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QKCURSIOH FARES NEW YORK MIAMI ; HAVANA LIMA BUENOS AIRES RIO X PANAMA 2.0975 ... v ? II fft THE FOURTH LANE A bulldozer smooths out the fourth lane of Fourth of July Avenue Bear the entrance to Quarry Heights. The avenue-border Is being widened to four lanes to ac accomodate comodate accomodate the increased traffic expected with the opening of the new Balboa Bridge. US to Arm n WASHINGTON, Aug. 24 (UPI) Th United States hat decided to give Laos emergency help in rming .5000 more troops and niini$t 'mmKXMsSxrrzji 5000 Troop Laos cial $ottm dlttlosad-wday: Formal announcement of the de decision, cision, decision, expected this afternoon. Is ot likely to mention the 5000 5000-wkn wkn 5000-wkn siw of, the fore increase or the cost of (h emergency aid, of- 'u, they said the United States wlir foot the entire bill, including pay and the cost of Uniforms and other equipment. '' The present 25,000-man Laotian . army is entirely financed by US aid. ' President Eisenhower approved the basic policy decision yester yester-day day yester-day .shortly before he left for Eu Eu-rovi. rovi. Eu-rovi. Officials said the United Stales ag.ees with Laos that, direct mili military tary military intervention by US or South Souther. er. Souther. Asia ;T r e a t y Oraan;zatiun (SEATO) forces is not necessary 1o, i jsl with He steDpc:.-up Com Communist munist Communist guerrilla attacks. $ officials sairf they knew no. basis -for a report that the Unff States was sounding out its SEATO allies on their atti attitude tude attitude about sending in an e ;oe ;oe-ditionarv ditionarv ;oe-ditionarv force if the Laotian government loses ground to the rebels t' the Laotian government's special representative, Ngon Sana-mtfne-,' -has warned lhal his ov ov-?rbmejlt ?rbmejlt ov-?rbmejlt faces collapse if the Com-mifni8t-5nsmred rebellion is not toon'stanipjed out. 3Pil Official Says Registrafian More Than Half Comn!e!e Spokesmen for the Third Nation alif ; Party yesterdav anhouneerl that the party had registered niore than half of the required 5000 members necessary for of official ficial official recognition as a national party. The spokesmen said the sum wrs reached in approximately 15 days. The Third Nationalist Parly i one of five groups seeking official recophition to nartirnate in the I960 presidential elections. t1! part'' must register mi minimum nimum minimum of 5000 members in three months, including at least five members in each of the 63 dis tricts. , i. x Today's Transits (scheduled) Northbound 16 Southbound It TOTAL i0 (Clear Cut: 5) COtOW 77 J 4. 4Mt X yxw s. y" 5 ,P ? Perez Jimenez To Answer .'Murder Charges To Press Maimi, Aug. 26 (UPI) 'ormer Ventiiician President Marcos Perez Jimenez, living in exiled luxury in a Miami Beach villa, today publicly answers charges -of murder and theft which could lead to his return to Venezuela to stand trial. The charges, itought by the Ve- gnszuelanr gSyefliimenf that ousted mm in January oi io. were made through the U.S. Marshal's office in Miami. They could lead to extradition to Venezuela for Perez. j An attorney, for the pudgy ex ex-dictatof dictatof ex-dictatof announced -.that v"P.J.," ai he is known here; wouldshold. an unprecedented -news confer conference ence conference today. The attorney said Perez could "comment in full" on charges of murder and theft in Venezuela which led to his surprise arrest here yesterday. This would be the first time Pe Perez, rez, Perez, has consented to a generil news or picture conference since he moved to Miami Beach last year. Perez was arrested yesterday at his high-walled luxury mansion on a warrant signed bv Venezue- Haitian City Mayor Says French Priests Preach Colonialism NEW YORK, Aug. 26 (UPI) The mayor of Port-au-Prince, Hal t Antoine R. Herard, charged to day that the colonialist attitude of I he French Roman Catholic tier gy assigned ttfiHaiti is at the root oi the present troubles between the government and the church. Herard made his charge in a statement issued here before he left for-Chicago to officiate at the opening of the ran American gmes. He said 90 percent of the Hai tian people are Roman Catholics and that President Francois Du Du-valier. valier. Du-valier. had extended honors to -i number of priests and had shown a "willingness and desire to walk hand in hand with the clergy." Herard is a Catholic. "But, and there is always a but," he said, "the great majori majority ty majority of French pr;ests in Haiti have received their instruction in q spe special cial special seminary in Brittany, France, at the impoverished Haitian gov government's ernment's government's expense. "Very 'few demonstrate a, true zeal for their calling, and when they come to Haiti refuse to ac accept cept accept the fact that the countr- is no longer a French colony. They want to maintain the people in a sort Of 'spiritual colonization.' In the main, onlv the Haitian nriests and the ministers of the Protes Protestant tant Protestant churches re making erin"c efforts to eradicate the supersti superstitious tious superstitious practices of the citizenry." Panama's Expenses Exceed Income By $7 Million The Panama government is run ning almost $7,000,000 behind its budget of income and expenditures for the lirst seven months of the year, it waa revealed yesterday. Expenditures from Jan. 1 to Ju July ly July 31 totaled $36,197,557, while in income come income for the same period was on ly $29,296,181. or $3,159,688 less man the 1959 budget estimates. The difference between income and expenditures is $6,901,376. AH mm L?t the people .V V J? Ian General Consul Manuel Aris Aris-leguiet. leguiet. Aris-leguiet. He was released undor $25,000 bond after a hearing. The warrant accused Perez ef being a fugitive from his native country and asked for his extra extradition dition extradition under a treaty between the two nations signed in 1722. Venezuela will have 60 days to prove that he stole at least 200; That would subject Perez to be ex extradited tradited extradited under the treaty. The complaint charged h I m with "murder, attempt to com commit mit commit murder,.1' embezzlement for criminal malvera ationj? hff accessory u such iwlmrCTTcW cfime's art' pectfifc fcHStWt tff ry ot extradition betweenthe Re public of Venezuela and the li nited States. ." American Youth Smashes Auto Into Concrete Abutment An American youth and a friend riding in his car escaped serious injury yesterday after afternoon noon afternoon when the youth reportedly blacked out momentarily and crashed head-on into a concrete abutment on Curundu Road. Stanley E. Chassin 18, who lives in Panama, was driving to toward ward toward the Curundu gate when he momentarily lost control of the auto, veered off the road and hit the abutment at the intersection of Curundu Road ana Terminal Place. The front end of the car was demolished. A passing motorist took the in injured jured injured youth to Gorgas Hospital where he was treated for facial lacerations and a possible broken shoulder and released. Salvador Girardi, a passenger in the car, escaped without injury. ' The youth told police he har no prior history of momentary black blackouts. outs. blackouts. Stabbed Soldier Back on Duty Pfc. John A. Dreyer, Jr., US sold:er stabbed during a fight at Rio Hato Aug. 15, has been released from Gorgas Hospital .md returned to duty, according te Army authorities. His alleged assailant is confined at the Fori Clayton stockade on a charge of "aggravated assault." Sp.4 Louis Etheridge Jr., is the sold;er being held. An Army spokesman said the necessary pre-trial investigation has been completed and a decision as to whether to bring Etheridge to trial is expected momentarily. Porky Pig Promoter Concludes 'What's Up, Doc?' Doesnt Mean Fat Prices By PRANK ELEAZIR 1 WASHINGTON, (UPI) Con Congress gress Congress is hoping to quit soon for the year, and maybe it's time. They're trying to get us confused. Take pork prices. - In thp uit)rmirkrt. latelv Dork shops, bacon and ham have been getting down to' where ordinary taxpayers can afford m. Well, they can buy'em, anyway. Pork roast here last weekend dropped as low as 35 cents a pound. Rib end roast could be had some places for 25 cents. Centers cut pork chops were of offered fered offered at 69 cents. I thought this was good. My wife Liliiam thought it was good. IKDEKKDENT VUbv. DAILY NEWSPAPER know the truth and thecounlry is $afe" Abraham Lincoln MO L Tuna Firm To Experiment With Operation At Taboga Frank X. Zeimetc, manager ef Panama Agencies, today re revealed vealed revealed provisional plans of a major tuna fishing and packing firms, which may ultimately lead to a large tuna fleet operating from a Taboga Island base. In order to forestall the rising costs of fishing tuna some of the U.S. tuna fleet, operating from San Diego, Calif., return from Peruvian fishing ground to transfer fish to fast refrigerated cargo vessels at Balboa. The transfer 1 costly; Zeimetz said because of pilot, dockage and stevedoring charges, and two of the firm's ships due in soon will attempt an open sea transfer otf tne lee shore at Taboga Island, us ing Panamanian labor and re remaining maining remaining in Panamanian waters rather than entering Canal Zone jurisdiction. Zeimetz, whose company is agent here for the tunafirm, said if the transfer technique is successful, the entire fleet of about 20 tuna boats, each about 350 ton capacity, will be operated out of Taboga and a large refrigeration plant con constructed structed constructed on the island for storage of the fish: In addition to the plant the tuna company Tourism Institute Sought By Panama To Attract Visitors The Panama Chamber of Com Commerce merce Commerce has submitted a formal re request quest request for the creation of a Pana Panamanian manian Panamanian Institute of Tourism as th fir$t step in project involving way,-. The proposed institute would be sin independent government agen agency. cy. agency. The proposal, which was issued yesterday in the form of a draft bill, cited Panama ai Hie country with the "richest tourist poten potential tial potential in the Americas." However, the proposal stated, little has been done to develop this potential because of lack of an organization to attack the prob problems lems problems of attracting tourists "me "methodically thodically "methodically and scientifically." The proposal called the Canal Zone a great potential attraction for tourists which 'has been so far unexploited. The Chamber of Commerce pro proposed posed proposed that ithe new institute be supported by funds derived from the tourist tax, the 5 percent tax on tran portation tax, and the Tourist Visa Tax. Navy Ships Norfolk, Peterson Due Here Tomorrow Morning Two Navy ships with bows pointed In opposite directions are due to arrive at Isthmian ports tomorrow. The destroyer-escort Peter Peterson, son, Peterson, commanded by Lt. Cdr. C E. Hunter, is scheduled to ar arrive rive arrive at Cristobal from Key West Fla. After transiting the Canal the Peterson will be berthed at Rodman Naval Station until Saturday, when lt will continue to Dundln, New Zealand, to participate In Ooeratlon Deep Freeze, the Navy's forthcoming expedition to the South Pole. The destroyer leader Norfolk, traveling from Long Bfacll, 1? due at Balboa tomorrow morn morning, ing, morning, and will leave Friday for the port for which it was named. The Norfolk Is com commanded manded commanded by Capt. J. W. Koeing and has a complement of 28 of officers ficers officers and 400 enlUte l men. I bet even some congressmen's wives thought it was good. But apparently, it's bad. Anyway, Assistant Agriculture Secretary Marvin L. McLain told a House agriculture subcommit subcommittee tee subcommittee he's got 100 million of our mo money ney money set aside to buy up pork if the market drops any lower. McLain didn't specifically come out against bargains. All he said was, the farmers who raise the pigs that supply all those hams pork chops, etc., are starting to eat mightly low oti the hog. He just doesn't want t,hem to starve. Naturally, I thought the sub subcommittee, committee, subcommittee, which is always look looking ing looking out for the farmer, would be happy to bear McLain's plan. would construct dock facilities for regular transfer of fish to t-press cargo snips. Former LI. Governor Visits CZ Friends Col. Herman Schull, .Jr., erly Lt. Governor of the Zone, yesterday called on form form-Canal Canal form-Canal many former associates and friends in the Canal organization during a brief visit to the Administration Building. He and Mrs. Schull are spend spending ing spending this week in the Canal Zone. They are among the many out-of-town guests here to attend the wedding of Miss Suzan Ruth Pui ter, daughter of Gov. and Mrs. W. E. PoUer, anu their son, Gun Gun-na, na, Gun-na, which takes place tonight. Their other son, Walter, also is here and will be his brother's best man at the wedding. Col. and Mrs. Schull are now residents of Jupiter, Florid a where he has his headquarters as general manager of the Florida Inland Navigation Division. Schull retired from the Armv soon after leaving the Canal Zone ana was associated with an engi Florida about a year ago. He and Mrs. Schull will be guests at the Tivoli during their visit 1 1 the Zone. Mrs. Schull was active in many civic and community ac activities tivities activities during Col.'Schull'i term of office as Lt. Governor. Newsmen Stoned At Dollarway School By White Teenagers PINE BLUFF, Ark. (UPD (UPD-Newsmen Newsmen (UPD-Newsmen here to report registra registration tion registration today at (Dollarway Schol were the target of a volley of rocks thrown by a group of icon age boys egged on by a white man. None of the newsmen was hit. A sound cameraman had sol ur his equipment and was preparing to interv'ew aboit 10 boys as io their feelings about expected inte integration gration integration Sept. S of the all white Dollarway school. "Those are nigger lovers, don't talk to them," shouted a white man from a half block away. The boys talked with him and walked back a port of the dis tance and threw rockes in the ge general neral general direction f the camera and three other newsmen. "Are you nigger lovers?" the boys asked. The boys were about 100 yards from the newsmen when they threw the rocks. However, the newsmen said it did not appear that the boys were trying to hit them. Gordon Yoder of Dallas, repre representing senting representing ABC-Telenews had set up his equipment to interview the boys. A United Press International newsman and photographer and a Pine Bluff reporter were standing nearby. The Dollarway school district the state's next potential trouble spot, began registering students today for the fall term. Wrong aeain. Too little and too late, said chairman W. R. Poage (D-Tex.). The subcommittee is looking with favnr on a plan of its own. Under this plan McLain wouldn't buy any pork. He would just give pig farmers a nubsidy. This wouldn't be for not raising pigs exactly, but merely for selling them while they're still young and skinny. This could oost us 150 million dollars a year. Naturally I assumed that Mc McLain Lain McLain who doesn't want the pig farmers to starve, would like the committee plan better than his own, since it would do more to keep 'em from starving. W Two Arrested In Hunt For Killer Of Pretty Maid Panama detectives have ar arrested rested arrested two persons In connec connection tion connection with the slaying last Sat Saturday urday Saturday night of pretty 26-year-old Paula Caballero in the back backyard yard backyard of the Golf Heights home where she was employed as a maid. No names were revealed. The Secret Police said two young men were bein grilled by homicide detectives but there was nothing new to report. The only tangible clues found by detectives are two footprints near the scene of the crime. It is understood that relatives and friends of the dead woman are being questlonel. In addition to an unnamed dentist who is said to hav,t: been friendly with Paula, local newspaper columnists have also reported her as having had af affairs fairs affairs with a 'promineni lawyer and a high school teacher. As In the case of the denti3t, no names have been released. Kobbe Gl Charged With Statutory Kape Faces Military Trial Army authorities today confirm confirmed ed confirmed that a 25-year-old American soldier charged with statutory rape of a Teenage baby sitter has been transferred to military jurisdiction with the concurrence of the Canal Zone district attorney. K:Sgt.veUn-,C.,v:Ll of Fort !or'i alleged to nave comm'i- ceoMne ouejise agmnsi old American girl who was tend tending ing tending the sergeant's children. Lewis was arrested last Thursday morn morning ing morning by military police, then turn turned ed turned over to civil authorities at the request of Canal Zone police, and held in lieu of $1000 bond. An Army spokesman said the transfer is such cases is covered by the memorandum of under understanding standing understanding between the Armv anH Justice departments when the al alleged leged alleged offense occurs snlelv within military jurisdiction. The girl is a daughter of an American civilian employe of the Army. Under the Uniform Code of Mili Military tary Military Justice (formerly the Articles of War) an actual trial would not take place until completion of a full investigation. Conviction m the charge called "carnal know know-lodge" lodge" know-lodge" in the Uniform Code 'ar 'ar-ries ries 'ar-ries a maximum penalty of 15 years eontinement 1 hard labor and dishonorable discharge fron the serv;ce. Lewis is being held at the Ft. Clayton stockade. Catholic Committee In Chepo Receives Offerings To Saint A large quantity of offerings to St. Christopher, the patron saint of the town of Chepo, which had been in the custody of a woman who died recently, were turned ov over er over to the Catholic Committee and the townspeople at a religious cere ceremony mony ceremony Sunday. The offerings were delivered by the children of the late Mrs. Mer Mercedes cedes Mercedes L. Gomez, who had been custodian of the offering made to the saint for favors granted since 1919. The offerings included gold and silver trinkets, religious symbols and other items which had been "iven to the church by townspeo townspeople ple townspeople who credited miracles to St. Christopher. Wrong again. He said the committee's pig plan is a stinker. The said the trouble with pig farmers is all the money they vc made. It seems the price of feed has been down, and the price of pork has been up. Ro the farmers keep raising more pigs. Now they're fixing to harvest a crop that will bring the year's produc tion of pigs to 104 million, wich is some kind of a record. That's why hog prices have dropped from more than 20 cents a pound to around 14 and below, and why pork prices, in the store also are starting to slide. McLain said promising the far mer hot less than 14 cents per pound for his pigs, as the eom- jr Seagram? rO V0. A f Shrugs Off Flood's Warning Invasion' Of CZ Panama Assemblyman and former forcinn minicf. Aquilino Boyd indicated today he would go ahead with pians ro marcn into the Lanal Zone on Panama s Inde Independence pendence Independence Day Nov. 3, despite lS Rep. Daniel J. Flood's speech Monday against such a proposal. Boyd emphasized that there is no desire to provoki hostile or violent demonstrations, "but Flood and all A A-merica merica A-merica can be sure that on that day Panamanians, with" if greater motive than ever, will march peacefully into th Canal Zone as an act of reaffirmation of Panama's iov ereignty over Isthmian territory." In his speech before the Patriotic Order of Sons of America at Harrisburg, Pa., Flood said Boyd's plans for the proposed "peaceful occupation" of the Canal Zone included a "mass invasion by Panamanian demonstrators and suggested that the Panama government take steps to prevent any such "revolutionary forays into the Canal Zone." Flood said thr demonstrators plan "to take up seats on the door doorsteps steps doorsteps of the Panama Canal admi administration nistration administration building, at the portals of the police stations, at the churches, in the clubhouses and other places of prominence" and descuhadU-aa'aoiifMwHne- to the long-range. Communist program of indirect warfare." Plenary Session Held Sy Chinese Communist Parly TOKYO, Aug. 26 (UPI ) Com Communist munist Communist China annnounced last night that a plenary session of the central committee of the Chinese Communist Party had been in ses session sion session from Aug. 2 through 16. The cutbacks in the production targets for steel, coal, grain and cotton were decided upon at a plenary session of the central com committee mittee committee of the Chinese Communist Party held Aug. 2 through 16 in Lushan of southeastern Kiangsi province which was presided over by committee chairman Mao Tsc Tsc-tung. tung. Tsc-tung. A full text of the communique of the meeting was broadcast by the New China news agency. The communique admitted "over "over-assessment" assessment" "over-assessment" of production figures and other troubles. It said a re-examination of this j year's plan for development of the national economy took place and it was found "that the original targets of this plan were some somewhat what somewhat too high and need to be ap appropriately propriately appropriately readjusted." Nursery School To Onen Tuesday AI Fort Amador A nurserv school will open at Building No. 9. Fort Amador 5, inclusive. Hours of operation Tuesday for children aged 3 to will be from 9 to 11 each morn morning ing morning Monday through Friday. Days for registration are Aug. 28 and 31 from 9 to 11 o'clock. For further Information call Fort Amador 5234. mittee bill proposed to do, would encourage him to go on raisir. more pigs. Without any gubsid., he said supoly and demand wi 1 fake care of ,viemselves v-. cially, I guess. If he pumps up the demand with our loo million dol lars 'People are always asking me when we are going to have a gen general eral general farm bill," Poage told me after the hearing. "I have said all along we will get a general farm bill when the price of hogs drops we'll have a fame bill with supports for everything, from okra lo celery seed. Hog farmers politically are the most potent farm group in the country." So I guess I'm not confused any more. CANADIAN WHISKY MOT Against , Boyd, a leader of the Third Na Nationalist tionalist Nationalist Party, declared that Flood's "eccentric pronouncement serve the cause of Panamanian nationalists more appropriately than the reactionary prineipls which induced him to deUvesmch an .address? ..w 1 Ho indicate that Float! hit 0i in made It evident tfcaf tho time nas come for Panama to take action and stop "btfoing for a better deal from the ev ernment of the United Statti..." In his address, Flood said the proposed march, "if permitted to occur, would be as gross an indigl nity to our government and flag as is made against the continental United States; and should be so regarded and treated, for it would greatly impair United States pres prestige tige prestige throughout the world." The Congressman claimed that advance world publicity ith agi agitations tations agitations in Panama (is) aimed at forcin" the Canal Zone 'sovereign 'sovereignty' ty' 'sovereignty' question into an international court for 'arbitration,' or to the United Nations. Boyd first suggested a peaceful Nov. 3 march into the Canal Zone to mark the 56th anniversary of Panama s independence from Co Colombia, lombia, Colombia, some weeks ago during a Spanish-language "Meet the Press" program. Owner Mistakes UK Labor Leader For Bartender LONDON (UPI) -Pub keeper Jill Winton got a new bartender loday after Labor I'arty leader Hugh Gaitskell politely spurned the job. Mrs. Winton today mistook Gaitskell for the man she- had hired to work the beer pumps ia St. Stephen's tavern, a favorite drinking place for members of parliament. "We have been waiting for you." she told Gaitskell if ho entered the pub. "You can start right away behind the bar.'' Gaitskell, who has been a. pro fessor and twice a member of the cabinet, begged off. "I am sorry, madam," he said "I'd be delighted to help you, but I am afraid I have a lot of work to do." Hp explained who he was. Red faced, Mrs. Winton apologized. $100 Plus $50 Jay Hissem, 42, American, wii f'"H $50 at Balboa Magistrate's Court yesterday after being found guilty of drunken driving. The fintj was in addition to $100 bail His- som forfeited when he failed t nnnear as ordered Monday morn ing. Hissom was arrested early Mom day morning on Barnebey Street, Balboa. He told the court his fat lure to appear was unintentional, that he had overslept. A warrant for his arrest was issued but ho reported voluntarily. In addition to the fine, his drlf er's license was suspended fqr one year, It' 3I WO HE PANAMA AMERICA! Aft DfDEPEHDENT DAILY KKWSPAPXS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 