117V. U aa Pitivjant. rnuncila wine (sic) for support of the white trade, union members in mis large in t Mpmnhis. Tennessee, work ers employed in the Firestone rub ber plant, ine rora assemuiy luaw and the International Harvester i i: I A AnMBtifiita a JO., are oeueveu wj iuu,. -majority of the White Citizens' Councils ana tne pro-ouuiernci, nri. trip unit nf the White - Citizens' Councils is led by. a man long active in the traae umonsoi Tanhacop h U Robert A. Til- man, an international Typograph- TTninn mpmhpr OnCB a region al director for the Textile Workers Organizing Committee and mofe recently an active official of the T-t-t r onlolativa fnmmittrJe com- posed of AFL, CIO and BaUway Labor and, as sucn, was in the fight against ine work law in Tennessee" Mitchell ,a!?J ttrinir ni other unions whos members 'and officials are similarly acuve. mircneu wu Ciuues wiu Very utile new oriuiMu v. ... k, suppessfullv under- ."u' irh. snth hv either the sUffs of the AFL-CIO or those of tho national and internaUonal, unions in the face of the racial crisis. thorp has been lin iu uita 5. .... v.; I.W, natinnal lead- ers. They see we aiuim And-it's quite a thunderhead. They fr" u kl, ritrht nast Without noire ,r their finding themselves in the middle. " ipin mrVW nn,. fnnp.vear-old Samuel Junno received a 1-suiri uu" he asked, "Does that mean I have to wear n w tea pHi ' Dov.fi on the Farm -"-I;.- SamtTM af 1 i --rt rn w r 9- II jatai T -.' .- ... , IS -. v "W If -.-itt-GO-iiOUalt.) W i arij a aa-a--'"'' Fajnciful Tales By PETER EDS0N WASHINGTON fNEAl Fan ciful stories galore grew out of the meeting between President Eisen hower, President Ruiz Cortines of Mexico, Prime Minister St. Laur Laurent ent Laurent of Canada and their advisers at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. A Canadian paper printed a story that one purpose of the neighborly chat was to arrange- for employ ment of Mexican labor on the dew Line, the Distant Early Warning radar screen operated by the U.S U.S-and and U.S-and Canada in the Arctic. A Mexican paper, not to be out done, printed the rumor that the USf was going to propose Mexico lor. ruu memDersnip in norm At lantic Treaty Organization NATO. mo less fantastic.' though mak making ing making a lot more sense was the reply of a Canadian diplomat when asked what problems Canada and Mexico had n in common. '.'The United States," he replied. The final press-, briefings gave out that it was a most marvelous meeting. But now that the con conferees ferees conferees are all back home, they are no doubt trying to write themselves memoranda on what they accom plished. They're concluding. "Not much.", it. a.-s v .v--, : ,; ,:vs 'Announcement that Canada and Mexico will join the United States in giving more aid, to the free and independent new nations is be ing taken with -a large grain of salt. They probably won't give an another other another dinie, because they can't. It was Secretary of State John Foster Dulles who seems to have done most of the talking at White Sulphur. What he said was largely a reu nion of what, he has told U.S. congressional leaders and the Cab Cabinet inet Cabinet in private, and the American people over the air waves, about1 nis recent trip around the world. He is reported, to have 'added nothing new. v But he apparently made It clear, that he does not trust' the Rus Russians sians Russians any more than he ever did which is not at all; y His concern is greater than ever over possible future Russian moves in the Middle East and Commu nist Chinese moves in the ..Far East. A ., Though not mentioned openly, the U.S. internal political situation was made very eyident in the oacKground. ? ? To keep the larger, Internation International al International situation quiet until after U.S. elections are over, two steps were maoe -rather obvious, -v v. ' One "is the proposal made in the United Nations to send Secy. -Gen. Dag Hammarskjold to the Middle East. rti(.r-v- ,. The other is to keep the talks going witn tne Red Chinese mm isters at Geneva, Switzerland. As long as their sessions continue, there is less likelihood of an attack by Red China asainst Ouemov and Matsu, as the first phase of a larger attack against Fnrmnsa President Eisenhower seems to have made his usual excellent im pression on evervnne with his sin ceritv and hich ideals. .xn addition to carrvimr nn his correspondence with Soviet Pre mier tiuigamn, President Eisen Eisenhower hower Eisenhower will have other nnnnrtunitiea to win international friends and influence the people of other free nations in coming months. v rnme Minister Nehru of India is comina. Sn is Prpsirlant Saa. karno of Indonesia whether the Dutch approve or not. ? ; These meetings will give Ike his chance to create a good, friendly atmosnhere .. for fntnra nndpp. standings twith Jawaharlal and Achmed rr if they get, on first- It is being suggested," however, that these sessions should not be neia at White Sulphur Springs Hotel SWtes-at 1250 a dav nlua. a liquor supply might be a little too lush -ior 'these new demopratip leaders of their people even mouan tne u.s. picgs up ail the i-iiei-Ks ana pays raveung expenses to boot. Besides, they're both pro- oioiuonists. Waller Winchell In NeivYora THE WIRE BROADWAY-HOLLYWOOD AT j ' II 1 Celebs About Town; Frank Sina-I tra; No. 1 : girl-dater (on both coasts), and his tamer. Lovely Peggy Connelly. .Josephine Pre- mice, one of the major attractions in '"Mister' Johnson." displaying a 76-diamond wrist-watch. The gift of millionaire. George "Grief, the caf dealer. .Oleg Cassini and Jimmy Roosevelt's dghtrv .D. Garroway and his betrothed, Pam ela Wilde, whose chums suspect they will make it a Paris wedding. They are booked to sail June 22. . .Jane Wymkn and Gayle Smith her first seriou teaumance in years. .Alfred Hitchcock, excited over his almost-ready ""Wrong Man" movie. "I'm a producer of gooseflesh" Xunt & Fon Fon-tanne, tanne, Fon-tanne, the stars of "The Great Sebastians." Their 26th hit. .Joan Crawford, who .has a trick for keeping that figure: Sips a table spoon of cider-vinegar (mixed with aqua) between' breakfast and dinner. Then eats all she wants. Sallies In Our Alley: Some wags were discussing the report that Zsa-Zsa would wed Hal Hayes. .' "I wonder," wondered a lad, "what Rubirosa wUl do now?" ."Prob ably," chuckled another, "remove the ear plugs" .Overheard: "How long do you think 'My Fair Lady will run?" ."Till it's a very old woman." ; .; Show Business Is Like This, o Duncan Sisters are so unhappy about Ben Hecht's movie story (of their history) they are seeing law yers. Claim it is packed with li bels about friends, etc. .Hitch .Hitchcock cock .Hitchcock is giving Vera Miles a buildup. Vera, whose legs helped k.. w.!!.:. u ..... I ca vrui m uauiuig ucauijr vuiucai, must not pose for cheesecake, v Marlon Brando shops for newcom ers. Saw Jean Hill m a drug store and signed her for his "To Tame a Land" which he will produce . .Man Blanchard's current Mex Mex-appeal appeal Mex-appeal is Tony Aguilar, .Sidney Chaplin has forgotten Joan Col Collins, lins, Collins, his one-time fLSme. She can blame it on Carol Alexander Jack (Variety) Hellman's report: Trendex gets its ratings (on your favonte teeveu shows) 'by only 700 phone calls in 15 cities. .Nielsen gets its arithmetic from only 900 gadgets! Hollywood Vignette: Movie stai John (Duke) Wayne was doing the corridor-pacirg-bit at the hos hospital pital hospital the other day. .A nurse approached' him smiling. ."Mr jWayne,'' sha saiA, "I am sur you would want to meet a nam uttie boy. ." wayne gave ner large hug, yelling: "Wowee!" 4 "I meant to a4d," was the post script, ne s too sny to asK cor your autograph!" .Mrs. Wayne presented him with a girl. Times Square -Circle: Despite the rave reviews in Boston, "The Most Happy Fella" musical lu al altering tering altering the entire 1st act .That show cost backers tha highest share price in show-biz history $6000 per unit ."Diary of Anne Frank," longest-running dramatic hit in town, hasn't paid backers Too: The Godfrey Talent scouts theu. investment yet. '."Goodbye may be interested in a rhythral Again," starring Donald Cook, will singing group called The Four Pals. .They have a hot platter named "No One Ever Loved Me" . .It is their first recording. It is No. 5 on Cash Box mag's 'ten top tunes in the 'rhythm & blues category ... The Four Pals can be found at the Composer on West 58th Street Not as the headlin es or even an act .-.They are waiting on tables there. .'.Waiting for a break. a Midnlghter: challenge Broadway without trying its wings out-of-town. Opens at the Helen Hayes April 24th. .Song .Song-writers writers .Song-writers Vernon Duke and Irving Caesar are feuding over wordage in the Gershwin biography. .Stan Kenton's band is definitely booked for tne Monaco merger. They'll fly from London. .mine Mahoney busty baton-twirler with the circus was a Copa .eiggie-gel 3 year, ago ; Movie Starlet Novelet: The love ly leading lady in Comanche is Linda Crista! of Buenos Aires. The She is 23. Jler parents perished in a motor car crash when she was-a very little girL : .She has been acting in Mexican-made films for the past 5 years. .When Carl K r u e g e r, producer director of "Comanche," made it known (in Mexico! that ha p.tln Linda showed up with about 400 omen. .mere are no agents in Mexico. .It's sort of aeainst the law. .Her Latin beanty, figure ana ouier iitnouies won ner the lead. .The next problem was teaching her English. Shn panoht on fast. .When Krueger started a 1 : a a tauung salary, unda's first query was. w no gonna pay my taxes?" Broadway Owl: The society pag es are now excited about Rubirosa 's new love in Fla., which we tipped on the air weeks ago. "Masauer- ade Party" producer Herbert Wolf ana tne Mra. are apart v .Gina Lollobrigida's photographers have to shoot up on Gina when taking full-length shots Because her legs are too short for her frame. (They don't have to do that for Gary rVlnrwrl "Rlrin tnr Ap)U wu.. a iuip ivi nvuvii paid 12,500 for the almost-block long sign on the Winter Garden . .Ole Olson. 62, will marry Ellen O'Dare, 29, when his melting is final. .The new chune, "To Love Again," is oof'ly reminiscent of uwpin s BU M Nocturne. Xast minute decision to include "Is A Puzzlement" (as a production number-in "King and l")v cost 20th century-rox an extra $300,000. Jackie Gleason's snapper when asked what he thawt of Como "It's a beautiful lake in Italy." Sounds In the Night: At Chas- en's "The movie business is a very great industry despite the great number of idiots who run it" .At Dubrow's: "It's over when she starts calling you darling instead of sweetheart" .At Mc Carthy's Steak House: "Chomming chap. He'd do anything to a friend" .At McGinnis': "You know her type. A little ciddyot . t the Boulevard: "Apparent ly a new oeiiniuon of a Commy is a guy who's willing to share everything but taxes!" " FANCY BASTILLE BLAIR, Neb. (UP) The city jail here boasts one distinc distinction. tion. distinction. City officials believe It is the only jail in the country furnished in knotty pine. KANSAS CITY I dropped into ine omce ot riarry Truman in the Federal Reserve BuiWine the oth er day. He was busy clearing his desk of a big pile of correspond correspondence, ence, correspondence, v. .. .,' ,. r "My wife 'says that if I'd keep my mouth shut I wouldn't get so much -mail,!' he remarked, "and i guess sne s ngnt.;' The ex-President was in wonder ful spunts. We talked about a lot of things, from Margaret to his old critic, Roy Roberts of the Kan sas City Star, to the tense situa tion in the Near East and how war could be avoided'' Boy Roberts, we both agreed, seemed to be mellowing since he married the widow of Truman's former press secretary, Charlie Ross,-- .. r -. -,..'"'.....-.. "He even gave Margaret a nice write-up this morning," said Mr. Truman. "I read jt and wept a little. Of course, her mother and I think that anything Margaret does is all rights .-r "I can't claim much credit,"- he continued.. "What really matters is a child's mother. And Margaret has a mother with about the finest character any girl could possibly have."- : UNNECESSARY RACE TENSION The rnnversatinn turned to na tional problems. The ex-President was careful not to criticze his suc cessor in the White House, but he had definite ideas on tne way some things were drifting, among them race relations, i v ; "We're going through a period similar to that before the Civil War," he said. "We didnt have to have a civil war. But Buchanan, Pnlk and Fillmore couldn't make up their minds on a firm policy. If Andrew Jackson had been in power he would have stopped nui nui-lification lification nui-lification before it e v e r. got started. ?-'-.-' ?, .'.-i-1 "My mother was unreconstruct unreconstructed,?' ed,?' unreconstructed,?' he said. "She never got over the Civil War. She told my brother before she came to see me in Washington: t '" " 'If Harry asks me to sieep m Abraham -Lmcoln's bed, I'll sleep on the floor.' "But a lot of people like her who still live in our pari of Mis souri know that tney ve got w give -Negro children a chance. The Nacrm has pot to have economic equality, and you can't get eco nomic equality WlWOUl equamj w u.Atirm V i. ..'.-)f, ;-'V-':.' .,7'J:. '"" - ,"Lots of progress in that direc tion had been maoe in Arajisn, Kentucky, North Caroima- even Texas and Louisianauntil Strom Thurmond and hir. boys',? came along and whipped things upvAll this bitterness didnt have to hap pen. It could nave oeen. vic vic-vented. vented. vic-vented. Sijii ju-,y..vtSu: .i3 ,: ARAB ISRAEt SITUATION Mr Tmman touched briefly on a great many subjects. nn vnn think war is inevitable in the Near East?" .i "No, but there u one great aan aan-..,jinsm ..,jinsm aan-..,jinsm here in --the corner of the Mediterranean." Mr. Truman reached over to a giani'.gwue alongside his desk. Tha Russiana are after this 400,000,000,000 barrels of oil- 70 per cent of all the oil In the world I-down here in Arabia. That why ,u sinan arms to ECVDt. That's the reason for the trouble in the Near East ; "But," he said, Vwe ceuiq nave outmaneuvered the Russians with my development plan." . I had forgotten about his develop development ment development plan and asked for details, the ex-President really became en enthusiastic. thusiastic. enthusiastic. i ; .-. "First," he said, "t would siphon water from the Mediterranean into the Dead Sea-dig' a ditch across. c. 1. -1 vnn feet lower ino icau ovi u than the Mediterranean, and the rush of that water proppm, a,w feet would supply electric power for all the industries you needed. 'T would make Israel the indus industrial trial industrial country of the Near East, then let the Arabs raise the crops to feed : Israel and themselves. They re cousins. They don't hsva" to fight. This, could be one of the -breadbaskets of the world.? ; ONETIME GARDEN OF EDEN He pointed to the gloLe again. "Over here in Iran." he said, "was once the Garden cf Eden before Tamerlane came in and : destroyed the irrigation system of the Tigris and the Euphrates. Wev could rebuilt it. The people who have lived here since have fol-' -lowed the Kismet doctrine that, things will take care of them themselves. selves. themselves. We're not that way. We can rebuild. "I sent old man Bennett out tm Ethiopia," Mr. Truman : referred, to the director of his Point 4 pro program. gram. program. "And he made survey which showed that up on this' 12,000-foot plateau two crops of wheat could be grown a year enough to feed 100.000.000 extra people-ienough to cut out starve- tlOn. "T !.. T-.-'v- "So with Israel supplying the industry, and Ethiopia and Iran. supplying the food, yotr bring a n sound economy and cooperation and peace back to this part of prevent war. v ; rv; v "There are all sorts vt oddot. tunities- in the world to build for peace," Mr. Truman continued a little wistfully, as if he regret regretted ted regretted not having the chance to build them. ',..;..' v f-w i- "I made some surveys when I was in the White House. Down .' here in Africa are the great Zam- :1 bezl falls just waiting to be har-v nessed. That's the way to stop 4 communism in Africa. Over here c in; the Andes is Lake. Titicaca. Its power is wasted. I made an offer to Chile and Peru that if they ; would give Bolivia an outlet on v the sea, we would, harness the the-power power the-power of Lake Titicaca and use it to run all the mines of Pern, and -Chile. They wouldn't do it, but they will some day. ; "Down here on the Parana mv- er in South Anferica are two falls that could supply power tot thit ",' enure area, ; "And there's another r proposal I made, to internationalize the Danube make a great seaway from the Baltic down to the Black Sea put it nrnder the United ,Na- tions as a great stabilizer for '. peace. I would have done the same thing with the Sues Canal and with the Panama Canal put them under the United Nations. -That's v ; the way peace is built showing ,' -people how they can work to to-gether." gether." to-gether." Jflr, Truman's voice had the en en-thusiasm, thusiasm, en-thusiasm, the vibrant quality ef a -man whose most important work was unfinished. : ,, if.JtT 1 HERSELF NOW-Pretty Peg Peggy gy Peggy King, the singer who has , often been mistaken for Judy Garland, is escaping the "Sec "Second ond "Second Judy Garland" tag. And she's happy about it, saying the .tag "made me a has-been before I was a been." She's now in : high gear as Peggy King. Chow Call Answer to Previous Puzzle : ACROSS I and eggs 4 Asterisk. I Wheat 12 Malt beverage 13 Dinner 14 Bread spread 15 Radish color 16 Siened briefly ia n.ki. .ami waiiia lnS0ndeS.Cnded iuipment 4V 41UI caCIl BOOT)! P g enougn S Doctors -4 Serve scantily v 3 fork part Photograph Photograph-developer developer Photograph-developer 7 Soak flax (Horned ruminants' 9 Girl's name ow Kioit.ifaii' i?i..;n UA. o 5. A l K f ot'TTi1 iL-l ATTAR l aki NTF 1 1 TlEp w A Jj J'-fjJ i igiit z t z ptr " fO R D A T N -J?M2.. n t 7T1 i.z"ii.''Eo,'-i"" t o b T Ki" u eJt 'm : -T." n A Tt-;-. ;iou siMtw "High wind .! S u 23 Cupolas 41 AeiepMuua Prt 26 Narrow --?.pen.,ng 26KUled u neaitn resort 30 Bony 32 Man's title 27 Abnormally 41 Muddle -marked . 