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v , t ....... . ... 1: S . r': "... .: -". r. .v.". '. f-L . .' .. v i , 1 v., - J. Li -:i 4 5 LttfS 1 xtci yggir -i KtwsPAPa YO. CAXADIAN 1HIISKY - T rYY v : THE CITY CP THE -' 11 I l.- t VICEROYS...; 1 3 u3 MTCMMA7IOMAU AIRWATI 'let people know the truth mnd the country i$ eafe Abraham Lincoln. ! r, meagre feign xo. IIMI SteaSSEr . Ill 4 s, S r r, ., .. I ,f Mth tEAB v ..? . ; t ts PANAMA, B y., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUABY 4, 1959 . 1 nn cum llli&ci 'mm Ob CutWdmhwv '" 11 -"" '' t.i t i J x x x i -' r'r -7- iTtttv r-''"i I i i r y?r 1 : - OUINTIN GONZALU (liat VirBitio Vualvas) t Three Prisoners Escape From Gamboa Road Gang Three prlsnni from Gmbo Penttentan sctpeA today while working on the prison road g&ng les than nan mile north of Madden Wye, ... .u This, brings to six the total number f crfaninals who have MimiMl frnm rHanal Zone detention institutions during the past week; Three men with police records who fled at Comal Mental Hospital last Saturday are still at large. V . The escaped Gamboa prisoners all were wearing the regula regulation tion regulation prison garb of heavy high-top shoes, blue denim trousers, ahort-sleeved. V-neck 'coarse white cotton shirts with left-hand pockets and with a four-digit topr ef the pocket, and white, Oddly enpugn, an unree vi though none are related. Qulnthv Gonzalet (alias VlrgiHo Vuelvss), 83,-Panamanian, ft. 7 in., 158 Jba; dark skin euriy black ErWa ttoniales, 84, San Bias Tndhmt f ft I ttu l IDS., siraigm , HacH airs and Ismael Gonzalen AH Canal Zone police a tatlops were C r-r,?maaiaa," ft. to ISO Jlmm")iately, alertediv-as wett is vhhu. u-'ix atraisht black hah tohitui Gonzales has been' erv erv-m m erv-m mf 13 mars en seven eounta of burglary. He was admit-; ted at uamnoa u aivu . vairfm rtnnT.alnz hat been serv ing 4 1J -years on two counts -of burBiary ana ior pronauou tionT m been servini ttie sentence shice November 19?5. JHe was als oentenced to a addi- Sonal 60-day Mflcaping on Sept i, 1856.- The thM Uonzalw,, Ismael, was serving Ihroa-yeara after convic Vigorcnj Protest Scniilolloscow On Convoy Search WASHHWTOSft Tb. 4 CUPD- president Eisenhower, at his news conference today announced tne United State hasioageo. witorf the Soviet for mi art .ffiM'.e:aJnst the blocking of :. a-U.S. mUitary oonvoy T-Tho President said Soviet action to. demanding Hie right to search the small American con voy at an Kast uerman cubw mint violation of an im plied agreement among the four litiui immn jM(uovine Berlin. , H aid,me ir four control of Berlin cameo wiw n mo ckjbit tuiderstanding.that eiach wwer eiMild vsrnmlv Its forces in Berlin without mtetfereace of 'Inspection of these supply movements! Dy i .'.of til f!ini nAwers. Eisenhower. iaid the VJ. pro test was te be delivered this morning to Moscow butt he was not suro'whethe the delivery had take Place 08 schedule. Eisenhower devoted much of this newt eonference to lengthy answers to question on Soviet claims and7 nelicy, statements. : He said he tould see r nothing; in Soviet Freroier jnuu itnrusfr ohv4s Bolicv speech to the Com munist PartyCongress last week which might offer a -; new avenue of hope for the free na tions in resolving the cold war conflict, t jf f. ance Living Costs NEW IrORX1 UPI V-Steel wage Increases have far outrsced the rising cost ef living since 1940, the American bos and Stel Insti Insti-.Jute .Jute Insti-.Jute .said todays -fw-t.-'- -M. -The Institute, laid while the con consumer sumer consumer price nder doubled be- tween' 1940 and-the third quarter ' if 1958, average hourly earnings or jSteelworker rose 84 times nd 1 employment costs per hour uadrapkHMn the steel industry. It noted that the consumer price Index was 123.7 in the third quar : tor last year ain8t;59. in 1940, . while average hourly, steel wages i .:, -were $a.96 in the third quarter of . 1958, compared so S4 cenU durine 1940., '9 t 1 tRNESTO prison number stencilled at the soft brimmed round fatigue hats. mm mm wo siamea uomaiei tlon of burglary", probation vtola tion and returning to the Canal Zone after deportation. He was al so sentenced to an additional 35 days for aa escape during October The sscape oeetirred at 8:10 a.m. Pjiniarjleporlcd Planning To Give Vofe To Yomcnr Rainier,, new Prime .Minister' was reported to be planning to give the vote to women in a move believed to have been suggested by Princess grace, the former American actress. Grace Kelly. Emile Pelletier. recently interi or minister of France, w said to believe the move would give the prince a greater show of pop popular ular popular support in his spat with the 33 members of the legislature which he fired last week- for re fusing to approve hi budget. Pelletier lunched with the Prince Mondaynin his first offic official ial official contact since he arrived from Fans Sunday. Later he got down to nis new admimstnative lob. The 35-year-old Rainier has been reported in favor of amend ing the constitutional revision that makes his 370-acre (principal- liy one ox me u counures in the world in which women are de denied nied denied the vote. The members of the legislature had opposed such a move. . Bight now the constitution is not in effect anyhow because Rainier suspended it when he disbanded the two chambers of the legisla legislature ture legislature lastn Thursday, There was talk ra the tafes and political circles that the anti monarchists among the ousted legislators would plaster the city withia the next 24 hour protest' inff Sainier's "coun d'etat. Some of mem were rewrted to have met secretly somewhere on the French Riviera Saturday mgnc US Roadway Deaths At Alltime Low CHICAGO (UPI) Traffic ac cidents killed at least 37,000 Amencaos in 1958, but the na nation's tion's nation's roadway death rate drotroed 1 to an all-time low of 5.6 fatalities The National Safety Council, in summing up -he best and the worst of IVmi naHoti'i tnaffie twv 1 Cs jjord yesterday, also reported tiie population r aeath rate from au types of accidents hit a new low of 52.5 persons killed' per 100,000 peronsi' ..v :,'. .a .a-' ' .a-' Although motor vehicle acci accidents dents accidents i were -i. tho biggest killer, home accidents raa second, tak tak-mgv mgv tak-mgv 27,000 lives Vjo.t'-:v." r The. overall ..accident toll for 1958 was 81,000 dead. 9,100,000 in injured jured injured and a financial loss of just unaer a miiion aouarg, the coun council cil council 'said, i- t'i ;t n- The highway death 4 rate was down 4 per xient irom 1957,1 the Srevious-A all : time low of six eaths1 per 100 million miles, t In separate accident categories, only burns and firearms caused an Increased number of deaths ' percentagewise . tAi. .1 j GONZALEZ I ii iatojrtl bW f- I Gouncilm en's Libel Suits Follow. City-Funds Probe Two Panama 'City Councilmen yesterday filed libel charges be before fore before Mayor Alberto vAleman a- gainst the morning tabloid Critics for mentioning them in connection with the current investigation of the spending of city-funds. councumen tiernanao juaroz ana Mario Velasquez hayo been men tioned among those who are to be questioned by Disw Attyv uerarao A. de Leon. .'.tf'':;i: Yesterday. De Leon summoned the threer auditors of the Comptrol- ler General's office whose report on an audit of municipal books prompted Attorney General Her:. moeenes de la Kosa to oraer an investigation. . v .. A summarized auditors . report lists several apparent discrepan cies which include: t s L Salaries to employes who ren der no service to the municipality and paychecks .for- non-existent 4-1... ( 4 - J2. TK Ymnmaso-tv tomecessary equipment, V without bids Ind ia excessive jimountsf V S. Excessr expenditure Irrn drinks and DarQes: 4. Check made out to compa-4 nies which have' not sold anything te the municiDality. The compa nies are1 asked to endorse the checks oh the ground that it was made out to them by mistake: 5. Checks deposited in the bank accounts of several councumen,. and? 6. Faymeni ror umuinuea con tracts, unusea; material wn oannnt. th wrorhieed. The full auditors' report Is said to contain proof of the discrepan cies and the names of the persons involved. Crime Doesn't Pay As 9 Burglars Get 16 Years In Pen Crime doesn't pay was the dominant motif in U. S. District Court, Ancon, yesterday as Judge fmthrie F. Crowe sentenced nine burelars to a total of nearly 16 vears in the Gamboa Penitentiary. Six of those sentenced nave nrAvioua noiice records ana sev eral had Deen on pronation wnen committing new offenses, au are Panamanians. Juan Antonio Macias was. sent sentenced enced sentenced to 18-months on one coimt of burglary! on a second burgla ry count a two year sentence was susnended. witn s-years prooauon. -Eloy Alcides Chavez was sent enced .to two years for burglary and for violation oi prooauon. Victor Castro was sentenced to two years for subsequent petty larceny, sentence suspended and five years probation. Jose Manuel Montalban received an 18-month sentence for burgla ry. Cornelio samaniego was sentenc sentenced ed sentenced to two years for violation' of his probation beginning November 19 19-56 56 19-56 and for three counts of subse. quent petty larceny; ne aiso re ceived a two-year suspended sent ence with five years probation for returnin to the Canal Zone after ueponauon.- v .. Efrain Mario Arosemena and George Howell were- both trente c- ed to six months for burglary. Elderly Panamanian Collapses On ferry ''J Marco A. Sanchez, 57, Pana manian, taken to Gorgas Hospi Hospital tal Hospital about 1:30 p.m. : yesterday after suffering what' appeared to bo a heart attack on the ; oast ramp of Thatcher ferry. f . first am .at tne lerry was ad administered ministered administered by 'members of the Balboa fire station by means of an inhalator which was brought to the scene in- fire engine No.' S. An ambulance arrived shortly afterwards from Gorgas- Hospital with Dr. K. W. HJortsuang. San San-chei chei San-chei was admitted to Gorgas fWM'IMW w MUmMiHl mil i w mmmmmmmmmmm ISMAEt CONZALIZ ' The D.A. has also ordered the auditors to produce the, full report Meanwhile, a communique is issued sued issued by the Council yesterday that it did not fear an investiga tion and described the summarized report which has been made pub lic, as an infamous plot to discred it certain members oi tne council who are believed to be in political disfavor. (Zone Policeman Slint With MPs rvmaal ef the many civilian employes in the Canal Zone who ar mamhera of the S. Army Reserve teeir spare fim4t;:'- is a? member of w tanaj jtans Hce, Department. On several nights a, mondk, h dona Armv uniform and takes kip with the 549th .Military' Police Company, Fort guucr, wnere ne left off in 1954, when he became a member of the reserves and a member of the local police force. McBride served with the- 1st Coast Artillery at Fort Sherman from 1936 to 1938 and later witn the 7th Reconnaissance Squadron at France Field, From 1944 to 1948 ho served in the Pacific theater of,, operations. He was with the 549th Military Police Company: and the 50th Military Police, Criminal Investigations De tachment, from 1950 to 1954. Gammg a commission as a first lieutenant in the U. S. Army Reserve in November 1949, Mc McBride Bride McBride has "since been promoted to his present, rank. t. He and his wife, Marjbrie, live at Margarita. He is a member of the BPOE Lodge 1542, Cristobal and the American Post No. 8, Gatmw. Search Is Resumed For Cessna Lost Last Fall With 5 The search for the Cessna-180 airplane which disappeared more than three months ago on a 1rVif frnm Panama filtv. to c. v ... tr San Bias has been resumed by an expedition party neadea; Dy Harry Meteger or bi vaiie, re respected spected respected a an able. Jungle Ox Ox-ninrer ninrer Ox-ninrer in this area. -' Tha i; private expedition is belrur 1 financed by relative : of the ulane's four passengers Mrs. Oraciela de la Guardia de Lopez, her daughter Myra, 13; Loris Castro. 13, and Blanca Ce cilia Hernandez 12, all of pro minent Panama iamuies. a spokesman for the Lopez family emphasized that the resump tion of the search is not based on any new reports, but that the family -wants to be certain that the area in which the plane: disappeared has been thoroughly covered. Metzger'a search party is composed of ten hand-picked mountain dwellers from the El Valle area. No report is expect ed from the searcners for sev eral days, after which flocal planes will contact them : by pre-arranged signals. Th OpKsnn. ntlntarf hv T.iila Felipe Morales, was bound for Porvenir Island when it disap disappeared peared disappeared Oct., 81.'- An .intensive ground, sea and air search tne most exhaustive;, ever conduct conducted ed conducted on the Isthmus, was per formed by cooperative efforts of the u.8. Army, Navy and. Air Force and the Panama National Guard. :.lvlW,.;fv;).'i Numerous reports were receiv received, ed, received, but all efforts to trace the craft or its' passengers have proved frultlesa, . j, ; Afore Men To Be Taken On For West Bank Bridge Job Sixty men are now employed on th contract nrnwt fnr building the West Bank approaches for the Balboa Bridge; and contractor L. R. Sommer plans to add additional workers as the job progresses. Construction men are now working on a two- abut basis. These facts were learned the first construction lob for moving on schedule. It is duo for completion 150 days from mid-December, when Sommer won the award with a bid under that of several other contractors. m i Sommer himself, asked a a-bout bout a-bout talk that the. work was behind schedule, said: "I'm not hurting." He added that the job is till too young for great prog progress ress progress to have been made. The time-limit for the earth earth-moving moving earth-moving and compaction iob calls for completion in mid- May. The job was officially inau inaugurated gurated inaugurated Dec. 30 at ceremonies in which President Ernesto de la Guardia, Jr., participated. An average of 1800 cubic yards of material is being moved daily by the contractor for the con construction struction construction of the west approach of the bridge; over the Canal according to an announcement today at Balboa Heights. Since initiating- the1' big job in which most of Faff an Hill r(.usn ume tew Bcfcrc Week's End NEW". YORK (UPI) About 8,000 Pan Amencan world air ways employes are expected to complete, by the end of this week a voto on whether to' empower union oftidais. to--call a strike,, a union spokesman said today. The company notified the Na tional Mediation Board Monday it was willing to arbitrate the con tract dispute. The air transport division of the Transport workers Union previously rejected arbitra turn out a spokesman said union leaders were reviewing the situa tion. The vote, technically on wheth er to accept the recommendations of union negotiators to turn down tne latest company oner, would not set any deadline for a strike by maintenance workers, port stewards and mgnt service per sonnel, including employes at the Cape- Canaveral, Fla., missile range. Contracts covering the workers expired Dec. 1 and negotiations were broken off last month. Pan American said its latest offer was for a 25-cent-an-hour package increase spread over two years. The union said major stumbling blocks were side issues, such as hours and working conditions, ra ther than wages. At present, the workers earn $1.95 to $2.95 an hour for a 40-hour week. Rotarians Meet Tomorrow To Elect New Club Officers Members of the Panama Rota- ry Club this week will hold their Annual Meeting for the election of new Club officers tomorrow. Pres. John Mayles has urged that every Rotarian be present for the luncheon session at 12:30 p.m. in the Bella Vista Room of the Pa Panama nama Panama Hilton Hotel. During the counting of ballots in the election of the club's 1959-1960 officers, a special program on "Ro tarian Harry Willis. PC Caretaker Bill On Gift Building Goes To Ministry Mayor Alberto Aleman has for warded a bill of $3,033. from the Panama Canal Co. for caretaker services at the old Pacific Service Center to the Ministry of Govern ment and justice; v. The building was sold to Pan Panama ama Panama by the Canal Zone govern government ment government for the symbolic sum of $1 The bill 1st for the expenses in- vlved in caring for the building for some months after it was of officially ficially officially turned over to Panama authorities and up to the time It was demolished snd moved piece meal into ranama. todav in reannnai. In riimnra that the S23400.ooo hridn mu nnt just west of Thatcher Ferry will disappear, the contractor has completed approximately 70 per cent of the necessary clearing ana gruooing. It was reported today at the Engineering and Construction Bureau offices that the ex excavation cavation excavation and fill is now about ten percent completed. Equipment now in use on the approach fill includes six earrv alls and scrapers, six bulldozers, a motor grader, two rooters, and sheepfoot rollers for compaction UI I1US. New Cuban Regime To Investigate Labor Complaints HAVANA, Feb. 4 CUPI) The revolutionary government entered its first labor squabble today to end a two-day-old hunger and sit sit-down down sit-down strike by 200 electrical workers outside the Presidential Palace: President Manuel JvUrrutia'' Seed to-investigate eomplaint by A.strer'!hatr .fhw.noTi'iid 'othera werajfu-ed' Illegally by the American-owned uiimb Electric Company; He acted when six of w suiMurs coiiapsea aner w hours without foodand were hos- pnanzea..t y .- if; -if' UrrutiaVdeclsion coincided with reports of X new shooting inci incident dent incident in Santiago in Oriente Pro Province vince Province where three persons were killed and 80 wounded by a gre grenade nade grenade "dropped" by a pro-Batista non-commissioned army officer last weekend. However,, rebel Capt Senen Casas, who is second in com command mand command at' Mondaca Barracks', at Santiago, said last night's wild outburst of shooting resulted from a "confusion of identities' Between groups. rival rebel military He told Santiago's gun-shy res ldents, "You can go to sleep wnnoui worry." casas said no one was injured in the shooting and that the situation was normal. Ho Early End Seen For NY Tug Strike; Ancon's Plans Firm NEW YORK, Feb. 4 (UPl) Early settlement of the tug .boat strike that has crippled harbor trafiic appeared dim today; be because cause because of a deadlock in eoofract neffotlattnns. ' 1 (It is presumed by Panama Le authorities that the liner Ancon, di-e to sail from New York Friday, will lave ne trouble In clearing without the aid ef tugs.) Bargaining broke off yester day when National Maritime Union investigators walked out of a joint mediation sesslor charging that management rep resentatives had attempted to dictate to the union. Approximately 4000 harbor workers tied up their tugs and barges last Saturday at mid night In support of demands ior a si-an-nour wage increase. The Maritime Towing and Transportation Employers Asso ciation had offered a 21-cent- an-hour wage increase spread over two years. The idling of some 450 craft meant that ships must move in and out of the harbor without aid of tugs. Yesterday the su su-perllner perllner su-perllner United States with 1080 passengers was delayed for two hours so .the ship could man euver, away from the oler at slack, tide. The strike also threatened to cut off oil deliveries to Manhat Manhattan tan Manhattan Island but the city set up emergency delivery by trucK. . Federal mediator Thdmas G. Dougherty said It probably would take several days to stet the disputants back together for a new mediation attempt. Skilled Workers Will Be Hired ; At $1 Minimum A peak figure of slightly over 200 local-hire em em-ployes ployes em-ployes is expected to work on the two-year, $7 million job of widening the Gaillard Cut. All but about 30 of them will be classified as to led workers for operatina heavv earth and rort mM;M equipment. The Ne York -v-, ,w wn..n-is expecrca ro De awarded the ton ton-Sfii5L Sfii5L ton-Sfii5L y n the basis of it$ appoint low bid of $7,. r5ii j pe t0 train local employes if sufficient skilled operators are not available on the Isthmus. a. .Tfe an hour Federal minimum wage applies to the job, under the terms of the contract. Already local construction workers have been ap approaching proaching approaching Mer rit-Chapmon and Scott representatives here, looking for work. formal signing of the contract is expected to take wl start within 60 days of the signing, Merrit-Chapl man vice president G G. Werner, Jr., said before flying to NewYork, last night. 9 The Cut-widening contract will call for the contrac- oLImJaTK?? f anfl! I dredging, which will be fi! 9"w Panama Canal Dredaina : ju"a' "urwyine no no? number of add ttionnt ;nhi dredging work. Werner is vice president of the heavy rock-movine and road building division of the giant con construction struction construction firm whose low bid for the widening job Monday toDoed eighteen bidding contractors from tne united states and Panama. He was here for the opening of the bids by Canal Company officials, and was accompanied bv one of his top engineering staff aids, Mi Michael chael Michael Esielones. In the event his firm does the work, Esielones is tentatively slated to head the Cut-widening project. "It is our hops that no more than 20 or 30 of the total work force ef about 250 will have to be drawn from skilled U.S. or Eu European ropean European operators," Werner said. The Merritt-Chapman o f f i c ial stated that in fulfilling overseas contracts it has long been the firm's policy to fill the maximum number of jobs from locally avail able labor sources. In the event a contract is signed with the Pan Panama ama Panama Canal Company the same policy would apply here. The Cut-widening job at the Pa Pa-raiso raiso Pa-raiso and Cucaracha Reaches will involve the removal of 5,400,t)00 cubic yards of material, mostly rock; the drilling of some 1,000, 1,000,-000 000 1,000,-000 linear feet of blast holes; and the use of 2,500,000 pounds of ex explosives plosives explosives both above and below the water. The two sections of the Cut will be widened from 300 to 500 feet at bottom depth. All required dredg dredging ing dredging will be done by the Canal Company. Werner said nearly all heavy heavy-duty duty heavy-duty earth moving equipment would be shipped to Panama from Stateside points. Equipment would include at least two giant earth shovels ca capable pable capable of single bite in excess of seven tons, and emoval trucks ef nearly 35-ton load capacity. Merritt-Chapman and Scott Inc Nemesio Milton Oi Gamboa Admits To 9 Burglaries Nemesio Milton, 18, Panama Panamanian, nian, Panamanian, of Gamboa, has confessed to a total of nine burglaries in past months, all committed In the Pedro Miguel area. Milton also named Clyde Boxen, 24, Panamanian, as his accomplice in one of the bur glaries, involving tne inert oi an outboard motor. Boxen was picked up last night by Balboa police. According to ponce author authorities, ities, authorities, Milton has been under po police lice police observance for some time and he was arrested followlna the recovery of a portion of the loot. Both he and Boxen are In, jail awaiting a preliminary hearing tomorrow in Balboa Magistrate Court. firm of Merritt-Chapman ond antfeipattf an appreciable :Ji -.::v Vvv,' 9r.' iing available fo -the is widely known for bridgehead and power-dam construction. Thre current power-dam projects cur cur-rently rently cur-rently underway in Washington, Colorado and New York State W resent a combined total of more than $360 million. The Merritt-Chapman bid of It 363 675 was only $18,515 below tho next lowest bid. Alien-Spouse Group Of Tax Fighters Hires Legal Counsel A general meeting of the U. ?. citizens employed by the govern- ment of the United States on 'he Canal Zone, who have alien spous spouses, es, spouses, was held on Jan. 30, at Dia Diablo blo Diablo Heights. It was decided to retain legal counsel to prosecute the claims of the individual tax 'payers, which claims are based on the proposition that the community property laws of the Canal Zone vest a present interest in one half of such property in the wile. This position is in conflict with; that expressed recently in the press by Trygve Johnson, the re representative presentative representative of the Internal Rev enue service, who is presently in the Canal Zone. Chairman Geroge Vieto explain explained ed explained that the position of the Bu Bureau reau Bureau of Internal Revenue:' had. been known to the Comm'ttee prior to Johnson's enunciation. ',: It is the view of the Commit Committee, tee, Committee, based on the advice of coun-( sel; that the decision of the Su Supreme preme Supreme Court of the United latent, in the case of U. S. vs Bobbins, 269 U. S. 315, cited by Johnso was based on an interpretation of Canal Zone law will not nec necessarily essarily necessarily be bound by an inter interpretation pretation interpretation of a California court; The group has agreed to retain the law firm of DeCastro and Ro Ro-bles, bles, Ro-bles, who will be associated with counsel in Washington. The nec-v essarv powers of attorney are be being ing being drafted and will be present presented ed presented to the group at a meeting to be convened in the near future. All interested taxpayers have been advised to refrain from ex executing ecuting executing waivers of their claftnl, but on the contrary to request extensions of time for the furtM furtM-er er furtM-er prosecution thereof by coun counsel. sel. counsel. riawdii iteceives r V'l Thumbs Up Vote For Statehood WASHINGTON, PeK 4 (uVl) The House Interior and. Inst lar Affa rs committee today ap proved a bill te. make Hawaii the 50th state in (he union. Th vote was 25 te 4. .it. j - A ' 1 ft- . t t . ts 1 AS 5! .If'? ft" AGt TWO THE PANAMA AMERICAN , t OWHIO AND UBllHCD r THB PANAMA AMIMICAN PR(M. INC. POUNOIO r ISCLSON ftOUNOeVCU. IN 111 NARMODIO AMIA. 101 ton IS -37 H Strut P O SQ 134 Panama tt or P. rrrt : TtxiVHOMI 2 0740 S Link I -. 