19S r r s a V t t t ' 4 THE PANAMA AMERICAN ' CNtB PoOnOHto .. TMI PANAMA AMtBICAN IMC . fOJNDtO v )ilLON KOUNOCVBI.L IN S HAHMODIO AKIA. foiled V t-7 n TRtFl P O 0 '34 or P. . CAOLI ADDfttOO MNAMIICH. P"NH cacON Ornei 12 17 CtNTi Avnui cir! th no iStm tit . .. reItSN RlPMICNTtTIVII JOSHUA B POWER. INC fT: 348 Moion Avi M ro H. V. - 1 item. PI MONTH IN ADVANCt ' ' I 5 ftO re. Oni V .M Advance Q $ Tfc. Mi.il loi h forum i Ltttn aro rocoiroo erorofullv an" h.tirfleJ in wholly tontidontU I noonor. ... .. .. .L. ru contribute t lottor 'out e impoNont It if ooom i ip' 11; ot lettr art oub'iiheo' in tho order rcivl4. "V '-'i, Pleato try to keep lerten limited to one Mot Unfth. i i. i Ll J MAvir canfldoneo loofinry mw iwtt imn - JT -a Tail ow$ppr itiaimi no rcopoiiiibilitv for otaromer THE MAIL BOX SANTO TOMAS Sfr' 1 read Mrs P. L. vescio s leuer inu da, --- Blood Bank at Santo Totnas, and 1 must admit that 1 was amazed Perhaps we went to different Blood Banks. One morning a short time ago 1 went to give blood for the Hos Hospital pital Hospital del S 1 had been a frequent donor in i the States but never had I recened the courteous treatment or the thoroughness I re received ceived received that morning. Yes, my temperature was taken, my blood was tvped and 1 received a short physical examination but I ap appreciated preciated appreciated this, not only for myself, but for the recipient of my b-All in all the procedure took less than an hour ;.nd Victor Charles who did the job was the best I've ever known. Can one measure live, in terms of time snent FIRE ALARM BOX S'r For the past several vears a fire alarm box (No. 165) located on Fourth of July Avenue has been the source of much anxiety for the S'stwherethe box is located is a deserted are aai nights "With no lights in the vicinity. The alarm box ha, been tampered with over and over setting off false alarms which cause no end of WOrnVyh:urth!nkn;hefK!ree opartmen, could remove the box and have it placed further along the street where there is enough light before somebody drops dead from fright. FULL EMPLOYMENT Sir: . i i n..inm one Box A e 21. o ew e everything in Panama with the Canal i This i. not fair. The Canal Zone certainly has no unemploy. ment pSkm. there are no beggars because they are Prohibited by Ihw there are no tavernsin short, the Zone is a paradise The -Tch is that as soon as you are unemployed there you are pushed ; across the line into Panama, to become a public charge - Cr ngo' refers to Panama's shopgirls, waiters, to the slums of - Marafion and to the spectacular mushrooming of supermarkets in FaTis an erroneous belief of many Zonians, including Government officials and "Gringo," that salaries in Panama are too low Shop Shop-I I Shop-I r s mav make "nlv $24 monthly, but a ihopgirl also enioy. the tol tol-fowing fowing tol-fowing bcneT.s If she becomes a mother she receives three months aTarv nd that same amount of time ofr while she having the child she receives free medical care if attended in Government or Social Security wards, or half her expenses if she attends a private cUn ic she cannot ge reduction in force without pay in lieu of no- ah n entit ed to one month's paid vacation every year she works for any enterprise, with a maximum of two months accrued vacatioiJ Tshe is entitled to 15 days sick leave annually with pay, and she is covered bv a liberal Labor Code. Bvcomr.ari.on. I know many men working on the Canal Zone riocks for $10 weekly, no retirement provisions, no vacations, no Jick le ve-a 1 became they do not work the number of hours re re-?uired ?uired re-?uired bv the Terminals Division. Furthermore, these men spend 5 lot of time waiting fruitlessly round the pool, waiting to be called fr Wa'uera in Panama make only $1 a day, there are mahv cities in the US where waiters buy their jobs, pay paying ing paying up to $1000 to work for no salary, just tips "Gringo's'' concern for the unfortunate dwellers in the shirns of Marafton should be even deeper if he realize, that many of them Vrl former employes of the Panama Canal living on their miserable W montWv cash relief. Previously it was as little as $25 a month. WhoTe ZU responsibility does "firinpn" think it is to care for these poor r.ldrter. who have spent their live, being exploited by the Panama Canal? The supermarkets are laden wtih all the foods ''Gnngo" mem (ions but at least the buying is done by Panamanians. When the commissaries were riding high this portion of the Isthmus' (nod irn irn-pons pons irn-pons were bought by high-salaried US Raters ,n 'he SuPP v ,nd Service Division, with a lot of business connections Stateside I k'ow of ton CZ officials who after retirement found jobs for them them-clves clves them-clves or their families with the same wholesalers they used to buy fr0;Grinn" gives the US Government credit for providing Pana Panamanians manians Panamanians with the best low-cost housing on the Isthmus in the form of the towns of Paraiso and Kainhow City. I would remind Gringo that when those towns were built a tremendous cry went up from US Raters who complained that their own high rents were being used to subsidize the low rents in Paraiso and Rainbow ( t. These US RMers even suggested to the General Accounting Office cele celebrated brated celebrated William Newman that non-citizen employes be shifted off the Zone. SMOKING ON Sir Dock tne inside the dock. A US guard Tiuir i -1 rivr.tte Instead of complying, the stevedore turned on the the guard, cursed him, and strolled off. , A little later the same stevedore was smoking again in the same DCSuppose It had been me. a poor dock laborer. They wouldn't forget to report me to the boss, and to bawl me out for not observ observing ing observing the regulations the Governor himself sent out all around the docks (Penyltv for violation: $100). "The white stevedore's cigarette maybe wouldn t burn down Cris Cristobal tobal Cristobal docks, but mine would. Jote Jutticia BARTENDERS CLUB Sir The other dav someone wrote combo that plavs at Panama's Bartenders' Club. On that note I went up to hear for mvself. I agree that the little band is one of the best jazz arouns that i have heard since coming to Panama. But win didn't the earlier writer mention me aimospnrre m uir establishment' I honestly believe that the Bartenders' Club is just about the only place in th city that rightly deserves being called a club. (With apologies to ill the others) Last Sundav night I went up there, as I have been doing almost every time I get into town. Around midnight when it .seemed that there would be no floor show, one of the members of the club (I nev never er never got his name) got a show together which consisted of 'wo of Pan Panama's ama's Panama's top professional entertainers, and two of the club's members who anDeared to be close to professionals themselves In fact the two fellows could very well appear on programs anywhere as pro fessionals. The show lasted about 30 minutes. And it was wonderful. From the moment you enter the club you get the feeling of be being ing being at home. Although it is primarily a colored club, it's really a pleasure to see the manner in which whites and colored get along. I am white, and not for a moment does anyone even makes me fee) self conscious about it. Even the waiters, who are decked out in colorful uniforms act as if I was an old acquaintance. There are no vendors, bootblacks, nor B girls to molest custom customer, er, customer, there. You enjoy yourself in a quiet homelike atmosphere. I have heard that for guest's entertainment the members ven hold contest, among themselves on Mondays. That's wonderful. SAN ANTONIO BUGLE Sir it vm mrm lnnlrin fnr nin reau at Chicago has reported the whole of the United Slates covered except at Redwood, where they are fighting a forest fire out of con control trol control and likely to finish what is left. Fresh prunes are coming in from the Rio Grande Valley and aoon it will be goodbye to California. What of this writing I ran see doesn't look right, 10 I had better try another letter next week. ' Pop Wright Ut ntitn of Tfc Mu" "'". entf or opinion- BLOOD BANK ,w.;l Dv And 901 hnilt the . 1 I U.. "-; r, rtr.' Mail n v nnnnreti uy uiuifeu Quo To Poroco, CholitoT THE DOCKS R last week a stevedore was smok- , 4 .i saw him, and torn mm m pui m.i in the Mail Box praising the jazz Bortondori' Fin ta nn further. For the weather bu Labor News And Comments By VICTOR RIESEL LONDON Most of this past uvek -end the finest of Scotland Yard, some mighty bright agents of J Kdgar Hoover's FBI and ie eral L b. Secret Service men were busy preparing for the se security curity security of another visitor by the name of Dwight D. Eisenhower. They ignored my talents. So I left them to their own devices and set out to discover why there are no crooks inside British labor, though some of our unions are part of the underworld. Soon I was in the presence of Sir Cecil Crabbe, a genial guar guardian dian guardian knight in modern black coat and striped trousers. Her Majes Majesty ty Majesty the Queen appointed Sir Cecil to an odd sounding post Regis Registrar trar Registrar of Friendly Societies. Strange as it sounds, if we had one in the U.S. we would have no crooks We would not be the butt of mocking jibes across the world. The foreign radio would not be talking of American labor rack eteering No one could steal un union ion union funds. Not a single union member could be deprived of any of his rights. Nor would a penny of his dues or assessments go to support political candidates or parties he disliked. Of all this, what intrigues me most is Sir Cecil's power to pro protect tect protect the funds of a union from po political litical political abuse. Especially in view of the uproar inside Congress to day over a new labor law. The RrilUh are so calm about it all and so effective. i Sir Cecil is modest about his, powers, He called in his aides and we went through documents which show first that the Register of Friendly Societies is a list of associations running from build building ing building and loan outfits and ladies' marching groups (black sashes' on display) to trade unions. Labor organizations have to re gister if they want to avoid pay ing income tax on their "provi dent funds" pension and wel are pooia ami ...veMniems on evn, wnu iidu ncvci uccu interviewed, hefore, asked me why I was so interested. I told him of crooks and muscle men and suppression of rihls. "In credible, he said, "incredible Look here at our political sec tion." I looked. The Registrar has the power to enforce a law whieJh says no un union ion union can spend any monev out n' its general funds on Dolitics for political meetings, literature, use of cars, or expenses or suport and maintenance meaning a sa salary) lary) salary) (of political candidates. If a union wants to go into po politics, litics, politics, it firs' has t write su"h a project into its constitution. This! has to be passexl by the member ) ship. Then the program must be registered. The union has Vto create a soecial political fuiei. which must be run along "Model Rules For Political Funds." These are inspected and guarded by Sir Cecil and his staff. Sir Cecil explained that any un union ion union memher can "contract out' of ttie political fund if h wants The funds are created by un ion officials taking a small per centage of each mer ber's dues and assessments. If the member decides to "contract out," he me merely rely merely fills out a form and sends it along to the proocr officials. From that moment, the mem ber's dues cannot be used for po litical purposes. This means that no member can be forced to pay full due if his money is being used for the dis tribution of anv political literature or documents or in support of any candidate or, even more im important, portant, important, anv prospective can didate. The fact that everv mem ber of the union has the right to refuse to join in the union's po political litical political adivitv must h "issed on the him by the union officials. Furthermore, the law say (and the Registrar makes cer tain) that "a member who is exemnt from the obligation to contribute to the political fund of the union shall not be excluded from any benefits of the union oi placed in any resoect cither rii rectly under any disability or dis disadvantage advantage disadvantage as compared with other members of the union ex except cept except in relation to control or management of the political fund of the union. ." If anybody picks on those mem hers who don't want to kick in, ine aggrieved members can go to the registrar. He makes a deri derision. sion. derision. That's it. The Registrar can prosecute. There have been cases where members have complained be cause a penny was taken out of their dues each period by a Communist controlled union with out authorization. The Registrar ruled this unlawful. It wasn't tne penny. It was the principle. Maybe the British could lend us Sir Cecil in exchange for all that tea we dumped some time back n f.f NEW YORK CONFIDENTIAL By LEE MORTIMER SMOGVILLE ON THE PACI- tack. He often accuses the police, FIC: Buddy Bregman (Anna Ma- wi.houl ns jusinical on, ol ir ir-l'u l'u ir-l'u eic s tx-namci anu autreis regular procedure and even cor- Gia Scala rekindled ao old Ho'.- lywoud ilame...Anne Baxter (not the twin) and Hyatt Von Dehn are a new discuvery... Ray Anthony iim fi ning .vi a in t- Van iJoivii ( and how can you forget her?) with Lou Aior gut J-ick Carson's ex I Phyllis Kirk ana Mort Sahl are1 much more serious tlun a mere column item... Rhonda Fleming's millionaire. Kehx Fosiel, comuigl Ifrorn Switzerland to visit her ...ny's Bar" on Virtudes where cab- Don'i knock science. After all it : was science that gave u. blondes.! AND STILL I'M HERE (Are very broadly translated for a fair- vou with me?). Singing star Dick ily journal's readers means "Fi "Fi-Roman Roman "Fi-Roman forgetting Millie Perkins! del's new guy-without-guts." ... with s.arici .vlari Edmond ..Don't Four Crosbj Brothers (in their get too excited by the Court of Las Vegas Sahara smash) note Appeals two-to-one decision requir- that they're just "lour young, guvs ing Communists to register ai, trying to get ahead without' the foren a tfentf. Judge Blzefon, who voted agin' it, was upheld by Warren's Supreme Court last time. Bazelon is a protege of (1- lino s' Jake Arve... Anthonv Quinn finally explained the date with press agent named Michael Sean K m Vovak to his wife Katherinel O'She n', Levin (who 'ike Hnl Hnl-De De Hnl-De Mille. Katherine is wearing lywood TV actress Leola Rich Rich-new new Rich-new ri'ainonds...Sicn over Ihe b-tr ards) open a new Gilmore's 'es- at Gatsby's: "Welcome to Alco- holics Enormous." LIFE'S LITTLE IRONIES: Bob Harrison, who lifted our title and debased our formula for h's no notorious torious notorious Confidential magazine asks me nol to blow my top jusi be because cause because he secretly acquired the rih s for the Lai' Mortimer "New York Confidential" and other "' Onlii'ential" t : ties for re republication publication republication in magazine formit. It's too l?te. 1 blew my lop right into the hospital when I discover discovered ed discovered who was in back of the dummy company I did business with. Har- rison s sensational N.Y. Con- fidential is now on the stands. Though I'm his, cantive "nari ner,' what I think of him cannot ne piinieti in h tarn ly puonca lonJano nn?s qw-" on the p'nnT i go not speaK to mm except in the lawver's olfice. But Jack Lait's widow and I ar in on a T J 1 1,1- (tei com niy 'iiv onsis on everv magazine he sells. So I've got to Miami Beach, and signed him for rool. he' von tieln me for Ihe sue-' f'nmms'pjoi" fii Kstnirp -r,n cess of Bob Harrison! Ugh!! polish. ..Lou Walters notes that ; he's bn'nnin In liVo 1 Vo-,s. IT'S THE SAME ALL OVER: j Is bringing the entire Folies Ber Ber-"The "The Ber-"The mosi ''s i-rhin" feature of 1 "ere 'rrn Pa'-is r rhrV. the increase in the crime ratP lies mas night at the Tropicana...Add n the fact tba' neither the ab- i inv r.ih-n -nM- sence of real poverty, or the more "toTessive methods em employed ployed employed in dealing with delinquents, annr 't have Hone anvlins 'oil reduce the volume of crime .. 1 ,?" -rlvnc to his mere through education, the criminal finds h!a readiest defense in at Now, It's Official ruption. 1 his is from a repon by the boss of Scotland Yard re re-gjrding gjrding re-gjrding ihe almosi 1 0(1 percent jump in crime in England sine l!)54. (So let 'em siiudup about America.) I CAN DO THIS STANDINGS ON MY HEAD: Best source of political info in Havana is "John- Dies and steerers hang out ... 1 hey re calling una s newest President, Osva do Dorticos, "El 1 Eunuco Nuevo de Fidel" which old maniMmonev (Thev for?et to mention that their mother left e ch o' them more than a mil million. lion. million. (...Strictly kosher Chelsea Ho Hotel tel Hotel in Atlantic City Ins an Irish taurant in September in the Bev- erly Hotel in "omnetition with the nearby new Four Seasons Restau Restaurant rant Restaurant which is managed by his son, Stuart. .According to Paddv (Clan house) Whitt tP SMhie of liber liberty ty liberty is no longer holding a torch. It's holding tlv bag. HERE'S HOW (Put not why!: Skitch Henderson playing it cool1 "m com"oi'"' i p-nivn i.e'in n Miami. ,.ThP Toots Shor mob play play-Nickv Nickv play-Nickv Ri-;rv Ria HA,";e. Harwyn and El Borracho... Now 'bat thev'n a tirrp- Father W I- liams and Ben Gage enjoy their dates ... Dor s Onke's M('"-wav 'near her New Brunswick Estate' is the Sirs'- Pi ;n Paramos S i s j down just like us common people' ...I knew they'd think of it. An j enterprising n'lhl '- ?t ronnH Ttea"i Jack, ex-ligh'weight champ of ' l-nnn vno siwnn onr iers.. .Which reminds me: Not a tro hushed what happened on Ju- of peasants were brought t" Hs- rv- v Oh yes. A lot of Cubans don't like i Castro.) slipped poison into the FINE WATCHES SINCE 1833 NtA Service, Inc. canteen coffee, killing 3,000 name jess Cdotro acuieiems. meywere secretly buried in huge trenches uuring ihe nigiii. so icdiiui was Castro to let out the news that the counter-revolution is that powerful. COMMUNISM CONFIDENTIAL Khrushchev and other Soviet liars and American apologis s for same insist that prostitution does not ex. st in the socialist parad se, whereas it is ven more preva lent in some oar.s of ihe Curtain than in the Western world where ' amateurs are .r ving pros out of business. In Russia, many wom women en women engage in the world's oldest profession to get more than the bare necessiiies o' life, which is all they get unless they're party members, b-llerinas or "favor "favorites" ites" "favorites" of important Marxists who o ;n for harems in a big way. The government itself employs manv fulM m "call girls" and many government girls are forc- eH 'o b? n-T -t;rf Htfto 'o take care of visiting VIPs from the .,,, n,i imhots from a a-broac broac a-broac who then go heme and taik about the wonders of the Soviet. THERE'S GOOH NEWS TODAY (But where?): Did anyone men- m Tf-v w-ld P-bian9 If not, why not?. ..Actress Diane Tr:hv .l-rMS K;mhA-'p' he Chicago paper king, watching Cen Cen-rl rl Cen-rl -r.- rivi P-mi rr-tii!ip ni's Penthouse Club. Now just why cSni'l'l Mqr'on nr"ryfn fun J) iv- iar party for TV's Mervin Grif Grif-r; r; Grif-r; "par mo'"'"'- of too'e Williams, the hot Embers star, is about wanderlust, isn't Prince and the Mrs get home? .Lionel Unm'nn ?n'p"Pc h's "THp 'S 1BO swanky that the attendant cleans Advice to young gals: Before gun--'" Sr a man find out if he's loaded. TO THE FAIR SEX But with mink 'ho can bo gotton. MPROVB POSITIONS PARRIS ISLAND. S.C. (UPI) (UPI)-,Tarin ,Tarin (UPI)-,Tarin Cnt. Mi'Tton JeraheV. of "JtnT'eon Bay Wis., and Sgt. Rob Robert ert Robert Watson, of Knoxville. Tenn., ,-r.r- ri"h bck here h v stirted today but in btt." roles. Thev were officer of th Hay and commander if h oard ;n the first i-eeruit trainin" bt bt-'lion 'lion bt-'lion here. Ten years ago to the lay, t'iov "-ere nrivates no'ling guard duty In the same spot. (QlcarcLy txcivnvi aaiHf woil riMilt wumi jfait-tiaoL cut out fliwdlumflMM&H r, I o WASHINGTON, -The Amer' ; can public -isn't being told u whole story about the shockini rise of polio which caugCit the na tion with a Salk vaccine shortag in many areas. C-lciaHy the U.S. Public HealL Service explains the situation b saying that "community" inocu inoculation lation inoculation drives, spurred by the rising incidence of polio, have drained off vaccine supplies. However, what the people aren't being told is that the alarming increase i the crip crippling pling crippling disease, plus the vaccne shortage, might have been avoid avoided, ed, avoided, or at least lessened, if many local medical societies had not blocked mass Salk vaccine im munization. One of the worst outbreaks of polio this year occurred in Des Moines. Iowa, where two years ago the Iowa State Medical So ciety went on record agains. "mass immunization. . .without (doctor) fees for administrr In other words, the Iowa Medi Medical cal Medical Society wanted Iowans to go to the office of each individual doctor and Dav a $4 or $5 fee foi each Salk vaccine shot, rather than have the shots administered on a mass, cut-rate basis by nurses under the supervision jf a doctor. It is well-know that many peo people, ple, people, especially lower bracket fa families, milies, families, will not go to a doctor's office to be inoculated against po polio lio polio or any other disease. A similar situation occurred in Washington, D.C., in 1957, wnen the District of Columbia Medical Society balked at supplying me dical supervision for the anti-polio inoculation of 1,600 Capitol, em employes. ployes. employes. They claimed it was ."so ."socialized cialized ."socialized medicine." The Navy De Department partment Department finally had to provide an attending physician. Dr. Leroy Burney, director of the U.S. Public Health Service wrien interviewed last week on NBC, did not reveal that the op oostion of medical groups to mass Salk vaccine immunization immunization-socalle'l socalle'l immunization-socalle'l socialized medic:newas the chief reason for the currenl polio epidemic. And NBC did not press him. In fact, commentator Morgan Beatty stated that Salk vaccine shots have been 'ree which was DAILY MEDITATION (Proiontod by tho Dopartmtnt of Christian Education of tho Epotcopol Church n tho Mis Missionary sionary Missionary Diocoto of tho Panama Canal Zona.) SKYSCRAPERS AND SUNCATCHERS "And I will miko thy win windows dows windows of agates." Wesjump today from tents to skyscrapers. The prtphet sees the high towers of Zion seizing and reflecting the sunglints Lke our own tall buildings which seem to scrape the heavens. Suncatchers he calls them, basking in the bright daylight. It is unfortunate that the RSV substitutes the word "pinnacles." It has removed the windows! This is symbolic of our modern culture. Skyscrapers have been erected without windows, t h e light and ventilation provided ar tificially. There are people who live e qually artificial lives. They arc never exposed to the daylight. Ne fresh breeze ever disturbs. No stuffiness. But we dare not pre sent a blank wall, however high ly polished and glittery it may be, to the world. We must look up to the God above and there fore out to our fellowmen in un derstanding and sympathy In our lofty tower we need a window of agate through which God s light can shine upon lis, suncatchers in a skyscraper so ciety. xmf .kjxmx jttMfflKtta. jm. life BBi3:itii:i iii3Mii:fiiaa I'liii KfliiniiiiiiVMiik mm QSLam, ALUMINUM aoaeum awnings today! !; For FREE Estimate without obligation 1 DISTRIBUTOR Wbdnhna, s.a. LA LOCERIA, PASADENA On half block to the left of the Nat. Brewery's main raje. crte Washington Merry-Go Round r DRIW PIARSON ny thing but the case in most ci-' in until the present emergency. However, Public Health doctors writing under Burney art less iiscreet. They are emphatic 'hat tad the medical societies of all states cooperated in mass inocula inocula-ion ion inocula-ion programs, instead of crying about, "socialize medicine, here would be no polio epidemic today. Also, with planned mass ino inoculations) culations) inoculations) the supply of Salk vac vaccine cine vaccine would be more closely stabil stabilized ized stabilized to demand, since manufact manufacturers urers manufacturers can, then gauge the market Note: Not all doctor, opposa mass vaccinations. In soma states, notably North Carolina, local medical groups enthusiastic enthusiastically ally enthusiastically endorsed the idea. YOUTH CORPS' Two senators who came to Washington during the first year of the New Deal, 26 years ago, lined up last week on opposite sides of the same measure for which they both voted as fresh freshmen men freshmen congressmen. They are: Sen. Everett Dirk Dirk-sen sen Dirk-sen of Illinois, now Republican leader of the Senate, and Sen. Jennings Randolph, West Vir Virginia ginia Virginia Democrat. The question on which they once agreed, now dif differed, fered, differed, was youth conservation, camps. Randolph, more than any other senator, is given credit for pilot piloting ing piloting the youth conservation bill through the Senate by a narrow 47-45. Sen. Hubert Humphrey of Min Minnesota nesota Minnesota introduced the bill with Randolph among the co-sponsors, and battled for its passage. But when it came to the legislative) footwork, he gives credit to thn Senator from West Virginia for getting a favorable vote. Randolph quietly went from sen senator ator senator to senator making sure tho had the margin to win. He knew it would be close. Almost every Republican was lined up against the bill, which provided for a revival of Roose Roosevelt's velt's Roosevelt's ; C i v i 1 i a r. Conservation Corps to get youngsters off th city streets and at he same time preserve natural resources. But Republicans claimed it in increased creased increased the budget. Dirksen, the Republican leader, told Randolph: "Your bill is a dead duck. We've got the votes to beat it." "You and I voted for the old CCC bill when we first came to Congress under the New Deal," Randolph argued, "I'm sorry that after a quarter of a century you can't do so again." "I've learned some things in the interim," Dirksen replied. "But in 1937," Randolph remind reminded ed reminded him, "you voted for the CCC camps again. This is pro-peoplo legislation which deserves your support." Dirksen remained unmoved, was confident he had the votes to block his old colleague. But when the votes were counted, the fresh freshman man freshman senator from West Virginia had outmaneuvered the veteran Republican leader from Illinois. KHRUSHCHEV VISIT Adm. Hyman Rickover wants to take Premier Khrushchev for a ride in an atomic submarine. If Khrushchev's not interested, he's in favor of a special de demonstration monstration demonstration voyage for a Rus Russian sian Russian naval aide. Rickover learn learned ed learned while in Russia that the flbviet Navy is having problems build building ing building its first atomic submarine, and he figures a ride in one of America's atomic subs would be an eye-opener. . President Eisenhower will do a lot of homework to prepare for Khrushchev. Special briefing hava been arranged to acquaint him in detail not only with the Cold War but even about the nation'! economy. Vice President Nixon has warn-. ed Ike that Khrushchev can spout statistics, facts, and figures to prove his claim that the United States is slipping economically. So Ike is now boning up in the USA as never before. The brief ings will constitute the most in intensive tensive intensive study the President has ever undertaken for a single as assignment. signment. assignment. His relaxation over westerns is out for the time being. 