17P.ii. ...n.t 17 Dye lngredient28 French father 43 German title 29 War god of Greece 24 Prescribed 31 Dress i amount 33 Gaze flxedly 25 Goddess r 38 Annoyed 40 Lure 44 Therefore . 46 Notorious Miss Gwyn 47 Roster 48 Mulligan 30Here(Fr. 35 Whole .' 36 Worni 37 Asparagus 39 Eras 40Eat 41 Supply with weapons 42 Thin 45 Makes beloved 49 Saw f 51 Small child 52 Jason's ship 53 Prison room 54 Follower 55 New York city 56 Unoccupied 57 Crow's call DOWN 1 Kind of sauce 2 Toward the sheltered tide ... Ii B I h p Jo 0 I la Jy Ikj Jii1 r- : rzz a h r3 "" 7" 3 "r -:::::::: r-- ---3 Memos of 't V ) TCI S!) AY, APKH 19, 19'l THE PANAMA AMIRIC1N AN. INDEPEXDEXT DAILY NEWSPAPER Solon Raps GOP 'Do Nothing' Charge, Praises Record Under Democrat Rule ' W A STttNfiTf) N Anril 1ft TPi ' senate democratic Leader Lyndon ' jB. Johnson, hitting back at GOP i V"do-nothing charges, declared to to-iday iday to-iday the Senate has worked harder (this year than it ever did under H-the Republicans. -''V .j Shortly after the House and - j Senate ended a 10-day Easter re re-,i ,i re-,i cess, Johnson issued a detailed statement showing the Senate had passed 423 pieces of legisla- luon tnrougn taarcn 31. Johnson said this year's record parable period of 1948, 'comparea wnn m diiis aciea on in comparable time by the GOP- i controlled 1954 Senate, and 301 during the 1948 second session of he 80th Congress denounced by Jiormer resident Truman "do-nothing" session. and not private bills or resolu tions. "To make this record, belaid, "the Senate' has worked harder, as measured by hours in session, than it worked when the Bepubli cans were in charge of Congress.' : Before the recess, be said, the Senate had been in session 355 hours. The, score was only S04 hours in session during the first three months of 1954, be said, and i only 227 hours during the com- ; THEY SEEK WAMPUM, NOT SCALPS-CWcago's been invaded by Indians. Qiief Stripe in Sky, left, and uuei bwutwina terra up smoKe signals as an -bus caning lor conations 10, the Windy-City's annual Red Cross fund appeal, Little Iron Moccasin gives the beat for the genuine ail-American enterprise. ; .".;'i.-v.'; .: ''i. T": --. FiveS Drovri As Marine Instructor Into Dense Swamp PARfclS ISLAND, S.C April 10 (UP) Five Marines drowned In a dense tidal swamp border wr tnis island "Doot camp sun sun-day day sun-day night and a sixth was still missing today after a drill in structor marched a platoon '' of recruits into the ragged area, apparently discipline-tn em, The drill Instructor, Staff Sgt Matthew C. McKeon, 31, a Ko rean veteran of Worcester. Mass.. . was placed, in custody "pending The nnaings of a court of inqui- The bodies of five "of the re recruit cruit recruit were nulled from the swamp yesterday and an all out search was pushed for to sixth. All five were drowned, f Names ; of the;, victims were withheld pending : notification of next of Kin. : -v Gen. Randolph pate, com commandant mandant commandant of the Marine Corps, Mm i Aiiniyersiry Marked By Msssp Froni Pfesljppbs : CrP8J FS,1 dep0 ?ubl, ionines President Ttamon Mawey- th ISTth Pl8 continued '.'close col, Hit ,?,h.t:1m,&,?.J?.e. twa.m laboration" with the United States Z"? u"i "''.."riyesterday in a message to Presi JS,- 1 Ulftaimi a' dent Eisenhower on the occasion 'wood added that i'lnstouctorsk JJJ of fU often rout their 'platoons out atl" ""n 't. i Xfl?Z?ri?nn?K V Tor the fist time since the fall ?TJ&S-:i:. the peninsula. April 9, 1942; the - -rw-.-M w- -nuiwareorif was. AheorvsVl ft -special holiday in homage to the "shining symbol ;ot courage ana heroism." : 5 ; Both Houses beld r e g 1 1 a r meetings at noon, yesterday and are expected to get dowa to, work en major legislation short shortly. ly. shortly. The compromise farm bill, hammered out by a House House-Senate Senate House-Senate conference committee during the recess, is scheduled for final House aad Senate ac action tion action tomorrow. v ... Other major issues still a waiting! action include appropriations, for foreign eign foreign aide social security, high ways, school aid, bousing, postal rates", and health, immigration and civu ngms measures. Johnson,; speaking as chairman of the Senate Democratic Policy Committee, said that of the 423 measures acted upon by the Sen- ! ate so far this year. 127 w e r e general legislative measures' one-minute The men were in the "fourth flew here to take personal charge U1. of the investigation. -1 "v.u"c- "considerable confusion! in the darkness of the swamp and it was not until, the platoon strai,'- eled out at fthAut a n.m that it was realized anyone was misslnc. iFUininos Joined in" Wood, said al men .failed to silent prayer this afternoon for the answer roll call when the nla-ltfcnnn4 hn n Rataan. be- toon returned. : rnr it fell to the Japanese invad ers..,, :-v-:y The celebrations were ; hem m the platoon of 70 men feU -rot fSSJ'S Z. forthe march.-- -y iSiK VJV" 1 , However, one of the 11 had remained In the barracks when 'Sir Loin Lauded By Beef Council KANSAS CITY, Mo., April 10 (UP) The National Beef Council announced today it is awarding a special plaque to Sir Cutbbert De- Houghton of Lancashire, England at wnose nome, tne council said, "sirloin of beef" was named. "Nearly 350 years ago, the coun council cil council said. King James I visited Houghton Castle and, being parti cularly impressed witn the quali quality ty quality of the beef cut, drew his sword and in a jovial mood said,' "I knight thee Sir Loin." BIBLI QUIZ ADRIAN, Mich. -(UP) Hudson and Waldron, two southern Mich igan communities, have come nip witn a new kind of competition. The communities select five-mem ber teams which compete in Bible quizzes. ; '; v. THESE FEW LITTLE FAULTS CAUSE WIVES' UNHAPPINESSi Judging from the letters that nave come to this column through the years, the gravest faults of husbands, so far as their wives are concerned, are these: 3 : i He never shows, any apprecia- - tion." -?, ."'.,.:v ';V fsJ : Apparently many husbands don't realize, thai the work of f wife and mother is -paid fox uk appre appreciation ciation appreciation or she gets no pay". "He never talks to me. but comes borne in the evening and reads or watches ; TV' until bedtime. When I try to talk to-him he acts an annoyed noyed annoyed or mumbles replies : that show he basn't really beard what I've. bees saying. "V -: MM.... l. 1 i mice more were jusicomin? up the road when the Toll call was completed and another saw the lights of searchers and was rescued about 11 p.m., leaving six unaccounted for," Wood said. Wood said McKeon was a vet veteran eran veteran of the Korean War and had been a service man for 11 years. He Joined the Navy in 1945, transferring to the Marine Corps two years later. He had been a junior drill Instructor. here sinte last December. Parrls Island, wliome 10,000 men, is one of the two largest recruit training depots operated by the Marine Corps. -? : t The other is at San Diego, Calif. J ; ; All Marine recruits from east of the Mississippi River eo through "boot canjp here. Magsaysay, however, expressed th hnne todav that "emDoranr" differences between ine rnuip- pines and the United States would be no barrier to continuing inejiu inejiu-ship ship inejiu-ship between the two countries. HI-FI i s Qnwqirisill It's Big -T-IPs Grand It's Only Once A Year! Our GRAND ANNUAL SALE MOTTA S PANAMA ONLY Scout News The recent Executive Board meeting of the international Bov Rrnnts of the rnnnl 7nn held at the Rainbow city scout snacx, appointed Everaid B. Walker as district commissioner for the Atlantic District, suc succeeding ceeding succeeding Romeo O. Miller, .. who resigned the position for person personal al personal reasons. .' Walker, former Netirhhnrhnnrf Commissioner for Camp Bierd, received tne unanimous support of; the members attending the meeting. ''! Other highlights included the presentation, and discussion of Boy Scout Week program, sched scheduled uled scheduled for AM-!! 22 tn 58. TaHnr place during the ninth anniver- asrjr w uie organizauon," tne program begins on Sunday, A A-Drll Drll A-Drll 22. with the vartnn nnlfa nt the organization attending di- tuic service as meir respective Places of worshln- nln inn .r- cial arrangement that mav k. made for combined religious ac- uriuca. ... .:- ,. v In addition to the holding of the Annua Cubareer the tiro- gram ends April 28 with a " Scouts Field Day on both sides of the Isthmus, possibly at the Rainbow City playground and the Paraiso Ball Park.- President Ellis L. Fawcett, in closing the meeting announced that Guthrie F. Crowe, U.S. Dis District trict District Judge of the Canal Zone, has consented to address the At Atlantic lantic Atlantic side Boy Scouts at a pro pro-trram trram pro-trram slated to h. hM R,a,n'0w City gymnasium, April Members and rinrf f u. organization are Invited. THEY WMI WRONG NKW BRITATV rk. ttt -.......u xviuiuim iyncn re retired tired retired from the Connecticut Light 4 pw,?' c- Shears after he was feUed by a high voltage line and pronounced dead bv, three doctors.: 1 f U COLPAN Reconditioned V f t Qoof I T COLPAN Safefv Checked 11 "7 f I COLPAN Guaranteed I J Jjj li 7 COLPAN Priced to sell S,-7! sa .- ii ""er.r i i WlED CAB LOTS ON AUTO ROW! 446 f AZXtJr-' JLU4W Colon 1 "GARRARD! RECORD CHANGERS 25 & 60 cycles No. 1 Via Espafia . TeL S-0383 Men need peace and quiet after day of dealing with people. But a wife who has stayed home all day and whose conversation -has been limited to talking to youngsters needs the mental stimulus of adult conversation,- If a husbend would give his wife his full attention for even a .half hour's conversation after dinner she would probably, be glad to let him have, his peace and quiet ior ine resi 01 ine evening. IHnnev Differences Cause Problems "He is stingy about money. A wife who devotes her full time to being a housekeeper,' wile and mother should be her husband's money equal.. She shouldn't have to wheedle- or complain to get the money she needs. She should have an equal say-with her husband in how the family income should be 'larigeteoVif "' "He is always flirting with other Women and it embarrasses me." - Husbands who enjoy making their wives t Jealous arent- grown-up enouch emotionally to be husbands. No wonder their wives are ashamed of them.' J "He is slovenly about his person and his clothes." . 1 . Women are always told that they must be neat, well-groomed and make the most of their .looks if they expect to hold their bus bus-bands', bands', bus-bands', love. But some husbands don't see thaf the rule works two ways. A wife is no prouder of a slovenly husband than a husband is of a dowdy,- carelessly groomed H O O 'Ihs Voice of Ihs l$lhau$" V V ; pre$cnl$ : J ; 'PANAMA'S NEW -. "KEYBOARD ARTIST Playing simultaneously the HOXO Hammond Organ 4 1 $teinWay Piano .Twice Daily 1:30 P.M.&7;15P.M wife. To men these may not seem like major faults. But they are the kind ef faults that women cant laugh off. - v is :t- ; 760 Kcs. '! V I r" MAKE FRIENDS ? : i ',:'.. '' '',''5 l.ymr 'A IT k simple to teach a boy to say "Yes, sir" and "No, sir when be is 'speaking to his father and other men. And it isn't an .empty social courtesy. , Chii'hen who have been taughl to trial adults with special 'cur tesy vsually have more respect lor adu't than children wtu ae . i .i .i i-j ,.K:..;nM 'ONLYl'SltVER: V 5!-' ... t ,.L- ,ll'h1t -i il'. & J M. ,t ( -" fj itf1 3 Uil f ) 1 Gives You 6-Year Guaranteed Service at an Economy Price , ; The Battery of the Year Available Hunnicutl Export Compania; S. A. ' .Tel. Colfin 43 FREE 2 0 N E . COLON, R. P.- -' T V PAA'S two for one vacation trip to KINGSTON and MIAMI V -i far man Jfnfonmhon tliummet.tr Visit tin twi most famous winter raurtt la thi CarlbbHa. Colonial Kingston with. Its superb, climate white torsi btachu,., "lysttrious Caljptt music ,' IIASI, plsy-gmin' ef the Americas golf, fishing, water skiing, hone rices only minutes from fabulous hotels and world famous stores, Flights every onday, Wednesday and Friday. Leave at a comfortable 11:45 la the morning, arriving it Kingston at 1:00 la the afternoon In time for ewlm. The plane continues to Blami, arriving it l:2t p. m. s i Only J-i one way . Only $171 round trip ti M Panama: I Street No. 5, Tel. 2-0670; Colon: Solas Bldg, Tel. 1097 xt-w.sj.m.KiN.Mi ..WNV.V.V.V.V.v ..A n tad a cireunuarantor anl a diirara of th planeury ucecta, a Ud table and a nocturnaL Mad by an Entliihnun, Honphray Col,- it Slued with one of the greatest of tfl Entltthmen, Sir Franca DraVe. And it tho told th time within half aa hour or to.' (ReproAictJ by courtttf ef the Thatm of Iht National Marltim .. Mmtum, GrttwmcM, Eafland.) V J t .' ( : .i . S 1 V r V SW'f S. ';'.!. ' .. ., 'l !: I H 'ir'. ; Round '. the world m v j with' ", !i J'JJ Francis Drake? . f When Elizabeth I was on the throne of England and English sea-power was at its height, this dial was buccaneer-' ing th seas with Sir Francis Drake. It was probably with him when, in 1577, he laid course by Morocco and the Cape Verde islands and set out to sail around -the world. f Nearly four hundred years were to i pass before the Rolcx Datejust made its i r-. appearance; but th analogy between Drake's dial and the Datejust b not so 'far-fetched a it may teem. For Rolex watches, too, have quite a naval tradi tion. They've been used, for instance, for destroyer navigation when the ship's chronometer was destroyed and once, even, for timing a flotilla attack in the -Far East But they've also served with distinction in quieter roles; served with such un unvaried varied unvaried accuracy as to make their name a byword. And top of all Rolez watches we can put the Datejust perfectly waterproofed by the Oyster case, powered by the silent, efficient Rolex Perpetual self-winding "Rotor," it shows the date -automatically in a neat, clear window oa the dial Of all great Rolex watches, the ". Datejust is the latest and the greatest ", ) so far, at least .. A landmark in the history of '- ;- time measurement - i - - p . t t, - i H LaUM aed treawrt etOm Beta triumph,, the Diteju k waurproof, thank to the Oyaur can, and talf talf-windina, windina, talf-windina, thanka to th patametf Kate PtrpKtul "Bear." Moaover, th date appcut automatkallr and clearly hi a tat wmdow e th face. Accurate? Of counal Th wliuaat accuracy; Botox ccaracy. And th loin Kad Seal? It b s ) that th watch M which H h attached haa baa tauad ey aa Official TwUni Suuoa of the Swat , Govarnawm. hai bam twirtled H, own Ofhciil Timim Cartinclla, aad th ttUe of chraaoamar. All DaU)uiu carry the Bola Bad SaaL v) 7.m ; THG DUTY i PKCG WATCH CENTER , CTClOl 161 CENTRAL AVENUE PANAMA f ACE F011 TEE FAAAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILI XttTSrAriK TCESDAT. Arr.IL llVA. llY Firing Of 5th Ancnttaent Prof. i WASHINGTON, April 10 (UP)-i The Supreme Court u i H ruling lesterday itruck down a New Vork City lar under which pub pub-lie lie pub-lie employes were automatically fjed for refusing to answer ques questions tions questions about Communism. J The majority held that New York school authorities violated the constitutional rights of Brooklyn College professor who fast his job after taking refuge in the Fifth Amendment at a con gressional hearing. The oninion. which could have far-reaching implications, 'strong ly condemned "the practice of in uting a sinister meaning" to the ose of the amendment against self- incrimination. 1$ said this' jprivilege "would jr ACQ3T cm ttxcn ' By OSWALD JACOBY Written for NBA Service WEST VKQIOIH AQ4 NOKTH It AKIOIS JAJ AJJ 711 BAST A 7 V7ISJ Q10J5 . 