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. " '' . f -J ' "' -x-"" J I 'V i y TWINKLES' ALIEN, 9-year-old daughter of Nary Engineer , and Mrs. William Allen,, appears to have carried away the grand championship award In the zonewide Huja Hoop con contest test contest without difficulty. Can you count the hoops she's twirl - v j ying?. Or twirl them? r-? 1 t ' I'll ii.i ."I '. I 1 1" ." J(. '. in il'. ., in i nni'i; i' ""p.f",' l''.' ComhiiHeeAtteiits Solution Fo Latin American Economy WASHINGTON, Dec.. (UPtt (UPtt-Th Th (UPtt-Th committee of 21 Americas re. publics pushed forward today, in hopes of meeting Thursday deadline for its first session ol talks aimed at bolstering some of Latin America's shaky economies. - The wvnmittee. which., has been meeting, for tteaflyf thefr weeks,. , rdinate a new plan fcr speeduig Latin Anr.erica,'s economic develop development. ment. development. v C The seven-mail group, '-'t 'be named by committee chairman Alfonso Lopez of Colombia, is ex expected pected expected to include the Umit d States and IBra?il,r6ne of the orime movers towards an economic rev rev-olut'onh olut'onh rev-olut'onh irb the 'lemisphcre.j.w.i, The group was directed to vork closely with 'the inter mencan .Economie and Social Council 'tf the 1 Orffan'zation of American States "(OASM Mafty Committee delegateL-had heatedl" opposed . creation of any new group which woi'id bypass, or duojicate, the work of theOAS aRency. he seven maA subcummittee wilpbegia,work Jan, '15 ,-on a brond ranee o meaiirs to meet acute economic problems in La Latin tin Latin America. It then will submit a report to a jsfecond meeting f. .of Handbook Contains some iniprpaion 1. il inapplicable nerc Th ''Hana1)ook 'iot, fimereenfr les' dis'nbuted .by the. Cabal one Boy Scouts-, yesterday, con contains tains contains certain instructions relative to "Conelrad! which are not ap ap-plioablet plioablet ap-plioablet o the' Canal Zone, the of office fice office of Cml Defense announced. The information is contained on 'Baee 17 of the booklet'5- and in s'ructr the' public to tune to two specified sadio. wave Jengnts lor disaster Information. VThese 'Conelrsd. instructions do not apply-on the Canal 'Zen Philip L.- Dade, Chief of Civil .De fense, explained. "While the in formation is basically correct, the public should be Instructed to dial v ci w radio, vao xr uz jar ,orncui Instructions,? v 'The w.aveienghtg mentioned Jn 'the handbooK will be used nation ally,' throughout, the United States i In a ConeJnad alert. On the Canal Zone.1 tne two tf wave lenchts hould be ued to obtain Instruc tions and infofniatives. V V Avoid the Last, Minute Rush Be SureVour Christinas Cards and I sqivett one oi ais wwsi suaiis .yea J .Way' by jagreeingvstOv set, ufu .t V r' I t.' Gifts 'Arrive Oil Time, j uuinra vu Jnu -Sw fWr,f 1 ? y;':.r' the full committee of 21 in May or Juf -1 -v"- 1 Meantime, a special 21-country group of technicians will meet here Jan. 8 to draft the protocol for. aa interiAmerican rcredit Sisti- tution, Tms' institution: is one. of the key, means by which the com committee mittee committee hopes, to pump, new blood "into Latin America's saggihg at- , The United States is xpected to carry, the- lion'a hare of the financial Twrden."- Planling U5C Bomb; DAToSliidy Case;, 'LOSXnCIELES (UPI) -"Two University of Southern California students have .admitted planting a homemade r. time bomb under the cheerleader's stand at- the Coliseum, setting it to go off dur during ing during the USUCLA football game. Hut they insisted it was all a pranic . .. v e ' 1; i'. .: It. I. Dave Visel. 20. a knior. and Neil Bazier, 21, a senior, told po lice they planted the bomb in the 100,000-seat stadium to explode as, a smoke bomb at,kickoff time during the annual game Nov. 22. lor, some, reason ;t failed to de- lonaie.. ( "Weplanned. for it to create, a smoke screen and it was to bide the UCLA cheerleaders from the rooters," thev said. 1 "If was a college pranK. and no malice was intended." i t-, , But police thought differently. at least until the two students voluntarily walked Into a police station .Thursday.'. Police aidrthe van irvuiu w tuiu-u uia l.hi 'ui .a.m. in n r m.imm a district attorney's office for study. 2 Sf udohfs Adnilf Public Invited To Yearly Showing Of Flowers At Balboa Y' Monday t.) V ' Newcomers to' the Isthmus will find many. new. and novel ideas for using tropical materials to brighten ; their homes during the holiday season s at v the Flower Show, to be held on Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Balboa Y.M.C.A-. US.0 fjut i, -- 'About 60 students are expected to place entries in .competition .in three' categories: ,cut flowers, fruits and vegetables and.! dried and exotic'' arrangements. j ? Members of the class will be hostesses throughout the evening. Mrs. Laura Crawford is chairman of the. refreshment committ-e with .Mrs.' Blanche Hodge,- co-chalrman--they ,wiH be. assisted by v Mrs,. Maria -Dickson, Gra a Gaynor, Flora Torbert, Norene Brennao, Dorothy Doberty, Annie Ziuman Patricia Doylefi ,! Helen Marx, ( Marine Shimp, Alzadie Trotman, Mary .Haywood; Lucie Ernst, Olga Ramdee,' Caleria Wells, Helen Mercooloff,! Rosary Bullock; Pat Swanson. i . Mrs. Dpris Abel is chairman of the committee on recognition, as assisted sisted assisted bv Mrs.' Grace Gaynor. Mrs, Loye McDaniel and Mrs. Betty. Woolen, formers priie win-Mi- ... 1 1 -1 coratihg the refreshment table, Punch eookieg wiU ,1 ' .v r.M tt :f r i Unix mulleins, Bin in cuirKB IH v. ; v Siiilliili;:Miiiii Mm lii Togetherness ' Panamanian and New Zealand and Australian beef, which don't get on too well in the Canal Zone are Togetherness personified in Chicago. i" i"-., ., i"-., Aciording to a spokesman for Armours,, the meat firm which bought recent shipments of lean, boneless beef from Panama, the Panamanian beef and Australian and New Zealand beef of the came type go right; together into the same sausages,' belogna and luncheon mea't;.t,.' .., The lean boneless beef, fs im imported ported imported because that particular grade is scarce In the United States, ii ' The spokesman added r "Sevi. eral companies use it in dog food, but that's usual.'V' Bayano's lndi:ns Don't Vanl Cedillas, Do Want Bulletin The fiuna Indians of the Up per Bayano region have beefs a- cBinst. Panamanian auuiuriues. One, they are opposed to eff forts by the Electoral Tribunal to Issue cedulas to their womenfolk. .Two, they regard it as Inimi Inimical cal Inimical to their Interests and safety In the iunele that the National Guard refuses to allow them, to buy ammunition for their .22 ri rifle fle rifle At a meeting between the Ctf na manuilas chief s and renre- aentatives of the Electotal Tri Tribunal bunal Tribunal and the Cenms t Bureau, the" Indians said their .women havt, never "voted In an" election and consenuently do not need cedulas. However; 'after some in sistence thev promised to put the question before a, general assem- blv.' -V -fV ' jteeardina-ithemniunltlonf they. said- thatrrewnfc TegTilst4rftBr bullets for their rifles... They, re requested quested requested the officials to Intercede with the National Guard, for a change In these regulations be because cause because the lack i-ot i ammunition lefl? them 1 practicallv swtthout means of defending themselves against marauding; a nint Is which raid their fields and de deprive prive deprive them of the names of hunting for meat to feed their families. ; i Cardinal Cushing, O'Hara Assigriep Old Rrthrie Churches VATICAN CITH (UPI) The two American cardinals v elecr, Richard Cushing of Boston and John O'Hara of. Philadelphia, will be assigned two of the oldest churches in Rome as their titular seats, Vatican sources said 'yester day., ' They said Arcnbishop cusmng would take; the church of Santa Susanna, -where American' Roman Catholics frequently worship while in Rome. Archbishop O'Hara will receive the Church of St, Andrea and Gregorio Ad' Monte Celio, on one of the seven hills of Rome. Both churchmen will take pos session of the titular churches after the Dec. IS consistory,- when they will receive their Ted hats from Pope John XXIIL '" Judge Guthrie F. Crowe, chair chairman man chairman of the committee of manage management ment management of the Y.M.C.A. will be mas master ter master of ceremonies when the class gathers prior to the show to learn the decision of the judges. A A-wards wards A-wards "will V made at, this time. The .show opens to the public at 7:30 p.m.. when Mrs. John- D. Mc Mc-Elheny Elheny Mc-Elheny wjll cut the ribbor.. , ( r f 1- All residents of the Canal Zone and Panama are cordially: invit invited ed invited to view the show, 11 Historical: Significance Of Anothe By LYLI C. WILSON v ft v - WASHINGTN, Dec. 6 (UPI) -Again this year the cal e nda r comes up with that voodoo com combination: bination: combination: Sunday, D U. ,' FDR called h "that day ef In Infamy." famy." Infamy." ( ' :,: v The wprld over, people '"consi '"considered dered '"considered It' the ntost humiliating event In the history of th United States, '.' v There is no more than cold comfort, If my, in the knowledge that history pot remoteiv imeiy to renew itself:' anyway; that his tory will not repeat itself in just " PANAMAR. P; SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1958 ' : : ' THE, SMILING SURMANS 2nd Lti Edward E. Surman Jr.; his wile, Sue and their son, Mi Michael, chael, Michael, wf41 be an Army family for a long time to come. When the lieutenant completes his tour of duty with the 1st Battle Group, 20th infantry, he plans to study for a divinity degree and be become come become an Army chaplain. He already Is an ordai ed minister, (Uif. Army Photo) v i Qfficer Chooses Name Fitting Career Pfc.-BWirOlrt;NV;fice1v CamderiV'qhnfrh" Ifi merfectlv all. right to ad dress 2nd Lt Edward E. Surtnan Jr1' as '.'Reverend' V becaus he's an ordained minister wi t h nerience a. a ifull-time pastor but at present he is an artilfery officer with M"tar Bafery,1 1 1st Battle Gorup, 20th Infantry at tori AouDe; ,. j w ,' ,, i i As flie 25-year-old officers ex plains it, "I decided to become an Army onapiain wmie in ne ne-serve serve ne-serve Officer Training Cops in college. But first, wanted to serve my. two year koiu com mitment at a regular officer. Then, I'll, spend the remainder of my career s a chaplain." While in the firt two compul compulsory sory compulsory years' of ROTCv he made up his, mind, to become a Army ofs 1 1,1 ii.li.iiii,ii,,.iiiigiliiii..,il ,i i. Ideal jManiage Of Debbie, Eddie ' t i V '-it; ''..- j Folds In Wake Of Many Differences HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-Just how, many a trip to Las Vegas during "ideal" was the so-called "idealjhis marriage while Debbie stayed marriage" f ot ueooie weynoias and. Eddie Fisher? k i .f ; .. i . I ."', "V, -.;,.. :. '- ',', ". Obviously, 'and marriage that lasts only two, years, 11 months and 15 days could hardly have beeen built on aa solid a founda foundation tion foundation as the public' ,thought. Yet It seems difficult to eueve that Elizabeth Taylor was entire ly right when she said: ! visdcue t wot in love wim ueu ueu-bie bie ueu-bie and never has been." ,? The truth probably lies some somewhere where somewhere In between. But the one fact that stands out is. that the marriage was never so, ideal as it was cracked up to be except, nurhnn in the mind f fans. Debbie and Eddie Fisher had many of the same problems lhat plague other youngs couples-and thev couldn't overcome them. There was, for instance, the problem of home life. Debbie lik liked ed liked lt. She liked to cook and sew; Eddie preferred the high life. He told friends .he didn't understand why Debbie had to make her own clothes. Insiders know that Eddie made that way. The stark11 and" factual explanation "' of confidence that there surely never could be an another other another Pearl Harbor is this: -: ; A i well-armed enemy could and surely would choose fatter targets in this second balfn of, theapth century wlan were available in the first half. Detroit, -Chicago, New York, Washihgt6n, for ex example, ample, example, offer more inviting targets than a great naval biwe plus major elementa of the US. fight fighting ing fighting fleet.' An enemy might even choow the Soo Canal oven Pearl Harbor in this era' of rocketry and nuclear weapons.' Tha Soo is ft ; i 1 r 1 1 -x P J : v : : :i; -SCO ' 1 4, -a combined the.' two goals- into the cnapiaincy-t t , i'(, Before he attains that" end, how ever, he must attend the seminary to obtain a divinity degree, Under Southern Baptist church rules, a person may be ordained prior to seminary attendance if the parti-, cular church he is serving -r auests it, 'A 4 A- V v , Surman 'pronounced, ; approplaii-: ely enough Vefcrmoa") was full time pastor i. at the South, Side Baptist Church of Camden, Ark., while a senior at Ouachita College in Arkadelphia, Ark. The church tea ues ted his ordination, so on Dec. 28, 1956, he was ordained in liis iiome, chun-ch-i-the First Baptist Church of West Helena, Ark, home. We've been having problems for a long time," said Eddie. 'Our marriage would have come to an end even if I had never known Elizabeth Taylor." There was the problem of dif ferent i backgrounds. Eddiet son of a poor Phuadel phia vegetable peddler, came up through snow business scnooi ot hard knocks. Debbie came from a comfortable family in Burbank, Calif,, She was voted "Miss Bur Bur-bank" bank" Bur-bank" and easily landed a movie contract. There was the problem 'of re ligion. Eddie is Jewish. Debbie is a Protestant, r And!11 of course, there, was Liz. Although she certainly .crnnot be considered the only factor in the divorce action-Mnd although Deb bie did not mention her m the divorce suit hev beauty is irre irresistible sistible irresistible to most men. v With all these problems, then then-even even then-even before LL: came along why waf t h e m rriage considered i-ldealVby so manyTiPeople? 1 4 ;-t a- iea to serve ms-enu'en. nesimo v until n i en ranee lB'OMne.Armv Sunday. Another Dec. 7, Is Recalled n America.i life line1. A sneak punch such as the Ja Japanese panese Japanese landed on Pearl Harbor could' and may be e f f e cted ' against one er mere ef Ha area American urban centers. There - is progressively :ies time now to detect and progressively lest chance to fend off a' sneak rocket punch than there was to detect and fed off the Japanese air attack on Pearl. ' There -was on Dec, 7, 1941, the unexampled miscue When Hawaii Hawaiian an Hawaiian arm i far) op warned ftf nn. proacbing airplanes. The Army and Navy in Hawaii, supposedly , v. . i iri September 1957,, He attended ii. j.um ,. i. a ..i ii ... tl ine ,i-weeK Arunery era .c,n School at Fort Sill, Okla.,' before coming to Fort Kobbe last March. A native of Helena, he received a bachelor of ;arts degree in May 1957 from' Ouachita Baptist School. His s tfoncent rated study was so ciology. artd he had minor in re religion ligion religion and psychology, :ratmattdesciibesi'!nu'''UoIleees 'dayr as'fairlVauIefe' When not .studyingv' he spent much of his time on the tootbau field. He was an all-conference guard when a senior and was listed in "Who's Who in Small College Football". In the fall of 1959, when he finished his tour as a platoon lead er in his present unit, the lieuten lieutenant ant lieutenant plans to enter Southern Bap Baptist tist Baptist Seminary, Louisville, Ky. Th-e' years (there will give him a bachelor ot divinity degree, a necessary requirement for the chaplaincy. '.-Amid' college studies, footbal, Army. ROTr and serving a con gregation, he also founfl time to get married. He is now the. father of a 10-month-old boy. Asked if his wife agrees with Ks plans for the future, the lieutenant smiled and said his wife says that any- ininR ne ueciaeg vio ao is nne wim her. JW - i Registrations To Be Cancelled On 128 Ships SAN JOSE, C.R., Dek (UPI) A prttidential decree ytrdy ordtrtd immadiate canelltion of tha rtgistratioms of 128 foroign-owntd ships which have boon fly ng th Costa Ric Ric-n n Ric-n flag but which ara In arrears on thair payments. Undaf tha nw faw congress passed last weak tha k-amaind s of tha 233 foreign craft which have boon using Costa Rican re registration gistration registration will ba "without a flag", Dec. 31. Numerous .ship .shipowners owners .shipowners protested tha short not notice ice notice of tne oancellatw and some , threatened damage suits. a great military bastion, werej caught with their defenses 'down. ' However1 tightly you may have made up your mind who was re re-potisibile potisibile re-potisibile for the tragedy of Peart Harbor, there remain many who do no, agree with you, whom so soever ever soever your culprits may be. The argument goes on and on, quieter, now. but forceful. Books still are beinst written about it, '"' The dispute ranges from: Did FDR and his ..war-mihded cabinet deliberately invite the at attack tack attack Mi Pearl to comoel Japan to fire the first" shot! to ; Did Adm. .Husband E. Kimmel Unionists Expect Big Rrimotiohs i - .-.'.--"'. p. ''',... ', i For local Raters - -1 ' ' r 1 ''. '.'' ,' r.'-i",'' : :.-;' Union officials predicted yesterday that when the y Canal Zone merit system and the single wage plan go in-; to effect they will start a new era of employment practki on the Canal Zone. v ,? "If the single wage plan is implemented properly, Panamanian employes on the Zane will benefit greatly in the future," said Alfred J. Morris, president of Local 907. However, he cautioned: "On the effective date ver) few employes percentagewise will receive any substantial 1 benefit. But as time goes by this system, is expected to open advances in employment practices and promotion! ; ' 7 I -";-'tt.. There is no official word, on when President Eisenhower der implementing a uniform I ImiAN fAiiaoAa wiiiwii auuiLca caucl i time between now and Dec. 15" and that the single wago 1 : law will be implemented 60 days after he signing. Panama Canal sources in Washington predict the signing "early this week" Another published prediction fixes Jan. 12 as the date the President's qrder will become effective. , All sources aaree the renorf i fine tA rMni' V 1 '. -1. iV- are some points still to be ironed out In the-' ,new, measure, ,but nonetheless', consider it "a step icwara tne. muniment or our employment ?oai U.S.-rate wages for all Panamanian em em-plpves plpves em-plpves on the Canal Zone. ' The Panama Canal source in Washington said they be believed lieved believed the order would nimnly provide the framework for eliminating. thetdiscrimination in wages between U.S. and Panama citizens in Canal Zone joh,. They said it is unlikely to contain the details of imple implementing menting implementing the uniform wage scale. The elimination of a double standard for wages In the Zone was first agreed to In the 1955 treatv between the united States ari Panama. Congress last year passed a law Implementing the treaty in this resnect, and setting; .forth a for inula for eliminating the dis discrimination. crimination. discrimination. Details have been worked out since bv the various Rovernment agencies who have employes in the Zone. The law nassed by Congress nrovlded that it must go into ef effect fect effect not later than l80 'days aft. er onactment. .'''.';,' That date will fall-on Jan. 20. but lt is possible the President's executive order may set an earr Her date for enforcement. , V Well-Known Cellist To Hive Concert At JWB Monday Henry B o se n, internationally known cellist now teaching at the National Institute of Musi.., will present a cello concert at the USO-JWB Armed Forces Service Center on Monday at 8:15 p.m. Servicemen and their depend dependents ents dependents are cordially invited to at attend. tend. attend. There will be a charge of $1.00 for civilians The program will includ v Men delssohn's Sonata tNo. 2 in D Maj or Op 58, Bach's Sonata No. 2 in D minor (from the 6th S' te) and Saint-Saens, Concerto No. 1 in A minor Op. 33 with Hans Janowitz as accompanist. t Today On Pearl Harbor Anniversary and Gen. Waltef C. Short fail miserably to discharge their ob obvious vious obvious duties In Hawaii. The administration and a con congressional gressional congressional investigation tagged Kimmel. and Short' as the cul culprits, prits, culprits, both officers protesting that this finding was grosly unfair., f Japan's military triumph at Pearl Habbi1, iT"mel recently repeated this accusation: ; : y 'This success- was caused by the deliberate failure of Washing- Hon to give the Hawaii command Crs the information available intto Gen. bhort more;'r Washington to which they were I than, it did."' TEN CENT! . ;-:t,ji;-;. but plenty of speculation, wilf sign the executive or- wage scale for the Canal 1 LL.."ijJ.' a ft. '.'.'' M rr,.;:. rne nrnpr m na cmnoi "ifsji r i '","J,,J. 43 uj.uoorj'iedaes-r-: ft Ffghf For Rise r In Minimum Wage WASHINGTON (UPI) -Orgaa-ized labor has pledged a deter- mined fight to raise ,lhe minimum wage from one dollar to $1.25 an hour. It has taken on the. battle) v despite warning, of si ng oppo oppo-sition sition oppo-sition even in the heavily-Demo. cratic new Congress. AFL CIO President Georga Meany declir-j Thursday that the minimum wage should ba b 1 quarter and cw age shosuld be extended to mil millions lions millions mor workers. Meany said the move would meet powerful opposition and th tt :But he Aid ine trade-Union movement will not be deterred nor halted by ca?hatt,acksn7leM "-nd noaeUi. The AFL CIO leader spoke Thursday night in an address cU maxing i two day conference marking th 20th anniversary ol Ah,f Feduer?J Fair Labor Standard nl,iW,hu:h "Providei for I one-dollar an-hour minim-m wage. th ?Sf?S!ee w" POnswed y the AFLCIO and the aUonal Consumers League Rep. Richard Bollin? (B-Mo Zi ?ldt the grouP tht the goina ? be rough. He said the drivf would win congressional approval only through a coalition Vftorth. ern Eastern and Western" De crats plu, g0m Repubia,, fld model te Southners. Mother's Day Not a peep out of us fo- morrow. It's Mother's Day, so we're keeping mum. Back Tuesday, loud and cledr. BALBOA TIDES MONDAY, DEC. V J High A low 12:55 a.m. 7:24 a.m; 1:31p.m. y.7:46 pn. entitled. This informatiad,i denied to the Hawaiian commanders, was supplied 10 me American com- manders in the Philippines andW the British. , J Secretary of "War Henrv J Stimson 'old the congressional in- vestigftors that on' Nov. 27, 1941, Short was warned that "hostile ac- lion is possible at anV 'moment. Stimson said hindsight ha( con convinced vinced convinced him that the nation world -have been safer ft the" Army'j Waf Plans Division had transmitted mformattott V. 