1 I 3 4 TEX PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSFAPE PACt THRU Expert Cohen Give s IncomeTax Advice To Embarrassed Lawyers MIAMI BEACH (UPI Half Half-pint pint Half-pint mobster Mickey Cohen, who lectured unsuspecting lawyers as a "professor" of income tax Sun Sunday day Sunday night, savored his joke yester yesterday day yesterday at the expense of the embar embarrassed rassed embarrassed American Bar Assn. "Yeah, I gave them some ex expert pert expert advice," chuckled Cohen who once served a five-year prison stretch for income tax evasion. He said he went to jail because "I didn't have the advice I gave out last Sunday night." The affair which shocked the dignified proceedings of the ABA convention here was a practical joke cooked up by Cohen and Melvin Belli, top trial lawyer from San Francisco. But the association did not think it was so funny. "This obviously is an attempt to use the ABA for a private promo promotion," tion," promotion," an association spokesman said. ABA President Ross Malone. who had laughed when told Cohen expected to address the conven convention, tion, convention, was not amused. He issued a statement emphatically pointing out that the seminar Cohen addressed had absolutely nothing to do with the convention. Belli answered, 'If they can't appreciate that part of the pro program gram program then the whole bar associa association tion association has lost its sense of humor." "I wish now he (Cohen) had never went there-;- and you can quote me on that," Belli laughed. "Never again." Cohen, wearing a $285 wrinkle wrinkle-proof proof wrinkle-proof suit, strutted onto the speaker's' platform before 100 to 200 lawyers attending the Belli trial Lawyers Seminar at the Fontainebleau Hotel. It was a pri private vate private seminar sponsored by Belli and was not a part of the ABA convention. Beli introduced Cohen as 'prp 'prp-fessor fessor 'prp-fessor O'Brien" and the short mobster climbed up on a tall bar stool behind the speaker's Iec Iec-turn. turn. Iec-turn. He had to crane his neck to peer over the lecturn. "I probably got more courtroom experience than any of you guys," the ex-convict said by way of in; troduction. The 25 to 30 lawyers in on the joke guffawed. The rest won wondered dered wondered what was going on. Belli, with a straight face, asked him if a person should pay his income tax by check or cash. ' 'It don't make no difference as long as you pay it," Cohen said. Asked how he got out of paying his own tax, Cohen mumbled "I'll take the fifth." He advised the lawyers that the only way to meet the income tax problem is "to RedXhmlJuftll FronfWoffll In Many Yeai WASHINGTON (UPI) Com Communist munist Communist China is suffering from; the worst drought in many years in its northern and central areas, the Agriculture Department 're 'reported. ported. 'reported. Ten provinces are affected in varying degrees, with 32 million acrs of crops menaced, according to Peiping announcements com compiled piled compiled here. Honan Province was listed is the hardest hit, most of it being without rain for several weeks in the period when rainfall is nor normally mally normally heaviest. "The drought area includes much of China's best agricultural land," the report said. "Among the highly important summer crops grown for food and export are soybeans, peanuts, rice, field peas, and broad beans. Cotton, and tobacco are the major industrial crops threatened."' . "More than 50 million peasants are said to be fighting drought around the clock in an effort to irrigate the land and minimize the damage.-to crops." from your friends." The whole thing was over fn less than five minutes with most of the audience still in the dark as to the identity of the "profee- borrow money sor." Poisoninq Strikes 200 In 3-State Outbreak NEW YORK, Aug. 2ft-(UPI)-Doctors sought today o deter determine mine determine the cause of food poisoning outbreaks in three states that left more than 200 persons stricken. Nearly 100 were either hospital hospitalized ized hospitalized or were given treatment for food poisoning at two separate picnics held in a North cheyenne, Wyo., park Sunday afternoon. Officials said 25 persons were admitted to Memorial Hospital and another 29 were taken to De Paul Hospital. A total of 35 per persons sons persons were treated at the park and sent home. James Young. Memorial Hospi tal administrator, said none of those admitted was in serious condition. The same caterer furnished po potato tato potato salad for both picnics, ac according cording according to Statp Health Director James Sampson, he listed he salad as the probable cause of the poisoning. Four restaurant employes at the Wisconsin State Fair at West Al Al-lis lis Al-lis were suspended Sunday after 20 persons were hospitalized from food poisoning. State Health Inspector Ronald Weber said that apparently all those stricken had eaten mashed potatoes and gravy at the fair fairgrounds grounds fairgrounds restaurant. Weber said the four employes of the restaur restaurant ant restaurant all had minor- scratches, burns or wounds on their hands. However, he said the source of the epidemic had not yet heen pinpointed, or traced to the four suspended employers. About 12 persons remained hos hospitalized pitalized hospitalized in Attica, Lnd., for treat treatment ment treatment of food poisoning which struck down nearly 100 persons during a company picnic Saturday rught. State Health authorities said food samples were being analvzed to determine the exact cause of the poisoning at the Radio Ma Material terial Material Co. picnic. However, J. F. Reilly, chair chairman man chairman of the board, believed taint tainted ed tainted ham was the probable cause. He said a member of his own family became ill after eating a ham sandwich. REACH TIRE AGREEMENT KUALA LUMPUR (UPI) Agreement has been reached be between tween between an American and Malayan company to set up a tire factory Details of the industrial comoine were given by Richard D. Rosen Rosenberg, berg, Rosenberg, manager of the Dayton Rubber International of Ohio, and two Malayan industrialists, Shum Kwai Hong and H. M. Shah. The plant initially will produce 1,800, 1,800,-000,000 000,000 1,800,-000,000 tires annually, Quote Unquote TOMS RIVER, N.J. Ocean County Prosecutor Howard Evart, tracing a prison fire that killed eight inmates to an inflammable tranquillizer solution and a eiga eiga-ret ret eiga-ret slipped to a deranged pris prisoner oner prisoner by a trusty: ii was an act of kindness, but he gave it to the wrong guy." WASHINGTON Senate Demo Democratic cratic Democratic Leader Lyndon Johnson (Tex.), on possible adjournment of Congress to avoid taking part in greeting Soviet Premier Niki Niki-ta ta Niki-ta S. Khrushchev next month: "I don't believe that the fact that the President has invited a visitor to this country and he has accepted is any reason for mem members bers members of Congress to flee the cap capital." ital." capital." MINNEAPOLIS Vice Presi President dent President Nixon, reiterating that Presi President dent President Eisenhower will not carry on private negotiations on Berlin with Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev: "Any settlement of any ques question tion question will have to be made with all appropriate parties present." Women visitors to the Chinese Fair, held recently In the Chines Club to raise funds for a children's recreation center, wen pleased to find the "Adorn Girls," who readily helped to keep hair styles in place by using a new styling comb and the faurls faurls-ible ible faurls-ible hair spray. I j ACEITE PURO i VEGETAL v j BlEN REFINADO ? t PAIU NUESTEO ORGUUO lMCCHO EM fHt-Tf7i -an ECONOMICAL SUPERIOR Quality Oil! LOS ANGELES An unnamed detective, suggesting that pretty University of Southern California coed Linda Edna Martin was stabbed to death by a prowler as she stepped from a bath in her fiance's apartment: "I think myself it was a strang stranger. er. stranger. Whoever was in there appar apparently ently apparently was surprised by her and when she screamed, he stabbed her. There wasn't much of a fight." (Ford of Germany) COSMOS, S. A. Tel. 2-4680 EXPANDING JET SERVICE NEW YORK (UPI) Pan Amer ican World Airways Inc. an announced nounced announced over the week end it will extend its jet service to six north northern ern northern European citis stating Oct. 25. The cities are Frankfurt, Dus Dus-seldorf, seldorf, Dus-seldorf, Hamburg, Copenhagen. Amsterdam and Brussels. Pan American jets already serve Lon London, don, London, Paris and Rome. AUG. 28 ) BIG MATERIAL SALE TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS OPPORTUNITY ZIG-ZAG Opium J A wardrobe of woolens that rates an "A" NOW specially priced for the college erowdl ' For Jo9 College fin textured overcoats and sports coats... expertly tailored suits for aH.campus wear... magnificent sweaters In cashmere and wool... warm woolen took. For Betty Co.ed fashionable coats and suits for class and date wear.., sweaters In favorite classic and new styles... lovely skirts, slim. lined, pleated and full... all In exciting colors. Mjre Wonderful Buys at Our Storewlde Sale, Starting Sept. Smokeless odo Mess ON SALE EVERYWHERE In Sizes of 1 Gal. 12 gal. 15 gal. -- 18 gal. "77 N o matter what oil you are using now... oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooao o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 9 o o o 2 3 2) o o o o THAT FOR ONLY (DOWN PAYMENT) You can buy a General Motors VAUXHALL Victor Super 4 DOOR SEDAN SEE IT . DRIVE IT TODAY O O o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o PANAMA COLON 9 o ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo MHMHHHHaaMaEaBM PAGt FOUR til PANAMA AMERICAN All INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPE WEDNESDAY, ACGUJIT M, ll ocia (and Oilier Box 134, Panama NEW OF ENGAGEMENTS, MARRIAGES, SIPTMS, PARTIES AND TRAVEL SHOULD BE MAILED PROMPTLY TO BOX-NUMBER SHOWN. IT WILL BE RECEIVED BY TELEPHONE OVER PANAMA 2-0740 OR 2-0741 BETWEEN 8:00 AND 10 A.M. ONLY. MISS Sl'ZAN POTTER, MR. GUNNER SCHULL WED THIS EVENING AT ST. LUKE'S CATHEDRAL An outstanding social event of the season will be the wed wedding ding wedding this evening of Miss Suzan Ruth Potter, daughter of Canal Zone Gov. and Mrs. William E. Potter, to Mr. Edwin Gunner gehull, son of Col. and Mrs; Herman W. Schull Jr. of Jupiter, Fla. 1 The vows will be exchanged at eight o clock in the Ca Cathedral thedral Cathedral of St. Luke, Ancon. The wedding reception at the Gov Governor's ernor's Governor's House will follow the ceremony. Air Force Base will sponsor a fa family mily family breakfast Sunday, septem ber 6, after the 7:45 k.m. mass at the Albrook Officers Club. The Sodality is making arrangement lor a guest speaker. Tickets will be available after mass this Sunday. AMaro Dt li Guirdu Wedding Stt For Friday Of social prominence in Pana Pana-mf mf Pana-mf City will be the marriage Fri Friday day Friday evening of Miss Analida Al Alfaro faro Alfaro daughter of Mr. and .Mrs. ASionio J. Altaro. to Mr. Joaquin ds la (iuarriia. son of the Pres President ident President of Panama and .Mrs. Lr Lr-ne'sto ne'sto Lr-ne'sto de la (luardia Jr u"he vows will he exchanged at gix o'clock Friday evening in San San-tu'ario tu'ario San-tu'ario National in Panama City. Miss Alfaro -was feted today M Daring Men Brave Death To Recover Two Dead Bodies TRANC0N1A NOTCH. N. H (fJPl) A band of daring men dc fieri death vosterday to lower thej bodies of two student? who died of hunger and cold on a lcdg below the "Croat Stone Fare" ol tHflVhite Mountains. j .Four hardy mountain climbers ' itowly inched the bodies .down the nfcarlv perpendicular 500 fool precipice of profile mountain, fymed tourist attraction in Fran eonia Notch. The vouths. Alfred Whipple -lr.. 20 of Gales Ferry. Conn., a sopho sopho-Triore Triore sopho-Triore at Brown University, and Sidney Crouch, 21, of Ledyard, yard. Conn., a student it Export (Pa.) Bible Institute, were itranded atop the ledge for 24 hours and died of exoosure within minutes after rescuers reached them Monday. a pre bridal luncheon given by Mrs Finita Samudio Arosemena and her sister, Miss Mayra Sa Sa-mud mud Sa-mud o, at the home of their pa parents. rents. parents. I A luncheon and kitchen shower i was given for Miss Alfaro yester yester-,da ,da yester-,da h Miss Irma Gonzal .laco .laconic nic .laconic and Miss Maria Pia Consani. lAlbrook Sodalify Plans ; Family Brtakfist Our Lady's Sodality of Albrook Meetings Gm, Mineral Society An important meetinf of the ( anal Zone Gem and Mineral So So-cietv cietv So-cietv has been scheduled tor Fri Fri-dav' dav' Fri-dav' evening at 7 30 at the club building in the Balboa pier area. New officers will be elected, and reservations will be taken for the annual club dinner Sep September tember September 11 at the Tivoli Guest House. Paraiso Camtra Club The newly-organized Camera Club of Paraiso, sponsored by the Recreation Committee of the Pa Paraiso raiso Paraiso Civic Council, will hold its I second meeting Thursday evening at 7 in the music room of the Paraiso High School. I A detailed report will be given t Sylvester Callender. president, and the proposed constitution and in laws will be read. Permanent uii'tters will be nominated and e e-icckd, icckd, e-icckd, and membership dues will i. c determined. All camera fans are invited to aitend. Alumni Chorus At Camp Bierd Theater Sunday Ti e La Boca Alumni Chorus will be presented at Camp Bierd theater oy the Pat Morgan Gar Garden den Garden Club Sunday' afternoon, and will be heard tor the first time in a joint program with the 76th Air Force hand of Albrook Field. Mrs. Victoria Whyte. president of the Pat Morgan Garden Club, said the club is serving as joint sponsor of this concert in which tne Latin American Scholarship Committee endeavors to raise funds to assist deserving stud students ents students to pursue a higher education. There has been a wide distribu distribution tion distribution of tickets, and advance sales and comments indicate that pub public lic public support will not be lacking lor this cultural program, sche scheduled duled scheduled to begin at 4 p.m. precise precisely. ly. precisely. A repeat presentation of this musical concert is scheduled for the Paraiso Gymnasium on Sun Sunday, day, Sunday, Sept. 6. Ill niton Fine Bone China Shay's, S.A, Panama, K. 1. Zor S.P.C.A. The Canal Zone Chapter of the Society for the .Prevention of Cruelty to Animals will have a general meeting( Thursday eve evening ning evening at 7:30 in tlie library of the Balboa L'SO-JWB. ) The Canal Zone Spanish Con Conversation versation Conversation Club will hold its regu regular lar regular meeting at the Quarry Heights Officers Club this evening. The club whose members meet nformaU.oipiaeUce S)ani: pr Knglish, depending on their na live tongue, will meet at 7:30 p.m Dress is informal and the pub public lic public is cordially invited. dolorks krtsift announces the opening of her SCHOOL OF SPANISH DANCIING October 5, 1959 THE TEEN CLUB, BALBOA, C.Z. FOR THn CONVENIENCE OF THOSE WHO WISH TO PLAN AHEAD, DOROTHY CHASE Expert Teacher of BALLET and all related forms of Dance, will hold Registrations for the 1959-1960 term on August 25, 26, 27 from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Knirhts of Colum Columbus bus Columbus Hall in Balboa. (Term begins October 1st). Courses will include Fre-School Tots thru Teenagers, Beginners, In Intermediates termediates Intermediates and Advanced. A Professional Polish awaits the ambitious advanced student. Red Chinese Farmer With Green Thumb Tries New Project TOKYO (UPI) Tseng Jui Jui-Kuang, Kuang, Jui-Kuang, the man with the greenest thumb in Red China, has branched out Irom tomato-potato plants and colored cotton fields io poultry improvement, Peiping said today. 1 The Communist New China News Agency hailed the 39 year- old peasant for developing and improving breeds of chickens, sheep and goats, despite the fact that he never finished grammar school and was cxpoed to higher learning only as a porter in an agricultural college. The agency said in a Radio Pi ping, broadcast' he still was kee; ing his hand in the plant world by developing a new strain of to tobacco bacco tobacco with a greater yeild and "bfctter aroma and taste." But he also has developed a new breed o, chickens which laid 270 eggs apiece annually," several dozens more than the local kind." However, the agency indicated that it felt his greatest triumDh was the one announced last win winter ter winter when he successfully crossed lomatoes with potatoes and evolved a kind of plant which bore tomatoes above ground and potatoes underground. STOREWIDE SALE Guard Against Heat with MEXANA The whole family will enjoy the feeling of freshness which MEXANA powder gives. For prickly heal, rasli. eczema. diaper rash and skin ir irritations ritations irritations . nothing can surpass . Mexana. Contains Starch POIVQ k in. Viriili- Familiar Names AilCwer 10 ruiiuut ruizle ACROSS l'Mv Wild Irish 5 "Good Queen t Joan of Arc (ab.) 12 The curtain 13 Seed vessel 14 Rocky hill 15 Poisonous spider 17 Baba 18 Blue Gown" 18 River in Virginia 21 Jog 23 Enervate 24 Last month (ib.) 27 Passport endorsement 29 Chair 32 Package 34 Hostage 36 Opposed 37 Close again 38 Identical 38 Brazilian money 41 Mariner's direction 42 Balaam's Balaam's-44 44 Balaam's-44 Dross 46 Most jobese 49 Festivals 53 Past 54 Location 56 " Skelton 57 Yugoslav Mr. Big 58 Volcano in Sicily 59 Poem 66 Simmer 61 Fly DOWH 1 Hayworth 2 Spoken 3 Spore case clusters 4 Put into effect 5 Blind as a 6 Bursts forth 7 Fodder pit S Narrow boards 8 Mass movements 111 Rupee weight ! the Sed 16 Gives courage L'li Fertile spoil 22 Tanker 24 Poisonous tree QlEjglU l5iOi-l i MIA ARK. A E fPEN TAPE. Ul IM PJS N E?A TnA K. TXf B' g E M T XT"' glT ? g, Ie g.Ef Pofl -Est & t 5 m BspL. C M U O g 1 I E LA T E Q P r- g giA F- "fZ g N ' vest t T 5TT g T ?ET Qf AIM Mf agMfri -IBM pIeHp 25 Molten rock 26 Parasite It thower 30 Oriental princes 31 Distant (prefix) 33 Peak 35 French novelist 40 Landed property 43 Tribal groups 45 Sports 46 Gambling game 47 Old 48 Cut 50 Apollo's mother 51 Eleanor Roosevelt 32 Asterisk 55 Milk producei i B ft I I? L ) I f f. l 2 ZZZ rzz it: 55 1 1 1 Tt s a k pr- r a rjr s t "!T!r: i -rsriT "J g rfl w or c-y p 1st 5 ft 55 51 5S 5! HI CT""" z Mrs. NAT SHARP AND HER COMMITTEE Wish to thank the merchants of Pan Panama ama Panama for their generous contributions to the Annual Fair held at the USO-JWB on Wednesday evening, August 19, for the benefit of the Salvation Army School for the Blind and the Lighthouse in Jerusalem. I Dear Friends: At I am continuing to make improvements in my service to you, I'll have to suspend electrical services tomorrow, August 27th, at the following areas: HOUR: 1:00 a.m. -6:00 a.m. Ave. Central, from Calle H to Calle B Calle 13 Oeste, from Calle C to Ave. A Calle 14 Oeste, from Calle C to Calle G Calle 12 Oeste, from Calle C to Calle B Calle G, from Calle 14 Este to Ave. Central. Calle E (part of it) Calle D (all of it) Calle C, from Calle 14 Oeste to Ave. Central Calle B, from Calle 14 Oesle to Ave. Central Thanks for your cooperation. K-LISTO KILOVATIO I Ftiti i l Lif) tmiM t Sim J By OSWALD JACOBY Writttn for NEA Srvic NORTH 28 A K7 5 V 973 64 AJ1064 WEST EAST 4k 4 A J 10 9 3 J 108 6 4 VAK52 QJ 109 4A75 985 7 3 SOUTH (D) 4 AQ662 VQ K832 KQ2 Both vulnerable Sooth West North East 1 Pass 2 4 Pass 3 Pass 3 Pass 4 4k Pass Pass Pass Opening lead Q The normal play with five trumps to two top honors in your hand and three to the other top honor in the dummy, is to cash dummy's top honor on the second lead of the suit but this normal play is not al always ways always correct. East won the opening diamond lead with the ace and played king and ace of hearts. South ruffed and saw that he would make the rest of the tricks if trumps broke. He also had seen hands before when trumps did not break so played safe by cashing his ace and queen of trumps. When West showed out South rtarted aft after er after the club suit and although East trumped the third club he had no way to beat the hands since he I could not keep South from getting to dummy with that king of spades jto cash the last two clubs. If South had played trumps care lessly and taken dummy s king on the first or second lead of the suit he would have lots of ways left to play the hand but they would all wind up the same way down one. 28 Q The bidding has been: Et South West North 1 A ? You, South, hold: What do you do? A Bid one no-trump. This bid shows an opening no-trump with at least one apade stopper yhteh it Just what you have, TODAY'S QUESTION Your partner raises to two no no-trump. trump. no-trump. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow b?V) THE VOICE OF jfe BROADWAY Rfffoj by Dorothy Kiligallen All the news stories about rift between Bing Crosby and his four grown sons came as no sur prise to those who know the crooner and his kids particularly Gary, who is as temperamental as Maria Cartas. Most show bus business iness business partisanship is on the side of Bing, who isn't being condemn condemned ed condemned by his sons for any profession professional al professional reasons but because they dis disapproved approved disapproved of his marriage to young actress Kathy Grant, and made that quite clear to him. There's talk that Gia Scala may star in Dore Schary's next Broad Broadway way Broadway play. .Rodgers and Ham Ham-merstein, merstein, Ham-merstein, have settled on their Mother Superior for the demand demanding ing demanding singing" role in "Sound of Mu Music." sic." Music." She's a mature legit sopra soprano. no. soprano. .Marlene Dietrich, whose arrival in South America s made headlines, can pick up a fabulous $50,000 for a 10-day en engagement gagement engagement at the Palm Beach Casino in Cannes she's that mucin of a draw. ..Lillian Roth's husband, Bert McGuire, is re recuperating cuperating recuperating at home after major surgery at a West Coast hospital . .Micky Rooney is one of the angels behind "Cops and Rob Robbers," bers," Robbers," the upcoming Sid Silvers Silvers-Harold Harold Silvers-Harold Spina musical. Johnny Ray's record of his own composition, "I'll Never Fall in Love Again" is breaking as a big hit all over the nation. Richard Maltby did the dramatic arrange arrangement. ment. arrangement. .Arthur Godfrey is cast casting ing casting the disapproving parental eye at a young Southern gentleman who made bold enough to court the 01' Redhead's daughter. The radio and TV star hopes to sa sabotage botage sabotage the romanpe. . .Sudden thought: Nikita Khrushchev bears a striking resemblance to Boris Morros, who made headlines' as a "double spy." Brigitte Bardot, who has been known to take off her clothes at the drop of a lens sKitter refused to disrobe for a doctor who want wanted ed wanted to give her a life insurance physical. Clue to her attitude: the policy was in favor of her film producers, not her. Just something they thought up in case she should meet with a sad fate during line making oi a flicker. FBI Puis Toupeed fugitive On List Of Most Wanted WASHINGTON (UPI) James Francis Duffy, a tattooed and sometimes toupeed fugitive who was once an inmate oi an insti tution for the criminally insane, today was placed ...'