4J1098 soimt d: AQJM$ V S - K K5S -, Neither aid nil. rata Weat Nertit Eaat I) 8 34 Pass Ik Pass Pass Pass Opening lead V K The. problem in today's hand is to void loss -of a diamond and three clubs. If South plays the hand "normally," by taking a dia diamond mond diamond finesse, he will lose to the queen. Then a club will come back from the East hand, and the defenders will rattle off three club tricks to defeat the contract. South can avoid this horrible fate by a foolproof method of play. See if you can spot the right line, i Declarer should win the first trick in dummy with ace of Vurts, draw two trumps, cash the' Ving' and ace of diamonds, and thrnMead the lack nf hearts from dummv. South throws his last vHa-iof mowl on this trick, allowing est to win. ... West can now do nothing to de defeat, feat, defeat, the contract. i;.' .''v,a' If West has one mora diamond and,' leads it, South will ruff. De Declarer clarer Declarer can then get to dummy with a tfump in order to discard on - dummy's last diamond (which will then; be good). If .West has both el the missing diamonds, he cannot afford to lead the 'queen. If West leads the ten of diamonds, dummy, puts up the jack. In short, West cannot afford to lead a diamond whether he has one or both, i ,1 Ajy return except a diamond makes matters easier for South. If West leads a club, South is sure to win a trick with the king. And if West leads a heart, dummy ruffs, while South discards a club. be reduced to a hollow mockery" if it is regarded "as equivalent either to a confession of guilt or . a presumption of perjury." - The test ease stemmed from the 1952 dismissal of Harry Slochow er, a language professor at the city-operated Brooklyn College for 27 years. The New York Court of Appeals upheld the ouster. Slochower was one of 14 teach ers questioned by the Senate In ternal Security subcommittee when Jt was headed by former Sen. Homer' Ferguson (R-Mich), now a member-of the U.S. Court of Military Appeals. All H were fired.- Slochower testified that he was not a Communist at the time of the hearing but declined under the Fifth Amendment to say whether he had been a party member in 1941 and 1942. ... lie was dismissed under a sec tion of the New York City Char ter which provides for dismissal of any public employe who refuses to answer questions about his official conduct. The High-Court declaredJhis provision unconstitutional. The majority opinion was writ ten by Justice Tom C Clark Dissenters were Justices Stanley r. need, Harold H. Burton, Sher man Mutton and John M. Harlam. Soviet Geneticist, Apple Of Stalin's Eye, Gets Heave-Ho LONDON, April 10 (UP) -'Rus- sia today announced the "retire ment"' of aeneticist T.'D. Lysen- ko who became the apple of Jo Joseph seph Joseph Stalin's eye when he pro proclaimed claimed proclaimed that the laws of heredity conform to the Communist, party line. ... f Radio Moscow said the (7-year- old scientist was- relieved "at his own request" of his post as presi president dent president of the Academy of Agricul ture Sciences. Deputy Premier P. P. Lobanov resigned his job to succeed Lysenko. .- v Agriculture Mmister Vladimir Matskovich, who headed a Soviet farm delegation to the U n i t e d States last year, was named to succeed Lobanov in the deputy pre- premiership. ; i Lysenicos retirement apparent ly means a shakeup in Soviet a gricultural policy, which was roundly criticized by the commu nist party congress at which the Stalin myth- was shattered. Lvsenko had long been a favo rite of the late Premier. His theo ries' directlv allenged the laws heredity -r aimed by Gregor Mendel, a.;.i .dSM'n scientists who disagreed were banished. Lysenko's fall from favor was forecast when Soviet scientists re reported ported reported that the late scientist Ni Nikolai kolai Nikolai Vavilow, who disputed Ly Lysenko senko Lysenko and was disgraced, had been posthumously forgiven." (Curses True Life Adventures T5 fiKIN WSTXVtV TO RESEMBLE A 6.V0JEH7- c&fiszw kock,tu& Japanese -f vi"""' OMKFt 1 OMAKlS, (OR LIES MOTIONLESS At THE SEA BOTTOM TILL. ITS PREY SWIMS V01THIN t?EAM. i35jh- SKIN-LIKE FLAPS WELR5 JJ L, .iTQTgia.THE yicnMS. qj Tui i thc Carpet Smakw: UvVl USES UIU .TO COMPENSATE FOR LACK OP CPE6R ? INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP) A convoy of Army vehicles stopped at a local filling station for gas while passing through the city. The drivers told the attendant the man with the credit cards would be alone shortly to take care of the bill. The hired attendant sweated it out until a sergeant came along half a day later to pay tor tne MO gallons of fuel. NJ I v ; t...u - rzZZY A.3 TZ3 fOATEs Hj urOSGS KXKPE3 5 AWAY. W LOST (NTECEST IN XX'K L A CASES. rr 4 r KV-BCbS TMI5 i 4 MAXES MY THECy UXX PKETTy SOCP, HAVCC, COUP H-BUT IT fCSSH'J CHECK HIM OUT AS AN 5P1CNASE A5ENT TEUey' RE U rWi'NA 4 50 VE iSET CUS30US II HAVE A STSAIwE AaAiN V.EH V HIT f TA1ENT KK C-ET- INTO THE MC5T WORffiP COK-VEKSATIONf. J :tuea axd exs rzi:: Sodden Change. KZKS3X fctOSSIi J-,- ",-lL wT3 NowS The lVe 6em oesEHViMfi Tfe Aovewwe determine so riht, WAY TMeSC ism. VT j WeM6. SIR .' Ive rtl$ YOU AROUNP, LAOOIE JV2i U, ,?.E.ii- TT pA',;.vr0VER" saABsswaWsis!s,,11l,1,,,,,,1V -t nTejct time t MeeroNB OF THEM DM GONNA j PLOW MY S7ACK.O-- L I MAPfc US HE( lATs FHC J ALLTt OCT The dhase f T. HA MIDI ANYWAY, - s j r 'aOXovc this b any L HESSTEAUN1 THBrwR to nirt 7rTl-Sv AND ASK ki 'AT WJTCILE.STW M anyway,. ss M 7nT VKV GIT CONT FkSGEK TIME TOfilOP' OueSTIONG.., fiOlM'. LENA. GAL' GO FROM 'HEAR' BOOTS AND CXIt B'JDDOS Hard At It SI C3QAA MAKTU "Sorry, but you'll have to catch the next umbrella!" ' i 1 1 1 i ii 1. 1 SESGEANT WAS LATE fof Qfllg PhWff) Pbillp'a lite Is filled with bruises, ffefl-worn steps and mgs tw oaea.' Kepaira would lem his homo likt new. A. CUsaifleds. fwt the right ela XSX STORI OF MARTHA WAX Going Back J I levw.iTOLOwe Vmo wet.' "L-l MoncewErce Ihowmany - N3 TO HAVE A8AW.WB S.TWES 00 " (NkNTSUSTOCOMBTO CBTTE5-)! Hf ' vw.rCw vujrpoeVTOTBa . a WtEK, IWim ... .j 4L I pleash cwN.'rrs sew ovfiz tw teaks Bwce nouAre ceN wk.wv tm SeNDMS US UONEY.THaTS MOW rVB MADE INOS MEET. Id! By WILSON SCB0GO8 r strs a wowjEmtT' senows money, w7 pi vjjw(f- MB M.T."rt- WW- ...... Ixjs.ift b, NtA Snl4c. T.M. Reg. U.3. Prt WT. 1. CATTAIN Mil I Rescue! Bt LESUI TVKNCB ; I JUfWlNlS U BLUt" BLAZE) 1 I IT HER CAR I OCOURSEl 4 t '7 PERSON, r OONT SMtT MUST K LOADEtK FEELTHf I I COllCOUtO vws- VACATION I till jri0 m-"" I VII It r 1 uiumiI J HP'4 DRUSfiED -X VI OR KWOCKCP OUT'. V JA i i LUCKY W WINPPW& I .- l.TT JLOWEP'W AT6(r. tuukim w. v. i V X A 3-4 i 1 t :.. iinla. T.M. u.. t IX tBist fLt.A-s rop Wrong Party By AL TtJRMEEB tYto oive our littu fr' 4 aJ3'' Hpoor LITTLE TYKE! jlt LISTEN TO M M SOBBING! 2 OHJMATKr """"" sssVBHBr imi il nf I Aecommodatin'i Uko Tbatt 'HATS CLEANED BLOCKED WHILE UWMT C MM tf SOm TJl ILft. fat. i ilia 1 1 MORTT MEEKLI Up to Form By VICB CAVAIU- THINGS HAVCNT BEEN (THE 6AME AROUNPHERE S4NCE MK.PODMEK STAKTEP 6TOM60RIN6 THAT TELEVISION fTOOKAM Y"1 re it 4J OfOHf P1PVOU ? NfiW HEKEHE SEEHieVwJt. y (731 V COMES. V ouAq j(JR BUABDIMQ UtSt HAJoat coortutl,oi WAX MI J. B, WUXIAO OM, He tASTED HK5 COTOUCOY FAMTS.' WHAT HAPPENED i Y.'A6 THE OTHER TUB OF LARD DIDN'T 6HOW UP AND AM06 WOM Th.S 6(?AND PPIZE BY DEFAULT 'I LSFT HIM AX TriS 0JL5 au6,TAiM6 HOPATILJ5 AT TKS ffKIDiSE' -e- AM r jjgREAK rc3ENUyPAHr fci JW Ul 1VU 1 I IIVU' Yxf I Ul 11X1 tX DID THC A" AJOR H A60OTTe?s . LAST ? WEKe'a7 COCONEti V THE SOPY V I OES l -s-K HE TMiN I! iT 1 I V j J N t5 iaFi'- EE SOMEAaiOhi I ,A,TtZ..,.m1-lU f WOO OKAV, TEPt NOT SUFFERlW' NO PAIN ER NOTHW't WELL, HOLD IT A UTTLE WHILE TILL HURRY.' (SET A CAMERAMAN DOWN FROMTH' praptin office 1 THIS'LL MAKE A 6REAT SAFETY PICTURE-iMAVBE: EVEM ON THE COVER OP ONE OF THEM SAFETY J WCLLpWEVe MADE THE ' COVER GlRU OR COVER BOY CLASS AT LAST. WON'T THAT BE A PANPY VIEwf m LETTERS HE'LL on. FAME f 1 I DAT. ArF.IL 13. 1926 XZT. PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT OAILI NEWSPAPER r.F rr 3 Pa 134, UEETIXGS ntma cicil and suierwiae or Iirs Bfg !lfs Grand ift Only Once A Year! Cur , GRAND-ANNUAL SALE MOTTA'S !:. Guests Call Fcr 'Seconds' Of Teatime Treat Fran Poland r By Staff tri Box -503?, r 1 Ink BOttc for IncIasioD m ma I (luntii stimld iubmmcd ia lir lir-wnttra wnttra lir-wnttra fvrn ll nailed l l Uie Mx uumlxra IKIctf ealljt la "S- cul ami Utkcnwit, ar tlflikctcO i kj feaitO la the a(lk. Nalim al netting! caaatM a acccalra ay Mi. I Obon. I Alumni of 3 Ho!d 5 j Sptclat Mooting Tonight Mr. Herbert Wright, President of the Alumni aonounced tnai a special meeting of the group will be held tomgtrt at. J:30 p.m. in tlie Library jf ihe Pacific serv-; ke Center. Matters' of vital mipor mipor-tance tance mipor-tance will be discussed at this jit -www , ................... 1 ; r." v 1 meeting. AU members both active PANAMA ONLY and inactive may attend... 4 SPFCTATORS t the WotM Professional High Divin Championship and Watersh' "l TlPanamaHotelonSundav we, left to right, Mr. EuKene McGrath and Mrs. McGrath, nee S r oi ethers, and tht Cora ptrollet General, Roberto Heurtemattc. OI5.T-4 DIRECTOR DECORATE ; AT FAREWELL LUNCHEON, t ' I-'r iir. Tance Rnrewwha wiU teavhur In the Bear fatira r , ; to taka p M ew post In Weriw, was hnwed i at a f are are-( ( are-( Fel luncheon -WrnKt, V rrresetaT the Panama T Thao"der of Vasco Nuftei lie Balboa-was conferred npon y fci ?L Minister .t Public Works; Erie DeWaUe. (. put WVVV w J t imior For LuU Dm'n9lii ; Dr. and Mrs. Gilbetto. Aria a were hosts, Sunday, at a dinner at their home in honor of Mr Lii Mijruel Dominguin, the famoos buliiishter. Vatation'mf nied by her daughter Mrs. Felix B. Madura (Mnplaned mtlyfor Miami o a vacation- tr They will be one for two weeki. s. Shower 4onor rWo4o-to 'jv Mrs. Costaro Vamvo aad Miss Vilnia Rosania of the Atlantic Side were co-hostesses at a Silver Dol Dol-lsr lsr Dol-lsr fowrt- for Miss Alicia Cordo Cordoba ba Cordoba nl Pavid, Cliincul, wha wiU.be ma" .1 to Mr. I n J'" n Apiil 21. The affair took place at t h e Vamvas rewdenc la Campo Ale Ale-gre. gre. Ale-gre. 1 Ta Loavo, lc Planning to embark on the'J "Ancon" for New York are Miss Avelj-n de Castro and Miss Ame Amelia lia Amelia de Castro. Mi?a Amelia de Cas Castro tro Castro ho is an instructor at the Salvation Army School for t b fc Blind, wilt take ome advanced courses at the ligljtiiouse Center. Boy For The Thomas Andrews ? Mr. ind Mrs. Thomas Andrews anooniwo the, birth -of a ten pound boy to lIrs.Aadvrs on Monday, at the Amador Guerrero Hospital, Colnoi "' : Tbe -young fellow wilL be ,chris-j tejaed Theodore. Chrutoninfl '. .... The young son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack McGrath was christened, re recently cently recently at the Cnstq Rey Church receiving the name 'of .-Patrick Henri. His godparents -were Mrs. Vicki McGrath and Mr. ; James Purcell, of Larchmont, New York. Young Mark McGrath, cousin of the newly christeued, baby, stood proxy for' Mr. James Porcell ,who could not be presents Reception The Charge d' Affaires of Spain and Mrs. Rafael Zaera, were hosts t a reception at tha Spanish Em bassy i honor of the French Am Ambassador bassador Ambassador and Mme. Lionel Vasse who-art leavmg shortly on vaca vaca-ton ton vaca-ton to France, : j ,jy:? j ;- Mr. and ;Mrs, Charles 'Akin em- pianea Monday, tor me unnoa mums wnere uiev wui ipcuu lonst vacauon visiting with, rela relatives. tives. relatives. v Farf wall Dinner ... Dr. and Mrs. Jean Canavaggio gave a dinner 'last night at the I kome of Mrs. Canavaggio's broth brother, er, brother, Mr.. Guy Canavaggio of Golf Heights, in honor of the French Ambassador "Lionel Vasse and Mme. Vasse. V Alumni- Dinner vi"V :. ". The Alumni of Notre Dame As Association sociation Association of Panama and Colon, ac accompanied companied accompanied by their wives, held a dinner at the Union CIub on Monday night. iWmo. Lionel Vasse 'At Homo' This Afternoon The regular monthly 'at home' ; given for the wives of the Diplo Diplomatic matic Diplomatic Missions accredited to Pa Panama nama Panama by Blm. Julienne" Vasse, wife of the r'rencb Ambassador, will be given today at 5:00 p.m. This, reunion was to have taken place last Wednesday. However, wing to it being a Nationa, day of mourning, the tea was cancell cancelled ed cancelled at that, time, lack Prom Vacation Mr. and Mrs. Brandon Eisen- man, accompanied by their son : Monthly Vorioty Night itky, have returned from an es-IAt USO-JWB tended vacation to the United1 The monthly Varies Night will States. ... : be held at the USO-JWB Armed i "G.H of Mm VrM To to Honorwl Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sororitvs "GiVl of. the Year" will be publicly hohwed at a festive dance on May 5, at the Strangers Club in Colon. Each year the out standing member is chosen for this honor through her many cha-ril-ahla and civic works and her exemplary assistance to her Chap ter. ; f' V ,. The winner of the coveted title will be announced at the Annual Founder's Day Banquet, April 30, at the Coco Solo isaval omcers Club. ' Diane Cancellipr General Chair man of the "Girl Year" Idanrf Vn" i n I floor suow.iMiu.utg b... iieuidii and chorus eirls. t nounces there will b door p...vs and sur prises throughout the evening. The 60th Army liana ox ton uuuck will be on band to turmsn music for dancing. Tickets at $1.00 per person may be obtained; irom members ana at ine aoor, IAWC Plans For Pan Amorkon Day" In observance of Pan-American Day, the Inter-American Woman's Club of Colon hag planned a pro gram and dance to be neia at me Washington Hotel, Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The program will in include clude include an address by the American Consul, Mr.. Hobert Weise, and a narade of the flags ot tne zi mem ber nations, also two ballet num numbers bers numbers by students of the Gladys Heurtematte School of. Ballet Car- la Meehan of Colon will dance Pizzicato (Sylvia) by Delibes, and Laura Martinez, from Panama ci city, ty, city, will do variations from the ballet Aurora. After the program Raymond Simpson's orchestra will nlav for dancing, v Chaiman and co chairman of this event are Mrs. R. A. Emilia ni and Mrs. Robert Weise. Other committee chairmen are Mrs Robert Leigh and Mrs. Hans li lies, invitations; Mrs. Milton A. Cookson, and Mrs. Carlos Quiros, nrocram: Mrs. Humbert) Leign dier and Mrs. E. Burlando, recep tion; Mrs.'Euatare Lee and Mrs, D. Rusodimos. decorations: Mrs John Gorin, Mrs. David Bell and Mrs. Raquel Castillo, publicity. The young ladies who will make up the parade of tbe 21 flags are Lita Samaniego, Teresa Qui Quiros, ros, Quiros, Maggie Mouynes, Marccla Leignadier, Sandra Motta, Albera Franco, Floria Toledano, Ida Aro Aro-semena, semena, Aro-semena, Alda Sanchez. Lilcbet A A-rroyo, rroyo, A-rroyo, Loretta Hirschfeld. Rose Rosemary mary Rosemary Cookson, Joyce Cookson, Marietta Meana, Margaret Leigh, Anamaria Enriquez, May Mot Mot-land, land, Mot-land, Sally Morland, Judith Tipton, Esther Reynolds, Marucin Kudio. All members of the IAWC and their guests are invited to attend. An invitation is also extended to all members of the Consular Corps, officials Of the Canal Zone and the Armed Forces. Dress for the evening is semi-formal. ; Monthly Concert To Present Edward Lambert The monthly concert will pre present sent present Edward Lambert, pianist,, at the USO-JWB Armed Forces. Serv Service ice Service Center on Monday, at ., S:l? p.m. A student of-GeTJrge Beach, Re Rene ne Rene Brenes and currently with Pa Panama's nama's Panama's well known pianist, Jaime Ingram, the. artist will present a program of the music of Bach, Beethoven, Chopin. Schubert, Brahms, Debussy and Donhanyi. An invitation is extended to mil military itary military personnel and their families, and the public of the Canal Zone and tbe Republic of Panama to at attend. tend. attend. Admission is one dollar, and for students, fifty cents. There will be no charge for military personnel. i r: Forces Service Center on Sunday, at 8:00 P.m. A program of varied entertainment will be presented which will be introduce ny Mas Master1 ter1 Master1 of Ceremonies, Pfc. Al : Lo Lo-man, man, Lo-man, of CF.V. V'-'' The program will Include pres presentations entations presentations by the popular "Lifelin "Lifelin-er er "Lifelin-er Chorus" of Fort Kobbe; Boo Boo-ai ai Boo-ai Wnnsin and Soncs by Pfc. Don ald Ramey, whose Combo got first place in the AU Army Talent Con Contest test Contest at Fort Amador; Spanish rtuno nrntessor Mrs. nianca if.i 4. Rinnil- the Mellow Tones Quartet; Bagpipe Selections by Pfp. Arthur Hieniower qi Amador; Vocal SelecUons by Pvt n..rf Cnhm of Fort Clayton who assisted in the arrangement nf ih nrowam: ana uramaui. Presentations by John Mehl. The public is invited to attend. Mrs. tlanca Ripoll 4 t ..,!.. Am Smi BlaS if.. Plmfi Knrsi de RlDOll, well known Panama folklonsf, will . wtnro nn San B 1 a s at S.nn m Th. tulle will be accom panied by a film in color--which .i,.r,i,.i the life of the SimJUas Hurt the beautitul, i ij. ilmorf sneciallv foC the . Pinnll Director Of the School of Spanish Dance at the National School of Dance M i Pa Panama, nama, Panama, travelled throughout, Spain several years ago, .interpreungw culture and folklore pf Panama A display of typical San Bias items loaned .by Fred : Busch, will be on exhibitition to illustrate the evening's program. itary personnel, ineir and to the public, both the Ca Canal nal Canal Zone and the Republic of Pa nama, to attena. Piummer Funeral Set For Tomorrow Funeral services tor ta King de piummer will be held, Funeral services for Mrs.' Alber tnmnrrow at 3:30 n.m. at the San ta Ana Roman Catholic Church in A' former resident of Thira or November Street, Mrs. Piummer died Sunday afternoon en route to Kantn Tomas Hosnital. She was VI vaara. nlrt She leaves one daughter, Delfi- na Piummer, and a brother, im manuel B. Boston. PAVEMENT POSIES 1 PORTLAND, Ore. (UP) -The Cuts Council is considering a proposal to beautify the business district. rn roruana newu iiau Bureau has offered to underwrite a $20,000 project to hang flower pots filled with roses and trailing vines on downtown -lamp, ppsts. The city's park department has indorsed the idea. ; RfafU When you argue with a fool you had better be sure he isn't doing ; (ho tnmo. au frisiiST iz?;;n nun? Sensational new greaseles Cuticura Madicatad Liquid I "1" aran oucomlort I nlantlypetdt re, I ( of azteroally I cauaed pimplca, riahoo, mosquito v O'tes. trash aimburn, i athlete's toot Buyl ? I tl lTiri in I I t SPRINGTIME 18 TEA TIM K ua eonpUmento blossom rross nests By CAYNOR NEA Food and "A delightful Polish custom Is the break in the afternoon routine for pastry and tea," according to Mrs. Leo Kowalae ot Hammond, Ind. She learned to cook Polish! dishes from her mother, who was born in Poland. Among her fa favorites vorites favorites are "chrusts." These are a unique and deli- clous' fried pastry. The crust is made with rolled oats, which give ant-like flavor and tenderness.' The dough is rolled as thia as can be: cut in string.' thm tied in a knot and fried in deep, hot fat until crisp and golden. A sprin kling, of -powdered sugar adds a touch -of sweetness. ;. ' Polish Chrusts iAt' ii.T:r' (3 dozen cookies) Four egtf yolks, 1 egg white. V4 teaspoon, salt, Vi cup confec- Margaret's 300 Wedding:Gpwn NEW YORK; April 10 (UP) An Italian dressmaker arrived here from Rome yesterday with Mar garet Truman's beige wedding gown pt-300-year-oia venetiariace and two steamer tnmfcs filled wiUJ tiuusseaU appall. 