'i Hf' t' s. 1 .V-s!'rf .'', '. IHE SUNDAY AMERICAN SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7, 193S MG1TW0 THE PANAMA AMERICAN j Owns And vuslishw v TM ajama AMCaiCAN Ntss, INC. rtuH ir niuon niHiNflvia m mi- . MARMODie ARIA. fDIToa 1-T M STMIT V 0."OX ,134. PANAMA, K Of P. TCLCPHONt S-0740 LINK) ; "... I '.'?";; '- 1 CAM AODRKSX rANAMBMrtANi PANAMA -M OmCKt 11.1 UNHWL ill""" , r(lN fltWIINTATIVM. JOSHUA POWERS. INC. : v" t 4S MADiaOH Avt., WiVf YOMCf M7 N. V. i LOCAL "AIL Pm Month w Advance i 'il oS P SIR MONTHS IN .ADVANCt 0 IS OO .... PM ONt YlAH H) ADVANCt I i , 4 0P THIS IS YOUR FOKUM THi KIADIRS OWN COLUMN Tke Mail it m M "H" Latt-fi aw net WW irataf-Hf and an haasief' hi wholly aaafl.eiiHal i .dJkrf. .'uim iut ba Imaatiaiit H ft eaaia'l aapaar ha art oar. Lttran art pubHihaa ta tha erder raealyad". -Please try to keep tha lottan limite- to ana aaee HMiata. Meat of letter writer It hold la strictest confidence. Tli it Raw-paper attnmat aa re.peaibilitr for ttatamaatt of opinions cxafeste. 4 letters from readers. THE MAIL BOX jCIENTTFIC CALCULATIONS Sir: Havent heard a word from "I Quit" (Mall Box, Nov. Z5) since mv letter of Dec. 1, but just in case he still harbors his miscon miscon-Stions Stions miscon-Stions about the playing of the lottery I am going to refer to a few paragraphs from Nacho Valdes' column in La Hora a few dy Nacho wrote that he can't help but smile when peoplexome up with illogical comments as a Jesuit of the caprices of fate re- g"e8wl1nt1oneto 'say: "We are sure that the persons who ben benefit efit benefit from these caprices or apparent anomalies do not believe that their good fortune has been the fruit of any fraud perpe perpe-tralted tralted perpe-tralted by toe lottery, but the product of their calculations, their faith in hunches, their 'dreams and their interviews with witch . . ,i .l .th.ov.n th.li. rahMt'a feat the doctors, oowu wumtu vjv.., ------ - - blood of birds, powder from the toes of the great .devil, the piece or unicorn s norn or mo a ucojr ui s by the Obeah man of chillbre, Anton or Bejuco.- ,,;,. Maybe If "I Quit" had visited the "wizard of Rio Rita" he would of toM him that 88 was going to hit four .Sundays in a row. in fact 1 think will go see him myself if l tan find where he is. . Regular Buyer DESEGREGATION AT GORGAS Sir: It looks like the wall of segregation at Gorges Hospital is fi- nftllit iiimhllriflr down. The out-patient clinic already was fairly democratic.. The rninr.Pi'. wife had to sit beside the private's wife to get a sore toe mended. But now imagine Local Raters (or do we call them Canal Zone Raters now?) are privileged w an in me same wa,-' ing room to see the same doctors. Tndipnftnt' (Mailbox. Dec. 4) condemns the darkened eorrl dors at this same hospital, but somebody obviously has seen the light when they arrived mt the conclusion that two clinics cannot operate as efficiently as one. The new appointment system" also is a big time saver if you are smart enough to get sick on schedule. Couldn't they leave a few holes in the appointment book for kids who need attention right away? x Of course, a lot of neople just don't bother to make an ap pointment, but on the other hand it's irritating to have to wait three or lour nours unm every -o-y wee gew .a&cn cure m d--fore the doctor can prescribe a bottle of pink stuff for your fe verish baby. Oh well, they're trying. Lame Duck BLACKOUT WANTED Sir: TV here on the Canal Zone is the most boring: I have had the displeasure to witness in any overseas area. Right now I am being most cruelly bored by watching "Home Town, USA", and this hillbilly bunch from North Carolina is boring me the most. I suggest a boycott of CFN-TV to follow the world-wide boycott of vessels flying flags of convenience. Alternatively, in the interests of conserving electricity and the viewers' excessive blood pressure, I suggest a blackout of the following programs: 1. Home Town, USA; 2. Mr. Wizard; 3. Tic Tac Dough; 4. Juke Box Jury. I'm not a civilian, so there's no need for anyone to blame this gripe on them. Bored. by RCA VICTOR 0 v cArifites The World's best bicycle Made In England ON SALE AT: ACENCIAS W. H. DOEL, S A. ' ; JUS Automobile Row Tel. MW european furniture store muebleria ;fel diablo" casa;sport, s. a. The two polar regions of the' earth are marked by more differences than slmilarttias. Antarctica Is an ice and snow covered continent sur-'. rounded by a cold and stormy ocean while the north polar region consists of the Arctic. Ocean surrounded by margins of Morui America, Europe and Asia. Men, animals and plants'. nave slowly migrated north, north,-but. but. north,-but. Antarctica. hundreds of miles from all continents 'but South America, has no land animals or native TpulaUoa, 0 SaereiopaalA Britaaalo Haif a ColumnMore or LessNow and Then . by. CREDE CALHOUN h TIMI OUT AT TOCUMEM v The bulletin board showed that the plane I had come to meet was 45 minutes late. That is the minimum for planes that I meet They are always late. a I took a seat ana .umoiaea a morning paper. Then I saw the Fusser come through the entrance to the waiting room. Travel may be broadening, but the mechanics sometimes, perhaps oiten, nave a strange effect on the travelers. They become a little bit mad at times, and can be annoying as well as interesting. The Fusser was both, lie was turned out t In brown from hat to shoes. A shiny brown silk shirt and a glistening brown silk tie. He walked with nervous haste and, waj. followed by his pretty, slender, lame wife who earned the hand bags. There wis a look of patient resignation In her dark brown eyes. She- seemed to be trying to disguise her limp. The Fusser was burdened by a very small 'camera in a brown leather case that hung from hit should by a brown Mather strap. The Fusser was not a Latin ot North American, but his pretty wife was plainly, rather decora- tively, a .Latins, While waiting for his baggage to come in be fussed with his travel papers ex amining them closely with a look of suspicion. The wife sat down with a gtef sigh.' H' was the first" in line st the checking counter for a plane bound to South America; The tick et aeent was cross-examined un- '4til the baggage arrived. Then the Fusser checked each uoei ana watched the weighing in with sus suspicion. picion. suspicion. The" agent had "not started, working the plsne so the Fusser! rushed to the imieretion office, There was no one at the window so he went inside and Questioned an old man who was sweeping the floor. He returned to his wife SAVE MONEY I TRAVEL WITH THE WORLD'S MOST EXPERIENCED AIRLINE I Fly to Los Angeles in a giant Super-6 Clipper with radar. You have your choice of First Class or Tourist service at Pan American's new 30-day round trip excursion tares. PLY NOW-PAY LATER, IF YOU LIKEI for ruervQtio call your Trmtl Agent or WORLD'S MOST EXPERIENCED AIRLINE Nftomei 2J-S Street No. 1 J-83 Tel. 2-06-70 (Feeing Pelade legtsfotive) Colem Solos Sldg. Tel. 10-97 . V f Xfrtir Novuabor U Utfouib April li. 19S inisi m (M ind carefully checked .their tra el oaoeri a Cain. The Fusser was obviously near- uehted. He wore thick tens glasses, of -course, with brown james. He removed them fre quently held them away away and looked througn mem aouDixuuy and then popped them on again. Next he had his brown shoes shined and discussed the operation at length with both his wife and. the bootblack. He gave the finished job a careful inspec tion: Then he ; discussed the charge with' the : bootbl'ck and paid doubtfully, .' examining l each coin as though looking for counter counterfeit.' feit.' counterfeit.' v- ','- ,.:-ri.: :;; After-admiring his"' shine he-returned to question the airline' a a-gent gent a-gent and eome back to his wife with a schedule which he studied intently." Back to the agent he dis cussed the scheduled-- with him. He took off hisi glasses looked throueh them and popped them on. again, -, ," 1 f- if L- V -J' r j. . j i 1 w ii ir UJL3 j w a aaaaaMaaaMSilssSBBBa aaaatjaaaaBaaa wtaaMfttaaaaaBK j i r a r I I i l rU ir3 J I o37 ROUND TRIP 1 DUOURISTCLASS 7 r-ROUND TRIP, f T vSj& FIRST CLASS He sat besdle his wife and re examined all their travel napers Suddenly he jaw some one at the immigration -window and pooped over there for more ; nuesuons, He removed ,. and polished his classes. ves.v with a brown eilk handkerchief. Now he checked his wirst watch -with the airport clock and then asked a passerby for the time. ' He wa carefully nuestionine porter, when the arrlvjl of my plane was announced. l eave i last look of sympathy, at his. pa tient weary wife who hadn't mov ed since sitting down after enter ing the airport. f v THRIAT OP SOCIALISM We have just had a visit from Senator-elect Clair Enle of Cali California, fornia, California, He was one rf the "left wine, radical, snender Democrats who are coins to take the United States strsieht down the left-hand road to socialism and government ownership, according to the. cam palen speeches of PreHent El Elsenhower senhower Elsenhower and Vice President Nix on. .." Anoatently thei speeches In Cal ifornia helned Enie o defeat Governor "Goodie' Knight and to lect many other Democrats in California. Bu the cannot be giv en all the credit. It. must be hir ed with Senator "Bill" Knowlanl Republican candidate for ooern"1 who lst by wide margin over a million votes. ; Knowlarid nr, on the so-cilltd "right to work amendment o the conitu'tlnri of California. He a'so cot an unhappy assist ram an old McCarthyite, Joe Kamo. which back fired. A California Democrat is reported to have said: "We ought to give, a te"H moniat dinner to Enowland. He did it." Engle Is the first Democrat ,o ne sent to tne senate from Call fornia in 20 year. He has, how ever, a liberal record as a m ber of tb' lower house of Con Con-rres. rres. Con-rres. Although he is probably wmuiar wi"i the cnal to a limit- ed extent, his visit was all too short to evaluate the "horrible example' of "government vownr shin" and "socialism" in th r a nai zone. ; Take the Health aervfrava starrer mere ne can see an un mistakahle form of "socialized medicine." no less, which has a a-larmed.the larmed.the a-larmed.the American Medical Association. Virtually everything In tha fV meninousing, theatres, commis commissaries, saries, commissaries, schools and some neonle lay; employes, too. Private enterorise. which the left wing, radical Democrat snend- en are aupposea to SDonsn, ac according cording according to Repulicln "campaign warnings, enters the picture only as a contractor but it seems to be doing very well. ; iv The Canal Zone socialism Is not the "creeping socialism" of the Tennessee Valley Authority. It has arrived and appears to be pretty durable. The fact tha the greater part of Canal operations, are per performed formed performed as business enterprises by mo rmiDii i;anai company does not rmoye the stain of "social. ism. :. NOW With thfl vlrtArv nf 1- wing, rjdieal. spender Democrats in the -ovember elections, the Ca Canal nal Canal is likely to Continua rfnwn fh hand road to aapialitm inti of taking the middle way to the nearest golf course. j UrvJi? mem i tin zf j TITICACA V Y 1 mi The Andes Mountains ef eoutn America are the longest mountain chain in the world; 800 miles longer than the North American Rockies. Ge Geologists ologists Geologists say they are among the youngest mountains on earth. The highest large body of nav nav-lgable lgable nav-lgable water, Lake Titicaca, is on the plateau of Bolivia and Peru. The lake Is 125 miles long, 12,507 feet above lea level laerclopadi ftritaa'niM YOU FLYSPECXS nmonor th fina nrint in 4h A.il Regiater, today the mission is a -medium of exploration in the fields of anthropology. The study of the bygone cus customs toms customs of a dead age can be intefesting indeed; especially ir pursued in parallel with an investigation into the Jinks be-, tween today's Teenager'worship or, the juke box and tha ancieni; aaoration ot the Suri Cod. From what I have read of Indian cultures, these two objacts of worship are en-, shrined in temples of about the lame sUi and tha victim of the respective cult rnakt about the aame.noise. In the case of the Indiana, the hols wna because the'' principal performer was undergoing heart surgery, for re removal moval removal of. same. What the sienificanciif the unabatinsr noises remitted 'by'; they moderit. :Jragaf dafjit the re researches searches researches Of modern arhama Tvm isnlrala -! niHirn to their; howling, Teenagers, no Was a:tlme,iltls reported to me, when eoft converse among the young meant moon ana june ana so torth. only thing it means these days is laryngitis. ,(- '. ., ... I You have all heard of the Stone Age tribe which dwells in a high, jungled valley back jn the fastnesses of New wuinea.; mese cnaracxers are so tar oenma tne times mat their television' let does not even f show "One Moment Please." Tehir only association with the chemise fashions is o bundle plump missionary ladies In wrappings of the sort prior to popping tnem in we pot. -- , In Sarawak: too,' there. are tribes which can almost match Canal Zone Teenagers for resisting the' advantages cfviliiation pretends ttf, confer. There In .Sarawak, amontr the Dyaks, the poison-tipped arrow continues to enioy preference over the deckle-edjred pasteboard. a a calling card. It is a conditionah compliment to an absent friend to declare that "he has a good head of his shoulders." Tha chances are considerable that that is lust where his head Is not, at the moment of discussion. As aT further sigh of their remoteness from good taste and civilized restraint, the pattern of a Dyak warrior's shield is as childishly as Detroit automobile grille. ... y s i Further on in our catalog of meaningless tribes which history has' passed by, leaving them in their Stone Age ways; are the Aucas of Ecuador's Orfente a missionary missionary-murdering murdering missionary-murdering aggregation of non-voters which inhabits tha area of. some of the tributaries of the Amazon, Immediately below the wild eastern slopes of the Ecuadorian Andes.' Anthropologists are still kicking around the issue of just how retarded the Aucas. should be considered. VarioOs In terpretations are heard, of the fact that round the handle of one of the spear found in the back of a murdered mis missionary sionary missionary .in the Auca country about two and a half years ago was a page from a recent issue of Time Magazine. Even Panama's own San Bas Indians are looked upon by some observers as having a comparatively primitive form of civilizationThis has been questioned by at least one Grin Gringo go Gringo who took his Box Brownie down to the Islands on a Sunday tour, was promptly photoraohed by ? a Sn Plas wixn a roiaroia camera. t remains,; nowever .inax xne oan Bias hava..th'eirv4ribal iwiyi' rwhicfe:dlffer"1nohi.' resoects from the; forms of behaviour wa like to rwrd a enlighten enlightened, ed, enlightened, and rich- with the grace of progress. Tha bit about tying an UM141U11UI nito up kiii, ivauiiijK iibi ; tnw v wvv mu pushing craft and cargo out upon the ocean currents may do regaraeo as euuaiiv .meritorious oy us vna uy in, ar Bias, but they act while we dream. Fellow anthropologists, this is all, leadln un to the revelation of my discovery of a Stone Asre civilization ri?ht here on the Canal Zone. I have not the spaCe to deVelon a full and scientific thesif but the first clue I rot was that the whVof a fiW rrfrfi ffier In one of the US Arr-d Forces! found It impossible to declare It. was Impossible for her to cirrv oul a lon-standins' obligation bec'e she and her husband Jiad, as" I understand it, been bidden to join some colonel over the shinbone of a dinosaur. - She had to abandon" all other plans lust as surely a if her old man had whacked her on the h-ad with half a moho?anv Josr and dragged her .off the to the colonel' cave by trie hair. I urge you to bear the following In mnd when con considering sidering considering this cave jrirl's abdintion of a civilized person' right to live his or her own life. j 1. The occasion she nlans to loreirw is of .a sort that won't come to her often. Yet she eats three times a day. Why should she feel compelled to substitute the common commonplace place commonplace 'for the challengingly uncommon? Z. Her husband, as best I know, arrives at work on time every morning, performs his allotted tasks' satisfac torily, and departs at night without stripping the office of paper clips, or sabotaging the pencil sharpener.. Having thus earned his day's pay, whyv should he feel .additional .additionally ly .additionally contracted,, without overtime, to drag his wife along to dance around a dinosaur's bone at the colonel's behest." Cannot hubby perform a post-frandial pas d deux with the colonel, instead? He will get well fed. The colonel will get well fed. Neitherof these nutritional triumphs will be in the least affected by the presence or absence of the wife. So why must she go when she has something mora interesting to do? Something for which she was previously committed. It is strictly a Stone Age civilization when the tribal chief cannot get the gastric juices going without all the squaws of all the lesser braves being arrayed betore him. v 3. To what degree would the wartime)' effectiveness of the lady's husband be diminished if he shared the dino dinosaur saur dinosaur bona with the colonel without having her at his side. Would he shoot any less accurately? Would he marshal! his men any less ably? Seems to me the taxpayer, would get about, the same fighting value per nickel out of the guy no matter where his wife is when the colonel carve the peacetime dinosaur. There are many civilized occasions upon which peo people ple people charge upon the calories In social unison. The differ difference ence difference between these occasions and the dinosaur cookout alluded to In the foregoing Is the element, of free will. By all. means let everyone eat whatever they choose, With whoever they like,, whenever they care to. Let them likewise dance without restraint, sing and puy tottery tick tickets, ets, tickets, Just so long as they cbey' the J Street traffic lights. But do not make them do any of ths things. The forced feeding which faces the lass of which 1 write Is to me so realistically primitive that the only note of relief she can anticipate Is the discovery that she Is not Scheduled as the entree. r t . PERCY'S PEERLESS PORTENT Is dedicated to thN i s 'dollars by which the Canal Zone Un'rt.und missed ft goal. In the hooe that three bucks well-invest' bv tha alhla fttflfttaU uA ahhnt' the fund un to 4340 01S Its goal by 11 i.m today. A fit TESTS .;. 'i, ,- , ., 1 Hfr,v' ,s I - ;4fifv 1 t & 4 ills: j :a ; r--- .S&:i?17? ' -1, , mtr imffffim ltwfmi j gj, 1'' v,mimitm,wm,m.mmmm m.mwm.mmMwmm vVy n l IML LV MA iJKUl flmW City Ticket Off ice ; I . a .. -- ... ' 00"! ! ( 000 ... tlr-eowdltlonea -tni &slgc4 vjth your omfo Ifl nind! No more tediou leaning over counters . '. instead you sit u k desk while our experienced travel personnel gives you prompt personalized service b completiog your plan to anywhere iff the orkL si-:? 