1 OKI AOtmiM PANAMHICAN. PANAMA S a oiom Officii 12 170 ccntl Avinui iiTwif n i.tm and istm frfttcTs FORtiSN etrwTTivis ioshua 8 POWERS INC 349 Madison Avt New York iiti N. V o'XptW Month in Advanci j , P Ol MONTHS IN ACVANCC- " .ONt Via in Advanci t -T"1" THIS IS rOUt FORUM THI READERS OWN COLUMN Tkt Mail Ram li an even forum Letters ara received ererefullv and ataaner. ' If cosrfrtoote a bttti dan't t hneaHeiit tf It steesn t appear Nit Mat dr. Letters, are published in the order received. Please tr to ketp tka lattart limited ta oaa moo lenith. Identity of I ttr writer it held in strictest confldanca. Tbis newspaper assumes no respeitsnilitv for statements ar opinions expressed in lattart from raiders. THE MAIL BOX TURNIF Sir: Since my Army brother "Even Up or Shut Up' (Mall Box, Jan. 29) has elected to air some comparisons before the general public I would like to point out that as usual he only mention mentioned ed mentioned those parts of the single wage scale system which he feels to be detrimental to him. "l pay high rent, high utility bills and buy all my own fur- .,!. fw ,-.Hnn nf a ranoo fnr whtrh T have the DriV- ilege of paying rent. The money my brother Even Up or Shut Up" saves on furniture maintenance alone will enable him to take considerable time off without pay and still have a great advantage over me and my children. Inasmuch as the Armed 8ervices get an appropriation every year which they have to figure out how to spend, while the Pan Panama ama Panama Canal has to earn an enormous sum to help pay other pills before it can be given an appropriation, it is only logical that I must work much harder than my brother for my salary. Also my leave starts when I leave my job, not when I arrive at my destination. . J Now that my dear brother "Even Up or Shut Up and I have shown he administration a few more places where they can squeeze another few cents from what is now an almost bloodless, centless turnip I hope that he will sleep well In the future. Brother( But Not by Choice V.F.W. Blr: ' -r j i j irnnir oii.K Un 1 au noii uuu v r vt uu , ly being run, to be among the most fragrant spots on the isth isthmus. mus. isthmus. In fact, I have heard it described as the Canal Zone s roadhouse. . Maybe I am over-fastidious, but there are times when I would not care to take my wife there. The tone of discussion is not altogether Biblical, nor are the activities wholly abstemious. Stateside I understood that one had to be a member to enter a VFW club, but this does not appear to be the case down there by the Curundu gate. For Instance, I see cars there with Panama plates. Certainly there may be some members who live In Panama, but not that many. This club may have good officers, but if so they are not carrying out their duties as firmly as are the officers of other VFW clubs on the Isthmus. After all, it would be embarrassing to liave a K Street honkytonk complain of unfair commercial competition from the Zone in that VFW club 3822's activities wei not linked directly with the operation, maintenance, de defense fense defense and sanitation of the Canal. Especially sanitation . El Echo AIR FORCE Sir: ..i! tw. .ttuniinn of vnur readers to a ereat musical treat to be offered in the National Stadium Feb. 18 at 7:30 p.m.? The at at-4 4 at-4 ,;.. ,iii k. th. nnwnnl United States Air Force Band under lhe baton trf Col. George Sallade eeDt for a mall reserves tection 10 oe soia io nep umij. '"-- -TJ band ia curl entfy on itr hinJh internaUonal tour and ha. met with acclaim wherevtr it has appeared. The program w 11 be ap. peaUng to all memberi of the family. The appearance at the Na Na-tional tional Na-tional Stadium is sponsored by the Fine Arts Department of the Pan Panamanian amanian Panamanian Ministry of Education and the newly-formed Panaman an an-North North an-North American Association. The latter organizaUon has been estab estab-lished lished estab-lished to further cultural exchanges between the people of Panama TSfsSrfforms purl oi the fourth annual summer art festival f the Fine Arts Department of the Ministry of Education. - Enriaua Sola WilHtm T, Boya Direct o? Bella, Arte. 1? SCOUT Sir: ,.r. m knnw what Bov Scout Executive Dan Daniel anrScoutTouncil president Gen. George flatter are trying to pull in briel, we get te impression they are t yin to ease Kdwara i-.ucas insuiuuunai 111....,. 5 and Tost 5 out of the Scout Council If our impressions are well-founded we don't like the idea and feel the matter should be looked into. Many members of the ex executive ecutive executive boTof the Boy Scout Council Boy Scouts of America on the Canal Zone are new to Scouting and have not had time to get Jo know thr Jules and regulations of Scouting.. They probably think that the Scout Executive runs Scouting. This is not so. The execu executive tive executive board runs Scouting. The Scout Executive is hired as an advisor nd We'don't know anything about Daniels' record before he came heie, except that this is the first time he has been a Scout Execu Executive. tive. Executive. We do get the feeling he talks down to us. For th last three years we have been associated with Lucas on different Scouting activity. Our boys are in the units for which he is the Institutional Representative. We think we are better qual qualified ified qualified than anyone else to judge his abilities. Here are a few of the things he Iras accomplished for Scouting on the Canal Zone during ' Three vears ago, when he became the Institutional Represent Representative ative Representative Scouting was at a low ebb in the Canal Zone. Standards were low. The oldtimers said that you couldn't raise and maintani the tandards as required by the National Council of the Boy Scouts of AmeThe GAO had forced the Panama Canal to stop sponsoring Scouting. The Scout leaders were discouraged and most of the pa parents rents parents were not supporting Scouting as they promised. We had scouting in name only. The above condition, were known to Lucas but he still accepted the position as Institutional Representative because he believed ft" that if the boys received Scouting as they had a right to expect they t,.;, would resoond and that parents would support Scouting if the stapd stapd-"pds "pds stapd-"pds were raised and their bovs received Scouting as required by the National Council, Boy Scouts of America. ' During the past three years he has been able to obtain the help ' of parents to serve as Unit Leaders. commiUeemen, Den Mothers, tid so forth. He has been able to do this when some of the older units have failed to do so. He is responsible more than anyone else that the Canal Zone was able to send more than 30 Scouts to the National Jamboree at Valley Forge two years ago and for sending five Scouts to the Na National tional National Junior Leader Training ( amp at Schiff's Scout Reservation. At counc i meetings and in the day to day operations of Scouting he has insisted that the policies and the constitution and bylaws of the Biy Scouts of America be observed. I understand he has had tome difference, with Daniels in this regard. I trust this is not what has given rise to my impression that the Scout Executive would preler not to have Lucas on the council. We pcrents are back of Lucas 100 percent. We have seen what he has done for our boy. in Scouting during the past three years, and know that as long as he i. in Scouting the interests of our boy. will b protected. I can imagine what Canal Zone Gov. William E. Potter would think if any rumor should ever reach him to the effect that the Scout Executive wa. trying to ease Lucas off the council. Luca. received a letter of commendation from Potter last year for hi. work in Scouting. If the member, of the Executive Board wonder why Luca. will not compromise on principle 1 suggest they read the article "Have i' We Let Our Boy Down?" in the li Finally, when Lucas reads this j -;, J' motives, and not be too angry. FHILANTROPISTS Sir: I wonder why "Damn Mad" rest of the oh, .0 patient US philanthofiists don't get out and leave r Panamanian, to starve. We appreciate their unselfishness in re- X training here to keep the wolf from our door, but happen to be .0 .'.'fed up with them we would rather they didn't try to help us any ''ta.,;-r-longer. Intact, they are welcome to get out. Hopeful Fanamanlaa. V feAIL s t so If oo 24 OO 70 80 l so for rede-i of The Panama American. ara handled la wholly confidential SQUEEZERS CLUB 3822 B99 in r.ha manner it ill Dresent- BAND CONCIRT Howard. Admission will be free exr LEADERS January issue of McCall's magazine. letter .ure ha will under.tand my Troop I Parent. (Mail Box, Jan. 26) and all the - TBI Labor NeVs And r : Comments By VICTOR RIESEL (Hara, in on complete and at yoi unrevealed .lory, I. what President Eisenhower has bn tailing his ciosa aide, h footing on leoor rackets and what ho bal laves I. the only way to crack thorn. This i. what prompted hi. labor massage to Congrats.) For months, right up to a few hours beiore tnis was written, Pre President sident President Eisenhower has been tel ling h s Cdbinet, nis personal aides anu his more personal iriends that the only way to crack the rackeis is to curb the unions' absolute power to picket anywhere, any anytime, time, anytime, foi any reason. Tae President believes; that the mob's pressure point is the picket line the tough ones, not tne je je-gu.mate, gu.mate, je-gu.mate, token lines used, for example, around sleel piaivs. This he has said u.er anu over again, especially at the four ses session, sion, session, in waich ni special labor message was discusseu under n.s personal leadership. At the final! closed uoor pane., .n uie .m.nJ House last 'iuesuay morning, the President was satisfied that this viewpont was accurately reflected in the message's final draft. Reptatediy, In those confiden- j tial parlays, Pitsident fcisenlio fcisenlio-wor wor fcisenlio-wor said no was aghast at the revelations of San. John McCl McCl-lan't lan't McCl-lan't corruption-digging probe. The President said that any taw which did not wipe out all abus abuses es abuses r ppod open by the Senate investigators was useless. Ho believes that the abuses pivot upon the mobs' still legal right to use "blackmail picketing. This is a phrase wh ch ha haa used quite bitterly in hi. analy analysis sis analysis af cr minal infil ration into unions. Spec.fically he has frequently summed up his angry attitude with the following: "There is a need to deal with the corruption and racketeering and abuses of trust and power." The Chief Executive does not see his proposal as a "labor" bill. His attitude is that unions and management can be expected to quarrel. But, says he, no rank and file member, no citizen, nc- oublic forcei not involved in these quarrels, should be caught in the middle and hurt by tne disputes. That would be a "dis service to the country. He has used phrases such as "protecting innocent bystanders and the publx interest." He wants picketing defined so that no one is a stranger to the particular labor-manigement dis pute will be hurt. It is this ability to hurt .others with a picket line which must be contained and wiuiom .uch cramping, Mr. Ei- 1 -1 PAN AM A -BOGOTA -PAN AM A BA PAIIAMA-MEDELLIM-PANW.U U(4 , ' s , xj ( .-- PANAMA- BOGOTA-CALI-MEDELLIN- PANAMA 90 DAYS -Mt f;.i -; PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER - Me senhower believes there can be no effective anti-rackets bill. The President is aware that his is the middle-of-the-road bill. It is somewhere between the anti anti-racket racket anti-racket proposal, of the liberal Sen. John Kennedy and the hard hardest est hardest hitting of all, the coming pro proposals posals proposals of racket-busting commit committee tee committee chairman McClellan. But strangely enough Sen. Mc Mc-Clellan's Clellan's Mc-Clellan's bill, when presented iater this year after the committee's blistering second annual report in March, w.ll be no tougher than the British and Australian laws. And those exist in lands where the unions are the manpower and the money -banks of. influential ; labor parties. Both in Australia and En England, gland, England, these labor parties have run the government in the not too distant past. In both land, the unions i aro required to. register with a cen central, tral, central, government office it they want to enjoy special labor pri pri-; ; pri-; vlleges,. In England, the unions register with ..omothing knows mmmm llHlllll liilliilllllP j urn. J I ., , ,i. wmm Co o EXCURSION FARE .1- Engine Room Ful I Speed 57 v. 'i-t r nut. a. . neno. as the Registery of Friendly So So-cisties. cisties. So-cisties. In Australia, whre there are In Industrial dustrial Industrial Courts, the unions regis register ter register and,; 'as in London, they must then maintain a terrific set of de democratic mocratic democratic standards. The law specifically states how long an of ficial can hold office, how frequnt frequnt-ly ly frequnt-ly a union must meetv and when and where and how notice must be given. Sen. McClellan' will ask for a taw requiring such registration of U.S. unions and adherence to simi similar lar similar democratic practices if they don't want to lose their tax exempt Status. That is quite a status con considering sidering considering he billions of dollars worth of investments in real esta estate, te, estate, bonds and other nice things to have and to hold. On all this the President of the U.S. has been briefed and now is quite an expert. He knows what he wants and toe; General is on the march. P. fanamono Coombs Everything is less expensive in Co Colombia. lombia. Colombia. We'll be happy to give you any further information. Panamanians and U.S. citi citizens zens citizens do not need pass passportsonly portsonly passportsonly a tourist card issued free. Baggage allowance 66 lbs. Pay 10 dowir-r-toke as long as 20 months to pay the balance. 39 Y tyARS ... ,: -i . i,a' -"M Ahead ). ir Falange's Onetime Poet Convicted Of Franco Insult MADRID (UPIKDxmisio Rid Rid-ruejo, ruejo, Rid-ruejo, one-time "poet of the Fa- iange Party," waa convicted and sentenced to 20 months in jail yesterday for insulting Generalissi Generalissimo mo Generalissimo Francisco Franco and spread spreading ing spreading illegal propaganda. The sen sentence tence sentence was suspended. The trial had been pending for two years bilt it took only an hour in a three judge civil court. Hf. st'll must face two further charges : of: maintaining relation. Spanish political refugees abroad. When this trial would take place was not indicated. He escaped going to jail through terms of an amnesty granted to short-term prisoners last year by rancc-tin nonor 01 me coronation EXPERIENCE ir WASHINGTON Alt Force crew. are preparing tor what may turn out to 1 be hi.toryV weirdest Iisn- ing expedition, 'they are secretly tra ning t harpoon satellites white .till in the air and reel' them in) like strange fish from outer space. This fantastic technique will be used to recover future satellite. phere. Air Force -planes will : try to 'catch them before 'they either burn up or get lost in deserts, mountain, or the ocean. r For nearly a month. Air Force harpooner. have been waiting at vanoenberg Base, caul., to test their skill against the first satel lite tn be brought back intact from outer space. This will be launched ino orbit as soon as all the technological bug. have een enminaieo. The latest trouble was an acid leak, which ruined wirinr and will take another 10 day. fo replace. wnen tni. recoverable satellite, u ready, it wU be .lammed into or. bit by a combination Thor-Van- guard rockets After the ."'satellite' T has whirled arouno tne world A few time., re ira rocxets wis be tired to siaw its .peed. This will cause the sa tellite to dip back into the atmos phere at a precalculated time and place. At it plows into the heavy air. metal drogue parachutes will be released to slo it to a drift Then the haroooners. following radio signals from tne satellite. will chase after it in C:119 Flying Boxcars, wnen tncy come within range, they will try to hook the satellite with a harpoon fired from the rear of he big plane. Al cable will be tiel to the harpoon. Once the harpoon snags the drifting satellite, the Cew will reel it into the back of tl)e C-139 with 1 winch. Believe it or not. REVOLTS BREWING Repercussions from Fidel Cas Castro's tro's Castro's Cuban revolt are churning Central America. Bad blood between Mexico and Guatemala, stirrer; tip wnen Gua Guatemalan temalan Guatemalan military planes machine machine-gunned gunned machine-gunned four Mexican fishins bloats off the Guatemalan coast, Dec. 31, is the immediate cause. Otner governments are beginning to take sides. Three men died and 14 were captured, 10 of them with wound, requiring hospftaliiation as a re sult of the two-hour attack on the fishing craft. Yh strafing was done by Mustangs, furnished to Guatemala from U.S. war surplus under a "mutual-defense" -treaty wun mat tiny republic. Mexico lodged a formal protest, but the. Guatemalan foreign min ministry istry ministry rejected 1 and ordered Uhe Me,xican;fwirihelr fo&ialjon tkarges irpmg7' .hiSnp in lerruonai waieT. Tne yes.eis, three of them badly damaged, are also held. Despite public indignation in Ulexico and loud cries for drastic taction. Foreign Secretary Manuel M. Tello recently named to that Bost after six year, as Ambassa Ambassa-or or Ambassa-or in Washington courteously M imposed taking the dispute be be-ore ore be-ore the World. Court at The Hague. Guatemala'. President Mi viiAl VdigOra., who had personally ord. red the attack oh the boats, re refused. fused. refused. Instead he demanded dam ages from Mexico for "violation of sovereignty.'' That was a little ton much n Jan. 23, President Lopez Maleos 01 juexico announced invriiiu of relations with the Ydigoras government. AGAINST DICTATORS Behind these strained relations :'s the fear that Fidel Castro's fol followers lowers followers in the Caribbean will un- dermme other governments, espe cially mose ruiea ny dictators. Ydigoras became President of Guatemala in a disputed election between three candidates after U. S.-backed Carlos Castilln Armas was assassinated. He lives sur ACROSS 1 Jeweler'. weight 6 Slope 11 Pompou. Aow 12 Feminine ... nama . 14 Angara 15 Small stone 18 Male .wan 17 Tit for 19 United State, ship (ab.) 20 Competent 22 Collection of laying. 23 Narrow opanlng 24 Chair 26 From Utah DOWN 1 Mediterranean evergreens 2 m for . plowing "3 Rodent 4FrUltdrmk 'a Seed Integument 6 Divided T Falsehood 8 Vestment Medical term 10 Crustacean segment HSiaoof type 13 Bird', home 18 Babylonian ky god SI More manageable 28 Therefore 29 Period of time This and That SO Charged . parttcl :. S3 Diminutive or Xdward 15 Slabs of stone (Or.) 16 Alone 29 One who (suffix) 40 Arabian bird ' 42 Twist out of ;:; shape , 44 Arrival (ab.) 45 Cloth measure ' 46 Honey producer 47 Heavenly twins 60 Habituate . 63 Sowed 84 Roman procurator SS Allowances for waste 86 Got. by steamer II II K H I) I Y P f iT" " T iT"TX ; ' AiJiiiiiii I'liiMii Ir1,.1.1.1 Iii i'ii ml1 ,. ' WEDNESDAY, RBBCABT 4. 1951 8 WASlliNGtOfj " T"t. W i rounded by; armed guard, rani travels la a builetprool limou.ine; Recently, his' miliury intelligence agents reported that itef list ;ppo- -sition klements in; Guaemak wer receiving armssmuggle' U night on small lu,.-Rf!rAt iir, -;One prpbable source -,-of; suer weapons, Ydigoras ifgured,W was Mewco,from:whicli-TlaBdeitine sbipmenU-of rmsr4 Fidel i Cas-1 .The mbatUed GuatemalaFres- -j 25? -,!ft'W" men who ielpedqastr wa- throw Batista are out to get um. along with delator Tnm&tf t Domimcan Republic, and the, So moza dynasty Jtf NicaraguaJ,, Those men, director a, of tbe ini tern.tional Revolutionary Junu of Central America and the. ?t Carib Caribbean, bean, Caribbean, include Presidentelect Ro Ro-mulo mulo Ro-mulo Betancourt of .Venezuela and W-Presidents JosaV Figuer of CosU Rics, Carlos -JPrio Socarras of Cuba, and Juan Jose Arevolo of Guatemala, 'h w,,, ,jt(. Th JunU, ,eiUbU.hWfomsily ta 1955, grew out of .the old Carib Caribbean bean Caribbean Legion, a .guerrilla t force made up f poUtic.al. exiles from half a dozen LaUn American eoun eoun-tries. tries. eoun-tries. Its avowed purpose is to rid the enUi area of dictators And that it whjr a ; sharp (jdlvi (jdlvi-aloa aloa (jdlvi-aloa of sentiment has shown up ov" Mexico's fishini-boat .pat wUh Guatemala. President Luis Somoza f, iVjca iVjca-Mgqasuccessor. Mgqasuccessor. iVjca-Mgqasuccessor. U hi fattier, Gen "Tacho" Somozi,, assassinau ed in 1956 has .announced v full support for Guatemala. yr ', On the. other5 h?n .... Presid-nt Ramon Villeda of Honduras, a lib lib-eral eral lib-eral -elected last year after two decades of dictatorship, is openly backing Mexico. ; The governments of Costa Rica, El Salvador and Panama have taken .ng official stand. All are watching develop development ment development nervously. What is happening; basically, is that; Fidel Castro's dramatic vic victory, tory, victory, coming on. the "heel. of pn. pular revolts, against' dictators in Argentina, Colombia and Venezue Venezuela. la. Venezuela. has fired 110 rb lnnf.amolriap. ing resentment t Oentral .Ameri can people, against political im imposition position imposition and corroptioq. H : Miguel Ydigoras, a veteran ar army my army man who has the supnort of Guatemala s coffee barobe and bi landowners, plus United Fruit, is the first to sense this growing threat to established patterns. However, his .trressfva mnvm to meet" the challentfa mav a. dually have set -off ir haio me. Iron that will itngendeV mor viol viol-ence. ence. viol-ence. UNDER THI DOME Former President Harry Tni Tni-ma? ma? Tni-ma? was all smiles when he posed for. photograoher. in the HonSe di di-plomatic. plomatic. di-plomatic. gallery the other ria. but there were tear, in hla avaa When he left. "I guess I'm just a sentimental piki ha M "ur.fnk ing all the ceremony and liitenin? to Sam' Rayburn speak touched a tender spot in m."...Arcording to official reporters of Congres Congressional sional Congressional debates, Republicans ar the fsstest talkers in the Houie. GOP Rep. Walter Judd of Mlnne Mlnne-sota sota Mlnne-sota is rated fhe fastest, but oth others ers others who keep the horthind re-r-orters hopping are GOP Reps. AlWr (Testes Arends fill.), Alvm Bentley (MictU, WU WU-ham ham WU-ham Cramer (Fla.) and John Rhodes (Ariz.),..THe middle aisle no ranger separates Democrats and Republicans in the House chamb chamber, er, chamber, s. a result of the Democratic election landslide. Of the cham cham-ber's ber's cham-ber's 283 Democrats, 59 must find seats on the ReDublican gid 1 all 436 House members are present. '' "' '. ' i: c. crash kills rirels JAKARTA (UPI) A mililary spokesman at Maka.sar claimed today 4S rebels were killed dur log fighting in the central Celebes. The spokesmen a 1 d the rebels were killed during a large large-scale scale large-scale operation agsinst Darul Is Islam lam Islam rebels near Wadjo. Answer to Previout.Puzifo 23 Vestige 25 Implement 27 Greek god of war 21 Sea nymph. 33 Thoroughfare 34 First (prison) aS fain nf Parll 2i Build. 39 Droops i 41 Applaud. 43 Masculine 5 nickname ( 48Fiah .'. 