1 i &4 - i Micol Fontana, of the famous nouse of Fontana; declined to dis disclose close disclose the price' or all the details of the wedding cown. which Miss Truman had hoped to keep secret until her April 21 marriage to newspaperman' E. Clifton Daniel Jr. -, 1 ,' v -' . But she did say the dress wis "truly a unique piece," design 1 ed for Miss Truman's feminini. ?. Ki',-r,vff'- .! !''j -''V!."t''' .' "She is much more feminine and radiant than anyone thinks," the dressmaker said. "This dress is not quantity but quality. It is so! refined it looks so really UKe ner, The lace was made m the 17th centurv and has been in' the pos session oi mree ansiocrauc lunu lunu-lies lies lunu-lies in Venice since that time. To work this lace is like working on antique painting." slje declined t0 identify the fam Hies who owned the lace before it was fashioned into a gown made also of 25 yards of pleated tulle The dress has three quarter sleeves, but the neckline remained the secret of Miss Truman and Miss Fontana. 1 ; - Even Miss Truman has not seen the dress, although she ap proved a sketch sent her by the designer, who met Miss Truman five years ago when the House of Fontana sold the then Presi President dent President Truman's daughter her first strapless evening gown. ":- ',.' V :- Gt"J f.0TC3GnG! Relieve Babs SKIN IRRITATIONS this DEDICATED way I No unmedicated powder can re relievo lievo relievo your baby's Diaper Rash. Diaper Chafe. Urine Scald and Prickly Heat Rash as Amman Powder does! . For Ammens i$ specially medi medicated cated medicated to soothe, protect and help heal irritated skin. Absorbs mots lure wonderfully and is so soft, it promotes healing by cushioning baby's chafed skin against further irritation. Get Ammens Medicated Powder today. fRti Try Amment at our ex expense pense expense ? For trial site can absolutely free, tend a postcard with your name and address to Dept. GK, Bristol Myers Co., Hillside, f4. J. iOtjet expires Dec. 31, 1956.) ' V i 1 BMkaaaaaaJ -''", these PolUh ChrnsU will mko as they sample the fried pastry, j MADDOX V Markets Editor turners' sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 tablespoon rum or sherry ex- irac(,topuonai), 1 cup sifted en ricnea flour, M cud rolled oats (quick or old-fashioned, uncooked.) Add salt to eee volka and ec? white; beat vigorously with rotary beater for 5 minutes. Add sugar, navorings ana Hour, mixing well; blend in rolled oats. Turn out on lightly floured board or canvas and knead dough until smooth and elastic (about S min minutes). utes). minutes). Cut dough in half, then roll each half to about H-inch thick thickness. ness. thickness. Cut in strips Wx4", At one end of each, cut a slit one-inch long; pull the other end through it. Fry in hot, deep fat (375 degrees F.) until golden brown. Drain. Sprinkle with confectioners sugar. Note: If the jura or sherry ex extract tract extract is omitted, add 1 tablespoon water. s - Year Old Lace Arrives In N.Y. Miss Fontana said Miss Truman wrote her sue weeks ago asking for a sketch of a dress to be worn at "a very nice party to be given in my honor.',' After receiving the sKctcn, Miss j rum an wrote back ' ''I love it. I want to tell you it will be my wedding -gown. Don't Blame Hens; Check On Weather , r- .-. ; .-- i.. -.-i ........ -...v STILLWATER, Okla. (UP) -If your hens go on a sit-down strike, don't blame them blame the weather says an Oklahoma A. i ll. College poultry expert. Ales Warren said prolonsed drv weather in Oklahoma fills the air with static electricity. It makes hens nervous, especially the caged layers, and nervous hens don't lay eggs, i Warren said experiments have shown that if poultry raisers ground each row of cases with copper wire, the hens will" over-' come their nervousness ana lay more eggs. Relieves prickly rashes. Refreshing . Protect MEXSANA is not a talcum.' It is a . .i starch-base powder Th or:iY r:sn Ccnrcr.icr.t ccnr.ttlicn via Guest Dc:!y Czr.zlz'.lzllzn to ' ONlVv ulUfcONIWAV " mS IcOMMical Tooriat Faro- Gatewey I ell Kdiieait U. I. ' 1 Twlce-ew iek from Moxice City to ZHhfS ', V.'ndsorDefro and the Midwest i.'''VwfV.,. CosMih yavr favarif TranlAjant mm 7i::jj3 naano Si ui e- ii t-angrejo, ias..ua uvt O.o i.u,.u., actosM the Hotel LI Panama Tel. 3-1057. American Legion Auxiliary: Mooting Tonight ; The regular monthly meeting ot the American Legion Auxliary, V- nit No. 1 will be held tonight at 7:30 at the American Legion Club, Ft. Amador. .- There will be election of offi- tere for 1956-57. The slate, is Pres ident,' Mrs. Joan OConnell; 1st. Vice President, ; Mrs. Muriel Black; 2nd Vice president, Mrs. A. nita McKeown; Chaplain, Mrs. Bessie Campbell; Historian, Mrs. Hua Rigby Sgt. at Arms, Mrs. Eleanor Connor. There win aiso De aominations from the floor. 1 All members are asked '-W' please make an effort to attend! and vote for the person of their j choice. Curundu Women's Club There will be a no-hostess card and scrabble party Wednesday morning, at 9 a.m. at the Curundu Community Building. Mrs. Marie Weptzel, Card Group chairman, announced that the Card Group will also discuss its plans for the ! coming 'club year. Guests are wel- Judge Guthrlo P. Crowe Guest Speaker At -Thursday Morning Study Group The Thursday Morning Study Group of the Canal Zono College Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Edward A. Doolan, 205 Cash Cashew ew Cashew Place, Balboa Heights, Mrs. George T Darnall, Jr. will assist i avt.hMtsa. r The Honorable Juoge uuinne t Crowe, United States unirici Court, will be the guest speaker for this meeting. DEADLY "INNOCENCE" Communist Hungary has Just admitted that former- Foreign Minister Laszlo Rajk was "in- nocently tried and executed" for treason In 1949, In one ot the last of the Stalin era purges. Rajk was chief of Hungary's.,., dread secret police until his appointment as foreign min minister ister minister in 1948. His "rehabilit ac tion" (Communese for restora-. tion of one's good name) is the latest flip-flop on the interna- tional Red tightrope. MEXSANA is a medicafed powder for your baby. heat and diaper to the skin, it. v sisp r:!,hts to , V iA k i" v'" 5. .' : J Coming this FRIDAY. f ELSA MIRANDA 'J UN- Hear the piquant Puerto Rican singing and recording artist of CBS and Television sing your old favorites and the newest fl.atln American and American songs You'll lovo her voice, her daab,. and charming per- sonalityl I t Minimum: Z- person - Call Max, 3-1660, for table reservation '' Every night-. Orchestra for dining Iz dancing eee . .. L A - s V I i ii i i i It e Ha should weian odout two poujiua more thon he 1 :: He should begin to use his hands and rafse his head.' r He'should have ., .now... V : pTj Milk alone is not enougMor baby! At this age baby also requires more nourishment ,: ' than nursing providea. Regular feedinge of QOakeb oats provide the extra nourishment he needs. ' 5 Quaker oats helps baby grow bttler helps him grow healthy and strong .'..because it provides him , with important nutrition he requires at his tender " f 8e- Quakeb oats gives baby more protein andlrdn -' ; than eggs, rice or bananas... 8 times as much body-. building Vitamin B( as whiu rice. QUAKER oats , contains 40 times as much trength-givinf iron as f whole milk. That's why so many doctors recommend! ' it as the ideal baby food. It'a very easy to digest too. ' No other whole grain cereal offers greater nour nourishment ishment nourishment than Quaker oats. How to pnpan QUAKtt Oofs for baby Quakes Bottle Feeding mauvret viler I mta$urt OiMMB oati Bring water to a boil add Quaker oats and pinch of salt cook 10 to 15 minutes, strain, add warm milk or water to the liquid. Stir to obtain desired consistency or use aa directed, by your doctor. Qimieb Spoon Feeding ' i meaium tcater I wor QUAKEK oat ' Cook aa above train add warm milk or water to liquid. Stir to obtain desired con con-siatency siatency con-siatency or use as directed by your doctor. ,' QtlAKEB Porridce i (See Rtcip on Tvt) : ; '(3QUACX11Q cxz helps thildronVo strong.. .helps grown-ups tfoy shongl .:, ' n I P the "(hiquila Banana" Girl! singinR ) twice nightly in the air-conditioned BELLA VISTA ROOM. ; 8:30 A 11:30 p.m. daw a I 1 : Kirkeby flatel fc' I 4. I IT' LT4 . i Sli K -c' f i .. J. did last month. smiled by this time. jt aJOMnOlO i PAGE SIX TEX PAXA5L4 'USSICAJT AX IXTITEXTrXT tiHT TL -w AX AT a. 13. I- YOU CAN PLACE YOUR AD AT 14 DIFFERENT LOCALITIES IN THE CITY a . m. w w' W' uv V u f LEAVE YOUR AD WITH ONE OF OUR AGENTS OR OUR OFFICES AT 57 "H" STREET, PANAT.1A LIBRERIA PRECIADO LOURDES PHARMACY f ; LEWIS SERVICE HOUSEHOLD EXCHANGE FARMACIA EL BAtURRO J.' T 1 Street No. 11 1U U Canuanilla V' At. Thrall K. 4 '? J. F. e hj) At. No, 41 riifH Umt I IM JIDfU.IUT.1 J Agendas Internal. d Publicacionei FARMACIA LOMBARDO FARMACIA ESTADOS UNIDOS ::) FOTO.DOMY FARMACIA SAS" rni ? Hi. t bttor Hut N. M "tV Street v. H Central An. v Jwto tiiiam At. A gft "'V::Tli hmi IU -J. "il CASAZALDO MORRISON v x FARMACIA LUX ; FARMACIA VAN-DErIoUS NOVEDADES ATHIS 12 70SDS ; CtnlATf.4S 4tal JuljATe.Jt.iat .' U4 Central Atom. Street K. St .,TU EspaA At. ',. j MINIMUM ! FOR i 12 .WORDS COMMERCIAL & FOR SALE FOR SALE PROFFIONAL HonsehoM Antomobaes riUr WJIWnu- fOR SALE: Bdroiii. living ; FOR SALE: 1952 DeSot Fir- ..li roam, diainf mm furniture, re- : dome 4-door sedan R&H powtr CANAL ZONI rOLICUNIC tifratr, gas star. AH nw,i tterin g, under 30,000 nil, ' PIMril T.rm. Ttibbl. Phon 3-5087 $950. 4273 Albrk. . DEf ITAL-MEDiCAL i -rrf,, DR C I. FABREGA.' D.D.S. FOR SALE: CLEARANCE? 96 Montcliir CTrtibl In I r DR. H. AVILA JR.. M.O-. mtttl twin beds (39") $14.50 oo conditio. On iiy hnm. O Vacation. Until May lit Ma; 7 mt buraau. (5-drw- f For ntor infmMlia cH Pna-, riTell (Oi f iu7) A- nAM ,r) 5'4-50 Tht prices n- 2-3223. (ppoiit Aiwmi School riajfro) til April 15 nlr. HOUSEHOLD ....J ,-c.' 'J," TTlAt-ina -run EXCHANGE. 41 Nation.) A.. GOOD BARGAIN- 1954 Fr4 BaaBMMOTMMMMM Cuttantlin 4-dosr V-8. 0r mmmmmmmm-wmm---mm-mm-mm-wmmm-mm, FOR SALE 6-picc mahogany dn'y, radio, htaHr, rinttd flats, orTiDCUCMT I !PE ,ivi"t nm suit, innr-prin 18,000 miks, $1400. Qtrs. 46-' RETIKtMLN I, Lin snkMi $175; mahogany tabl. B. Albrook, Phon 4177. EDUCATION INSURANCE chain $50; bd, cht of draw- ;; ",j ; tUWV iw rt $50 w all for $250. Must ... f 0 5A"!T 4' !!ynUt. 'JIM KlUUb A Apt. 3, Jot d Fabraga (Pa- fcrtwwn .m. and 4 p.m. Mm riHmim M55I M'" Hot' P,"am- FOR SALE: 1941 Srudbakr fhon rjim ZHiSSi .;,,., rtaM, ,3.2210,.. S3- B?TmpoItAXTERa7 nK?ti"tiJm' FOR SALE 1949 Fr4 4-do pKnJT 2-245T1 2-25M, 2"4268 Balbo- .w ...t ..vrs, $500. Call 2- . tW!M rt FOR SALE Kcnmer wringer- 1827... --y:..,. W---K 1 ; anamTrIDING SCHOOt r?,h,, W .Aif V-ILi cUe. dia ri9.ralr with 40-lb. freex.r CAD CAI C 5 ; a-Sj. c A- : FOR SALE , bT.;.. I Motorcycles J 11 g V???''' w 1 I "uchin FOR SALE: On ( 1) Nrtn L -WK UI icltev Tw" 100- Call Ft. Clayton 87-5282. motorcyd 500-c.c. with racing 0RTEFED1A NAC10NAL FOr SALECmp,., Hn,i,b. AIP M lt AwMmei f. t-nit lnm.ll.P.rtm.nt,Jnclud FOR SALE 3SBWBMnB8SBMBiB" apartment six refrigerator and t tSh.Vi!LSI .""ITc!!. Rea Estatf L.3ZllI2n lOUlISI J partmenj; Call B-ldXfoD.I FOR SALEt Chalet 3 bedrooms, m a in Apt. 8, El Cangrejo, di-' basement, garage and yard. 49, Ccrds Replace Visa, wnxtzr rr? jws 533; 2 Cbili Announces Brazilian tourist cards, replac replaces es replaces -the formerly required visa, re now being furnished by Bran iff Airways to Its passengers as part o its regular documentation ; r w noniittle. manaeer fur the airline in Panama announc ed today. Under new Brazilian law which has just become effective, tnnrist visiting Brazil for less than 30 days will no longer need a visa lor eniermg me cuuuuj. Only papers now necessary for ci ci-nf nf ci-nf anv nf the Western Jem- isphere countries are passport, in international ternational international smallpox vaccination certificate, tourist cant with vxa cm. photograph, front view on white background. ; Valid for 30 days, the tourist card can be extended for another month by application to authorities id. Brazil. i 43 CZShulterbugs Visit Scenic Isle 01 Darro Colorado Forty members and guests of the Diablo Camera Club visited Barro Colorado Island on a pho photographic tographic photographic field trip last Saturday, The railroad journey to Frijoles, and then by launch (o the scienti scientific fic scientific island reserve, afforded the photographers the opportunity to record on film local scenes of in in-terest,' terest,' in-terest,' ,(l,V,.'v'v' : ' . t rI.i .my. -rna Dsnv was uiviubu miu wu groups for the island bike on the well-marked jungle trails. Several varieties of wild life were ob observed served observed in their natural habitat. The photographic field tripa of the club iB one of its most popular . ......; .sw aM.:i in .1.4),. on acuviucs. uu nyiii 1.9,. lor slide meeting, members will . -1 J uk. am 4nnc enter coior. miuea mu u !' during the past camera club year. The winning slide will receive the special club award as trip-slide-of-'., the-year. PUBLIC NOTICE Holdera t Urkeia f the following Scries In the W. Ameow OHIeen Wlvee Club TV raffle hM at 0 Arm-Nay Club April 7 are advised the books were found and slob of II ticket aeld wen entered la the drawing: 111 thru 12M v 1201 thro i3a , 261 thnr Z7M .' .SELECT ZIP-A-TONE SCREENS From Our Wide Variety of DESIGNS i Today Get This. WONDERFUL MODERN DRAWING DEVICE I FVI5 SERVICE Across from Ancor. P.O. :iAaarT7iTmrTr: V -'JlTifffM ; -' : (NEA Telephoto) ATTENDS LAST CABINET MEETING Secretary of the In Interior terior Interior Douglas McKay (right) Rets a hearty handshake from President Elsenhower In Washington after attending; his last Cabinet meeting. McKay Is resigning effective April 15 to run for the Senate seat held by Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon. V . foot-deep basement Harold Palmer owner of the PPt shown feeding the pig, which he thinks may basement since the wreck. Watching are Arnold Stevens and bis son, Lloyd.' ; : ime-n T -C lw la a truckload MISCELUNEOUS ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS BOX 2031, ANCON, CZ. BOX 1211. CRISTOBAL. CX DR. WENDEHAKE Medical Clin Clinic.' ic.' Clinic.' Day fr Night Sarvic. Op De Desire sire Desire Cbas Bank. Telephone 2- 3479;. : FOR SALE Uliscellaneoiu FOR SALIr-Tw. Frigidair air., conditioners: (On) l-tn unit 220 V.; (On.) unit 110 V. Both la xcllnt cditioa for $418.14. T.I. 3-09110915. 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. FOR SALE: Diamond tslitair .' r karat $250., Call va- nings Panama 3-3319. N FOR SALE-Winrer pun and bench, almost aw; alt accor--lion, 120 ban. Call Panama 3 3-5366 5366 3-5366 between 6 and S p.m. kn Bias Isle Trip Planned For Sunday Another tourist trip to the San Bias has been scheduled for Sun day.. ;. The one-day combined Diane and launch trip is considered to be one of the most colorful sights in Pa nama. The 40-mile flight will be in a DC-3 plane to Mandinga on the Atlantic side. The trip also in cludes a 30-mile cruise in San Bias Bay with a visit to four or five islands, i v SiiAitseers are advised to brine picnic lunches, swimming suits and to wear rough clothes. ' The plane leaves Tocumen at 8 a.m. Sunday and returns at 5:30 p.m.; The trip which costs $20 each person 'is under the sponsor sponsorship ship sponsorship of the USO-JWB Armed Forc es Service Center in cooperation with the National Tourist Bureau off Panama. Further information may be obtained by calling Bal boa 1072. s 1 : Un;i.:ge Inslilub Courses Scheduled To Begin May 2 V'- v.... ,, '.'