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If i. m ; 39 YEiARS XEljto CONSULT YOUR AUTHORIZED JRAVBL AGENT t 1 BALBOA tXPRCU TRAVEL ACtWCY , Avfc, f ST Tl 1.1021 t-ion 1 ls CISCOME TRAVEL AGENCY 1-Calto tlAti'tlU.' r Ttlt ,i.Ol t-t4S1 LOK TRAVEL ACENCV A II, 11-04 t T.l f-S41 . Pinuaa, I f. riOANQUE HNOS E HI JOS Tmntvrntl 1. TITI Tl t-Ul Ptnuna, Jt t. TIVOH TRAVEL AGENCY A 14, 11-11 TH t-04l t-04S Pnm. R P ' COLON, TRAVEL AGENCY Av. MfmU, SOOT Til. WS ( - Cote. B. f. PANAMA TOURS 1 . Av. 14, tlA-K' i Tilt. t-S0O t-llll .Pmiu. R. P. : PERSON, TRAVEL RURXAU A 1 Enpifta I IT Ttlt -14 S-0144 PANAMA TRAVEL AGENCY . Av. Jot Arsttntiw, (Mil i ' VadM Mtrctlt i'i T.ll. 1-1701 iai( l-IMl '!: Ptntm. R. P. BOYD BROTHERS - Ctllt tl-B ll-ll T t-on t PtMBi R d P. . j c i ( t it i a i ! i ; !) -A 7 'I ' 1 "'I rrv. .. i'.v" A (iBBBSBBBVBBMBBnBnD J" ''J "'BMSlBBBWEai . '.':'. .' :.: -''5 ,U'''i;)f;:i?iv;;:.A I BtU V V- in .S ...V V V 'J .v ?' r ag rouK THE SUNDAY AMERICAN m-- --i. I''-. SUNDAY DECEMBER, I .." Hil ...... octal ana By Staffers 2-0740 2-074 U Box 134, JPanama tftJ fMmfttf U Lu numLt tLmm. mm 8:00 M W rn.iL mtf 'i Royal Cbuple Give Fairytale Glamour to Lavish Charity Ball In New York I i Hrt' ft - v r- MX- MISS ROSELENE BRICESO IS IdRTHCOMING MARRIAGE OF MISS ROSELENE BR1CESO TO MR. BRACK HATTLER IS ANNOUNCED BY HER PARENTS " M Col. and Mrs. Julia Ernesto Briceno of Golf Heights have an. ijtunced the forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Miss Rose Rose-lene lene Rose-lene Therese Briceno, to Mr. Brack Gillium Hattler Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Brack Gilliam Hattler of Golf Heights. The nuptial vows will be exchanged at seven o'clock In the evening of Saturday, December 27, at the Santuario de la Virgen 1 del Carmen In Panama City, i A bridal reception which had been planned to follow the church ceremony has been cancelled due to the recent death of a member of the bride-elect's family. Colonel Briceno is the Panamanian Ambassador to Brazil. Kitchtn Showtr Honor Milt Julieti Montoya Misi Marisin K r a e m e r was lostess Saturday at a kitchen bridal shower given in honor of Miss Julieta Montoya, bride-elect ef Dr. Anibal Ramos. The party was given at home of Mrs. Olga M. de Mirrop in Diablo. Charity Card Croup, i Balboa Woman's Club The only nreeting of the Chaniy Card Group of the Balboa Wo rn, at the Fort Amador Officers' Open Mess. 1 Hostesses for dessert and cards will be Mrs. Gertrude Smouse. Pa Panama nama Panama 3-6465; Mrs. Marian Wag ner Balboa 4358; and Mrs. Marie We zel, Panama 3-6605. Reservations should be made with one of the hostesses before noon Wednesday. noon Saturday, December 13, in the Fern Room of the Tivoli Guest House. Mrs. Herbert B. Wilkinson, a member o: the NeW Rochelle, N. Y., D. A. R. chapter and former elate music chairman of New York State will present a program on American music. Mrs. wuxin wuxin-son son wuxin-son is visiting on the Isthmus with her daughter, Mrs. John W. Muller. Reservations should be made be fore noon Friday with Mrs. M. B. Huff, Balboa 1231, or Mrs. Maxine K. Hitchcock, Durundu 2124. Members are invited .o bring guests. Woman's Club To Hava Brunch, Christmas Program The annual brunch of the Bal Balboa boa Balboa Woman's Club will be given Wednesday morning at 9:30 in the Fern Room of the Tivoli Guest House. The program will follow a Christmas theme. Reservations or cancellations should be made before Monday noon with Mrs. Tess Luce, Balboa, 1488, or Mrs. Sara Rowley, Bal Balboa boa Balboa 3674. NEW YORK, Dec. 6 (UPI) Princess Grace and Prince, Rain Rainier ier Rainier III of Monaco disregarded ro royal yal royal decorum io dance to the hazzy trains of "Dixie" witli 1,2000 ce celebrities lebrities celebrities at the most fabulous so society ciety society ball since the free-spend ing 1920's. Police held back hundreds of curious Broadwayites and autograph-seekers outside the Astor Hotel as the royal couple frolicked inside at the $60,000 Imperial Ball, which provides funds for music therapy in veterans' hospitals. Princess Grace said she was "overwhelmed" by the luxury of the fete in honor of her and hre prince charming. The "names" that turned out for the ball at $50 a head were SO formidable that vntpran nartv. giver Elsa Maxwell cast .superla .superlatives tives .superlatives aside and railed it "th hall of the decade," Elsa wa hard pup to it to keep trom being up upstaged staged upstaged by nationally known host- afl ca. D..I. W r ,aiio icne inctlt, uwen Ll fritz, Mrs. Thomas Bancroft Jr;, aieanor iwnitney, Mrs. C. Bread,; and Ailsa Mellon Bruce, who may well be the world's richest wom an. -7 SDotlieht f r.... around the floor of the Louis XVI green-and-eold ballroom h opened the evening by dancing wun i-nnee serge Obolensky "The Princess Grace Waltz,"-composed for the occasion by lociety band- KONTIWtD ON PAGE FIVI) MAKE FRIENDS Christmas Party Planned By Local D. A. R. Chaptar The Panama Caral Chapter of ;he Daughters of the American Re man's Club planned for this month volution wiM have a Christmas Will be held Thursday at 12:30 p. and birthday luncheon party at li NIA If you answer the telephone and it is for another member of vnnr family, dnn't stand at the telephone and yell for the person who is wantea. fcay. "jusi a mo ment, please," and go to yie per son and tell him that he is want ed on the telephone. Here is where a few steps will keep you from making a bad im pression on the caller. YOU ARE ALWAYS EXPOSED TO GERMS leader Meyer Davis. But the for former mer former Grace Kelly of Philadelphia and Hollywood occasioned a real mob scene when she and Prince Rainier left the foyat box to danoe to the music of "Dixie". : The great and the near -great eibowed photographers and re reporters porters reporters to see the Princess dance with her bemedalled consort, who was every inch a prince in white tie and tails. Grace fulfilled ev eryone's dream of a fairytale princess in her rose-colored silk bouffant gown topped by a tulle stole and set off by a- massive diamond and ruby tiara and a royal ransom of diamond earrings necklace, bracelets, and rings. She wore an old-fashioned corsage ot violets. But even Grace and Rainier could hardly compete with the entertainment of the evening, or organized ganized organized by ball hostess Helen Huntington Hull, who is the for former mer former Mrs, Vincent 'Astor, .Veteran observers of the New York social scene agret that the midnight tableau entitled "beauty and the beasts" was the most lavish since the galas, of pre-1929 days. ARRIVES IN SINGAPORE SINGAPORE tVPl Prime Minister John Diefenbaker of Can Canada ada Canada arrived in Sincranhi-e lif nnda for a -25-hour visit on his world lour. .JDiefenbaker flew from Ma Ma-laya. laya. Ma-laya. ... V 4 Eyes...to remember ..l.-.,-v liili EYE-GENE 5 J i CLEAR SPARKLING BEAUTIFUL Cr fori your eyea... take care of them well! Use the Modern eye drop... that soothes, deans, refrnnhx trf beautiftei. -.-i8wai 1MILY TO LOOK YOUR BEST A ' MK'u'fM-1 tt ' y "i'"iniLii .V.'':Jtf4jb easy tO Ctch P cold ,.nrm pro pvr"- where all around ;-u. Fo whv n"t nlav snfp? ; LISTTCRINK Is antiseptic... kills serms ln ln-i.K i.K ln-i.K aUntly. Why not garple LTPTERINE every It' bo easy.v. .!ti no convenient. EVERVDAV PROTFCTION , EVERYDAY GARGLE , (te Suit alt Sluuidi of C2GC2ES FAR'BELOW United States PRICES 12-inch LP RECORDS,.. New releases bimonthly PANAMA RADIO CORP. Across 'La Merced Church Central Ave. 9-14 Llo up PERSONALIZED HAIRCOLQR BBffi"w,',lllJ CUSTOM-BLENDED . with ROiJC0l0R Nowl We blend colors. We accent them. And we create the on color that fits your desire, your need! For with this sensational new -Roux product we can produce literally hundreds of individual haircolors-the most lustrous, most natural looking veri Phon today, for your appointment for your "persopol" ftoircolorl Wt M Roux Crem Color according to directions. IT'S CREMI-KIND TO YOUR HAW "'-. V ASK FOR IT AT YOUR BEAUTY SALON ; Distributors In Pairama JULIO VOS, S. A. Second Diagonal (Old "A" Street) No. 7-27 Box No. 297 Tel. 2-2971 .lev Device Seen As Useful Monitor Of Human Heartbeat - KEENE, N. H, (UPI.) -"No, Nol Don't ait tnat golf b-Ul" : ; "Better get off the tenuis court now. Onevmore game and you t-utuu Udve a ueari tUtk' -' la they day coming when a m.n playing on a golf course or ten tennis nis tennis court will be advised, oy re remote mote remote control, to ease up imme immediately diately immediately or run the risk of a coro coronary? nary? coronary? "Perhaps one day In the not-too-distant future," says Horace D. Gilbert, presient, of Minia Miniature ture Miniature Precision Bearings, Inc., "there will be medical monitoring services which, for a monthly fee, will listen in on 'a man's heart beat constantly and warn him of impending danger." Such monitoring, : Gilbert be believes, lieves, believes, could be v accomplished through tiny "electronic devices attached to strategic parts of the body. t "Dramatic examples' of how this is possible have been demon demonstrated strated demonstrated in the various experi experiments ments experiments with artificial satellites and rocketry," said Gilbert "We now can keep track of thi welfare ot an animal as small as a mouse in the nose cone of a rocket. The Russians were able to monitor the heart beat and breathing of the dog in their sec second ond second satellite. sThese, same .prin .principles, ciples, .principles, which will be refined in the future, can be-applied to the man on the tenniscourt with suspected or knowri heart trou trouble.'' ble.'' trouble.'' . ; The tiny .electronic devices would transmit dinger signals to a central recording station. Warn Warnings ings Warnings then could bg flashed back to the individual, no matter where he was, i : Gilbert's firm manufactures ball bearings, the smallest of which is only a little larger than the period at the end of this sen sentence. tence. sentence. Miniaturization already has oro-' duced a transistor the size of a cufflink, a microphone the size of a grain bf rice and even the 11 11-pound pound 11-pound instrument package put to together gether together for the first Explorer sat satellite. ellite. satellite. SILENCE IS GOLDEN NEW HAVEN, Conn.-(UPI) -Motorcycle patrolman Edward Johnson switched strateby to stop astolen car. The officer's siren was doing such a good job of clrearing a path that the cul culprit prit culprit was getting away. S John Johnson son Johnson shut off the siren, The traf traffic fic traffic quickly boxed in his quarry. HOLIDAY CUTBACK GREAT NECK N.Y.. (UPI) i-.The Gseat Nekifplrrinl hnarrl decided J that the -"educational process was- suffering from "too many interruptions" and decreed that from n6w on classes would oe new a usual on -Lincoln's Birthday and Columbus Day. How Carefully Do YOU Select Your Make-up? - I w 'J whpn nettinsr out to refill your compact or purchase some loose powder, nave you stopped to consider whether you -set a a-bout bout a-bout it the right way? MavhA vnn think vnu alreadv know the shade which" suits vnn anri hftv not chanced it since you first started nislnn make-up. But it Is as wen to remember that your s k 1 n chances with the seasons and with the years. You knowi. of course that you need a darker shade of powder In the summer, but have you also taken into account the fact that most skins tend to wow sliehtly 'darker, so that. If your make-up is to continue to look nat-ural and lovely, you should deepen' your powder shade very slightly from time to time. M o s t N first-class cosmetic houses, too, are always experi experimenting menting experimenting with riew (deasr. and fashions can. subtly change. At one time, for instance, when women first used powder, an almost dead white was used, then, later, powders took on a yellowish tinge, which, In $urn. passed out of vogue. ; The house of Yardley, how however, ever, however, has always realized that the important thing about powder is that It should match the skin tone exaetly-no easy target to aim at when one con considers siders considers the hundreds of tiny dif differences ferences differences in shade which exist. You have only to,. compare the skinjdf the inside" ofyour wrist with that of the woman on ei- .wsKf''i.,v''?y-..'V!.v ther side of you at a tea-party -or bridge game, .to see how dif- -f erent they can be. : When you choose your-poW" der, therefore, try it just there, on your wrist, and see? how close you can get to our own, i graduation of colour. It you make your selection from .the l rang of Yardley complexion t powders. -vou will almost cer tainly find the one which :1s a your own.; for it has alway been a very wide and carefully carefully-toned toned carefully-toned range, hundreds of tests have been made on skin-tones of every grade. Two new igolden shades have been added at the i deeper end of this scale, carib-- bean and Bermuda. as tests have proved that this Is where they are most needed. These1 should be making their ap pearance in all good class shoos Just now and there Is no need, therefore, to make do with a : powder several shiades lighter than -your skin, ? . 1 Yardley recommencis : y b ti start the da v. for vour first make up with loose powder, us- ; ea over, a xooa iounaauon. ana continue to' keep lovely durinK the day by means of using a -compact powder r for aulck:re aulck:re-touching. touching. aulck:re-touching. 1 !Por your foundation" choose Yardley feather: f.ounda, tlon, a liquid-cream powder-,, base which gives a flawless make-up. and for your day? time compact select Yeather finish, the crearhy.; Yardley powdef compAcfc Both of tHese have been brought out Jn the new Caribbean shade.' which, v"ncs wim ciiner O une WOjto .nnwdr deeoer shades. complexion : Advt. announcing the worlds firsf- : 1 vanisnmg hair spray 0 'AW rrU IWn hi. .mil i V ,f & . a from Helene Curtis Conditions as it 1 rnntrnlat TTnlAa lin KrJ softly all day,.. leaves its magic . then vanishes overnight I JLj'l Atirri 'Vf jt.af .M aa1 "",''irir 'A j gi m r t J0RDRY, NOBMAU COfLY.HAlf The Only Hair Spray of it's type! ASK FOR IT AT YOUR FAVORITE COSMETIC COUNTER OR BEAUTY PARLOR PURER 0 FINER RICHER Fresh as all outdoors r " I I II WEEKLY CARGQ SERVICE FROM NEW YORK AND U.S, ATLANTIC 1 tiAKUU sLKVltlE' rKOM JNEW IOKK AINU U.5. - ATLANTIC PORTS AUD U.S. PACIFIC PORTS TO -THE REPUBLIC OF PANAMA AND, CANAL ?QPiE. PASSENGER SERVICE TO NEW YORK AND WEST COAST SOUTH AMERICA PORTS. : ";v T PANAMA AGENCIES :M CRISTOBAL il3f U. ilSS"? ; 'PANAMA 3-071 3-7599 BALBOA 2150 21 59 1 not rm tUNDAY, DECEMBER t, 1951 THE SUNDAY AMERICAN Sdiiat'and-Olk 6 r wide Bridal Shower Honor1 ; -r MiM Vivien Madlemi v ) ViVSea Madlem' waif guest M honor at a., bridal shower, fyen Saturday, evening In the Fern Roont of th:TiwU Guest House. Co-hostesses b the: afafir were Edna Humnwr, EUea; ShirervMa ShirervMa-deline deline ShirervMa-deline Cora and Clae Purvis. .; Tha'guest list for the- party in included cluded included Harriet Tewinkler, Eliza Elizabeth, beth, Elizabeth, Selby .i Dolores Coffy, Mary Jane Selby, Genevieve Bartlett, Marcela vBarraxaJl Dotorei Cop Cop-ipenhaver; ipenhaver; Cop-ipenhaver; Buth Ewing,5. H 1 e a. Facrot, Thelma Lowande, Jenny Turner, Norma Trevia, Amelia Ft bto, Myrtle Albiitton, Valentine Diers.- i Shirley Gallagher Pauline Har Har-bro. bro. Har-bro. Vida Weeks. Marea Duncan, Mary Worsley, Esmeralda, Ambro se, Mavis McUIade, Hattie uupree Sadie- DeBridge, Minnie Hennea, Sara ThieL Lila PuUen. A n n i e Matthews, Dora de SalOana, Delia Sosa, Barbara Bares, ; Gretchen Warren; Carmen ; Pinel. Juauita jvwae.en. V Florence Fealey Elba Sambra ho. Doris de Arteta." Angela Mo rales, Rufinade Plataniotis,. Jean Smith,' Jfelen Kat,' Dorthey Her rington,' Eleanor Becker, Sylvia Staoles. Joanne Hummer,. Karen Henter;. Reggie Smithy Ester Mo zon and Judith Chamblee. Cbiivict 'Shoots 'Sell' After Holding Cops Ai 1 Bay PBtNfcvlLLE. Ore.' (UPI )An onvict who feared he: migtui have to go back to prison shot himself to death early today .after holding a squad of police at bay for nearly 10 amQ-Y The ex-convict was Staley Ro Robinson, binson, Robinson, 27, the father of four chil children." dren." children." Friends described him as "personable and charming,' like fee boy next door." Robinson was released from atate prison three weeks ago ay iHntf one-year term for bad checks. A police officer came to . his house about 3 p.m. yesterday to arrest him for obtaining money untie false nretenses. Picklnff un a .30 rifle, Robin- son ordered i the officer away Another) noliceman turned in an alarm and soon 14 city and state officers were at the, scene. '1 i won't S go : back to the pen" Robinson shouted from a window. "I won't come .out until I lay down my gun and I might hot do thafc'vT'-'---'---.--Police tried in vain to persuade him Ao give Aimself up. As night fell, they turned k spotlight on the house. At intervals Rooinson appeared at the window and shout ed to officers. Robinson's ex-wife. Dorothy, 24, called him on the telephone and sobbingly pleaded with him to surrender,' She and one of the children were said to have been in the house when the policeman tirst came; to arrest mm, but tney were allowed to leave, v a Finally, Robinson demanded that the counselor who had helped him in prison come to the house. The counselor, Wade Scott,' made a rtosh trip from Portland. 160 miles away, and entered the house at 10:55 p.m. ; At 12:25 a.m. Scott burst from the house and ran through the police guards. The heavily armed officers then converged on the house after throwing a tear gas bomb inside. Seconds later, there was a muf fled explosion. The officers went inside. Robinson had turned the rifle on himself. He was killed instantly. Negroes ;VVi;Hoc Top Political Posts In Years ? To ? Gome, Predicts Sen Jqvits WASHINGTON (UPIV-The Jm-.will convene in January 2000. Jav- mayor of Manhattan Island, the mediate coal of the National Assn. for tbe Advancement of Colored People Is stated to be the election, in I960 of; : ., ,SJ.. I Three Negro, congressmen, from Mississippi. v. One each from-' North Carolina and South Carolina. ;; ' Authority for that political pro projection jection projection is Sep. Jacob -K. Javits (R-N.Y.) whflfwroU. for the Christ Christmas mas Christmas gift issue of Esquire maga magazine zine magazine an article on racial integra integration tion integration in its broadest' phase. ? Javits speculated, on-what he regards as the likely possibility, that a Neero will be appointed to a top Cabinet position or. be elect elected ed elected president or vice president of tne- united sta'es d. tne year 2000 42 years hence. Tbe senator hopes and believes these events will transpire, ex plaining that he applies very prac practical tical practical consideration:: to the matter of Negroes and'U. S. politics,, as f jws: 'Once the (civil rights) fight has won for Negroes in the South their constitutional right to vote," Javits wrote, "and once they learn to take the full responsibil responsibility ity responsibility of voting, this country may well witness a ballot box revolu revolution tion revolution in many southern states." Another NAACP immediate ob jective is to increpse several times' over the registration of southern Negroes. The second ses slon of the 106th U, S. Congress SUM FAT, AWAY If (at ruins' your Urur. or suUces you ihort of breath and andangwi your health, you will And it uy to loa weight with th new Hollywood method Formode. No draatlo' dletlnf or exercise. Aak your drugstore for Permode. ad ttart cUmmlnr at once. its believes between 30 and 40 Ne groes will be elected to -the House in that year. Negro leaders have told him that it will be possible to nominate a Neero to the Supreme Court in about 10 years. In fewer than 50 years, Javi'p expects -a Negro to be elected mayor in New York, gmcago. Philadelphia or Los Angeles. By 1965, f Javits expects school inte . . 1 X 4.1 1 granon .io oe compieiec. inrouga inrouga-out out inrouga-out the South. ; The senator's practical political considerations largely are. based on expectation of a great and steady increase in the Negro vote 'or local and federal otnce. ro- litical factor No. 1, of course, is the protection now provided for southern Neeroes' who desire to vote in federal elections. This was provided by last year s compro mise civil riehts bill. Another factor is the population shift of Negroes to the great cities outside the South. The end result of such shifting ean be seen in New York City where the bor- ouch of Manhattan elected in 1953 and re-elected last year a Negro to be borough president. His name is Hulan Jack. Jack, in effect is 91 one the Indians told. There is a great concentration of Negroes in New York Ci'.y and in tne record of penormance. so fr, it will become greater over the years. "It is perfectly possible." Javits wrote for Esquire, "that by the year zooo, one out of every four New Yorkers will be a Negro. In umcago, tne ratio could be one cut of every three, and in Los Angeles half the voters mieht be Negroes." Javits has not overestimated the powerhouse possibilities of the Negro vote. 1 1 IT Vi,"t..' Former Comedian Class In Humor i KANSAS CITY, Mo." (UPD (UPD-Why.do Why.do (UPD-Why.do you la gh at a joke? : More often than not, it's be because cause because you feel superior to the characters in the story being told, according to tbe nation's only fcaeher of ''professional comedy! 'Ron Carver speaks as an au authority thority authority on the subject by virtue ' of nearly a decade of studying comedy seriously. He instructs a humor class at the University of California at Los Angeles and serves as tutor to the motion pic picture ture picture and TV Industrie and to private business firms that sell humor 4n various .forms. Young Carver recently conduct: id a$. two-week course on the prin principles ciples principles of comedy and humor for the writers and designers of a greeting card iirtn here. He said tne art oi creating -tunny mate- rial and situations can be, learn learned ed learned if person has "reasonable talent" and is willing to follow three .important steps: : 1. 'Approach comedy with a business like attitude; according it the .same respect law and medi cal students show their profes ions.-; ! 2. Develop a comedy slant or i aense, and look for the humorous distortion in- all things. i 3.' Work, study and practice mi nor as a ruii-time undertaking; jCiTibbeah Meet V l,'3l$ Avards For 4 From Florida U. : f GAINESVILLE. Fla.. Dec. j (UPD Four men were awairded : citations last night by the Uni ; versity f Florida Caribbean Con Con-j j Con-j ference for their contribution to : Inter-American relations. They were Ralph H. Allee, direc direc-! ! direc-! tor ef the Inter-American Institue ' of Agriculture Science at Turrial Turrial-i i Turrial-i Costa Rica:, Johij "Weir asso asso-, , asso-, eiat director 'Jfedlcal Education and-Jublic Health ofttfce Rocke Rocke-1 1 Rocke-1 feller Foundation; J. Fred Rippy, : professor American History at the University j of Chicago; and : Fre Frederick derick Frederick Hirdy, professor emeritis ! of Chemistry .and SoU Science of i the Imperial College of Tropical : Agrlcultura in Trinidad' : s i Earlier. Allee said Caribbean ; countries must develops further : their educational institutions to exist and defend against a "tub "tub-tie tie "tub-tie 'enemy." Allee said he hoped future te' minara would help define current : Caribben problems and lead to i '.more .loyalty, and common Aac I Tying; In the tame theme, I Charles Wagley, professor of an an-1 1 an-1 thropology at Columbia University told panel members that ther is 1 little formal community orcanira- f tion .ind a lack of sociaU bounda ries in tne Caribbean. He added, however, thai I'this doesn't' mean that the Caribbean U doomed to failure in iU pro- frarrt' et social and economic de velopment." SPEAKER Herbert L. Coffman from Houston, Texas Come and hear' the word of Ood preatched in all it's God Breached: in all' its simplicity Church of Christ 08S1 Balboa Rd. Meetings Nightly Dec. 3 9 at 7:06 P.M. Subject! Dec. 3 Preach the Word. ,r Bible alike?. .. Dec. 4 Can we understand the Dec. 5 Salvation is by faith.. Dec. 6 One Baptism. Dec. 7 Morning The prophecy oi tne esLaoiisnmeni oi the Church. Evening The mark: of the New " Testament Church. v- Dec. 8 The reforms tion and .restoration of the Church.,--'' "V Dec. 9 What must I do With Je sus who Is called Christ? No collection taken, by RCA VICTOR These two discoveries helped to make the modern wrist-watch possible THE watch you wear on your wrist today is a reliable, efficient, highly accurate pieoe of mechanism. But it would not be what it is save for two great discoveries. This year marks their anniversary. Twenty-five years ago, the Rolcx Oyster waterproof case was perfected ; twenty years ago, the Rolex Perpetual self-winding movement. The eighteenth-century pioneers of horology, dreaming of near-perfect accuracy in watches, always knew that their ultimate goal was un unattainable attainable unattainable until the delicate mech mechanism anism mechanism it demanded could be protected BET YOUR LIFE! Hnt at Huskamps all "59 rental cars have Life Life-Guard Guard Life-Guard Blow out ahields. Another Huskamp service for your Safety. If you are starting your stateside va vacation cation vacation or trip at Miami, write or cable Paul Mc Mc-Creery, Creery, Mc-Creery, He'll see you are met at the airport with a new Ford or Rambler, for your trip of a day, week or month. AH details taken care of. Prefer to buy? 5end us your name, we'll immediately mail you our Long )lfe cool Perfect comfort Odorless at 1 .a non Anergic Cost lest by lasting longer AGENCIAS IV. H. DOEL, S. A. 89-15 Automobile Row Tel. S-7175 fht Rolex Oyster Winding Crown Materials of aH sorts, rubber, even oil, haS been osed in vein attempt to make a watcH permanently waterproof. It was left to RoUn. in 1926, to discover the simple prmcipls ot the self-sealing action of one metal on another, and produce the fmt permanently waterproof watch. by a really waterproof case, and guarded from the vagaries of hand hand-winding winding hand-winding by a reliable self-winder. In the Rolex Oyster case, patented in 1926 we have the first truly water waterproof proof waterproof case. In the Rolex Perpetual Rotor mechanism, patented in 1931, we have the first truly trustworthy self-winding mechanism. Proof of their efficiency, if prodf were needed, lies in the fact that the self-winding waterproof watch is accepted today as an integral part of The Rolex Perpetual Self- WimBng Meehamsm A radical and brilliant departure from all other, attempts at a self-winding watch was tbe secret of the suecem of the Roles Pee Pee-Detuak Detuak Pee-Detuak Before, the hammer-jerk principle wMUMd in pocket watches, but tbe continual jerking of the eeH-winder as the wearer walked soon told on the mechanism, it was left to Roles, in 1931, to discover theRoVor. . semi-cireoUr weight routing smoothly on an ills, and produce the first silent self-winding wrist-watch. our modern life. Genuine advances in watch-making science come at all too rare intervals i here are two to which all watchmakers owe a debt ' "" By a happy coincidence, this year not only marks the anniversary of the Oyster case and the Rotor, but also two more personal dates. The Governing Director of the Rolex Watch Company, Mr. Wilsdorf, this year celebrates his seven seventieth tieth seventieth birthday and his half century or service to the horological industry. J The cream of the Rolex production J is marked by the famous Rolex Red Seal. It is a sign that the waicn to which it is attached has been sub- J milled to the rigorous tests of the Swiss Government Testing Stations, has passed them successfully, and has been awarded the coveted Official Timing Certificate, j 1 Qqq (g Mch CENTRAL AMERICA'S LEADING JEWELLERS Across The Chase Manhattan Bank Everybody Reads Our Classifieds S TEIT TUBBI BABIES VMftLADELPHIA (UPI) pr. Edmund Farrls V of Philadel Philadel-; ; Philadel-; Phia's Institute for. Parenthood es mrr w '" V.V.. V.VA v WED. DEC. 10 at Lunch Hour in the alrconditioaed BALBOA ROOM LATEST TROPICAL FASHIONS p r n.t d b y tta'A ami 1 Panama dUtion 5!"9AFASi?,S V--r:-AHy! y tony Tht latest ;fahlon from all ovar tha worldl Six I lovely models from Panama City and tha Canal Zone! All thlt with tht antartalning: mualo of j CLARENCE MARTIN'S ORCHESTRA , v Mako your reservations arlyr .mi: ''' v 1 ; .iijnateaMhat 80 W 40 thousand of r. n )? I tZJ79rys v. WJ-T I U'MIUS 1 1 OWaya children in the U.S. were I Ll I gBagay T i l.LLafeta Vi,;'. VT :: 'L;'; : ' -Cbnceived-lhroush; artificial ; Inse- !!'J 'V '5! ir, 7 7-. . 