49 Meshed fabrit 51 Through (prenxi 37 Pertaining to ,62 651 (Roman ne up. numerals I a ICI 1 ItUItToIAI LtiaIwI Sid VJ 1 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1951 TEX FAX AMI AMERICAN AH tOTEFEOTENT DAILY KZW8EAFEB PACT TEZZ3 rSenqte Banking Group Jakes 4Vr nL lf ri.:.. .. nf' lYliaaie rcoaq un burns wan f WASHINGTON (UP E) The Sen Sen-t. t. Sen-t. Btnkine Committee took the middle toad yesterday by approve ing a $2,100,000,000 six-year feder- . '' al program to help the nation's i i-ties ties i-ties rkt themselves of slums. f ,LThe committee; working toward -ah wnpletion of a package housing fciii for Seaate-consideration this w! week; 'accepted the urban renevr renevr-, , renevr-, ail recommendations of Sea. j John Sparkmin (D-Ala.), chalr- i man of its housing subcommittee. ! JlB doing so, if junked President n: Eisenhower's request for six six-year year six-year program carrying $1,350, DM.OO Twice tag and a proposal 4ySen. Joseph S.- Clark D-Pa.f Jfor a 10-year, million dollar out- !" lay; W s-?!? --. r ..-.rf ' Clark, who tad backing; from mayors- of large and medium sized U.S. ctties, at the last'min- v nto scaled down his proposal to $1,800,000,000 over a three or f our- ' year period. But Sparkman's plan '- Clark's proposal lost 94 niter tM committee rejected tne aanun- ' 1 istrstion Tequest 8-7.- The Presi President's dent's President's plan also called, for grad gradual ual gradual reduction of the federal share - f urban renewal from two-thirds to one-half;' ' The House Banking Committee " also was working on an omnibus housing-bin, with hearings expect- ed to end Tuesday. 1 Albert Whitehouse, representing the AFL-CIO Industrial Union De Department, partment, Department, told the House commit committee tee committee Monday that Eisenhower's housing and slum clearance pro- '" posals represented "an abdication f the" federal responsibility m this area and worse, an abandon abandonment ment abandonment of the welfare of the Amer American ican American people. 'Eisenhower's' failure to seek new- public housing authority - "means that the 17 million Amer Americans icans Americans now condemned to living in eur "worst slums must abandon hope," Whitehoure chearged. House Democratic leaders an announced nounced announced that a bill approved by the Veterans Affairs Committee to Increase the Interest rates on new GI home1 morgtages would be cal- ' led up for action Wednesday. The bill would Increase 61 interest rates from the current 4 3-4 per cent ceiling to nS 1-4 per cent, a changeisought by the administra administration, tion, administration, -v House leaders said the GI inter est MB would be inserted into the package .bousing legislation when it comes up for action later. It was felt the interest feature would make the entire- bill more palat palatable able palatable to the President But if ht vetoed the- package bill anyway. the interest legislation still could be sent on to the Senate for sep sep-arate arate sep-arate action, V : i '. The Senate committee approved the i administration's, : request for an authority to boost interest ceil ings from 44 to 5V4 per cent on DHA-insured rental and coopers tive rental housing and on milita ry housings The .committee also west along with- the administra tion's proposal to boost the auth- orized interest limit on FHA- backed cooperative sales housing xrom per cent. MOT PLUM LOCO LONDON, (UPI) -Judge John Maude dispensed this advice in London's Old Bailey Court today: "Police .afe not just, solid old . plum puddings. vTljey,ha,ve .some sense about them, you know," CufBail:dayr For 20 Americans TIJUANA, Mexico, Feb. 4 (UPI) A Mexico federal judge has agreed to rule today on bail reduction for 20 Americans held in jaff here for the past 10 days on misdemeanor and gambling charges. The ruling came on the heels of fresh and vigorous protests from "United States official s in California and Washington, D. C, concerning the high bail set for the Americans. Judge Eduardo Langle Matinez refused late yesterday to act on a request by U.S. consul-general Robert Hale to reduce the bail of $1,600 each for the Amencans, but he promised to make a ( rul ruling ing ruling sometime today. California Gov. Edmund G. Brown joined with Congressmen and business leaders yesterday in calling for action in the case which was beginning to take on the" aspects of a major interna-" tional incident. "I know none of the people ar rested and none of the facts, but as attorney general of California I am concerned with anything that will affect the normal warm relationship between our coun- Uiaf .. VHlUvi iufl xv,va avj viwiva- al Stanley Mosk said after Gov. Brown asked him to investigate the situation. Brown said, "I am happy that Mexico is cracking down on gambling because it is too close to u, but I want to make certain that California residents are not being deprived of their rights." Quote Unquotel V DURANGO, Mexico. Actor Mel Ferrer, lamenting tne restlessness of his wife, nlm star Audrey Hep Hep-bum,, bum,, Hep-bum,, who is immobilized by a spine injury received when ; a torse threw her while on location her for.; a fun: i WASHINGTON (UPI) Presi dent Eisenhower and Republican congressional leaders arced the American people yesterday to rb- lieve in a balanced budget . and make their voices beard1 against Democratic spending pro proposals. posals. proposals. 1 The appeal for public support' of President's narrowly-balanced 77-billion-dollar budget followed WASHINGTON Twenty-two BTtH Eisenhower's regular, weekly ' n don't kno.. what to do to keep her quiet. She told me "I am going to ride tUat horse again be fore me picture is finished." minent Americans, including Mrs. Eleanor Roosvelt, in a statement urging a ban on atomic tests even if there is a risk of cheating by Ce participant?; "There are elements of risk n any. agreement, but the risks of continuing tLc arms raca indefi indefinitely nitely indefinitely are even greater,". 'MIAMI, Fla- President Arturo Frondizi of Argentina, on his de sire to and Argentina's traditional neutralism in favor of greater coo cooperation peration cooperation with fb United States: "We aire now embarked on an irreversibly course linking our des destiny tiny destiny with, the United States and with the rest of the republics ef the Western Hemisphere." SUFFIELD. Conn. Renubllcsn National Chairman Meade Alcorn Jr., denying tt ha will resign the post: '1 have no plans to resiin. al though anyone who has served far this job for on- term has served just' about as long as he would' want to. At the moment I'm try tog to get the party back in business." DENVER, Colo. Adlal E. Ste venson, on me need for a re-appraisal of the current armed forc forces es forces draft program: quantity with the illusion of protection, rather than quality with the reality f security. NORFOLK. Va. A aroum of top Norfolk high school students, calling for a peaceful start .of in integration tegration integration in Virginia, schools: "We believe that, reeardless of their personal feeling, the students . ,1 1 oi our respective icnoois win con con-that that con-that will bring credit to our city," M;gUpIIights If you suffer from Otttlns Up Night, Baokach, Xstg Fmina, Low of Vigour, Nrrou(nu or wakn, you hould help your Proitate Gland lm mediately with Rogena. Thli medlctn make you feel younger, itronger, and able to eleep without interruption. Get Roaent from your ohemiet today. Ike Urges Congressional Leaders To 'Believe In Balanced Budget meeting with GOP legislative leaders. Tne meeting was unusual ly long, lasting for nearly three hours. Emerging from the White House, House Republican Leader Charles A. Halieck (tad.) told newsmen Democratic proposals already before Congress would push the government's spending authority three billion dollars above the President's requests. He specifically mentioned Dem ocratic proposals on housing, air port construction and aid to JEdu cation, K Is Wgh tlme, fcaBeck. nlAl that people believe m a bal anced budget ... (and) begin to make their voiees heard in this capital. Asked whether the president shared this feeling, Halieck shot back "very definitely The GOP leaders also disclosed that Eisenhower will submit to Congress shortly, possibly asxt week, what they termed a "mod erate1 civil rights program. They said the program probably will be outlined in a special message. Patrolman Reports Return Appearance Of Pesky Monster DRUMNADROUCHIT, Scotland, Feb. 3 (UPI) it's happened gain 4ne Loch Ness monster has reared its "chalky white" head. At least Motor Club Patrolman Jimmy Mcintosh swears It did. Jimmy, five years wkh the highly-respected Automobile Asso ciation, said he saw the monster yesterday while standing at a tel ephone box here. "Tne wee monster was cruis ing midway between mid-stream and the shore. It was about 12 feet long, brown in color and had a chalky white head,' he said. "I saw H for a few minutes be fore it disappeared under the sur surface," face," surface," he added. Mcintosh has spent hit five years with the A.A. cruising the roads In the neighborhood ef the Loch. His job k to assist strand ed motorists. 1? .V7?o ua DO YOU KNOW THIS PERSON! IT MAY BE YOU! sirs vv mi n n n o u u u O O O DO YOU KI!07 THIS PERSON! IT MAY BE YOUR NEIGHBOR! HE IS GOING TO PURCHASE A CAR IN THE NEXT 30 DAYS. $25.00 REWARD FOR THE NAME OF ANY PERSON WE CAN SELL A NEW OR USED CAR OR TRUCK. IF YOU KNOW OF ANYONE PLANNING ON BUYING A CAR CALL US AT ONCEi PANAMA New Cars Phone 2-0870 or 2-1061 Used Can Phone 2-0619! COLON New w Used Can PhW 1369 o o Q o o THIS WEEK'S USED CAR SPECIALS '56 MG CONVERTIBLE '58 HILLMAN MINX Radio '55 CHEVROLET BELAIR 2 doir;HX jPpwcrglide, .RsS.Civen'!'v 4 Door Leather Upholstery, WSW Tires 56 PONTIAC i Door FLT. Custom Star TA7 'iOi- u ,y :L-A 7 !:- i t-. DISTRIBUTORS YQBL'M A " ''-. :- Cadillac Pontiac GMC VaiixTiaU Bedford Lloyd HaQeck and Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen (HI.) said it would fall "somewhere be between" tween" between" the civil rights measure introduced by Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (Tex.) and more sweeping lilla put for forward ward forward by northern liberals. They did not elaborate. " Johnson has called for a xneclal federal agency to mediate civil rights disputes, federal action against hate bombings, eubpena powers for the attorney general in investigating voting rights viola violations tions violations and an extended life for' the civil rights commission. The liberals want to give the attorney teneral nower to seek in. junctions to halt any type of civil rights violation and to provide special federal aid for schools which carry out integration. HaQeck lent some substanc in report- that the daministration and congressional Republicans are split on how strong a civil rights bill should be sent to Congress. aaiq auiermg viewpoints were -expressed at yesterday rawing dm mat -nroeress in ho. ing made and there are no violent disagreements among us.' Scientists May Revise Concepts On Growth Of Genes WASHINGTON (UPIl-A Unl- versity of Wisconsin geneticist has mad a research discovery which may force scientists to revise some long-held notions about the mechanics of evolution. The discovery by Prof. R. Alex ander Brink challenges the eur eur-rent rent eur-rent conviction that genes, the hereditary factors of germ cells, do not alter from generation to generation unless they andergo mutation; Mutation Is a change which oc curs spontaneously or as a result of an external influence such as radiation. Geneticists long have believed that evolution resulted from chance mutations which oc cur from tun to time. But the National Science Found ation, whteh supported Brink's work, said his research with corn may upset this conviction. This dlseoverv the foundation added, "may well turn out to be among the most significant basic discoveries in genetics." Brink discovered, the foundation said, that a gen that produces color In the corn kernel can be permanently modified 'simply by bringing it Into combination with a particular on of Its alleles r tsTfm; Scovfcapades Divided zW Into Three Sections Next month's "Scoutcapades" program has been divided into three basic sections, it was' an nounced today by L. Budd Hav- erstick, Activities Chairman ofT the Canal Zone Boy Scout Coun cil. The first section of the gala March 7 event will be the grand opening. This will consist of a pageant depicting the history of Scouting, Scout Uniforms and flags, and flags of the states of the United States, Canada, and the 20 Latin Republics. The pa pageant geant pageant is under the direction of Don Musselman, producer of the pageant that was a highlight of the Zone's recent Teddy Roose Roosevelt velt Roosevelt celebration week. The grand opening is expected to take 25 minutes and will start at 7:15 p.m. It will take place in Balboa Stadium where all the other phases of Scoutcapades will be held. 1 A gala review In p&rade, tim timed ed timed to last 20 minutes, will be the second section. Since floats,-historical groupings and novelties will make up the line ef march, participating units will be judg judged ed judged on their cleverness, construc construction, tion, construction, and float idea. The third phase will consist ef "Scoutcapade" exhibitions. Each Scouting unit will be able to show off its skills in making and doing things, frofn making camp- fires and cooking to know tying and making camp, Exlibitions al so will be judged on basic origin originality ality originality and attractiveness. Smog-Caused Chest Cases Crowd Four British Hospitals MANCHESTER. England (UPI) Chest cases aggravated by last week's smog crowded four hos hospitals pitals hospitals here today, forcing them .0 close their doors to all but emer emergency gency emergency cases. The hospital cases were a grim reminder of the two days last week during which the country was blanketed with a soupy fog that disrupted transportation and filled the air with the worst smog that has smothered London state 1952. The weatherman predicted sun sunshine shine sunshine early this week for most areas of Britain, but in Manchest Manchester er Manchester hospital officials said only ur gent medical or surgical cases could be admitted because of the jammed wards. "People already sufferm fmrt bronchitis were Severely fft- ea, tne medical supenntende 6f tft Crumpsaff Hospital "laid. O Vgarowthakk I " ttfa t'aWtti means to ex press, to, ow many friends our deepest appreciation and'sincer thanks for th beautiful floral offerings and. the kindness and ym ym-pathy pathy ym-pathy ihown' us during oui recent bereavement, Mr. RUa Marine, Capt. and Mrs. Thomas C. Marine, Mr. and Mr$. W m. J. BrVglit, Jr., Mr, and Mrs. B. F, Scptt, Mr find Mrs. E. L. Talbott. Big Bopper 2 Other Rock Roll i Start, Pilot Die In Airplane Crash "CLEAR LAKE, Iowa (tJPI)- inree tne nation's top rock 'n roU singing stars-ftitchn Valens. Buddy Holly and a disa .fockev Known as tne "Big Bopper" died yesterday with their pilot la the crash of a chartered plane. Their Bonanza four-seat single engine piane went down in a snowy farm field five miles north of Clear Lake, a few minutes aft er Uiey bad taken oft at 1:50 a.m. fir Fargo, N.D. The wreckage and bodies were not discovered until long after dawn. One of the bodies was re reported ported reported pinned m the wreckage and rescue workers asked for equip equipment ment equipment to pry it loos. The Diana did not burn. Vateni, 17, th ,Bopper"-4n real life a 26-year-old disc jockey named J. P. (Jape) Richardson and Holly, 21, were three of the brightest stars in the world of rock 'n roll music. They followed the pattern of swivel-hipped Elvis Presley and eacn had a wide and enthusiastic following among the nation's teen-agers. The three met their death try ing to make a fast jump between dates on a tour of Midwest cities so uiey could get tneir clothes laundered. . Th manager of th Surf ball- Health Bureau Club To Offer Cash Prize A! Picnic A cash prize will be awarded to the most colorful dressed "com "com-parsa" parsa" "com-parsa" at the Health Bureau Club's "Carnavalito" outing to Chepo on Feb, 22, it was- announc ed today. The club Is hoping that many, guests wil lbe encouraged to wear colorful sports apparel to blend with the spirit of the picnic, No special requirements would be necessary, but each comparsa group entering the contest must register their identity the morning of the picnic prior to the depar ture of the buses in order to be qualified. judges 01 tne contest wm oe at- seno Algondona, Mayor of Chepo and Tomas Pasado, a prominent civic leader of the same district. Two hula hoop contests for the ladies of the senior an$ Junior age group, are also scheduled. Fe male guests must taice aiong tnetr hoop to enter the contest Other entertainment wur be a greased pole climb, bag race, sight-seeing, swimming and dancing, r ':v Music will be by tn Willi Mo- ro orchestra. Busses will leave- at 7 a.m. from the Palacio Lecisla- tiva. "' 1 1' 'vr-tt-M". .. room In IWs nofllte&st Iowa re resort sort resort community, Where the troupe played to a crdwd of I.OOO Mon Monday day Monday night, said the three stars wer weary of bus travel. They had ho relish' for the overnight bus trip to Fargo, N.D., across the state line from Moorhead, Minn., where they were to appear Tuesday night. They wanted to get time to get their clothes laundered," the manager, Carroll Anderson said, so they chartered a plane piloted by Roger Peterson, 21, of Clear Lake. fh other member of the troupe, including singer Franky Sardo and the teams of "The Crickets" and "Dion and the Bel Bel-monts" monts" Bel-monts" made the trin hv hn Their agents in Chicago said, the travellers did not learn of t the others' fate until thev fargo. Valens. a if-rear-nlri mniitlnn from Pocoima. Calif., was rently one of the hottest singing laieiu m tne country. His latest record'ime. "Dmine Is number four in national sales, according to his agency. Richardson became a Rh. mont. Tex., disc iockev whil t. tending college. He was the area's top radio attraction. Holly, a Lubbock. TV nrntiuo left a bride of less than iv months. Advenlisls Slarl Series Of Meetings Al Gamboa Church The Gamboa Seventh Day Ad- yentist Church has begun Evange Evangelistic listic Evangelistic meetings, which will contin continue ue continue through the dry season of 1959. These meetings convent On Wednesday and Sunday nights. Tonight s meeting and those to come commence at 7:15 p.m. mere will be several guest speakers who will present differ ent subjects each night. The subjects are as follows.' "The Man who has been Travel ling for Nearly 6000 Years," "The Man who Has Run His Last Mile," JThe Woman in White." "The Woman in Scarlet," and "This Last Message to a Dying World." . in addition, there will be soec n music provided by. the choir, and guest artists, both instrumental and vocal. .All seats are free and the public is invited to come and bring a friend to fcnjoy the service and the old gsopel songs. ORDER NOW hurry! we leaving: the ftore with your LE VALUES j Check Seaw NTER SALES CALAL0G : GUARANTEE TO LVf YOU MONEY f EL! Satisfaction Guaranteed or j Your Money Back v Open from 8:00 to 12:00 and from 2:00 to 6:0O e smart . b thrifty. shop at rir Cfltertnr-tfi fietsf. tttih SfM- SEARS Paiunu, TlvoU At tm S-4H1 Los Angeles Trandethmlaa HlirhwW Utm Bolivar Ave. 11ST -e-r Vile ntme Suggestions;. the little woman wilF- be "mad" about! M PORCEUn JtlBMINtiW WATEtLEJS COOKWilf 4-pc. Starter Set $7.95 Your Choice Capri Turquoise Or Hacienda R$(f Thousands of other gift items ;;( for the Smart Homemaker i in our Housewares Giina, Crystal & Cutlery Depts. Betiding Dept. etq, BUY ON our revolving credit PLAN ' Sfht! 3"tmnl(ire Kome cfurnishtng StOft Mr. Comfy 4th Of July Ave. & H St Tel. Z25 "YOU CAN WIN IN OUR FREE WEEKLY RAFFLE ';';k',' ' V .;,j.vi,' fACI.FOTJR ' I .ill I TEE FANAMA. AMERICAN ANJSDITEXWKT DAJ1T JftWSFJtfF WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1S5I it? :1JJ i and Otlierwide Staff,. ft oaat ana smerwi$e v-x u, ' i MS V IIU W A anama w : 9 4. $ M JS L mmJ uLfLm m Jms 2-0140 3-0 74 Lhmm 8.-00 J 10 yeivfuweci : MR. AND MRS. JOHN R. BEADCHAMP are pictured at a re re-caption caption re-caption following their wedding Saturday at the Fort Kobbe - T. Oll C I- J 1- X f l;napei. rne oricie is me iormer iviiss aany oacH, aaugmcr oi Nary Chief and Mrs. Edward Sack of Farfan. The bridegroom, Whose home is in Chicago, III., is a Specialist Four assigned to the Fort Kobbe dispensary. Wallace Crawford of Agendas Crawford in Panama and his son, Wally, left Sunday for a short business trip and a visit with Mr. Crawford's family in Miami. Theater Production Tomorrow Evening The Thespian and Dramatic Club will present a single perform- Spend Your Carnival Days in Lovely PANAMONTE INN BOQUETE Wire Reservation or See Yon Travel Agent. I I I I I I I 3 ance of the play "Inside Lester" tomorrow evening it 8 in the su su-ditorium ditorium su-ditorium of the Cristobal High School. Rainbow Girls Of Pedro Miguel Install Officers In a forma, installation cere mo ny Saturday evening, Nancy Webster became the worthy ad advisor visor advisor of Pedro Miguel Assembly Three, Order of Rainbow for Girls. The event was held in the Aneon Masonic Temple. Other new officers are Danielle Harned, worthy associate advisor; Diane Hoenke, Charity; Carolyn Holgerson, Hope; Sue Thomas, Faith; Patty Davis, recorder; Joan Dohety, treasurer; Mary Lynne Stoakley, chaplain; Carol Zelnick, drill leader; Judy Pen Pennington, nington, Pennington, Love; Joyce Herring, Re Religion; ligion; Religion; Beverly Phillips, Nature; Beverly Bryant, Immortality; Peggy EUch, Fidelity; Barbara Bengkrni, Patriotism; Ellen Wil son, Service; Aloha Shartrosky, confidential observer; Mary Kay Howe, musician; Judy Brown, choir director. The erouD of installing included Mickey Walker, retiring worthy advisor: Mrs. E. B. Webs'er, as- sistine worthy advisor: Charles W. Hammond, installing Marshal;. Gayle Hasemann, installing cha chaplain; plain; chaplain; Christine Harrison, instal installing ling installing organist; and Helen Nital soloist. The e-oup of pro tem officers includes Mareie Hurtado. Sarah Wagner, Janice Doherty, Judy Buehler, Frances Andrews, Pa Pamela mela Pamela Smedley. Penny Catron, Car- la Elich, Toni Ann Fisher, Barba ra Slotkin, Barbara Dombrosky, , -' 1 1 1 t i tlf11 v ivki cainwin, jeanne vvauier, Robin Smith and Margie Morris. i (Continued on Page 5) Meeting Rrired Worker The regular monthly meeting of the Canal Zone Retired Wo-kers Association will be held Thursday evening at 6:30 at the usual meet meeting ing meeting place. All mmbers are urged to attend. Special Education Assn. The newly-formed Special Edu Educational cational Educational Association (SEA), will meet at 7:30 this evening in Room 109 of the Balboa Elementary School. The objective of the orga organization nization organization is to provide special edu education cation education for children with physical and mental defects.. Parents, teachers and other In Interested terested Interested persons are urged to at attend. tend. attend. Raiuiav Club The J. Henry. Bonney Club has scheduled an important meeting in Paraioo. Ml members are urg ed to attend. (j l It i THE VOfCE OF BROADWAY by Dorothy Killgalleh THE CELEBRITIES A clause in Cary Grant's eon eon-tract tract eon-tract fo' the forthcoming Hitch Hitchcock cock Hitchcock thriller, "North by North Northwest," west," Northwest," provides that his name must hi advertised in letters as lar,ge as those in the title, and must fill as much space in width as the name oi any co-star. MGM's ad-planners all but went daffy trying to stretch the nine letters in his moniker to take up as much room as the billing of bis leadine ladv. Eva Marie Saint ... New York was the scene of a big underworld meeting the other day, with swank East Side hotels get getting ting getting the trade from mysterious chaos arrivine from points all ov er the nation. The word: it had to do with decisions to be made as a result of the shutdown of Cu Cuban ban Cuban gambling casinos. Larry Kert, hero of "West Side Story," is being considered for the James Dean rqle in a TV series etlo be based on the film "Rebel Without a Cause." And by coin coincidence cidence coincidence he's wanted for the lead in "The Immortal," the movie Metro is doing on the life of Jim-' my Deap. It doesn t seem in character for the great writer, who's always been rather shy about public ap appearances, pearances, appearances, but Hollywood is agog over the report that Ernest He mJ ingway may hand out one or more of the Oscars at the Acade Academy my Academy Awards ceremony ... The girl with Andre Previn at the Embers the other night was Diane Skylar, of the Brigitte Bardot school of beauty. They seem enormously smitten...Luben Vichey snarefl the Martin Beck for Les Ballets Afri cans when it was decreed that "Listen to the Mocking Bird" would fold out of town...A guided missile now being perfected in Texas would scare the Russians if they knew about it. (Or do they?) ..Birdland owner Morris Levy has been under doctor's care ever since the funeral of his murdered brother, Irving. June Havoc's heart belongs to Harald Finsness, a Scandinavian blade who runs chic clothing shops in Jamaica, Bermuda and Mil Milwaukee,.. waukee,.. Milwaukee,.. The Walt Framers (he produces TV's "Big Payoff") are lullabying a baby girl their seventh.