.on the FBI's 10 most wanted list. The FBt described Duffy as a "hot-tempered armed robher, warning the public and searching law enforcement officers nation nationwide wide nationwide that he should be consider considered ed considered armed and extremely danger dangerous. ous. dangerous. He has threatened to open fire on any arresting officers, then use the last bullet to com commit mit commit suicidt. The 52 year-old Duffy who was born in England has a crime career dating hack to the age I 19. He is currently wanted on a federal warrant for unlawful flight to avoid prosecution for a nighttime armed robbery of a Droxel Hill. Pa., inn in 1958. Duffy, 6 feet 1' inches tall and weighing about 170 pounds, is said to consider himself a confidence man who "will not work tinder any circumstances when it can be avoided." He has a kewpie doll tattooed on the back of his right wrist an the intlals R and B on his right forearm. Duffy is balding and "may wear a toupee." He has a crar on his left eyebrow and at the root of his nose. In 1942, Duffy was adjudged in sane and moved from the Eastern State Penitentiary at Philadelnhin where he was serving 10-20 years for armed robberv o p stat" nen tal institution at Waymart, Pa, The Four Seasons 'restaurant is almost as crowded before it opens for lunch as it is at meal time time-it's it's time-it's packed with models from Vogue, Pageant, and ott r magaz ines plus their camera crews who find the premises perfect for tasnion layouts, .Table 50 at the Stork Club (the definite mark of chick) was occupied by a fascin ating combination the other night: Galmorous Dolly O'Brien with fighter Rocky Marciano and Bob Straile, owner of One Palm Beach Athletic Club. Bess Meyerson, one-time MisS America, tells chums she's been approached to make her Broad Broadway way Broadway debut in the forthcoming Ginger Rogers play, "Pink La Lady". dy". Lady". .Friends gloomily confide that Mike Romanoff, colorful West Coast 'restaurateur, is far more seriously ill."than most of his patrons suspect. .Audience who've seen previews of ihe Sophia Loren picture, "That Kind Baptists Sponsor 'Surprise Night' The Panama Baptist Church will sponsor a special entertain entertainment ment entertainment entitled "Night Of Surpris Surprises" es" Surprises" at the church in Guachapali, on Monday. The affair is aimed at raising funds for a new church-building being raised at 4th street, Rio A A-bajo. bajo. A-bajo. Entrance is free, no collection, but donations will be accepted. Cakes will be sold during the program. KAISER PLANT REOPENING OAKLAND. 'Calif. t UPD UPD-Kaiser Kaiser UPD-Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corn, said yesterday its BelprC. Ohio plant, idle since last Tues Tuesday. day. Tuesday. v:ll resume onerations Aug 31. The unit was forced to shut down hec'iise of a wildcat strike at Kaiser's smeller and fabrica fabrica-t t fabrica-t "n facilities in Ravenswood, 'W. Va. Of Woman" predict Jack Warden will win an Academy Award no no-mination mination no-mination for his peerless drunk scene. Kay Williams is delighted by Clark Gable's decision not to pro duce any more films as tycoon of the Gabco picture firm. He wa offered the producer's job on hi next, "But Not For Me," but turned it down with the comment, "An actor should never be a pro producer ducer producer too. It's a mystery to me how these producer-actors hold up under the strain." But don't cry over his sad plight; his de decision cision decision to take a percentage deal instead will net him approximate approximately ly approximately $1,000,000 on the movie. A "Free Czechoslovakia" move movement ment movement has begun unusually active underground operations. It will harass Russians officials Frank Sinatra's agents are still quaking from a recent experience. They telephoned Montauk Manor to reserve rooms for the singer and his entourage and were told "Sorry, we're all booked up" a shattering occurrence. . Big News for the bOngo-lovln set: Guy Warren will return to the African Room next month. He's currently in his native land, Ghana, where he spent a year writing a book about Africa.- . Experts say the best choreogra choreography phy choreography of the season won't be seen by theatre-goers. Carol Haney dreamed it up for an Oldsmobile industrial show, and viewers cheered her beatnik number which may be reproduced in a TV spectacular during the winter . .John J. Bergen, new head of Madison Square Garden, has been huddling with former heavy heavyweight weight heavyweight champion Max Baer, which ought to make an interst interst-ing ing interst-ing item. Harry Guardino, now in Rome filming "Jovanka" hag received nine offers to make Italian pic pictures. tures. pictures. His reactions: "I might stay here for a while and be im imported ported imported to the United States ai 'the new Italian discovery'". . Tennessee Williams leaves for the Orient Aug. 20. It will be his first visit to the Far East. . Top toreadors now earn as much as $30,000 for a single after after-noon's noon's after-noon's toil in the bull ring at Venezuela. 'Bomb' Explodes Near Hall High In Little Rock LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) Police today questioned two teen aged boys and sought a third in connection with the blast of a giant homemade firecracker a foot from integrated Hall High School last, night. The explosive brought, all the police cars in town to the school. in Little Rock s most expensive neighborhood, but there was ho damage. Hall High, where three Negro girls attend classes with about 700 white students, is one of two in integrated tegrated integrated high schools here. Two Negroes attend Central High. There has been no major incident since Aug. 12, when police and firemen drove away about 350 per persons sons persons who tried an anti-integration march on Central High. Assistant Chief of Police R. E. Glasscock said police cars arrived shortly after the blast. Glasscock said police saw two youths run running ning running behind he school and coll red them. He said both had wet trousers, indicating they had been hiding in tall grass. Both boys, the names of whom police declined to disclose, were kept in the Pulaski (Little Rock) county jail Monday night. Police said they expected to arrest a third youth today. The two boys, aged 13 and 17. said they were not residents of Little Rock. They said they and their parents were visiting rela relatives tives relatives here en route from Formosa to an air base in Missouri. They said their fathers wre in the Air For.e nd were being transferred. The "bomb" left a scorched spot i the gravel next to the east wall of the modernistic school building. It was made of various chemi chemi-.'.emicals .'.emicals chemi-.'.emicals including aluminum phosphate, police said. I : i'l 1 I arrive refreshed In JjjJ r3 U i (Q) SUPER CONVAIR 340 Optimistic and happy Leave: PANAMA 7:30 a. m. Arrive: SAN JOSE 8:15 a. m. Arrive: SAN SALVADOR 10:35 a. m Arrive: MEXICO 2:40 p. m. LUXURY SERVICE AT TOURIST FARES Pressure controlled, air conditioned cabine Only 2 seats abreast for your cr..rort j panoramic winaows Delicious hot meals served in-flight Consult your Travel Agent or call our offices 3-7011 Bilingual stewardesses give you personalized service LINEAS AEREAS COSTARRICENSES, S A. AYE. ). AROSEMENA No. 3M0 (Across from Olympic Swimming fool I WEDNESDAY, AUGUST U, 195 THE FAN AHA AMERICAN AX INDEPENDENT DAILT NEW SPA-PI PAG I FIVI FBI Nabs Accused Slayer Of Elderly Washington Widow ATLANTA (UPI) A man ac accused cused accused of slaying of a prominent elderly Washington, D.C., widow was nabbed by FBI agents at the Atlanta airport early yesterday just as he was about to board a plane for Cleveland. Larry Lord Motherwell, 43, who has been the object of a nation nationwide wide nationwide search since last Thursday, was captured without a struggle. He was charged with the murder of Mrs. Pearl Ada Putney, 72, whose bones were dug up by a tourist looking for pine cones in a California canyon nine days ago. Motherwell said it was "all news" to him when he was ad advised vised advised he was accused of the slay slaying. ing. slaying. The arrest of the fugitive was announced in Washington by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. The FBFin Atlanta said Motherwell was unarmed and offered no re resistance sistance resistance when he was apprehend ed. He had been living under an alias in an Atlanta boarding house since mid-July. Motherwell was charged with Mrs. Putney's death by authori ties in Sierra County, Calif., last Thursday. At the same time, the FBI sounded a nation-wide alert for the fugitive, charging him with unlawful flight to avoid pros ecution for murder. . The construction engineer left Washington with Mrs. Putney in June, 3958 on an automobile tour of the South and West. They were last seen together checking out of a Marysville, Calif., motel. V. Jiuejj J9UOIS5IUIUI00 s H Holden set a temporary bond of $50,000 at a hearing here Tuesday morning. MotherweU was ordered held in custody when he failed to post bond. Looking poised and at ease, Motherwell said, "I've been treat treated ed treated very fine since I've been here. I find this quite a surpris for a charge I'm not acauainted with and the lawyers are going to con contact tact contact the judge here and see what will develop from that view point." Asst. U.S. Atty. Robert Sparks said he had been contacted by a Washsloh attorney, Samuel C. Klein, woo told him that Mother Motherwell's well's Motherwell's wife had retained him and John K. Regis as defense counsel. Klein asked for a continuance because Regis was in Paris and was en route home. Holden grant granted ed granted the continuance and set no When Motherwell was arrested by agents at the airport, he had a roundtrip ticket to Cleveland, where he said he was going to look for a job as a salesman with an (SutomdUvei parts firm, Mrs. Putney kept her relatives Informed of her 1958 tour with Mo.herwell by sending gay gay-colored colored gay-colored post cards. When her brother, Castro ML Dabrohua of Winnetka, nil f tppe i$erin( from her. he cafted for police as listance. Motherwell told Las Vegas po lice Jan. 18 that he drove Mrs. Russians To Miss International Meel On Outer Space LONDON (UPI) Russian scien scientists tists scientists apparently will not attend the International Astronautical Congress nex week, and British experts believe the decision may b linked to some important Sov Soviet iet Soviet space project. L. J. Carter, .secretary of the B ri t i sh Interplanetary Society, said today that for the first time in maneras the Russians had failed to give notice that a dele delegation gation delegation would arrive at the Con Congress gress Congress which is the most important annual conclave of world space experis. It is being held in London from Aug. 30 through Sept. 5. "We must assume they will not be here," Carter said. "It is a pity." Carter, who has been amazingly riehi on Soviet space science many times, said there were two possible r easo ns why Russia might nss this year's sesion. "It could be political," he said. "They walked out of Cospar the international upper altitude re research search research body because of a dispute over the stand on detonation of atomic weapons in space. "Or it could be that the scien scientists tists scientists tbey had planned to send to the Congress were neeoed for some project -which is being given a higher priority." Carter said he was aware of some American speculation that the Soviets might try to orbit a man in space to coincide with the visit there next month of Premier NikiU Khrushchev. "I wouldn't have said they were ready for that step," he said thouthtfully. "since as far as we know they have not completed all the firings which we in the West v:ould regarc' as preliminary, to such an epochimaking venture. "But the Russians obviously do not think our way in space matters." BACKS VP BELIEF LOS ANGELES (UPI)-A dis disgruntled gruntled disgruntled taxpayer. John Charles Owen, of Colton, Calif., is backing up his belief that the government should figure income taxes after, not before, living expenses are deducted. He filed suit in fed federal eral federal court claiming that on the, basis of his tax plan he would get some of the taxes he paid In 1956 and 1958. Putney from Marysville to Las Vegas Aug. 16, 1958, and left her there to marry' another man. He said he never saw her again. The FBI said Mrs. Putney was believed to be carrying at least $50,000 in securities and cash when the left Washington with Motherwell. Motherwell was arrested last January in Las Vegas on charges of failing to register as an ex ex-convict. convict. ex-convict. He returned to Maryland to appear before a grand jury to answer questions about the death of his- mongoloid daughter, who had been buried in Frederick, Md., pet cemetery, but the grand jury refused to return an indict indictment. ment. indictment. Mrs. Putney, who inherited $50, $50,-000 000 $50,-000 in 1956, was an apartment house neighbor of Motherwell. He aDparentlv helped her settle some of her affairs at the time of the inheritance. Neighbors said he was most helpful during a trying period. Christian Mission To Hold Sunday School Conference The annual Sunday-school con conference ference conference of the Christian Mission of Panama will convene Sunday, Sept. 6, at the Chorrillo Gospel Tabernacle. There will be an early morn ing fellowhip and breakfast for ministers and Sunday-school Su Superintendents perintendents Superintendents at 5:30 At 9:15 there will be a business session to be attended by all Sunday Sunday-school school Sunday-school teachers and staff workers; and at I p.m. a public session. The program for the conference is. being arranged by junior of officers ficers officers who have selected the theme ""Behold I have set before you an open door," and various ministers and laymen have been invited to address the sessions. At the 9:15 session the delegates will study statistics, reports and projects of all Sunday-schools and young people's auxiliaries. The 2 p.m. session will be a program of special renditions and items in line with the day's theme. The public is invited. Russia May Try To Put Man Into Space During K's Trip HAMBURG, Germany (UPI) .Vest German intelligence sources said yesterday that the Russians might try to shoot a man into space during Premier Nikita' S. Khrushchev's visit to the United States next month. Intelligence reports from Mos Moscow, cow, Moscow, these sources said, indicate that Soviet preparations for hurl hurling ing hurling a spaceman capsule into an orbit around the earth were "vir tually complete." Successful firing of such a rock rocket et rocket during Khrush:hev's American tour would give the Russians an incalcuable propaganda triumph as well as a spectacular scientific achievement. It would beat the U.S. spaceman project by years. Sources within ihe West Ger German man German intelligence network said- it had been learned that the Soviet top space scientists and rocket technicians were summoned to an extraordinary Moscow conference late last month. Such a meeting, the sources said, could mean that the launch launching ing launching of- a new and important space project was imminent. The West German report co incided with growing indications in London that Soviet scientists would not attend the International Astronautical Congress next ween. British experts believed this might be linked to some important space project bei g prepared in inside side inside Russia. L. C. Carter, secretary of the British Interplanetary Society, dis closed that for the first time in many years the Russians had failed to give notice that a dele gation would attend the Congress, the world s most important con clave of space experts. The Con gress is scheduled to be held in London from Aug. 30 to Sept. 5. Career said a Russian Decision to skip the Congress this year could be "political'' or "il could be that the scientists they had plan ned to send to the Congress were needed for some project which is being given a higher priority." Asked about speculation that the Russ;ans misiht try to fire man- carrying rocket into space next month, the British scientist said. "I wouldn't have thought they were ready foi that step." But he added that the Russians "obviously do not think our way in space matters" and may try to "le-n-frog" some of the steps Western scientist would consider essential to such a project. STAND-INS SERVE SENTENCES . JAKARTA, Indonesia (UPI) A local oolic inspector complained yesterday that Chinese convicted here of 'raffic offenses and other minor charges were hiring stand stand-ins ins stand-ins to serve their jail terms. In Inspector spector Inspector M. Husin said the Chinese i";d as much as S7 a 'day to others to serve their sentences. This ;s almost the average month monthly ly monthly Indonesian wage, he said,,-? "'v 'i ;' v OUR FABULOUS Storewide Sale Starting September 1 COMB IN AND SEE THE NEW BY STEELCA8E Before you come in, though, put ainie all your preconceived ideas of what a desk looks like, what a desk should do. The Flight Line an entirely new kind of executive office furniture. And new appearance (see the Sabre, above) it matched by a new performance. Each desk has a full complement of personal features designed lo help a busy executive get through a busy day more .effortlessly, more efficiently and with a good deal more pleasure. Come in and sector yourself. If you prefer, let m ten, you our new full-color brochure on the Flit Une . CALL 2-2010 TERMS AVAILABLE Boyd brothers; inc. A W Ave. 11 (Jose Fco. de la Ossa) Famous Hand 9' C8C FOR MEN Made Italian Footwear 0 t A FOR CHILDREN Gemg Up Mights If you tuffer from Getting U Kight, Bkch. L Pains, LnM A vigour, NrvounMor weakness, rot hould help your Proeut Giant) im media iey with Rogtna. Thi medlcin make you tee yount-er, tronrer, uni able to sleep without lnteirupttoa, nogina from your chemist todajk i OK WOMEN OURS EXCLUSIVELY IN PANAMA T Join Our Merchandise Club Modren, Spacious and Air-Conditioned To match Fashioned in Italy of the f4nest leathers! Don't Buy One Si RENT IT Low Rental Rate Immediate Installation CALL 2-2374 TELERAD II x : -m--: WTT "7 Across fron. Coca-Cola yZI 'i Jl at Frangipani lQo)tW s.a. V)pn SISTEMA NATIONAL BELLAS HESS STORES INC. QV to be a s f-i n t i i r v VL reason u ? n ,orthe J fT fT 0&llk POPULARITY : : 25 1 i Ww ni J, BHMiagJi MB HaBIHBHaiBlllllliS I "CVr? free" Washable Cotton mSKl Un DRESSES li mM 111 Stunning on, and two jA. U) & J A M Uf M ;; M 111 I j piece dresse. in newest $ S W M mMM t j sleeveless ttyles. f Q Jfefe W l3 kW 11 1 PANELLED DRAPES Choice stripes and 41 "K IV'Jv $9$ I v"' r 12t 20 WORTH 6.29 J& M .uifi JIB Sizes: 7 to 15, 12 to 20. i0L' f j j i J J j j Ladies Lovely Lingerie 'pn.Tj'n! j WORTH t'i$ 3" 5 J 2.39 ea. I J'jFI 1 if t 1 &r ),i ill i, : j nu0uPummwm ' h 1 y I ; l -t.i U ? w U Hii : i m i is i PETTICOATS PANTIES Nylonized acetate tricot mesh Sizes: 5 to 8. 2 for 3.00 4 fo 1.00 Adorable clothing for your adorable tot! DIAPER SETS 2 -1.50 2-pc. plastic lines sets made of cotton gingham and broadcloth. Gripper side pants. Sizes: 9 to 18 months. WORTH 2.99 ea. DRESS and 1 A A Cotton batiste. Scalloping and embroidery. Collar and collarless styles. White and Pastels. Sizes: Infants to 1 year. . . and for the girls (Sizes 4 to 14) here is an exciting collection of BOUFFANTS 1.00 fH i Sensationql Buy! Ladies' BLOUSES OA .UU Washable cotton broadcloth In overDlouse, tuck-in styles. Sleeveless, scoop necklines. San Sanforized! forized! Sanforized! Sizes: 32 to 38. Boys' Sizes: 2 to 6 DRESS SLACKS WORTH 1.99 1 - inn SHOWS (6; .11 HeVOIS to 8. i aitcs: 4'" Shop Central Avenue and Ctttbo 20th Street, acrost NOW from Central Tneater- BEAUTY PRACTICABILITY ECONOMY AND CAN BE MOVED & REINSTALLED CALL 2-0725 For your Free Estimate The Wearability of RATTAN FURNITURE is Unbeatable! Sooo easy to care for NEW STYLES NOW ON DISPLAY! Tropicana The Furniture & Home Furnishing Store 1th of July Are. & "H" St. DOUBLE YOUR MONEY FREE! KARMANN CHIA SEDAN DE LUXE MICRO BUSES V IK WA EM DISTRIBUTORS UNICAR, S.A. PHONE 2-0iil PuMttt F An AULA AMEBIC AJ IHOirEWUlB'l PATIT mCWBTArBW WEDNISDAY, AUGUST 18, U5t -Aft! SIX Abracadabra... "thkkA" aqain... It's the twist of a wrist and the wave of a wand that makes a master magician. A 3 L But we find "hocus pocus" isn't necessary when it comes to money-saving magic. The trick of true economy is owning a GIBSON tnmline refrigerator Come to TROPELCO SET YOUR OWJN PRICE AND OWN a GIBSON Refrigerator 45th St. and Via Espana Tel. 3-1285 Come along on a world wide shopping tour! Let us be your gourmet guide. Shelf after shelf of foods imported from all points on the globe. What an excursion and so inexpressive! SPAIN Boneless Anchovies in Olive Oil Aromatic Sardines in Olive Oil Swet Red Pimientos Genuine Spanish Dry Sausage JAPAN Fancy Smoked Baby Clams Fried Cocktail Clams Fancy Smoked Abalons ITALY Genuine Italian Salami and Mortadella Italian Antipasto Italian Condimento Universale GERMANY High-Grade Baltic Eels Dolicatess Brat Herrings FRANCE Pate de Foie Gras Pieds Paquets Marsellaise Creme Perigourdine Truffe ICELAND Icelandic Fancy Fish Flakes High.Grade Cod Fish ENGLAND Scotch Fresh Herrings Date Sponge Pudding Mango Chutney Sauce HOLLAND Finest Cheese Selection: Goudas and Edami DENMARK Selected Ccoked Hams Cocktail Brissling Sardines Fancy Cocktail Pastes Danish Sea Salmon Cheese: Molbo, Maribo, Havarti We Give Chico de Oro Stamps ca d ca d ca a k Panama's Most Complete Supermarket la Espafiii, just three blocks from El Panama Hilton Store Hoartt 7 a.m. 10 p.m. Daily, 7 a.m. 10:30 p.m. Saturday, 7 a m Double Stamps on Weekends 1 p.m. Sundays .,,tj : ssr-rj. 1 Q&22 vV n,.-' ; v baW if) jj 'ArrrF "IIECT vunu r i igni u I iciiigi, w ao mviiuibu ai nciburning wmci jhom ujr mu null vuiu. LUrrtt VlUtjl missioned Officers Wives Club of Fort Kobbe. Colonel Wright recently was assigned as com. manding officer of the 1st Battle Group, 20th Infantry, Fort Kobbe. From left are Mrs. Ramona Sullivent, Mrs. Vickl Noel, Mrs. Willie Avery, Mrs. Wright, Mrs. Jean Brookover, club president, and Mrs. Jo Martinez. (Army Photo) it ft TUDIET cuno UnDLfCDC Members of the Fort Clayton Officers Wives Club who are volunteer workers at THRIFT jHOP WURIxlKj the thrift shop participated in ceremonies as the shop opened in new quarters at the Fort CI yton Shopping Center. In front row, from left, are Mrs. Richard W. Dowell, Mrs. John J. Templeton, Mrs. Oliver L. Robbins, Mrs. Henry H. Knovicka, Mrs. Robert Taylor and Mrs. Roy E. Pafenburg. Standing are Mrs. M. F. Moucha. Mrs. John D. Coney, Mrs. Keith Z. Pierce, Mrs. Arley C. Richter, Mrs, Edwin J. Steckler, Mrs. John E. Davis, Mrs. Edwin F. Cavaleri, Mrs. Joseph Muckerman, and Mrs. Jack M. Ernst, thrift shop chairman. (Army photo) i if it I o i '- 13 TO0 ,v. -,.fflimnii.Mwn)nrnfltiiiinmiwwwi..niiimn.i nil ninum n i in l .11 1 ItT- .'ni mmWa 1 i.rr.i..i.,.i .1 rnAmiATiAM hadtdait BiK PaoPu can Kraduat in or Jnuary but ony littl8, uy nd al" GRAUUAT ON PORlRAII tha. know th nnmn and eeremonv of an August rraduatibn. The group com. pleted their school seions at the Margarita Nursery School just in time for operator Mrs. William Dixon and her as. . r .11. I K .. L a mhaimIa i mnvtin Ai m J sistant, Mrs. H. I. Tinnm, to rest up Tor anotner Dout next wsen. mrs. uiaum ho pi viucu .ui iun aim Viw 1: ... xl. 1 u u a in D:.t.,.al in 4n f rnnt rnw frnm Inft lira Charvl Rtrnno- Rnffw Sen 00 ling ax xne nursery m ner iiumg iui 1110 pnoi 1 w joi. nnuisu ...... 1 j 1... n 1-1 n n...ju..t d.uu., .j 11....... Diuini anH NunRV Oacd' In the back row urn Hnlait Linn, mm oenaer, noiisnng diuhuubihi nuuujr iTiayimiu, 11 miuj vu .--..- Finlev. 