7-. aninaUo,,.,,,.. .,...,., I li, .''til I IL. v.v.- IPPrjt gm See our complete seitxtion of .f T v 'fciigtBspll ,w genuine Kodak-mode gift outfits. W 1 IBM) f Dj H BBBBBBBBBeHBaWr' Ml brownie MU mmnMwhiiL brownie SfewlUv kodak VwSM; tl kwtumn u (latu niiTrird ...... 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" v SUNDAY, DECEMBER " ria six THE SUNDAY AMERICAN T r '1 1 1 nil 1.' -j, 1 r 1 i 1 1 .vvttU' .. t I V I r.i. 1 I r ? s v s r re Combinecs 7i i I V -nirrf-'S in ur-- nm n iikiiiiiiiimii inn mmiwmm ii t m,n i i i i n i i 'I f THE JUGGLER Sir doctoring your books will be a delightful treat for me!" says Joseph (Cameron Stewart) to the troubled shopkeeper Felix t Osmond Kelly.) enevolent 'Angels' With Disreputable Pasts Bring Hilarity And Pathos To Ancon Playhouse "My 3 Angels," the third production 6f the Theatre Guild's cur current rent current season, will open at the Ancon Playhouse tomorrow night, De De-f f De-f t eember 8. It will run through Tuesday, December 18, - The uproarious comedy of murderous 'whimsies, and engaging nonchalange was adapted by Sam and Bella Spewack from Albert Husson'i French farce, "La Cuisine des Anges" (Angels' Cooking.) The three angels from whom all blessings flow are Joseph a bashful soul with a tidy talent for embezzlement; Jules, a fatherly figure who rather regrets murdering his wife; and Alfred, a hand handsome some handsome young romantic who was forced, much against his will, to dis dispose pose dispose of his miserly uncle with a poker At th moment, these benevo lent figure are parolees from the French Guiana penal colony, ana they have been put to work re repairing pairing repairing the roof of M. Ducotel's general store. As they quite liter literally ally literally descend from the heavens, they find the Ducotel 'family in orry atraits. In coming to their rescue -and restoring righteousness to a callous world, they find it necessary to doctor tie, atore's books, forge a will, bait a trap for a reluctant suitor, snatch a fowl for the Christmas dinner ta table, ble, table, and dispatch with great good humor and practiced skill two menaces to the family's happiness. , The Cart .selected for this de-. Mghtfully prepestereus fare sparkle witheld and new ta talent. lent. talent. Claude Ayeeek, Osmond Kelly, Bob Arm iag, and Earl Almquist hive a justifiably large and devoted fallowing en th Isthmus. Th nw Playhouse , personalities an Cameron Stewart, Lev 7 Ann ; Henderson) Leonora DA Was, Charht' Peraeej .Peter Barge," Jonji tte'ade, and, and,-eh eh and,-eh y snak named Adelphe, Mrs. Priscilla Reade, the direc director, tor, director, brings to the play tonsider tonsider-able able tonsider-able talent and experience. The wife of SavycCdr. John Reade,- she is well-knowmJodatUy not only for her t theatrical interests but also for her Work' with teenagers. Manuel Jose Die?, the assistant director, was born in Panama and studied directing, production, and pnonography in the United States. He worked for six months as a co comedy medy comedy writer for the National Broadcasting Company and also did free-lance writing for TV in Los Angeles. 4 : Ticket reservations for "My 3 Angels" may be obtained by call calling ing calling Mrs. Kathy Wllber at Balboa 2-3428 between the hours of 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. tt: I II ' ss;Sf lt i I ' ! '"Kfl r';" Vi t A lik 1 I ' 1 Hrif v v 1 t v 1 ' 1 j , BORROWED TRIMMINGS Marie Louise (Lou Ann Henderson) examines the three angels on the stolen Christmas tree and finds them as bruised and damaged and just as lovable as the three ' i ' "angelic" convicts 'who are helping to give her a Joyous' holiday seson. A MONDAY PUNCH She'l 'U tfgbt. 1 had to hit her, but I pulled my punch," Alfred (Earl Aim Aim-quist) quist) Aim-quist) assures Emilia (Gaud Aycock) as he holds the unconscious Marie Louise (Lou Ann Hender- $u JPridcilla $eade9 Lnaeid 9 iV il " By MARGIE ROJHROCK A day in the life of Mrs. Priscilla Reads might com bine grease paint with baby powder, play props and kitchen mops. It's all in a day's normal routine for Mrs. Reade wife of Navy Cdr. John Reade, mother of five youngsters, often an actress and currently the director of the Theatre Guild's presentation of "My Three Angels," which opens tomorrow evening at the Anton Playhouse. :. .'( xrecior Mrs. Reade's "dowry" from her family was a legacy of love for both the theater and the Navy. Her grandmother, Corinne Robert, was on the stage before her mar riage at the time, Mrs. Reade says, when "ladies were not la ladies dies ladies if they were theater-active." She was the first director oz tne Vagabond Player in Baltimore,, 1UU Mrs. Reade joined Ihe Navy on her birthday and has never been released from active duty. Her father is Rear Adm. Hague, who, with Mrs. Hague, now makes his retirement home in Potomac, mo. When the Reade family arrived on the Isthmus in March, it was a strange sort of a homecoming for Mrs. Reade. She had lived on; the Isthmus as a small child when her father was here on spe special cial special assignment. She revived vague memories when she visited her former home just off Amador Road, and she remembers playing on the steps near the Union Club. Mrs. Read contracted "feet "feet-light light "feet-light fever" early. She followed ch'ldheod amMtiens for the theater by enrolling the Ste Stephens' phens' Stephens' College In Missouri, a school well-known for Its fin arts course-as well as training Its young ladies as hostss and hommkrs. Mrs. Reade still holds the high est admiration for the' talents of her instructor, the great Maude Adams, whose fading youth was not reflected in her enthusiastic approach to theatrical teachings. It was from Miss Adams that Mrs. Reade received her firt training in dialects. Ambitions for a career behind Broadway footlights were halted abruptly with the appearance ot her husband-to-be, but she has continued to participate in thea ter groups both because of and in spite of numerous shillings of. homes and the arrival of five youngsters. During the war years, she liv ed with her mother near Pasadc na, Calif., while both their Navy husbands served in the Pacific a rea. Mrs. Reade says she very nearly lived at the Pasadena Playhouse, "where I gainetf the most valuable experience of the technical end of the productlbu." With her husband's transfer to Norfolk, Va., 'she joined the Lit tle Theater activities- there, and continued practicing her technical knowledge while playing roles of the "woman 01 the world" type. The roles which she most cn joyed, however, were in the Falls Church, Va., Community Theater. She adopted a Pennsylvania Dutch accent for the "Mama" part in "papa is ah." most fondlv is Bloody Mary in the popular "South Pacific" musical. "I was completely uninhibited," comments Mrs. Reade.; "I ? could do anything I felt like dc-mg and still stay in character.' , Hr costume, a tattered ahlrt adorned with a variety of mill, tary Insignia and baggy black pants, galrod distinction in each succeeding performance; Its con dition bcam prgrssivly-Ms-reputable as "Mary" carjessly wadded it up and tssd it into a corner after aeh prform--ac, thus keeping th n$m n$m-bl bl n$m-bl "in character" for th mxt night's shew. . . .-- .- Mrs. Reade managed to inter est the commander in theater ac activities" tivities" activities" bv appealing to his abili ty with a hammer ana saw. anc pay a her husband credit for ma nv hours labor on sets and props, He also baa played several parts on the audience-side of the stage, as has their eldest son. John. Together, the Reades worked qn a theater production tor teenag era as part of the Amador sum' ffler recreation program, weir talents in this enterprise ranged from actually hammering the stage together, to painting the ac tors'; faces. "These youngster were really wonderful," comments Mrs. Reade "As the work progressed, they became more and more interest ed, and began noticing things that had to be done. It was most rewarding." "My Three Angels" Is Mrs, Reade's first directing ob, ohV r than th tnag pty, sine sh arrived n th Isthmus. With ettors Involved in th play, she has spent the major ity of her evenings for th past, fiv wks in rehearsals at th Ancon Playhouse. Does she have stage-fright, el ther as an actress or a director? "Of course," she says. "As. an actress, the fear vanishes soon after the curtain goes up. As director, it lasts through the en entire tire entire first performance until "you can see how the audience reacts. . Mrs. Reade never eats before a play in which she is acting. She feels that actors,; like, athletes, give better performances on emp ty stomachs. The Reade children range in age from 15 to three. As mention mentioned ed mentioned earlier, John already has tast ed theater. The two smallest children often accompany their parents to the playhouse during pre-produc,uon activities. It a not impossible for the' fu future, ture, future, but Mrs Reade scoffs at the thought that' some day there may be an all-Reade play written di directed, rected, directed, acted ana, of course', pro- ' 1 1 ' V -sV -sV 1 sV , viz iittiliiliBiiiMiiiii 1 aswv wwwwrrwwww aBBSBeEBeBaSB9BSejBS9BBeSBSCSSSSBSB MRS. PRISCILLA READE The "character" she reca! f duced by Reades, v w I ' ". 1 '' W 11 -! !" '' ' v Z7u ' v V V & 7CW 1 L f ' 1 jFxy ' i 5 V 'tlliJL : v ;rse'' xx ; ,xx 1 V ,aii...,H.,..'."!, -x'' ll JiiS ' 1 V :'X -A s-' x s . 'r rt"WX - 4 rf j iiiiifT S ''m'Tt1' -iJ IJH--- I - X X v X J y ,-- id I t y fi xx x ;i 7 tlt L iL lu UL I M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 lra-H mhm interiokes- O Interior Decorators O Custom-Built Furniture O Carpeting O Draperies O Bedding Box Springs -.Mattress' O Decorative Fabrics Consult us for planning and estitnates . HOMES u. OFFICES --CLUBS HOTELS ' Ave. Jnsto Arosemena 41 St. Tels. -428 k M4I9 ; Silvestre & Brostella Cubor Ave. 27-02 Panama "SPORTS PARADE" ' by Conrado $argeant XX Daily at 7:00 p.m. in J ,o f, HOG Your Community nohverk 0 MO KllocycUs PANAMA' 1090 Kilbcyclss COLON r -I, -I- i - bWL.R "There's no taste of cog nae at all. It's urt plain water," complaihs Ma Ma-Me Me Ma-Me Parole (Leonora Davies) to Devil's Island parolee Joseph (Cameron Stewart:) , j ? T X Read Our Classifieds - i . ...J.: a r - FUNDAT AMERICAN ,'. 't .-. .;;' '-7--. " LONDONT)ec.tt Some Jjero-J I have no doubt, will ,taa.- the 135-yeara-old Chriatmaa- puddiBg ' which is to be decanted 'rom its tin by the British Food Manufac-, v turing. Industrie j Eeeajch -Association in good time or the fes festive tive festive season. t waa tinned in 1823 as .part of the provisions the British explorer ' CaptV Sir Ed vard ,Pary: took on hia search for the- Arctic ; North North-West West North-West Passage linking the Atlantic with the Pacific Parry got back safely, but whe whether ther whether or not because he .did not eat the pudding we may-only dir ' cover this month. Britain's scien scientific tific scientific food tasters will try anything once, and we must hope this time 'Afte-T 'allifour dietetic Tierbei are: msde of tough, stuff. It has just been I revealed W 170' delegates : at , tb United Kingdom' Atomic, Ener. 1 gyu Authority's itBeserchEstabr lishment at Harwell,-scene the United Nation's" Food and Agricul; tvffal Organisation conference,'-that dentist volunteers fat Cambridge and other United Kingdom labora laboratories tories laboratories -are- feedingnionj irradiated food. i.'VfV iThanks to them,:jrVis said. Bri Britain's tain's Britain's housewives may. aoon be a ble to buy meatj)r ftft and ve vegetables getables vegetables preserved Jby irradiation. IRRESISTIBLE APPEAL -, i 'One trouble, apparently, is that of 'giving exactly the right dose without spoiling the taste or smell or disguising the effects of putre putrefaction. faction. putrefaction. Once this is overcome, the appeal -of irradiated turkey land plum-pudding ht .the Christmas dinner-table' should, be irresistible. Just' now the Christmas radia radiations tions radiations that -appeal most-are those which. are setting our ciMes and towBs a-glitter with tinsel and, fai fai-rTlamos. rTlamos. fai-rTlamos. ..-, Regents' 5reet,' London; one the finest shopping centres in me Commonwealth, gives the had wt'h 1 dazzline avenue of winging Igntirrisand multi-colored stars re'-lecting -the brilliance of shop shop-windows windows shop-windows loaded with treasure as never before. ,, Amid such a choice of luxuries, however, the Chris'mas gift that haiven me-moat anticipatory . pleasure h a set of bookshelves made by Remploy, Ltd.- '. ;.. This remarkable organization has hit the headlines this iTnontto , partly for having scored a, net ope ope-'" '" ope-'" rating loss of wftOff.MM 'or the yea ended last .March. Yet not ; a single stockholder protested when this was .announced -at the annual meeting by Remploy's ?. chairman, Sir Alec Zealley. For AkRemploy Is the Governmen-spon-f 'sored firm that keeps severely dis disabled abled disabled men and women in produc productive tive productive work. In 90 factories throughout Eng England, land, England, Scotland and Wale about 6,250 people who might have des paired of living except on charity, - are turning out products ranging from portable buildings and ma--." chinery to domestic and garden I i'furniture; knitwear ahd Christmas crackers. Remploy's sales last . year reached a record of $10,000r- 000, and -current Sales are running at mare .an 3; percent, higher., v ' FIRST RATE QUALITY ' "' w- &$T(,&fy --:"6I,;V.' n The quality I Is first-rate. But 1 output .is slow owing to disable mant. Because of this and the fart that goods are sold at commercial rates and wages are four-fifths of union fate, the company can ne never ver never hope to make a profit -- On the credit side, though, is the ' restoration of confidence and self -respect factors which last year. ' helped if many as 141" severely severely-; ; severely-; handicapped workers to "return to normal industry, , In the company's report and- ac ac-' ' ac-' counts I have been reading a ty J leal case history, that tof William ames Ward, aged 25, a Welsh miner and football player, When a (bof collapsed lie was trapped uo uo-.er .er uo-.er tons: 0' rock and- paralyzed. After .nearly two years he was able to walk wi h the aid of a spinal jacket. This;: hr; was told. would be the limit of recovery. ' Rempbygave him a job inrti metal shop. Now." mtrried r with two children,-; he is in charge of a lactory aespatch department an active member 'of the ambulance brigade, founder member of the social club; and. shop steward of nis union nrancn. FIRST EXCURSION TRAIN A benefaction of a different kind from Remploy's' ha: been recalled trus, month with the 150th anniver sary celebrations of the bir h .of Thomas Cook.iWUhoutivdoubt this good man from the. English county of licestershire.was.the father'of modern tourism. z.TK'Wi ;5-v;t,i v.Starting as a liftfer. of, doU'b sacks, he -wa s 35 years, old ; when, in uMit-nonorganized the, worw iirst excursion train.llt was a'uh I lanthropic ven ure to take 570 work people from Leicester to Loughbo Loughborough rough Loughborough and back, 24 miles, for a sliilfing a head, , Wifh every seat; sold. Cook had the visition to reabie he was on the road to fortune. .Today Thomas Cook and Son, ; Ltd.,? own" "394 branches in 64 countries and book about 5,000,000 clients a fear1 Their share caoital is now owned by the British Transport Commission but they are still run like a private firm. '':, -;'.'' And the brainwave of- he; hiim ole potato man In an English coun coun-jy jy coun-jy town lilT years ago has ret the nat'ern fo-, the colossal tourist in industry dustry industry that now bestrides the world.-'S-f-' .:"'-- ; Cook's can book a passage any any-where;. where;. any-where;. even the Northwest- pass passage. age. passage. Nor will they be lagging with the first excursions, to thfe Moon, one way Or round trip. .;, i f & out Retirement . y By MARIE DAERR- Put the blame on Mame aad josephine-i-and.tafah,.if the men won't stir from thetr- easy; chairs and. their TV sets and hie. them them-ieivek ieivek them-ieivek to a golden-age club mee: ' Three go!den-age club leaders- women, at, that gave me this an answer swer answer to a recent column on the aubject of men's reluctance i, to join in the after 60 social groups., , .AU of, their lives, women are active in club wck' these lead leaders ers leaders 'told mei Tbey are "running thr show' in sororities M'3 nt ; "They are.-'? in PTA'a, sewing clubs and book-review: and study groups. They're so used to all this that, when they get td he golden golden-age age golden-age club- stage, they 'just continue to-itake 5over,'--r,?i ;:::iH v"Fraiikly they.'scer He ment i wh may hnvt belonged a , luncheon club, ar: two. .In fMr werkina day,'but naver did ;' much more "than.' sit back and :"So. When it comes to a retire meat; 'group;: he mett don't sep fotward they,just stay home. :- Clubf these- women a'gre t d. ough' to do a canvassing job for member. just as churches do. And. when once they can lure a man" away from b's hear', they'd better giyc hlm plenty of. chances to '"( !ito-'.bhigf, ,"r ( -.; "Give the men an opportunity, and tbey enjoy oing chores," one woman said. "We discovered that at our golden-ace hobby, show. The men did the hard work of the show, and really enjoyed it, "They puup r displays lugged quilts and other cumbersome en tries around ; and organized?, car nools for the benefit of pople who couldn't get to the, show by pub lic transportation." If a club er a cemar has tno space and the menay. It can attract male membarshlp ;. by providing billiard tables and woodworking equipment it was suggetted. .' -m-- -,-"- 1 Q::te Unqu ote SAN FRANCISCO a. Secretary 01 aiaie jonn roster DuUes on vommunist unina s use of com munes to regiment its people: "The program is one of slave labor that sacrifices human dig nity on a scale unprecedented in an worm nistory." CHICAGO Charles Wood Jr, 17-year-old Spencer,, Iowa, farm ooy, on the sale of this Angus steer "Holy Cow" for $23,125 at the International Livestock Show? "Holy Cow was',, such a wU I sure hate to lose hint," .ATLANTA Leslie E. Rogers, FBI undercover agent who attend ed meetings of a racist group tes testifying tifying testifying at the trial; of Gfeorse Bright, charged with hnmhw a. lanta's Jewish temDle; The avowed dutoosp nf th tr ty was extermination of Jews and expulsion Of .Tw (run kuii... ible -posibons in the U.S. govern- uiitin, as 1 unaerstand it." ' CHICAGO David B. Bmiph .Ti an actor who tried to hold up a o-vuig am an association, on why he didn't shoot at pursuing policemen who caught him? i woum nave shot but r didn't want to hit the girls." 'AUTOGRAPHED STAMPS painesville; Ohio -upi) Hy -Brown, -a furniture company executive, here,', has given a new twist to the hobby-of stamo col- ti- ..1 ..j . 11.. -of, -famous . : I . I. ,1 f U1C WKUIIHIO surveys nave snown wai many 1. vs. j. .J lubi h.ve. .'four womea la one ."."J?' 1 Among the more l than 4,000 autographed first-day covers -, in Brown's collection are those of President Eisenhower Indian; Prime Minister NehrU. Eleanor I Roosevelt,' Alberto Einstein, Har-I man,' these leaders pointed 'out. That's, something that ought to be correc.ed ..,w-s:.'.'.'k.'. ,WelL,ladies, how about it? V. . r ..... . 1 A First steps is .to get a So Social cial Social Security card from tha nearest Social Security office. Next, to the nearest Internal Re Revenue venue Revenue office, and sign a waiver fern). '....' 