.v. ...a-., v' ' Reeistratlon Is now onen to those wishing to enroll In the Language Institute, a new school which is considered to be the only one of its kind in the Republic. masses fnr ornujnilno niltl VA. gin on May 2. There will be be- clnnprt anri ar1vnrpr1 rfinrspe In Enelish. French. German. Ital ian anri Rnnnlsh n. wnll a inn. versauon ana speecn classes ana special groups or cnuaren Heading th school Is .Prof, Rodolfo Jacobson. a well-known Panamanian teacher who was formerly principal of the Crlsto- oai Koarigaes school. ruiuia unuiuiwun may m obtained bv calling Panama 2 2-1393 1393 2-1393 or 3-4294. m...(V.. f. ... r L j ; (NEA Telephoto) GETS LIFE Tommy Wil Williams, liams, Williams, 14-year-old Wheeling, W. Va., twin Is shown after he was sentenced to life im imprisonment prisonment imprisonment for the slaying of nine-year-old David Powell. READ THIS j v ; '. Are yon Interested In a beau beautiful tiful beautiful lot In Panama's most beautiful and closest beach development, PLAYA COllO' NADO? Lots from 15c a square meter (9 sq. ft). Mon Money ey Money is no object Make your own terms. All lots are cleared. Call Eisenmann, Panama -4505 or see Castilla at Coronado Beach. WANTED Houses WANTED: New r to t b completed 2 r 3-bdrm chal chalet et chalet in go) lecatien, Phn 3- 618. ; -' ' i Toiiqh Guy Tierney Slaps Down Copper NEW YORK. Aorfl 10 mv Movie tough guy Lawrence Tier Tierney ney Tierney knocked down a patrolman who tried to help him across a sireei yesieraay. tie pleaded guil guilty ty guilty to a. disorderly- ronrtiirt rhirit. and received a suspended len ience, ... Patrolman Josenri TnpnrviaiM he found Tierney, who became fa famous mous famous for his John Dillinper vnm role, weaving on his feet at 'an nuersecuuu auoruy alter mia night. In'corvia said Tierney was tie tie-less, less, tie-less, rumpled and smeared with lipstick. He said the actor swung on him when he volunteered to as sist him across the street Cyclotron Capacity Comes Under Study BUFFALO. N.Y. -TUP)- Scien tists at the University of Rochester are studying a new physics princi- Sle which might enable them to lcrease the capacity of the uni versity's cyclotron now one of the largest in the United States. Dr. Robert E. Marshak, chair chairman man chairman of the school's physics de department, partment, department, announced that a $46, $46,-000 000 $46,-000 grant from the Atomic .Energy Commission would be used this year to study the feasibility of ob obtaining taining obtaining higher energies and higher currents from the school's 130-inch Cyclotron. Dr. Marshak explained that a new principle, called fixed field alternating gradient (FFAG) fo focusing,, cusing,, focusing,, might make it possible to increase beam currents produced by the cyclotron. e ... Forget That Diet; Get Right Scales BOSTON (UP) Chubby per sons would willingly weigh them themselves selves themselves on a new set of scales at Boston's Museum of Science. A 420-pound circus fat lady, for instance,, would tip the scale at a mere 70 pounds. A 186-pound "lightweight" would register only' 31 pounds on the scale specially manufactured by Fairbanks Morse 4C!-. '- The scales are designed to show what the user would weigh on the moon where, because of the differ difference ence difference in gravity, objects on the earth's surface are six times as heavy as they would be on the moon. II I 1 'fi 1 II 1.'..- sV.'Jl.p.lk-.'.V.A-v-.-"-----1y1---'.---(-(y-v------.- AA..a...Jl...u..liMIHI . r ....... 1 .1st PRIZE 001090 T 906543 Present your tickets before Friday . I.- $700.00 (Accumulated) "... .. fan Coda i'i !l pre;: FOR RENT Apartments ATTENTION C LI Jm Meant taraiib' ajaaiiauati. I, 2 bdiRS, hot, cM watda, rhM Panaata 3-494 J. FOR RENT: Modern antur antur-aihd aihd antur-aihd apartmat at EL CAN- GREJO: 2 bedrooms, 2 bath. Matt, dining-liiTitf room, tnaid'a room with bath, garag aad ht watr. Phon butinett bvra 2 2-0321. 0321. 2-0321. Saadays 2-3525. FOR RENT Mode r n-bd-rom apartment, hat water. Tb ideal apartment tor a bachaler r a co.pl. Cad 3-3421. FOR RENT: Apatrment I bd bd-room room bd-room with kitchen. Via Porrat N. 64; aha 3 bedroom chalet ia 1 2th Street. Paitilla N. 97. Phon 3-1863. FOR RENT Rooms FOR RENT: Furnish rm, hath and antra nc iadaadat, tor. person. Between 7-9 p.m., phon 3-6046. 2nd Strt, P.rjil (T.mistoclei Dial St.) Na. 7-189, upstairs. A. I 1-V '1 THE MAIN SWITCHBOARD, nerve center of the Portsmouth Air Force Base's communlca--tions center is a whirl of activity as A3C Joseph A. Lowe checks the locator file for a name,? and numerous calls chief operator, Gloria S. Leather (in back), supervises the numerous calls belnjr capably handled by A3C Ernest-Ray (at her left), Mrs. Paula L. Trancoso (fore- ground), Mrs, Thelma, K. Brittell and Mrs. Evelyn C. Curry. A3C Joseph A. Xowe is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Lowe, Box 616 Coco Solo. Lowe graduated from Cristobal High School in 1955. N , : 2nd Get them buying. : 1 1 Ukja, ibn 9??o;iZfjiw;ta "Cite", (hiii OaM : cl "VHIICOLA UCCj?J. t.3 t-STILDA CCU3A1": RESORTS MAKE PANAMONTE INN, tOQUETI beadq.arters for hunting aad fithing i th Chirioui high high-laaas. laaas. high-laaas. Juagl (aunts, picnics ad xcurswns. Wir rat rvat ions. PHIUIPS OcMatia. Catta, Sant Clara. Bex 435. Belbew hfMj Panama 1-1877. Crista Crista-bat bat Crista-bat 1-1673. Swim aad relax at Shrapnel', beach homas, Santa Clara. Phon Tboarps, Balbaa 1772. FOSTER'S COTTACES. Om tail past Casin. LawTata. Pba V Balbaa 1861 ; MISS REFEREE THOMASTON, Conn. (UP) -J A local nigh school senior. Donna Reeves, qualified as a basketball referee. Donna, said the Connecti cut Interscholastic Athletic Con ference, -is the state's only iuuy-accreoitea temaie reieree. AXLE ACTS UP McKENZIE, N.D. (UP) A burned-out journal, the part of the axle that protrudes through the wheel of railroad cars, caused de derailment railment derailment of 32 cars of a freight tram here. The car on which the journal burned out was loaded with, new box car axles. v 4 0 APRIL PRIZE Your tickets are valid for -a whole year Keep tscra rireiuuy ' TOTL,.; $1,900.00 .. $240.00 (Accumulated) 3. S960.CD (Accumulated);. Position Offered WANTED: librarian for Army ' position. Qualifications: agr its library science from accredited library school; maximum a. 40. Apply t Staff Librarian, Special Services, USARCARIB, Bldfl. 156, Ft. Clayton. T.lephon. 87 87-2295. 2295. 87-2295. ,x Help Wanted WANTED: Goo' cook. Goad alary. Albert Navarre N. 26, "El Can9rJ." Leggiere Awarded V Painting Contract The contract for : the interior painting of nine -apartments and three houses located in Balboa, Ancon and Diablo Heights, was a- warded this week to Anthony Lp. giere, who made a low bid of $V 788 on the project Apartments scheduled for paint-1 ing under the contract are Nos. 5176-A, 5271-A, 5271-B, 5M0 B, 5281-A, 5281-B in Diablo; No. 0589 0589-A A 0589-A in Ancon; and No, 765-14 in Bal Balboa.' boa.' Balboa.' --'-- 1. .v Houses to be painted are ; No. 0918 in Balboa; No. 0831 in Bal Balboa; boa; Balboa; and .No. 4285 in Diablo Heights. '- 8th ; 3rd PRIZE lrx, V.n m r r l 1 1 I, mi. i U ,. I . ... .1.1 430300 1 V 4 V ':' il J CI -2.tr .TITO AX, APRIL. 10. 13'$ PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER FACE SEVEN i i i -i ,( i i v. CJkurouo T tVOLl CENTRAL Theatre 73c. 40c. WEEKEND RELEASE! -The. best comedy picture ever! Humphrey BOCART Aldo BAY i and Peter USTINOV, in ' WE'RE NO ANGELS i with Joan Bennett Basil Rathbone' ; and Leo G. Carrol LUX THEATRE 60c. r- SOc. ' ACTION. RELEASE' PICTURE! Dennis MORGAN ft Paula RAYMOND ; -in- ; THE GUN THAT WON. , THE WEST DRIVE-IN Theatre 60c. i j 30o. ' ACTION DRAMA WAR RELEASE! Jack SERNAS & Kurt KASNAR - JUMP INTO HELL CECILIA THEATRE 60c. 30c' Biggest Double of all. The true " story of a soldier with Al'DIE MURPHY, in TO HELL AND BACK Acid Jack Pa lance Barbara Rush ; KISSOFFIRE k o y IC TO I i i J5c. 20c 15c. PROHIBITED FOR : ( MINORS! ; THE SINNERS - Also: WE WANTA CHILD ! EAXK NIGHT! IKE TUZLE KING CIRCUS s Also " -"'s UN SET ' B OXJ LK f ARD Ralph Meeker, in Color and SuperScope DESERT SANDS " Also: FORT YUMA i ;5 TWO GOOD PICTURES! "' 'liiorflirtW SIDE GLANCES By Colbroith . j 1 MA : :-. ! '''"'.7, .:n u.. w. K. -ilS?.- .; ; lf ' "I owe debt of gratitude to these banana splits- v my folks finally realized I'm not going to be a ballet . 1 -,-" -' dancer,'"' Seeks Administration On Politically-Hot Far m Lomprc WASHINGTON. April 10 (UP: The Administration will seek con gressional approval of a compro compromise mise compromise that would boost this year's support prices lot wheat. and corn less than half as much as the pend ing farm, bill, GOP sources said today. ', ... The compromise win be..otter: ed to the House tomorrow in a last-minute effort fo revamp the Administration-opposed farm bilL J; n.vp0n )V j J V ; MQY!:$ TV UDIO ' ; li if rJifa Johnson m ) New VS. Embassy Economic Officer Arrives Tomorrow Orion J. TLibert. first secretary imfeconomic officer who will head the Economic Section of the Amer American ican American Embassy in Panama, will ar rive on the Panama tomorrow. He replaces Glion Curtis,, who was transferred to Managua a i Coun Counsellor sellor Counsellor of Embassy, and ricently left Panama City to- take up hisi "reasQnably sore i,nwrtiitip V I tenhowar would veto It. Libert has had; long experience; president tisennower crmcizea In commercial E . It appeared to have lets than a 50-50 chance ef winning ap proval. .'" i "We're willing to compromise, but we're not willing to surrender," Republican House leader Joseph W. Martin, Jr., told newsmen. Although Martin declined to dis discuss cuss discuss the compromise before pre presenting senting presenting it to a closed-door meeting of all House Republicans- late to day, informed sources a a i d it WOUld: ,:V- '.- -,- a ::V. Boost minimum price' supports for basic crops this year to eith either er either 82 12 or 85 per cent of modern ized parity. This would be in lieu of the rigid 90 per cent of "dual parity" provided by the bill. Knock out of the bill all provi provisions sions provisions for two-price plans. The bill as now written would make a two two-price price two-price plan mandatory for rice this year and next year and would re require quire require launching of a similar sys system tem system for wheat, if approved by a. grower referendum. 1 Unless the Republican move to revamp the election-year, farm bill succeeds, Martin said, he Is President II- tmise Price Bill practices: He has a: the new omnibus farm bill yester-l h d of Spanish; and f day as "not good.", and set in mo-jter rilOENIX for -; 'i: atiii fiw but i.e isn't drop ping wordage for the press about the "new'': Marilyn, said to be a . great actress At 'least she ain't talkinV to the ' drop-in press,. invited here by 20th Century-Fox, for location scenes on ' "Bus- Stop," her first movie in year.'';,7. .; ? j : ; Studio press agents are willing, ' but apparently her private drum ' beaters: and career guides, have -ther ideas, v 1 or nn ... -4 Ariz.' Good: dayi indicated 'Marilyn had i Manlvn 'Monroe- is dialog.. Just fleeting luri nor ia a rcxk'j eruwii After the tliree-hou ton Greene and a doll r ing a private publicity office handling Marilyn Mcnroe Produc Productions tions Productions came out of the trailer and said she was sorry "Marilyn's sua studying ner lines with Paula. Maybe if you come : back this afternoon you caq talk to her.'!1 "This afternoon maybe," echoed Milton Greene. ood commani lso Dbeaka German and French. He was associated 'with private industry for a "number of years. He has also had long experience in the U. S. Department of Commerce,- TBerving as assistant trade commissioner at the American Em bassy, Santiago,; Chile, from 1930 to 1933. "-: it-.:. -r. -Jin addition to holding other gov- ernment positions; Libert, was as- sociate director of field operations! of the Department 'of Labor from 1938 to 1942. He has been with the Department of State since 1945. Libert' is"' married and has 1 a daughter anl two sons. His family will, join hlrti -1a Panama in the noar future. :' i Uon a Republican drive for a com promise. -Senate Democratic Leader Lyn-' don B. Johnson (Tex.) charged that Mr. Eisenhower had "suc "succumbed cumbed "succumbed to the pressures ef fran frantic tic frantic Republicans and loined the lobbying against the bill." He said congress u trying to It was hot and dusty at the rodeo . igrounas. i naa heard : enough I took the Fox airlift to Phoenix about the "new". Marilyn sudden-' for-a glimpse of Miss Wiggle: ly becommg a great actress. Hips, W had no luck. t Director Login even put her In Neither did a national magazine: the same acting league with writer doing a cover story on her. Grace Kelly, adding, ."Hollywood And he'd been1 around for THREE hasn't taken this girl seriously." days.- ;" We decided to wait back at the The film editor of a big London 'hotel for the flash that Marilyn newspaper uau iiuwu ,uuu iiiiica,was reaay to taJK. to wail alA aays to see waruyn .Then they talked for only 30 min minutes utes minutes with Marilyn's New York ca career reer career boss,- ex-magatine photogra- J phcr Milton Greene, helping out. !- And even then, it is said, Marilyn , spent half of the time on. a long longdistance distance longdistance phone tall' ;: -::v--' - At the Sahara Hotel in down downtown town downtown -Pheenix someone pointed out At the Marilyn Monro head headquarters quarters headquarters in the hotel someone again said;. , "How do you like your Scotch?" It was a good day for Scotch. In fact, we were told, it had been a ?reat week for Scotch. With Mari Marilyn lyn Marilyn incommunicado in her oent- house or in her bis trailer Hr- - Marilyn s lourin-iioor penmouse mg room for a week, the daily but said gabbing with Marilyn flow of drop-in newspaper writers - was something else again. Then found themselves interviewing he added, "How do you like your each other. Scotch?" It looked like the begin-;,. And when newsmen interview ' ping of a great day for Scotch, leach other, Scotch comes in MOTHER-DAUGHTER GRAND RAPrDS'Mich. (UP) : Mrs Hobert- L; .Rose and her daughter,. Kathryn. Teceived' theu diplomas in- practical nursing to gether during graduation exercu.es at Gsand Rapids Junior College. At the Phoenix rodeo' grounds. where the company has been shooting for a week, I waited for almost three hours to talk to Mari Marilyn; lyn; Marilyn; .who was incommunicado with private press agent, r She was in her dressing room,' a 'SO-foot' luxury trailer with lace curtain! and drawn blinds. She was "studying dialog," it was said, with her new drama coach. versation. . An hour before our scheduled return to Hollywood, Marilyn's private press agent sent a note to the hotel that we could return on a later plane and maybe talk to Marilyn when she returned to the hotel from the rodeo grounds. fellow from London who had wait- Paula Straibere. Paula, wife ot;ed six rinvs to sp Mis Wipulp' New York Actors' Studio heed LeejHips. So did the national magazine' Stratberg, replaced Marilyn's, writer working on a Monroe cover! long-time seech, fiatasha Lytess story. So we decided it was nmce when the star won her contract! but we would leave on schedule.! ditoute with 20th Century-Fox. I Besides, we were all out of1 ' But tn nay r snooimij scneauie scotcn. T -"" r I i Showing At Vouf,Seryce Center Theaters Tonight! BALBOA 6 J5 S.00 m.roNi'iTMivtfr 1 WtJ.-Thur. "Stan With A Cue" I DIABLO HTS. 6:15 :00 Mickey SPrf.LANE Clyd? BEATl'Y "RING .OF FEAR" ' .'I'.tTi.'tSrf'l .rtf ' Thoniloy PFTTt GIHL1 liAMKO-' 7 00 ''GENEVIEVE" Color! Wr.1 -THIS ISLAND EARTH "THIS ISLAND EARTH" V Thursday 'QLTIEN BKE" MARGARITA :15 S:03 Cy GIWST Uarilyn liONROt "3IONKEY BUSINESS" Wtdntlday "QtEES BEE CRISTOBAL 6:15 7:50 4irln(t111nnrl Barbara ST N'WVCK Frd MacMVJRRAY There's Alwars Tomorrow' Wed.-Thun. -THE WARRIORS" FARAISO f :is T:4Bj FOBFR'S ROOST- ene "RtlCR.V TO PARADlSt" I SANTA CRUZ : AP" BAXTER ' '-BEDEVILLFU' :1J S:M Camii Bicrd S:1S S IS "Toughest Man Alive" "Bowery Battalion IT'S AN IDEA Patty Me Me-,Cormack, ,Cormack, Me-,Cormack, pre-teen TV star, offers a 'new thought on the! subject of income taxes. She feels "loafers" who don't work should be taxed and that toilers on the home-screen circuit should be allowed to keep their money, One of the youngest performers required to file an income tax return, she's start starting ing starting her task in Hollywood. TROPICAL 0.60 TODAY 0.40 Great Fortune Night , $150tCD IN PRIZES! Be one of the Lucky Winners of these Cash Prises! 1st Prize SIW.CO 2nd 25.00 3rd ..; 15.00 4th 1 10.00 . "- On the Screen: GREAT DOUBLE FEAT(JHE. ' Victor Slalure, in "VIOLENT SATURDAY" M;aia Montez, in "The Thief of Venice" i bolster farm income and that "a Presidential declaration against the bill.,, will not be welcomed by the farmer." ,::;:rLTii Mr. Eisenhower discussed the legislation at a meeting with GOP congressional leaders before tak taking ing taking off tor a -golfing vacation at Augusta,. Ga. There is a good chance the measure will.be wailing on the! President's desk when he returns, from Georgil. The House is sched-; uled tc take it 1 up '. tomorrow. ; Johnson said the- Senate wir geared to act after the House votci .Then Mr. Eisenhower would : have to decide whether the high ; rice suppon, provisions wrirren into the bill werrants a veto that also would kill his billion-dollar Soil bank plan for reducing farm Surpluses. 