0l Brook. Lynn Gregg, Bradley Blllison, Carol Wsrtz, Kim McCraw, Jaims Barraia, Donna Graham, Micksjf Franklin and Madelyn RimUII J 4 4 TFEDXT8DAY, AUGUST M, Ml TBI PAXAMA AMCTtCAJI All TXVTTVtptJrT PAttT KrWiTKTtM PAS I IIVIM ff Felix has done it again! He's a cunning cat when it comes to bringing u lighty females the very latest in fashions. IVom he has the most exciting new handbags that are absolutely the catVjneow! And, dearie. Fin no bird brain when it comes to knowing values. Nothing sky-high about Felix's prices... in fact, they're real down-to-earth. These handbags are sheer elegance! Soft straws and luscious leathers in a rainbow of colors dove white, robin's egg blue, cardinal red. crow black. But instead of mv telling you about it, let's fly down now before they're all gone . M AM ATEMEKIT EHD TUE I AHICC Sixteen ladies from Albrok Air Force Base, recently graduated from IVtANAutMCIl I rUK inC LAUICj the first home management course ever to be offered on the base. Management courses for career airmen have long been a standard practice, but requests from husbands prompted TSgt. Jessie H. Mijford Jr. to initiate a management course to help wives solve their chief problem, running a household. Col. Arthur P. Hurr, commander of Albrook, presented certificates to the graduates, who from left are June K. Swaine, Esmee C. Sommerville, Marjorie A. Hull, Mary M. Robinette, Asunta Valdez, Dorothy S. Hamilton, Mildred E. Musgrave, Irma S. JSlolla, Gwendolyn L. White.Maria M. Montoya, H. Elizabeth Kehoe, Thelma P. Bolado, Theresa U. Garcia, Genevieve R.Jay, and Frances P. Grimes. Milford is pictured with his graduating class. (Air Force Photo) it & it NWNWg IMIUMUIMWMIWro I I I II MMI Kt.lUlUII MMIIIMI Ill lil II r U : V MAIN STORE 22-06 Central Are. BRANCH STORE 18-60 Tirol! Are. Dear Madam: We take great pleasure in inviting you end your friends to our public demonstration of the new rrCCCL CfD YMrtMCI'C I APtV W'ves of enlisted men of the 4th Gun Battalion, 517 Artillery honored CUrTCC rUR CULUNcLb LADY Mrs. Robert H. Johnston, wife of the battalion's new commanding officer, at a welcoming coffee. From left are Mrs. Johnston, Mrs. Robert E. Aydelott, Mrs. Joseph Milam, Mrs. Eugene L. Savage and Mrs. Richard Lytle. (Army Photo). "A" "A" If J U i: if : til fw4 ?J3 i H ? 1 WW' 7'i'A a V he Cristobal Woman's Club UWCV WCAWIMr Tlla dl,P,ay of huck weaving at open house is shown to Mrs. Frank Seatt, right, and her granddaughter Dale by Mrs. Frank Cougher, instructor of the club's class. DDCTTV DlirC Mr1, Mich"' F' C""ene, right, rKCIIT KUVlJ president of the Cristobal Woman's Club, shows the display of hooked rugs to Miss Mildred Neely of Curundu. The occasion was the club's open house and arts and crafts display to Inaugurate the new club building In Margarita. sewing machine. The demonstrations will be held in our show room this week ending Thursday, August 27, from 10:00 a.m. to noon and from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Via Fspana Between 46th and 50th Streets Tel. 3 1650 Panama, R. P., P. O. Box 4395 4 MUSH The favorite trade mark in homes all over the world DISTRIBUTORS: 0 t 'r ,rill,J! CASA SPORT, S.A. 11-18 Central Ave. (Beside Amador Theatre) SOLD AT: MUEBLERIA "EL DIABLO 16.26 CENTRAL AVE. r n r i a wsessm H J1- liViM mssm (ED OG3Q 09 '1" WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 21, 195 PAOI EIGHT V Giants, White Sox Travelling Different Roads Toward Next World Series. THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWS P APES Frisco Sluggers On Big Inning Sox Get Run By JOHN GRIFFIN NEW YORK, Aug. 26 (UPI) The Giants and White Sox may well wind up as rivals in the World Series, ut they sure are travelling: differents roads toward the promised land. . . ir, duo it out in IB j "big inning. a5 tney tm. 12-5. triumph over me SMj ame National ura Even 18-game winner Johnny An tondli Bo" into the act with a two- utTow about those White Sox. who think a "big inning" means walk, a stolen base, a wild pitch, and a sacrifice fly' Th. on.en-Soxers gave a 'Ji'"" performance as they came L.k.'nH tn heat the Boston from Red Sox.- 5-4. in 10 innings and main maintain1 tain1 maintain1 their two-game '"i"" '"ec American League chase. That was merelv their 30th home run victo victory ry victory so far this season. This time they were "treated" to JUl early homer by rookie Norm Cash. But they had only four hits off Frank Sullivan and trailed. 4 2, going into the ninth. Singles by Al Smith and Cash cff" and then Jim Rivera and John Ro- mano continuea me ment" with singles off reliever Mike Fornieles to tie the score. Chicago won in th. 10th when Sherm Loll.r walked with two out and Billy Goodman drove him horn, with double. Turk Lown, who pitched only th. 10th for Chic.go, was th. winner The 'Giants, on the other hand, missted scoring in only two innings as they trampled the Pirates for Antonelli's 18th victory-tops in the majors. Daryl Spencer also homered as the Giants pounded out 15 hits and it didn't matter that Antonelli wasn't at his best, giving up 10 hits including Dick Stuart's 20th homer. The Giants and the White Sox both remained under pennant pressure, however, for their top rivals also won during the all-games-at-night big league pro program. gram. program. In the National League, the second-place LoV Angeles Dodgers whipped Philadelphia, 5-2, to stay a half-game ahead cf the third place Milwaukee Braves, who downed St. Louis, VI, in 10 in innings. nings. innings. Also, the Chicago Cubs downed Cincinnati, 3 6. In the American League, second-place Cleveland ripped New York, 6-3; Washington downed Detroit. 3 1; and Kansas City shaded Balti Baltimore, more, Baltimore, 6-5. D,uke Snider and Gil Hodges, the two "old pros" who are pacing the Loi Angeles attack, each whacked his i2ist homer of the year to beat the Phils. Snider's was the 352nd of his career, breaking his third third-place place third-place tie with Ralph Kincr on the all-time National League list and Austin looks years New swift fine, new Iku i Th mw Autttn AiS Cambridgt Mk. II it now in r thowroom. Hffr mrt a mo favU ond figure ohtmt kt Mew ilwk hn dind by Pinin Frin. Roem for five in omfort. Oiit hoot take! tM the Umily hidg. All. round imrfnc.d vww lor tb drivc. 4-apaod giwrbox with eithnr trtaonnj; eolumn cr rtrl floor gr change, H litre 4-cyhiioW engine. Top speed t m.nr 7ft mph. Cenw tmd m I'm ear, tmplort it, drim ill T tlitpkon, or jurt $mU in for a jrr trial flw C. Z. $2,075 CIA. CYRNOS, EDIFTCIO CYRNOS FRANGIPANI ST. TODAY T IV O LI 2e. lie. ' BANK I 1125.00 BLOOD OF THE VAMPIRE ; AJoo: KISS Of FIRE (ldth Jack Palanct Rely While At A Time 1! leasing him behind only Mel Ott 'leasing ,) c,,n Mnsial n' ,h. winner. . an(l Robin Rob- erts. victim oi noin mmin loser. Rav Boone, acquired recently for pinch hitting strength, delivered a run scoring ninth inning single that save the Braves a 1-1 lie with the Cards and then Ed Mathews' dou double ble double highlighted a winning two-run rallv in the 10th. Reliever Don McMahon, whose two inning stint saw him .retire Musial with the bags loaded in the ninth, was the winner Homers by Cal Neeman nd Irv Noren led th. Cubs' 11 -hit attack against Cincinnati as southpaw Bill Henry picked up the win with 5 1-3 innings of on. on.-run run on.-run pitching. Rocky Colavito belted two hom homers ers homers and Vic Power one for the In Indians dians Indians as Cal McLish posted his 16th win on a six-hitter over the Yanks. Colavito's blasts gave him .17 for the year, tying him with Harmon Killebrew of the Senators and Ernie Banks of the Cubs for the major-league lead. Marv Throneberry and Hector Lopez homered for the Yanks. r 1 l I tVtO Pedro Ramos, with ninth-inning help from Chuck Stobbs, gained his 12th win for the Senators over the Tigers. Julio Becquer led his 11 hit support with two singles and a run-scoring double. The A's spotted the Orioles four runs; gradually caught up. and Ihen went ahead to stay when Dick Williams' run-scoring single cap capped ped capped a two run rally in (he seventh inning. Bob Nieman led the Orio Orioles' les' Orioles' six-hit attack with a homer and two doubles. LEADING PITCHERS (Based on 14 or more decisions) National League Face, PiratCb Antonelli. Giants Law. Pirates Newcombe. Reds Conley, Phillies Podres, Dodgers W 16 18 14 12 12 12 L Pet. 0 1.0QO .720 .667 .667 .632 .632 Americart L.agu. Shaw, White Sox McLish. Indians Pappas, Orioles Wynn, White Sox 13 16 13 16 16 12 4 ..765 6 .727 6 .684 8 .667 8 .667 6 .667 Larv, Tigers Maas, Yankees ahead with the uncrowded comfort, S. A. tfMGOTosEs TODAY CAPI TOLIO I5c joe. Spanish Program! CAFE COLON with P. Armend&rta - Also: -TO, EL AVENTURERO with Tony Aguilar VICTORIA lie. M O H A with Scott - Also: -THE BRAIN MACHINE Pan-American Games to Start Tomorrow pm By MARGUERITE DAVIS CHICAGO, Aug. 26 (UPI) The Ihird Pan American Games get under way tomorrow to the tune of a 26 gun salute, the fluttering wings of 5,000 doves, ind a burst of oratory and fireworKS. Mayor Richard J. Daley ex expects pects expects the 65,000-seat stadium t Soldier Field on Lake Michigan to be filled almost to capacity when the 26-gun salute, one gun for each participating country, heralds the opening ceremonies at 2 p.m. Panama time. The 2.500 athletes will parade before the stands, with the host I'nited States team last in the line of march Reviewing dignitaries will include Dr. Milton Eisenhow Eisenhower, er, Eisenhower, brother of the President whom he will represent; Douglas Rohy, president of the Pan American Games Organization, and Avery Brundage. president of the Inter International national International Olympic Committe. A boy scout, accompanied by two scout honor guardmen, will run onto the field, bearing aloft the friendship torch which 5,000 scouts have brought from Mexico City in the longest relay run in American history. Using an elec electronic tronic electronic wand designed by the Ar Ar-gonne gonne Ar-gonne National Laboratory, the scout will light a larger friendship torch atop the score board As the torch flashes on, flags of the Olympic and Pan American Games will be raised and the 5,000 doves, symbolizing peace and the opening of the Games, will be re released. leased. released. Th. two-hour program, includ including ing including a gymnastics exhibition by 7S0 teenagers, calisthenics dem onstration by 1,000 YMCA mem members bers members and a 1,500-voice chorus, will end with a fireworks exhibi exhibition. tion. exhibition. Actual competition begins Fri day at 27 sites throughout the met ropolitan area. Chicago has spared virtually no effort to make the young athletes comfortable and "at home, de despite spite despite unusually hot, muggy weath er that leu some oi me visitors gasping. Brazilians and Argentin Argentinians, ians, Argentinians, who left mid-weather at home, were especially uncomfort uncomfortable able uncomfortable in the 90-plus temperatures, according to spokesmen at the un un-airconditioned airconditioned un-airconditioned "villages" where the athletes are housed. LEADING HITTERS (Based on 325 official at bats) National League G AB R H Pet. Aaron. Mil. 123 503 94 181 .360 Cun.. St. L. 118 374 50 128 .342 Pinson Cin. 126 529 110 176 Mi Ceoeda. S.F. 123 494 79 159 .322 TemDle. Cin. 121 486 89 156 :S Rob.. Cin. 124 466 92 149 .320 Bover. St. L. 124 469 69 149 .318 White. St. L. 122 458 68 142 .310 Logan, Mil. 113 388 50 119 Mays, S.F. 122 469 96 143 .307 .305 American League Kuenn, Det. Wood., Bal. Kaline. Det. Runnels, Bos. Fox, Chicago Tuitle, K. C. Power, Cle. Minoso, Cle. Lopez, N Y. Cerv, K.C. Ill 442 78 157 .355 115 363 55 118 .325 108 412 73 134 .325 119 457 75 144 .315 125 508 68 159 .313 118 437 71 134 .307 121 492 91 149 .303 122 464 77 138 .297 120 447 65 129 .289 96 347 47 100 .288 Runs Batted In National League Banks, Cubs Robinson, Reds Bell. Reds Aaron, Braves Cepeda. Giants 116 112 99 97 86 American League Killebrew, Senators Colavito, Indians Jensen, Red Sox Maxwell. Tigers Malzone, Red Sox 95 94 w 81 81 Home Runs : National League Banks, Cubs Mathews. Braves Aaron. Braves Robinson. Reds Cepeda, Giants 37 34 33 31 25 American League Killebrew, Senators S7 Colavito, Indians 37 Allison, Senators 28 Maxwell, Tigers 27 Lemon. Senators 2d R I O 15c BANK! 1230.00 W K Brady DOCTOR AT SEA with BrlKltte Bardot - Also: old yelij.;r with Fess Parker Panama Golf Club's Dunlop Tourney Begins This Weekend By TED WILBER One hundred and thirteen golf golfers ers golfers sought qualification in the 1959 Dunlop Golf Championship tournament during the past two weeks at the Panama Golf Club. This total exceeds the 1958 to total tal total by six, and again shows that the Dunlop Golf Tournament, one of the oldest club tourneys at the Panama Club, is one uf the most popular. The annual Dunlop tour tourney ney tourney is sponsored by Doel Agen Agencies cies Agencies of Panama City. Play in the tournament com commences mences commences this week, with all first round matches scheduled to be completed by Sunday evening. First round matches scheduled for play are as listed: Wally Trout Voted Most Outstanding Player In '59 CZ Government Hoop Loop Walter Trout, ace veteran hoops ter of Delamater s Veteran's, was voted the Canal Zone Government Basketball League's outstanding player for the 1959 season. The eighth ballots cast were totalled, with Trout nosed out The Gent s Donny Alexander by one point ;n the MOP voting to take the honors as the league's most outstanding individual hoopster. Trout was named on all eight ballots cast and received the most nnm hpr of first olace votes. Six players were named on all eight ballots, with two hoopsters tieing for the team's tenth slot, resulting in eleven men being named to tne 1949 All League J earn. The following is the league s honorary team with the numher of points in parenthesis: FIRST TEAM Trout, Walter Alexander, Don Culbreth, Roy Nesbitt, Ray Winklosky, Dan (D) (63) (R) (62) (G) (60) (F) (48) (R) (47) SECOND TEAM Gayer, Dick (G) (44) Kouraney, Oscar (F) (30) Tocherman, Geo. (D) (30) Joyce, Bill (F) 16) Joyce, Bert (D (12) Perantie, Jack (e) (12) Trout, playing with Delamater's Veterans, was the team s cons constant tant constant spark plug throughout the season in the Veteran's drive for second place. He was among the league's top ten scorers, all sea season, son, season, finishing in a tie for the league's sixth top scorer. A 28-year-old Canal Zone and Panama basketball veteran, Trout is employed with the CZ Police Force. Wally, as he is better known, poured 114 field goals and 58 free throws through the hoops for the 1959 season to finish with a total of 286 points for the sea season's son's season's play. He was not only a scorer for The Veterans, but was an excel excellent lent excellent man in getting rebounds off the backboard. Closely following Trout In the balloting is little 19 year old Donny Alexander, a former All -Zone scholastic hoopster with th. league's highest average p.r-gam. with a 24.7 av.rag. for 13 games. 'Lit Don poured 132 field goals and 57 free throws through th. hoops for total of 321 points in 13 games. Roy Culbreth, the league's top individual scorer, was one of the main reasons that Gayer's Exec's finished in second place and went to the finals in the league's two two-day day two-day tournament. The 19-year old Culbreth had 165 field goals and 101 free throws for a 431 point to total tal total for 19 games. Roy's 431 points Is the highest number of points to be scored by an individual for the first time in many season of play in the Canal Zone Government Basketball League. It didn't take Culbreth long to enter me league s top ten scorers and then to move into the number one scorer slot and stay there. The leagut champions, Flynn's Vagabonds, were led all season in the individual scoring by their ace forward Raymond "Moss" Nesbitt, who finished the season as the league's number two scorer with 146 field goals apd 65 free throws for a total of 357 points in 21 games. With Nesbitt hitting with his one-hand push shot from any plac. on Hi. floor, Th. Vaga Vagabonds bonds Vagabonds wer. always a constant thr.at to go on to finish on top of th. I.agu.'s standings, which th.y .v.ntually did. Nesbitt was the league's top scorer for many weeks during the season, dropped no lower 'han the number three position, and came on strong to finish in the number two slot. Finishing out the first team is Riley's Gent's, 20-year old Danny Winklosky, former All-Zone schol astic hoopster with Balboa High School, who's rebounding ability TODAY ENCANTO 35 20 Richard Widmark In "WARLOCK" Cinemascope Si Colon Jim Davis in "WOLF DOG" CHAMPIONSHIP FLIGHT (0 to 1 HANDICAP) May vs Nene Arias Col. Skip Babb vs Jim Riley Negro Arias vs Bob Sander Tommy Jacks vs L. Chandeck Jaime de la Guardia vS Col. llurr Maurice Muller vs J. J. Valla- rino, Jr. Lul Arango vs Paul Moran Shead vs J. Kineaid Glickenhaus vs Frank Morrice Dr. J. J. Massot vs Dick Dhl Dhl-inger inger Dhl-inger Rey Valdes vs Ted Wilber Murphy vs Jimmy Des Londes Sr. Gerrans vs Erasmo de la Guardia Jim Hinkle vs Roberto Torres and scoring prowess kept Riley's hoopsters in the thick of the league's championship fight all season. Winklowsky had 120 ficlr goals and 47 free throws for a 287 point total for 20 games, finish finishing ing finishing as the league's number five top scorer. Leading the second team is th. very able captain of Gayer's Execs, 5' 9" Dick Gayer, a 25 25-y.ar y.ar 25-y.ar old veteran of th. Panama Major Basketball L.agu. and th. CZ. Government Hoop Loop. Fast, hard-driving, deadly with a long two-hand set shot, flashy Dick was in th. league's top ten scorers all s.ason, and finally finishing in the number nine po position sition position with 105 field goals, 37 free throws, for a total of 247 points in IS games. Coming on strong in the last half of the season to move into the league's top ten scorers is Flynn's I little sharp-shooting guard, 21-year old Oscar Kourany, a pre-med stu student dent student at Indiana University. Oscar poured 101 neid goals anu 44 tree throws through the nets in 19 games to finisn the season as the league's number ten top scorer with 246 points. The Veteran's George "Lefty" Tocherman tied for the league's number sixth high scorer witu 110 field goals and a very commend commendable able commendable b free throws for 18 games and a 286 point total. George, a 28-year old hoopster with the CZ Police Force, was up among the league's top ten scorers all sea son. William "Bill" Joyc, Flynn's $' HVi" rebounding ace, was on. of th. champions main assets in copping all th. I.agu.'s laur.ls. Bill finished as th. league's number twelve scorer with 76 field goals, 29 free throws, and a total of 181 points in 21 games. In a tie for the league's Ail- ucague leains lum position is the. Veteran's forward Bert Joyce, who was in the league's top ten scorers from the season's very outset, varying between the num number ber number four position and the number eight slot. Bert, a 26-year old law student at the University of South Carolina, poured 127 field .goals, 11 free throws, lor a total of 2K.s points in 21 games to finish as the league s number eight top indi vidual scorer. lne oilier All Uague hoopster in the tenth position is Riley's high acuiiug iurwaru jack "Smiley Perantie. The 21 year old Peran Perantie tie Perantie finished strong in the scoring race to jump from the number eight slot all the way up to the number four top scorer at the finish of the season's play. On th. honorable mention list ar. such very able and capable hoopsters and Bob "Dribbl." B.st of Riley's Gents, little Ed Edgar gar Edgar Kouraney of Flynn's Cham Champion pion Champion Vagabonds, and Gayer's fcx.es highly improved Doug Pajak, who just miss.d making th. All-League Team. The 1959, sea sop was one of the most successful seasons that the Canal Zone Government Basket Basketball ball Basketball League has ever seen. It brought together the Pacific Side's best civilian hoopsters in close competition which resulted in well well-played, played, well-played, high scoring games and an extremely close finish among the teams at the close of the sea season. son. season. SUSPEND DESPIRITO CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) -Jockey Tony Despinto has been suspended for 15 days by Randall Park racing stewards for mis judging the finish line in last Saturday's $40,000 Buckeye Handi cap. Movies of the race showed Despirito rose in the saddle whik riding Terra Firma in the stretch. Terra Firma finished second. I refreshing I I AFTER-SHAVE LOTION i Large Bottle 60c. Jorge P. Rodriguez vs Brack iattler Luis Martinz vs Pico Diaz In both of the men's flights, certain players who were leaving ihe country and could not com complete plete complete the tournament play shot qualifying rounds. These players withdrew, leaving places for. o o-ther ther o-ther players who sought Qualifi Qualification. cation. Qualification. Two such subs t i tutions were made in the championship night, and six in th efirst flight. Matches scheduled in the first (light in the first round are as follows: Lalo Arango vs Carlos Orillac Col. Bob Rupp vs Jack Mercer F. K. Baldwin vs G. Cruz Garces vs Octavio Arias Ernesto Jaen Guardia vs Hank Kascher Roberto Aleman vs Bob Jerrell Davis vs Chick Kline Woodruff vs Jack Anderson H. Willis vs Mullin C. H. Vandergrift vs A. Carrizo Pablo Abad vs Col. Mark Mooty Busky vs Geoff Lee Mike Maduro vs Bob Chandler H. Randell vs Stan Fidanque Jorge Boyd vs Kiki de la Ossa R. Drum vs R. Tapia LADIES' PLAY A new feature in the Dunlop tourney for 1959 was the opening up of this club flight for the la ladies dies ladies to an 'open' basis, open to all lady golfers on the Isthmus. Over 20 of the fair sex took ad advantage vantage advantage of the new feature and Alyce French copped the medal. First round matches scheduled for play are: French vs Twomey Dease vs Hurr Purdy vs Mooty Vallarino vs Bishop Garces vs Baird Sullivan vs Stempel Mansfield vs Waring Sliker vs Laming NEW CHAMP IN 1959 The Dunlop tourney this year will see the crowning of a new champion in both men's flights. Gordy Dalton, 1957 cham p i o n, and Capt. Charlie Kade of Al Al-brook, brook, Al-brook, the 1958 champion, are both among the missing in the championship flight. Jack Lally, the 1958 medalist, is also absent. In the second flight, 1958 medal ist Mike Maduro is again in the running, but 1958 champion Earl Fidanque is not entered The nm-ner-up in the first flight in ltw, J. J. Vallarinb Jr., is again in the tourney. SPECIAL CONCESSION Players making the trip to Me Me-dellin, dellin, Me-dellin, Colombia the 31st., are ad advised vised advised that they should complete their first round matches before leaving, in order not to suffer loss by default. Their second round matches, scheduled to be played by the fol following lowing following Sunday (Sept. 6), have bfeen authorized for deferment until not later than the following Thursday, Sept. 10. This concession was authoriz authorized ed authorized by the chairman of the tourn tourn-ment ment tourn-ment committee since the golfers making the Colombia trip will not' return until Monday, Sept. 7. TOURNAMENT RULES For information of all players, the rules for the 1959 Dunlop Golf Tournment are again quot quoted. ed. quoted. 1. All playing rules will be those of the USGA, and special course rules for the Panama course already published. 2. All play in the tournament will be match play, of 18 holes duration, except the final round matches in three flights, which will be of 36 holes match play. "3. No matches may be postpon ed during the tournament for any reason except with the express approval of the Chairman of the Tournament Committee (except the concession for the go 1 f e r s making the trip to Medellin). 4. Any player unable to play his match by the required time shall be defaulted by his oppon opponent. ent. opponent. In the event both players are unable to play their match by the required time, they shall enter a double default. 5. All match play shall be with 3-4ths of the difference in handi handicaps. caps. handicaps. 6. In the event of a tie after 18 holes of play (or 36 holes n the final round), the sudden Heath' method of determining the handicaps of both players are the same. If the difference in hand handicaps icaps handicaps of the players is even, 9 more holes shall be played; if the difference in handicaps is an odd number, 18 additional holes shall be played. n DRIVE-IN i 7:00 Today! 