-child..;, Hollywood,, is. going through a new cycle of gangster films. ..Gian-Carlo Menotti yearns to have Kim Nvak play Lucrezia Borgia at his Spoleto Festival Ball at the Waldorf, April 14. He thinks Kim looks very much like the portrait of Lucrezia by Pintonc- chio. The long-awaited Peter Town Town-send send Town-send film won't reach Enzland un-, til' May. But if ydu'ire the. impa1 tient type, you can nip over to Paris for a preview screenine in March. ..Tab Hunter's chums sajn he's depressed over Warner's will willingness ingness willingness to release him from a con tract that still had four years to. run. The cash settlement involved was a nice piece of change, but it's still a reflection on bis popu popularity larity popularity at the box office. -s Meyer Lansky and bis brother Jake have patched up their-feud probably because- of. Meyer's grave illness. He's dropped 50 pounds.. .More Broadway shows are on two-fers than ever before in the month of January...Mark Rob Rob-son, son, Rob-son, who accomplished a minor miracle when he turned the tra trashy shy trashy novel "Peyton' Place".vinto an excellent .jovie, will try it again with John O Haa i "From the Terrace." Robson feels he can transform the rambling O'Hara novel, with Us juvenile eniphasis on sex, into a picture of quality. His most recent credit was "The Inn of the Sixth Happiness," a fine example of his ability with scripts.., Donna Hightower. the new" dream girl at the Capitol dis dis-cery, cery, dis-cery, has signed witA Dakota Sta Sta-ton's ton's Sta-ton's jazz-wise manager, John Le Levy; vy; Levy; l Bennett Cerf's vacation, which will combine the delights of Mia Miami mi Miami and Jamaica, celebrates the completion of another cheery book, this one titled "The Laugh's On Me". .-Ahmad Jamal is thrilled be because cause because his March recording, date will feature an accompaniment of strings something he's, longed lor ...An important Hollywood produc er is on the verge of tossing his career out bf the window because he's flipped over a teen-age star let. There's .no way to square it wun me man 10 wnom ne owes his big job diisi father-in-law.- The pretty lady; with" Jphri Ire Ireland land Ireland these nights is Elizabeth Dav is... Show folk who've attended previews of "Tall Story" are in agreement with Herman Shumlin, who in a -burst of enthusiasm a a-bout bout a-bout Marc Connelly's performance said he wouldn't be surprised if the playwright "turned out to be this year's Ed Wynn." Bulletin from Madrid: "Gina LoHobrigida and Milko Skofic cel celebrated ebrated celebrated their 10th wedding an anniversary niversary anniversary here, with Gina giving diamond cufflinks and shirt studs worth $2,500 to Milko, and Milko arriving from Rome with a mag nificent emerald and diamond ring for ner. They invited the entire cast and crew of 'Solomon and Sheba' to a cocktail party on the set, then took 15 of their closest friends to .dinner and flamenco dancing at the famous Corral. In Incidentally, cidentally, Incidentally, despite all the reports, Gina isn't expecting a baby." JUMBO JOLTS STORE, OSAKA, Japan (UPI) A cir cus elephant did a takeoff on the bull-in-the-china-shop routine here last night and caused $2,778 damages in a furniture 'store. The female elephant, "Natsu," was en en-route route en-route to Osaka station after a six-week performance here when she broke away from her trainer, caved in the front of the shop and stomped on furniture. RIOT INJURES FIVE TAIPEI (UPI) Four" police: men and a city councilman were injured last night in a riot touched off when police tore down an illegal Squatter's shack in a Taipei residential area. The riot started when 10 police officers arrived to tear down a shack oc occupied, cupied, occupied, by two men on grounds it was an illegal structure. Neigh Neighbors bors Neighbors battled the police with sticks and rocks. ; t I 3M ) l FRFF! V- mmm mmm w Vj ill .NEWIlHaistylist;;-,.' booklet; There's celebration in the air! So, comb a "party look" into your ! & hair. You can do it with Adorn . and these six sparkling, nnw stvhn? tricks. with Adorn Avallabla in medium and economy sizes. AT YOUR FAVORITE STORE on the ISTHMUS I PARISIEN FURNITURE STORE Central Ave. No. 27-10 Juste Arosemena Ave. beside Kelvix I. i 41 rAiaxiUflLa LUCHO AZCARRAGA 4 EVERY WEDNESDAY 6:30 to 7:00 p.m. YOUR COMMUNITY NETWORK HOG S30 Kilocycles PANAMA 1090 Kilocycles COLON BY OSWALD JACOB Y Writfen for NEA Service v ":: : i NOKTH (O) M ' -'Q10 4 K8S WEST !"- EAST AAQTt Alt V40j8. : VKI8J A7 K J M SOUTH T5 54 J ; , AJS East and West vulnerable North ; East Soath West 1 V Pass 1 4 Psss 24 Pass Pass, Pass Opening lead 4 S The cards is todSv's hand are stacked in favor of East and West and when it wgs played in the recent Tri-State Tournament at Shreveport, all East" and West pairs came out with plus scores. Top score went to one pair who succeeded in beating two spades four tricks. I must admit that de clarer helped them a little but tbe whole play is interesting as an example of what good defense can accomplish. West opened, the deuce of spades and no one can blame declarer for playing his jack and after he re recovered covered recovered from the surprise of hold holding ing holding the trick he returned the suit. West took his ace and led a third triump which went to dummy's king. East signaled with the nine oi diamonds. South took dummy's ace of hearts and ruffed a small heart with his one remaining trump. This gave him three tricks and dummy's king of clubs made four. He led -a second club and would have made a fifth trick if he had taken his ace.' Instead he finessed me jacjc ana weji won wltn tne queen. Now West led the jack of hearts and as you can see the defense nad no trouble about winning the rest of t rn',,r. nanlMiKlMWH Q The bidding has been: West North East South 14 Double 1 2 Pass 2N.T. Pass 3 4 Pass 3N.T. Pass ? You, South, hold: 4AKS76 y7 AQ5 4951 What do you do? ; A Pms. Tow have shown sreat strencth sad oo4 spade luit. Toir partner has choaen to Play mt in B-trntnp and has shown no Interest in a slam. TODAY'S QUESTION Instead of bldduig two ne ne-trump trump ne-trump over yftut two hearts your partosr hW Jumpe airectir o -three no-trump. What do you do in -this Instancer Answer Tomorrow MAKE FRIENDS Bow iTie Noodles Swim ln ;" t Eggplant-Tomato. Sauce i bow tics Ue between strlnis ;iwllU iVtJJ Spaghetti, macaroni and egg l-noodlcs are the most familiar of the 150 different shapes of. maca macaroni roni macaroni products made in the United States. For sake of variety, try shell macaroni, egg hoodie bow ties and fusili (Spiraled spaghetti). Bow Ties With Eggplant- Tomato Sauce (Makes 44 servings) Dne-auarter run salad nil 9 runs diced eggplant, 1 medium-sized o- nion. ehnoned: nn ft-nunr ean in. mato sauce, one 6-ounce Can to tomato mato tomato paste, 3-4 cup' water, 1 tea teaspoon spoon teaspoon sugar, 1-2 teaspoon silt, 1-4 teaspbon pepper, 1-4 cup- grated Parmesan cheese, ,1 tablespoon salt, 3 quarts boiling water, 8 ounc egg noooie now nes isooat s cups). Heat nil. AM crtmlnt knil oiiinn and cook until eggplant is brown browned ed browned on all sides. Add tomato sauce, tomato paste, 34 cup water, 1-2 teaspoon sugar, salt and pepper. Cover and cook over low neat 20 minutes. Add cheese and cook 10. minutes, or until iho.o Meanwhile, add l tablespoon salt io rapiaiy Doinng water. Gradual ly aoa now ties so that water continues to hoi I Cnnb ed, stirring occasionally,' until ten der, urain in coianaer. Serve bow ties with eggplant-tomato sauce. Shall Macaroni Salmon Casssrela (Makes 4-4 servings) One tahlpfwin oolf- 9 nn.f. ---- -" j-...... on.b, a tjuaiio boiling water, 8 ounces shell ma-' caroni (about 3 cups), 2 cups com commercial mercial commercial sour cream, one 6ounAe package chive pream cheese, soft- an 4 l & : - r- i'i ,: ened; one 7,, 3-4-ounce caa salt mon, drained and boned; 1 table table-spoon spoon table-spoon chopped chives, 1 teaspoon grated onion, 1 small clove garlic, finely chopped; 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1-8 teaspoon pepper. Add 1 tablespoon salt to rapid ly boiling water. Gradually add macaroni so that water continues to boil. Cook, uncovered., stirrintf occasionally, until tender. Drain in coianaer., combine, macaroni, cream, chieve cheese"" salmon, chives, onion, garlic,-1-4 tesgpooo salt and pepper; mix well. Turv into greased shallow, 2-quart cas casserole. serole. casserole. Bke ia moderat .ovea (375 degrees F.) 20 to 25 minutes ROU OUT THI BARREL A novel cocktail bar is being exported by a British company famous for its products made aA "Hogshead" old battleships. The "Hogshead bar and cabinet con consists sists consists of, a half, bayel, eu$ .from top to bottom i down the middla with a half round -top w h i-c-.h forms the bar counter. Mounted on fineer-tiD castors, it. fits. noat. fy against, the wall when not in t use. I wo oacK aoors close tne half -barrel, forming wing flaps -when open: Inside each is a small glass rack and .brass-edged shell for sccessories. Three shelves give 'PISHSW V bar barrel rel barrel is:'ifeuflyrS ftifirm.Twitu a top 2 ft." 8 ins. by l ft. 4 jng The bar is avaUs;bto:)in; rrreflHim or antique (blck) oak, fitted with either brass or copper hoop- us, mm uuusuea wun spirit-re-sisting lacquer. K f ', Don't feel free to invite your yourself self yourself to stay overnight with friends when you are lo be in their city on business 'in order to save a hotel bill. If you want to see your friends, check into a hotel first and then get in touch with them. If you don't check in first they may feel obliged to ask you to stay with them whether it is convenient or not. 4 Geneva. Gunmen Rob Swiss Truck Of $327,040 GENEVA UPI) Four gtinmen robbed a bank truck of $327,040 cash here yesterday hi a holdup that was carried out with the pre precision cision precision of a Swish watch. The four men, one of them wearing a woman's nylon stocking over his head as a mask, escaped in a French-built sedan after slug slugging ging slugging an elderjy guard with i sub submachine machine submachine gun. The car was found abandoned la.ter on a road lead leading ing leading to the French border. It was the biggest holdun In Geneva history and recalled the still unsolved theft of $280,000 in gold bullion Jan. 19, 1956. VIGOUR RESTORED, GLANDS MADE, YOUNG If you f4el oM bef or Voul lm or sudor from nsrvo, brain or physical WMkncss, you will And hsipinsss and 1th in a nsw Amorlcsa Xsboratory mothod which rostorss youthful viou and vitality. It Is a slmplo homo trost trost-mont mont trost-mont In t&blst form prepared by an American Laboratory and is vsry sasy to taks. It aots directly on your s;Iandi, nerves and vital organs, and works so well you can see and feel new bodily power and vicour in short time. Because of its natural ac action tion action on (lands and nerves your brain power and memory often Improve notably. ; ,,. ' This sew stand and Virour resterar called Vl-Tsbs has been tested and proved In the United States and Is. now available at aU drucstores here. Oet Vl-Tbe tablets from your druf cist today, put them to teat and se the bif Improvement Take the full bottle, which lasts elrht days. It will make you full of vicour. energy and vitality, and you will feel years younger. The large else which lasts M days Is very soonoaUoal, , ,.j We proudly announce our appointment as exclusive distributors for the famous $Anting (faith LEWIS SERVICE, INC. Main Office: East 26th St. 1-37 P. O. Box 1634, Panama, R. P. 11 v mill Ml M Moby's caSam&n (wiC( uhHok Lactogen WISE MOTHERCRAFT ... the guidance of your own doctor ... and choice of food are vital at this stage of youf btby's development Turn wltn cpnnaeac w nw-"" balanced, all-milk Lactogen for bottle feeding fecpirerneats. LACTOGEN IS CONVENIENT to use, uniform sad lafe snd so essy to digest. It is of great benefit jn ' avoiding and even correcting underweight cooditiona. A mmdM whole tewt1 milk In poweW hna wWi vHomlni A end D and Iron. Ye. mis R wHh hriwwerm, ImIM wrter-end be kHs Is iedrl Hky44 gSset NISTll (CANADA) ITO., Medkd 0rMnM SO Ml " Ad.NL-l-6o(lU0-?cokTUnNirpape 4 ft WEDNESDAY,; FEBRUARY 4, 195 V TBS PAfUMA AHEBJCAIt ,AH INDETENDEMX DAUt ft Social an ValenHneV Jmbrt f ? i v Bar n.nra Stttdsntt -- Obe fint jamboree f Out yer for atudentsof Harnett and Dunn is plumed for Saturday evenin at 7:30 at th American-Legrai Club M' I OCT MDIUW. ,..' All classes will be the interne dlate '.or wive gTup.V Entertain mrmt. refresnmenta and .new party-; emei will be Inkrodoced; Daocera who will be featured' is the ahow are Col Kapinei, John Scott Dale Searle. Hicky Selby, Valerie Spencer Tommy gtarkenburg, Sheila Holcroft; and Andrew Hinjey.: V;; -.-V Jimmy Dunn will aet as maetec of ceremonier andiudjes for the Li: ague A humnor roa oi 24 babies. 14 of them girlie wa born at Gorgaa Hospital during the week, ending at midnight Monday. During the aa me period 195 patients were ad admitted mitted admitted and flM were discharged. The fathers' of the babies are natives, of such widely separated countries as Italy: the Ukraine, Mexico; Puerto Jtico, Canal Zone, Panama, and the United States. Parents of the 'girls are Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Blaek; of Panama Ci City; ty; City; Sgt; and Mrs. J. H. Kelley; of Cocolij Mr; and Mrs. I R Lowe, of, Panama City; Mr and Mrs. E. E.-Urriola; Urriola; E.-Urriola; of Chilibrej'Mr. and Mrs. L. Laguha, of Panama Cityj Pfc. and Mrs. F E. $quire,;of Pana Panama ma Panama City; Sp.4 and Mr, J. R. Crow?!,' of Panama City; Sfc: "and Mrs. R. C. McFall, f Gamboa? Mr and Mrs. t Peterkfn, of Pa Panama; nama; Panama; S-Sgt. and Mrs. J. 0 E Segura, of Panama; Mr and Mrs. W. S. johns6n,' of;Paraiso; and Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Toppin, of Gamboa:'- -'' v- Boys were 16rn to Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Alvarez P., of Panama City; Mr. ana Mrs. A. A Jimenes, of Panama City; SfC and Mrs. R. E Richards, of Fort Kdbbe; Mr. and Mrs. FY Votola, of Gambpa; Cpl. and Mrs. John Zionkofski, of Gamboa? Sfc. and Mrs.-W. Na Na-iareilko;Rof iareilko;Rof Na-iareilko;Rof Fort- Amador; A-lc and Mrs.rD. 0. Opid, of Rodman; A-2c and Mrs. B. C. HA11, of Lo Lo-cona cona Lo-cona Sgt. and Mrs. N R Riser, of Fort K6bbe;,snd Sfc and Mrs. J. P. Chambers,, of Panama. Quiz Team Hangs Losing Coach In Effigy EVANSTON, 111. (UPI)-They take their book-learnin'. seriously at NnrtowternU Mnhdav nieht. he N. U. "auii bowl'.1 ieam, coached by dean of students James. C. McLeod, lost a radio-television battle of brains to Georgetown Vniversityr-its first loss after victories over laiumtna, Pittsburgh and Brown-Pembroke. Yesterday, a papier-mache dum my labeled !McLeod" was iound hanging in -effigy outside the school's administration building. IGNORE ANNIVERSAR Y FRANKFURT, Germany '(UPI) Twenty-six years ago today .Molf Hitler became chancellor of nermany and the: Third Reich v-'s '.born. "TBje'j anniversary was ignored by the German people. 4 will give beauty consultations from 9 a.m, to 12 noon everyday Hill Saturday, Feb. 7 and classes from 3 to 6 pa?;ui to Friday, Feb. 6 Make-your erwi&Q various, contests' will be-JUr. and Mrs. A. Hinley. Parents uf the dance students are invKed p attend. V j t- Dr. Sctdren Hetrnmi -s-Dr. Norman J. Scadron has re turned to the Isthmus after an ex tendd visit in California. ; :: a tnru tarhivh twnn In Rome in A wj " 1845 with the discovery of a sar cophagus containing me weu-jne ...nn nuria hndv of a sublimely beautiful girl is told in a new book "The March of Archeology" which nlarert in ClTCUlBUOn liua week by the Canal Zone library. Beginning wiin uus penoa v w r.nm thf author, traces the world' most exciting and prolong prolonged ed prolonged treasure hunt, a hunt that v is not yet over, whether men search tnr hurioH eold and silver, for the key to a lost language or for scant . f 4.1 I Inns traces oi ctuea y uuiucu ago. y , The complete list of new books and their author's now available at the Canal Zone Library follows: ; Miut.fietian The Road to Emo tional Maturyty, Abrahamsen; De with You. Alex ander; Let's, Get a Divorce; and other Flays, uentiey; iae T 4. nf Michael Tnfld-. Tohn: OUT SMf VO V m.wm. F W Frianrf IimM Jovce. Colum: ArC- i Wild cnsier: me jaarcn w Arrhonloev. Ceram: Mr. Church ill's Secretary. Nel: Water Skking, Pope; The Proud Posses rinm- T.ifp- An IntTOdUC tion to Biology, Simpson; Airways oi Ameriqat xyw, ieuu w. Vining; Wedemeyer Reports, We We-demeyer; demeyer; We-demeyer; On You Own in the Wilderness, Whelen. Fktioiv- Anecdotes of Destiny. Blixefl) Playback, Chandler; Flagg, Andrew, Piece of the Ac Action, tion, Action, Gardner, A Little Sin, Hardy The Visitors. McMinnies; From the Terrace, O'Hara: Beyond Wind River, Savage; Tne secret of Luc a, Silone; Red Queen, White Queen, Treece. ranomo i.lno : civtu.init naiapnppri are book ed to sail from Cristobal for New York Saturday, aboard the Pana Panama. ma. Panama. Liner Cistobal Twelve pas passenger senger passenger are listed for Port au Prin Prince, ce, Prince, Haiti, according to the ad advance vance advance passenger list; Pannl pmnlnvM booked for New York are William A. Hadarits and Mrs. Madalyn C. Shacklett. Haiti-bound Canal employes are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur. J. O'Don O'Don-nell: nell: O'Don-nell: Mr. and Mrs. John E. Ridge, Jr., Mr. and Mrs Frederick C Rose; and Mr. and Mrs. Earl M. Stone. I Jlliss oCaura (Burgos - special representative of appoinment today Telephone 2-26a;r Gehef el Wegflilctft In Teriile Trade t: i- -!,-J ! .CHARtOTTE;- NIC. ; (WJ-The first leneiral wage mcreaUt in the UJ5.S: textile industry -since 1956 apparently will go into. effect this month despite warnings from two big companies that t could be dangerous. A vrf il Smi mi tn niuwtna. Alabama-South, Carolina .segment qt tne inausu? uyi w nounced a general, pay raise ef effective fective effective about Feb. 15. The an an-nouncemenll nouncemenll an-nouncemenll foljowed reporti that the big Cannon Mills Cou would institute! a $1.25 hurly- minimum hv mid-Fehrnarv.' ; The president of the West Point Manufacturing to., J: ju wmer, announced that "an increase in wages -to all wage-hour employes will be made'effecUve with the work week s t a r t i ji g Feb, 15.; West Point ; has; firms tat Lt Lt-Grange," Grange," Lt-Grange," Wfst J Point,j Columbus and Daltoh, Ga.f Anderson, S.C; Lannett, S h a w m u t.i- Langdale, Fairfax and -Rlverview Ala. The amount of the increase was not revealed,, but it was 'expected to be in; theii neighWbitodi of 10 tents' per hour. V lne- wesi, rami aimouDcenieui Was followed quickly by an n n-nouncemeot nouncemeot n-nouncemeot by Callaway Mills of LaGrange, Ga., that ; its wages would, oe nixea, PiPAsfdnnt Arthur B. Kde Jr. said Callaway plants at LaGrange and Mancnester, ia, ana tnose outside Georgia would begin pay paying ing paying 'higher wges ast:Feb. 15. miUs alid announced "that wage increases will bej made' soon, but Criticism of the movement came from the big Burlington In Industries dustries Industries add the 44-plant J. P. Stevens Co. '-- i-;--, Spencer Love, president and chairman of- Burlington, said that while ''we, lire on .record as in sympathy with the desirability of higher wages id the industry it is our feeling tnat this move is both' premature fand precirjitate. tWa J P .t'vn firm, while denying ;' reports; ; bat A would grant wage mcreiws rnxm, iu the industn is cnlv, faced; with serious nlems created by textile- imports:3 . ; "The .company reeis. mat iur iur-ther ther iur-ther : study of the" situation is es es-sential sential es-sential 'at the "present me before aiiy 4lnl"''-aisbBetafJiM?!,Mi kbe reached," It, said. ti ? :, Marlon Blqncias Estranqed ife Goesffl HOLLYWOOD fjjPI) Anns Marlon Brando, remained in Ce dars of Lebanon Mospuai toaay for treatment of sevme : abdominal pains. -'-.-.i-.- The. beautiful actress taken to the "hospital; Satur4ay and ad mttted under the name f Anna Smith. Hospital attendants- said Brando visited her sunaay nig m. She is expecteo to remain no- pitaiizea lor several m p-,uj. Actor Sammy Davis Sued For Divorce SANTA MONICA, Calif. (UP1) Singf-actor Sammy Davis Jr. was sued for divorce yesterday on the ground ottatreme cruelty. In her suit, stager Ldray; White i sought $2,000.imonthly alimony front her husband of one year. Ml cwfci m . I) ' ( Is II s fe New Form-Fitting Spring iLines LONDON, Feb. 4 (UPI) En glish designers in their own cau cau-ious, ious, cau-ious, conservativ way brought back a suggestion -of a waistline and longer skirts to their famous wool suits today. The parade M srpinging suit style Began u tne salons of London s 11 top coutouriers with represent- auvea rrom Mew York manufac turers on hand io buy designs for ueir sprine line. By the time these quiet, almost timeless designs filter down to the copies in our own department store, your spring suit may have: -Slightly idented waistline in. front of the jacket, burying the free-swinging "sack" line. Still loos haneins Jackets in tack. .-rJackets waistline. Natural, sUghtly below ,.vhe unpadded shoulders, skirts a enod two arrow inches below the knee. The same old wrist-freezing three-quarter sleeves. The French went hole hoe awav from the sack line with suits hug hugging ging hugging the waist. But, the English, whose elegant-suits even Paris can't beat, 'vare playing It cool, withiwaists only slightly fitted. As designer Victor Sttebel said, "wo THIS WEEKEND!. . PLAN TO JOIN the for 4 GLORIOUS NIGHTS of PANAMA'S MARDI GRAS THREE ORCHESTRAS FOR CONTINUOUS DANCE MUSIC! A1DA I, the Emerald Queen, and her gay court reign over the fun! SAT. FEB. 7 The colorful Coronation nf ur lovely Queen followed by the Grand Ball. Everyone's out for the beautiful spectacle. Dress formal or semi-formal. SUN. FEB. 3 Ths unique, lovely parade of our national dress polleras. montunor and with prises for those adjudred b est. Enjoy Panama's folk dances and typi typical cal typical music! MON. FEB. t "Mamarracho Nlrht" our "a nythlng-goes" night of wacky fun. Come In a costume (any kind) and be part of It. ,-TTJES. FEB lfl "Comparsas Night" The Grand Wind-up. See the "Comparsas" (troups dressed alike) make then way entrance into the patio. Everyone dances till the "Sardine is Buried" at dawn and the unique Panama Mardl Gras is over for another year. AUINites 11.80 Sat, .8 Men. I2.M Sun. $2.50 Tues. $3.00 NO TABLE reservations. Everyone will be able to ses the fijp! ;. GULF SELECTA gasoSfne gives you mere for your monay... And this is due to the care with which each ingredi ingredient ent ingredient hi Gulf Selecta gasoline is chosen. The care with which this gasoline is made is a guarantee of power. Golf Selecta gives you the longest possible mileage. Gulf Selecta gives you split-second starts. Gulf Selecta lets your car deliver full powefc You no longer have to pay more to get first-quality gasoline. Start sure . start with Gulf Selecta. men never will return to the tight fitting suit jacket" StiebeL one e Princess Mar Mar-tareta' tareta' Mar-tareta' dressmakers, saluted 4he waist in h's eeNectim with half-belts, in the frent enly, of tha same fabric the suit and attached ta it. You casually loop the belt and let the ends bangle, crowded subway "hazard. An audience including movie queens Vivien Leigh and Leila Johnson jammed the Stiebel sa salon lon salon to murmur correctly his calm English approval of timeless En glish tweed suns. Many were worn with chiffon blouses with a bow. at the neck and floppy Gar-bo-type felt that gave the collec collection tion collection a vague 1930 look. In the dress department, Lon London don London designers joined their Paris competitors in the back to the-bust-and-waist campaign. Stie Stie-bel's bel's Stie-bel's afternoon and cocktail dres dresses ses dresses had waists tightly wrapped in cummerbunds. Fitted bodices brought the bosom out of hiding from last year's sack line. HEAVY LOAD CARTHAGE, Miss. (UPI) -Bur glars entered a local bank and carried away 33,000 pennies, po police lice police reported today. Age-Old 'Icicle' Put Under Study ,J CHICAGO (UPI) An age-old "icicle" is under study by scien scientists tists scientists hoping to solve riddles of the past. The ice slab, unearthed in Arc Arctic tic Arctic Greenland some 200 miles east of Thule, is believed to contain samples of air preserve for more than 800 years, scientists st the U.S. Army Snow, Ice, and Per Permafrost mafrost Permafrost Research Establishment here said today. If so, the icicle will reveal how much air contamination has re resulted sulted resulted since the industrial revolu revolution tion revolution and how much snow has fallen every year since 1100 A D. "Scientists who have been mon monitoring itoring monitoring radioactive fallout can go back to the icecaps to measure some things they missed," said Dr. Henri Bader, chief scientist. "We can now reach back into the past for information otherwise un unobtainable." obtainable." unobtainable." "Natural objects which fell with the snow such as volcanic ash, meteorites, pores and actena are perfectly preserved year by year for anyone who is intrestd in them." Raimhri rimv iIms Into anl icecap to remove tne icicie, a core four mcnes in diameter and more than 1,300 feet long. CROWD Gulf Petroleum, S. A. Buy your film now for CARNIVAL KODAK PANAMA LTD. Panam& CARNIVAL MASKS, COSTUMES AND DECORATIONS COME TO OUR STORES: MORRISON'S LEWIS SERVICE CASAZALDO Calidonia Near to the Tivol! Theatre CASA ZALDO Near Santa Ana Plaza INVENTORY SALE MEANS WHAT BUYS! Costume Jewelry M M M From .2 J Chinese Sliver Figurines M From i Elgin-American Cigarrette Case .From ,95 Solid Gold Earrings ..