'f f 'Informed sources said House GOP leaders decided after the I White House meeting that they would try to send the bill back to conference with specific instruc- r tions for-revising it ..-! A close vote is expected on the) GOP recommital motion. Speaker: Sam Rayburn (D-Tex.), indicated lie Deueves n wui laii. fe nam mi issue is a mue nuv now than It was" last year when the House narrowly approv ed a return to high rigid supports. ' He said it would be "embarras "embarrassing" sing" "embarrassing" to many farm belt Republic Republic-ana ana Republic-ana to vote against 90 per cent sup supports. ports. supports. What he meant was that the congressmen will have to face the farmers at the polls in November. T rr h 1 i I4 A' i ''ntEAuE7t'M'Sr !af ot Hurir up and wait" has been beaten by these soldiers at Camp Hanford, hear, Richland, Wash. IT last man In line squats,, letting the man in front of turn sit on his knees, and so on up the line. This makes waiting a lot easier on the Xeet- r INSTJTUTO LEriGuAs r.:oDznr3AS PRINCIPAL: Prof. RODOLFO ACOBSON 8-39, Fourth Street (between Central ind .."A" Avenues) V Large Shipment of Fuller Brushes Just Arrived! A (omplelely Hew Shipment of v. FAMOUS FULLER MUSH PRODUCTS (Brooms, Mops, oPlishcs, CJcaners, Disinfectants) ,; -fi '. "r ,Vt 's .'' q ,'' :- 'l ? "-: '"rH 'f ' NEW, REDUCED PRICES CRAWFORD AGENCIES ; No. 13A.30 "J" St. 18-20 Tivoli Ave. Tela. 2-2142 2-3665 2-2386 Phohes: M39J and 3-4394 ; PANAMA OFFICE HOURS; 3:00 to 7iOO p.m. . j SPANISH FRENCH german: ITALIAN o Elementary Counts x- 1 o Intermadiate :' Couraef r ; e' Advance Courses n , Conversation Courses ' ; o Speech Courses ' Special Children's Courses GREAT RE'LEASE TODAY-: RIYEIN v;.,,,,,., ; y : .1 0.60 0.30 r I ; UUO ii L.J i ! i .wiUIXItn9l'samm I' J h iff icmnuuim; y .f. i f ;-- J H5:i --,..,'".. r. ti Off 1 V. -. V. w Gist ... she was a kind ol heaven .after the 'Jump Into Hell' IK SERNAS KURT KASZNAR ARNOLD iSS IRVING WALLACE DAVID BUTLER mvoouevo ev ' M fc Only IK:-" AT 30 SAVIJIG DAILY DC-63 FU6IITS V ( Q yRoBsd Trip Visit Lima," cradle of Spanish Colonial architecture, the tourist Mecca of South America.' Historic monuments and churches, the color and splendor of the bullfights; the awe inspiring ruins of cioey Machu Piccha, the hica city that, hid m the cjouds for centuries. ' Fly Panagra's' thrifty El Pacifico inrice at- the new , 30-day excursion fare.- .'' ; fx. Ami there wt'iheje lVs)tar$lbti fartf tt I CALI-vnly B;"vt B2M0 QUITO only Bit6.60 iav 174.20 GAj73AGO only B3S5 for hrthv Womrtieii; con$uh y9W-Tmvtl AtMl :'t FAN AmiCM MACt AWWAri Fonamo Agenciei Co. Calls "L" N 3 Tel. 20556 20557," fanoma R.P. ;. v; of i I vic 7'5i IliO- 'm 87 hi4 it : 'it rt- i- ( in -. full V t ;i 1. TZ2 FA5.CL4 AJHSICA5 A INDEPENDENT DAH.Y KT! 'ATe. tit r 3 at, Arr.rL u r-? .a Philadelphia Hurls 2-1 Win NEW YORK, April 10 (UP)-Robin Roberts is ready and rarin' to go for seventh straight 20 20-game game 20-game season. V!,;v -'" :f" :Hv ;- ' The pale, 29-year-old pride of the Phillies, who has been hammered like an ordinary humpty-dumpty during past exhibition seasons but certainly hoj this one, turned in his best performance of the spring in stopping the hard-hitting Red Sox, 2-1, at Mont gomery, Ala., yesterday. BnheriL who is almrne at "on- iv on .vtatnrte. this year but Is oulte likely to overshoot, that mark, ticked off three notewor- !?2JZZZS.Z. Tin Hmitir.rh,nd.r contract to Nashville Ttnstnn tn sit hits. First, he became. tfMM first Phillies' pitcher te go nine hv nings thrt spring; which fig figured. ured. figured. Second, h didn't walk a single batter, which Is more or less par for him. And third, he hong the "collar en Ted Wil Williams liams Williams In four trips, -which is something of a trick for any Ditcher. Roston starter Tom Brewer ;hn un thre of Philadel- phia's four hits, was the victim of Richie Ashburn's two-run homer over the right field fence In the sixth inning. Rookie Pat Scantlebury, who may turn out to be- Birdie Teb Teb-betts' betts' Teb-betts' fourth regular starting pitcher, and Joe Black limited to four scattered hits in lead leading ing leading Cincinnati to a 1-1 triumph at rhattanoora. Tenn. f A twn-hnsfl wild throw by Scantlebury in the fourth inning helped the senators score uie CnArfr ICPlhtc 3 DO lib U I I C I J r ,-.'1 v (BOXING). fiV'vltweea the two teams with two ' Heavy weight champion Rocky Marclano nromises he won't re, tire If he can fight a suitable opponent this year. There, .had 1 been talk that Rocky would quit. "But I wont TPtirp h savs "If there Is some onnnnent' the nubirfr. belieyesi would be aDie to aeieai mtw w tne exniDiuon scneauie., Rockv now Is Vacationing wutvameT'-lt uhed out wer . his wife in the Dominican Re Republic. public. Republic. He returns to New "Xtrk later this month and says he and manager Al Weill will de decide cide decide his future plans then. s (BASEBALL) Southpaw Maury McDermott ef the New York Yankees has been dischareed from a New Or Orleans leans Orleans hospital. McDermott suffered an attack tit otomalne noisonlng last Fri Friday.. day.. Friday.. He must stay on a liquid diet at least one more day. Mc Dermott has reiolned the Yan-1 kees but nrobably wont Bitch a- gain until the start of the regu-j lar season.: rv- 'j."t-.'-i.' other clubs are narlnc ros-. ters. The Chicago White Sox .-OT)-1 tioned lnfielder 1 Carl Peterson and outfielder Eddie White j to. Memphis. The New York Glints optioned shortstop Eddie Bres Bres-soud soud Bres-soud and" southnaw Pete Bum- r He to MlnneaDO lis and returnea lirst baseman Bill White to. theimer. and same club. Th? new nresident of the pa pacific cific pacific Coast League says the base baseball ball baseball circuit "sllll clings to the hope" of Jbecomlng a Majof League. President Leslie O'Connor says "There Is no: question that -the West Coast Is major-league terri territory. tory. territory. The big question now,", he says, "Is bow the. change. will come about"- ,v ; . . DUfLICATtCI "'-. ' PINEHURST, N.' C. v (NEAr --, Playing in, the same foursome and tournament a .year apart, Mrs. Michael T. r Pishko duplicated an ace on the fifth hole of the No. l course at Pinehurst, Ths PialitSissin llavlplion Ccmnny (INCORPORATED BY FAST FREIGHT AND TO COLOMBIA, ECUADOR, PERU AND CHILE S.S. "CIZCO" vt i-.-v v 't r -..... V-ri. ....i.Aprll II M.V. -REINA DEL PACIFICO" ................. ..April t S.S. OTOPAXI" ... y. .. P' TO UNITEDKINGDOM VIA CARTAGENA, KINGSTON, HAVANA. NASSAU. BERMUDA. "SPAIN AND FRANCE M Y. "REINA DEL PA'CIFICO" OS.OOO Tens) May 14 TO UNITED KINGDOM VIA CARTAGENA. LA GUAIRA. , TRINIDAD. SPAIN AND FRANCE S.S. "REINA DEL. MAR" (2L223 Tons. ; (Air-Conditioned f . Tf UNITED KINGDOM DIRECT M.V. "SARMrENTO" 4 .April 11 M.V. "SALA VERR Y" ........... April 18 , ROYAL MAIL LINES LTD.HOLLAND ' AMERICA LINE TO NORTH PACIFIC PORTS S.S. "ARENSDYK" April fl S.S. "DRINA" ....... ..April 23 TOUKCONTINENT S.S. "DIEMERDTK" .. .April IS S.S. "LOCH RYAN" ; .May t All Sailings Subject to Cbanjre Witheat Notice PACIFIC STEAM NAVIGATION Co.. Crlstohal Tel.: 1654V ,,,. rfi' (PANAMA Ave. Peru No. 53 tel. S-1157S " V 1 BALKOA Term. Bids. Tel. 2-1905 Righthande only run. Wally-Post paced the Redlegs' attack with a pair of triples and a single while rookie Brant Rnhlnson. who- has been an purchase of him with ay towering home run that snapped, a t-all tie in the sixth. - Ned Garver. on and off the trading block all soring, yielded only one hit in the six innings he worked as Detroit defeated New Orleans of the Southern As Association. sociation. Association. 10-0. at New Orleans. Reno Bertoia, a hard-workmg model-tyre youngster who is making an all-out bid for De Detroit's troit's Detroit's second base lob. slammed a home run won we pases juu while Ray Boone, enjoying ; a banner spring himself, hit one with the bases empty.- s Del Crandall lashed but fonr hits In leading Milwaukee to an 8-4 trlumnh over the world champion Dodgers at Louis Louisville. ville. Louisville. Bob Buhl pitched : the f'rst i seven Innings for the Braves but was sent to the showers In the eighth. Bob Trowbrldre and Dave Jolly ffcn, ished ap for the Braevs, Bob feller teamed up. to pitch -Cleveland to a 6-4 decision over the Giants at Shreveport. La. The victory rave, the Indian, a m.7 dpe in th cnrinir series be v Hoot Evers and Jim nVean hit homer for the Ina'ans while Gall Ha r rite and Hank Thompson each connected for the Giants. The homer bv Har Harris ris Harris was the first one hit off. Score this a'prllit.v. '",.5. Rain out heavily into the, rest Tne the Yankees.vs. .'. ouston at Housr ton -Tex.; th white' Sox vs. the Cardinals at Oklahoma City, Okla' Kansas Cltv vs. Pitts burgh at Wichita. Kans., and the Orioles vs. the Cubs at Beau mont, Tex. Swimming i gatdn:pool. -pool Hours: 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.". dally.' In an effort for greater parti Hnatkm: the' Jhouri tot" .the la- idles swtmmin? class has- been changed to Wednesday 1 to 2:3" p.m. ann Friday 10 a.m.' to 12 noon. For those interested In lolnlng -this group, the classes consist of a- short neriod of al isthenlcs, teaching of non-swim mers, imorovement of -the swlm- a visit over a cud nr ooftee. The only charge Is the nrlre nf ttdml.wlnn Beginners classes for GatifVi "hlldren are held on Monday, Wednesday and Friday from S to 4 n.m. Beginners classes for out-of-town children are held on Mon Monday, day, Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 4 to 5 n.m Intermediate, swimmers and advanced swimmers classes are held on Tuesday from 3 to 5 p.m. for all children eligible for these groups. ,s i;WATER SKI MEET LA PORTE, Ind, (NEA) The National Water Ski Champion ships will be Aug.- 24-26. held at La Porte, ROYAL CHARTER 1840) PASSENGER SERVICES June 19 In Non-Title Bout J- RICHMOND. Calif.. April (UP). 'Archie 'Moore swings In to his fifth mm-title bout since Rocky Mirclano knocked 'him out last September t h e n he meets. Willie Bean of Los Ange Angeles les Angeles tonight In a 10-round con contest test contest at the local auditorium. Moore, trying to lose soveral rolls of fat before he defends his world light heavyweight 'championship against Yolande Pompey in London next June, probably will weigh 191 for this one te bean's 210. i f v Bean not only is the heaviest fighter Moore has fought in his tuneup series but also the hard hardest est hardest hitting. Although his record indicates he; is ever the hill. Bean still has a hard ight hand punch. Ha also has been around since 194. Junior Sharpshooters To Compels Saturday For l!RA Honors Junior riflemen and women on the Canal Zone meet for the tenth consecutive year to compete for National Rifle Association section al honors in .22 caliber m-a r k s s-manship manship s-manship on Saturday, April .14, at 8:30 a.m., at Ft. Clayton indoor range. i B.F.O.E. Balboa Lodge No. 1414 each year has been the sponsor for mis event and in addition to the medal awards presented by the NRA, Lodge No. 1414 donates ma many ny many merchandise prizes to the win ners and entertains the tired shoot shooters ers shooters with a luncheon, at the Elks' Club on Balboa Rd. immediately following the firing activities. The program consists of 1 1 w o parts., Each entry will fire ten shots at 50 ft' in the prone posi position tion position and ten shots at 50 ft., in the standing position for : Individual honors. Teams will be chosen from the Junior Clubs represented and the same course of fire, will be repeated for team honors. Winner of the individual compe tition is derlarpd Canal Zone Jun ior chaniLwii. XjmS : Ithc Club team winner is declared Ca nal Zone Club team champion for 1956.' .' 't-j n: Scores fired locally, both-r indi vidual and team, competition, will be sent to. NRA headquarters in Washington, B.C. to be compared with scores of Junior shooters fir firing ing firing in NRA sectional competition throughout the United States and territories, namely, Hawaii, ruerto Rico and Alaska. Last. yeaT ap approximately proximately approximately 4000 juniors partici pated. -;;::;"- Mr. Stratford a. uuxe nas oeen designated by the Washington Of fice to represent the NRA as Offi cial referee.:.. u.i-,. Mist Lois Spencer, whose mar riage to Richard. E, Dillman will take nlace on Saturday, was the guest of honor at a silver dollar and (necessity shower given by Mrs. Norine Simms, sister of the groom, on Saturday April 7 at the Elks Club in Balboa. The i auests participating -were Mesdames V; Spencer. M. Dill man, !. Napoleon, B. Clarke, C. Norris, V, Keller. J. C. Schmidt, J. Bevineton. B. Kruger, M Curies. M. Christiansen, A. Pierce, h. w. Marsnau. uauey, in Scroggin, L. E. Gorham, D. Jones, D. Andress, A. Iribarien, and the Misses. Bilue Sue Spenceriv Nora Reyes. Ginger Mann. Ann. Keller, Jnriv Rrinklev. Pat Steiner. Shir lev Minion, sue marsnau, aau Joan Norris. ..' swr;',v. Sloan Started Ace-Deuce Riding 'HALLANDALE'' Fla. (NEAV3 C- -. ..llnfaan n. ; T m 1. K j,. i a i style wherein the right stirrup is drawn un higher than the left. This produces an1 unbalanced seat that, contrarowise, furnishes balance on turns. i "Tod, Sloan was responsible fori it," recalled a grizzled tramer.i "Although he weighed only 10 0 pounds, he had a wel developed right arm. One day he got Into a Htcniiv nf utrcnptn wun jjod nu- simmons, then wona neavyweigmj champion.. They faced each other, elbows on a bar, one foot on the rail, hands clasped. Sloan pinned . ....... That'. r IIZSIIIIIIUIIS CVC1J wine au a where he cot the idea for the ace- deuce saddle posture." TEXANS TRAVEL AUSTIN. Tex. (NEA) Texas track and field teams under Clyde i.ittlpfipM have won 20 Southwest Conference championships and fin ished in the runner-up spot 13 times. Todr Encaqto 25 .15 WAHOO! $115.08 Richard Burton, In . "PRINCE OF PLAYERS' Richard Wldmark, In "RED SKIES OF MONTANA" Tort" MAI '10 "INVISIBLE MONSTER Chapters 1-2 "ANOEI.S IN EXILE" "CASS OF THE BOGUS ; COUNT" Tonights 10 NAVAL OPERATION Eddie Erdelatz appears confused In spring football practice at the United States Naval Academy. Halfback Chet Burchett, guard Jim Hower, center Wilson Whitmirt and halfback Ned Oldman, left to right, are the only holdovers from the starting lineup of last season. There are shoes to fill, but they hardly will be empty when the Middies take the field in September. WmneyHaslwoG Job Is ToGefEmToThe Derby ' By JIMMY BRESLTN NEW YORK (NEA) This was on Saratoga's tree-shaded lawn, last August ana syl yeitcn was watenmg tne two-norse v.' v. Whitney entry being saddled for the RanfoM Stakes. "I've got a big chance In this one," he said ouletly. "Look at the one on the left He has legs like Charlie Chaplin, but he can run like blazes. The other Is a good horse, too." 1 1 Trainer Veltch's entry ran 1-2 In the event, 'with his Charlie Chaplin i- Head Man getting home ahead of Career Boy. Around tne New Yors racing circuit, they give Veltch. a better than passing chance of pulling off the same finish In the more Important 3-year-old numbers, beginning s with the ; Kentucky Derby, May- 5. ,t-f.:A '? While Needles was making the loudest noise of the winter rac racing ing racing season, Veltch and his string were at Aikerr, S.C-, training in 'eisnrr'y lasmorr Mil rasing dead aim at the Run fortae os- es. -.-. v....--1', v a int int-the the int-the "Both of the 3-year-olds proved an awful lot over winter."1 he says. "Career Boy was better as a 2-year-old, but I looked for Head Man- to improve plenty, which he has. Right now, I couldn't pics between me iwo. I'm not in a tnooa to point un gers, any way. I'm too busy keep ing them crossed."; v : s This Is the make-or-break time for Kentucky Derby candidate! There are countless examples of horses rated "bie" who did not get tnrougn April sound enougn to be snippea. '-"'r Turn To. Harry Guggenheim! almost odds-on choice for the 1954 Derby, Is a top illustration. ; " .:i' '! r." .- !".;''. r 'f J 1 j. f . i .'- "i ,! ... -;, ;'' '... H i ,f J . -.... I r r.-, ,j ,, "You go to bed with a i top. horse and wake up In the morn tag-and find something happen ed to him and he is out,", says Veitch. "Or you put him on the track for; a -workout and tv comes back a hospital case.. You DOGHOUSE? Casey' Stengel looks down the Yankees' dug dugout out dugout and wonders. The athlete next to the manager ia Pitcher Don Larsen, who wound up with his automobile wrapped around a telephone pole at 5:30 a.m., as the American League cham champions pions champions were about to break camp in St. Petersburg, Fla. ft i worry about that as much as you do the races." Veitch has sent both of his Derby candidates into action Head -Man, ,,-a eray which has grown out of his knock knees, won at Bowie and bagged the six-furlong Experimental smart ly at Jamaica, career Boy ran hsecond in the sbt-furlohg Olym- pia sprint at Jamaica, but veitch was well satisfied. V ; v "He's a Phalanx colt, a late Closer," Veitch says ."Distance should hem mm." Off their 2-year-old showings, career Boy was given tne nod as Veitch's- foremost entrant.