9:00 POPULAR NIGHTI $1.10 per CAR! i Patricia MEDINA in 'irlri : iiircirr mm" jltt ll in mi jji jjir r I Tomorrow! A ACTION PICTURE I VICTOR MATURE Yvonne DE CARLO in 'TIMBUKTU' In TECHNICOLOR! Jj J -Sis"' 4 Vi : ;'-' DIABLO'S OUTSTANDING SUMMER ATHLETES Front left is Jeannine Hebert, outstanding girl athlete who participated in table tennis girls physical fitness, captained the volleyb.aH team and won CZ. championship in tennis. Front row (right) is Mable Eberenz girl runner-up who was active in tumbling, volleyball, girls physical fitness and was secretary of boys weight weight-training training weight-training club. Back row (left) is Don Rudy, boys runner-up, who took part in volleyball, B League Basketball and tennis. Back. row (left) is the most outstanding boy atniete, John Paterson, John played B League basketball, volleyball, tennis and was av member of the weight-training Editor: CONRADO SARCEANT National League TEAMS San Francisco Los Angelas Milwaukee Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago St. Louis Philadelphia W 72 70 68 65 61 60 57 52 L Pet. GB 53 .576 58 ,547 3Vi 57 .544 4 62 .512 8 65 64 71 75 .484 HVi .484 11 V2 .445 WVi .409 21 Today's Games San Francisco at Pittsburgh (N) Chicago at Cincinnati (N) Milwaukee at St. Louis (N) Only games scheduled. Yesterday's Results (Night Gam.) Los Angeles 201 100 0105 9 1 Philadelphia 010 000 0102 7 1 Podres (12-7), Sherry And Rose Rose-boro. boro. Rose-boro. Roberts (11-14), Farrell and Thomas. (Night Gam.) San Francisco 200 111 124-12 15 Pittsburgh 000 200 0215 10 Antonelli (18-7) and Landrith. Kline (8-13), Gross, -Green, Por terfield, Witt and Foiles. (Night Gam.) Chicago 210 401 0008 11 0 Cincinnati 130 000 1106 10 0 Buzhardt Henry (8-6), Elston and Neeman. Purkey (10-14), Schmidt, Bros Bros-nan, nan, Bros-nan, Acker, Pena and Bailey. (Night Gam.) Milwaukee 000 000 001 23 11 0 St. Louis 000 000 100 01 6 1 Spahn, McMahon (4-1) and Cran dall. Gibson (1-3), McDaniel and Smith, Porter. SERVICE CENTER BALBOA 6:15 8:05 AIR CONDITIONED KPN MOTTmIOT GRAffli I Tlso Showing Trrffrsday! I PARAISO 7:00 Santa I "Johnny Rocco" fTHE 8TH VI 1 WONDER OF M THE SCREE i i Wal "THE DEFIANT ONES" & "Bomba The Jungle Boy" I MATINEES BALBOA 2:00 COCO "THE KING AND 'THE LONE HAND" club. American League TEAMS Chicago Cl.v.land New York Baltimore Detroit Kansas City Boston Washington W 75 74 62 60 61 59 57 51 L 48 51 64 63 65 66 68 74 Pet. GB .610 .592 2 'J .492 14V .488 151 .484 15Vt .472 17, .447 19 .408 25 ". t Today's jGames New York at Cleveland (N) Z Washington at Detroit Boston at Ohicago (N) Baltim6re at Kansas City (NV Yesterday's Results Z (Night Game) New York 100 001 0103 12 2 Cleveland 400 620 OOx 6 0 Ford (13-7), Blaylock and How Howard. ard. Howard. McLish (16-6) and Fitzgerald. (Night Gam.) Boston 100 200 001 04 10 1 011 000 002 15 10 1 Fornieles (3-3) and Staley, Lown (9-3) and Chicago Sullivan, White. Donovan, Lollar. (Night Gam.) Washington 100 101 0003 11 0 Detroit 000 010 0001 6 1 Ramos (12-15), Stobbs and Court Courtney. ney. Courtney. Foytack (12-11), Morgan and Berberet. (Night Gam.) Baltimore 202 010 0005 6 1 Kansas City 000 103 20x 6 10 0 O'Dell, Brown, Loes (4-5) and Triandos. Herbert, Tsitouris (3-2), Sturdi Sturdi-vant vant Sturdi-vant and Smith. THEATERS TODAY COCO SOLO 7:00 Air Conditioned -fa Spencer Tracy Jeffrey Hunter "THE LASTHURRAH" Also Showing Thursday! DIABLO HTS. 7:00 e Charles Bronson "Showdown At Boothill" Thus. "Satan's Satellites" & "Daniel Boone, Trailblazer" MARGARITA 7:00 "MURDER bjrCONTRACT "' Thursday "Funny Face" GAMBOA 7:00 "THE LADYKILLERS" FrL "The Defiant Ones" Crui 7:00 tamp Bierd 7:00 "The Fast and The Furious" & The Black Glove TOMORROW SOLO 2:30 Marrarita 2:30 "Toughest Man in Artcona" and Serial WEDNESDAY, AUGUST IS, ISfc. TUt PANAMA AMERICAN AN IXDEPETCDENT DAILY NEWSPAPEV PA6I NINl ouldnH Have To Be SoldB mes Ga Sh PREVIEW OF THINGS TO COME nr. 1 by JOE WILLIAMS y HARRY GRAYSON CHICAGO (NEA) It is a sad commentary on the woeful status of healthful amateur sports in the United States that the third Pan-American Games, ending a 12-day run around Chicago, Sept. 7, had to be preceded by so much ballyhoo. And that, despite the best efforts of the tub thumpers, this tre mendous international event pro bably will draw only a comparat comparative ive comparative corporal's guard of spectat spectators ors spectators after the opening day cere ceremonies monies ceremonies at Soldier Field, when the customers will come out to see the parade and other frivolities Everybody loves a parade, but few in this country outside ol Southern Californians care much about track and field in the sum mer time. The world's greatest athletes have competed before re lative handfuls of people at Rand alls Island Stadium in New York during the outdoor season. The trade seems to have other places to go at that time of year. This must be so, for vastlv lcs ser track and field attractions pack Madison Square Garden and other eastern and mid western arenas in the dead of winter. as and eves the more pompous AAU official know that this coun try could use a Utae of mat. ihe principal difficulty is that the American puttie uas be. educated to pay too mu.n atten attention tion attention to night narness aud oog racing, prize fignt prooes, behina-j tne-sttnes maneuvering anu ou'.er i unwnolesome aspects in wnat is i roug.ily passed oil as spon. mere has been lar too much of district attorneys, trotting czars, Krankic CarDos, Cus D'Amatos, Bill Ro Ro-sensonns sensonns Ro-sensonns and the nke. By OSCAR FRALEY NEW YORK (UPI) Crrmcn Basilio and. Gene Fullmer, the two yonng bulls who battle for the middleweight title at San Fran- cio Friday mgnt, nave muon in common. -iBoth started boxing at the tender age of eight. -S-Each have similar slugging itvies 4-Each won and lost right back to 'Ray Robinson the now vacated tit&v -Both are happily married "heme folks" who dote on their children. -J-Eac.i is an ardent hunter and fisherman. 4-Both are breeders. ljut there the similarity ends. For while Fullmer raises mink, Basilio breeds hunting clogs. it is, in a way, the story of thtf fight. Because come triday th feeling in this corner is thot it' going to be a bad night lor tha mink market and Fullmer well may feel like a future lady's fiiiP'ecc harried by Basilio's bca bca-giVipick. giVipick. bca-giVipick. Frindly Enemies , Basilio and Fullm.T arc friendly "enemies." Each is rghly complimentary of the otltrr's courage and rougiihouse ability. And this mutual admira admiration tion admiration may he Ihe reason why. ai ai-th;rJugh th;rJugh ai-th;rJugh each lost the last duke tt Robinson, both men voice the be belief lief belief that this will be their to'ighest Hjl made just one mistake gainst Robinson the second tilfle," Fullmer said today by tele- Jthone from San Francisco. "I e him hit me on the chin. It wa the biggest error I ever made because anybody can knock you Showmanship, nicrcandising and a pitch for public confidence prompted the simultaneous ra els on the National bnnne ot Antiqui Antiquity, ty, Antiquity, which has, for the time, at least, revived the fading celebrity and tried blood of Branch Rickey and Jack Dempsey. Having as yei no players, still minus three playing ites, and wih others, more in the blue blueprint print blueprint than th9 finished state, the new league, the Continental, or the Cons, as space-pressured headline writers, less critical than harassed, already are identifying them, it was imperative lhat they produce something tangible at the outset. For their immediate purposes, they could not have made a bet better ter better choice for the presidency than the persusively articulate spell spellbinder, binder, spellbinder, whose contributions to the splendors, and the sociology of the game, have been notaMe. as even the gentleman himself, i pressed, would agree unreservedly. Rickey, now in lis late 70's, has stature, a long record of solid achievement, is a respected big league rrame people assosiate with character, as well as success and is therefore a stimulus to con confidence. fidence. confidence. Our feeling is that Rickey would be of infinitely more and magical magically ly magically recreate, in its pristine force, the original farm value to the Third Leaguers if he could turn back the clock system which re revolutionized volutionized revolutionized nlayer procurement and enabled the bankrupt St. Louis Cards all of a sudden to domin dominate ate dominate the National League. It's the same with Dempsey. What he can do now to help the bleaguered prize fight enterprise he's joined, is nothin? compared 'ith what he could do if he were the melodramatically thrilling m kiMer of yore. CLASS VS. COMPETITION Pempscy's ambitions and in interests terests interests apparently do not go much beyond t-e money he is being paid. The truth is, apart from ficlning to divert public attention from an unsavory atmosphere, t'vre is nothing he can do to put Johansson back in the ring wl'h Pntterson. It is altogether ridiculous to be believe lieve believe that the mere presence of Dempsey. in a vague tenuous ca capacity, pacity, capacity, with a promotional group wh'ch has been eniovin" someth'n" less lhan a laurlatcrv nresso for weeks, would influence" the Sw?de's thinkins in th? slightest. As for the Third Leaguers, their essential problems remain un unchanged, changed, unchanged, despite the hand of neace so fulsomelv extended by the entrenched club owners. Even while watchinii amalcn.s irain n '"ickey tacitly admits that for an old garage. At mat age lujt'rpe years anyway, they'll be stood on a taole to punch the bacddlin a minor leacu" product and suorlly thereaicer was box- m a major league package. Do 'hey have the kind of money to hang' on lone enough for the pu public blic public eventually to accept them? th" answer to their destiny. Rickey talks fuzzily of "relative goodness," and holds that compe- SECOND STORY MAN Lloyd Hopwood (31) of Albrook "Fly "Flyers" ers" "Flyers" comes down with a rebound as Navy's Walt Bell (13) vain vainly ly vainly attempts to win the ball. Looking on are "Flyers" Jim Kern (40) and Lon Stephenson (35). The "Flyers" cinched a portion of the PAF crown with this game bv downing Navy 77-57. (Official USAF Photo) Basilio, Fullmer contended, is not a one-punch stopper. "But he'll be rougher liian Rob Robinson inson Robinson because he fights tnree min utes of every round vhile you have to chase Robinson for two and one-half minutes ol every round," claimed the 28-year-old Mormon mauler from West Jor Jordan, dan, Jordan, Utah. Fullmer, who was named after Gene Tunney and idolizes Jack jjempsey, began boxing at tigm titive balance will get the crowds The answer to that is probably from the start regardless of play player er player virtuosity, and hence money is no problem. If a close race among medio mediocrities crities mediocrities will jell as well, or even better, than an unclose one pre presenting senting presenting superior talents, the prin principle ciple principle upon which big league base baseball ball baseball was founded has been spur spurious ious spurious from the start, and for gen generations erations generations a lot of supposedly asiute "wners have been squadering zil zillions lions zillions senselessly. NEW JOB, NEW TUNE It isn't unusual for a man changing allegiances to change his views at the same time. Some years ago, as general manager of the Pirates Rickey vigorously de defended fended defended before a Congressional committee the majors'raetice of controlling large numbers of play players ers players through their farms ... "You would place no limitation at all on these numbers?" an interrogator asked. "None whatever," was Rickey's bland reply. .At the time the Pirates owned title to over 300 players. Now as president of the Third League, Rickey strongly suggests the practice is nefarious, mono monopolistic polistic monopolistic and un-American, and the sooner such oppressively wretched and foul conditions are eliminated the better. .Especially, for the Continentals, who eye these farm pools as a rich, promising source of material. Rickey probably had these pools in mind when he addressed the majors representatives, as fol follows: lows: follows: "We want your cooperation, we need your cooperation in fact w? demand vour rnnneralinn This is unique in American com mercethe proprietor of a new ri rival val rival store demanding that an es tablished competitor across the The highly important return meeting between the United States and Russia at Franklin Field in Philadelphia more re recently cently recently played to no more than 55,000 paid admissions in two days. And if that didn't draw, what in track and field can you sell Americans during the beach and mountain season? There are numerous reasons for track and field not having been sold to this country long ago. and they start with the stupidity of the irrepressible perennial Amateur Athletic Union badge-wearers. Getting back to the upcoming ran American Games, they shouldn't have to be sold to the public. They should be purchased without inducement. The Pan-American Games were devised to promote better un understanding derstanding understanding between the Americ Far too little aaint;on has been paia Greg Bell crowding Jesse uwens' ik year-old oroau jumpins record oi J .eel, 8' lncnes; ihe 1,500 meter duels between the Oregonians, young Dyrol Burles Burleson on Burleson and Jim Grellt; the seven-iooi high jumping ol Char.ey Dumas, ana tne sprinting oi Ray .Sorion,! among numerous other spectac ular performers. This year's Pan American) Games will be the largest interna i tional sports event ever neld in the United States, right dou through the Olympic marathon. More than A200 win represent J5 nations in 20 events for men and seven for women. By all reasonable standards, the Pan-American Games should turn people away, yet the administrat ive personnel is concerned aboui attendance. No pari-niutuel machines, you see. BALBOA STARTS SEPT. 5th Y COCO SOLO STARTS-SEPT. 12th 3(23 Cecil B.DeMille's i CMARUON YIX M'Nt tDWARD G Hil5T0N BRYNNER BAXTilR-R0BIN50N YVONNC DCBRA JOHN DE CARLO PAGET-DRK 51 CtDRlC NINA AAMHA JUDITH VINCtNl HARDWOE FOCH SCOTT ANDERSON PRICE W.. V, IIA3 ftftCUNM JUX I m5KT Jl JAC 0Ui fltOK HAM f TOiSWl TECHNICOLOR' Tom Nieporfe Wins Rubber City Open AKRON, Ohio (UPI) Tom Nieporte, of Bronxville, N.Y., who finally broke a two-year victory famine, headed toward Milwau Milwaukee kee Milwaukee today spurred by a $2,800 check, evidence of his three three-stroke stroke three-stroke victory in the Rubber City open. The 29-year-old former Ohio State University and 1951 NCAA golf champion blasted a last round five-under par 6fi Suriday for a 267 total, a record-shattering 17-under-Dar for the Firestone Country Club, site of next year's PGA. Nieporte, who has collected more than $14,000 in 29 events this year, was sporting a red-hot putter as he carded six birdie and one bogey. l Bob Goalby, Crystal River. Fla., still looking for his first ti title tle title of the season, was runner up with 270. Bill Collins, Crystal Riv River, er, River, Fla., who wound tin with the third Dla'oe purse of $1,400 fired a brilliant final round six-under-par 65 for a 271. street contribute to his progress and solvency. The situation in Washington is the explanation. Sen. Kefauver'; sports bill would grant antitrust immunities to football, Basketbjli and hockey, but not to baseba'I. This helns account for Rickcv's bold aggression, the majors rea dy submissiveness. Neil Johnston New 1 Coach Of Pro Cage Philly Warriors PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Ne I Johnston, an eight year veteran with the Philadelphia Warriors was handed his "golder opportur ity" yesterday by being amo coach of the team by owner Ed Eddie die Eddie Gottlieb. The six foot, eight inch center was signed strictly as a coach "and not as a player-coach" Gottlieb said. "We'll see how his knee (in (injured jured (injured last year) works out," he said, adding "I don't anticipate Neil will play much this season. '"If he dois play, it will be only as a relief man for (Wilt) Cham Chamberlain," berlain," Chamberlain," Gottlieb said. Johnston said that he played in an exhibition game last week with Chamberlain. "I'm glad he's on our side," the former pro-baseball player-turned-basketball star said. Johnston told a press confer ence "This is a golden oppor opportunity." tunity." opportunity." "I've always wanted to get into coaching," he said. "If I can't play there is no better place to be than on the bench as a coach.'' Gottlieb said he didn't make his decision to appoint Johnston to the coaching spot until "within! the last three or four days." He declined to name who if anyone else was considered for the post. Johnston succeeds Al Cervi, who resigned after one season to re-i turn to private business. The War riors finished last in the Eastern Division last year, Johnston said he believed he would have no difficulty in pick ing his team since he has played with all the men. This was the third straight year that a new Warrior coach has been named on the eve of train training. ing. training. In two previous appointments of coaches from the playing ranks, the Warriors won titles in 1955-56 under George Seneskv and in 1946-47 under Gottlieb. "It could happen again," Gott lieb said yesterday. NEW TIRE COST WITH Factory -- Method Retreading SAMfr TREAfl WIDTH SAME TREAD DESIGN SAME TREAD DEPTH T& li mit mi 7 Nd f.Yl MOT i i i Mi .1 . .r-IA m m mm mrm BETTER RUBBER. . FROM START TO FINISH! BUDGET YOUR PAYMENTS TRANSISTHMIAN HIGHWAY TEL. 3.1501 ing at ."smokers." Football Too Rough . "1 played basketball and foo: foo:-ball ball foo:-ball in high scnooi, he bam,, "but they were too rough. oo he uevbtcd iuii tyiie to. box iUe; and won a. jjilinuiv ul ama amateur teur amateur uties before turning io.es io.es-tional. tional. io.es-tional. ne nau wo.i u ..iait,ut oeiore ciuenna tne Army olid serving 1'iiioiuhs ui u .,o ... illicit ij AYorc. iidbum s story is la'ucn the same. Bum along l. it it-same same it-same rugged lines, Carmen also came up mrougii ihe amateurs, enlisted in the Marines a l 17 and spent 24 months on Guam and at Pearl Harbor,. Basilio has an edge in profes professional sional professional experience, at 32 having had 74 bouts oi which he won w, and lost 13 and kayoed 27. Full Fullmer mer Fullmer in 53 bouts has won 49, lost four and flattened 21 rivals. But the odds-makers have made Carmen an 8 to 5 caoice in this one and from here it sounds like a solid numerical proposition. The litt.e onion farmer can take tremendous amount of punish men. and you have to go wilii otrt with one shot if it lands just a beagle against a mink any day GLAND DISCOVERY RESTORES VIGOUR If you tee' o'.i befof your tltn or uffer from nerve, brain or phyicJ weakness, you will find happlnem and health In a new American Laboratory method which restores youthful vigour and vitality. It la a almpla home treat treatment ment treatment In tablet form prepared by an American Laboratory and la rary aaay to take. It acta directly on your landa, nervea ar.d vital o riant, and works ao well you can sea and feel new bodily power and vlitour In ahort time. Becauae of Ita natural ac action tion action on rlanda and nervea your brain power and memory often Improve nolnbly Thin new gland and vigour reatorer called Vl-Taba has been teatad and proved In the United States and la now available at all drugstores hare. Get Vl-Taba tablet from your drug druggist gist druggist today, put them to test and nee the big Improvement Take the full bottle, which lanla eight days. It will mnke you full of vigour, energy and vitality, and ynu will feel yeara younger. The large alze which lasts M 4ays Is very economical It's new! It's a BiperbMate! It's got the new JUMBO REFILL! HOLIDAY Positively guaranteed not to skip over handprints, fingerprints, grease spots . . even writes over a smear of butter! JNEW SK1P-FHEE JUMBO REFILL WITH GIANT INK SUPPLY GIVES 5 TIMES LONGER WRITING! Four Roses Kentucky Straight Bourbon That old-time flavor 1 korlr I i uuvn a flrh V0 H f e X FOUR ROSES DISTILLERS COMPANY, N.Y.C. KENTUCK t ITRAIGHJ BOURBON WHISKEY 86 PROOF AGED I YEARS EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS CYRCA, S. A. PANAMA COLON .0 Hp - -i 1 " v: f "i -rr i anu iwice on rriaay WEDNESDAY, AUGUST K, 199 PACE TEN Classified Ads Classified Ads Classified Ads Classified Ads 4 AGENTS: CUMlfied rax closes 11 :M jh, Mon. U FrL, 11 sun. Sat, 2 pjn. Sat for Sun. Office open S-S weekdays. Phone Panama 2-0740 for information about Clas Classifieds. sifieds. Classifieds. Charre vour ad if you have a commercial contract. LI AVE YOUR AD WITH nvr rr mm AGFNTS OB OUR orriCES AT 1J-J7 "H" SWEET, PANAMA UBRER1A MtlClAXXJ f KnU Ma. AGENCIAS IVTKRNAL. DF linn Nn 2ii "B" Street LEWIS tUtVICK Ave. TtveU N FABMACIA EST ADOS MUBK1SON tn 01 juijt nc. - t- FARMAC1A 1UX-164 Cenirii Ave M4fl VA 1)1 R JIS 50 Street No - . . I J. I. A . h, J. enTA VtAAAV liute A .. J l r ar- 53 F'ARMACfA fcl BATUKKU .rajqu W)"ti f sireeijp riutmAUA 'AAA rorm in nvrujAias J .this Beside Belli VtsU Thestrs end Branca t Minimal Snper Market aa.via upn at wi-H wru-t: tow uuin "w. iui) xei. THE F 15 AMI AMERICAN AN IKDEFZXDEXT DAILY KIWSPAPEB Resorts Baldwin's furnished apartmenti at Santa Clara Beach Telephone Smith. Gamboa 302 PHILUPj Ocenifle Cottagei W. Can R P. warn, i-1877 Cristobal 3-1673 Fosteri cottages. Sjn" Clara Reasonable rates Phone Balboa 1866 r Houses FOR RENT: Four bedroom house living-dining room. hall, three services, maid's room, gar gar-j,c j,c gar-j,c for three cars Altam.ra Tel 3-1645. Mrs Gonialei Commercial Sites FOR RENT: 0t Mercedes building, above Avem Avem-da da Avem-da Balboa's Post Off.ce. condition, good tirer, good paint private bathroom. "te""j!" "te""j!"-erv erv "te""j!"-erv reasonable rent Tel 3-305 "FOR RENT: Small space suit suitable able suitable for private office or "Chic stove, in goor residential area Air conditioned, glass door and Urge side window. 46th Street No 30, Bella Vista Tel. 3-7804. r Personals ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS DRAWER "A" DIABLO BOX 1211 CRISTOBAL. C I. PHONE BALBOA 3709 Boats b Motors FOR SALE: 18 ft. cabin crusier 1 22 horsepower motor, completely equipped, licensed 6. Can be 'seen at Diablo Spinning Club -- This boat is for s.'le $695 00 Phone Balboa 2-3782. Special Offers Bilingual secretary with over 10 year experience offers her services for any type of works that can be done at home. Call 4-0696. CECILIA TODAY! FOR ADULTS ONLY! PRICES: 0.60 & 0.30 THE 1001 FORBIDDEN DELIGHTS FOR THE PARISIAN NIGHTS! "PARIS TEMPTATIONS" Plus: Strip-Tca.se! Gags! Gals! Nudes! 'STRIP-TEASE HOLD UP" And Bl RLr SQl h SHORTS! NO MINORS ALLOWED! Opening TOMORROW! Great Double Feature! "Bell, Book & Candle" KIM NOVAK JAMES STEWART "The Last Blitzkrieg" VAN JOHNSON Commercial Guide"! ADVERTISE IN THIS SECTION Ads only cost $0.85 per col. inch FOR INFORMATION CALL 20740 Canal Zone Society l or The Prevention Of Cruelty To Animals Box 2B. HhIIiob. C. Z. Phnnr ( iminrtu SI 1 3 The fftlliiuiiid HinmnK nl Ihe n.. n..-Ml Ml n..-Ml V(rrinar Hospital ner-d flood homr- : 1 Male don. Idiirk mu hltr. na- ii r Irrrin I ipp I Krnialr tal. itir, nv jienllr I Malr vrllou ial l.itgr, hrnutiful with collar anil hi'll 1 Malr cal. Kic tiiirr collar and brll from roil Amador. Sl'PrOKT VOl H Sf( V VOU M Kl) II. 11 M.I.IIS Mil f We Certify RADIO and TV SERVICE W certfy quol'fy TROPELCO V 9 few El W, ,Mr1 ifi mmrnrl C i ill t ir hi he- with i lit ( (vx1 Hoii'.rkf'i'piMB tUAfarv' y Seal TROIKI,rO, S. A. Tel. 3-748!) Apartments FOR RENT: Three bedroom apartment. Maids room Hot water Garage Paitilla Phone 3- 2279. FOR RENT: Two bedroom apartment. livingroom. dining room, kitchen, laundry room, maid's room, hot water, gatage. Enquire 48 street No 12, La Cresta upstairs FOR RENT apartment. Army ins inspected pected inspected Bachelor or two couplet pretered Via Porras No 82, Tel. 3 7258 FOR RENT: Small apartment, completely furnished, refrigera refrigerator, tor, refrigerator, stove, hot water. 43rd Street No. 27. . FOR RENT; One bedroom, 'ur 'ur-nished nished 'ur-nished apartment, $75 monthly, National Avenue, call 2-2926, from 9-12 noon, 3-5 p m. FOR RENT: One bedroom, fur furnished nished furnished apartment, $85 monthly. National Avenue Call 2-2926 from 9-12 noon, 3-5 p.m. FOR RENT: Modern three bed bedroom room bedroom apartment with two prin principal cipal principal bathrooms, large livingroom and dining room I for entertain entertaining' ing' entertaining' master bedroom has wide balcony around it, kitchen, laun laundry dry laundry complete in apartment tor hanging, washing, etc., etc., maid's room with bath, hot wa water, ter, water, two bedrooms arranged for air-conditioning, garage with doors and locker room, etc Apartment newly painted, modern col col-ors ors col-ors 3,d floor "Miami Build Building", ing", Building", rent $150 00 Phena Pan Panama ama Panama 3 0763 or 2-0027. FOR RENT: Modern one bed bedroom room bedroom apartment Garaqe Bella Vista. $75 00. Tel. 3917 FOR RENT: In the best resi residential dential residential area of Cangrejo, modern and large two bedroom apart apartment, ment, apartment, living-diningroom, kitchen, two services, maid's room sep separate arate separate and garage, with cold and hot water Selected vecinity. $120 00 monthly. Tel. 2-4516. FOR RENT: Cool, clean apart apartment. ment. apartment. Convenient access to Ca Canal nal Canal Zone. Next street from 4th July Calle Darien No. 14-21. Apply Apt. No. 2. Al Jackson's Leap From B To Triple-A Is Big Help To Jets NEW YORK, Aug. 26..