-..:.... From 1.50 Solid Cold Blrthstone Rings From 1.95 Solid Cold Locket & Chain From 3.80 3-pc. Sterling Toddlers Place Setting 4.95; 24-pc. (Service for 6) Flatware S.S. Blade 3.95 Men's Automatio, Waterproof Watch 12.5ft MEN'S WATCHES 1847 ROGERS BROS. 2 62-pc. Service for $ fl (with chest) o9i $59.75 Sweep Second Hand First Love Adoration Luminous Dial Eternally Tours WHAT VALUES ODD LOT JEWELRY PIECES Especially Slashed to Clear! o Col6n CREDIT ?f USUAL! SELECT GROUP DIAMOND JEWELRY Drastically Reduced (Limited Number) GRUEN BENRUS WALTHAM WATCHES Vi PRICE ALSO 50 OFF ON LADIES SWISS DIAMOND WATCHES THE JEWELRY STORE 18-47 CENTRAL STORE (137) TNE PRICE IS RIGHT . AND, YHJ CAN DOUBLE YOUR MONEY WEE IN OUR WEEKLY RAFFLE K r if I r 4 1 i I la. '1 ll 'ft Til .''M..'V'..bV r: JBf PAH AMI &MKU6JUI A m)jrWTpCT BAttT fttWSff Aft ""7 WipNTSnAY. FERRrART 4, !WI I 8 Tivoli Ave. 830 Kilocycle PANAMA 1 ivn Invitation It h our pleasure to invite the public In ge general neral general to our great exhibition of Electric and Gat equipment for domestic and commercial uses, which will be held daily at the COLEGIO JAVIER FAIR At this city during the 4th, 5th and 6th of Ftb. 1959 HOME OF ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES SWKBIP and & 'A VIE a, Central Calidonia Centro Comerciall Girl's BLOUSES & PEDAL PUSHERS' Sets Girl's BLOUSES & SHORT SETS Sices 3 to I Special Price A. M Plain and striped materials. Lovely colors. Boy's COWBOY PANTS with buttons Long laitins. Heavy gabardine. Colors: Black, Tan, Sizes 2 to 11 298 up Girl's SKIRTS Mexican Hand Printed Ideal For Carnival Beautiful designs, guaranteed washable Sizes 4 to 14 up SPECIAL OFFER FOR THE CARNIVAL FESTIVITIES Ladies' BLOUSE ft TORERO SETS Striped and Multicolor Blomea. Gabardine. panU. Size 10 to II c98 fl09 LADIES' BLOUSES Newoat, boat buya In top top-quality quality top-quality fabric. The widest assortment in cotton, and Butcher linen, lace trimmed or printed. 3 "0.48 LADIES' HEAD CLIP HANDKERCHIEF Trimmed with flower, a variety in all color. .4868-88 VLWAYS BUY AND SAVE AT ALDENS FASHIONS r J I. 1 I Tels. 2-0461-2-0465 Presents TIVOLI TRAVEL CARAVAN "A MUSICAL TRAVELOGUE" DAILY MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 6 P.M. with Dave Constable as narrator M Your Community Network HOG 1090 Kilocyelaa COLON ftSXEftB G0CJD Off (TDOCB -Hi v r v f ft A y$ t tk I i A--f c tew 111 fck .ZIZML,, flQ DAIUDHW II1CTAI I ATIAI1 ,n tn lpriaiivt oartmony Saturday avanlng, naw of floor forth Pedro Migual KAIllDUlf llOIALLAIIUff Aasarnbly of tha Ordar of Rainbow for Olrla war Inatallad at tha Ancon Ma- aonic Tampl. Picturad in tha baok roWi from laft ara Judy Pannlnrtorl. Pattv Elloh. Joan Doharty, Aloha Shartfoakv. Nanoy Watotor, Danialla Hamad, fllan Wilson Jeyci Harrlng, Bayarly PhilllpliJlii tha middl row, from left, ara Mary Lynn Stoaklay, Carol Zalniek, lavorly Iryaiit, Judy Brown, Miry Kay JHdw and Diana Hoanka. Front row, from laft, Carolyn Holgaraan, Barbara Bonglornl, 3u Thomas and Patty Davis. CARNIVAL QUEEN Mis Vicky Almfngiiir, lft, Carnival Quaen for tha Bal Balboa boa Balboa YMCA, ia shown with last year' Carnival Quaan Miss Hayda Jaan 8l at tha coronation caramony at tha "Y" Saturday avaning. (Army Photo). r in 1- Trf E 4 I ' t ist !J-.' ENTERTAINERS After tha Carnival coronation earameny at tha Balboa "Y," Joaa Carloa Dial and Cacilia Pinzon la Chavalita antartain ad guaats with an exhibition of traditional Panamanian dance. (Army Photo). mo s'n.,' v- st', ' life I r I I V I r: t- : Yf 1 SF"' A r :v . t r'VV VTA Vis'." 1 TW V1 A V, ' ; itiWf will! .v;'f,:- 4 WEDNESDAY,, rEBRUAKT. U M5 -1 -p TM PANAMA- AMX&tCAN AN IXBEPENBtNt .DAILY' JfEWfPAWJI fAGI KTCI Vibrant Colon, Gay Detigng in the latett Sportwear Fa$hhn$ just arrived and waiting ju$t for you. """'" 1 111 '" ii m ii ii nii.iiii.ii MM miifc immi inimii t,m4ir -M iliPlliill fpliiil fllpilll 'PI v:i; i viiii ii:M- lii11 .. ii J i'iii-i ff r llKi:, T( fillli J i y :; J 1 ' ... v .ii .. inn .i .. .i )., .mum iWiilWlirwiOTWIW DCrCDTIIJ III1C 8tudht rprintat(vi from Bolivia trt grfttid at a raooption held racantly In honor KCWCrllUn LlNC f 0f naw atudanta to tha U.S. Army Caribbaaif 6ohool. Shown In the receiving Ifno ar MaJ. HaroW I. Jonaa, aecnttry of tha USARCARIB Sehoo I, Col Cecil Himaa, commandant of tha USARCARIB School, Mra. Ruth Hlmaa, Brig. Can. Milton L. Ogdan, da puty commanding genaraf DSAftCARIB, Mrs. Og'den, Brig.' Qen. Jamaa Coutta,. ohiaf of etaff, Caribbean oommand, Mra. Coutta, Ut. Col, Philip M. Judson; assietant commandant of tha aohool and Mra. Judaon. "1' (Army Photo) i 1 f v ' 4-" 1 SA X f f a! i Jv i ' ft v 1 If - - Pl'" I W l 'Hi"'! 11 J i tfh 1 Ale; H '1 , j j v itl 4.J 1 ,r&5i'! 4 I 1 1 I J I" A' J. f ' 1 1 ti j 't 1 Jt 1 '-j y' -, 3 --3 1,1 it i fit I Iff fc !l if rfI Iff 4i 4 I rrr 1 1 'I i f 1 I r sVrW !VA"f Desert Cloth to quench your thirst... for that extra apeelal Capri in the toft toft-eat eat toft-eat natural tone. The multl atrlpe eleeveless blouie puta any Shiek'e tent to ahame and pope ita pattern Into tha ouff en the pant, which can be worn up of down. The straw hat It at home on any island or mainland. Sixes 10-18. Hati ona aiza only. At Illustrated. MAIN STORE No. 12-00 Central Are. Phone 2-177S BRANCH WOW No. 1M0 Tirol! Ave. Phono t-mt Alimir tuc riiCCTC 8tudn" from 17 different Latin American countrlea were welcomed at a rtceptlon AMONG THE (jUCdTj given in their honor rsctntly at For GulioH Officars Club by Col. Cecil Hlmes, com commandant mandant commandant of the U.S. Army Caribbean 8chool and Mra. Hlmes. Guestsfrom ief are Lt. Jose Oscar Agullarlar M., El Salvador; Maj.v Alajandro Fiallos, El Salvadoi; Col. John F. SchmlafzeVi ;C.3?;.MIss Miriam Ochoa; Col. Salvador Ochoa,; Coneul of El Salvador In Colon; Lt. Baltaiar Lopex C. from El Salvador and Lt. Carlos Culllermo tolombanl from El Salvador. (Army Photo) : 1 mmmmmi o an X r-w M- a in s', v.v : .. ,V' I! Ii s j Ml 'n yi ti? m! f s.i,ri.- :,; V ; lilliil'iliiil ffwiii i k im NOURISH yT i) ii Jiiiy a. 1 iv is i II IV rC K ft J II fill II II Xk o-' J?mm o vs. VITAMINS A T lilpilf4i;L Mryi i I r ;MSfi d,str,butoR! 11 t &IJ CAMILO A. PORRAS A migmm1 :: TEL. 3-6411 A A''-- iii i J i S .. I i.... ,sl. J.. !....'. ft.T . A A & rcrCDDATlM' Tha terraca of the International Hotel ,waa the acona of a party glvan by. Inooenolo LtLtbKAIINVl Callndo, rtewly-named as Panama's Comptroller Caneral by the National, Assembly. Pictured with the hoat ara Enrique MacCdullpugh, Deputy Comptroller General, Mario da Dlago, manager of the Insti Institute tute Institute for Econbmlo Development, Victor C. Urrutla, Robarto Haurtamattr, outgoing Comptroller Cenaral, and Adolfo Quelquejau. s - 1 The sewing machine with the "thousand hands" magic touch. "BORLETTI" is a tradition In every woman's heme..; you ean execute all kinds of em em-broidery broidery em-broidery and sewing work with tha "Borlattr... Tha most modern sewing machine produced In Italy. II V. I I J ,mtwm ,;mm in ..miMiiiiii""'-'!-'' i i 1 H c 1 DISTRIBUTORS! CUGDCLIK D A 10 E)0AC31L o ' tut house! or linoleums, ucture frames, mirrors and glass NEXl CENTRAL AVE., IT TO THE CECniA THEATER. THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT AUT NEWSPAPEB .... wy. , WEDNESDAY JXRKC4LET Cisill Carta iea Makes filial 'peance 1 M FAGt HGHT t jf i $ -'1. I 1'' ii tl If if Crowds Will Have Without Baseball Scorecards NEW YORK, Feb. 4-(UPI)-It will be tough for the local crowds to tell 'em apart without a score score-card card score-card in baseball's training camp this spring. More than 30 established ma)or leaguers already have swapped uniforms in baseball's annual came of "musical chairs' with the hottest part of the trading sea season son season still to come. The St. Louis Cardinals are leading both leagues as a result of picking up eight players in deals, including manager Solly Hemus who moved over from the Phillies to pinch-hit as well as master master-Bind. Bind. master-Bind. . It's likely, however, that FranK Lane of Cleveland has not yet be begun gun begun to fight. Trader Frank, who has made a few spectacular moves already, likes to look 'em over in the spring before dealing in whole wholesale sale wholesale lots. Even so, the turnover has been fairly impressive and these are a a-mong mong a-mong the "new faces" of 1959: Jimmy Piersall, long-time Bos Boston ton Boston Red Sox outfielder, moved over to Cleveland and Billy Mar Martin tin Martin switched to Cleveland along with pitcher Al Cicotte from De Detroit. troit. Detroit. Service Center Theatres TONIGHT BALBOA 6:15 & 8:25 Robert Ryan, Aldo Ray "RftTVS LITTLE ACRE" (Strictly- adult fare) COCO SOLO Virginia McKenna Peter Finch "A TOWN LIKE ALICE" ftlARLft HTS. 7;0 Frank Lovetoy Barbara Hale THE COUNTRY HUSBAMJ GAMBOA 7:8 Randolph Scott DECISION AT SUNDOWN" MARGARITA 7:00 Mala Powers James Best "MAN ON THE PROWL" PARAISO 7:00 Forrest Tucker Allison Hayes "COUNTERPLOT" SANTA CRUZ 1:01 "SEVEN GUNS TO MESA "THE 'STRANGER" CAMP BIESD 7:00 Dana Andrews. Linda Darnell "ZERO HOUR" In VistaVislori! CAPITOLIO a.35 0.20 HELL'S FIVE HOURS Stephen MacNally - Also HONG KONG AFFAIR R. Kelley l"JE MAKE YOUR smooth tires V GOODYEAR W't Oft SINCE OPENING We Hav Retreaded and Repaired MORE THAN 250,000 TIRES (on quarter of a million) MORE PIOPU THE WORLD OVER RIDE ON GOODYEAR TIRES THAN ON ANY OTHER MAKE GOODYEAR de PANAMA, Si. Calle Jeronimo de la Ossa No. 13-33 Telefono 2-0754 Ray Narleski and Don Mossi, star Cleveland relievers, will be working for Detroit. So will Ed Eddie die Eddie Yost and Rocky Bridges, vet veteran eran veteran infielders from Washington. San Francisco added Jack San San-ford ford San-ford of the Phillies and Billy Muf Muffin fin Muffin of the Cardinals, both pitchers. Los Angeles presents Wally Moon of the Cardinals and Rip Repulski from the Phils. Cincinnati has three ex -Cards-outfielder Del Ennis, pitcher Bob Mabe and infielder Eddie Kasko. And last weekend the Redlegs got homer hitting Frank Thomas, out outfielders fielders outfielders John Powers and Jim Pendleton and pitcher Whammy Douglas from the Pittsburgh Pi Pirates rates Pirates in exchange for catcher Smokey Burgess, infielder JJon Hoak and pitcher Harvey maaix. The Phillies acquired pitchtr Ruban Gpmex and catcher Valr my Thomas from tho Giants for Sanford and added infielder Sparkie Anderson from Los An Angeles. geles. Angeles. Balboa By VICTOR M. CAREW It appears as if Hector Lopez' bid for the Panama ,s triple crown will not be successful. Lopez picked up one hit in his last game Monday night against Marl boro s Leonarao rergusuii u four trips, giving mm a toiai oi 51 hits in 132 trips. His average dropped from .391 tn 3Rfi and he has lust IWO game', left in which to produce all ot tne hits that he needs in order to overcome Les. Peden's well-rested Qfi avpraee. There seems to be some confusion on just what Lo pez' average is, but until me oi oi-ficial ficial oi-ficial release is available no one can be sure. Although I don't go along with a player winning a oamng- uuc on the bench, as could be the case with Peden, it should Be pointed out for the benefit of the puDiic that Peden is sitting it out chiefly because his ankle is not yet heal healed. ed. healed. He was forced to remain in the lineup despite his swollen ankie until the pennant issue was settled Ibecause his understudy, Rainon away Trorti 'iMongint to this league. Now that the race is over and he has to go to Caracas it is only just that he rest his leg suf ficiently in order for him to DC in eood physical shape during the Series. One remaining factor that might wind up to Lopez' advant- T IV OLI VICTORIA 0.25 BANK 125.00 THE GREAT SIOUX UPRISING Jeff Chandler DRUMS ACROSS THE RIVER Audle Murphy 0.15 WAR ARROW Jeff Chandler - Also BLACK HORSE . CANYON J, MacRea EVERY YEAR A BETTER PRODUCT NEW MOLDS ALL SIZES ALL TYPES (E,dD(D)nDEAlS Di fficulfy Vic Wertz, at Cleveland last year, is with the Red Sox. Boston also picked up pitcher Babe Mo Mo-ford ford Mo-ford from Detroit, outfielder Jim Busby from Washington. Infielders Ren Bertoia and Ron Samford of Detroit went to Wash Washington ington Washington in the deal for Yost and Bridges. Baltimore added Chico Carrasquel from Kansas City, Bob Bobby by Bobby Avila from the Indians, Billy Klaus from Boston and ex-major leaguer Jim Finigan from the mi minors. nors. minors. . The game of musical chairs even extended to the front-office this winter. When assistant Lee MacPhail of the Yankees took over at Balti Baltimore more Baltimore things began to hum. The Yankees, who needed an assistant, nailed Roy Hamey from the Phil Phillies. lies. Phillies. The Phillies took on John Quinn from the Braves. The Braves signed John McHale of the Tigers. The Tigers, at last report, still were looking. Brewings age is the fact that Peden might not quality for the batting championship because he might not have the required min.mum number of trips to the plate. In the homerun battle the. Brewers' secondsacker, with eight is now trailing Marlboro's Bill Gabler, who has nine. Lopez will have the advantage of having two games left to play while Gabler played his final game last night. Only in the runs-batted-in depart department ment department does it seem certain that (Lopez will have nothing to worry about. His total ot 34 runs Daueu in will stand up as tops. Long after the players of this 1958-1958 season are back in tne United States with their respective teams, local sportwriters as well as other enthusiasts win oe cr ducting p o s t-mortem examina tions to determine tne cause or causes of the failures of Marl Marlboro, boro, Marlboro, Carta Vieja and Cerveza Balboa. Marlboro's second-place finish is the biggest surprise of the sea season son season and Cerveza Balboa's cellar position is the biggest disappoint disappointment. ment. disappointment. i On '104 V ;bj.conf$ttwsei in tnese autopsies-js we auRpuvwcu aement of the fact that the Cham pion Kings played better: ball than the others.-They were a lot more aggressive, they came through with the run-scoring hits when they were needed most, and theii pitching was good. RIO 0.25 Golden Prize $500.00 BANK NITE SABU - Also: FINGER MAN s-TODAY Yankees to Meet Cerveza Balboa; Bill Slack Goes Route to Beat Marlboro The Carta Vieja Yankees, who have, already clmched third place in the Panama Pro League race, will make their final appearance of the season to tonight night tonight gaainst the cellar-dwelling Cerveza Balboa Beermen. Carta Vieja righthander Bill Slack, the relief artist who may replace ace lefthander Dick .Lueb .Lueb-;e ;e .Lueb-;e on the Kings' hurling staff in "aracas during the coming Carib Carib-ean ean Carib-ean Series, had a good workout inder his belt today following his route-going 8-5 win over the Marl Marlboro boro Marlboro Smokers last night. Luebke, whose brilliant 10-1 rec ord makes him the pitcher with far the best won-lost percentage ;n the loop, will pitch only during the first game of the classic on Feb. 10, because he has to leave Venezuela the next day to be in the U.S. in time to enter the arm ed services Feb. 14. The Panama League. will make a request to the Caribbean Con federation at its, inaugural confer conference ence conference Feb. 9 that Slack be allowed to take Luebke's place on the team. The Kings are not ntitltd to us any player who does not ae 1 1 i i i i i ... tually belong, to bolstor its squad; but in view of tho unu PANAMA PROFESSIONAL LEAGUE iTARTINI Teams K M CV CB W L Pet. GB Kings x 8 6 9 23 12 .657 Marlbfiro 4 x 7 8 19 17 .528 4J Carta Vieja ....6 5 x 5v 16 19 .457 7 Cerveza Balboa 2 4 6 x 12 22 .353 10 Total ...12 17 19 22 70 70 TONIGHT'S GAME At Plympic Stadium: Carta Vieja (Frederick 1-1) vs. Cerveza Balboa (Brown 1-6) LAST NIGHT'S RESULT At Olympic Stadium: Carta Vieja 8, Marlboro 5 Pacific Softball Loop Standings Unisport Abernathy 0 1.000 Jantzen Pan Liquido Ambassadors Mariners .667 .625 .?j0 .000 Next Games - Mariners vs Feb. 4 Ambas- sadors. Feb. 5 Abernathy vs Jant Jantzen. zen. Jantzen. Feb. 6 Mariners vs Pan Li Liquido. quido. Liquido. Slack Tightens Up Carta Vieja Bartirome, lb Davalillo, 2b Wilhelm, ss Peeples, If . Kern, cf . Schmidt, rf Patton, c . Clark, 3b . Slack, p . AB . 4 . 5 . 3 . 4 . 5 . 5 . 4 . 4 . 4 Totals 38 8 11 27 7 Marlboro Napoleon, rf . 5 1 Brathwaite, 2b ... 4 0 Altman, If 4 0 Gabler, lb Bernard, ss Ferguson . Cobos, c . Flynn, c . Mitchell, cf Houradau, 3b Milo, p . . Hardison . Totals 36 5 10 27 6 Ferguson grounded out for Ber nard in, 9th. Hardjson homered for Milo 9th. Score By Innings Carta Vieja 004 010 102- 11 Marlboro 000 000 0235 10 in SUMMARY Errors: Wilhelm, Altman, Gabler 2, Clark. Runs batted in: Peeples, Wilhelm, Na Napoleon, poleon, Napoleon, Altman, Kern 3, Hardison 2 Earned runs: Carta Vieia 6, Marlboro 5. Two base hits: Kern 2. Altman 2, JMapleon, Mitchell. Home runs: Wilhelm, Hardison. Stolen base: Houradau. Wild pitch: Milo 2, Slack Struckout: By Milo 4, Slack 8. Bage on balls: Off Milo 3. Left on base: Carta Vieja 7: Marlboro 5. Winning pitcher: Slack (3 2). Losing pitcher: Milo (7-4). Umpires: Hinds, Thornton, Corrigan. Attendance: 260. Time of game: 1:56 sual circumstance concerning Luebke it is boliovod an ex exception ception exception will b mdr Last night Slack picked up his third victory against two setbacks while giving up ten hits, one of which was a ninth-inning, two-run homer by a pinchmtter pitcher Jim Hardison. Spider Wilhelm hit a solo roundtnpper for the Yan Yankees kees Yankees in the seventh frame. The Yankees had given Slack a 6-0 lead up to the eighth inning but the Smokers spoiled his bid for a shutout when they plated their first two markers in the bottom of eighth. Carta Vieja scored two more tallies in the top of the ninth to increase its margin to 8-2 and Marlboro pushed across the three runs in the last half of the same inning for the final 8-5 score. Boh Milo, who permitted 11 safeties, was the loser to make his record 7-4. The Beermen and the Kings play tomorrow night in the finale. ABERNATHY WIN STREAK AT SEVEN Without a loss so far, Aberna thy Unisport s win streak hit sev en games Friday when tney knock Pan Liquido third place with a 6-to-5 win. Two of the league's best pitch ers chucked the' distance. Al Aus- mus was the winner for Unisport and McNair Lane, Pan Liquido's ace, the loser for the third time against Unisport. A two-run single by Hooper in the sixth gave the Unisporters a lie score against Sam Catlett's Beermen but Trout's single and McGlade's interference accounted for Abernathy's extra winning tal tally. ly. tally. A supporting home-run for A A-bernathy bernathy A-bernathy came off the bat of Al Husted in the second inning to deep rightpcenter. Ausmus struck-out eight Beer Beermen men Beermen to increase his average as Lane took t,wo rivals. The box Abernathy Taht Woodruff Woods Helzinger Ausmus Jones Husted Hooper Trout. Chance Totals score: Unisport AB 3 1 3 4 3 3 2 3 0 3 0 3 0 28 8 7 Pan Liquido McArthur Carlin, Bill 1 Kosik AB 3 4 3 4 3 3 3 3' Nesbitt Ostrea Lane McGlade Morales Loubaugh Totals 29 5( 5 EAGLES SIGN GRIBOSKI PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Jim Griboski, a-6-9, 295-pound tackle with sandlot experience has been signed by the Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League The young eiartt from nearby Phoenixville, Pa., is believed to be the biggest player in the ,NJfL. TODAr-ENCANTO-35-20 TRIPLE ATTRACTION I. "ESCAPADE IN JAPAN" "MAN IN THE ROAD" "CORONATION OF POPE JOHN XXIII" " ovie Highlights Oj$ Qpm By TED WILBIR "If; anyone asks vou about that Hollywood looking e h a r a e t e r with his cap turned around like an oia-ame movie director, tell them he's not .directing, but he is tak ing;' : Thu was George Hall, Special Kepresentttive of the USPGA and Supervisor of the Caribbean Golf Tour speaking '(George is also Chairman of the PGA Magazine committee, which publishes "PGA Professional Golfer', the of ficial' monthly magazine of the Professional Golfers' Association of America.) "Taking what?"- I inquired. "1 see Johnny Mahoney of Warwick, R. I. standing" there with a movie camera. I know he's one of the ten young pros from the U.S. who is paying his Own expense on this tour. So what does he do? Take pictures to- defray 'some of his expenses?" i 'Well," George' continued, "It's wni mignt be a short story, but we hope it will be a long one. Johnny is .the Vice Chairman of ine jrtrAs Teaching Committee, and is making this trip as a pro play player. er. player. 'In addition, under the aiisniri of the PGA, he is taking pictures ot eacn or tne tourneys here in ranama, in Valencia, Venezuela, in Kingston, Jamaica, and in San Juan, ruerto Rico. These pictures are in color too. Actually, whilp Hp is possibly most interested in tak ing iotos or tfte golf play, he is also very interested in taking pic pictures tures pictures of the locale, such as exist in great quantity here in Panama. Pictures of the cathedral at Pa Panama nama Panama Viejo, the pat arch, Las Bo Bo-vedas, vedas, Bo-vedas, the Plaza de Francis the new Palacio Nacional, and dozens of t)ther places ahve been taken, as well as pictures of the people going to and from workshops, cars, hotels, etcetera." "But what is he eoine tn rin all these 'pictures.' Georee" Are they just for the- PGA records or something?" I asked. No, but that is the BIO M he replied. 'As I said, he is tak ing thes, color pictures under the auspices of the PGA. After this Canbben tour, we will have the films edited, and made up in a set for each country, and tournament. We will then, as I have tentative- auaugeu ii mane several co pies ot each film and distribute them to all the clubs possible in the States, through sectional and regional associations." "We hope in this way," he con con-tnuea, tnuea, con-tnuea, "to stimulate a, lot of the young pros to matte this CariDbean tour.- i tam firmiy ot tne belief tnat the association oi our younger players witn tne people ot inese canoDen countries is one ot tne ways we can Dest improve our iciauuus. wun 'tnem, ana not tnrougrt' a lot of papers;' '. besides, Hail said, "there are dozens of goners in each coun u-y wno neeo. summation, and who uccu iicip. uur young pioa, ,u- iu J"ai iuayius, will fcet 10 meet uiese young cariooeu gof ers anu can ueip them witn uieir gou game, as well as meet tneu sociauy. in wis manner, we get ueip. mai Dnngs up another point. 'i "c wryiy, "we trom Uie unueu states can do niucn nere, uu in mese otnercountries tnat we snouiu mae a real, nonesi to-gooouness exiort 10 uo it. bports, 01 course, is proDaDiy one- ot tne oest ways, ana naturally, i tee: tnat gou is tne Desi. oecause wnne mi it a spectator snnrr it muot . -IT iui. ui peopie a cnance to mmgie wnn all oi our youne pros, j.uki. tninK in previous years you naa ten or tweive ot tne oest pros in me biates here. Tnis year we aave 37! Tnat means tnrte times as many golfers get to meet 37 times as many peopie. in aaaition, tnis year we startea the amateurs play mg witn tne proiessionats some ming we naven't done here be- lore. i tnink that is one of the linest ways we can Ueip tne ta- riDDen goiters, and I intend to im pr6ve on it next year." "Another thing and very im important," portant," important," Hall said, "fae showing or. these pictures and eacn one win De tun length, about each country the snowing of these nims arouna all the ciubs in tnp United States will helD. a lot ot people unaerstand that tnese places are not just a lot ot thatcneu hus. (Which of course is not alwavs their lauit, he noted) 1 personally believe that the showing of the golf tournament of Panama, for exam ple, will be of great interest to goffers. The showing of pictures of Panama and its suburb, the beautiful homes, the old city, and the like, in addition, will add ereat- ly to the interest of these people. h mignt resuu in good tourist busi business, ness, business, too!" he added, with a laugh. "Yeah, then you and Mahoney can take a cut from Elton Todd." I said. "Anyway," Hall continued, 'John TIVOLI GUEST HOUSE SAT. FEB. 7 O DINNER 6 to 9- REGULAR PRICES o DANCE 8 to 1 O I I'P ,iiHiM'SSj.i J mini l p i .m m )sju-mrv''tm 1 1- i -' K i tV w.. J i F " " f , . f S i x t 1 f i i : v ; rS nf t 1 "' f i ' i w GETTING OUT OF THE ROUGH Panama Open .champion Pete Cooper shoots from the f'rough" onto the 17th green for ' a birdie to virtually wrap up the gram Cup. Two-time lormer champion Booerto Devicenzo,. ; who along with defending champion Bob Watson played ia" the same group with the new champ, studies the position of; hte ball while awaiting his turn. ny is taking aa tnese pictures, and we hope to have tnem printea in time for you to have them here soon. Paul Moran 1 believe ne s the Secretary of, the Panama Golf Association .asked me just this morning about getting golf pictures from the PGA, and this will be the very best we can lurmsn. 