-'-- He won the Grand Union and unit ed States Hotel Stakes, was sec ond to Needles in the Hopeful and was a strong second to Prince John in The Garden State. t ..i Head Man. on the other hand. won only the Sanford, but was second in six starts. ; ; : ,T- vftfa thorn avahJin vtntn Syl Veitch says."Let's leave it at tnat and hope notnlng hap pens w tnem. "This is a tough season on trainers. - "sometimes, it makes me wish I'd stuck to that law career my father made me- start on back home in Maryland." - HANOVER HOPPER HANOVER, N.H. (NEA) Wil- lie JKmarsson, Dartmouth senior, is the nop-step-and-jump cham champion pion champion of his native Iceland. v - NO SHORTAGE s PHILADELPHIA (NEA) -i Ac ceptances have been! received from 478 colleges and high, pre paratory and elementary schools for the Penn Relays on Franklin Field, ;Apr. 27-28. (xi:ji Editor: CONRADO SARCEANT Joe DiMaggio Former Yankee outfielder Joe DiMatgio was scheduled to ar arrive rive arrive at Tocumen 4 Airport on PAA flight 701 at 130 tomor. row morrv'nr, Joe Naehio, man manager ager manager ef the Pro League's Ches Chesterfield terfield Chesterfield team,, announced this morning. .' " DiMaggio, who met Nachie in 1940, when Nachio played wth.the San Francisco Seals ef toe Open Classification Pa Pacific cific Pacific Coast League, plans to be In Panama for one week as house guest of the Chesterfield slc'pper. During his stay the erstwhile Yankee Clipper will do some fishing and play som golf at the Panama Golf Club. . DiMaggio, who IK considered one of baseball's all-time greats," was elected to the game's nail of Fame last year. He was voted the American League's most valuable player in 1939, 1941, and 1947. fit" '0 HIGH DIVER A' competitor In the high diving contest which, ended'at Hotel El Panama Sunday, goes through a-spectacular somersault In plctuxe' above.- The. championship 'was.' won by Barney Cipriani who accumulated a total of 616 points' to nose out defending champion Don Hapka who garnered '615. -; DETOUR '-, -'- g I I 1 ! Vc.m? c 1 mm i . ... s "7 To Arrive thre For One-Week Visit r j. JOE DIMAGGIO He holds the major league1 record of hitting safely in 5$ consecutfve games. ? SIGN Pp.i ' "-V & j .. J 'I"a TO PANAMA AMOUCAS AN INEEP EXTENT DAJXT NEWSPAPHt 1 fAGt 1 ; i MM dims Singing His Praises noun rinc J i jut Nk Buir i I: Spin Fishing Eases Little Woman Into Trout Business, Like It Or Not JOE WILLIAMS '' The man who has paid Rocky Marciano well in excess of $1.5 million to throw combat leather since the young Brockton, Mass., factory worker fait the big time, was thinking out loud about reports the heavyweight ehampionintends to retire. v "I'd have to doubt that he has actually reached a decision,' biff Jim Norris, the nation's foremost curator of cauliflower, told me recently.: "Naturally, if there Is no one to fight and no money to be made, he would have no alternative. -"I haven't Riven up hope of producing a challenger. We've got two or threfr months yet in which to move. If we can make a match with even a modest potential value, say, $400,000, including radio and TV, I feel Rocky would be interested. 4 ' "I'm deliberately talking minimum. Of rnur.se. if w ant lucky and came up with a really exciting challenger, -the po- tenuii wouia oe just mat much greater, and so, I believe, would Rocky's interest. v . "But even if $400,000 is the best we can provide. and I admit I'm not sure we can even do that well. I'd have to bet Rocky would fisht. : y : "' t of such a totaK Rocky's take-home will be around t ?i 1 vhile b. did -considerably-better. 'than 1' -t , i Anhip Moore last summer, as well as in some prc.i- i. c .s f ats, stj.i not many people in any business are in a position to walk away from that kind of money these days. "In short, you might say it's up to the contenders to keep Rocky in business. If they get busy and develop a head man who looks is if he might have some sort of chance, I'd say it's almost a certainty the champion will fight in September." . NO MORE MOORE . It is popularly believed that a match between Hurricane wacicson ana f ioya Patterson would produce a challenger "in wuiuii mo ngnt puduc wouia oe very mucn interested. Norrls does not seem optimistic that it can be m&rip: -."I think Patterson's a fine fighter, but if his manager won't biiuw mm against some or tne oeiter boys, what chance have wcrog io sen mm? . ; "We certainly can't bring him In cold, say to the public. Take our word for it, this boy will, give the champion the fight of his life,' and expect to do any business that way." I also get the Impression Norrls Is no longer captivated . by the idea of exposing the grand and stately Archie Moore to the champion's mighty aavarerie arain. "The old fellows never do as well the second time around," uie uju oik wneei aaia. waicow, you Know, diant right a lick. Charles was no roaring lion, either. Moore might be different, but the fans would want to be shown. and I wouldn't blame them." CONTRACT STUFF Norris seemed to sneak as if it were a foreeone conclusion Marciano would still fight for the IBC, though the contract be between tween between the two has expired, and the champion's manager, Al Weill, personally has broken with the boxing boss. , "I'm lust assuming that If Rocky fights, hell fight 'for us," said Norris. "He always has. I doubt that he can do better, or as well, anywhere else. If he can, then we wouldn't deserve the match." v Marciano's contract with Weill expires next February. 1 Their relations are also said to have become strained, and the scuttlcbut is that the champion would prefer to remain inactive until he's free to .make his own decisions. ' As of now, nobody knows from Tuesday, and apparently the number of people who don't seem to care who fights whom or why is like the search for Brldey Murphy, constantly expanding. By JIMMY BRESLIN - NEW YORK (NEA) Nobo dy can lie like fishermen. But when Tony Aracola tell I you swordfish is the buy this week, you believe him. And for a high class fish market, his prices U.J t .11 So with the trout season bloom blooming ing blooming throughout the nation, we gath ered up me latest trends of peo people ple people silly enough to stand in cold water on a day off and took them to Tony for an official internreta- We were particularly interested in a uung called spin fishing. This comparatively new type of fresh water fishing has taken a firm hold on the estimated 30,000,000 wno usn. w....- Spin fishing, as opposed to flv or plug casting, eliminites the old menaces of angling. Anybody who has placed himself warily at a stream, jowl to jowl with a mob of addicts, and put in a day duck ducking ing ducking boomeranging hooks should appreciate spin fishing. Spin fishing is based on Mitchell reel. It is on the under side of the pole, has a one way principle. A simple jerk of the arm causes the line to whisk out, witnout tne reel spinning. This eli minates any chance of backlash ing. You can use the reel .for bringing the line back. "I hear about this spin fishing," said Tony Aracola. "Guy was in I think he bought two pounds ot snnmp and ne says it looKs like the jig is up. "You see, the old lady is In the picture now. They never used to go trout fishing. Fly casting and that stuff was too bard. But any anybody, body, anybody, even a wife, can do this spin fishing. So she comes along now. ,.,, "You know what that means. The game is over. You used to get up on Saturday and tell the worn an you are- going fishing, then blow out to the race track. On the way home, you come here, pick up a piece of fish and you got it made. r .. ,- "Now the guys got to actually stand out there in the fresh air and take a beating or stay home and clean out tne ceuar. The guy who caused this trou ble is Tom Lenk. In 1945, Lenk was a stock clerk for an Impor tant firm-. He brought 500 Mitch ell reels to the nation s fishermen. Today it has ballooned into a $5 million business. This hardly helps Tony Araco la s fish sales. Youngster Earns Unanimous Verdict Over Jackie Labua NEW YORK, April 10 UP) unocieatea middleweight Rory Calhoun is improving so fast that even ms victims are singing his praise.. After blasting his way to a un animous lo-round decision over Jackie Labua of East Meadow. N Y last night in a widelv-televised fight at St Nicholas Arena, the hard-punching but soft sooken aid irom Atlanta, Ga., conceded only that "It was a tough fight." ' But Labua was much more talk ative. ' M've been in with seme prt y. tough fighters but none ever hurt me like that Calhoun,'' said ho handsome New Ysrksr, who has traded punches with such renownsd battlers as CM Turn Turner, er, Turner, Willie Pastrana and Johnny Sullivan. "He's strong as a bull. Labui added, "and once he learns to shorten his punches he's going ti be even a better fighter." Calhoun, who weighed 161 pounds to Labua s 158-34, worn his 20th straight fight with sheer punelung power. He looked awk.. ward at times and still is a little "right-hand crary," but he never was in trouble against the more- experienced Labua. In the fourth round, Calhoun scored the only knockdown of the fight when ho caught labua with crunching right to the head. Labua's gloves barely touched the canvas and he jump jumped ed jumped auickly to his feet, but rtfo rtfo-reo reo rtfo-reo Mark Conn forced him to take the mandatory eight-count. Althoueh bleeding from cuts a loncsida both eves. Labua put ur a game fight and mixed frMly with Calhoun the rest of the way However, he ran into another bar rage of Tights in the 10th round and showed remarkable courage as he fought off Calhoun's frantic bid for a knocaout. Fastlich League Wen Lost Palomas .............. 7 J Ocelots 7 5- Fumas ................ 6 6 Conejos 4 : '8 Macaws ................ 4 8 The Ocelots kept their hopes alive for a tie for the second half m the Fastlich League Monday when they beat the Macaws 14-5. Trailing by two runs In the fourth Inning, they put together three walks, two errors and five hits, including a home run by Johnny Engelke.'and came up with ,ten runs to Ice the game, i Moe Schoch who was the win- rung pitcher helped his own - SUMMARY Errors: French 1. P. Corrigan, J. Durfee, 2, Hitchcock, l, Pearson, 1, J. EngM ke, l, R. Morris, 1, Tubbs, Laatz, a. itunj muiea in: w. Engeike, Ammirati, 2, J. Engelke, 3, Laatz. Thompson Dubois. Twn hn hits: Durfee. Home runs: John Engelke. Stolen bases: Macaws, 6, Ocelots. 1. Double nlavs: P. Corrigan, French, Pearson. Left on oases: ocelots, s, Macaws, 3. oases on oaus oh: Ammirau, 4, Schoch, 1. p. Corrigan, 3. French, i. oiriae ouu ty: P. Corriean. 3. French 1, Schoch, 5, Ammirati, i. mi py piwnero oy: nrencn, i. AJiimirau,, i. uant: ammirau Wild pitches: Ammirati. 2.-. p- ill !: IV cause oy gewing s-ior-3 ior tne.corrltan Pa.wrt hiis- nrf day. Tommy Durfee was the 2. winning pitcher: Schoch. Los Los-leading leading Los-leading hitter for the Macaws 'in nltcher p ivrrinn rim. i This" afternoon" the Patemas and Conejos meet in the last scheduled game in the second half.- a win- for De La Pefta's team can sew up the second half for the palomas. -j The box score: Macaws v Amato, 2b ...... Days, cf Watts. 2b French, p-as corrigan, Durfee. e Hitchcock Eberenz, if Pearson, lb ... DesLondes, lf-3b Dubois, rf ..... Brockman, rf .. AS R H Fo . 2 0 0 1 ss-p s'b' Totals Pacific Softball League V- By GILBEBTO THORN First Half Finish 4 Along The Fairways c h r V r' Get Rlore For Old Furnishings V7ilb a X7&tA Ad ' Teu'd Its surprited ttow nwiy folk art looking fat whlvr yen havo to sell. y can rMck 'cm quickly d chaaply with Pnam ,mrica Went Ad. a're buying, silling, mti "'Ing or iwppir,g, t . Want Ad, i t ( 4, PANAMA AMERICAN The Panama Golf team proved to be strong for the Gamboa con contingent tingent contingent last Sunday at the Pan Panama ama Panama Golf Club course as Pana Panama ma Panama took the first round In the 1958 Inter-club matches by a score of 23 points to 7. The outstanding feat for the Gamboa team was when Bombe ro Perc Graham coupled with Long George Riley to fire a two under-par best ball of 70 to cap capture ture capture three full point, from the Panama team or gnarlle Mac Murray and Carlos Arosemena who could only card an even nar 72 best ball. In all of the other matches the Panama team out out-scored scored out-scored their rivals -from the banks of the Chagres except In the No. 10 match, when Gam Gam-boa's boa's Gam-boa's team of Don Judson and Trim broke even with Panama's Clisbee-Gerhardt comb 1 n e to split the pomts ly, each. Next Sunday, April 15,: the Panama team will meet the Ft Amador combination at the Ft Amador course with tee-off time scheduled for B a.m. Panama re alizes that they have a tourh match on their hands In down. Ing such players as Ray Barnes. Major Stovall, Jack Smith i and company and especially over the Amador course but they will bt bolstering their, team who so easily defeated Gamboa with such fine players as Presirtent "Dicky" Arias, Rey Valdes and doc Miiien wno were unable to piay last Sunday. ; This contest should nrnva n be a real red hot battle right down to the last putt and the public is cordially invited to fol follow low follow the matches Over the nrpnn- side Ft Amador course admis-i slon is free. ninri A Henries "Stars" ....11 American Lealon 5 5 2Rth Engineers 5 6 rerver eria. "Pan LiauldO .- 4 Signal r I t) Second Half Standings Glnd Agencies "Stars'! ....10 2 Signal 7 6 American Legion a 26th Engineers 3 Cerveceria "Pan Llauido" 3 9 ( Straight Season Standing Glnrt Aaencles "SUrs" ....21 American Legion 12 10 signal a 15 Cerveceria "Pan Llquido" 7 16 2nd Half Department Leader, Most Hits Tingler, Signal 18 Ocelots pires: Mohl. Diaz, Scorer: Mead. Grapefruit League Detroit 000 400 12310 N. Orleans 00 000 000 0 ! Garver, Foytack (7) and Wil Wilson: son: Wilson: Douglas, Fisher 8 and Erautt, Dunlop (8) HR's Ber-toia- (Det), Boone (Det). WP Garver, LP Douglas. BACKS TO NATURE They look as if they might ba hold-up victims, but i these fellows are only taking advantage of the sudden emergence of warm sunshine In Chicago. Apparently want lo get an early start on their suntans. i : t Boston Phila. 001 000 0001 - 000 002 OOx-2 Tubbs, c S W. Engelke. cf ... 3 Reynolds, rf ..... 1 Ar.mlratl, p-3b 3 J. Engelke, rf-lb 3 McGriff. as ...... 3 Laatz. lb ........ 0 Schoch, p 3 J. Morris. 2b ..... 2 Thompson. If 3 Dombrowski. If 0V R. Morris, 3b-cf l; McNall, cf ....... 2 21 5 4 13 7 Brewer. Kielv (8) and Sullivan Roberts and Semlnlck. HR A.hburn (Pha). WP Roberts: u brewer. 1 0 4 0 Cleveland 032 100 000 6 10 6 2 1 1)0N. Y. (N) 200 002 000-4 7 Score. Feller (6) and Heean: Worthlngton, ldzlk (6), Wll-I neim (8 and Westrum. HR's Harris (NY) Evers iClel Thomp son (NYl: WP Score: LP I worimngton. ToUls 26 13 9 18 6 0; Milwaukee Brooklyn Macaws Ocelots Score By Innings .221 000 '5 030 lOOx-13 001 001 042-8 13 100 000 0124 8 : i i i ir ir i 'I 76 m N Buhl. Browbridge (g) Jolly (9) and Crandall; Drysdale, Roe Roebuck, buck, Roebuck, (8) Elston (0) and Thofho- son. HR's Logan (Mill Jackson Bkn) WP-Buhl. LP-Drysdale. Bo iff uSSi TlPO Most Runs Matsomoto, Signal . ' Most Doubles Stewart, Signal ....... .18 Most Triples Wirth, Signal 2 Mindt. American Legion .....2 Most Homo Runs s Lane, Pan Liquldo ' Most Str'keouts Wirth, Signal ............... .12 Most Bases On Balls Matsomoto, Signal ...........12 - Most Stolen Bases Koslk, Fan Liquldo 7 Mond'tora inajss with transparent "scotch" Cellulose Tap. Ksf) sewing bosket nm( fasten thread antt bind binding ing binding ends with tape. In$i$l on tht fctsf... SCANO CELLULOSE TAFE .57 .33 .93 JTnst ITome TTnn Adams, 2iKh Engineers ...... 9 "ne, pan, Liquldo ............ 9i Most nita Adams, 26th Engineers .... .111 JOCSI Krniil Pun Innra Hilzlnger 2-39 " SLICK SOPHS BLOOMINRTON InH (NV1V Sophomores hold down' the No. 1' and 2 sinclps assipnmontt n In. diana's tennis team. They are Alike Field and BUI Petrick. Distributor: ClA. ATLAS. S. A. with aser'a name and specificationa by Cia un o. 'leiepnone z-stu. P. O. Box 1057 Most SacrJflee Hits V. Mclant. Glud Agencies .... 2 J. pescod. Glud Agencies ...... 2 ScoUh" brand colored tapes are printed la Panama C. McArthur, Glud Agencies .. 2 ' Department Leaders, Pitchers . Most Annearanees i Adams, 26th Engineers .,..11 Most Complete Games Adams. 26th Engineers ...... 9 Lane, Pan Liquldo ........ 9 Most Innings Pitched Adams, 26th Engineers 72 13 ' Most Wins Hilzlnger, Glud Agencies 6 Most Losses Adams. 26th Engineers 7 Lane, Pan Liquldo 7 ' Most Strikeouts Hilzinger, Glud Agencies Most Bases On Balls Adams, 26th Engineers ... Most ft una Adams, 25th Engineers ;. , l! r m 1 CflDK fl. h" i' ; '. I 5 IXt .l X ; v : --: W J. !-" 8 I: i. A' yjLyS aadgraaadiyaaiae J 1 1 (j 1 Q KOCH-SaSS 'II I in now rrpsn i-n-. I. ; .. w m, i- vwi .1$.,,, .'.'ti'i'i'.- j . '.-.. are even fresher t Soften olbows with lotion-.. soaked pads taped on overnight. New tape holds tight. Did you ever see anything ao fresh? Yes... KOOL.figarettea! Even when .you have a bad eold, KOOLS ( are wonderful. The cool, lightly . mentholated tobaccos are ao pleasant i and soothing to the throat ami, ; 7mouth. And if you're feeling fine, -you'll foci better when' you light up a KOOL. Enjoy thnt scnaation ,.. .... of pleasant roolneiw) enhanced by the rork tip which never gets ; .'.lampnoratioUtoyourlips. 