(l'Pn Southpaw Al Jacksnn's success successful ful successful stride from Class B to Triple-A ball may be the determining fac factor tor factor in landing the Columbus Jets in the International League play playoffs. offs. playoffs. Halting a Jet skid lor the third lime this mont'i. Jackson beat Richmond, 3-1, on three hits last night for his sixth straight triumph. The slender southpaw now has won 13 for the Jets this season. He posted an 18!) record with Lincoln, Neb., last year. Montreal remained 3 1-2 games behind the fourth-place Jots as Rene Valdes pitched the Royals to m 5-3 victory over (lie first place Buffalo Bisons. Valdes' nmi'i virion- '.'ivc .'lonucai us fourth straight win over the Herd. The Rochester Royals, rclusing to give up hope for a playoff bert trimmed Toronto twice. 5 11 nd 7 0 in 10 innings, while Havana wrnt into a second place tie with Richmond hy edging Miami, 2 1, on Jcs" Condor's home run. AUTOMOBILE F INANCE Gevcrnmciit rimploves Service Personnel Finance Your New Or Used Car UOVERNMfcNT EMPLOYES FINANCE Co. LOW RATES I P TO 36 Mo on new cars AGENCY DEHLINUER No, 43 Automobile I'.ow Phone 3-4!84 3-4!)Sr. All Types of Auto Insurance GIBRALTAR I II E INSURANCE COMPANY Jim Ridge Harry Cornell Davis Stevenson Box E Diablo, ( Telephone Pan. 2-05.' STEEL OUTPUT LOU WASHINGTON fUri) Steel proclin t on durinc the rd ended Aiie. i: totaled 33.Vn(l(l tons, nr ; i h i ci i ii. pared with 318,(I(HI fi, or 11 '! per nl c.in.irl v Ii,. "e cpdiro week, the Commerce l)e partmenl reported. Automobiles FOR SALE: French Ford Ver Versailles sailles Versailles 1957. V-8, 4 door. Ex Excellent cellent Excellent condition. One owner Can be seen all day. "Salon da Belleia Nine", opposite Hotel Pa Panama nama Panama Hilton. FOR SALE: Small 1947 Ply. mouth coup. Vary good condi condition tion condition $195.00. Tel. Balboa 3284 after 4:00 p.m. FOR SALE: 1959 P o n t i a c i Bonneville) 4 door, hard top, all accesories. Phone 6-169, Gamboa. FOR SALE: 54 Chevrolet con convertible, vertible, convertible, beautiful shape, recently overhauled, all accessories, pric priced ed priced for quick tale. Call Coroxal 2148, Panama 3-7435. Miscellaneous Salon Bahia offers 3 shows nightly: 9:30. 1 1:30 and 1:30. Continuous music until 5:00 a. m Delicious meals and fine liq- ours. NURSERY SCOOL Register now for September. Children 2 ',2 to 5 year, transpor transportation tation transportation provided. Call Balboa 1214 or visit house 875 Morgan Ave. So Buy Kluszewski For Long Ball Power By DAVE SMOTHERS CHICAGO (UPl)-The Chicago White Sox, searching for long ball power and "pennant insurance," yesterday acquired Ted Kluszew Kluszewski ski Kluszewski from the Pittsburgh Pirates in hopes that he would regain some of his slugging magic. The Sox gave up pinch hitter Harry (Suitcase) Simpson and Indianapolis infielder Robert So Sogers gers Sogers for the beetle-browed muscle muscle-iiian iiian muscle-iiian who once ranked as one ol the game's great first basemen. The (leal was a straight player trade with no cash involved. Klus zewski, 34, boarded a -'-ne from Pittsburgh. White Sox manager Al Lopez indicated he wanted Big Klu pri primarily marily primarily for his pinch hitting abil abilities. ities. abilities. But Lopez had not given up hope that Kluszewski would be able to take on some starting as assignments. signments. assignments. .. ;: "We think Ted can help by sup supplying plying supplying the long ball in addition to strengthening our bench," Lopez said. "He might start some games against right handed pitching. It depends on wha' he looks like when he gets here." Kluszewski said he "wasn't sur surprised prised surprised by the trade." "I heard rumors about me go going,'' ing,'' going,'' Klu said. "Two or three American league teams were mentioned. "Sitting on the bench here didn't appeal to me," he con continued. tinued. continued. "1 found that if I sat around, it didn't help my back, but if I played it was okay. "I don't think it will be too much different playing in the American League. The guys are the same only the names are different. Before the trade, I felt the White Sox had a strong chance of winning the pennant. They have halance and good pitching, the only weakness I could see was lack of I he Ioit; ball. I only hope I can help solve that prob lem.' I If Kluszewski, plagued by an aching back since 1957, can start slugging again with some of his old authority and frequency he could be the answer to Lopez's prayer. UNITED FRUIT COMPANY CHEAT WHITE FLEET New Orleans Service Sails Arrive. , Cristobal HH.I A Aut. 21 Aug. 19 t.,BAO Aug. 18 Sept. 5 MORAZAN Sept. 4 Sept. 12 I'l l A Sept. 11 Sept. 19 CIBAO Sept. 18 Sept. 26 Also Handling Refrigerated and Chilled Carfo New York Service Sails Arrivs " Cristobal LI MON Au. 25 COMAYAGUA Sept. 1 Aut. JO FR BKRLANGA Sept. 8 Sept. 6 ESPARTA Sept. 15 Sept. 13 JUNIOR Sept. 22 Sept 20 SAN JOSK Sept. 29 Sept. 27 Oct. 4 Also llandlint; Refrigerated and Chilled Cargo CRISTOBALW.C.C.A. FEEDER SERVICE TEXITA Every (15) Daya Ml VVeekiy sailings oi twelve passenger ships to New York, New Orleans, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle SPECIAL EXCURSION FARES FROM CRISTOBAL ANOOR BALBOA: To New York and Return To San Francisco andor CRISTOBAL Home Articles FOR SALE: Household items, leaving for States. Call 3-S301 from 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. and also after 6:00 p.m. FOR SALE: Bamboo sofa and three tables. Call Panama Tel. 3-0795. FOR SALE: Baby furniture, high chair, toilet seat. Crib w matching wardrobe. Call Balboa 3714. FOR SALE: Custom made ma mahogany hogany mahogany furniture, Chinese dining set Very reasonable. Telephone 3-0633, 4-1444. No. 3, 52th Street. FOR SALE: Diningroom set, mahogany, six chairs, cupboard, excellent condition. Tel. 3-2483. FOR SALE: Dinette set, red top table and chain. $25.00 Will accept reasonable offer. Phone 3-5024. Wanted WANTED: American family desires maid for cooking, house housework, work, housework, laundry. English desirable but not mandatory. Apply in per person son person with references at 104-S4th St. Paitilla. WANTED: Maidservant. Cook, clean, iron. American couple. No children, must live out. Ono evening off, plus all day Sunday. References required. Telephone 3-1427. WANTED: Maid to must havo references, Gamboa 226. Animals FOR SALE: 7 German police pups, one month old. Price $35 each. Call Cristobal 1410. FOR SALE: Dachshund male puppy, perfect condition, six weeks old. Tel. 3-5709. Employment Opportunities WANTED: One accountant i assistant, bilingual, threaw yoars xprlince. $165.00. Twe bilin bilingual gual bilingual secretaries with shorthand $130.00. Three bilingual office clerks, $100.00 to $125.00. 2 office clerks with knowledge in sales correspondence, English and Spanish from $200.00 to $250.00. Serviciot y Coloeaeio Coloeaeio-nes. nes. Coloeaeio-nes. Camera ae Comercio, Build Building ing Building No. 9. Girl Scout, Brownia Registration Monday At AlkrnnU AFP. Registration for Girl Scouts and Brownies will be held from 9 to 11 a m. Monday at the Youth Ac Activities tivities Activities Building at Albrook Air Force Base. Mothers who are interested in helping with the registration, or anvone wishing further informa information tion information may telephone Mrs. Victor H. Bolado, Albrook 6109, or the Youth Activities Building. Albrook 7219. Seattle and Return .8275.00 $400.00 TELEPHONES: 2121 PANAMA.2-2904 Miscellaneous FOR SALE: Aoed natural ma manure nure manure at give-away prices by the trucfcloae". Call 2-2641. FOR SALE: New Guatemalan furniture for your porch. Stuffed livinf room tot in new condition. Hand made Italian win red rug. Larae silt 1954 Pontiac hardtop, aacellent condition. All below normal prices. Must toll, leaving Isthmus. Telephone lalkoe 4495 after 4 p.m. FOR SALI -Adolescence custom built accordian, 120 base. Cu Cu-rundu rundu Cu-rundu 4231, after 4. FOR SALE.- Piano Betsy Ron Spinet $225.00. Calle No. 68, house No, 3. El Cangrejo. Phone 3-0J72. FOR SALE: URGENT, General Electric last model Aten$, air conditioner; deep freeitr. Rea Reasonable sonable Reasonable prices. Phone 3-6631 or 3-0568. FOR SALE: 35 m m. Cortaflex camera, flash attachment, close close-up up close-up lens, filters, carrying case. Phone 5-507 house 138-1, Go Go-tun. tun. Go-tun. FOR SALE: 21 inch Capthart T.V. Columbia 500 Hi-Fi with 1 speakers. Call 08-385. Lessons For the first time in Panama. Academy of Art opens formal courses. One different schedules starting on September 25th. For information please call Panama 3-19271 Three Hatfield's Killed In Outbreak Of Clan Feuding PINEVILLE, Ky. (UPI)-Three members of the Hatfield clan have been killed in a new out outburst burst outburst of Kentucky hillbilly feud ing, police reported today. Authorities were trying to De Determine termine Determine whether the dead Hat- fields were related to the storied Hatfield family that feuded with the McCoys many yean ago. The Hatfields killed Monday were Mm, Arlene Hatfield, 79, her husband,1 Jess, 81, and their daughter, Beulah Mae, 38. They were shot at short range with a shotgun during an argu argument ment argument over a property boundary line. Police held Charles Pierce, 76, and his 12-year-old son, Frank, as susDects in the slayings. "We don't know whether Frank or Charles Pierce shot the three Hatfields or not, but we are hold holding ing holding them for questioning," said State Police Sgt. John Robey. The shootings resulted from an argument during which the Pierces ordered the Hatfields off their property. All three Hatfields were shot at close range. T h women were killed instantly. Hat Hatfield field Hatfield died five hours later. The Hatfields of Hatfield-McCoy fame lived in West Virginia along Leo Dehlinger's 80 Low Score Among Local Representatives In Portsmouth Tournament In the first day of tournament play in the Jaycee International Golf Tourney at Portsmouth, Va yesterday the Canal Zone's Leo Dehlinger carded a just-so 80 which was low score for the local boys participating in the tourna tournament. ment. tournament. He was followed by Jeff Kline with an 85, Robin Morland with an 88, and Willie Engelke with a 92. Unfamiliarity with the course seemed to be a major factor in the relatively high scores. The boys who arc representing Panama in the "Little Masters won the Panama Golf Assn's Isth nian Junior Gulf Championship earlier this month. Almost every state in the Union md many lorcign countries are represented in the 199 boys who lave stormed Portsmouth for the tournament. Virginia's No. 1 player, Wright Garrett, showed last week that he ?nn handle Elizabeth M a n o r's course, on which the Tournament WANTED SALESMEN! Are you interested in making EXTRA MONEY? Write qualifications and particular to Box 3173 PANAMA Real Estate FOR SALIs Utt 500 and 1.000 meters, hi the Nuovo Hipodromo Urfcanlzatiee across tha Rama Racetrack. All lata with street fronts, sewage, water main and) electricity. CaN W. McBarsvett. Tel. 4-0976. FOR SALE OR RENT: Beautiful residence, 4 bedroom, living living-room, room, living-room, diningroom, library, recrea recreation tion recreation room, large kitchen, pantry, maid's room with service, hot water, terrace, garden, garage, land 1,800 m. 9th Street No. 28, San Francisco, phono 2-2510. FOR SALE: Ideal lot of land at La Cresta Heights, Manual J. Hurtada street. 1066 square meters. Moderate price. For in information formation information phone 3-4868, Pan Panama. ama. Panama. De you want to buy or tall a lot In Las Cumbres? Sea Liche Cas Castration tration Castration at La Hacienda Restau Restaurant, rant, Restaurant, from 4 p.m. on or by ap appointment. pointment. appointment. I offer the last twe lota en tha highway. Two email farms, 12,000 meters on tha Transisthmian, 30 minutes from the capital. One has a small house, well, roe across the property, end a variety of fruit trees. Services TELEVISION AND RADIO SERVICE. Our new service plan gives you faster, more econo economical mical economical and better service. Phono 2-1905 Crawford Agencies. Tivo Tivo-K K Tivo-K Avenue. U. S. TELEVISION Means reliability, and lasting re repairs. pairs. repairs. For better home service call 3-7607 Panama from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday to 6 p.m. MOTOROLA. T.V. and radio repair shop all kinds of elec electronic tronic electronic equipment and a p a r a parts. Call 3-3191 or try us and at Avenida Nacional No. 38. (Automobile Road). Protect your homo and proper property ty property against Insect damage. Prompt scientific treatment on emergency or monthly budget basis. Telephone Pronto Service, Panama 3-7977 or Colon 1777, Articles By CZJC Grad Published In Insurance Mag A series of articles on "Group Annuity Accounting," written ny Oscar J. Rinehart Jr., a 1939 hon honor or honor graduate of the C.Z. Junior Col Col-leffe leffe Col-leffe wax nuhlished recently in the monthly insurance magazine Interpreter. Rinehart, who has been the man man-tnr tnr man-tnr of the eroun insurance de- nirfmtni nf the New York Life Insurance Co., was a resiaem w Corozal during the time ne at tended CZJC. the Tug River, which forms the boundary between West Virginia and Kentucky, Other branches of the Hatfield family lived ljn Ken tucky. is being played, when he shot 72-70 in the Eastern Amateur. The heat may be a vital factor in the six day grind of the "Little Masters." The mercury has stay ed at around the 95 mark for the last several days and there ap pears little hope for a let up. Letters from the local boys com plain of the heat wave which had been expected to break this week Don Hause, Brazos Brook pro met the local boys in Washington on Friday and is their official es cort at the tourney. Before arriv ing in Virginia the boys enjovec Ihe hospitality of Mr. and Mrs Henry Finn in Hollywood, Fla. Jimmie Vincent, who is well known to Isthmian golfers arran" ed for the boys to play at the Ft Lauderdale Country Club with picked foursome, among therr Carol Airey who has a handicap of six. They were also given a opportunity to practice 6n the Plantation Manor Golf Course. The Portsmouth Tournament end Saturday. INVESTOR'S GUIDE ly SAM SHULSKY King Ftatures Syndicate, 235 E 45 St., Naw York O I i m fin. runnin? a nne-man business, from which I hope to retire at 65 u possiDie. I have made some stnniH mi. takes, and would now like some guidance, i noia 1,200 j-enn kk at 19 : 200 Sperry Rand at 28U and 100 Sun Chemical at 18. Alan 14.- 000 in Treasury 2Vas, bought at par, ana $6,oou in savings. 11 1 liquidate my business, I could wing my net wortn up 10 su,oou. A. You have made some mis takes, although they could hardly be classed as stupid. Of course, at the head of the list of mistakes is the fact you put pwo-thirds of all your securities money Into one railroad stock. While it is true the Pennsy has paid some dividend every year lor more than a century that alone does not qualify it for a purchase of nearly $23,000 in your case. Sperry Is a growth situation which has not proved too reward ing in recent years, but certainly has promise. Sun has had a high ly erratic earnings record. 1 can t figure out what you were striving for growth, high in come, saiety? You haven't hit any target. I'm inclined to think you were looking for stocks be low $20 or $30, so you-could buy a 101 01 snares, am mat is fool ish. 1 you nave a lot of eomnanv locked in witn you in those Treas ury 2(4 s, but it was an honest mistake. I think you should hold mem now Decausa tun m on your side. If you are thinking of retirement within the next few years, I would urge a shut in your common stocks to far more generous and dependable dividend providers. 1 am sending you a list of top grade companies. Keeping taxi losses in mind, so as to cut down your income tax bill, start shift ing some of the Pennsy into good grade oils and utilities, as a start er. I hope you will not Interpret this as a prediction by me that Pennsy is going to decline. I don't know. Some rails may well do better from here on. I lust feel that vou nave lar too much of your funds in one company, and mat an east ern rauroad. Q. I am a widower, approach ing 70. Have substantial savines. checking account, E bonds, large amounts ot three stocks and real estate mortgage. Have been in terested in tax free utilities. A. Several suggestions come to mina. Von r rtcrfut in Mn.in 4. free investments, since the tax ouraen is evidently an important one with vou. Yon 'mitrtit aclr broker to suggest some utilities wnicn pay tax tree or partly tax free dividends. Iti addition, there are me municipal bonds wh eh now ottering a generous tax-free yield. As to your other holdings: 1 can't iustifv so -mneii only three issues, only one of muni. n.L. ami l . i.v fir inn ranir Nor can I see such large amounts m casn, j, Donas ana checking ac counts. It seems tn mo nicipal bonds would solve several oi your proDiems at one ume. Pro Grid Teams Oul Oi Exhibition Play Without Injuries Apparently most of the Nation aj Football League teams came out of last week-end's exhibition play without any serious injuries George Halas, Chicago Bears owner-coach, has stepped-up prac tice sessions for today and tomorrow before the squad pushes off for Houston, Tex., for a Saturday game with the Pitts burgh Steelers. Halas reported his squad in good shape after last Satur day's victory over the Philadel phia Eagles at Lynn, Mass. The champion Baltimore Colts, who whipped the New York Giants in the Cotton Bowl last Friday, were back at their train mg base m Westminster. Md prepping for a Friday night game with the Washington Redskins in Baltimore s Memorial Coliseum. Del Shofner, who suffered a charley horse against the Red skins in Los Angeles last Friday night, will be ready to play again Saturday when the Rams meet the undefeated Chicago Cardinals at Los Angeles. The Rams en enjoyed joyed enjoyed a day off Monday but are expected to resume head knock mg today. The Detroit Lions cut five play ers from their roster, including Tom Rychlec, who made the club last year after a year in the Army. The others cut all were newcomers ha It back Carl Smith of Tennessee, guard' Harry Jacobs of Bradley, linebacker Jim Bald win of Murray State and center Dan Mc Grew of Purdue. Smith was the highest draft choice to he dropped. He wa picked on the ninth round. The Lions play the Giants in Detroit Friday night. Today's Opening M STOCK PRICES ACF Ind Advocate Asbestos Alleghany Corp Aluminium Ltd Amer Cyanamid Amer Motors Amer Tel and Tel Anaconda Copper Arkansas Copper Arkansas Fuel AVCO Mfg Beth Steel Bettinger Corp Bicroft Uranium Blauknox British Pet Burroughs Canadian Eagle Celanese Cerro de Pasco Chicago Great West Chrysler Cities Service Coastal Caribe Colgate Palmoliva Colorado Fuel Cons Electro Dynamics Creole Pet Crown Cork and Seal Cuban Venezuelan Oil Du Pont El Paso Natural Gas Fairchild Engina Fargo Oil Felmont Pet General Dynamics General Electric General Motors General Plywood Gulf Oil Gulf Oil Harsco Steel Howe Sond Imperial Oil Intl Pet Lockheed Magellan Pet Montrose Chem New Eng. Tel and IJW. Northrop Air Olin Mathiesoa Pancoastal Phillips Pet Pure Oil Royal Dutch Shell RCA Reynolds MetaJ San Jacinto Servo orp Signal, Oil and Cn Sinclair1 Oil Socony Mobilt Spenry Rand Standard Oil NJ Studebaker-Packart! Superioi? Oil ' Texas Gulf Prodi Textron JJnderwood United Canso Ofl US Rubber US Steel Westinghoust Elet Wheeling Steel 265b 347s 61V 4394 79T 64H UVtb 13 56 15b 65b 54b 7 31 imb 30 44b 5H 4 i 314 38 474 35 H 268 82V, Tb 5 6b 47 80 54V4 20 111 111 42 22 40Vih 36 26 lftb 13b 193b 80 51 3 46Vi 40V4b 61 105 V4 45 Sb 6 34b 58 44 23 51 11 1865 83 26 V4 tfib lb 1 loavi 88 62ft Jones Waxes Lyrical Over Earl Buchholz By BOB SALMON CHESTNUT WTT.T. V... tntr -. -- T4.ao0. Ul if U. S. Davis Cup Capt. Perry T. T Jones waxed lyrical today over I young Earl Buchhol7: whilo hn. I ing Peruvian Alex Olmedo would nit nis crescendo" in this week. end's showdown at Forest Hills, Australia made ft fi nal mil Sunday by winning the National Doubles here on the shoulders of ? 25-year-old Neale Fraser anH year-old Roy Emerson. Winner takes the pot the top prize in tennis starting Friday when uie n.ussies cnaiienge the United States for the Davis Cup. 4 Jones was holding his breath f, during the week-long doubles here, pairing the 23-year-old Ol- medo, now living in Los Angeles, with the 18-year-old Buchholz. Many said it was a mistake; that Barry Mac Kay of Dayton, Ohio and the Air Force should bo teamed with Olmedo. But Buchholz, a quiet, erew-cut lad from St. Louis, Mo., with more potential than any tennis youngster in years, turned the ta tables bles tables on just about everybody. V Fraser and Emerson squeaked through to a 3-6, 6-3, 5-7, 6-4) 7 $ win, but it was Buchholz who carried Olmedo. ."Buchholz was magnificent, Jones said. "He played like an i old campaigner. And he certainly l took a lot of weight off my shoul- I ders." Jones admitted that Oimedo'a playing was off. "Alex definitely was not nla. ing up to his normal game," ha said. "But I think he btingg hit same up 10 a ceescendo and While this match was imnnrtant it wasn't quite the same as th uavis cup. Wimbledon champions Darlent Hard of Montebello, Calif, and Jeanne Arth of St. Paul. Minn, successfully defended their worn- en's doubles crown Sunday with ft i ho-hum victory over Maria Buen j of Brazil and Sally Moore of Baa t ersfield, Calif., 6-2, 6-3. Marijuana Farm LOS ANGELES fTTPTI 4 year-old man was booked early tonay on suspicion of violating narcotics laws when police up uprooted rooted uprooted 586 marijuana plants ia the yard of his home. "Wen, 111 be darned," said tha suspect, Mike Micassio Jr., a sin singer. ger. singer. 'I didn't know what thty Y were. I thought they were bambot plants." i f i v WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1959 THI STORY OF MARTHAWAYNI fHl PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY MWSPAP10R rl ILIVIN Htid of the Family Y WILSON SCRUGGS! TERRY AND THE PIRATES GKORGB WVNDU OT PEOM CHF THFWf Rau.yin$ the scattekep tui005h kxxz center tmbraim on the vov5 shapes in the rain. 50PEKEP Y THE 5UTTEN CONCENTRATION OF RRE.TKE REP IMOiVER ANP KEAK FOR COVER. ErTMER TEWy OR AMJFTI ATHLfcTlccLut. I STILL ON HI5 FEET.. 60TMEOKE.' L a 'RISriLLA'S POP Pity tho Rich By AL VERMIII T1I Ujfjriir 0T-THE PROMT MAR1 JM rlSAill AIM CAREFUL, TERENCE A 1J Xf5?f7rVfk 60TTA KEEP -EM FROM J I ( HI, DOUWA. HOW JTjUSTj. i JteJT? n01OUZFf!$T WOWOEeRl, 1 1 OMjKge, vie v 1 A . W0RVIU6?! WSKT -J OHIOJCWMfi J 1 1 t M lUj I'l. Hi. -y HA THE PIAWO 4 ou SToey ( ATTHE'UTTLfi f &V "S V-K30fAV 7 SOMETIME.' ) Ml- pUAeLS,IAWN ipo r LLIY OOP CAPTAIN IASY MORTY MIIKLR eUR BOARDING HOUSE n ICKLRS AND HIS f tlIND Nothing to It V MERRILL BLOSSLR HOW DOXHJ.SUI?yiVt BUT I THE SUMMER VVTrHOUT. J CO A PAW-TlME JOB, .HAVE EVEy I TAKE MRS. 6RIMKlNS DOG FOB. A . ..... i i ,-,-,. t KUN AAEAM OLD BULLDQ6? we K'Ive. BITES HANDLED r Uili tro i r lift I vr. AAONTH SO FAR. wTWvrr A MtSHAf its easy whe? Hinds Off Y V. T. HAMLIN msv whm with i txrr YOU GUYS, ANYWAY? I Bit ANY OMBBODV9 THINK BrRTHDfcY? UNUSUAL OivO-l! BUSINESS W IN TH' SHOP, EH? OXV MY (S09M, WHO'S I TWENTV IN THERE, V FOUR. A.NVHOVV.' , "-VANYHOVV v OH,TH' liTTLE MO YOU YOU'VE ALREATY AW, FER CATSAKE, MOROM, EH? I WONTf "fOU I DONE ENOUGH WHEN WO HE SET TO La."' auessiueo) lew to upset our I be th' fair-haired- Ek'- IN AN' HAVE ( HIM f PROGRAM WHERE BOY AROUND )L A LOOK.' -AlONE HE S CONCERNED J HERS? fj-y f IW Ml t.'vir Ej AND HIR RUOMIfl Jolly Rogtr IY IDGAR MARTIN i ir , liw. T.M. u,. rti. on. r j Easy Insitti Y LISLIi TURNER WUV IIOT2 incitrvflrl iltrr m MOOI A KID rpnnu-i T ufuic to cie awr WALK to I'll trv to kepa,y y friend ran rWAIT, CkKT b mi nun m i r ni7 MCLr r I THATOICE-.m CAKIMOT BEr!! 005 e. HURRY.. open THAT PUNSfOKIJ BROWBEAT VOU INNOCEWT A5 1 AW. TLL Salfe SUCH LAN51JAGE, Wei, t S5. X ill i V RVEM W5PAMI5HSJ POLICE MftY WANT M NECES5ARY1 Tfii JLVTYVVpV j p m Tho Hard Way Y DICK CAVALLI THE TROUBLE' WITH MOLT ' ( VOUNfl FELLOWS NOWAOAM3 1 V 16 THAT VOU HAVE IT .' Vl 8 f ANPA FATHER 3- V f WHEN I WAQ i I WHO LEFT ME A f0 it VOUR AGE, r -.fTM MILLION-OOLLAR I ALL I HAD 3 Qi CgjV BUSINESS." with MAJOR HOOPLR OUT OUR WAY MY J. R. WILLIAMS FARM ACROSS Ttf POAO' AND I 6I?0UGHT0D Your milk thought rMISUTS VJELLTELL VJELLTELL-YOUTHERE' YOUTHERE' VJELLTELL-YOUTHERE' A 9 T0?cD TOWNS yrfCKfc LOOSE FkOM A CIRCUS, PUT Ht AIN'T, AH.THE THOLksHTj CPA KAAArAO IMS 6SAI? APPEALS TO TH6NIMK0D I MB; WHAT A MI5FORTUM& THATVJ& FORGOT "TO EARWS ALDNJ6 rI'LL' K-5EP, EYES PEELED, AND i FtfOT ONTHS $TART- IMto .1 at nrwn iOME ME TOO rJE 60ME CHILLY- HOOF ALREADY PET BETTSft 3 mom g(?AME VOU OUGHT TO e 7 OW-OOH-H-H YOU WOTICE ( THANKFUL WE HAVB V I LVIN6INTH' ) I AFTER Hl C I kl"WBC,Br ( BECAUSE Wfl Jf MARRIEPTHEVN J ALL THI FOR NOTHtNa, A HAVE AN y V MOVEPTOAN- -isAvLHAPTH' A Uk)CLE OKI ) SZ- CAWK YEARS r A FARM 7 ( WHY? BECAUSE c- n -If VOU PA55N'T Yry f', shipjo fruit f 1 I,; N ACROSS THE I '' ' ' ' '''' ' VVMV M(T(HSK9 GET SRAV i . '"" I 1 lfjy. BOY, I CAN v &Jf i ai TV? flU (MARDLY WAIT 1 "SLEEPING ) J THERE'S UNDER JMOTt-AVG THE STARS, ) LIKE CLOSE TOff CAMPING MOTHER J v-, OUT.'; I PEEL KIND OP 1 v Sorry pop polks iwmo can accord THOSE PANCYy I V-PESORTS.V ih ii.t i ? Atfy JUGS BUNNY On Tap LEMONAOkAY' BUSINESS MUST BE GOOP...YER ALMOST SOLP OUTA THIS STUFF J YEAH1ID BETTER MAkTC MAPPI MIMO Tl PKIIMg fYJ TUP WATFP J l Tfj ViiFou jn IfiKf&istets True Life Adventures !,lxl .a mi 'ipi5ask j"L r IThe NVEDGB -TAILED EAGLE tnVES 04 A RED XAN6AROO MOTHER, TWiUiS TO T7RIVE HEK AWAV FROM LITTLE JOEV. BUT SHE REMAINS. WHEN ANOTHER EAfiLEUOVNfS IN..