1 nave great Jiooes for thisadea. and we ;want .you to' publicize them when you get tnem. ti possioie, get tnem in some of the local theatres, so that the people here can see what we have done about their country in film and I. guarantee you that everything we show will be of great credit to Panama!" A couple Of things were left out of the .reporting of the tourna tournament ment tournament naturally .enough cine of which was that Panama's own Johnny MacMurray flipped in an eagle 3 on the 497 yard No. 3 hole on Friday morning, Johnny, who finished in the fifth amateur slot with 305, was mighty proud of his feat, since it was the only eagle recorded on No. 3 in the tourna ment. Our popular Don Roberto, after three rounds of 69-73-69, had his troubles on Sunday. He was press ing to get ahead of Finsterwald and Vossler, who were tied with him in fourth place with 211, and to disclpdge Bob Watson in third place. Playing with Cooper and Watson, he took a double bogey 6 -on the 352 yard No. 2 (from the back tee), but picked, up a stroke by a birdie on No. 3. He bogeye.d No.. 4, birdied No. 5, parred Nos 6, 7, 8 and 9 for a l over-par 37, He started out with a venge ftnee on Nq. 10, but got a bogey 5. When his tee shot on. the par 3, 185-yard No. 11 fell short of the green, he was intensely disgust ed. Walking up to his ball, he did something he had not done in se seven ven seven years here. He was so angry that he threw his club to the grou on the slope of No. 11, but quick quickly ly quickly recovered it. Poor Don Rober Roberto! to! Roberto! He's so popular that if he threw a club into the bashes, he'd still be as popular. "I go home now," he said later. "I play very poor golf. I go home and learn how to play." That was-the little boy coming out. He knows, deep down inside, that the people of Pa Panama nama Panama and the Canal Zone have- a great affection for him our two two-time, time, two-time, course-bustin' champion, who can come back to Panama .any time he wants, where it is a dis distinct tinct distinct pleasure to see him. It is interesting to note that four MUSIC BY AMATO NO COVER $10,000 tournmaent' and Sea- of the young pros who are givicf generously of their time and moi '' ney to make the Caribbean tour on their own, came into a little ef"' the prize money. Joe Moore, Jr., of White Plains, N.Y., was 9th with a 78-70-72-69 for 289, icHiite an improvement after that windy firsr"' day!); Tommy Strafaci of Brodsv" lyn was 14th with 70-75-74-74 29 J.' We might mention' here, too, that1 A mis is wnere our popular b b torm ,er Panama Open "(1947) and Isth-' mian Amateur Champion Dr. Herb Mitten rode home to take the 1959 Amateur Championship of ..the PSmmmJ nag upen. vAnd: with, the same -! score he made in.l947i" fYes." saSl 5L Hero, Dut the course was no? nearly as difficult asit-,issnow Sejveral of the holesafe tongpx: ana nave Deen matte par 4 in stead of 3's." So. he worked hard. er, but he is another two-Urn champion like Don Roberto. Getting back to the pro winners, Bob Hamrich, of Champaign, Illi nois slipped into a tie for 15th place in the prize money with none" none"-less less none"-less than Herman Barron, one-time.. ; Tam O'Shanter World Champion, and Henry Castillo of Tampa. Bob had 73-71-75-76 for 294. Following him, in a tie for 20th, was BiU Erfurth, playing out of the Lincoln Lincoln-shire shire Lincoln-shire C. C. at Crete Illinois, about w mnes soutn of Chicatfo. Thjfc i these four won helps stimulate oth- i.,V, ers, ana we nope they'll all come" back next year! u ; X-RAYS FOR DUCKS WASHINGTON (UPI)-The In- terior Department library has quired an -intriguing circular front : the Wild Life Commission of Aus--im tralia. It is entitled "free chest X- ray fors ducks." ,, DRIVE-IN ' TOrAY POPULAR NIGHT! S1.10 PER CAR! Richard Conte, in "THE RAIDERS" In TECHNICOLOR 1 TOMORROW John Smith . , Fay Spain, in ".. i THE CROOKED CIRCLE, CHARGE t'J . x: THE fANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NIwSPAPEB not mm Cristobal High Wins Again; Meets Bells Fotifir&tialfcMlei ;DXESDAT, FEBRUARY 4, 1959 w, Edrtori CONRADO 8ARCEANT ' k' 'I - I ' A 'ill RnftlPHANT RETURN Bright Spur hits the finish line a ecK rahead ot. verginamt w mate gooo uuuuicaouuiu v nrtn Wdintirin: that tils classy Irish colt, would return to lie &cs a winner1 despite a layoff of several months. Veteran ristfen:ReboIledo jrode Bright spur wnue Jose wuo n it up on Verglnaux. "The angle tnat tne picture was tasen ai ves th impression" that the ivictory 'margin was more than u(ldpgs:Overpover JC 11-1 etiind Jeff Kline's 6-Hitter he Bulidog '6f Biloa High tool proved once again that they re in a, class by ; themselves ere Scholastic baseball is cOh- During each of -Junior College's tnes o fat this, season J. C haS pwn Improvement in some phase the game,, unfortunately ,ior ryumean improvemem in pnc fcect of the game fttcurs a re- ssion appears in some otner tse af the game, lie JC outfield showed improve- nt in the person of Ricky Casi- neophyte outfielder, wno maae eral spectacular catches and ounted for the only J.C. RBI the came.. College also looked Iter in the base-on-balls depart- nt.giving up only three tree pses me ureen ana mu U nmiserably defensively, exe- injspven errors. In ttie Bulldog side of the ledg- wemust credit eleven big rots, ludine extra base blows by Migaber and French. Schwartz- k led the bus anacK wiui z 101 itn Lem jurxiana gewn im ffiflin nicked uo: his second tory: over the Peyils giving up six hits and holding on to a shut shutout out shutout until the final frame. No JC batter was able to get more than one bait hit. Spurlbck, Harley, Trimble, Crawford,' Casi Casi-ra ra Casi-ra and Oakley each hit safely one time. The box scorv BHS E AB R H 0 A Morris ..... 2 2 1 1 5 1 Ratheeber 5th .. 0 2 1J1 1 1 Engelke . . .04 t 2 0 0 Ammirati 0 4 2 2 4 3 Kirkland .....0 3 0 2 3 0 Ness 0 3 1 1 2 0 Pajak 5th .... 0 1 0 0 2 1 French 0 3 0 1 1 0 Pearl 5th .... 0 1 0 0 1 0 Schwarzrock ... 0 2 2 0 2 0 Klipper 0 3 '2 1 0 1 Kline 03000 1 JC Pederson .... 1 0 0 0 1 2 Mead .130010 Oakley 13 0 10 3 Trimble ..... 1 3 0 1 0 2 Crawford ....031180 Harley ..... 0 2 0 1 1 0 Perry 6th . ,r 0 1 0 0 0 0 Snurlock . ... 1 3 0 100 Gibson . . 2 2 0 0 6 0 Casira .. . 0 3,0 1 4 0 teas' ? hejos lomas Yesterday's Results Palomas 11, Ocelots 10 ;;. Today's Came -"Macaws vs Pumas n an exciting game played yes yes-day day yes-day the Palomas team defeated Ocelots team to the tune of 11 10 runs in six innings. V. Ashton went all the way on mound for the Faiomas anp hie out victorious anK i brilliant play by catcher rrea Hdldston who caught the center Ider Jack Devero's throw to put RoJT Bettis at the plate, hief umpire .Andres Alonso's ision was the cause for a big cussion. Chief Barreton, man- STANDING OF tf AM$ 5 3 ims slots -icQi caws Pet. .714 .667 .667 .429 .333 .250 fft To Broadcast night's Kobfe syton Ball Game Thf baseball game between Mart Kebbe Regulars and the frt.'Clayton Cavaliers, schedul scheduler er scheduler 7 p.m. tonight will be oaflcast ever cpn Rjdie bmes Pattnon ana m-sgr. ki ki-rl rl ki-rl D. Nordqulit of the CFN Lff will provide the play-by- y account and color. llMrtUNCE CARLING OPEM CLyELAND, Ohio (UP11 This pr s uarung opeu juu wmu- nt jyill be held here Aug.. 6-B Dart of the Cleveland Seaway lar Celebration. The tourney last i j field in Cleveland m law. is wear's event will be .played ler the Seneca public golf tourse. ager of the Ocelots, protested, but in our opinion the umpire was cor rect in his judgment. Ocelots scored five runs in the first inning starting with a dou ble by Gary Anderson and a home run with bases loaded by- Mike Dubbs. But the Palomas team re retaliated taliated retaliated with six runs without a single hit. Eight Palomas' men were walked in that inning. with the score at 8 to 6 in the fourth inning, Palomas added four more runs with hits by.Beatwrteht Huddleston, Borg and C. Brad- shaw. Jack Devore scored the decisive run in the fifth. Bettis. Ocelots' star sitcher. was the loser of the game. The box score: Ocelots Ab R H L. French, ss-2b 3 3 2 Rndy cf-p-cf ..4 1 2 W. French, p-ss 2 0 0 Bettis, If-p .22 2 G. Anderson, lb 4 1 1 M. Dubbs, c ,.3 2 2 A. Anderson. 2b-3b 2 0 1 T. Albritton, 3b-cf-lf .. ..2 1 0 Mosses, it Z 0 0 Totals 24 10 10 Palomas Devore J., cf . .. .. ..I Boatwright, ss 1 Huddleston, c B. Browder, lb 3 Berg S. 3b W, Ashton, p Bradshaw C. Boostrom, If Bradshaw D., Totals 2b Big: Game Tomorrow At ML Hope of . Standings Atlantie Twilight Teams Cristobal High Powells BeUs CHS-Alumni Baseball W L.Pct. 4 1 4 2 2 3 1 i .800 d67 400 .167 Monday's Results Cristobal High 10 Alumni I Tomorrow's Game Bells vs CHS By TR IVOR SIMONS The first half title of the Atlantic Twilight League came within sight of the rampaging Tigeis Monday night at Mount Hope Stadium, but the league leaders had td come from behind twice to score their 10 to 8 win over Alum ni and place., the first half deci sion squarely on the outcome of tomorrow night's game with Bells the final game of the half. The game was as erratic as was the Sunday afternoon victory over Fowells that swept CHS into the lead and a commanding postion for first naif honors. Six Alumui errors played a big role in their defeat. Cristobal took the early lead when four Singles in the upper first netted a pair of runs. But that lead was Sh6rt-lived whn Alumni's Dave Mann tripled with Legnadier and Ames aboard to knot the count in their half of the Opening frame. Corky Karpinski, starting pitcher for the Alumni men settled down and retired the Tigers f6r four innings, scoreless and muess. . t. In the meantime, the Alumni bats were not as the moved out in front with a single rtu in the third and four more in the fourth. all off: Cristobal's startine oticher. John Wainio. The Tigers1 came back to life in their half of the sixin irame and. camtauzina on three walks, produced an equal amount oi hits capped by George Cotton's three base blow that caused the removal of Karpinski in favor of Hatei who. cot Don aruce on a roller to third. When the dust had cleared Cristobal had scored 5 times and tied the game ai au. The Alumni came back in their naif of the 6th and scored a single run on a walk to Dnnahmt. m. crifice and Larrv" Ames' aintrle to right, his second hitiof the night: inn Aiumni came Within nnn pitcn of winning the game, with running all the way down to the iinai batter; but Cristobal High was not to be denied, with two away, Hatl walked three Cristo Cristobal bal Cristobal batters to load the sacks. Suddenly recovering hi mnfrnl tne Aiumni Ditcher threw tum strikes past Don Humphrey, but on the next pitch the Cristobal left-fielder lined a single to right field, his second hit of the night, driving in Lutz and Vinas. Kulig and Cotton then drew pas ses to push across, another Tiger tally. Kulls relieved Wainin in the lower half of the seventh after uie u-istobai pitcher had been uiieo tor a pinch-hitter, and retir ed the side without any further ixouDie. First Half Endi Tamarraiv Tomorrow night the first half of uie Atlantic Twilight League of- iicuu scneauie enos with game between CHS and Bells. A CWsui CWsui-bal bal CWsui-bal victory will give the Tigers the iirst nan championship, but if Bells can come up with their uura wis oi tne season then Cris- iopai ano roweiis will have to olay oh tne first half In a single game ummajr aiierooon. voacn Ingram's choice for the clincher will probably be Jim Pa Pa-lumbo lumbo Pa-lumbo while Bells are expected to send Jim Mann to the bill to put the damper on the Cristobal uiarcn in me Twiugnt League. The box score: 20 11 4 Score By Innings SUMMARY Earned Runs: Ocel6ts 5, Palomas 10. RBI: Ru dy, Dubbs 4, G. Anderson, Devore, Beatwright, 2, Huddleston, Berg 2, Ashton. C. Bradshaw 2. Boostrom. Home Run: Dubbs. Double plays: Beatwright to ,C Bradshaw to BroWder; X. Trench; (Unassisted). Sacrifices Devore' Beat wrlght, Dubbs. Stolen bases: W. French, I. Anderson. Albritton 3. Huddle ston, Berg. Left on, bases: Ocelots 4, Palomas 5. Strikeouts: Ashton 3, Rudy 4, Bettis 3. Bases on balls: Ishton 5. w.; French 7. Rudv 4.' Bettla.1, W. Ashton, 1. Umpires: a -- A 1 wn i v ... noxea.((uon5orc'ranj5,: Stewart. Scorer: C. A. Palomo. Time of 2:04. .v fu. X I Name: Cristobal High Wilder 2b-ss Humphrey lf-2b Kulig 3b-ss-p Cotton c Bruce rf McGioin ss Hernandez 3! Palumbo Tomokim 3h WiU cf-lf Lutz lb Wainio p Vines cf Totals CHS-Aluninl Legnadier 3b Hatgi p Irving 2b CasUllo 2b Ames c Mann, D ss-3b Palumbo lb Perez ss. Sandera IS' ,' Karpinski p--lb Crook cf Swalm, rf Donahue rf Tots Is Ab 3 5 8 4 5 3 0 1 0 2 3 1 0 30 10 H Po 1 2 Ab 1 0 1 a 2 4 4 1 0 R 3 0 1 0 2 0 ,0 iO ?I 0 0 0 Po 1 o 0 0 A 2 0 0 1 1 5 1 0 0 3 0 00 1 0 21 12 Scorobylnnlngs Score by Innings Cristobal H. 2 0 0 0 0 3 310 CHS-Alumni 2 0 1 0 4 1 0-4 10 16 Mutual Ls Legion r-r'. x'u-ates fouct rais Coca Cola Omaha V m 3 4 4 5Vi Thursday afternoon, the Police j Pus anu undeieaied Mutual of ud one half innings of bssebad, before r ain stopped the gs me, Luther Quinn and Kenny Knr- pinSki were hooked up in the j ear's finest pitching duel. The game will be resumed on Satur Saturday day Saturday morning, Feb. 14, at JO a.m. The strong Elks' club added another victory to their fast growing string on Friday after afternoon noon afternoon when they suddenly came to life to score a 6 to win over the Coca Cola Bottlers. John San ders' tbiev four hit ball as he picked up his third win of the season. Ralph Bender was chaf chafed, ed, chafed, with the loss, although he had a no hitter going into the fifth. Wih two out in the fifth. Ben der hit batter Matt Manning with pitched ball, and the incident seemed to shake him ud for be fore the inning was over, the Elk- men had scored four runs and gathered four hits. Again in the sixth they scored two more on hit and. a walk. Coca Cola start ed a rally going in the last in ning but thj scoring of two runs wss not enough to overtake the Elks. John Sanders snd Raloh Ben der each hit a double while tri triples ples triples were clouted by Nicky Brooks, and Keith McLeod. -The two Terrys, Tobin hd Conley made fine catches to rob Jonn Sanders of .'hits in the first and fo. Jth Innings. The boil, scori; Elks "r Will, rf Brooks, N., tss Sanders, Jo., p eBoyrie. cf Motta, c Pabon, 3b Sanders, Ja., 2b Acheson, lb Manning, If Fettler. If Brooks, R., If Totals Coca Cole Williford. 2b Tobin, ss Bender, p Hutchings, e conley, cf McLeod, 3b firnnfiAv IK Stanford, If Snyder, If ViTainio, rf Ab 3 3 3 3 2 3 3 2 0 1 0 1 '2 win of the year while Terry To Tobin bin Tobin took the pitching loss for his team. Over the six inning route Sanchez struck out 10 men, allow allowed ed allowed but four hits,' and both uns scored again t him were unearn unearned. ed. unearned. Vera McNamee struck out five and allowed five hits. The. Cola team played poorly in the field, being charged with 8 erros. At the pla'.e only three extra base hits were made.' Thy wer doubles by Terry Tobin, Ralph Bender and Woody Smit'i. Vern McNamee and Woody Smith tted in t runs each. The box score: Police Tiirrj, ss Mason, 3b icivaia a, p 2b Karpinski, c Hakanson, R. Cwen, rf Hotsko, cf Cooper, If Smith, lb Totals Coca Cola Williford, "2b Tobin, 89, p Bender, cf, ss Hutchings, c conley, lb, McLeod, 3b Sanchez, p lb Griffon, If Wainio, If Snyder, rf Totals Ab R H E 2b, p 32 7 8 3 24 4 7 8 23 6 I 0 Totals Elks Coca Seore by Cola 22 I 4 1 Innings 000 0426 5 00012-3 4 1 Saturday morning, the Police Pals and Coca Cola nlaverf off tneir game which was rained out last Monday. The Police ex pioded in the seventh inning to break no a 2 to 2 tie and en on to defeat the battlers 7 to 4. Ver non McNamee and Rickey San chez were the starting Ditchers and when they had to leave the mound by regulation after Ditch- ing six innings, the score stood at 2 all, in this the year's first extra inning game. Two new pitchers came on to work the .seventh inning, and the Police greeted Terry Tobin with four hit, five run barrage Coca Cola tried their best to get a seventh Inning rally going, but all they could do with Ricky Ha- aanson was a two nit, two run rally. Hakanson chalked up his first Along The Fairways WOMEN GOLFERS AT AMADOR Although it was the week of the Panama Open there was a good turnout for last Thursday's Ladies Dsy at Amador. Jean Hill copped first Dlace in tne low net tournament with 61. Mary Faison's 64 won second place and Helen Sliker came in third with a U. Lila Strumph's 36 putts took the prize lor tne weekly low putt tournament. This week s low net tourna ment is expected to draw an en thusiastic group of sharpshooters eager to apply tips picked ud during tne Panama uoif open. - ELKS La Boca Rd. 1 1 'v Friday Hl Score bv Innings Pnlic Pali 1 000 lfiS 7 8 3 Coca Cola 0 002 002-4 7 8 ' PACIFIC LITTLE LEAGUE Malor Division Teams W L Lincoln Life 7 1 Gibraltar Life 12 Elks 1414 4 3 Seymour Agency 3 4 Sour Cola 3 5 Police 9 7 Farm Division Seymour Agency 6 0 Mutual of Omaha 3 2 Gibraltar Life 3 3 Kiwis 13 Police Jrs. 1 3 Cyrnos 0 4 Spur Cols 7 Seymour Agency 1 Coming to bat in the third in ning tne Spur Cola soft drinking lads, exploded for seven big runs and that was tne ban game During this outburst The Spurs racked up five hits and were as sited by three fielding miscues in this big inning. After this one inning the Spur Cola were kept in check by George Black, and his teammates gave him good support. Spurred on by the big inning, Spur Cols pitcher Paul Zelnick pitched a good 'game, allowing only two singles, both going to the Sey Seymour mour Seymour shortstop Watson. Both teams are out of the race for the first half, but are out to upse some of the top teams and have aa say as to who will be the champs. Seymour Agency 13 Gibraltar Life Jr. 0 Seymour Agency in the Farm Division unlike its parent club in the Majors, is making a run runaway away runaway of the Farm Loop. They fattened their first place position Dy trouncing the uibraitars, 13 to 1. Three players got more than one safety, for the Champs to be Gallarido and Yozon both had two for four, and Gibraltar's Romero had two for three. Spur Cola Hele 3b Bowen 2b McCullough ss Mikulich c Hoenke lb Robertson cf Horsley rf Zelnick p D La Pens Seymour Spencer If Watson ss Black p Canavaggio cf Robinson c Stabler rf Farrell lb Rogers 2b Keneally 3b Cricket News The Wanderers Cricket Club got off to a flying start last Sunoay when they soundly trounced the Excelsior C.C. in the League open opener er opener played at the Rainbow City O O-val. val. O-val. Final scores .were : Escetsior 78 runs, Wanderers 90 for 4 wick wickets. ets. wickets. With three of their best play ers reporting ill, Excelsior ut.iiz- ed only eight wickets in ama;ng their total, aided by contributions of 25 from Paul Harper, and 17 from Gerald Small, despite the: fine bowling performances of R. Escalona (2 for 0), A. Denn s (4 for 2), and "Red" Roberts (2 for7 18). In turn, the Wanderers club re received ceived received excellent batting support from their opening pair of George (17), and completed the rout with a slashing attack of 26 runs from the bat Of A. Belgrave. The successful Excelsior bowlers were: M. Perch, 3 for 30 and A. Barret, 1 for 22. Midland C.C. take on the Surrey club in the second encounter of the season next Sun Sunday. day. Sunday. The season's schedule as releas released ed released by the Atlantic Cricket League: 2 1-59 Excelsior CC vs Wand Wanderers erers Wanderers CC (Heights) 2-8-59 Surrey CC vs M.dland CC (Heights) 2- 15-59 Wanderers CC vs Sur Surrey rey Surrey CC (Heights) 2 22-59 Cragwell CC vs Excel Excelsior sior Excelsior CC (Heights) 3- 1-59 Surrey CC vs Cragwell CC (Heights) 3-8-59 MidlSnd CC vs Wand Wanderers erers Wanderers CC (Heights) 3-15-59 Midland CC vs Crag Cragwell well Cragwell CC (Heights) 3-22-59 Excelsior CC vs Sur Surrey rey Surrey CC (Heights) 3-29-59 Wanderers CC vs Crag Cragwell well Cragwell CC (Heights) 3- 29-59 Excelsior CC vs Mid Midland land Midland CC (Mt. Hope) 4- 5-59 All Star Game. 4-12-59 Midland CC vs Excel- sior CC (Heights) 4-12-59 Cragwell CC vs Wand Wanderers erers Wanderers CC (Mt. Hope) 4-19-59 Surrey CC vs Excel Excelsior sior Excelsior CC (Mt. Hope) 4-19-59 Cragwell CC vs Mid Midland land Midland CC (Heights) 4-26-59 Wanderers CC vs Mid- RES Mallahan Jenkins Hilzinger Romero Thompson Peterson Foster Beardall Cornish Craig W. Jenkins Gibraltar Jr. Bfdgie Gallardo .uzon Anguizola Wallace Moses Ostenso Whitney. Albritton Seymour Jr. Ab R H 3 1 J 3 11 4 1 2 2 10 3 12 2 0 0 3 10 3 0 0 3 1 2 1 0 32 2 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 0 10 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 0 2 1 1 3 0 1 3 0 2 2 3 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 1 2 1 4 2 2 4 2 2 3 10 4 3 0 2 2 1 2 10 3 1 1 3 0 0 W QlwauA Stwd U)iih a W .-',. .... ...', ,:' HIGHEST QUALITY FOR THE LOWEST PRICE, LATIN AMERICAN SCHOOL BOYVPNG LEAGUE Last Wednesday GuUpride re moved all element ot doubt fruni anyone's mind regarding the tirsl place o'. the league. Gulfpnde is i now the chamo- of the league Last week their sponsor was there to cheer for them and mw the team take 3 points fruin Volkswagen. Segura led the oilmen with a 483 series and frevino cut 120 pins down. For Volkswagen, Ssr na rolled a 465 and Stevens a 381. WSldron helped n his race for most improved pliyer. Marlboro held on to second place by taking 3 points from La Mascots. To judge by the rack racket et racket that these te?m were mak making, ing, making, you knew that they had qu.te a tabble gong and save for one game that Marlboro won going away, the other two games were as tight as a piston in a cylinder For M"rlhoro, Taylor and (lo (lo-mez mez (lo-mez rolled a 440, and Martinez a 393 series. For La Mascota, Op'o lead his team with 435 pins and Ferreira pitch in 368. The Mercurio Jewelers kept in the running for second olace by taking 3 previous jewels from Crawford Agencies, They just ma managed naged managed to rake the 3 points even with a one-man handicap. BSrnhart, 1 mp and all, led the ioyeros with a 432 series, Vargas helped with 4 388 for Crawford Agencies Spiros howled a 446 and MirSnda a 351 series. Cerveza Balboa was left out land CC (Mt. Hope) 4- 26-59 C ragwell CC vs Surrey CC (Heights) 5- 3-59 EXcelsior CC vs Crag Cragwell well Cragwell CC (Mt. Hope) 5-3-59 Surrey CC vs Wander Wanderers ers Wanderers CC (Heights) 5-10 59 Midland CC vs Surr?y CC (Mt. Hope) 5-10-59 Wanderers CC vs Ex celsior CC (Heights) Games start at 12:30 p.m. sharp. of the race for second place whes hey dropped -3 points to Nations Kadio. Tough break-, to coin iJ'rase. Some of us have it, sonr of us don't. Last week Los Cei veceros were O.T.L. For National Radio, f ghtin iike m d to get out oi the eellei were Hervey and Hodge with 183 and 407, respectively. Fc Cerveza Balboa, Burkhalter an Di Paulo rolled their usual if n( their best but un'oruunMely the were not helped by the rest e .he team. Team Sanding Gulfpride 554 241 Marlboro 47Vi 32', Mercurio Jewelers 44 Cerveza Balboa 41 39 National Radio Zi is La Mascota 33 t7 Volkswagen 32Va 4?' Crawford Agencies 32W 471 Pacific Worctn's Softball 1 igue Meeting Tomorrow I Members of the Pacific Won en s Sof ball League are reques ed to at'-snd 'n imoortan mee ing whirb wi'l be held at the Pi raiso Civic Center tomorrc night. League president Mrs. Guillei mina Spcer has advised that an further de'ay in ge ting the se; son started will lead to unfavoi able results. The first meeting the yea was held Monday night but b( I cause of the absence of Jos French o' Viceroy and Joh 'Y-SKt o' the P'"ro ,f'2up' squat it was necessary to call anothe meeting. YOU CAN'T BUY A TIRE THAT COSTS LESS PER MILE THAN FIRESTONE In the Monzo, Italy 500, the Fastest Race In the World TIRES WIN and Prove They are Safest for Your Car Do you know the mileage you are receiving from your present tires? Be Sure The next time you buy a tire (of any make) stop in at Firestone for a FIRESTONE TIRE MILEAGE Record Card. . Keep your own record! In major racing events around the world and In the world's fastest races Firestone tires prove their safety year after year. Again this year in the Indianapolis and the Monza 500 Mile races where tires are subjected to torturous twisting, piwndln and heat, Firestone tires carried the win winners ners winners to victory without a single tire failure. You, too can have this same safety and dependability... safety equip your ear with Safety-Proved Firestone tires today. RIDE NOW. . PAY LATER VISIT OUR EXHIBIT AT THE Industrial, Commercial it Electrical Fair. . Coleglo Javier Jan 31 Feb. 6 BETTER RUBBER FROM START TO FINISH. . TRANSISTHMIAN HIGHWAY Tel. 3-1501 pi m hi ! ii M'l '! II 'I K il il t m 'n m it ' it 'is THE PANAMA AMERICAN Alt INDEPENDENT DAILY NZWSPAFaw . WEDNESDAY FEERTJARY e C L A S S I F I E D D S 1 AGENTS: H i .... THIS SPACE IS FOR SALE FOR INFORMATION TELEPHONE 2-0740 ' TH15 SRACE IS FOR SALE FOR INFORMATION TELEPHONE 2-0740 LEAVB WJB AD WITH ONT OF OTJB AGENTS OB OUR OfTOFS AT 1S-STH" 8TKEZT, PANAMA IIBREK1A THECIADO- Street No. IS AGENtlAS INTERNAL. DE rUBLICACIONES No. 3 Lottery Plaza CASA ZALDO Central At. 4S LOURDES FHAJtMACY UX La CarmqnHla PABNACIA LOM LOM-BARDO BARDO LOM-BARDO tio. U "B" Street MORRISON 4th of July Ave. A J Bt, t LEWIS SERVICE At, TivoU No, 4 PARMACIA ESTADOB VNIDOS US Central At. FABMACIA LUX 1M Central Ave. HOUSEHOLD EXCHANGE J. Pee. 6 la Oaaa Ave. No. 1 POTO DOMY-Jusle Araeesaene Ave. ane 33 St. ) PAR PARMACIA MACIA PARMACIA VAN DEB JIS 51 Street No. 53 FABMACIA EL BATUBBO Paraor Lefevre T Street ) FABMACIA "UlVil Jrenraa 111 NOVEBADKS ATH15 l 4 ide the Bella Vieta Theatre and at Ita Branch at the Minim ax Super Market Via Brpaaa at Jaaa JFraac. 