've been told that "acid" fruits aren't good for an older per person, son, person, to eat Is' this true? W., - A So called "acid" fruits ac '. tually are alkalizing age nt ; They are much better for most alder people than are the soda tablets Sat re often are used for this purpose. - CIRCULAR-SHAPED HOSPITAL BROOKUNE, Mass, -UPI) The first circular-shaped hospital iq this section of the country will open here soon. Built at a cost of $1,500,000, it, will be known as Brookline Hospital. Advantages of a circular hospi hospital tal hospital include: Rooms will be shaped like pie wedges, providing maxi mum space around the patient's bed; only two nurses' stations will be required on each floor; and no nurse will have to walk mdre than, 50 feet to reach a pa pa-tieht'a tieht'a pa-tieht'a bedroom, compared with 80- to 90 feet in thes conventional Rheumatism Whenvr th palm of Rheumatism, " Arthritis, Neuritis. Bumbago, 8ci 8ci-tica, tica, 8ci-tica, atiff muiclei and swollen Joints make you miserable, nt tOMIND from your druggist at net. ROMIND quickly brings fan Ustlo relief so you can sleep, work end live In comfort. Don't mffer sir. u Hums if toaay. Brown solicits the Signatures V ' ECONOMY DENVER (UPI) No oae ever stole the scratchy 1 old pens they used to have at the Denver post : office, but Postmaster Ted Hefner still thinks he's saving money py using .ballpoint pens, even though 42 of them disappear every month, v : tieiner pointed out, mat serv icing the old pens required 17 quarta of ink, 300 points and 1,000 hand blotters a month.! from, famous persons connected with the event being cpmmemor cpmmemor-rated rated cpmmemor-rated by the stamps. Ask for it by name AGENTS: 1 Cla Henrlquez S.A., Apartado 4St, Colon Isaac Brandon & Bros. Inc P.O. Box 387, Panama City Tels. 2-0461-2-04(55 8 Tivoli Ave. I 4V Presents TIVOLI TRAVEL CMVAN "A MUSICAL TRAVELOGUE" DAILY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 6 P.M. with Dave Constable as narrator Your Gommunit y Network HOG 840 Kilocycle! PANAMA 1090 Kilocycles. COLON by RGA VICTOR OPEN TODAY from 9 to 12:30 Both Our Stores will h closed Monday MOTHER'S DAY. 'f iTi,. -a- ..a MAiN STOKE ONLY No. 22-01 Central Ave. A dlopfuf JbtlittoifA A ' JJ.J L : 1 vjivc duaea cnarm 10 you entertaining holiday .) CHRISTMAS SHOPPERS EXCURSION SW BQTH1 DIRECTIONS , between' COLON Mt. HOPE aad BALBOA PANAMA "it.... ... :,:. ..v Co "and return fW same dayj at these ; lpw tares. ROUND ,TRIP 1st. Class -2nd. Class 1.25 .75 FROM PANAMA Leave 9;55 .m; ; -fi rIturn V --. LV. Colon ,1:00 pJn. '5:10 p.m. m FROM COLON r"! r. .. leave 9:45. a.m. r;, rt ,REJURN , LV. Paflanta-t4:10 p.m. or 4:55 p.m. ' sWssssMssHssMMssBsHM Reduced fares good ; only .or) these trains. u ' PANAMA" RAILROAD Hit ie""W -5.v ''.-. V ' '-. A';'.-'-;' k ""' "".'.,'' ' 1 that weighs only 24 lbs. So Easy to Take Home! Even the housewife can move it So Economical So Convenient No need now to stick to old-fashioned choking fuel j no matter where you live! ... the small Troplgas tank makes cooking cleaner, easier for the housewife! , ; .: rmmmmm''lmmmmmmmmmm'"'m lllSSiSSSSlWSSSSSlS I :-s'-.,.'.;:!;i:i.js-(i ,; n . ; 't .; . . f. ,.-.v -. .:: ... -.y'-y:. u..,' ., .;:"- V t r ; ? : . "'.ii- : wv. , ,-- ." ;: , j & s ' I .'.J ..; 1 v -,v-..f : . .. '. H '.f '! K . 'i -4 Special We install ABSOLUTELY FREE a small Tropigas tank when you buy your TROPIGAS STOVE! Call us today for more details about this unusual offer which only Tropigas can make! TOdDPffGAS Exclusive. Distributor in Panama and Canal Zone Ask cbout ourr easy payment 1 M T .sTA A irufl T 'yf kfl - ; .1 . v S4th St ; ' Corner of 32nd St Tel. 3-7424 . ' LATEST DESIGN DINING ROOM t SETS ! Undtstructible Rattan' tP ' : f $0lid- Mahogany -h V-Q J i t o tha wonder Woi You can be sura of daljvery oatora the hohdaya -yatiety ei styles available. 5 s, viii BRIGHTEN YOUR FOR THE HOLIDAYS I LAMPS Now unpacking.. .latest sfylesl - J tirff, 6 toicri (omor rbt In cefeorof lot t ffiMfi! hftt Day in Panama, But ypii Tuesday at J s T f rem ' 4th of July Ava. A M St. "Tat COME IN AND ASK H0W T0 MH : $1,500. IN OUR CHRISTMAS RAFFLE vr ; I i 4 ! i. :''.i...U'C"".;.;i fjiiHiS.';!:'' :. -;;':'i''''v;H'r',:3- :''i,Uy V;,- .'..,' .C;. t 'J J tACt EIGHT fHE SUNDAY' AMERICA, 1 SUNDAY, DECEMBER ?, U nn ti 9 in- i Qaav lassie - Seems Titita No. 1 Contender; Jabalina, Marilyn Only Miner entries ror Race o - , Ttp Haras Snn Mio-iiel's hn I li ant filly3 Nirvana seems a sure thing to chalk' up her ninth consecutive victory to remain unbeaten in the first running of . tl$2,00fr added seven furlong "Premio Nacional" i Classic for two-year-old natives at the President Re Re-inon inon Re-inon racetrack this afternoon. Hence the special horse T a ce card which wil be the third con consecutive secutive consecutive day of racing at t! loc local al local track. Ragazza, an impressive winner against strong field of second series throughbreds ldst Sunday, shapes up as th- mutuedti favorite Race Track Graded Entries P. Hon Joctn St. lit. Race 6th Strict Imp. 7 Fgs. 1st. RACE OF 1- La Geflerala 2- Towns Wall 3- Corviglia 4 La rk 5- Apache 6- Colifato 7- The Gipsy 8- Dagon 9- Fudge Girl F. Justiniani llOx S. Carvajal 108 S. Hernandez 110 R. Vasquez 113 G. Sanchez 115 A. Lourless lOSx r. Alvarez 108 J. Talavera US J. Ulloa 110 Comma! 04dt Pur $400.00 Pool Close 1:00 THE DOUBLE Nothing recently 50-1 Second last start 41 dot much good 5-1 Could wirprise here 5-1 Seems best here EVEN Has late rash 15-1 No. l" contender 14' Oould get-up here t-t Poor effort in' last 10-1 6- Golden Wonder A. Alfaro 106 -Favorite rider up 7- POluelo B. Baeza 108 -rWould ny nice odds 41 51 2nd Ract 'Slpacial" Imp. 7 Fgs. Purs $450.00 2nd RACE OF THE DOUBLE Pool Closi 1:30 Jabalina, Titita and Marilyn are s-Hlie only other r:heuuled starters 'in the race. T-tila shapes up as : ...j Nirvana's most damgerous oppe oppe-: : oppe-: sent with Jabalina apparently the : t third oest. Marilyn seems to be hopelessly outclassed. ;!; lea ing tkev Eraulio. Baeza iels plum ia-Wt one. .yft past ,perfo,iances. Nirvana isexpect- -'to to. ouispnnt tiic opposition, -o .i."1en ajonv Isau when given her k head and breeze hume an easy j. ft winner. Titita, whicn will be ridden by f Alejandro Y is stoat-He ted : f ind has a liking for distant' but : l.m tnree previous meetings with' Wirvana she has been trounced by Jthe latter. ? v Jabalina showed improvement' per la't time ou but must rni rni-i i rni-i prove considerably more if 1 she ' is to .threaten Nirvana and Titita. V ..'Jabalina will b- ridden by Ruben . r.i:-i. v i. t ' iancne; v a'snuvL, wno returns after serving two months of a ,1 thre-irt th suspension k Marilyn, a vastly improved fil- f.Iy, woo hr last time out Nt, a- , gainst much lrfenor opposition, to ..wh?t she will bt facing torfav. .Contract rider Jose' Ulloa will tgiK-le the Haras "Vri.thia's hope; S 'tea other prospective thriller l eomDlete the card. j Special Program Tomorrow , A fifld nf tlr f resident Romnn It j racetrack's best mares and fit f Jles will match strides 'n thp -n. pual J3.000 adled Mothtr'.- Day ClShth tomorrow aftannnn f Dec. 8 fFeast of the Immacul- 'W Concerrtion) Is a national holi- v r"mi ana flw the oth oth-f f oth-f er Utui American countrieswhere ,,ls celebrated a Mother's Day. hut: she will get plenty of cotnpe nn in the oettm? (and most like in the race too) from Quick Quickie ie Quickie and Neasham' Belle. Strong-armed ickey Ulloa will Ao the bnetins- on Ragazza while t w:n bave the leg up on Quickie. The latter was also a winner.1 aver the 'ecand series he" last time out. Neasham Belle will have Iviiben Vasquez in the pilot house. Neasham Belle, one of the big big-set set big-set martf" ever to put foot on Is'thmiaiufchofes. is reportedly a hiehrcl ,-.ficer. The fmir v'r v'r-old old v'r-old bay dauphtr o' Country Life Life-T' T' Life-T' Favorite aM to have com- ' atpct l)(h classv nr- formers as'Qutdico and Arlequin in h"r iytvf Chile. Other srhpffnior? starters ;n the Motjhpr' ttay Oassif are Grami Grami-As As Grami-As Vo T Vp Hpr. Evening Str' and Manuel- Pedraza Ten othr races complete the pro ""a rr TH DIVIDENDS First Rj.ce!. rOhoriHeiq td.op $3.08; JjuHn Vernp .?0 ' Sironrl Woe A 1 Brote J!fl.80 $2.20 2 .Mae9?3.wf iv'i-'-.--. First nnuble: $14.80 1 Melllzo $5.60. $2.40 I Don Cirilo .-Damajuana 3- Plucky 4- JoyerOi 5 Amelia 6- (Pardine 7- (Maniart J. Ulloa 110 Dubious ride last time 4-l B. Baeza 108 Hard beat here 2-1 . Saraaniego 112 Reportedly speedy 10-1 G. Sanchez 115 Strong effort in last 2-1 A. Alfaro Depends on start 5-1 A. Ycaza 110 Last doesn't co nt 5-2 C. Ruiz 115 Reportedly classy 5-2 5th "Promt Nacional" Ctaisic7PurM'$20M.OO -rPol Clo 3:00 1 -Nirvana ..B. Baeza 112 Seems much the best 1-5 - 5-a 50-1 : 3-1 2- Tkita A.. Ycaza 112 Should be ruoerun 3- Marylin J. Ulloa 112 Way above head 4- Jabalina R. Vasquez 112 CouldH stnrprdse- 1 -J v -' Editor;. CONRADO SARCEANT th Rat 7Hi Series Imp. 7 1st RACE 1-Teloreo 2- Pangal "3-Coron.-Day 4- Riscal 5- Introduction 6- Thunderstreak 7- (P. Vanidad 8- (Grimilda A, Credidio J. Talayer.a .. R. Cruz V. Ortega B. Baeza A. Reyes R. F. Alvarez C. Quiros Fat. Purs $400.10 Pool Closer 3:40 OF THE DOUBLE - ., 110 Distance handicaps S-l 115 Usually disappoints EVEN 112x -Nothing to indicate 25-1 110v Returns from .layoff 10-1 115, Barely won last 5-1 112 -Hopeless ''has-been", 3-1 107 Depends on start 5-1 lOOx Good early speed S-l 7th Race "Special" Imp. 7 Fgs. Puree $450.00 2nd RACE OF THE DOUBLE Pool Closet 4:15 3rd Rac "' 1- Certamen 2- Filton 3Tingant 4- Guacamya 5- Rock'N:Roll Pool Clotot 2:00 Nativot 7 Furlongs Purse $375.00 ONE TWO R. Cruz llOx Nothing in months ( 3-1 A. Credidio 103 Would pay nice odds v 4-1 J .Jimenez 105 Usually disappoint)- EVEN A. Alfaro 113 Will fight it out 3-2 F. Justiniani 103x Rates good chance too 2-1 4th Rac "F" Natives 4 Furlongs Purs $375.00 QUINIELA Pool Closes 2:30 1- Carmelita A. Credidio 110 Depends on start 3-2 2- Solito ( C. Quiros 100X Not with this rider 4-1 3- Folle ito R. Prestan 97x Must go lower 25-1 4- Bugaba A. Lorles lOlx Would pay off 15-1 5- Linda Susy S. Hernan t z 118 Hard to beat here 2-1 2 Notlci6n $2.40 One-Two: $12.60 Fourth Race 1 Eros $3.80, $3.20 2 Pepin $7.60 Quiniela: $18.00 Fifth Race 1 Henco (ran out of betting) 2 Engaftoso $5.80. $3.00 3 Pancbo Lopez $2.60 Sixth Race 1 Baudouln $8.80, $3.20 2 Maui-icio S2.60 Seventh Race 1 Coltro 7.00, $3.20 2Artic Pr'ncws $3 60 Second Double: $63.40 Fia'hth Race 1 Nedrev S8.60. $2.20 2 Marlett $2.20 Quiniela: $3 60 Ninth Race 1 Trirreme $10.80. $4.00 2 Hermellna 6.60 One-Two: $61.00 Tenth Race 1 Pan Tostado $4.00, $2.40 2 Bucalemito $2.20 Eleventh Race 1 Roina $2.60 2 Latino (no place betting) Sports Briefs NAMED LACROSSE COACH PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Suz Suzanne anne Suzanne Gordy, a member of the wo women's men's women's AU America lacrosse tern in 1957 and 1958, has been named coach of the women's Lacrosse team at the University of Penn Pennsylvania. sylvania. Pennsylvania. ELECTED TRACK CAPTAIN NEW YORK (UPI)- Louis Ris-, sone of Scarsdale, Ny., has been elected captain of the 1959 Colum Columbia bia Columbia University cross-country team Rissone, 19, is a pre-engineering sophomore. 1-Pocas Pilchas 2- Aldar J. 3- Ramo 4- Mama Lola F. 5- Granadero 6- Argosy Royal 7- Doiia Flora 8- (Nebrisca 9-(Mulchen F. Sanchez lOOx -Nothing to recommend 70-1 Samaniego 113 Could score again . 3-1 R.vCruz 97x Nothing recently 15-1 Justiniani 102x Would surprise 25-1 B. Baeza lift Form indicates 3-2 A. Ycaza 116 In fiff'it to finish 2-1 A. Alfaro 106 Not against these 25-1 O. Bravo 110 Dangerous contender 5-2 A. Valdivia 110 Depends on start 5- 8th Race 3rd. Series IMP. & Fgi. Purse $650.00 CUINIELA Pool Clotot 4:40 1- Horacio J .Rodriguez 113 Should beat these 3-5 2- Cervecero R. Cruz, 102x Could be upsetter 5-1 3- Paquiro A. Perez 108 Aiming for payoff 4-1 4- Behader J. Talavera 108 Barely won last 10-1 5- Narcqtico A. Valdivia 112 Rider handicaps 10-1 6- English Wonder B. Aguirre 108 Rider eliminates 15-1 '7-Abolengo V. Castillo 110 Enjoying top form 3-1 9th Rac 2nd Sri$ Imp. 7 Fgs. Purt $750.00 ONE TWO Pool Cfosts 5:15 1- Play Boy 2- Sputnik 3- Alcaraz 4- Kadir 5- Guadalcanal 6- Gazapo 7- Dependable 8-(Cntico A. Alfaro 106 A. Gonzalez 100 B. Baeza 115 H. Pitty 107 A. Credidio 110 E. Vasquez 115 F. Alvarez 112 J. Rodriguez 112 9-(Rosita Maria A. Perez 108 Ran well last week Not good enough In fight to finish Must go lower Would surprise Distance suits style Form indicates Ran well in classic Dangerous contender , 4-1 25-1 2- 1 50-1 5-1 4-1 3- 2 3-1 3-1 10th Rac 1st Srit Imp. 7 Fgi, Purl $1000. 1-Lobo 2- Bacancito 3- Melendez 4- Hostigador Pool Closes 5:40 ' R. Cruz lOOx Not-ft'ood enough 25-1 F. Alvarez 116 Could repeat ', 2-1 S. Hernandez 106 Ran well in last 2i B.. Baeza 114 Miituels favorite , ft-5 Tlth Rac 8th- Sris Imp. S Fgs. Purt $400.00 Pool Clott 1- Sutphen S. Hernandez 105 -Nothing tb indicate 2- The Squire B. Baeza 105 Jockey may help 3- Fifito A. Lorless 107 -Seems best here 4- Jump Quick A. Alfaro 115 Distance handicaps 5- Mariema A. Reyes R. 115 -Rate's good chamcs. EVEN 5-2 Wallop In This Wallet NORMAN. Okla. NF A 1 Th UKiahoma football -player who gets kidded most is Jakie Sande- fer. : 'ri'r x 'zt The swarthy, litele thick necked senior halfback is the onlv nn of J.D. Sandefer Jr.. -nrnminsnt Breckenridge, Tex. independent ou operator, me only trouwe is that the Sooner won't it Jarkii forget it. "Hev. Jakie. where'i vmr let?'', they call when he heaves into sight. They badger him about ine u-ceni watcnoana ; ne wears and about his full name, Jeffer son Davis Sandefer III. When he showed up for a road trio carry ing a small valise, they called it his monev bat!. Thv'v madu show of urging him to persuade uis iainer 10 Duy tne umversiiy ip wtiiu can pass. Jakie : crins cheAniahlv a nA onoi aiong wim tne gag. ioks last year, when everybody was talkinsr a a-bout bout a-bout the recession. "If it doeunt slacken off, I'm gonna have to let my oia man go, ne told the team. There's nothing wrong with ijis football Dun and Bradstreet, eith either. er. either. The rugged little gladiator, standing fiva fet nine and weicn. ing 169 pounds, always has been with either the starting 'Abigails' or tne alternate "Belie Starrs." Youne Sandefer nilnta a Ppsna. 172 at the university flying, school. Racetrack Tips ' By CONRADO , TApach- .; Th Gipsy 20M CJri'o . Joyro 3-t)acamaya 'v. Roek'n'RoH 4-Carmnllta '; Linda Susy 5-Nlrvana: 4-Pangsl 7-Grnadro-' l-Horacio f-Dpendabl 10'Mlndi U-Fifito Titita "v"1- Toloro ' Arjfosy 'Rbyaf Crvcro . Cuadalctnal . Hostigador . Th Squir Proybdal Lcof Gels Undpnay ; Today il 9 ima: ; V; By L. BEBTO JOSEPH ; f Panama's top amateur nasa nasa-; ; nasa-; baJl loop, jthe Provincial League, "will start its 15th sea season son season today at the Olympic Sta Stadium dium Stadium with a game between Centinela del Tuira and Joye Joye-rla rla Joye-rla NueTa rork. ;.;, v-3 -. The opener will yet nnderway at 9 a jn. after inaugural cere ceremonies monies ceremonies in which league offi officials, cials, officials, umpires, players of the seven team8 and their god- ' mothers; will participate. y Banco Nacional manager' Henrique de Dbarrio wlU throw out the first hall . from the mound. In an attempt to strike out Fire Chief Raul Arango. Gov. Jose Cajar Escala will be behind the plate.. ; . League president Alfonso D. - Pinzon feels that-his loop will be a "pretty good one," - He rates slaver li''!" rti)W rti)W-to to rti)W-to Blanco, Edgardo Ellis, and Federlco Bostte as future pros and adds that he would not be surprised if they all graduated to the pay ranks next year.' Last season's f champion Guardia Nacional has dropped out leaving only seven clubs to battle for the pennant. BOSTON, Dee. Of UPI) -iiSnnhn. more quarterback Johnny Ambllt scored once and passea ioi' auu. .er in a three-touchdown second- quarter explosion today to lead Boston College to a ze-s upset win over, Holy Cross. MIAMIr Fla.r Dec. 6 (UPI) -Fran Curci's only punt of the year ttink fronUsh hnunpe at. the Oregon goal, died on the one-yard line, ana set up we . gave Miami a sweet 2 0 victory to today day today at the fend of a bitter season. TODAY La- 2. Si. i ,4- l?I2'DSIl.eiLASSD( 5th RACE 7 Fgs .00 Pool Closes: 3:00 P.M. NIRVANA Braulio Baeza Be Purse 2000 TITITA MARIIA1V JABALINA A. Ycaza oa Ruben Vasquez Jose Im 112 112 112 112 . i i i r ;S 1st, 2nd 6th, 7th RACES D U R L E T A S ZZZIZZZZZZ ouinielas M and Ottt RACES -r- '4th and 8th Races ONE-TWO i UjlJ U LaJ O BBS' O 1-18 Mile Purse $3,000.00 Tomoerow 1. EVENING STAR F Alvnrr 108 2. AS YOU LIKE HER .:. J. Talavera 113 3. RAGAZZA ...-:............i,. : ...... J. Ulloa 115 4. MANUELA PEDRAZA : A. Alfaro 105 5. QUICKIE ; B: Baeza 118 6- '"AM BELLE R. V6sduez 115 7. (CRAMILLA : ...A.Ycaxa: 118 COLONt I .'"'i 'M-,''y..W:.' For the convenience ;:';;;;;V,;;;:; ,.1. of our patrons we are , Ajtlowed At The Arena dep&f W "'K m v v 4 j.JWn.f .' vrffi,".V.r i 'a A. .. !-' .11 mmi i Mum, T r1 ' .j...j.....t. k " . THE SUNDAY. AMERICAN rAtife fiNi USU's Billy Cannon StNl) AY,' DECEMBER T, 1951.$ Heart Attaclt Fatal To Giant Football Scout Jack Lavelle NEW YORK UP11 Cleve-j land Brownl may feel a bit lonely tomorrow t, Philadelphia because Jack LaveUe-.the-joUy, 300-pound-tr who shadowed j them lot1 Bine, years--is deaM :M i Lavelle, 52,- chief -acout for. the National Football League's, New York Giants for 27" years, died Thursday night & heart attack, Lavelle's career was almost as well- rounded as hisTbody, He was; the .official started at Ney York big Moor r: track -'-meets, coached and scouted,, worked for jlhei Catii Catii-olic olic Catii-olic Youth Organization and maite hundred?:-'of aortenrances arftund the' Cbuntcy as tme'of its" "Wittiest j aiier-amner speaicers, ; i ; But Xavefle's great Jove was football 'AM Wscalef delight dur ingth last decade was to. find flaws in ltoii most successful 'ot tntdi r-C professional 'teams 'teams-coach coach 'teams-coach Paul Browns Urowns.- j Haiti ttrwrte Firsff'S Rofeat i LsVeRfa tyatiid fce been parch parch-et et parch-et high up 3a, Franklin FMd Sua day scooting-: th Browns for New York's game with then, at Yan kee Stadium Dec. 14. But he al realy had watched-.the i JJrowns many times 4his season-and. with good effect. v, .:: -, J-i The Giants; setting up defensive alignments .based -on Lavelle's re. portsfhanded the. iBrowns their first 1958 defeat Nov., 2, The. Giants showed 'how to slow up: Jimmy Brown, (Cleveland's, record busting fullback? i. that game .and other teams; -have used, similar methods to stop him. ..,' '' -"That Jack Lavelle is nobody's fool. He'll have something figured out-for us," Paul Brown, said be before fore before that game.: He -was right. -.-But Lavelle probably did his master scouting job on the Browns the first year they played in the NFL in 1950. The Giants set up a defense based on Lavelle s re ports- and : scored a 6-0 victory ia; their first clash with the Browns and -their treat passer,' OttoUra- ham, it?; was. the only shutout over suffered by Cleveland in regular jSeaso game. ,vi,;:,,,.. 1 Started 30, Years. Age Lavelle became a master scout after, starting ,'ar an "apprentice sRVj-' sundef Kaute; Kockne at o tre J)t me 30 years ,'ago. Lavelle was sideliheu by a shoulder in injury jury injury ln his junior year and said hs didn't know .anything .about scouting when Rbckne asked him to look overa future opoonent. "Go- to the game and tell me what you see," were Rockne's simi pie 'nstructions. Lavelle did such, a good "job fbr,Notre Dame that, be later was hired by the Green Bay Packers as a Scout. He switch ed to the Giants when Steve Owen became head' coach of that team. Lavelle will be buried Tuesday with services at St. Thomas the Apostle Church 'in .West Hemp Hempstead, stead, Hempstead, N.Y. The wake will begin Saturday at the Cronk Funeral Home in- Garden- City, N.H. : . Lavelle is survived by his wi widow, dow, widow, Mae, and two children, John Jr., and Mary;;?! Army Halfback - v '- '--i-,-."-"-.'' -f. -V.' -" i s. f.t-.v- -' r ; Pete Dawlcins Is Runnerup Opiei Tennis Tournament Progresses Satisfactorily 1 Organizers of the Open tennis tournament now .being held at the Panama Olympic swimming pool have apologized sot having kept them up to date o the progress of the tournament in the columus of the pa"Lama;Americah. They promise, to .keep them well-inform-cipating in wis grahd tournament. Some thirty players are partii cipatipe j,n tis gran 'tournament. With the first half concluded' !-bout bout !-bout half of these have been eli eli-jnin4tediAnd jnin4tediAnd eli-jnin4tediAnd the first half was undoubtedly good.; Many a fine game was. played,- most o v. them Maine as was more or less ex- rapted. There has been only one start startling ling startling j npset: The old veteran Clarence- jESlie". defeated .much younger opponent .w the conceded winner-Jaime Jacome, 6-3, 3-6, 6 3. Jacome's "fast service" bsffledTthe old man at first but soon he learn- TODAf-ENCANTO-35-20 Kirk Dpuglas Tony Curtis "THE VIKINGS';, 5 ' Lisa Davs In '!