- vVt. UlllWP I ..I.; .PQ(. ...rr is too mucw tor -v MRS. KANGAROO'S NERVE6, ANP SHE PANlOS.-LEAVlNd THE VOUM6 ONE T M6 RATE SIDE GLANCES By Calbraith 1 Bardot Starts New Film As Pregnancy Rumors Continue NICE, France (UPI)-Brigitte Bardot started work on a new picture yesterday amid reports sparked by an American movie executive that she was expecting a baby early next year. Both Brigitte and actor Jacques ("harrier, whom she married on June 19, have denied that ghe is pregnant. But the reports received new impetus Sunday, when M I k Frankovitch, head of Columbia pictures in Britain, said Colum Columbia bia Columbia had postponed the start of a new Bardot film from January until March. Frankovitch said he had re received ceived received reports that the actresa was expecting a baby "at tha start of 1960, probably in Jan January." uary." January." Hp said the report cama from movie director Raoul Levy. skipjack Teaches italy LA SPF.ZiA. italy (UPI)-Tha newest U.S. atomic submarili, the Skipjack, arrived at this Ital Italian ian Italian naval base yesterday on ita first Mediterranean cruise. AUG. 28 MATERIAL SALE TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS OPPORTUNITY ZIG-ZAG T.M. k o.. r.i. on. in r nca rv.r.. i 'It must hava taken a lot of pia suppera and rummage sale to build that!" AfOVAS PAAAMA AAWAYS PANAMA-MIAMI MIAMI-NEW ORLEANS PANAMA $ Q NEW ORLEANS Today'a TV Program 55.00 35 30 0 S:00 crN NEWS 3:15 Folki Paradt 4:00 Mr. Wizard 4:30 Capt. 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ItJtunt Rood Miami, Tlorida Nomt Street Cily Country It Pan-America nCSam eslo mmmw Read story on page 8 (Get After Jet Flight From Washington Eisenhower Is Welcomed In Triumph To Germany He Crushed To Defeat BONN, Aug. 26 (UPI) President Eisenhower landed at West Germany's capital ity of Bonn today to launch a historic nuclear age cru- aade for peace. The man who led the Allied armies 14 years ago to inflict on Germany the most crushing defeat in its history was welcomed back here "in triumph today as the free west's leader in the Cold War with Communism. West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, 83, and most of his go vernment were ort hand to greet the President as he stepped from his jt transport at Wahn Airport near here. '- An estimated 50,000 Germans lined the 19-mile route from Wahn to Bonn and its nearby diplomatic suburb of Bad Godesberg where the President was spending the night at the US embassy residence. The President and Secretary of State Christian A. Herter will spend some seven hours in conferences tomorrow with Adenauer, for. eign minister Heinrich von Brentano and other West German officials. I Tomorrow evening Eisenhower flies on to Britain for a five-day vis it, during which he will make a quick trip to Scotland to call on Queen Elizabeth II, hold down.to.earth diplomatic talks with Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and receive Spanish foreign minister Fernando Ma. ria CastieHa. Sept 2 he hops over to Pans to i has switched the world's power BjWt with French President fronts since the destruction of Na Na-Chides Chides Na-Chides de Gaulle in what may be zi Germany in 1945. te toughest part ol his mission The West Germans see in Prest jL,,i t weld toeethor a solid dent Kisenhower and the US then Western front before hi mit't ivj ith Soviet Premier Nikila S. Khrushchev Sept. 1". Ji'he triumphal reception given fhc President here was drannti; evidence of the way the Cold War (Weather Or Not v! his vacation at Cadenabhia n l!This weather report for the 21 northern Italy to be here to re re-hours hours re-hours ending 8 a.m. today Is ce ve the President, prepared by the Meteorological: Brentano and defense minister Bd Hydrographic Branch of the j Franz Josef Strauss cut short Panama Canal Comoanv: their vacations, too. on Adenau- . Balboa - .. a Cristobal I JEMPERATl'RE: -High Low 86 75 8fi 78 HUMIDITY: High Low 95 70 8-9 .01 95 85 WIND: (max. mph) RAIN (inches) NW 13 .42 WATKR TEMP: (Inner harbors) 82 82 LAKE ELEVATIONS Gatun Lake Madden Dam 83.5(1 214.62 BALBOA TIDES THURSDAY, Al!G. 2 HiRh , Time 9:Sfi a.m. M:17 pjn. Time .3:40 a.m. '4:18 p.m. HI. 12. ft. 11.6 ft. lit. 4.4 ft. 4.2 ft. 1T AV PRICES: .75 y .40 Shows: 1:50 4:15 6:40 9:00 p.m. JAMES DON EA5IIEY' Murray 7 SHAKE HANDS Ir11.TI.TllE ElIE.' VlPU 1 II KnoBiHC VOII TUADMluvr umu Bin 1 M. ;, m Mf i mii Kowms .. main hope ultimately of breaking down Soviet hostility to German reunification. The Bonn government staged a welcome here that reflected the unity hopes not only of 51 million resurgent West Germans but also of the 17 million Ger Germans mans Germans under Communist rule in the East. The aged chancellor interrupted er's orders. Thousands of cheering Germans lined the streets in every little town1 and village, waiting for the Kisenhower motorcade on the 19 19-mile mile 19-mile drive to Bonn. Banners inscribed "Welcome M' President" and "Germany is in indivisible" divisible" indivisible" draped villa ?e streets. Typical German village brass bands were on hand to blare out an "oompah" welcome as the mo motorcade torcade motorcade soed through the German countryside and across the great Rh'ne River bridge at Bonn itself. Tomorrow thousands of Ger German man German schoolchildren will be piven i free day to turn out to cheer the President in what is proba probably bly probably the greatest eyertjn the his history tory history of fills "temporary" caoi caoi-tal tal caoi-tal of the western part of divid divided ed divided Germany. Eisenhower flew to Europe knowing full well that his day of talks tomorrow with Adenauer might add to the Soviet bitterness toward West Germany, but the American leader was determined to use his "last atom of energy" in his jet-age quest for peace. Aside from war time meetings of heads of state and govern government, ment, government, Eisenhower's trip repre represented sented represented the most extensive, perso- IB-EILI.A A STORY OF V LOVE AND HATE., f AND THE SUDDEN 1 SOUND OF GUNS' m h mmdu immpsovk mam oohnir lew m ,2wfrWiJ7Wiv j nal diplomatic venture by an American President overseas since President Woodrow Wilson toured Europe in behalf of the League ef Nations f o I lowing World War I. West German leaders hailed Eis enhower's visit as proof of his de determination termination determination to protect toe interests of West Germany in his talks next month with Khrushchev and future East-West negotiations. Eisenhower was greeted with a 21 gun salute by West German ar artillery, tillery, artillery, a German military band played the American and German national anthems, and the Presi President dent President and Chancellor inspected an honor battalion of army, navy and air force men. Eisenhower will discuss with Adenauer the problems of dealing with Communism for seven hours, beginning at mid-morning tomor tomorrow, row, tomorrow, after brief visits with outgo outgoing ing outgoing President Theodor Heuss and President-elect Heinrich Luebke. It was learned that Adenauer's aides had prepared a background on a list of some two dozen key topics which might be discussed. The list, prepared at Aden Adenauer's auer's Adenauer's direction, includes such issues as US-Soviet relations, in including cluding including past and forthcoming exchanges of visits by govern government ment government leaders; US-Soviet econo economic mic economic competition; US-European relations and specifically US US-German German US-German relations, Berlin and the question of former German properties confiscated in the United States during World War II. Eisenhower, on the eve of his departure for Western Europe, nromised Amreica's European al allies lies allies that there will be no retreat from principle or Western unity in any negotiations with Russia. At the same time, ihe President said he would appeal to other Al Allied lied Allied leaders to nledee their readi readiness ness readiness to negotiate "realistically" with Russia in disarmament. WASH" A THE MOST SAVAGE UNDERGROUND WAR EVER FOUGHT! DANA GLYTJIS ivmrrn -Johns . h M h mcimtt mm He also said he would urge them o tackle German problems and io help in any other way to re luce world tensions. At Washington news confer conference ence conference yesterday the President struck back at former President Harry S. Truman for asserting that Eisenhower's trip to Mos Moscow cow Moscow later this fall would damage Presidential prestige. The President, his fitte growing red, said he was deterifflned to use his "last atom of energy" in pur pursuit suit pursuit of peace and Americans should condemn him or any other president who did not. He declared fervently that there must be no letup in the search for peace. Then, with a sigh, he added that he was weary of people who accuse him of damaging Presi Presidential dential Presidential prestige. Eisenhower said he would pledge "America's devotion to peace with honor and justice; to support West Western ern Western unity in opposing, by lorce t necessary, any aggression; and to preserve the defensive strength re required quired required by our common security. After issuing his call for disarm disarmament ament disarmament negotiations, the Fresident went on to say that he would dis discuss cuss discuss with each allied head ot gov government ernment government problems common lo that nation and the United States, nd would rededicate this country to NATO. Eisenhower said he also would suggest that the Allies cooperate in helping the two million people living in newly developed or un underdeveloped derdeveloped underdeveloped countries. He said this might be the most important facet of his trip. The President renewed his pledge never to relax US efforts to give Soviet "captive nations" a voice in their'own destiny. He said he was sure Americans would never agree that peace had been restored until these people had a chance to express their will. Before the Truman criticism was brought up, the President calmly answered questions about the forthcoming visit of Khrushchev, scheduled to arrive in the US Sept. 15. He said he decided to go to the airport to greet Khrushchev after word was received from the So Soviet viet Soviet Foreign Office that the Pre Premier mier Premier would make his US tour as chief of state as well as head of government. Klementi Voroshilov, president of the Soviet Union, normally is considered Russia's chief of slate. The President said he invited Khrushchev h e r e because he wanted him to see US industrial and military might, and to see "with his own eyes, a free people living and working." In turn, Eisenhower said he asked to vis visit it visit Russia. Asked whether anything could upset plans for his Russian tour, the President said he was com committed mitted committed to go and would do so, as assuming suming assuming that Khrushchev's trip here "at least does no damage." In his talks with Khrushchev, the President said, he intends to find out if the Soviet leader has any intention of making sugges suggestions tions suggestions that would help ease ten tensions. sions. tensions. Eisenhower also said it might be a good thing for Khrushchev to see that Americans who oppose his visit are free to voice their criticism despite the fact that the Soviet leader is the official guest of the President. Vice-President Richard M Nixon said meantime that the Khrush Khrushchev chev Khrushchev visit will aid the cause of world peace and "deserves tho approval of the American people Nixon joined with Eisenhower in urging a "courteous recep reception" tion" reception" for the Russian Premier next month. He defended the wisdom of in viting Khrusfcchev to the US in a speech before the national Amer American ican American Legion Convenlion. where Ihe tour has been roundly con demtled by some top legionnaires. The Legion's Americanism Com mittee has a stack of pronosed resolutions be'ore it npnocin" the Khrushchev visit, and Martin G MrKneally, leading candidrte for national commander of the Legion has said the Russian's tour could cause "great harm. Well aware that msnv members of his audience feared Khrush chev's visil would weaken ip I'S stand aainst communism ion 'iromised to five the T e"inn,lirr" "pl'ii" tal1 about V- nm- "Khruihrhav will find we In the US will n more tolerate be ing pushed around than he will," Nixon predicted. He assured the people of Berlin and of free nations bordering the Iron Curtain that they 'need have no concern that their principles will be compromised." The Legionnaires responded by interrupting Nixon's speech with applause 13 times. Nixon warned "while under standing alone will not bring peace, misunderstanding could provoke war." "And it is because bis iKhrush chev's) visit can serve to reduce the possibilities of such misunder standing that it could contribute to the chance that we can settle our differences without war, and therefore, deserves the approval of the American people." Americans should welcome Khrushchev with politeness, Nix Nixon on Nixon said, because courtesy "is the American way of doing things." "It would be naive and wishful thinking to assume that the visit ...will result in any basic change in the communist objective of World domination, or their adher adherence ence adherence to policies designed to a a-chieve chieve a-chieve that goal," Nixon said. But Khrushchev may get rid of "some dangerous misconceptions" about the United States, Nixon added. Meanwhile in London, Soviet diplomats hinted that Khrushchev may meet with French President Charles de Gaulle early next year It was believed that the Soviet leader wanted to meet persi.nllv with De Gaulle hefore any full full-dress dress full-dress summit conference. Cdr. Fox Is New Staff Officer At Navy Hdqtrs. CDR. LYLE FOX Cdr. Lyle B. Fox has assumed duties as assistant chief of staff tor personrH ami administration of the 15lh Naval District. The voter 11 naval officer, a na native tive native of Washington, D.C., succeed succeeded ed succeeded Cdr. Iticham A. Sexton, wiio has been transferred to the des destroyer troyer destroyer iciim" 1 SS Everglades as executive officer. Kox has been in the Navy for 26 years, rising through the ranks from a yeoman lo commissioiu'd rank. A specialist in administra administration, tion, administration, he (.line to the ('ami Zone from one of the top administrative jobs in Ihe avy ass slan' admi administrative nistrative administrative aide to the Chief of Vival Per-iinncl in Washington. This is his first tour of duty in Ihe ('ana: .one but rot hi; first vi sit. In 19:it he transited Ihe canal is a seaman aboard Ihe old air craft carrier Saratoga and in 1946 !'c went through as a lieu'enani junior grade aboard the attack carco s i n AMi-un. In a varied career F-jx has had com ,) i m' ("-'Jed n rar1'' rar1''-intelligence, intelligence, rar1''-intelligence, ben ajp" operations. ( mimic (ip I oxr,"' ive o. ficer, and a ship's navigator. Dui i" : :( Ir n W-isliin? Ion, he headed le unil thai foriw'i; ''I'-.nvv' 'tiv ual up In (I. He ;er Ihe Korean ( Fox is iciilini at Ft. Amador I '' -fi'.lrerl ;. -I 'he who cbililKii. Ayie, 8, and Shit Shit-lev, lev, Shit-lev, r. r ill m ft'- -lift I i J THE SEARCH Pretty buc buccaneers caneers buccaneers Cathy Sellers, left, and Anne Morse, treasure map in hand, study the terrain of Santa Rosa Island, off Pensacola, Fla. They're looking for buried treasure worth $15,000. Finder of the chest in the sand dunes overlooking the Gulf of Mexico wins a house. It's Pensacola's quadracentennial celebration. Franco's Pipeline From Sahara Oil Gels Final Link BOUGIE, Algeria (UPI) A pipeline to France's dream of scK-suijiciency .11 o I gets its final link in this Mediterranean port tooay after two years of bur burrowing rowing burrowing through Sahara sands. The link is tp be welded into place in a brief ceremony attend attended ed attended by a few oifirals, and a month hence oil will start flow- i:ig from the wells of Hassi Mes Mes-saoud saoud Mes-saoud 41S miles inland. The 93 million dollar pipeline lo Bougie completes another phae o. .. gran- lose plan to oxplo Saharan oil reserves estimated officially at 15,300,000,000 barrels. Frenchmen have been told by thr r government h..t :iie S:iiiar. will provide for all their oil needs ly on-e iho' necessary pine line ave been laid and wells sunk. Technicians in this port, whero 1,000 workers are completing har harbor bor harbor installations for a fleet of tankers, say as much as one mil millions lions millions tons will be flowing through this first pipeline by October 1960. Veteran Skipper Fired By Cunard For Fraternizing LONDON (UPI) The veteran skipper of the Cunard liner Brilannic has been -lired for al allegedly legedly allegedly "paying too mcuh atten attention" tion" attention" to women passengers at his captain's table, it was reported yestrday. A spokesman for the line con confirmed firmed confirmed Capt. .Tames D. Arm strong was dismissed two months a so after Oeine told he could re resign sign resign or hi fired. "It's entire entirely ly entirely a matter between capl. Arm Armstrong strong Armstrong and ourselves," the spokes spokesman man spokesman said, declining to elaborate. Armstrong had been captain of the 27,000 ton l;ner Brittannic and was due to ake over the 35, 35,-ono ono 35,-ono ion MauretaP'a this vear and the giant, liner Queen Elizabetn wi'hin three years. But the captain's paradise was ended, he Daily Express said, be because cause because of alleged incidents on a recent New York to Liverpool run The newspaper quoted one of Armstrong's former crewmen as saying, "We believe that he has been sacked for pavine to much attention to some of the women passengers." When dod is in the driver's teat it's a sign no one else wanted the Cor tho! day. ( iNenru warns India Williiefencl" Bbrder NEW DELHI (UPD-Pri me Minister Jawaharlal Nehru warned Red Chin today in onti of his strongest speeches that "we shall defend" the tiny border states of Bhutan, and Sikkim against any invaders. Nehru told parliament there was concern in Bhutan and Sik Sikkim, kim, Sikkim, which have protective treat treaties ies treaties with India, that the Chi Communists might spill over the Doraers of captive Tibet into the tiny Himalayan nations. Last week, the Bhutan govern government ment government ordered military training for voune men. Nehru said Bhutan's Premie? Jigme Dorji was coming to. New1 ueini soon to see him. Presuma? bly they would discuss the tense border situation. Nehru did not mention China by name in his speech. But since Sikkim and Bhutan lie hetwepn India and Tibet, there was no doubt as to what he meant. He said he could not imagine any nation infrineine on the sou. ereignty of the two border coun ties, Dut mat such a move would violate India's agreement to pro protect tect protect them. "We shall certainly defend them against such infusion, he said. He emphasized that Rpd China was fully aware of India's pledge to protect the two states. The Prime Minister's warning came amid reports that the Chi Chinese nese Chinese Communists were engaged in McDonald Returns To Steel Strike Negotiations NEW YORK, Aug. 26 (UPI) Union chief David J. McDonald planned to return to the steel strike negotiations oday, even though he contends that up to now they have been "a sham." McDonald has been absent from the bargaining table since Aug. 7, leaving his assistants to dicker with the representatives of the 12 strike bound steel companies on "non-economic" clauses of a con contract, tract, contract, that is, issues other than wages. Robert II. Moore, deputy direc director tor director of mediation, reported that the negotiators have completed their first review of the contract terms and that at today's meeting the conferees will be "approaching thr decision-making level." The mediator declared however i that he was "not particularly hope ful of reaching an agreement on the contract" because neither side has indicated any change in its position. McDonald told newsman yester yesterday day yesterday that at no time since negotia negotiations tions negotiations began on May 5 has industry made a specify nffer to th" union. As he put it. "there are no offers on the table." The "key" to settling the strike, he said, is "true collective bar bargaining gaining bargaining on the cart of the steel in dustry leaders." , t f : Theater r.uild Tryouts Slcted The Theater Guild will hold ad additional ditional additional try-outs tomrorow and Friday evenings at 7:30 for its next production, "Visit to a Small Plan Planet," et," Planet," a three-act comedy by Gore Vidal. There are two major male roles open one a middle aged man and the other a young man. who pro provides vides provides part of the love interest. A young actor is also needed to por tray an eager West Point captain, and there are in addition three mi minor nor minor male roles open. A young ac actress tress actress in her early twen'ies is need ed for the ingenue lead. Anyone interested in taking part is urged to be at Ihe Theater Guild tomorrow or Friday evening. CENTRAL LOVE-AFFAIR WITH in 7rV rv r -I Kea uiinese a major offensive against Tibet Tibetans ans Tibetans still fighting against their rule. Indians have been, incensed toy the Communist terror campaign in Tibet and by charge that tcu of thousands of Tibetans hay been slaughtered and their mon monasteries asteries monasteries despoiletT ill a deliberjiU campaign to wipe out their v cient Buddhist culture. Border reports ddring tk- March revolt which led the god god-king king god-king Oalai Lema to flee to India said Red troops had fired on flee flee-ing ing flee-ing Tibetans across, the Bhutan" and Sikkim frontiers." Since then, tension has mount mounted. ed. mounted. The Communists have indjeafei ed that, t in Tibet, they consijjejr Bhutan and Sikkim rightful Ghi nese territory. Average US Income jj Up, Bui Prices Climb Even Higher I WASHINGTON (UPI) Th' average inflation pinched Amerj? can's income went up $14 last year but his money wouldn't byy as much because prices increase mure. Per capita income elimhod tmtit $2,043 in 1957 to $2057 last yeaft or about ft of one per cent, ; or about 3-4 of one per cent, But, it said, "since price increase more than counter balanced tiwa small rise" the average AmerH can's purchasing power fell slightly. i An earlier Commerce Depart ment study renortd that nri.j jumped 2 1-2 per cent in 1958. a general Business slump luck as the one in 1957 58 would b expected to pull down both peju sonal income and prices. Hn4 ever, the new report by the till lice of Business Economic showed the opposite trend. Total personal income went lU in all but four states. It fell i Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, and WiS Virginia. Purchasing power in creased in about half the states,' remained steady in a dozen other and dropped in the rest. Iman 01 Yemen Has Christians Beheaded I ADEN, British ProtectoraU UPI) The Imam of Yemen has beheaded several "Christian agi agitators" tators" agitators" and had others mutilated in a crackdown on liberal reforms instituted during his four month rest cure in Rome, reports reach reaching ing reaching Aden said today. The reports said the Marjfed imam, an absolute monarch?n his poverty-stricken country .'on the heel of the Arabian peninstiU, was determined to smash the re re-'orm 'orm re-'orm nrogram instituted bv his son, Crown Prince Badr during his absence. There was no immediate WofiJ on Badr himself. While the (54-year-old Imam was in Rome wih a alrge pnouige of men women for treatment of arthritis and other ailments.' the orin', was reported to have liberaliieo the l;fe and death powers of the monarchy. ; ..j. The Imam returned home folio weeks ago in anger and was re reported ported reported to have said in a smpeech? "There hav been som mjs mjs-deeds deeds mjs-deeds by hooligans and vaingtox ous fools and lackeys of foreign agents. I have been deeply dis- rinyed tn he'r or ki'lin". "Tiarxitfl- ing and threats to personal safety mH r,,,i-,i; eace. .' "Christians and their agents" w:" be severely dealt with," tfr said. "Thank God I know them afd they are now in my grasp. Some w!ll have 'heir heads cut off, oth others ers others their legs and hands." c"nrdinn 'o 'ie reports from the Yemeni border, the behead ings ,aml mutilations have begiin. TODAY, WEEKEND RELEASE! SHOWS: 1:15 2:55 4:58 8:57 9:00 P.M. PRICES: 75c. 40c. A FRENCH FLAIR! M-G-M prMntt Deborah Rossano Kerr Brazzi Maurice t Chevalier in CinemaScop and METftOCOLOR W)'iiiiiiiilii i i ft |