'page ten i : t 14 ? H:;v . -J 1 Pot? Resorts BafdVia't furnished apartments at Santa Blara Beach. Talephon Smith. Gambo 302. PHILLIPS OeeaneWe Cartas Santa CUra R. d P. Phone Pa Pa-aama aama Pa-aama -177 Cristobal 3-1673. Fetter cottage, between Santa Clara and Rio Hato. New low rate. Phone Balboa 1866. FOR NT: Furnished, two bedroom, independent house, with garden, for two months. Call San Francisco 3-5638. FOR RENT: COTTAGE, 3 bod bod-rooms rooms bod-rooms air conditioned, furnished, includes Bendix washer, freezer. Large livingroom, porch, terrace, generous patio. Golf Heights near sea. Separate maid's quart quarters, ers, quarters, bohio. 3 months starting March, $250, talephon 4-1391, and 4-1392. FOR RENT: Furnished chalet, with all conveniences. For thre month, from February 1 1 th. 48th street No. 15. FOR RENT: For first erf Feb February, ruary, February, 3 bedroom chalet, hot water, everything modern. Phon 3-3578, Panama. FOR RENT: Furnished room, stove, refrigerator, double coach, private bath and entrance. No. 3. 52nd Street. Tel. 3-0638. Gold By HERBERT MOISI RAINBOW CITY Manager Paul Walker of the newly named Stevedore Morris defending cham cham-Dions Dions cham-Dions of the Rainbow City Open Classification Softball League, will be the haooiest man around the circuit come 11:30 p.m. tonight. For th first time in 13 ye"ars, the record-making manager of the champs will be seeing his par parents, ents, parents, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Walk Walker, er, Walker, and his sister, Mary. The W. family arrives at Tocumen at that hour for an extended vacation tiat will afford them the opportunity of seeing Paul guide his ''Fighting Firemen during the 1959 season, Paul told this writer that the plan ned their arrival so that they may be on hand for opening day of the Rainbow City Open Classifi Classification" cation" Classification" Softball League on Feb. 21 at 2:30 p.m. The Walkers will reside in Coco Solo with Paul at Building 235-Apt. C. Thev will answer all calls on telephone 503 Coco Solo. Coming out of Somerset. Pa Mr. and Mrs. John M. Walker and their daughter should find the warm Atlantic side sun a welcome change in temperature. This writer, the board of direc tors of the Rainbow City Open Classification and all the followers of the Walker managed Stevedore Morris trem join in extending Houses Rooms Commerca Advertise in this section Ads only cost $25.50 per month FOR INFORMATION CALL 2-0740 JUDSON Super chargers for your Volkswagen and fihia MGA, Dauphine 50 more power Cia. Istmena tie Auto Servicio, S.A. Frangipani St Tel. 2-1870 Whatever Happened to . FORREST (SPiC) TOWNS Forrest (Spec) Towns was the ereatest high-hurdler of his day. an era spanning the years imme immediately diately immediately before and just after the 1936 Olympic games. The limber Georgian won the Olympic gold medal with a new 110-meter rec record ord record of 14.2 seconds at Berlin. Two years later, his world mark of 13.7 for the same event cauea "incredible" at the time was ac cepted as the official standard. Whatever happened to Spec Towns? He is just starting his 17th season as head track coach gt the University of Georgia.. ESennfl Apartments FOR RENT: Completely fur fur-nishew nishew fur-nishew two bedroom apartment, hot water, Campo Alegr. linen, dishes. Phone 3-5024. FOR RENT: On 48 street Bella Vista modern two bedroom Apt. On 46 street, Riviora Apt., another two bedroom Apt., din ing, living, porch, balconies, two bathrooms, maid' room and ga garage. rage. garage. Call Panama 2-4696. From 8 a.m. to 12 noon. FOR RENT: Comfortable, fur furnished, nished, furnished, small apartment. Air Air-conditionad, conditionad, Air-conditionad, private bathroom, telephone, porch, in residential area. Saul Monde 3-3516. FOR RENT: Small furnished apartment or independent room. Beautiful residential section. 43rd Street No. 13. FOR RENT: Furnished, on bedroom apartment. Three bed bedroom room bedroom chalet. 168 Via Belisario Porras, garage. $50.00 furnished apartment. North American neighbor, good transportation. Tel. 2-3343, 3 3-0471. 0471. 3-0471. FOR RENT: Two bedroom apartment clean, cool "Chalet Apartments," Camp Alegre. Tel. 3-7658. APPOINT AGENT CHICAGO (UPI) The Fjell Fjell-Oranje Oranje Fjell-Oranje Line announced yesterday the Georgian Bay Line has been appointed general passenger agent in the United States and Canada for its expanding passenger-cargo vessel operations between Chi Chicago cago Chicago and Rotterdam. Dust warm welcome to the Walker fam family. ily. family. We sincerely hope their stay with us will be one of fond and life-long memories. Paul emerged onto the Softball scenery in Rainbow city from Co lon where he managed and pitcned for t- team comprised mainly of the weal-rate firefighters ot the Canal Zone Fire Division. He mov moved ed moved his club into the stronger Rain bow City League and set a record in his first campaign, winning the cnampioasiup wiia an unueieaieu record of 12 wins. This unprecedented feat was followed with another extremely successful season in 1958 when the team, then named Cafe Coolspot, won tne title in Rainbow City and then swept a series from the lusti ly-touted "Boite W" in an Isthmi an title Joust. This series victory climaxed one of the most sucess sucess-ful ful sucess-ful seasons in the nine-year history oi ine league. Walker is the stern but quiet type wno possesses the rare a bill ty of pleasing everyone but still championing his own convictions. Walker is one manager who is a strict disciplinarian but still has the admiration, respect and even love of his players. Paul Walker has been a credit tq the RBCOCSL and more so to the thousands of fans who turn out to root for his team. Full day excursion SAN BLAS Svru'v Fr;ruary 15 COPA twin engine DC-3 Transport FIDANQUE TRAVEL Tel. 2-1661 LIFE INSURANCE call JIM RIDQE General Agent Gibraltar Life Ins. Co., for rates and Information .Tel. Panama 2-0".5J Monday thru Friday 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 .iturday: 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 AQUARIUM THERMOMETER A midget thermometer for a quarium use is produced by a British company. Claimed to oe the only one of its kind in the world manufactured specially for fish tanks, the thermometer is guaranteed completely waterproot It is vacuum-sealed in a non-cor-rodible aluminum case and can be' mounted by a rubber suction ring inside the tank and under water. The thermometer measures temperatures from 40 deres fa rnheit to 110 degrees farenheit. and can also be supplied with a centigrade scale. LONDON (UPI) Cream-less ice cream is still ice cream, Par liament decided yesterday. It ruled thus after noting that nine-tenths of the nation's ice cream is made from vegetable oil, not milk. Automobiles FOR SALE: 1956 Ford, 4 door Mainline, standard shift, wsw, radio. Call 84-4202. FOR SALE: 1957 Ford station wagon, 4 door Fordomatic, 8 cyl. including extras. Qtrs. 13-B Kobba, phon 84-3138. FOR SALE: 1958 Chevrolet Impala, convertible, black w., white top. Only 3000 mi., under under-coating, coating, under-coating, backup light, passed dash, "Wonderbar" radio, white white-walls, walls, white-walls, dual exhausl system, power steering, power brakes, best of offer fer offer over $2550.00. Call Balboa 2-2336. FOR SALE: 1953 Buick Super, dynaflow. Call Nyy 2226, 8 a. m. to 4 p.m. FOR SALE: Due to urgent trip, 1957 Oldsmobile Super 88 Spe Special, cial, Special, in perfect condition. Com Completely pletely Completely equipped with luxuriou extras and factory installed air condition. Call 3-1630. FOR SALE: 1957 Ford Custom 300, 2 door sedan, new car con condition, dition, condition, 16,000 actv miles. Phone Balboa 2-3338 or Coroial 2137. FOR SALE: 1958 Chevrolet Biscayne four door sedan; power power-cv4". cv4". power-cv4". V8 enqine, 4 barrel car carburetor, buretor, carburetor, 250 h.p., duty free. Phone Balboa 2-2744. FOR SALE: Two model A Ford located at Casino. n C-in Singh. Lowest prices $100 cash. Tel. 2-2163. FOR SALE: Parts of 48 Ply Plymouth, mouth, Plymouth, battery, tiros, electric whiper, etc. Telephone 4-0108. LOST: Diamond wristwatch vicinity Panama Golf Course or Kobbe Exchange. Call 25-3703. Reward. Little League Film Af Rainbow City Gym Tomorrow pm Arrangements were made by Os Oscar car Oscar Morrell, Physical Director of the Rainbow City Swimming Pool in cooperation with the Rainbow City Civic Council for a Little League move to be shown at the Gymnasium on Thursday night commencing at 7:30 p.m. This film will be projected tiirough courtesy of the American Embas Embassy. sy. Embassy. With the little league park now virtually completed and the sea son soon to get underway, it is anticipated the youngsters will be out in full force. Before the showing of the film, registration of little leaeuers will be conducted by the President of the league and all iniere.s eu p..y ers are urged to bring their certi ficates along with them. The re gistration is scneauied to com mence at 6:00 p.m. AUTOMOBILE FINANCE Government Employes. Service Personnel Finance Tour New Or Used Car GOVERNMENT EMPLOYES FINANCE Co. LOW RATES UP TO 36 Mo. on new cars AGENCY DEHLINGER No. 43 Automobile Row Phone 3-4984 3-4985 All Types of Auto Insurance The New NIKON Wtth built-in Universal Vlewflnder System Panama Colon AGEJVOA deCAMBIO Y SERVICIO W cash checks and Lottery tickets at any time. We are located right across from the Ancon Bus Stop. hum Home Articles FOR SALE. Modern furniture, used 3 month. It i a bargain. Call 2-2680 Mr. Flavin. FOR SALE: Modern furniture, lamp and beautiful rugs. Deluxe modal mangle ironor. All in ex excellent cellent excellent condition, phono 3-6775. FOR SALE: Quartermaster Bd Complct, Mapl Platform Roc Rocker, ker, Rocker, Electric IBM typewriter 9x 12 and 6x9 Green Rugs. Call Balboa 2-3782. FOR SALE: Due ta ...n household furniture, in perfect condition. Reasonable prices. Call 3-1630. FOR SALE: Kelvinator 18 cu. ft.. "Upright" docpfroeie,l$280. Kelvinator cloth dryer, 60 cycle, $100.00. Both in good condition. 86-5294 Albrook, quarter 332-B. BARGAINS (only this week) HI-FI console radio and record player 225.00, modern mahoga mahogany ny mahogany wardrobes 39.00, sideboards 12.50, double bod, wspring 12.50. bunk bed 39.00, China closets 18.00, cribs eompletg 29.00. lawn chair 4.50. kitchen table 5 50, coffee table 9.50, nite tables 7.50. lovely telephone tables 19.50, brand new folding bds 27.50, mattresses 6.50, pil pillow low pillow 0.95, HOUSEHOLD EX EXCHANGE CHANGE EXCHANGE National Ave. No. 41 (Auto Row) Tel. 3-7348 3 3-4911. 4911. 3-4911. FOR SALE: Hollywood bed with mattrass, spring, good con condition, dition, condition, cheap. Tel. 3-6 1 38. FOR SALE: Furniture, includ including ing including Chinese hand carved, maho mahogany, gany, mahogany, and yard furniture. Also selling power tools, power mower, and many miscellaneous house household hold household items. Moving, must sell. House: 0904 Amador Road, Bal Bal-boa. boa. Bal-boa. Phone: 2-2916. FOR SALI:-i-Frigldalro refrigera refrigerator, tor, refrigerator, all porcelain, 4 year guar guarantee antee guarantee in perfect condition $200. Cristobal 3-2430. FOR SALE; Han1 carved Cuban dininc reern furniture, bambee livins reem furniture. Simmons bedroom furniture, curtains, and gas store. Addr; Calls Jticardo Arias, Edificie "Perml", apart apartment ment apartment 3. Camp Alegr. Tel. J J-6992. 6992. J-6992. Mrs. Eliza Barnaby Dies; Funeral Set For Tomorrow Morn Mrs. Eliza Stolcea Rarnahv Jamaican rfsiiTvt of Ran Wan. Cisco de la Caleta, died at her home Vesterdav afteoinnn fnUnvmn long illness. A former resident of Silver City and La Boca who came to the Isthmus in 1908, Mrs. Barnaby was dS years old. She is survived by her children. Zadock, Basil. Lloyd. Mrs. Jose- iphine Thomas, Mrs. Kathleen Cox and Mrs. Mabel Lewis, in addition to several grandchildren, Funeral services hiave been scheduled for 10 .m. tomorrow at St. Vincent de Paul's Church, fol lowed by burial in Jardin de Paz Cemetery. UNITED FRUIT COMPANY Great White Fleet New Orleans Service "MORAZAN "ULUA" 'SIXAOLA" Feb. 21 'MORA Z AN" Feb. 2 "ULUA" Marae 7 AIbo Handling Refrijerat ani Chill Carge New York Service "COMAYAGUA" "FRA BERLANGA" "METAPAN" "SAN JOSE" CRISTOBALW.C.CJI. FEEDER SERVICE "YUCATAN" .i Every (15) Dayi Weekly wiling of twelve passenger ships to New York. New Orleans, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle. 1 a.BIMIH,BIBBIBHaBalp1BBneniaanen SPECIAL ROUND TRIP PASSENGER FARES FROM CRISTOBAL ANDOR BALBOA: To New York and Return S140.0 To San Francisco andor Seattle and Return . 1365.00 TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL 2121 PANAMA 2-2904 Miscellaneous FOR SALE: Baby Grand piano, in perfect condition $390.00. DeSoto car 1952 $200.00. Call 31 Mo. 4.41. FOR SALE: Collins KWM-1 amateur radio trans-ceiver with accessories. Call 14-2266. 13 13-5160. 5160. 13-5160. FOR SALE: Cheap two montu montu-no no montu-no shirts. Tak adventag of this Carnival offer. Phon 3-0860 Panama. 89th straet No. S3, Pal- tilla. FOR SALE: Stamp Album, $1000.00, and duplicate. Vx catalog price. Pint street El El Carmen No. 1. Phon 2-0644. Jorg Orosce. Dogs FOR SALE: AKC Boxer pup pup-pie, pie, pup-pie, fawn hus 0rJ4-B, Bal Balboa boa Balboa 2-425S. Major Leaguers In Mad Scramble To Sign Contracts NEW YORK. Feb. 4-fUPIi-- Their contracts or the prospect of heading south must be looking mighty good to big leaguers these days because they're practically trampling each other in the rush to sign on the dotted line. A flock of key men. including Robin Roberts, Billy Hoeft, Ray Boone, Tom Brewer and Bill Skowron, decided yesterday and today to agree to terms. There were only two dissident voices those of Bob Cerv, who apparent ly thinks the. Kansas City Athletics should pay him about $35,000 and Luis Aparicio who is carrying on his annual salary battle from his hacienda in Maracaibo, Venezuela,. Roberts, who bounced back last season with a 17-14 record after two bad years, signed with the Philadelphia Phillies for an esti estimated mated estimated $45,000 to $50,000. The hus husky ky husky pitcher said the Phillies told him he could be the judge ot whether he rated a raise and add added. ed. added. "I decided, in my Judgment, that I should have it." Hoeft. 6 year old southpaw speedballer who had a 10-9 record, and lefty Hank Aguirre agreed to terms with the Detroit Tigers. Hoeft is believed to have taken a cut while Aguirre, 3-4 in 44 games last season, probably settled for his 1958 salary. Boone became the 22nd member of the Chicago White Sox to sign and also probably took a sBght cut. He hit only .242 and 13 homers last year during which he was with both the Tigers and White Sox. The White Sox hope he can drive in 100 runs for them this year Brewer, who was "hampered much of last season with various ailments, returned his signed con contract tract contract to the Boston Red Sox. A 19 19-game game 19-game winner in 1956 and a 16-game winner in 1957. He slipped to 12 12-12 12 12-12 last season. CURB INFLATION RIO DE JANEIRO, (UPI)-Fi-nance Minister Lucas Lopes has announced that the government plans "radical" measures-includ-iilg reduction of military spending to curb inflation in this country. Arrive Cristobal Arrive Cristobal Feb. 9 Feb. I ee. S3 .Mar. Real Estate FOR SALIt let 500 and 1.000 ' meter, is the Nuev Hipedreme Urbanisation, acre the Rmmm Racetrack. All lots with straet front, tewtte, water aula and : Uctrlcity. Call W. Mclaractt. TaL 1-257. FOR SALIs Lot 1.06C tguar meters' .la the best location of : La Croste, ituatd between "V Street and new tret. for Infers matlen abate call Tl. 2-2170 from 8 a.m. to 12 neon and from 2 p.m. H 5 p.m. FOR SALE: Thro bedroom residence. Modern co'ncret cons construction, truction, construction, recently built. Cash $4,000 and balance $75 00 per month. Phon 4-0840. FOR, SALE; Income property on ''Automatic Row" net $60,000 down, rest term, won wonderful derful wonderful investment. Cucalon and Co. Realtor. Phon 3-3330. Latatr factory equipment The 1959 British Factory Euip- ment Exhibition, to be held in London, April 7-17- will show world-wide range of equipment covering all classes of industry. The exhibition will occupy an a rea of over 330,000 square feet, with 300 separate stands. More than 400 different tyfcs of indus trial equipment will be on dis play, ranging from aspects of fac factory tory factory construction to storage hand handling ling handling and staff welfare. Within the Exhibition will be a self-con tained Heat and Sound Insulation Exhibition, showing latest tech niques in this field. Leading Brit British ish British experts will speak at the sev several eral several major conferences to be held in conjunction with the exhibition Westinghouse Bops Spur Cola While Panama Insurance Tops Orange Kist In Legion Games The power packed Westinghouse team scuttled Spur Cola under a hnrraep of 16 hits and 19 runs as thev virtually clinched the. first half championship in the Americ an Legion junior jsasenau Jueague. In the second game of Sunday's twin -bill at Ft. Clayton's Jarman ball field, Panama. Insurance push push-ed ed push-ed across five runs to defeat Or ange Kist. 5 to 3. Westinehouse. with a record of 6 wins and no defeats, is assured of no less than a tie for the sea sons first half winners. witn three games left to play, any com combination bination combination of win by Westinghouse or loss by Spur Cola who has a 3 and 3 record, will give the cham championship pionship championship to Westinghouse. Orange Kist ana ranama insur insurance ance insurance have already been mathema mathematically tically mathematically removed for winning ho honors, nors, honors, but both teams will be fight ing all the way to knock off the League Leaders. Amato. Ditchintr for Westing house, won his third straight game, while Hakanson was tagged with the loss. Sims Allen collected tne oniy triple for the victors, which was just one hit of three that be re gistered. Morris, Allen, 2cott, koq- gers and Amato all scored two or more base hits for Westing Westinghouse. house. Westinghouse. The only player that went hitless was Martin. Wen-, catching for spur coia, accounted for two ef his teams' four hits. The box score! FIRST GAME Spur Cola Ab R H O A Will, ef Geddes, 3b Strounberg, 2b, p Damiani, ss, 2b Weir, c Belanger Hakanson, p, If, ss Bowers, If, p, If Borsellino, rf Kunkel, If (x) Rice, rf (l) Totals 29 7 4 27 (x) Kunkel for Bower in 7th.' (x) Rice for Borsellino In 7th. Wostingheuse Martin, ss Morris, 3b, e 2 S Price, c, rf Allen, cf 1;12 t 3 4 6 3 4 Scott, lb Rodger, 2b, 3b Carroll, If Camby, rf Amato, p Bradshaw, 2b' (x) 1 0 0 11 A 15 Tetala .' S 19 H 27 27 fxl Bntdshatr for Camby In the 5 Bases 'on balls off- Haijmsoni 6, Bower Qr Stramberg 1 Spur co- Bases en baus off Amato 12 (Westinghouse). Struck -out by Hakanson 0, Bow ers 0i Stromberg 3. (Spur Cola). '.Struck out by Amato 12 (Wast InffhouseL ' Innings pitched by Hankanson 3 3-2, Bowers 1-3. Stromberg 9. Innings pitched by Amato 9. SERVICES TELEVISION-SERVICE V ? W reeai in yeur hem w don't pretand te guarantee our.'werk. Wa guarantee It 'PHONE THE EXPERTS; CRAWFORD AGENCIES i Tel. 2-1905 TivoUAvanaeNe. It.20. Protect year homo and proper ty against insect d a m a fl e. Prompt scientific treatment en. emergency, or monthly budget. basis. Telephone Pronto Service. . Panama 17977 er Colon 1777. TV SERVICES For better Home Service, Always Rdy en f ' . U.S. TELEVISION, t Phona 1-7607 Panama, Service from 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. Boats & Motors FOR SALE: Cabin Cruiser "Mansion,' 19 feet, totally cov covered ered covered with fiber glass. 2 "Evin "Evin-rude" rude" "Evin-rude" meter. 35 h.p. Good me mechanical chanical mechanical condition. For informa information. tion. information. Barcenas Printing Shop. Car) bo seen at "Club do Yatos y Pet Pet-." ." Pet-." Phone 2-1424. -v FOR SALE 15' runabout, with control, rapareund windshield, har all extras, 40 h.p. motor. Gator trailer. All like new. full prie $750.00 Will trade. Ial boa 2-27-. v FOR SALEi-,195 lehnsen 35 h.p. outboard; motor $325.00 Phono Curundu 5157. Cae, seen at 2177-B, Curundu. FOR SALE: 13 ft. Cabincrufsar, outboard. Call Clayton 6213. ' Winning! pitcher, Amato. Losing pitcher, Hakanson base Jilts 1 (Westinghouse C. S. Allfn Spur Cola 10010117 6 0 1 7 0 0 0 1-19 Westinghouse SECpND 6AMI Panama In. Ab R H O A Pearson, lb Bright. F. 2b 2 0.0 6 3 0 3 2 02 Bright, I., p 2 0 I xoian, e Amato, 3b Egan, ss McWatt, cf Collins, rf 31. J 1 2 1 2 IDS 0.0 a 0 0 0 Forbes, If ,, Rager, dfifcy 10 0 Scott, rt.$ffe,o i.o KiamcQ, Ujttjt 1 Totals n t t II 11 (r) Reger Jor McWatt forth (x) Scott for Collins fourth, (x) .Kiamco for Forbes 6th. Orange Kist Metheny, 2b 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 Sullivan, if Flumock, rf Corrlngan, ss' caidweu, lb Berg, 3b Dombrosky, ef Stewart, a 0 10 McGown, p 1 0 0 0 1 0 Cunningham, K Roe, rf Totals as 4iii (x) Cunningham for Sullivan bolha n. (x) Roe for Flumeck the 3rd. Bases on balls of Bright T.5 (Panama Ins). Bases on balls of McGowin 3 (Orange Kist). Struck out by T. Bright 5. Struck out- by McGown 6. Innings pitched by T. Bright- innings pitched by McGown 6 Winning- pitcher T. Bright (Pa nama ins.) Losing pitcher McGown (Orance S base hit Panama Ins. 1 n &COUJ r . a. v 3 base hit, Panama Ifls.-I. (E . .... x 3 base hits Oransn vS'at a Ve .1J 11V Panama bis. Orange Kist 0 0 3 0 0 0.13-4 b ' i ts. WIN BOBSLED TtTLaf iKfcSR . riff. ST. MORrrt. Switierlan WPT;) Italy's two too bobsled teams nmsned one-two Monaav in ine bobsled championship of St. MO MO-riti. riti. MO-riti. while Arthur Tvler of Wes ton, Mass., and Lt. Tom Butler Saranac Lake, N.Y., piaceo inira Tyler and BuOer -won Sunday'i two-man event on the same course, Miscellaneous ". ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS L DBA Win -A- rtiaeiA EL j fffOX 1211. CRISTOBAL, CX R . r rnviMB BALBOA 1709 IV- Wendahake Medical Cllnta. cvpefta-Chat Bank. CciitralT Avenu ( if J7 Phone 2-1479 Domestic tmployrhsni Maid wanHd, tnust live t. oral beusewerk and carina for' thro childroet call at 2605-, Coeeli, after I avm. WANTED: Enflish ceeakiaSl Panamanitn feueekeener with references, tot couple, no chll. idren. Laa Cunibna. kum mtmm Phone 4-141. L Today's penind NEW YORK. Feb. 4 fUPIl in stocK market carried yl terday'r small gains ahead I rracuons to a point in a moda ateiy acuve opening today; Trading kicked m after the pening with tickers, falling nind for a nme. The price let; trading. Coppers met further bi! ing. Autos neld barelv steac Steels ruled' firm although soif of tne leaders slipped back frif their, openings. f ACF Inrl s Advocate Asto .50t 10t:' 3ib V4tf mvl 11,(7 37V4' 1V4. 