-!'' "THE" D ALTON GIRLST ed to return It .effectively, and wllfc" his- stincruift1 flat ririva aW curately placed, ware the young Euclides Barrera, .. defending up and coming slugger, opened iue secunn nan or i roiirnamant A- itiL. 1 1 . i va inuriuay, wnen me cnampion suowea ms usual good form trouncine vounc On-.nlirnv a.i a.n Today the Mowing games were atueuiueu: JUan Fernandez vs. Carlos Le Levy vy Levy at 8:30 a.m. , aarence tEliam-, Julio ,Pinilla at 3:00 n.m. Fernando Bradly 'vsHJ -New- uau i p.m. s,v The matches' scheduled for to morrow, kn as follows: ' Gabriel Obarrio vst Bamdn Ra mlrer at tM tm : Creslya Guardia vs. Micnael Levinson at 9:30 a.m. Alberto Loney vs. David Bassan at 8:30 on court No. 2. Cados Benjamin vs. H. Dunn at io:30, a.m. Sunday. .should prove an excit ing day for tennis fans, as all these, players are of A-class call her : The public Is cordially invited w come out ana enlov these jawea. , Today Die. 7 at 3:45 P.M. . GREAT BULtFlOHf jN HONOR AND WITH THE V -W-'V-t ATTENDANCE OF Her Majesty A MALI DA I Continntal Coffey ; Queen and her CourV and tha ; pretty Candidate from Panama to the 1958 Contett the, Missea Ana Elena Boyd, Clarita Wright, Maritz4 j Voleyf Roeario Conzalei, Anita Chee Chong and Mi 'i riam Cordon Aroiemena. '' Grajiif PrVmiere Grand Premiere f the Bullfight1 Carnival MR. CLIPPER and hit . Cuadrilla-iplacinj; Banderillas while lying down, pole ) vaultmg over the bull, playing football Mith the bull, "executing th'e most dangerous bullfight trick t 'POH JANCREOO'S LUCK,V ROCK and ROLL DANC DANC-, , DANC-, ING with the Carnival Band, i OnthVi eeriou -note The sensational matador uben Escobar (Eacobaritp). t Tickets for sale if house No. 5-II 33rd Street . & AvenidaCuba Cerveza Balboa Kings PI qy At Stadium At 3 PM. Today , T -t. Mr by : RCA VICTOR ly JOI SARCli NEVV YORK VUPlVC Bill Can- non,, who averaged' aix- yards per cany while sparking Louisiana Sta e to a perfect season, yester yesterday day yesterday was named college football' i -cacji oi me Year u the annual United Press International poll. i Cannon, triple r threat back an4 all-around athlete who has run iuu yards in .5 rtconds, won the poll .in a walk.: He received the votes of 99 of the 297 sports writ ers- and broaicasters' who select ed him in the nationwide -ballot ing. , ; - Pete Dawkins, Army halfback. was runner-up .with 59 votes and Randy Duncan, Iowa quarterback was third writh 49. These', three stars 'accounted for 207 of the votes cast, t -,- The remaining 90 were scatter ed among 17 players with Joe Kapp.ft California quarterback fourth with 30. Dick Bass. Colleee of Pacific halfback, and Bob White Ohio State fullback,' tied for -fifth- wun io each, t ? A Pre-Oental Student cannon and Dawkins also ran 1-2 last week in the voting for the UPI All-America team with 'the ISirstar toppine the Army bak by a slight margin, i j Cannon, 20. is a junior ore den tal student, ( He stands : 6-i and weighs 200 pounds. He sained 686 yards on 115 rushes in 10 games while helping ISU become the na nation's tion's nation's only unefeated-imtied msior college team of 1958. He also passes and catches passes and his punting average of 34.5 yards pro probably bably probably would have been better, ex ex-cetp cetp ex-cetp for the fact that his team spent most of its time in the op p-o. iuu wi'ilHn Hill Vmiy -. Cannon, in : New York for aa AU-American dinner, said his teammates and coaches made it possible for him to win the "Back ot me x ear pou. s ( "I never coujd have gained this honor without the help : of my coacnes and all the boys on our team. Cannon said. "It's a dream come true. In fact, this whole sea son has been e dream for all." Sinfles Out Caachts Cannon, named three j coaches who played major roles in bis athletic csrier-AJviii Rnv. an. O. iyiefrtinh heedihlrmlt isirouma, ign, Kcnou -3 in raioa- Route, Ja,i Jame Brown, anotheri high school coach, and Paul Diet Diet-zel, zel, Diet-zel, bead coach at ISU. Dietzel appeared happier about Cannon's latest honor wan the player him mm m Ml -f-T" 'Ci I?,f PANAMA PROFESSIONAL LEAGUE Teams M CV CB K W L Pet. GB Marlboro ...0 2 .1 2 5 2 .714 Carta Vieja 1 x 1 1 3 3 ,.500 1J Cerveza Balboa 1 0 x 1 2 3 .400 2 Kings- ;.0 1 1 x 2 4 .333 2 . Totals ....2 3 r 4 12 12 ; TODAY'S GAME ... At Olympic Stadium: Cerveza Balboa (Brown 1-0) ys. - ; Kings (Luebke 1-1) Came time: 3:00 p.m. self. "It's a weBderMfiug,MU xel said at Baton t Rouge. 'It proves my repeated statement that Billy Cannon is the finest football player I've ever coached. Last year as a soph he was an outstanding runner, but this year he developed into a tremendous blocker,-' a lire faker t and excel excellent lent excellent pass receiver. "In short the does every thing well wilh power and speed." Cannon's offensive prowess stood out particularly In his team's victories over Tulane. Flo Florida rida Florida and Kentucky. He playtd-bril-liant defense games against' Mis Mississippi sissippi Mississippi and Mississippi State, and was singled out by Dietzel u his team's best blocker againt Duke. With ISU trailing in that game, Cannon outran the Duke second secondary ary secondary and took a pass from Warren Rabb for a 60-yrd, gain that proved the key play of the. con contest. Milwaukee Braves Red-Hot For 10-Team National Loop ALEX HAWKINS SPORTS RALEIGH, N. C (UPI) Big, durable Alex Hawkins who came from the West Virginia hills to become a devastating half back at South Carolina Friday was named the Atlantic Coast Conference's "football player of the year." "The Hawk," from So th Charleston, W. Va., led the bal balloting loting balloting for the nnual all ACC team chosen by the Atlantic Coast Sports Writers Assn. For. player of the year he pooled 146 Points, in the voting by 68 ACSWA members, and was named on 22 first place ballots. Quarterback Jack Cummings of North Carolina was second with 121 points and halfback Wray Carlton of Duke was third ; with Dick Christy of North Carolina State was named the "player of the year" for 1957. Hawkins,' who started each of South Carolina's JO games during nis varsity esreer, was tne uame cock s standout in a T-l season this year. Coach Warren Diese called hi y MILTON I RICHMAN washiNuTON (UPl) The Milwaukee-Braves are red-hot for a-10-team National League, War ren Giles is Juke' -warm and most other officials waat some more cold facts before they say yes or no. j . .u. Joe Cairnes, preswenx 01 u Rrv made it Dlaih tooay Mil waukee is '100 per cent in favor" of any plan to expand the Nation National al National League, as was indicated with the approval of a resolution by - The National League bbi Wednesday it will hire an inae- nnrfpnt research organization w explore the possibility of expan sion among otner uunga. "Wr very definitely for eX- oansion." Cairnes said, "we're for ft whether it means a 10 club icairue. a 12-cluo league or even a third major league. Why stand in the way of progress?" Giles, re elected president of thrlsague for A fi ar term Wednesday; took. something of an opposite tand f. "Right now I'm opposed to a 104eam league;' he said. I won't be lor it until someone can show me that two new teams will get enough players of major league ability, to present a good attrac attraction.. I don't want the clubs we have now to be diluted simply for the sake of 'expansion." MWdle-Of-ReadStand clals adopted .a middle-of-the-road stand.- Some were even more in interested terested interested in, wjiat. other facts the research organization misht ferret out than-they were in the ques-l uon ui expansion. This survey could do all of baseball a1 tremendous amount of good," said owner Bob Carpenter of the Phillies. "It will furnish, us with a lot el other information. It will tell us about the minor league picture, perhaps even amaterur baseball' like the Pony Leagues and : the Little Leagues as well as about the economy of certain cities, the facilities-they offer and the popu' lation trends. "As for a possible 10 team league, I can't see it at this time, it would be too cumbersome a thing to control. We have a tight, compact league how and wi'h 10 teams, there might be too many weak sisters. Maybe it could be accomplished later, but I'd want to know more facts." t Calbream "Open-Mlndd" -Owner John Galbreath of the Pirates declared be was "open "open-minded" minded" "open-minded" on the prospect of a 10 10-club club 10-club circuit, such as the Ameri American can American Association adopted with the recent addition of Houston, Dallas and Fort Worth. , "I certainly would not oppose s 10-club league if the findings of this research organization show it would prove advantageous," Gal breath said. The Cincinnati Radlegs want to wait and, see before coming out for or against a 10-club circuit. We won t commit ourselves un til we see what the findings are," said General Manager Gabe Paul. "Let s get some facts first before we decide." Buzzy Bavasi, vice president and general manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers, said the league was taking a forward step. "It looks like they're optimis'ie about a 10-club league, .anyway," he said.' Phil Wrigley, president of the Cubs, and Walter O'Malley, presi president dent president of the Dodgers, were named to hire the independent research organization which will make the survey. 'I 1 The Panama P r 0 f e ssional League rejumes activity today, after a one-day respite,, itli a game between the third-place Cerveza Balboa and the last- place Kings at the Olympic Sta Stadium dium Stadium at 3 o'clock. Cerveza Balboa is two games hehind league-leading Marlboro while the KInfts trail the pack by two and a half games. A win for the Beerraen would move then Into sond-nlace tie with he'Carta Viela Y" Y"-Ves. Ves. Y"-Ves. A K'rs tHumnh would lift the cellar dwellers Into third n'aee, two fames hehind th leaders. Righthander Winston Brown, (i-0) reportedly romnletelv re re-ruoerated ruoerated re-ruoerated from an attack of the f'u. has heen nrpe to start on th nound for the termr Hfs opponent will be nick Luebke. a lefthander, with an evn l-l reco-i. Prown hnrle' a four-hitt,r In defeating the Kin, -i ir is "ply startlnit anpearance, Nov' 21. Luebke. with l"te-lnmn reef heln from Ptanlfy Arthur, de defeated feated defeated the Peermen e- nov; 38 and drooped flellop to "the Marlboro Ri"okers Dee. ? when he came tn fr irr"rV fo" f'te f'te-ms" ms" f'te-ms" dutv In th eighth, frame The soh-HnV, fer the rest of tbe week follows: Monday, Dec. 8: Marlboro vs. Tuesday. Der. 9: Carta Vleja. vs. Cfrvesa Palhna. Wednesiv Dec. 10: Kings ts Carta Vle. Thursday. Dee. 11; Cervesa Bf 'boa vs. Marlhoro, FrWay. Dec. '2: (I) Cerv Cerv-cn cn Cerv-cn Ralboa vs. K'ncs and Carta Vlela vs. Marlboro. Friday's finubl,eheader will be the first of the season. I! ' I ; : WEATHSR CANCELS GAME DAVTON. Oh'o 'U"t rc.ista rc.ista-vus vus rc.ista-vus Adolnbus of St. Peter, Minn wp forced to "-icfl i ht'knr. hall game with Dayton lent ni?ht because of inclement flying weath er. 60c. TOMORROW (ONLY) 30c G D D3 GRfAT PRE-RELEASE! -1 TEN8E... ACTlON-PACKfD. OUTDOOR PRAMA QF.l, ! A FORMER LAW OFFICER MARKED FOR DEATH... '. 1 pmMmmi0iw8?&n t mj "a coaches" football player that can be called -upon to do anyi thing. .and do it to perfection." , The 6-foot -1, 187-pound halfback carried the ball 100 times during the season and gained 474 yards for a 4.7 average. He scored five touchdowns and sir two-point con conversions versions conversions for 42 points. r- Hawkins' tied a conference fec fec-ord ord fec-ord in this last eollegeiate game by passing for three touchdowns la a 4-T win over Wake Forest. ; Help Your Piles Don't llfTr from .salnful Jlchln Pllai another hour without trylna trylna-Chinaroldi Chinaroldi trylna-Chinaroldi 'Upon application Chlnarold tarta curbing- Plla mlaariai I waya: 1. Saata pain and itching. S. Halpa ahrlnk aor, airollan tlaauaa. t. Halpa natur heal Irritated mambranaa and allny Pll Marvouanaaa. Aak your Druggiat far Chlnarold today. ITODAY-mJGATOGS-TODAY T CAPITOLIO S5c. 20c. Spanish Program! "MI ESPOSA MB COMPRENDE Arturo de C6rdova - Also: -f: LA VENENOSA Ana Luisa Peluffo V OLM S5e. 10c. THE HIGH COST OF LOVING with Jose Ferrer -. - Also: -. STRANGER WITH A GUN with Glenn Ford Service Center Theatres TODAY BALBOA Air Conditioned 2:15 4:20 6:25 8:30 John Wayne Eiko Ando "THE BARBARIAN AND ' THE GEISHA" 1 in Cinemascope & Color! COCO SOLO 2:36 7:00 Leslie Caron Maurice Chevalier "GIGI" in Cinemascope & Color! DIABLO HTS. 2:30 7:00 Sophia Loren Anthony Perkins "Desire Under The Elms" G A M B O A Temporarily Closed For Repairs To Building. GATUN 2:30 7:00 Al.Hedison Patricia Owens Vincent Price "THE FLY" in Cinemascope & Color! MARGARITA 2:30 7:00 James Garner v Etchtka Chourean . "DARBY'S RANGERS" PARA I SO 7:00 John Wayne Janet Leigh "JET PILOT" SANTA CRUZ 7:81 Ray Milland Mary Murphy "A MAN ALONE" CAMP BIERD 7:00 Fess Parker "Westward Ho The Wagons" in Cinemascope & Color! Ill TODAY j VICTORIA tut. ,;,'( istt. Spanish Prpgrftm! HAY ANGELES CON '.-.-ESPUELAS' : wltJi.Luls Agullar., ' Also: -' EL PORTERO with Cantinflas 35o. RIO fcOc. ( In Cinemascope! The Tall $iranger ', .."Aisof- ; ; OREGON PASSAGE with John Ericson and Lola Albright 60c. -30c. 1AST DAY! 7:00 9:00 EJ K E yjtw&w THE HELL-HORDE they caned The Butcher's Battalion! The pak of fury I T shock-hot saa ot nlght-rldlng frrorl The West's infamous wolf-pack raider.. ..a hundred renegades who scorched thejand with a thousand crimes! Lad by tkt mavtruk Quajtfnll and th infamout known at Kali! k a STEVE COCHRAN DIANE BREWSTER in CINEMASCOPE (aide irs COLOR DeLUXE yea can ff .be 37 A..". costs nviAti Timrirrf" Tinr Tht tire with the, built-in ' V Vpe'ace of mintf! ; -u.'ta, :epTTPD BIIKKTB nU WAIT Tft' HMKU v" OOSS CDGC EuMq DE LUXE CHAMPIOII TUBE OR TUBELBS BETTER RUBBER FROM START TO FINISH ,":' Trdnslsthmion' Highway t . Preyed on the Speedway... your protection en. the HigWayl .... eF j.vvti i If Us Sure you Cer & Tires crc in Tcp Ccndiiion! Tel. 3-1501 IIY Car Inspection lime be Prepared! 1 'V-''v.Y''.-- 'i.o..v.:'v; ' mgi tfa 'HE.TO"DAT AMERICAN CAH-.-. .;;". J. V:. "yi--r--:vr-'Jit:L-; s ''- SmT, DECEMBER 7tt9Hrf ft- FOR INFORMATION ' THIS SPACE TELEPHONE 2-0740 IS FOR SALE - THIS SPACE IS If OR SALE. FOR INFORMATION TELEPHONE 2-0740 r - r i''5 vi. --,'','ti., '. -fit ; mmmmam "MMgTagj'MMM -iimii 1 f 1 to it if, Resorts PHILLIPS Oeeenside Cottages Santa Claw R de P. hm J-1 171 Cristobal 1-U7S. Rooms FOR RENT: Apartments with service SI I ta $20. Singlt roomi $10 te $17. 4th Street Rio Aba Aba-io, io, Aba-io, Tal. 4-1310 at La Lome. FOR RENT: Two nice bedrooms, with connecting bath and aireon aireon-eitioning eitioning aireon-eitioning in North American home. Use of all facilities avail available able available if desired. Phone 3-0538 Panama. Houses FOR RENT: Completely fur furnished nished furnished three bedroom house ad ad-, , ad-, jacent to Golf course. Large liv liv-ingreom, ingreom, liv-ingreom, diningroom, bar, porch, terraces and gardens. Available Feb. 1st? No. J 3. Fifth Street, Golf Heights. Telephone 2-1459. Balboa Music Students Plan Xmas Program A program of Christmas music will be presented by the music students of the Balboa J4unio-r High School Dec. 11 at 7:30 p.m. in the Balboa Gymnasium, J 'Under the 'direction of Wallaee "Woodruff the school orchestra will play a group of Christmas cartas and the boys' and girls' choral i groups will sing several selections. Soloists will include Judy Brown Ethel Faulkner, and Susan Ness. Wendell Shepard will play a -trom-bone. solo. .A clarinet trio com composed posed composed of Eugene Linfors, Mike Harris, arid Robert Bohannon will play a clarinet polks. II ft, HLy Hl e.w from rnJIaoattoa, gal, hoartburj, otumiea. heaeaehee, bad breath, dl- Mt Hlgo your CBral,t todMi MlgalM m real tonle to thi tiv.r and 'tateettma. HleaH-o, at drusatoro. LIFE INSURANCE call JIM RIDGE General Agent Gibraltar Life Ins. Co.. for rates and Information Tel. Panama 2-0552 for your particular need in Bearings "SKF" offers you 8.000 types and sjzes. Agendas Larsen, S.A. t 'A Phone 2-3492 Opposite Old Balboa Brewery (Next to English Wharf) AUTOMOBILE FINANCE 1 1 Government Employes . Service Perioniel Finance Tour New Or Ued Car GOVERNMENT EMPLOYES FINANCE Co. LOW RATES VT TO 36 Mo. on new caM AGENCY DEHLINUER No. 43 Automobile how Phone 3-4984 3-4985 All Types of Auto Insurance 35 mm Camera Lens 1.9 the best buy In town Foto International 1SS Central Ave. Corner "K" Street 1 block from Railroad Station The New S IP NIKON With built-in Universal Vlewllnder Bystem Panama Col6n Apartments FOR RENT: Furnished two bed bedroom room bedroom apartment; hot water; army inspected, 82 Via Porras, phona 3-7258. FOR RfNT: -Furnished screen screened ed screened one bedroom apartment, $80 rent. Tel. 3-4644. FQR RENT:- Furnished apart apart-TMn TMn apart-TMn fwo bedreenu. living room dining room, independent service. 86th Straet No. 6, an Francisco, near Roosevelt" Theatre. FOR RENT: Beautiful ene-bed-room apartment in l Cangrejo, Madura's Building. For informa information tion information call 2-2844 or 2-2854, from 9 to 12 and 2 to 6. Arpegio Glee Club To Offer Program At 5 P.M. Today The Arpegio Glee Club, under the direction of Alberto (Toriv) A. Griffith will present a program over a Colon radio station at 5 p.m. today. The choral group wiU be assist assisted ed assisted by Len Martin, well known pianist, and Sidney Leacock, bas bassist. sist. bassist. FOURT REJECTS APPEALS NICOSIA, Cyprus (UPI) Thp Cyprus Supreme Court Monday re jected the appeals of two Greek Cypriots who -.were sentenced lo death for the murder oft a Greek war department rhploye. The doomed men Yannakis Athansiou 22, and Costas Constantinides, 27 were convicted on Nov. 4. The shooting occurred in July. CHS To Present 21st Xmas Program On December :1$ Cristobal High School will' pre sent its 21st Christmas program Dec. 16, at 7:30 p.m.. t the Cris Cristobal tobal Cristobal High School auditorium and lawn. v if it a concert Dy tne giee cuo ana the orchestra will be given in tne school auditorium. Singing solos for the first time are Karen Coate, Marguerite' En En-gelke, gelke, En-gelke, Barbara Hall, Frank Me Me-Leod Leod Me-Leod and Harry Butz.i the piano accompaints for the khoir are Esther Miller and Elizabeth Lim Lim-kemann. kemann. Lim-kemann. The High School orchestra of 34 members will play as a special number the Children's Symphony by Haydn. This number is some sometimes times sometimes called the "Toy Symphony'' since it employs the brass, wood woodwind wind woodwind and percussion players on a dozen different toy instruments. Following the indoor program tne singers, musicians and audien by RCA 7 A W ORIGINAL DESIGNS O REASONABLE PRICES 1 w BOB and JOYCE LEAVB VOUB AD WITH ONE OF OUR AGENTS OR OUR OPriCES AT 11 T H! '8TT8ET, FANAMA i- UBREKIA MECTADO t tnti Ne, 1J AGENOAS INTERNAL DE PUBLICACIONES No. 3 Lottery PUia CA8A ZALDO Central Ave. .41 LOURDES PHARMACI 112 U CarrasnirUla f ARMACIA LOM LOM-BARDO BARDO LOM-BARDO No. 26 "B" Street 9 MORR1SO.N th of Jul Ave A i St. LEWIS SERVICE Ave. TtveU N. 4 FARMACIA EST ADOS UNIDOS 'lit Central Ave. FARMACLA UJX-164 Central Avenue HOISKHOLD EXCHANGE tn. He U Osx A v.. Ne. 41 FOTO DOMY-Jurt Arowtnena Are. FARMAC1A VAN DEB-JIS 59 Street No. 53 FARMAC1A EL BATURRO Prqo Lefevre Street VAJRMACU "lAg'-Via rORBAS 111 MOVED AD E8 A THIS Beside the Bella Vteta Tneetre COLON OFFICE: lltb Street and Amaamr Guerrero No. 14.221 Automobiles FOR SALE: 1955 Cadillac coupe, excellent condition. Call Balboa 2-3658, after 5 p.m. BUY A VQLkijSWAGEN FOR SALE: 1956 Chevrolet 4 door Bel-Air, hardtop sport sedan, automatic transmission, radio and other extras. One owner, excel excellent lent excellent condition. Purchased new car. sacrifice for best offer. Tel. 2-2619. House 530 Ancon. BUY A VOLKSWAGEN FOR S.ALE: 1956 Chevrojet, 4 door, very, good radio, like new, perfect, condition. Tel. 2-3805. BUY A VOLKSWAGEN FOR SALE: Ford Six-1 955 four door sedan, standard shift, well cared far, good gas mileage, new battery, seat covers, muffler. $975.00. Phone, Balboa 2708. BUY A VOLKSWAGEN FOR SALE: 195 8 Chevrolet 4 door. 9 passenger, Brookwood sation wagon with all accessories. 1931 Model A duty paid. 1930 Model A. Balboa 2-430? or 2 2-3347. 3347. 2-3347. BUY A VOLKSWAGEN FOR SALE: Ford 4 door, 54, 6 eyl., standard shift. Excellent throughaiit. Call Navy (Pacific) 3111 for 'additional information, BUT.-A VOLKSWAGEN ce will retire to the front lawn of the school where the outdoor music in connection with, a table tableaux aux tableaux will be presented. The High School band will intro duce two, nw '.Christmas selec tions. Heard tor tne tirst time lo locally cally locally will be James Pltlyhar's "An Old English Christmas" and Paul Yorler s "The Christmas Story V Will Hayes, a senior known for his dramatic abiliry, Will do the narrator's part in the latter num ber. The High School. chorus wrill assist the band and the special tableaux under the direction ott Mrs. Carl Maedl will be presented, as in the ast, bx. Junior High School students,? - The program will very likely be the last Christmas- festival lo he presented at Cristobal High School. For its music director, O. E. Jnrslad,'', this' will be the 20ch program he has directed at Cris Cristobal. tobal. Cristobal. VICTOR FURNITURE STORE Next to the Savings Bank "COFFEE BREAK Every Monday from 9:30 to 10:00 a.m. ' Da... Your Community Network YCII 840 Kilocycles PANAMA Home Articles Miscellaneous FOR SALE: .Friidaira electric FOR SALE:-rTw firl's hieyeles, , stove.s has electric clock and 24 Inch, new tires. One wood timer. Cood condition, $75.00, high cnair. House No. 2244, 60 cy'ei: Call 2-4433. Diablo. Carr St.. Balhoa. ; FOR SALE: Zenith radio and J ''" record plwer; V h.p. 60 cycl. FOR SALE:-Apt. a.... Moliarrt ..Mtricmoror with mount; Phil- e. table model radio; floor lamps; desk lamps; kitchen table; mis- M Apt, 2539-C Coco- celaneous household items. 82 -., 1 v Via Porras, phone 3-725B. f0 $Ail;--2r' Television, 4 FOR SALE: Baby crib, fine con- C radio. RCA ( radio, dition S14.00. Childa' efcest Markel record -layer. .11 need drawers $5.00. Two baby aatei 'air, 200 '. 50 used $1.00 each. Phone 83-2U9. transformer, 100 uaed lectro- -rytie condensers, all tor $75. FOR SALE : New mirror. 28x68. Phone Balboa 2692. Double bed, Hollywood type, ; complete, p i a a t i e headboard, $ALI:--Weatinar.ouae re- be.ge. Or w.ll exchange for desk, fH 6fJ h $65.00. Bal- light color. House 2507-C, op- posit. Cbeoli school. Phone "4"a- 315S. FOR SALE: Due te trii, telling ... ... w- li..i.... ,i Hi-Fi record player. Norge wash- FOR All;-'n "f- in, machine, Nor,, drye. Mah.: geratpr 1,1 .2 cu H. ,v wardrobe. 0.1. -elMner; 2-3347" Phone 4-1 178. room table and 18 chairs $25.00. y 450, Solid mahogany Electric mangle iron.r $90.00, in9u ltt tM.x, MV, S Balboa 2-4307. 