1 SwiUk frtm ''HoU" to M CGDlS ,,n...,m,t.,t,.,.:J iSf" i anHHIHnMMHHBBaaVMHHMHHHMMMHMMiMi 1 .. jl . to i-i ii uuair-A s M 5J7 vl : W Fly El Conquistador, Braniff'a superb DC-6$ wilh million-mila .captains and th friendly servic that's famous- throughout th Americas. Why not ma k your 'nexf trip vi Braniff? V ) i lJ ht InfernMtlOn and nitrvillem ull your (rival ignt ar SraniH II , Avamd. tivoll IS. leltpSwna 2-097S, Hotel El Pn.m4 3-140, Ext. 130, ar Nntma 3-4724, Colon Tick Offica, laltphon 79 ar 77. "I v 'C iA Jo- i! i j 0 0 ; WS r U U W J U kj J u J Us v u li u t-s j V 4 ,Read siory cn pags 0 Russia Told : US May Hike Armed Forces LN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAFER . irj A 1 1 1 i r 1 n II' lib mot LONDON;' April 10 tUP) -The United States warned Russia yes yesterday terday yesterday -that -: American military man-power will be atepped up un- less the Soviets accept an offer to cut the- U.S. armed forces oy w, w,-000 000 w,-000 mean. ; ! The warning was made by A A-' ' A-' merican delegate Harold E, Stas Stas-! ! Stas-! sen at the London meeting oL the live power- uoiiea jui 'armament subcommission.. At the same time, it was dis 'closed that United States, Brit Brit-ain ain Brit-ain and France had e I s d ranks considerably en their va va-Sryinj. Sryinj. va-Sryinj. disarmament proposals land launched joint effort to " agree on a procedure for mak mak-t t mak-t ina rogress at the- arms talks.. At yesterday's session, Stassen taid the U.S. proposal to reduce American and Soviet armed forc- cs to 2-12 million men ach re represented presented represented a siiable cut in U. .S. military forces that would ; n o t : "otherwise be made. ; C ' He toid Soviet delegate Andrei Gromyko that if the Soviet Union does not concur in this plan, the .5 United States will keep its milita milita-t t milita-t ry manpower at $2,900,000 a n d 'possibly more. ;, Stassen stressed that while pre- "vious Russian proposals nave 111 fnr. prsatfir- initial -armed force reductions than those of the " United States, the Soviets puvsuca cuts In a more remote future, y t In urging the' Russians to: ac accept cept accept the U, $. proposed 7 e u t s now, Stassen 'noted that the U. ' S. manpower situation is J, now ! taking slight upturn..: .. tented t Congress calls for a con continuation tinuation continuation of the 2,900.000 armed forces level Joe 1957. He said the tendency In Congress is wwaro 'more rather than less BUmary. manpower. ,1 ' As the' disarmament conference "opened a possibly crucial week, rioioffata Jules Moch made .lnnuont nlea for East and w..t n mrt out their oointS of a grecment and differences and. get vvvm v -.-.f r J He urged coordination of those roposals which appeared to be common to East and West disar- jmament 'plans.-.-fv r ft said there wa a "very con considerable"? siderable"? considerable"? area of agreement In the arms cutting Ideas of the U U-' ' U-' nited States, Britain, F r a n e Dntali. '. '"'' ";r stitvn was reoorted to have greed with Moch on this point. --' ' --' Rut hi also aereed with an oh : ..ruiHnn kv' Gromvko that there were some ''very important" sub sub-' ' sub-' atantive difference and it was not Just a matter, 01 procedure. .r BALBOA TIDES WEDNESDAY,, APRIL 11 ' k HIGH LOW 1:44 a.m. - J0:Oi a.m. !:$ p.m. ... ,0:25 F ".rt iJi people knote the truth and the country is safe" Abraham Jincoln. sat TEAR PANAMA, R, P, TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1956 FIVE CENTS Eisenhoiver s Civil Rights Program Attacked From Both North And South WASHINGTON, April ;0 UP)-i president tisennowers 'civil rights program drew attacks in Congress today from both South Southern ern Southern Democrats and some members of the Northern civil rights bloc. The attacks came as the pro program gram program headed for its first legists-. ve hurdle in the House Judicia Judiciary ry Judiciary committee.-' Attorney general Herbert Brow Brow-nell, nell, Brow-nell, Jr., went before a closed ses sion of the committee today to ex plain Mr. Eisenhower's request for broader powers to investigate civil rights violations and to en enforce force enforce individual voting rights. Rep. Kenneth B. Keating (N.Y.), ranking Republican member of the committee and House sponsor of tne legislation, predicted tne duik of the program will clear the House. He said "quite a few" Southern Southerners ers Southerners would not "object too much" to the administration bill. But a number of Southern sen ators and representatives voiced total opposition to the program. : Sen. Richard B. Russell (D (D-Ga.) Ga.) (D-Ga.) called it "purely political and a bid for the minority vote." He indicated Southerners would retaliate with, sweeping proposals to crack down on labor violence. Sen.- Hubert H. Humphrey CD- Mum. ) termed the President's pro proposals posals proposals "lip service... a grandstand play." He said broader civil rights proposals already were Detore con gress ana cnauengea iar. rasenao rasenao-wer wer rasenao-wer to support them. . Brownell asked Congress yester yesterday day yesterday tor sweeping authority to in vestigate civi rights violations a a-gsinst gsinst a-gsinst .Negroes and other minori minorities ties minorities and to protect individual vot voting ing voting rights. He formally submitted the ad administration's ministration's administration's four-point civil rights program. t Even if the program should win House approval, it will run into the unbending opposition of south-, ern Democrats in the Senate where filibusters have been nsed in the past to block civil rights measures. ',': : Sen. Walter F. George (D-Ga.) said he doubted Congress would approve it' at this session. 1 Senate Democratic Leader Lyn Lyndon don Lyndon R- Johnson said he had not seen Brownell's program and de declined clined declined to comment on it. But he said he hopes for early Senate action on a constitutional amend amendment ment amendment barring poll taxes. Brownell proposed creation of a six-member, bipartisan civil rights commission to old hear ings on. charges that minority groups, particularly Negroes, are deprived of their voting rights, and subjected to unwarranted e e-conomlc conomlc e-conomlc pressures. ; He also called for creation' of a new civil rights section in tne Justice Department. It would be headed by an assistant attorney general. Brownell. proposed tightening present laws against intimidation of voters in Federal elections, v Brownell's proposal weald 1 j IN NEW JERSEY Sen. Estes Kefadver breakfasts in the Hotel Robert Treat in Newark, N.J., Kefauver was in New Jersey for a-swine through .the state in his bid for the ..;- Democratic presidential nomination. ; , 0.75 WEEKEND. 0.40 -RELEASE! TODAY0 CENTRAL Stevenson Facing Kefauver, Vrite-ln In Illinois Today Li, make it a federal offense for any individual to try to deprive an other of hisfboting rights by in timidation or other measures. It would apply to any election, gen eral or primary, "concerning candidates for Federal office." They would permit the govern ment to step in on its own without waiting for, the injured party to bring suit or to exhaust remedies in state courts. Brownell reminded .Coneress that Fresident Eisenhower last January urged creation of a spe special cial special bipartisan comm.sion. on civil rights. Mr Eisenhower suggested that it investigate persistent charges that "Neero citizens are beine de prived of their right to vote and are iixswise being subjected to un warranted economic pressures.'' Solon Asks Ccnfrol Over SuperrSecrel Intelligence Group WASHINGTON. April 10 fUPV- sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.) told the senate today that ; "serious flaws in the. Central Intelligence Agency may be covered by the curtain of secrecy in which it is shrouded." He urged approval of a resolu- QUILL SHOUTED D.OVN BY BUS WORKERS Michael J-. ciuill (left), head of the Trans Transport port Transport Workers Union, Is greeted with jeers and catcalls "by bus maintenance workers at thf Transit Authority's garage In New York.. Quill went to the garage in an attempt to enlist ,' the support of the transit workers; for legislation now awaiting; Gov. Averell Harriman's slg ;i nature, but the workers shouted .him dowji and he was forced to leave, t w Gangster Acid-Bombing Of Victor Riesel Creates National Emerg e n cy Kefauver i NEW YORK.4April 10 (UP) t Ptlice guards assigned to Wil- Sen. Estes Kefauver, candidate for. kens, and Batalias in Chicago also the Democratic presidential nomi- were strengthened. Both ate sus sus-nation nation sus-nation yesterday, called the acid! pended members of the union. attack on labor columnist Victor Riesel "one of the most diabolic plots hatched by the worst gangst gangster er gangster elements in our society."1 t A : shabbily-dressed thug last week threw sulphuric acid, into Riesel's face shortly after the col umnist had denounced racketeer ine in labor unions t.n a radio pro gram. Riesel's eyes were severely burned. '-.' ' Kefauver, who headed a Senate crime -investigating committee that exposed national crime car cartels tels cartels in a series of televised hear hearings ings hearings five years ago, said the at attack tack attack on Riesel has "created a national emergency threatening the future welfare, and perhaps the very lives, of every decent, lawabiding man, woman a a d child in the nation." The Tennessee Democrat ex pressed his views in a statement The union convention opened without mention of any internal strife and delegates unanimous ly endorsed a resolution expres expressing sing expressing sympathy to Riesel and of offering fering offering a $3,009 reward for the ar arrest rest arrest of the "criminal of crimin criminals" als" criminals" lesponsible for the acid at " tack..,:', -r:7---V-: Wilkens had charged that Joseph S. Fay, a ; convicted : extortionist and former vicepresident of the Union, was seeking t4 pepsin pow power er power by unseating union president William E. Maloncy of Chicago. Wiikens said Fay s candidate for the presidency is Victor Swansoa of San Francisco, a union vice president. Swanson denied he waa. seeking the Job or bad fay's supi) prt.; -Ovr j A spokesman for- Ihe Newr JeN ccy Iarole boai-d said there was( "absolutely nothing" to reports thai Fay was connected with union act dvity now. He ssid Fay is under "regular supervision" ioNewarK at the present," :V"- J i; 1 1 tv r vision? ana vicna ut otaicniciii, "flCr-?.te J01" ""-Senate 0 The New York daily Mirror .Shows 12:45 2:29 4:39 9.00 p.m. 6:49 "BIS MM MM in the year's funniest comedy! . 1 .1. 1 Color by TECHNICOLOR WASHINGTON, April 10 (UP) (UP)-Illinois' Illinois' (UP)-Illinois' Presidential primary to today day today provided a test of Adlai E. Stevenson's strength in hit home state agairst a write-in campaign on behalf of Sen. Estes Kefauver. Stevenson himself summed up the significance of the primary in a television appeal for votes' last night when he. said', f f ," ,f "The whole n a 1 1 0 n will be watching to see how Illinois feels about its aon." r ---i- The primary provided the first ballot test for Stevenson since Ke fauver whipped him in last month's Minnesota primary, pick picking ing picking up 26 convention votes to Ste venson s four.. ; Kefauver backers hoped tho Tennessee senator would win 10 per cent of the toal vote cast in today's Illinois Democratic bal balloting.. loting.. balloting.. ' Stevenson has said he wouldn't consider himself threatened u the Kefauver vote was no greater than 10 per cent. 1 President Eisenhower was ex pected to sweep Illinois': Republi can primary.,. - Sen.. William. Knowland, (Cal if.) was on the ballot because he could not withdraw his name soon enough after learning Mr. Eisen hower would run. Lar Daly, a perennial candidate, also was in the GOP race. The primary provided no popu popularity larity popularity contest between Mr. Eisen Eisen-however however Eisen-however and Stevenson, however, because voters were not allowed to cross party lines.. N J. Standard Oil Now World's 2nd Wealthiest Earner NEW YORK, April M (UP) Standard Oil Co. New Jersey be became came became the business world's second biggest money earner in 1955 with a net income of $709,309,992, or $10.84 a share, its annual report showed today. The world's biggest oil company earned $584,793,158, or $9.56 a share in 1954. Jersey Standard's consolidated Learnings were topped only by year became the first company in history ever to earn one billion dollars after taxes. Sun Spofs Cut Off Redio-Telephone. Overseas Services - LONDON, April 10 (UP) -Sun spots blacked out long distance radio services over much of the northern hemisphere today. .. : A British Post Office spokes spokesman man spokesman said that conditions were likely to continue "disturbe ddur-j mg tne next 48 aours. r ; The blackout cut off practical ly all .overseas radio-telephone service from Britain. : A spokesman of the Royal Ob servatory, south of London at attributed, tributed, attributed, the "solar flare-up to tne present pnase 01 tne cycle of sun-spots which vary with twd-'year cycles." "We passed the minimum in 1954 and are now rising up to tne maximum," ne s,aia. -T ; watchdog'' committee to.- keep tabs on the agency in the way another joint committee checks on the secret operations of the Atomic Energy Commission. The administration opposes the CIA- measure on grounds. tho tu ' per-secret agency, which gathers undercover reports about other countries. Is too sensitive to come under congressional scrutiny,.. Cowgirls;1 .Cowboys, Pawnee Indians Sail For France NEW YORK, April 10 (UP) A troupe of cowboys. cowgirls, Pawnee Indians and 116 animals sailed for France today to bring Parisians their first American rodeo since Buffalo Bill Ap peared in 1908. 4 Bob Estes of Balrd, Tex., own. er of the show, said that after a four-week stand in Paris his "Lone Star Ranch Rodeo" will go on a tour of Spain, Belgium, Hol Holland, land, Holland, West Germany and Denmark. 'Mansfield agreed that secrecy is vital. But he said that "Once se crecy becomes sacrosanct, it in vites abuse." "If we accept this idea of secrecy for secrecy's sake, we will have no way of knowing whether we have a fine intellig intelligence ence intelligence service or a very poor one,", be added. .Mansfield noted that the' CIA is the only major federal agency over which Congress exercises no direct ana tormai control, .its budget and its personnel lists are classified. The law says the agen cy can withhold even such obvi ously unimportant information as the salaries of its top officials." Head of the CIA is Alien W. Dulles, brother of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. Mansfield said there have been a number', of reports recently that all is not well with the UA The Hoover Commission reported a Woeful shortage of information! about the Soviet Union and noted that the agency could stand some mternal administrative improvements." which carries Riesel's syndicated column. Riesel yesterday was able 'to distinguish people from his hospi tal oea dui u wui noi De Known lor several days whether his, sight will be seriously impaired. ; Kefauver said the purpose of the attack on the newspaperman was twofold: ; ; t . "To silence immediately a fear fearless less fearless writer who has dared to ex pose racketeering infiltration of some labor unions, and to intimi date others whose testimony and cooperation with law enforcement agencies is necessary to combat crime.",,"',"""'' ;,"""-.' William Wilkens reported ",t h e threat as he came to Chicago with Peter Batalias, another Riesel in formant, from New York to attend the 25th annual convention of the AFL-CIO International Union of O O-perating perating O-perating Engineers.- v Riesel charged the union has been infiltrated by racketeers. Wilkens toldtpolice here he re received ceived received a telephone call from som som-one one som-one who cursed him and threaten ed harm to his wife and t h re e rhtlilrMi. '1- Police said they would suggest to New York authorities that a -:4iiiv.-.v.J SUBS TAKE TO THE SKY Next time vour friend Tints to the sky. and says, "Look at the submariner be may not be kid kidding., ding., kidding., For they're transporting small subs like the -one above in airplanes now. This submarine -was being flown from California to the Bahamas. A two-place job' about 12 feet long and rigged for undersea exploring, the sub is shown being unloaded in Miami guard be 1 placed at Wilkins' hornet Fla, for the last leg of its journey. on LOBg isianu. Dutch Say Thanks To US With Trees HOBOKEN, N.J., April 10 (UP) The Netherlands government sent a token of thanks to the United States today for the flood aid it gave the Dutch three years ; ago. t 1 The Holland-America liner Noor Noor-dam'dock dam'dock Noor-dam'dock here with 9,600 young trees and a large number of shrubs to help beautify the six northees'tern states ravaged by floods last year. : THURSDAY AT THE LUX 1 ' y ti.nl szt two W t Ah in 1 1 i, iv 1. u4W i I A UNrvtRSAL-MlTERNATIONAL PICTURE rODAY-BELLA V PRICES: .75 tt .40 SHOWS r i r ISTA 1:00 2:50- 4:50 6:55 :05 P.M. 7 What's he oof? It's what he hasn't got.,. -A WIFE! ... M-G-M'$ GREAT ON THE STAGE I V TEWIFICASAMOVIEI itorrirg mm-. i ArDT)lT)DMAIW VlJlJLflJlJJllViJiU .What every girl sets for every monl JIMIK-Mffl-- 0RtrtlvHU $MUVA OM BT fftUl SMITH CUMTONWILOiR vmm In COLOR and CiNEMAGCOPEI N Hi KCTf |