55W VAV 9Bt Alleghany Corn Aluminium Ltd. Amer Cyanamid Amer Motors Amer Tel and Tel Anaconda Copper Arkansas Fuel AVCO MfjK BethtSteeP Betfufger Corp Bicroft uranium JBrish-etr 1W; Canadian Eagle. CeJanese Cerre de Pasco Chicago Great West Chrysler r r Cities Servfce Coastal Carib Creole, Pet Crown Cork and Seal Cuban Venezuelan Oil DuPont El Paso Natural Gas Eversharp ot ,m-A- Fairchild Engine Fargo Oil Felmont Pet GeneralviDynamicf General Electric General Motors , General Plywood Gulf Oil 4 ; Harscd Steel Hayden: Newport Howe Sound Imperial Oil InU Pet tail Tel and Td Lorillard Martin Co New Eng Tel and Tel Northrop Air Olin Mathieson Pancoastal Pan Israel Pantepec Oil Phillips Pet Pure Oil RCA Reynolds Metal Royal Dutch Shea San Jacinto Shell Transp Signal Oil and Gas Sinclair Oil Socony Mobile Sperry Rand Standard Oil NJ Sterling Precision Srudebaker-Packard Superior Oil Texas GuH rodt underwood United Canso OH US Rubber US Steel Universal Cyclops Westinghouse Elec Wheeling Steel tit 31 45Vi : 4! ' 51' 62 1 594: 31i 13-H 209bt ei 0 Sports Briefs TICKET' SAL I GOOD WASHINGTON (UPIV-DiMmli their lowly finish in the Easter Division race-: of the Nation: Football, League last season, tt Whington Redskins reported t dayUieir 959 set son ticket sa! has passed the 10,000 mark,,pe tJlJ capacity of rjfrtfffl Stadium. Sales are lust ahol Ml o Jut year;ia club spoket man said. AlOOiTTBS SIGN JOHNSON m MONTREAL (UPD-Tht Mon rf Ajoueiies w the Eastern Div won -tne Canadian Footb League have nnmmal tha .rt r" Ui. f1 i string) Johnson, Mic igan Stale halfback, to a 1959 co tract. Johnson, a 6-foot, 195-poun J native of Flint, t Mich., was ni drafted by any of the Naon Football League teams in their r of cent aran.- s .. "1 1 PAGE EUVOI WIDNESDAI, rtBRCART i, 1SSI ITHE fANAMA AMERICAff AN-INDEPENDENT-DAILY NEWSfAPKK HUT 4D Ut. PULATEJ Bjr CEVItGK VtVNDKR rue stort of HArmi wvn PUi lor Pttifnc If 111 1 iDL.faiiniiiniiiniu I KMOW IT'S DIFFICULT, fCKKf. THIS f5 FAR EN0U6H. THEVRE; HCRC THEY WONT I BUT Y00 MUST BE HAPPY NANCY. ALARMEP BY SEEIN& THE STAFF CMC; LETS6CV mrnn PRISCOLA'i POP Thtrc'i a Ruson tf AL VCJUUft OPur r MEAUWHILE.. I f rMSORKYl'M THIS WAV, BAEKiEV. t; r X MAWCY iVE PLEA5E BE PATIENT y mi Mfcf t m i u A g. f in .imi-ti 28 ) IN5IPE. THIS ISN'T -VI HAVE NOTHING-1 ( irjc jnc. LitS m' i i rm 1 1 1 1 b niiit'ffii 1 jwf inn vjt- '.ai- a i ii. viiiv nrfvxi ESS , ... k..,it.aiMarbw MK' ,i" it It JHIOTI AND UK )lORn MEEKLV STOP' DUX! W WAWRDEW 1 WDNOEWNe! JSMT UPTOtATtTANO lMjno4roR 1 WAS WCMDeRlMO. -7 AN (Nw ., -:- VpgABTi CWTHW& LtCrA ruiinl J'- u v BORROW 6UESS TUKTU-MECK J SO SWEATER hf-L' D J SB fejj f MKllf tU W OSSKfc DAU6HTCKS XftE WkFFY FROM we LATesr fasmioJ K) STRICT INFORM- HILDA! iTslns rfauy THE MOST-V ODDYS-) ft SL S I to sew the trNsf jTCF.i FamUhri f. f. HAMLIN Brrnr 1 A3SURR KOU, J)R, I f pJ WELL, NICE I IF ITS NOT OLP VOREa OR OTHER-, OBWOUffl-XS TO SAY I OREDPITHECUS WWEl THW4. ARE 7 ARE AN SO.M. r FRIEND, MEAfiCR BUT COME. MY WELL.ALL I Wia R1GHT...ANY- RE W THING TO FARE?! OBLIGE A WHAT DO VOL! MEAN, HALF? WHY, MY 1 4 COODNESaV I WU MUST Sf-al fc,- BE HALF S SiSai MS kt. he. T.M. f. VjVM Off. f MA'. AND I THOUGHT YOU DIDN'T L.IKt ) I BUT LOOK AT YOUR PLATE! IT'S CLEAN ENOUGH TO PUT RIGHT IN THE CUP- r7 noioni V s A r SURE! IT'S HEP? S " "f ' (jsM GHT JOO THEJ BUGS OtTNNT Nipped .but ya f if ti flgr fflutj teSSrS 1 ' j . Rtptin Ctramitt CT UMAJL MA1TLN 1 wcjFsflofc. 1 vvrPweio ; Jfl Ml I I VWV1 1 t 1 m om pffif j1My Nttnl. Iiw. T.M..t. U.l. I'M. OW.J Irytf VUI At Gun Point LESLIE TURNER T A LONELY fQM tl--- 4 , N THB HILL, 100 fl if you so thru Tim stex o wue blupfin' WITK THI WUrRBnI IP WcKK WA W5IW'i TH' YOU'LL SOON PIE- VpAFWt WOULP Bf PUU IN THE CHAIK, A Of IT BY WOW. SURE AS " 1 iitl--'--i."- thwb a iacYWUPr? rOK STII.L KEEPINa I ODfiHTA SOT it secren but you th ouer pavs CAM Eft SUKB THE AfiOl WOW TURN FBI AMP THE SECRET AKOUNP,.,B0rH 5IRWCE ARB HOT A. OF YOU i OM YOUR TRAIL- Ntvir Volunttar y DICK CAVALIJ ISNTTHW ALL A MTMNIMT. A urMMra rSSSy l .THEOOMMUNITV IMnaJvEMENTv',- LEAGUE CAMC TO 7f A:l -SEE ME. At - ( fCIWBCHCXTHAT V lTt -A QrVv w iiiiii i , cr SIDE GLANCES Bv Calbraith If T.M. h(. U.i. M Off. C 1M by NCA SviM. M. "I'm afraid Protestor Enderby's lecture would be over pur heads. He calls his tee art honorarium!" La Naturaleza es Asi por llkiBts AJOR BOOPUI ODT OUB WAI BY J. K WILLIAMS IF HBWA5 REALLY MAlOK AUnS H fJlllCKKllsUf T 1U BttW XV 1"'"'.'' bARNAoY LATfrD, ON AN MOTHER'S m HOCPLZt f 5lpB,TOtH HOMOISABL ffiVVfi XSgarur tr IN THE CORNER HONOR OF ( HIS NePHEvJ.ASI BELIES fiCT "'TO 'C7N9-6RTCT-y it" t li ra r j v i,. n ilea uis i1 -KnrJ i !- .i. J AN UNCLE t 7 1 Symington! WAS TRUE ALL WHT, 0 X WAKEP V OH, YOU CAM COUMT OKI 1 111;!! A PlCCB Of JELLY VRBAP TOO MB A A FRlBWR ALL J J I m CLOSB TO SUPF(E'TIME AKB RlfiHT; BUT VDU'RE f- 1 III I I OU '94USAL ON ME OR YOUR OWN WORST J h Plk A" YOU A MKNP 7V EWEMY j-r- v 1 yACKVALua rr CALIFORNIA seieccioNAUN CSCONPITE Y LO LiMPiA.pespue's : LANZA CON PU6RT.A UN CHORHO PARA HACIR UN HUeco EN LA ARENA. TJ. Itaf..l. fit Off. "Well, you said he eats like a horse (, r 711 IMfV W f,riW' 'Guess I don't know my own strength!" CUANDO B'STE eSTA'LO SUFlClENTE HONPO 56 INTAOPUCB IN EL, CUBAE LA (NTRAPA CON CONCHAS V PIEPRAS V NO ESTA ,. .EN CA A fARA NA P IE 2.-12 IIWrilMmbylUiitrwIiimfjKllalk faltering PHilip; hiMp'f Mf ia rilled !th bralnet ilr would leave bi home like nrm. ' A Clawlfltdf tnat tbe Hrtil tv' PANAMA-MIAMI $55.00 MIAMI-PHILADELPHIA 46.00 Philadelphia 5 Panama Today's TV Pro2rarrt 3:M CTN NEWS 3:15 Dinah Short .1:!M Air niie lory .1" '"" k- "nvp 4;.1 Mr. Wlrd b:. iuhiU and Saddlrav 5:.-Mt rA.NOKAM A 7:0 II t'onld Br You 8:T0 Jukr Box Jury 'Irall'U court 9:.1 Mlkt Wsllmc I0:tm Writ. Niihl Fi(hli !!:' CF- S 11:15 Km: 1 r TV T:M Rohlh Hood Courtesy ol Aeroria Panama Alrwax PHONES: PANAMA:. 3-1057 3-1698 3-U99 OFFICE HOURS; from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. V t r '1 :.. a W e;f 7b Pro ioqp r. Pinpoint-accurate H-ICBMs? r Ike Is Skeptical Of Soviet WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 (DPI) President Eisenhower at his press conference today expressed skepticism at new Russian boasts of possessing intercontinental missiles with hydrogen warheads that can pin-point targets in this country and which make U.S. weapons obsolete. He recalled that the Russians in the past have brag bragged ged bragged falsely that they invented the flying machine, auto automobile mobile automobile and telephone. He asked why their boasts on weap weapons ons weapons should be believed in the light of their unfounded claims about the other inventions. He called it propaganda. Meanwhile Defense Secretary Neil H. McElroy said there would be only "one or two missiles" difference in U.S. and Russian stocks of war-ready intercontinental missiles by the end' of 1959. This estimate, more optimistic than most offered in the con continuing tinuing continuing debate over US. versus Soviet rocKei bwcuswi, Xn to reporters as McElroy prepared to resume testimony 'to the House Armed Services committee. ... . McElroy told the committee yesterday he expected the ' first few U.S. ICBMs would be operational in July and a few more in December. This Would put the CS. supply -within a few" of Russia s, h"Theiddifference would be of practically no importance, Mc-joh-oy said, in elaborating to iewsmen today. "When I say that, I mean that in terms of missiles de deliverable liverable deliverable on target, there would be no more than one or two missiles difference," he said. " McElroy said his forecast was Based on the "best judgment of the accuracy and reliability of the ocean-spanning ICBMs of both Russia and the United States. The defense chief said the ICBM capabilities of both coun countries tries countries have to be discounted a a-bout bout a-bout equally to take into con consideration sideration consideration the probability of er errors rors errors or failures. Meanwhile at Cape Cana Canaveral, veral, Canaveral, Fla., the Air Force fired - its With Intercontinental Atlas 4 early today to close out the key phase of the husky mis-'-sile's development. 1 Aimed at a point about 4300 TniiPK down the Atlantic track ing range, the 80-foot rocket was the last in the Atlas "B" series. In this phase the Atlas was tested with all three of its powerful rocket engines, design ed to give it a bisuu-mne doosi The firing followed by 11 hours the second attempt to fire the Atlas' backup missile, the Titan ICBM. The Titan launching was thwarted at the last seco.id when a malfunction develop developed ed developed in the 50-foot missile. TODAY TEH Tl0l)SAlD MYSTERIES SWipLED AflOlJflD TlEM TlEM-VI0LEICE VI0LEICE TlEM-VI0LEICE EXPLODED l TlEip FOOTSTEPS! 1 vl x 1 tr3ws? I (Lit 1 Ms .iiJt M IY'M pEDQRAVE CtALlDE unu won mm wm wm in FHnM en toutien M $mm, VM Nm ted Boasts Floodlights pierced the clear skv as the Atlas blasted off at 3 01 am, snaitenug uui coating formed by the sub-zero liquid oxygen in its tanks. The Atlas made a smooth start and climbed with gradual gradually ly gradually increasing speed into a star star-filled filled star-filled sky. After about two and a half minutes the missile's two booster engines appeared to burn out as planned, and the Atlas continued under power for another full minute. An eerie, blue and white wreath effect was created just before the engine burnt as tne Atlas reached an extremely high altitude probably about 500 miles above the earth. Rumors were plentiful on the role of this latest Atlas, in view of the secrecy-shrouded firing of the Atlas satellite Dec. 18. But informed sources said this was just another routine devel development opment development flight. Fitz A. Goodrich Dies Suddenly In Son's Home Fitz Albert Goodrich, 71. a British West Indian and a re retired tired retired Canal employe, collapsed in the Rainbow City home of his son, Harold A. Goodrich early, yesterday. ' Goodrich was rushed to the Coco Solo Hospital where he was pronounced dead at 7:13 a.m. bv Dr. J. L. Barraza. The retired man had spent the night at his son's home, Upon rising yesterday morning he collapsed while on his way to the bathroom. Goodrich had been in good health, but suffered occasional occasionally ly occasionally from high, blood pressure. An autopsy has been ordered. PRICES: .75 .40 SHOWS : 1:35 4:00 6:25 9:00 P.M. Three caught in the shadow-world of the seething Orient... and now ww- Joseph lwiiewicz' FIGARO, INC. presents (tui win wm tmit "ZtZT it to f inwHtt SMto Horn It TWW, Iw. tnMkm Hetomtf BEFORE THE D. A. Jose Felix Prado (center) .one of the two men who have admitted they attacked and killed American Thomas J. Marine last Friday night, and Juan Arzos Hermoso, (left) the alleged mastermind of the plot, are confronted with each other's statements be fore Dl3trict Attorney Dario bery and that his companion on Marine. The 77-year-old American was buried yesterday morning in a simple graveside ce remony attended by his widow, some 150 persons. Turboprop Crashes In NEW YORK, Feb. 4 (UPI) A new American Airlines turbo prop Electra plane en route from Chicago with 73 persons aboard crashed into 30 feet of water in the East River last mght when it missed its approach to La La-Guardia Guardia La-Guardia Airport in fog and driz drizzle. zle. drizzle. Nearly eight hours after the 11:45 p.m. crash, only nine per persons sons persons had been picked up alive from the icy ocean estuary and one of them died in a hospital. Several were in critical condition. Thus it appeared that 65 iper- sons were killed. Only 25 bodies were aecovered during the night. Two Civil Aeronautics Board of ficials began an immediate in vestigation of tne tragedy wmcn occurred a mile from the airport when the four-engine plane was makine a standard instrument ap proach. An eyewitness said there was an explosion at the time of the crash. One of the wrssencers, Sey mour Kemach, 36, of Brooklyn, said there was no warning. "I was sitting in the plane's lounge With another guy and two stewardesses, joking and talking Kemach said. "Then we went down and I thought I was going to die. Kemach and some of the oth er survivors swam in the icy wa water ter water to a commercial tug that was hauhng barges near the scene. Others were picked up by .police and Coast Guard launches, fire fire-boats, boats, fire-boats, and a police helicopter. They were suffering from intern al mjufaes, cuts, bruises, shock, exposure, and submersion, Dut no burns were reported. Among the survivors were three crew members Frank S. BELLA VISTA one of them carried the other back from hell so that the Saigon goddess could take her choice! I' JOSEPH L WMil f Sandoval. Prado insisted that Arzos plotted the attempted rob tne night oi tne auacK, juan Mrs. Rita B. Marine, members Electra On Chi-NY Run River; 65 Believed Dead HIavacek, first officer; Warren E. Cook, flight engmeer and Joan Mane ZeJler, Stewardess. Miss Zeller, 21, whs became a stewardess because she thought flying was "thrilling," was in : a daze as she was brought to flush flushing ing flushing General Hospital. "That crash, that horrible crash,' she moaned. "Please turn me over on my side. My stomach hurts. . It was the first crash of an A A-merioan merioan A-merioan jet airliner since the na nation tion nation entered the commercial jet age last November. Relatives and friends waiting at LaGuardia to see loved ones "come in on the jet" received the news with dis disbelief. belief. disbelief. Then they wept and sev several eral several fainted. A nurse was called to treat them for shock. Police set up a temporary res rescue cue rescue headquarters and morgue in the College Point section of Queens County, the nearest point of the Long Island shore to the crash scene. Searchlights from the launches crisscrossed the dark, icy waters which survivors described as "freezing really freezing.' The temperature was 42 degrees. A three-foot section of the plane's 32-foot tail, projected a- PARAGUAYAN CONSUL-Camilo Fabrega G. has joined the ranks of the Consular Corps in Panama upon being appointed honorary Consul by the government of Pa raguay. Recognition by the For Foreign eign Foreign "Office and the President of Panama was extended in a note on Jan. 23. Fabrega is widely known in "social and commercial circles, especially because of his association of more than ten years with Braniff International Airways, of which he is now district sales manager. 2:30 P. M. HELD OVER Slh. BIG TODAY 7:30'P.M. WEEK! "Inspiring I DeMUle ha give mofi mmbrabli production EXCLUSIVE? AND ONLY ViSTAVISION jumDreras, naa strangled of her immediate familq and bove the surface of the river. A 20-foot section of the plane was spotted by the helicopter floating near the Bronx shore on the oth other er other side of the river. Some bodies were probably trapped in the sub submerged merged submerged section,, police said. The Plane appeared to be in no difficulty when it informed the airport's control tower that it was approaching for a landing at 11:15 p.m. It was four miles from the airport at the time. There was no radio contact after that. Samuel Nicholson, captain of the tug that arrived first on the scene, said he heard an explosion when the plane crashed. He said he found survivors flailing about in the water and many floating bodies. When the Coast Guard launches arrived at midnight, they began "picking up bodies every everywhere.' where.' everywhere.' There were 68 passengers, in including cluding including an infant and at least four other children, and five crew members aboard the plane which had been in service only since Jan. 23. The flight, number 320, was a round-trip from New York to Chicago and it was running nearly an hour late at the time of the crash. It left Chicago at 9:54 p.m. i Weather Or Not This weather report for the 24 hours ending 8 a. m. today is prepared by the Meteorological and Hydrographic Branch of the Panama Canal Company : Balboa Cristobal TEMPERATURE : High Low .. HUMIDITY: High .. .. low .. .. 92 70 84 78 80 66 NE-24 0 80 45 WIND: (max. mph) N-19 RAIN (inches 0 WATER TEMP: (liner harbors) 79 LAKE ELEVATIONS: Gatdn Lake Madden Dam ... 85.14 ... 246.24.. BALBOA TIDES THURSDAY, FEB. I HIGH Time Ht. 1:29 a.m 14.2 ft. 2:09 p.m. 14.0 ft. LOW Time 7:51 a.m. 8:16 p.m. Ht. .. 1.0 1.4 ft. Iven th movie world Its WAITER STEVENSON, Detroit Time. RELEASE THIS YEAR! CECIL B. DeMILLE's Production TECHNICOLOR I $1.50 -r- 75c. Virginia School Integration From Norfolk, Arlington To 3 " RICHMOND, Va, Feb. 4 far-peacefully Integrated schools the race-mlxing crisis. ' warren County deemed to Charlottesville, which closed resistance''' program, teopened fwuiuw uu. win vuuuuik w ray un priTsie system wi up last jaa J CfrcumTent the? admission of 22 Negroes to the school: ;''"' : .-.!-T3JrTE$ Federal Judge Albert Bryan promised fir Alexandria to hand down an opinion Jn a da f- two. on a request to assign 1 Negroes to four Alexandria schools. ,-'v VJ.'a :'! iasi ween graniea ine enj stay oi integration nntu September. Twentvne Neeroes who entered seven scnoois in NortoiK ana Ar lington Monday returned today to another full session of classes. Norfolk reported attendance was picking up in two schools it re opened Monday under Federal court order. ; Yesterday's classes were order ly, school authorities said, and no incidents were reported. A few white students at Nor Norfolk folk Norfolk mad insulting remarks in conversation! within earshot of the Negroes but th Negroes said they ignored them. Meanwhile in Little Rock, Ark., the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has asked for-a three-judge Fed Federal eral Federal court to determine if the law used by Gov. Orval Faubus to close Little Rock's high schools to prevent integration is constitution al. Tls. District Judee John E. Mil ler denied a request by the Little Rock school board yesieraay w re reopen open reopen the schools as segregated institutions. ... . The board asked permission to re-open the schools, segregated. Immediately, and then be grant d ontil next Aufl. 15 1Blr, up with a new plan for integra integration tion integration to replace the on which led to rioting at Central H'Sh School on Sept. 23, 1?57. r. Tn rfpnvi'nff that reauest. Muler accepted a report from the hoard iri it rnuld do Nothing m the face of four state laws passed by a special legislative session last August. It was those statutes which Fau Faubus bus Faubus used to close the schools. Wiley A. Branton, chief legal counsel for the NAACP m Arkan sas, then asked for tne review to the law used by Faubus, by the Federal judiciary body. Miller reminded m ooera inF under th gradual Integration plan he approved In 195.- end which was later approval by the Eighth Circuit Court of Appee s in St. Louis "all puWIe schools would have to b r-pened on ... ..nr.n,l.li hatit." t- No vnrir thn U.S. Commls- oin nn rivil Riehts took under consideration today rtams f tes timony on racial aiscruninuuu i housing presented by more than 25 witnesses at a two-day hearing in K!cr rholrman of the commis- SAn th Rev. Theodore M. Hes- burgh, president of Notre Dame University, said tne nousmg tion is a national problem which must be solved on a national basis. "We are working toward a na tional policy," he deciareo. Hesburgh said th commission, which is invftiqating the issuw of equal prouetion of laws housing, voting and datlotl, will submit its findings and ree- ..j.ti.iu a President El- nhowr and to th Congress in report expected to bo ;reayf next Sptemor. i i rru. i,A.ms in ot rnncluded. ac- cording to Hesburgh, hadjnejm; portant effect it 'dramatized Jackie Robinson, the man who broke the color line in toasepau, told the commission that ' bean balls are sflU being thrown Jnhe housing field as well as on me uu field." .... Robinson saw mere is ineeu i "positive action by individuals to spur bias-tree, pnyaieij housing." Eisenhower Claims Hew Democrat Bills Mean Higher Taxes w k ctrTMnTnW Veto' A (UPI)-' n TTioonhnwpr cnallengea Democratic Congressional leaders today to raise taxes if they, pass costly housing and airport mus. The President told a news con conference ference conference that raising taxes would be the only straightforward thing to do if the Democratic leaders in insist sist insist on what he called .reckless spending programs such as their pending housing and airport con construction struction construction bills. He emphasized that he does not believe the United States wants higher taxes unless there is some emergency which demands them. The President opened his meet meeting ing meeting with reporters by volunteer volunteering ing volunteering an attack on the Democratic housing1 and airport bills. Both call for much larger spending than his own programs. Even Castro Needs Ticket In Spain V ZAMORA, Spain (UPI)-A pas passenger, senger, passenger, who tried to get off a train witho .t presenting his ticket today told the conductor: : "I don't need v ticket, I'm Fide) Castro. Though where' I come from everyone thinks I'M Napo Napoleon." leon." Napoleon." ...,,, i -.-'.4; !" .Police returned the man to the nearby Clempozuelos Mental Hos Hospital pital Hospital where he is listed is patient Juan Dies. .Rcocf (CPI) w Virginia turned its of Norfolk and Arlington to ,7' ;- keep its-only high school In. Front Royal closed at Jeast antfT? two fit its schools last fall under the nowtrlcken Sriassrni hen:;tf;r''Wgregaeil basis. A Federal appeals judeo- The former star of flio Brook Princs with housing discrim , lvlu ,v, in vttii ma- initfon. t. f: ,',- "When my wife and I decided to move from St. Albans, Long Is Island, land, Island, we were nut throutrh the usual hag of tricks, right in this siaie,v ne saia. ,. ... Among the' problems he ran in to, Robinson said,' Were: "We were told the house we were interested in had been sold just before we inquired. "we would be invited to make an offer a sort; of sealed bid and then we'd be told that offers higher than ours had been turned down, 1 "We tried bnyine Twuses on the spot for whatever Drice was asked. They handled this by telling us the house had been taken off the mar ket." Finally, Robinson said, he was abl to find a horn in Stem, ford, Conitv "due to The strong efforts of some very wonderful peopl there' .-: Robinson said h wnt th Waeti. ington "about 10 times in recent years to confer with officials, seeking action which would grant the Negro some1 progress toward equal rights in housing. ane omciais nave been: very polite to me.", he. said! 'hut r gardlesa of the reason, nothing has been done.f The" Rflman Catholic. archbishnn oi inbw xorx toict tne commission that racial or religious 4 discrimin ation -?ean become the hangman 6f any free nation." Francis Cardinal Spellman- said: It is a. monstrous and terrifvine thing that men can mistaken! v ha. lieve that they cad vlllifjr or vio- ! TODAY o (mm 1 ; I COLOSSAL DOUBLE I RELEASES i J2ST All TUP rilrVI :-mf I- TODAY!. I FILDIKnTr! ' jmmmmm Starrln(: ...H i; I charge double foira (" .v.-, : . 1 and as the mur-n VL .1 1 1 W3:T:-- screaming crescendo ,1 , H A "W 1 r the most 1 ' nnnraal crime, thril- n I J- Wleri ever filmedi I liifillBaiiil i .i in i' ii : ,$ory oh page Story Shifts Other Cities attention today from' the thw three others cities eanrht in appeals judge late other menVlights wlthdutT . vicuniiuiiExDemseives." r f -o Th cathenc prelate said thafl "No loyal. Amerlcenl whatevet his own particular racial bsclU ground, his craeder celer, writ himself enact or cwmnanoo any act of blgetry or priudid against any other American the wuold dny, imptde or impa the equal rights end privilege granted to him under the Co stitution of our United State j-2 Stanley? H Lowell, 'airman the executtve board of the Amer-f ican Jewish Congress New YobT MetropolitaB Council called! i fm formation of, a : President's coal mittee on housing discriminatlonT I ?ch a oemmittee, he said, vmikt Withhold Federal fiinrl. frnm n.rKj lics and iwivate housing projeets wmcn pracucerraciai or religloW uin;j.iujuiauun.v Algernon Black, chairman oi the Now York State eommlttef on discrimination in bousing e cvsed Hw FederaN government through its housing areieets.: Ho charged that" "entire Negro dif dif-tricts tricts dif-tricts are being cleared to make way for room :; rosMeted t whites only." The activity of the Commission of Housing Discrimination is ot a widespread v c a m i a 1 sr n throughout the United o lessen mncrimlniitiim:' ,i In part,' the "campaign is intend intended ed intended to ease rejaJSons jietween tjis Unite4 States t and Afro-Asian states This policy was reflected 4uni? the-1958 UN- General Assembly when the United States, for the first time, voted with, the Afro Afro-Asian Asian Afro-Asian states condemning South : a Su.B j m i ..... t.f ... e v Aincan apanneia pouaestt I i HIGH ABOVE ALL THE REST! TECHNICOLORVf . : r. --'" ''1 V.,1 |