6 ehiittVbuH,r ,d ,.,!, tables FOR 'SALE: Sewing machine $350; Solid mahogany bedroom with cabinet and attachmerlt. Do- auil-e. 2 Hollywood bode, eom- luxe mangle, like new, camera. plte matching cheat, Panama 3-6526. $300. No. 5407, Diablo. AROUND BV o Well gales, here we are with another brief on events in and a round town...Looking over the an anniversary niversary anniversary calendar w see that friend Dee Jay Dave Constable and the missus ar m ior "congra "congratulations tulations "congratulations this week for having' completed three years 01 weuueu bliss. j Marriage, ah marriage it 1 real: ly great w isn't;. $T Heralded, rooted nd tooted af after ter after a five-year absence- for the local, mound. Pat v Scantleburiy, failed t nota oacsr tn iic iic-staiiimm staiiimm iic-staiiimm -last Wednesday eve ning. But,' watch Hit fellow; he will come arouno. migmy, m Afti wnrVins 209 innings .In i season, Pat, or wiy pitcher for that matter, Is to ,1 ttckoned with. . : Cameraman Norman senneu, whn ha a real eone studio now, atop the Premiere building "Ar- tisco, got tnmgs moving iasi oai oai-nprtav nprtav oai-nprtav ftpr inaugural rites' the Hav hefore when the Ven. Arch deacon Lemual B. Shirley, did the, blessing. Admitted to the Panama Ho$ pital last Tuesday for a gener general al general checkup was dentist Reginald Ford of the Atlantic side. The Doe, as he is known to all and sundry, if expected be out the institution soon. Victor Osborne, Patricia Cros- 1090 Kilocycles COLON I If TOWN I TOM date, Stephen Pierre,. Ivan Baily, Vincent Greenidge and Elbert King will combine vocal efforts in the fiame of the. ''Millionaires" Social Club, to sing Christmas carols during the yuletlde. season- According to a spokesman tor the group they will be bringing a Xmas message in song. Not a bad idea at all. While on the subject of ".Christ mas cheer, the Junta Femenina will continue this year at they k-.. MM fk. n mi Amf m ria t A Him. tribute packages to the less for tunate. We are ot tne opinion mat groups, like business enterprises, should be supported py we com munity for their consciousness of the need that exists tor lending a helping hand. Speaking about the lending a helping hand,, we learned ; a nd from reliable sources, that Ciga Ciga-rrillos rrillos Ciga-rrillos Panama, will be on the ball also in bringing Christmas cheer, through to a nation wide distribution of toys .. weU that't something to write home about, after all it's better to give titan to receive. ." .Some (, the etalwarta, "whose contribution go into the produc production tion production of this i cigarette-, are Ed Squires4 of Cleff .Melodairfcr fame,. Norma Grenfcrd, Eva Este, Rey Reynold nold Reynold Adonican, Oswald Mc Ken Ken-zie, zie, Ken-zie, Jo-.eph Worrell, Edmund Mit Mitchell, chell, Mitchell, and Arsenath Dolly, to men mention tion mention only a few. Coming over from Colon last Sunday to take in the Mt. Olym-pus-Eureka Temple, Elks center inauguration, was Mrs. Mae Shur land. Arturo Layne, blew out of town to spend the holiday season in neighbouring Costa Rica, Meantime, birthday greeting went out to E. 6. Headley of the- capital as he' celebrated an another other another year,, and in Gamboa Mrs. Madge Grant, Oscar Bailey and Mist Esmeralda Fowler, teem teem-ed ed teem-ed up for big celebration of. their birthdays. The affair wet held at the homo of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grant. Camping out at the Gorgas Hos Hospital pital Hospital for a checkup is- John Thom Thomas as Thomas of Club Altamira. Over in Colon Mrs. Winnefred Morris, had herself a birthday on Thursday. It goes without she was widely congratulated. The recentlv-nriranikorf TTnr.li.nt. ers Social Club, staffed by Albert nmamine. ueraia usascombe ,.' E E-lena lena E-lena Amantine,,, Georg Thorrtal, and Johnny Cox, Is all set for this Friday evening at the Santt-Cru. Service Center with a solid floor show and dance. -j Wedding anniversary greetinga went out to Mr. and Mrs Ivor' Reece last Friday. This is the po popular pular popular Couple's first. Grin and Bear It: Two guys met on a. train. One aald to the other, "say fellow, what's wrong with yobr hand, had an accl accl-dOTt."v"No" dOTt."v"No" accl-dOTt."v"No" replied the second fellow whose hand wa i in a sting; "The, what'a wrong." :; , "On, I htd my hand -broken," , "What for was the !jury of Hie first.- "Oh, I tried to pat myself on the back." "Wht for' insisted the first fel fel-low; low; fel-low; -''f-A:..-'- V'v,. ;" "For minding tny own hurt, ness." 1 '"'' "" THOUGHT FOR TODAY; A gentleman is a man who can dis disagree agree disagree without being disagreeable. ,,,' i i 4 Real Estate POR SALEf-lote 500 and 1.000 ' meters, in the Neeve. Hipodresne Urbanization, across the Reman ''. Xacelrack, All lets with etreet fronts, sewage," water main and electricity. Carl W. McBarneH. Tel. 3-257. IN PA1T1LLA, eeeoslte the new schools,' "LAi JNVERSIONISTA" is building, Jionse anrf lots to your style, easy aaymenrs. LA INVIRSIONISTA, upstairs, Caja da Ahorres. Tel. 2-S639. FOR SALK:- Beautiful property en upper reaches Pacora River 8 miles from Goofy, Lake (Cerre Aiul), en prelected road to San las: 10 hectares titled land -and 60 hectares without title. About 40 hts pastures and 40 cleared: partly fenced;1 house for foreman, lumber and concrete floor; river with dear water, sev- , aral brooks, ideal climate. Nine bead of cattle leverage 3 years, free front tick and torsalo. Price: $5,500 including cattle, ; $5,000 without caHle. Apply El Agrieufter, phone 1.1912., j-.-'. -,', Loot vicinity Tlvoli Hotel Thanks Thanksgiving giving Thanksgiving night one bracelet gold chain with Phi Bete Kappa Kay and 3 other key. Finder please call 3-1252, Panama, reward. iry By CAB Set To Pass On Airline Agreement Legalify Wl SUlVPTrtM ct-tt on.- rt:.. il Aeronautics Board will open ad inquiry; Jan 14 tojearn whetheC worked out by sx ma jpr; airlines violates the public interest. Te CAB inko&icit lti!;feti lti!;feti-tifln tifln lti!;feti-tifln to look into the agreement, wa aeBigneor 10 CBl flown down (in niuiua n.aAm j v uu ....... i.T. luinrcra CUWCU 17V Ml... c . (several airimei union LA BARDOT IN SPICY TALE OF 3. : Ipmti DSD OPENS WEDNESDAY ATiTHE iiiiiiiiiii: iilliililil . i;Tfae greaieat French export of the century Brljtitte plftvs the role'ofa flirtatious and , makes her debut as comedienne In ffLA; I Incendiary ynune girt who ir determined to PARISrENNE." which onePe at the Bella ,7,VIt' Theatre, nd diata1bnttf v through United Artists. The export Is none other than the fabulously endowed Brlgitte, - Ba'doi-.- v-- 1 K )i-:jv-r;):,i-'Wvt''t;s : 'XA PARISIENNE," li a. comedy inch a . only the French can make and, In fact ar f anions for To come right out with It, "Lav -Farisienne" Is a boudoir comedy which is to say it Is fast, funny, outrageous, nd with : Itt emphasis resting aquarely on the battle of the sexes. ' IsMsMeVsasaWsHstlsiWM Miscellaneous ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS DRAWER "A". DIABLO BOX mi, CRISTOBAL, C.Z. v PHONl BALBOA 1709" Boats & Motors OR SALltU ft. beat Id h. .motor with trailer and all eeuip' mant, SS00. Ft. Clayton LATeL 17-4140..' 1 FOR SALI-1957 Ivinrilje out outboard board outboard Motor, 35 h.g. telephone, Gamboa 754. FOR SALE : A riatocraft A valon outboard beat, 15 foot long, ma mahogany hogany mahogany plywood hull, with mark 75 Mercury motor, complete with controls. Telephone Gamboa 754. FOR SALE: 2M fishlnf boat, excellent condition. Can be seen.' at Tarpon Club. Phone 3-3151 anytimf,:,' .. .. Dogs FOR SALE :-Bexer puppies AKC registered. Phone Navy 151 8i Domestic Employment WANTED: Maie?1t sleep In, apply Sunday and Monday, 0932, Amador Road. v; have charged the mutual aid a greement is illegal. In the meantime, the CAB said Hie Nov. 2 agreement could re remain main remain in force, but it ordered the airlines to. make public within a week the amount of money paid out under the pacv and who re received ceived received it. The airlines signers of the pact are American, w astern Trans WorM, Uriited, Pan American and Capital. -The latter 'received at least one payment from the other pact members during the 37laye strike -of itseehaircs, T VA, whose Service has bee;;:: : halted by a 13-day Valkoutjiaw- nouncea m Kansas .jitv tnaa rts domestic and foreign'flighte- wM be resumed Mondayi- Striking mechanics employed by Baetern prepared for what could be a drawn-out atoppage in view mm- 11111 on Wednesday WANTED: Experienced radio TV technicians. Tropelce," S.A. 45th' street and Vie ispafta. 'A WANTEDS r Television techni technician cian technician apply in person to Halman. S. A., Via IspaiSa No. L , WANTED: Bilingual secretary with shorthand, alsa bilingual ae countant, Servici y Coloceeio Coloceeio-nes, nes, Coloceeio-nes, Cemara-de Cemercio, Apt. SERVICES TELEVISION SERVICE We reeaii'in your home wo don't proton t guarantee owr work. We guarantee It - PHONE THE EXPERTS; CRAWFORD. AGENCIES 7 Tel. X'1905 v . Tivell Avenue No. 1 1-20 WANTED WANTED: Used freexer ia good Rendition Call 3.1252, Pa Panama. nama. Panama. ; WANTED --- Office furniture, darfting tables and stools, in good condition. Write apartade 4356, Panama, .v'ie. -i. ii " -n" n Wned by mature couple modern furnished apartment, air condi conditioned tioned conditioned for December and January. Phone 2-2123. Wanted Position Young lady with good recom recommendations mendations recommendations -seek .employment with American family here or abroadWrite Mist Castillo, aper- . tado 3429, Panama, R. P. 1 . r of the company? 'reported refusal to accept whaLtiie union termed its "final offer .v" Under the airlllle pact, the com companies' panies' companies' pledged v to pay a strike strikebound bound strikebound airline av extra revenue -they take in 'i. result of the strnce. v WASHINGTON: (UPI) The teheral Semees Administration (ttSA) aiinouhced nday ifttd approved a crjntemporary design for ai new, $,38fl,00O U.S. court house and federal office building at phoenix, Ariz. LOVE dq m OB BELLA VISTA -wxwf 1 s a wf if I ' v F S ? balance her -husband's Infidelities by haying an Affair witlr a handsome prtoce. ; : Her ce-stsfs in "La Farislenne" are Charles Boyer ,'' )who plays the prince with suaylty and a wicked sonhlsticatlon: and. Henri VI- dal, a tall, runed, nandaome redheaded male connternart of Brlgitte'r ex appeal. Filmed lartelt on location in Paris and the Riviera, In Technicolor. "La ParlelenneJUv with Fnrllshdla1omes, onens next Wednesi day; at the alr-condltloned Bella Vista Thea-tre.;-';.-t: ' '.-M:'' ;2;:-';W?.'i'U'.y-: V'L'' o o 7 IBS BVnOAK AfflEKlCAlf age nrrci TXXXT AND m PUATU ' By GEORGE WUNDER THE STORY 07 MAXTBA WAYNE Threatened By WILSON SCRLGCa - 7 wF Rim NATURE OF THCOWWJNIST' JwSCRUTASLe Jl '"T'' .- J 1 iau pip xai fHCrVra? Yhc unitccm noA&ANt, PLTT WILL AMERICAN THEY ACTf. ir T MINPT WE i.t7 yuuk m iK nr 1 states I, ,.f i ON MERELY HOPE, . iter, imr 'IT. K-i ,1 1 IUNDAT, DECEMt 7, U5I 'suptose I woe you off Jl ; XH A wawt mdu TO TAKE Mi TO . WHSKS BOUTS BSHTCOACJ.jJ a Y1H I IBVW ROAD rrtuuJTvoirw cctaridsJ Jkf I'm soeey, r huj't IJlflv TQTAKEM6 JT TO-- A fjL I HAVE A PUW6 P Jl IV I 13 Si'" 1 ft Jl 1 " .,';S.T'.-.-',.;. ixaiu ax9 eu nisei -Ml PIBC1LLA1 fOP On Down i (9 MEEEUX BLOSSfiE T ItX rnd oar which SCHOOt, 6 U- Bl &6EST 6ftMCtR THeMlixwowrort, HIM O lAKt KVt KJ JH& PBOM IN IM WAITING I FOfcBOft Kcu7 WHERE I T. am. -SST AW v r iA iwukb I Food for Thought By AL TEEMEE1 .WONDERFUL I FINALLY .BEAT MRS. ( SAfJ AND SME'S A) ATgoOO BRIDGE JT PLAYER -- NO, NO.. I MEAN Tv Cl SERVED A. NICER J ILUT OOt J PrWat Parley ' ff T. BAMUN BUGS BUNNT MajIo Word ;,SwaifM(X O? .iP )R3DZy, LETS OH, NO, MY ' ICKt8ytrtl SO SEE tT?IENP( NOT. I VWANT ME. 1 THATS OKAV BRIMfi TH' iSliz? mart I nnp th m ecrotrcwMcvma COULPN'T yjLIST 'TWEEN THEN BEAT ItTHlS J WAKE IT Ik. 'NOUN ME I 15 A TOP-SECRET .li.ii BOOTS AND EXE EC33 Headache tf CDQAB MAETIN irs STArriNTRAiN))' H Open th' poor, CICERO, BEFORE 1 6ET SOARED! I'M WARN IN' VA. V KIP. UNLOCK THAT POOR OR I'LL USEV Tlj' HAIR BRUSH y4 VgC; '1 mw rvNt ieo fNA. i TXX- WWW? QCvS CAPTAIN EAST Dlsapproyal fy LESUE TUENEE OR THKArst.'. WOK AMY WAV ILL ADMIT WOTHf C V Tfl CBipy m W1 Ift TH HKT IT HAP IN UJTH,BUP. rr WWePLAWlM sKVUtmSWEEK'. "- in I'LL TEACH VOU TO WW LOOK, MR. 5MBAK OUT J KB LK.5ME5 AM AsLctri trr PON NOTHIM WtONBt BHE CMAB TO APOL06IZ fOK YOUR IM- wspiTALiry j NOBOOV HA5TA AWlOtflZB POK MB I nw mi mt (www riccnw thi HOUSI FOU 00t, urn mine. i i ui., aiJJWm R .:-rr' r beelekiyov WHATYPUtBi poiua; fltef Dtefeyk True Life Adventures PLANET ..4 What is it ? A FU3ACnN MASS A 3N THB PLANBT, JUPITER; AND 24t9Ot0 M)L6 4 LOKkS, HAS fcTTRVeUK? ASTKOKkDMERS FOR OVBE A CENTLW Onh thborv: It e a priftins island d6 UNKNOWK MATERIAL., SUVPCWTKP BV A Wilt Disney iiwgiNuei WMHMiWWrii Ttke A look By DICK CAVAUJ AIRLINER8CNLV v mi i at riv wirj4 1 ALTITUDES WAVWIV ATOKM,1nij THEMORTV? ( T DON'T S I rd know.-KJ J IWAaiJD6r95RlN0' WHY OLK rLANC K : V.M WHAT MAKES MOD UP60 HK3HT : 1 r 7v QUE BOARDCVfi' BOUSE V ; vltk ,V; MAJOS BOOPU! OVTOXTEWAI ;f""""-"' Nwa BT I. R WfLUAMS '.V Itte 6TT6K PART 0 VALOR JN 1 rKt6iHt rKftiwe opyuiNO aktm "tfyC :; $ FAR MORS- pAMfiEKOUS THAN A" CUFFIOtNT TlV,ft TOWK 0? 60ME' 'i f t !INeNlWU TKTAeEWV THAT WILL, . H-t APPtASB HER WRATH.' : ',''ii :iit -:'A'.yl . j L 1 '- fH -w--. I Will .JTl : n V' lVv"VVP,B I III' IK 7 if I e BiB Jl -i 4?.C1I N ,ij I II i ...1 ... , .: Jtl 1 MMtaMlrllHrlMMlrMkM SIDE GLANCES By Calbraith T ON. MM tr IU tm. im. rvii 4 5iA ; 5 MSGT. ALBERT CROOKE, MUUary Police instructor of the U.S Army Caribbean, School, Fort Gulick, takes the oath as he en en-lists lists en-lists in the Army for three years, from MaJ. Eladio A. Burgos secretary of the school. Crooke's home is Ponce, Puerto Rico. ' (U.S. Army Photo) WSA:WWWmwra 1 s J SS. i S ,X "Seem like firei aren't at exciting ai they used to be. I came pretty near just staying at home and aating my aupperl" Faltering Philip i riuilp'r Uf li Wtod with brtrtf RAlrs weald wave hta heme Uke otn. ?. A. awHrtfledt, Jwrt ttaf Hel eW V 4 PERFECT RECORD Col. Joble Dixon, quartermaster Unlfcd States ArmyCCaribbean last week presented a Certificate ''of Merit for' 'Safety to rank Mangogna fleft) who accepted u award on'tiehalf of the entire personnelJ'of the Quartermaster Section, USARCARIB, following a perfect record racked ,ap y the acUvity durtagr the period Jan. 1 to July 1. 1958. The activity retarded 8S,t72 manhours worked without a disabling ijury . . Z1 (U.S. Army Photo t PANAMA AZtWAYS PANAMA r MEDELLIN ... ....... ,.r)T, , V. yk,it... . -tt'-.-i v.s i Today'a XV Program ...... j- .-'..-. . 13 !: Sun M'ttn( '' 7:00 Gnra To MchM 7:30 Sehlitz PUyhoust' :00 Ed SulUvn 1 9:00 Victory At Sm i 9:30 Se It Now 10:30 Into Th Night I 11:00 CFN NEWS ,-!:2s :':CFN.HEWB 11:05 Enc: Ptoit and SUcnt Service, ; :st ;pu Art There Rpt ii-is-5 v 3:00 Skla Plver i 8:3 Charwl .of The Air !i :M Art Tonr Sm P.rty :S0 Faith for Todov :00 Induitry On Panda " Cpurtesy of Aerovlas Panama Airways PHONESr" PANAMA: 3-1057 3.16983-1699 OFFICE HOURS: from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. I ..'! A: 't- n ppa- n'i Q) o. ' ,T. toy "frairk gfrcjloor i Copyright 1957 by frank Grubtr. fi VTHE STORY: Mike Jllf.takehover Barkerville's bank, makes a move to DUy out the snares 01 Jen Aiaerion, me amDiiious, but broke politician who is running for governor. He tells Alderton he. has the -"! Ituarcs Ull ills uaiiuo jusi ' f"THE carelessness of Denver's j 'tone created a sudden suspicion . nut Alderton. "At how much? ("Forty, aU right 50 a share ' -I !'4,Pr' a hun'red." They're not worth a hundred iJthe'way things have been going ' .rwith the bank.' Denver exhaled -hiavilv. 'You mav as well know; Jl've ot to let Eads go. He hasn't , v.? 'dmo running uiius iuicnj. -Mde a lot of bad loans. Fift dol dol-f f dol-f slar a share is more than the ? ""J'atock's worth, but to help you out, jjllTsiy sixty, Jeff." ;'ft '!fA hundred! The stock's al al-r' r' al-r' y Pid dividend." .' "Won't this year. All right, tand onto the stock, Jeff. I only T"thought. ." He shrugged. "What else is bothering you?" , w "Lily knows about the rustling. y5f got to atop." .i "Fine, I never liked that busi busi-t;" t;" busi-t;" w ness anyway. It was just to help "- "Help me!" Alderton suddenly lexploded. "Mike, you've helped -:W so much that you've just a a-ioxit ioxit a-ioxit ruined me' "That'a no way to think, Jeff. You''l make it, all right. One , more swing around the state i 'One more?" cried Alderton. T rtn't mHnrA it rx- vii j.in't ffnrrf not to. my boy, I've been getting reports from all over,. You're running neck nd neckwh tne uw Man and a little amore here and there'll do it." 1 'I haven't got the money, Silk. iThe bank'U lend it to you. -.Of course, you'll have to sign a paper on your own ranch, but that's Just a formality. Stop in tomorrow sometime and I'll f'x jt mn." Hp suddenly frowned. "That is, if I'm running the bank. Eas is forcing a showdown. Wants a stockholders' meeting to see. if, I have enough votes to jitr me control." "Do vou have the votes?" ' "1 think so. Of course Lily'll probably- ote her shares against ,me now, but I think I'm all right without it. Just to be on the safe aide, you'd better give me your proxy for the shares you own. ." He f Bulled out a drawer of the desk,irummanged a bit and brought iout a "printed form. "Here, just sign this, in case. ." i"Mmm." mused Alderton, "Jniybe Eads would like to buy to" shares?" Denver stabbed a forefinger at Alderton. "I'm warning you, Jeff, you're out of line.' "Thirtv thousand!" Alderton laid suddenly. "Enough to pay tot the last swing around the cir cir-' ' cir-' cult." ; .Only the slight flaring of Den Den-?ers ?ers Den-?ers nostrils revealed the ooliti ooliti-, , ooliti-, can's real thoughts. He drummed ITODAY! .75 .40 1:01, 2:35, 4:36, :, 9:05 p.m. Tbe Wonderful Story of . if Two Uttl moay In Jpnl WOHNMCOUMIs i TERESA WRII5HT .i;WMP0IjITCHat ( mm.immi ALSO: - THE OFFICIAL VERSION, 7 IN COLOR, OF "THE CORONATION OF ; POPE JUAN. XXIII" Distributed Thru The , ..RANK ORGANIZATION Denver, who has practical- votes, and may take the o help him out. his fingers on the desk before a.m. suauenly broke into a smile. "1 guess I underestimated you, Jeff" ne said. "You've got more guta wan I gave you credit tor. ne nodded. "You win. Thirty thousand it is and no hard fell fellings." ings." fellings." "And no hard feelings," agreed Alderton in vast relief. xrv DENVER took a checkbook from a drawer and wrote out a check. Then he gave Alderton a form. Amerton looked at the sheet. "You said this was a proxy to votrth stock." Denver shrugged. "I figured all along to buy. It's a stock transfer Sign it and take your check." Alderton hesitated, then signed the transfer. But instead of handing it to Denver, he picked it op. "You'll be running the bank tomorrow. You could stop payment on this check. could," said Denver thinly, "but, do. you think I would?" "No?' said Alderton coolly. "but m, bring this stock transfer lo the bank tomorrow morning and you can meet me there and give me the cash." Denver tried to control his face muscles from .twitchiiig ; but did not : quite succeed. He said, with some effort, 'If that's the way you want it, Jeff." "T like the feel of cash. Penver forced a' smile to his lips. "You're learning, Jeff. Busi ness is business. I like you the better for it. Now let's go down and have a drink and then I'll see you tomorrow." Denver got up and taking Al derton's arm, led him to the stairs. They descended and step ped to the bar, some of the custo mers making room for them. "Amos" Denver said to one of the bartenders, "A drink for Mr. Alderton and myself. The pri vate bottle." Amos, starting to reach for a bottle of whiskey, turned back and looked sharply at his employ er. Denver fixed him with stony look but made a quick covert sig nal 'with the hand that was way away from Aldefton.,' t"- The bartender stooped below the bar, got some glasses, taking a rather longer time .than usual for such a simple job, then set ting' the glasses carefully before the two men, got a bottle from a top shelf. He uncorked it and fill ed the two glasses, Denver picked up his glass. "Victory next month, Governor!" Alderton shook his head, pick ed up his glass and raised it. "I hope so." he said, and downed his whisky in a single gulp. "Tomorrow at ten!" "At the bank," said Alderton and turning left the saloon. Denver walked easily to a door at the rear, opened it and stepped outside. ALDERTON 'S spiteful charac character ter character saved his life. Leaving Den Denver's ver's Denver's saloon, he crossed to the hitchrail, untied his horse and was about to mount when he saw Marshall Eads on the sidewalk just a few feet away. Eads had been there ever since leaving Den Denver. ver. Denver. Sight of Eads stirred up the smoldering anger in Alderton. He turned away from his horse and stepped up to Eads. "Mr. Eads," he a'd mockingly, "you' did me a dirty trick when you told niy wife that I'd trasferred some money from the joint account to my own. Well, I just now repaid that little favor. ..." "I'm sure you did," said Eads glumly, "since you've come out of Denver's place." "I just sold him my bank stock.' A sudden spasm of pain gripped Alderton in the pit of his stomach. He Kasoed but man managed aged managed to continue, "That gives him enough votos to throw you out of your bank. The second spasm of oain caus caused ed caused Alderton to grip at his stom stomach. ach. stomach. He groaned aloud and Eads suddenly peered into his f a c e. "What's wrong?" he exclaimed. "My stomach." gasne Alder Alder-ion ion Alder-ion "I I'm sick. ." He sud denly doubled over and fell to the "round at Eads feet. Alarmed, the banker dropped to his knee' beside Alderton. He saw that Alderton was uncon uncon-(inus (inus uncon-(inus dithoueh moaning and stir ring feebly. He turned him over and a folded aheet of oaper stick sticking ing sticking out of Alderton's breast sock socket et socket brushed his hand. He took the oaper between twd fingers, drew t out and held it uo in a shaft of '"?ht that came from the saloon. He started to read, exclaimed oft1y. then refolded the paper and thrust it into his own pock et. Mike Denver snent a full two ours on the road, ridine ud" and 4own wit a lighted lantern, sekr ng Jff Alderton's unconscious fi ure that should be lying som where along th road. "He final' gave up the searching, cursing A Distributed by NEA Same, Inc. mos the bartender, -who had ap parently laiiea mm. TOM WEBER left his horse the end ot the lane that led Charlie Weber's, farmstead, climb ed mrouen a pole fence, and walk' ed along the edge of a wheat field to wtuun 100 teet of the Weber home. mally, he came along the south side of the barn and, stand standing ing standing in the shadow, looked to toward ward toward the kitchen of the house some 50 feet away. The light was on inside and Charlie Weber sat at thet able. Tom Weber could see the heavy padding of band age on both sides of his father's face where the gun of Paul Part ridge had laid open the akin. Helga Weber sat across the ta ble rrdm Charlie Weber. She was leaning forward, talking earnestly iO ner husband, who replied only now and then briefly. Neither Charlie Weber nor Ms wife had learned from the death oi Heiga s brother. They sat in, tne Kitchen with shades raised. in full view of any intruder who might come up in the darkness. A stone could be thrown from the shelter of the barn and break the kitchen window. A bullet. . it would take a poor marksman to miss at the distance. XXV IT was after 12:30 when Tom Weber finally mounted his horse and rode off. Even then he did not follow the secondary road to the main east and west road that i-an past his place. He cut across the Rawlins range until he reached the back end of his. own 320 acres. He was nearing the site of his burned-out buildings when it occur rJ to him that there was really no object in lingering in that area. There was nothing left of his house and barn, no shelter of any kind. He was .lust as well off sleeping in the woods. He started to turn the horse off to the left, to ride down to the woods that bordered Lobo River when he animal pricked up its ears. The long years of the kind of life Tom Weber had led had given him an instinct about such things. He pulled up the horse in instantly stantly instantly and, learning forward in the saddle, patted the animal's neck. There was another horse not far away. He dismounted and faced the general area of the ranch yard. A voice came out of the night, Tom?" His- relief was so quick that he actually winced. Then he walked forward leading his horse. It was a moment or 'two before he saw Lily'a face. She came out from the shadow or a tree nearby. i t been here for hours, she said. "At least t seems that long. Where've youj.fceen?" He made no reply to that. "Don t count on finding me here again." She said, "I want you to .come to Lobo, Tom." "Haven't you seen Jeff today?" he asked mockingly. "Or did you think he got those lumps on his face by riding into a tree?" He grunted. "For that matter, I've a few myself." "The reason I'm here tonight," Lily said evenly, "is that Jsff nd have broken up. His chin came up and he he- came alert, although in the semi- darkness she could not see e look in his eyes. She continued, "I need you, Tom" "I told you yesterday," he said, "I'd be no good ramrodding Lo bo-" "I'm not offering you a forej man's job now." Lily was glad of the darkness so he could not see her face. He shook his head. "I'm not in interested terested interested in my Job, as foreman or otherwise." "I'm not offering you a Job, Tom Lily e r i d poingnantly, "Look at me! He took a Uuick forward ttep and peered into her face. She was standing in the moonlight, her body taut, half on her toes. A shock rippled through him, jolted him. "No," he said abruptly. She moved toward him. A band reached out, touched him lightly. He tried to speak, was compel led to clear his throat. "It's too late, too late by 11 years." The hand that touched mm so lightly moved, found his arm a.nd gripped it. AND then everything exploded In Tom Weber. He reached out, seized her and crushed her to him. His mouth found hers and kissed hpr savaeely. He could feel the tremor that ran through her and then her arms were about him, all the years of waiting broke the m that ah had built up within her. Then al suddenly at he had sei zed her, ho took a quick step back. "Tom," she sobbed,, aghast "What is ltT What is it?" "You wrote a letter to a man," he said savagely. "You wrote to a man named Fargo. .you want wanted ed wanted him to come and do some dir dirty ty dirty work for you..." 'Uncle Marsh told you!," she ex claimed. "Eads didn't mail the letter. He gave it to me. He didn't have tr mail it." Ha saw bar itraintd fie is the wiiiiiM Wii m m m m mm w itvMj r. ; avti iwjv . si mj trWa Mr. President of the Ameri Americas cas Americas Foundation, General Pedro; Eugenio Aramburu, ... Excellent cies, Ladies and Gentlemen, "1 honoring others we honor- our, selves," a classie proverb says. If this truth has at times lost some of its significance it it be because cause because there hav been. and art institutions excessively generous -in tha granting of high distinc-' tions. This is certainly not the case of The'Amerifis Founda-' tion. To tbe cohtrary,; due to iti sobriety in eulogy, its accuracy in analysis, its objectivity in a true -appreciation of facts and the impartiality oi its decisions, The Americas Foundation has constantly maintained in grants ing its outstanding ; distinction!. , that prestige which is a source. vof genuine and fully justified . pride for -its, recipients Today's iceremony, therefore, in spite of. its simplicity, assumes that true, solemnity which confers an au aura ra aura of brilliance on this symbo lic ict of great importance. For The honoring Aramburu those vital for the reservation of democracy and indispensable to those concepts of dignity and mutual respect without which there cannot be a lasting peace'. FREE ELECTION On assuming leadership of this great and noble nation under critical and precarious .condi .conditions, tions, .conditions, General Aramburu made a simple and formal st ?ment regarding the provisional char character acter character of his government. He expressed his firm desire to hand over the government to the citizen chosen by the peo people ple people in a free and honest elec election. tion. election. If that forthright state statement ment statement of loyalty and homage to sacred democratic principles was in itself an act of the high highest est highest civic spirit, then the fulfill fulfillment ment fulfillment of such a pledge set an even loftier example of pro profound found profound moral significance. This is ao because, tinfoftu tinfoftu-nately, nately, tinfoftu-nately, it it easy to find in Lat- in America precedents of cor rupt and fatal consequences, -where promises of honest elec elections tions elections by a leader who has seiz seized ed seized power by force are solely intended to deceive the credu credulous lous credulous and naive. It is a kind, of smoke screen laid, by the poli political tical political opportunist to hide hit sor sordid did sordid ambition and to gain time to prepare the forces he will use to tupprett all public liber liberties'. ties'. liberties'. DEMOCRATIC TRUTH But The Americas foundation it not interested solely in the exemplary conduct'1 of General Aramburu as it relates to the achievement of lofty ideological standards and the material and social progress of hit country. It has also a specific and per perhaps haps perhaps even great interest in the example which the work of this brilliant statesman constitutes for other Latin American states statesmen. men. statesmen. For this example contri contributes butes contributes to the consolidation of democratic truth in our conti continent nent continent and advances our lofty de desire sire desire to seek and find the way to real and lasting peace. At I have previously indicat indicated ed indicated The Americas Foundation fosters the consolidation of dem democratic ocratic democratic principle and the de defense fense defense of those basic freedoms in our hemisphere vital to last lasting ing lasting peace a peace based upon the elevation of the spiritual values of man, a peace based upon the prevalence of justice, equity, understanding and toler tolerance. ance. tolerance. It is not a case, howevert of establishing peace at any price. Nor is it merely a question of achieving an overall calm in which peoples plunged into mis misery ery misery and ignorance fail to pro protest test protest or do not report to violence because they do not have the moral fortitude or physical strength to do so. Indeed not, gentlemen for that would be. a peace bated on injustice, extort moonlight, taw a tudden tremor run through it. A gasp was torn from her, "You you're Tom Fargo!" "I've been Tom Fargo for ll, yean. I m the gunfighter you tent for." She took a backward step and stared at him. Her tongue came out, moistened her lips and even then it was a moment before she could tpeak. "Perhaps Lobo needs a man like you." "And Lobo's owner? Does she need a man like Tom Fargo?" He too a quick step toward her, half raising his hand to point at her.- She retreated instinctively and he stopped, dropping hit hand. THE tortured silence could not last. It was Lily who broke it. She said, "I think I'll ride home." He moved. then. "Wait!" he called. "You rote me a letter. You sent for Torn Fargo. My gun't for hire. You're not the only one that wants it. The rea son I came back to l-obo valley had a letter from Pete Rawlins. "Rawlins?" she cried. "He sent for you?" "He made m an offer-SlOO a tionlh and a bonus of $1,000 at 'he end of six monthi. I haven't accepted hit offer. I'm open for a better one" .,-i'i!,,"''.'" v. Americas Foundation, in not-transformed into humilia- 'secular Institution! inrf ? win wither h-. h'i.i. .;.f JT. -TlTi ...r., General Padro Eugenio- tion. in which material aid is oBpV rTi. tl -hii ,,7 .-J 31 Vi. "sw , honors and ex.lta proifered as charity, and in' frontiers. Thev will .rrt T in .rr ,l m?r? institutions and principles which thera is no rieniirn for- tr K.m..r u.u t. .'...i.. i. 1j "lc ""'en anq A cry was tors from har. "All ; Vital Speeches of- the Day" publithed this s translation of a speech by pRi HAIU10D10 ARIAS on the occasion of ihe OcU 22f 1958,: presentation of The Americas Award to lAGen. Pedro E. Aramburu at;j the; Inter American' Press "Association annual meet meeting ing meeting in Buenos Aires,' Publisher of Thf Panama American, Dr, Arias f ir forniei" President of- Panama, The publishers of "Vital Speeches of the Day' believe that th&important addresses of the recognised ' leaders of public opinion ': constitute the best expressions of con contemporary temporary contemporary thought in AmeriatjMnd that U is eW important that these speeches be- permanently recorded end disseminated ,V tion ind ; weakness,: thf sorry -peace of abjection. DIGNIFIED PEACES Rather the objective is to .a- chiev) a noble and dignified dictatorial powers or the subjec tion ot satellite countries, sub subdued dued subdued colonies, or areas of eco economic nomic economic or political domination. Inasmuch as the world com com-nuinity nuinity com-nuinity is the turn total of all states, and at we must follow the j logical sequence of sound reasoning, let us proceed from the particular to the general. It it but natural, accordingly, that institutions such as this, whose intentions I am honored to in interpret terpret interpret at this moment, should refer to the political units of the world, especially those of the American continent, to judge their moral and material struc structure. ture. structure. It it proper to inquire ; if true democracy, freedom, hu human man human dignity, and sound econo economic mic economic and social systems are prevalent in these' countries .jus .justifying tifying .justifying their geographic divi divisions sions divisions as dynamic entities for . promoting the supreme ideal of universal peace. . i ' 1 PHILOSOPHIC ROOT But I believe, gentlemen, that is reasoning irom the particu particular lar particular to the general; it is not suf sufficient ficient sufficient to examine the situation in each state or union of states. If we aspire to lasting and fruit fruitful ful fruitful results we must delve deep deeper er deeper into the philosophic root of the problem. We must,, so to speak, divide (our exploratory area into molecules or s atoms. We must examine man, the in individual dividual individual human being, who as the cell of the state organism and the imWersal organism. Let us not be decieved by optical il illusions lusions illusions or rhetorics. The great greater er greater the strength of human unity in anv area the greater the , strength of peace in that area. Our imperative, v indispensable starting point must be the spir spir-tual tual spir-tual peace of individual- man. 'MAN IS THE PROBLEM' ' "Man is the problem," a Middle East statesman said, whr for years has been con concerned cerned concerned with the achievement of an aspiration similar to our own. As long as the moral ttandardt of man are not elevat elevated, ed, elevated, as long at man fails to exalt hit own, spiritual values until they drive out fear, thus repressing hit appetites and ambitions, the forces of unre unrestricted stricted unrestricted egotism meaning greed will prevail,, And' there will be latent in him tendencies and emotions incompatible with de decent, cent, decent, and dignified co-existence. Th imbalance- of primitive In Instincts stincts Instincts of preservation and self self-defense, defense, self-defense, transformed into un unbridled bridled unbridled action, will cause man ; to live in a constant state of fear and mistrust, either with an urge for aggression, or to prepare against aggression. Such imbalance; based on fear and distrust is the shock ingredient made use of by egotistic lead leaders ers leaders to launch entire communi communities ties communities into civil strife, whether of racial Jacobin, imperialist or some other nature. Depending upon the historic evolution of each country, this prejudice may oe used : at give ment to unleash forces ; m hn-, right, I'U double itl' "Mrs. Aldertoh," he said tiiinly, "you've hired yourself a gun gun-fighter!' fighter!' gun-fighter!' ' "Come along, men,", she said, almost hysterical.' 1 "Oh, no," he laid. "I .have to do the job in my own way." (TO B I CONTINUED NIXT WIEKI Search For Bauxite In Chiriqui Long-range Project NEW YpBK, Dec. (UPlV-The Aluminium Company of America said today that it It continuing its exploration for bauxite in Chi Chiriqui riqui Chiriqui Province, Panama,' without any changes. A spokesman ex explained plained explained that the company's work in Panama still consists of explor exploration ation exploration only.'-i.-; va.,-.-' -'..,;;' The project has been under way a year and will require aeveral more years of preliminary surr surreys eys surreys before any decision it made on ,. whether exploitation can be undertaken. A. spokesman recall recalled ed recalled that when work was begun a year ago ; It was explained, that it was a long-range projects Only peace, in which collaboration it wiH affect the -founditiona of destinv of our atom-io. vr f field erewt art on -the job o far. -anan beings, which utifle their that I have :done so without ev ev-consoiences consoiences ev-consoiences and are always rea- er forgetting the purpose of .4ft to break? out t into 'devattat- our gathering. No occasion could ing explosion. yOnee sectors of be more propitious ior these any- coumunuy. nave oecome yvimeu y. uuunuMsu peion, tne opportunist masking at a cruaader, until v peoples are launched in suicidil struggles . which have been the scourge of civilization time and time again. HIGHE$T IDkAL . -You are well aware of the fact. General Arimburu,- that in all crises the best, of. remedies - it the spiritual peace t of man! You are aware of -thit because first you felt and later you pon pondered dered pondered and finally experienced the fervent desire to serve spontaneously, without ostenta ostentation tion ostentation or rewardto- give Tather than to receive, !;tX tolerate rather than strike, to forgive rather, than than to, avenge, jn shdrt, to find your' .own peace in the- peace of. others. That, is really the highest ideal, .(.to some i may seem to belong to .anothjer world) which must con constitute stitute constitute the spiritual essence ,of maft if m i eyer vto attain peace for. himself, for his coun country, try, country, for hit hemisphere or for the whole. world. 1 I do not wish you-to interpret this, strong emphasis on the im imperative perative imperative evolution of individual man as an indication that I de deny ny deny or discount the efforts for world peace carried out, though as yet with little substantial w suits,-by international political ' organizationa- such, as jthe Unit United ed United Nations and the Organization 'Of American States Their ac action tion action is evidently limited- by the capitis diminutio Inherent in of- - ficial action, subordinated as a rule to political considerations which cannot be easily ignored. Hence the cold war still domi nates the world of pouticsi and efforts for the achievement of peace are but weak anth tern-pM-ary harriers against constant constantly ly constantly increasing current of vio-. lence. ? 4 STRENGTHENED PRINCIPLES .. For the attainment of spirit spiritual ual spiritual peace, the categorical inv perativa of our limes it is et et-sential sential et-sential of course to ttrengthe n democratic principles, which in turn require a sense of hemi hemisphere sphere hemisphere solidarity. In this i con connection nection connection I feel the temptation to ask. this centrar question "Can we expect the present day ci citizen tizen citizen of our Continent to accept, s solidarity and democracy mere mere-" " mere-" ly as a profession of iaith if 'we do not strive ceaselessly for a hemisphere community which will insure for him at the same -time the solid,' promising, eco eco-"1 "1 eco-"1 nomically-stable kndt piritually piritually-s s piritually-s atimulsting'Teondifiont he ; needs, for a ljf of freedom and digni- .'m.i,::.' .;t- EFFECTIVE COOPERATION j ".l-.3tt?t-' 1 -When Latin Ameri$Mhak-:'; en 'i by ecdnomic upheavals through tudden market changes,' plagued'hy the povertyof the nm it the AeoiDle. bv deficient eanitary conditions, by ignorance and ; exploitation tne,;f razens, oi our Continent' cannot be expect- d to entaiill loyal; inderinitely to those ? ideal 5 vf toimamy and democracy to devoutly pro proclaimed claimed proclaimed in constitutions and in-tftr-AmeTican treatiet. The most powerful countriet of our hem-. sphere must find every possible way 1 tHrough private, initiative hi well as political action 1 to lend effective !? cooperation' to: those other peoples with whom they traded and live, t That i cooi peralion, moreover., must not be again postponed, nor must -.it v remain limited, to : the vVgue and feeble wbrdt ; of meaning- less treaties or even, lets to un' fulfilled promises.. In that event the growth of the seed of rebel-, iipn, v already,; sown, Jn vmany; hearts: will be fostered by: dis dis-Illusion Illusion dis-Illusion and ? disappointment. - Real, .Immediate,; practical, and : tangible economic cooperation is urgently needed, not only among fovernmenti but in every area of human relationfliips.' Mereo yef it must be effective action action which will bring to the defeated and the doubting the conviction that democracy it a truth, that freedom it 1: truth, and that there it no1., place un under der under the skies of 'our continent 'for the exploitation of thewesk, for the machlnatons of tyrants,1 or tor the humiliation of ; the powenets,.. Vr ffflf!. W BlLtlANT, PATRIOT pf't hive tskl an quiWV&t. of time, aantlemen. but l am. sure . consiaerauont on tne -essence j auu meaning oi our progrest gave amDle reiterated proofs of the sinceri ty of his dedication to the cause' 'of. mutual understanding, stabilii ty, peace'-and the .respectfor authentic democracy and the' freedom of man, v Gentlemen:- Before closing' my remarks, I want to draw. atten attention tion attention to one aspect of the person personality ality personality of this outstanding states statesman man statesman who has won the deep and sincere admiration of the peo peoples ples peoples of the continent 1 refer to his respect to' the freedom of ,speech. 1 FREEDOM OF SPEECH With .clear vision. General A- ramburu;, on assuming the pres presidency idency presidency of his country and sol solemnly emnly solemnly pledging to his people to act as a true democrat rea realized lized realized that as a result of a sort of natural law dictated, by rea reason son reason and logic : and inexorably confirmed, by experience;- there exists an indestructible bond ' between the -" attitude ot the statesman towards freedom of speech and his; attitude towards democracy,. A people living in the healthy moral atmosphere of freedom' of speech is a o o-. . o-. pie living a life of truth and en- joying, in greater or lesser ; de degree, gree, degree, according to their staa-. dards of culture nd material meant, a life of justice, of so social cial social progrrts, and love for Indi Individual vidual Individual peace of, mankind.' ' "Let truth he known and the the-country country the-country will be safe' said an apostle of American freedom. The atmosphere of truth does not allow the weeks of exploita exploitation, tion, exploitation, of corruption, of injustice, . to' take roc,-, even- les those of " oppression and dictatorship: Be Because cause Because when the, truth -is known to all through the organs of THURSDAY 11 Thlo lo "TTHLa ; "is ;:...one otxhe characters in GflOOK: -mi ALBERT ZUGSMlTH PRODUCTION .ra at M-G-M h CinomScok Readi story on page ' i -j u i hievemehts freedom of' speech:, it i bring . into "action every spring, of the i. ' civic conscv'isness it' moves ! every fibre of pubile t optmoa, mobilizes the force-of "under. -, ttanding and tolerarice, mspirea new ideals of sacrifice and un .(Selfishness and ensures fmaliy that those principles should rule) Ahe destinies of the community V MORAL DEGRADATION ? Denial of "the freedom, of ; epeech, whether ft be open and : brazen, or the surreptitibus re repression pression repression in which some vanity stricken tyrants have specialize ed, creates, on the contrary, an atmosphere of immorality fos tering all the vices inherent i corrupt regimes. The silencing or djstortion of truth is the first step towards the destruction of personal freedom, with Its fatal. sequel : tne abuse of, public pow er,. tne exaltation of -venalitv republican institutions. tof this reason, gentle men. when there .appear on the poll, tical scene of the continent men like General Aramburu, who from'' the' highest position -of power have set an example of ; respect for freedom of speech and the strictest fulfillment of democratic principles, it is the , duty of the people of onr" conti continent nent continent to honour them,, with the highest distinction, for. the ex example ample example they have set, so .that each day every nation "ofour Continent may for ever" dwell in freedom. , . - 1 General Pedro Eugenio Aram buru: On behalf of the Ameri Americas' cas' Americas' Foundation which has en en-trusted trusted en-trusted to me this high duty,' I Pave the honour of presentinjr your with the Award .for 1958 and offer your name and your achievements as examples i whicH ; .shall. be a source of inspiration' and encouragement for all peo ples oi tne Amer;cas. i as LUX TODAY WEEKEND I ftr 1:15-2r39 4:4l '6:43 8:48 p.m. 1 0.40 J 1' "YOU'LL go Sback IV aro YOTDB WIFE UVEK MY DEAD BOOVI WHOVt TRUTH't CENTRALS TODAY WEEKEND I' 12:45 2:10 4:26 ; oao 6:42 8:58 p.m. TheScneGns Lauahtime bfa MYRON McCORMICK " aiirw anaaati i JOHN LEE MAHIN BROS.' 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