![]() ![]() |
![]() |
UFDC Home | Search all Groups | Digital Library of the Caribbean | Caribbean Newspaper Digital Library | Panama and the Canal | Panama Canal Museum | | Help |
Material Information
Subjects
Notes
Record Information
Related Items
|
Full Text |
M-.iX...... -7;
I "" FEB 4 l;6 4 I I 1 V. V ' A.I I. .-if I II -J $ CAILY KF.VSrJra ti:;: "asvelcl's CAr: C CUiTALJ 0 r v .Iriilll - : I j 1 1 i ' u .. i! ,s 1. 1; is f, !!! J W- IMl Wfc tkWjjt thm& Ml J jLoi kJ INTERNATIONAL AIRWAYS "Let the people knoic the truth and the country w tzfe" Abraham Lincoln. Hit TEAR PANAMA, R. P., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1958 FTVECI-M3 ) Kobbe Soldier Sued For $70,000 After fikmTsCar.Sniash' Three civil damage suits totalling almost $70,000 were filed this morning in U. S. District Court against a Ft. Kobbe soldier, Joseph Wright. The suits, filed today by Charles Ramirez and David Kobies of the law firm of Van Sicien, Ramirez and De Castro, were an outgrowth of an accident which occurred on Gaillard Highway on Nov. 27. Wright owns the automobile which his mend, another soidier, Joe A. Henson, 19, was driving at. the time of the accident. Plaintiffs in two suits, Isidoro and Flora Norgueira are seeking to recover $."u,0W for damages they allege were suffered as a re re-suit suit re-suit of Hie accident. They claim her face was disfigured, and she lost the sense of feeling in one of her hands. The Paraiso couple is also asking for $5,000 to cover cost of Isidro's hospitalization, and $2, $2,-800 800 $2,-800 more for the loss of consortium. Jilrs. Norgueira was hospitalized tor two months. The third damage suit was filed by Norgueira's in-laws, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Gonzalez, who were passengers in the back seat of the car when the accident occur occurred red occurred They seek to recover S total of $6 000 to cover hospitalization and Injuries they allegedly sustain- ed6n Jan. 31, a charge against Henson of "reckless driving caus causing ing causing great bodily injury to the person of Mrs. Norgueira' -w : dismissed in the Balboa M a g i- Canal Lets 2 Big Jobs In Power Shi I! Two contracts for the Panama Canal's power conversion totai totai-int: int: totai-int: over $620,000 in cost, have been awarded to two Isthmian contractors, n was jiu"u---t yesterday at Balboa eignts. Bids on both projects were open opened ed opened last month. I, p. sommer has been a- ,orri(.i a rnntract for the ex tensive work required at the A gua Clara Diesel plant. The tract price for this worn $249, 2o0. ment of the terrorist campaign set A contract for the replace-, 0f nere to enforce Greece's ef ef-jnent jnent ef-jnent of the high voltage trans-j forts t0 snnex Qyprus mission lines between Maddeni Dam and Miraflores has been,-! a ...If llvAinsi RP Cus!:m Roth contracts provide thatiMrf"1 th. work must be started with- the work must be staneo W1WI; in 30 days after the receipt of ntir tn nroceed. These notices will be issued alter completion cf formalities required in the contracts. - : - Eight bidders entered effers for the Agua Clara work, while nine bids were received for the transm'ssion line replacement, j Of these there were three lo local cal local firms. a Under, the contract awarded to Bildon, the copper wiring to be replaced with aluminum con conductors ductors conductors will remain the proper property ty property of the Panama canal Com Com-pany. pany. Com-pany. .. Under the specifications, 1 bid3 were invited on this basis and on the basis that the copper would become the property of the contractor. The replacement of these t tonductors is required since ' the exlsttinjr lines re consid considered ered considered too small to provide effi efficient cient efficient power transmission of - 60-cycle current, The work involves the replp ce cement ment cement of. some of the existing transmission towers and the re reinforcement inforcement reinforcement of others. The work at the Agua Clara plant Involves the construction of a new switchgear and trans transformer former transformer yard which will permit the combining of two swltchlng'9 a.m. hear the Balboa High stations and a transformer sta-lSrnofl area -on Lawrence Johnson tion into a sine e instflllatinn. Jtne contract also covers the replacement of a short section of hieh voltase transmission -a.t pie ana tne installation of a short new section. Cold Peace MOSCOW, Feb. 3 (UP) : The bead of the Australian expedition to the Antarctic spent two days visitin? the camp of the Russian expedition, the Soviet news agency a. . t, sj. ... -. ivs reponea xonay. lass said Phiuo Low was. in.! TiP'l to Russia's cmo by Sovietjbeen mif bv President Eisen Eisen-evpe'"tion evpe'"tion Eisen-evpe'"tion leader M. M. Somov J hower, The 'Red Cross drive will The linked S'ales expeJ'ion. s'. i 'a'" be f I ili'rip? (h month of in. as. i. known,. h no mMach- 4hMCnal Zone thipt- any persona Russians. r..n. .... U t. the strate's Court on a motion made by the District Attorney. The defendant reportedly suf suffered fered suffered severe head injuries and af after ter after having been discharged once from Gorgas, was returned for further hospitalization because he was found to be in a state of narco narcotic tic narcotic shock. Later he was evacuat evacuated ed evacuated to the States for further treat treatment. ment. treatment. Pro-Greek Wtximi Agrees To Drilish 0!(:r 0! Hems M NICOSIA, Cyprus. Feb. 3 (UP) Informed sources said' today pro- breek Archbishop Makarios has agreed in principle to a British offer of home rule for this strife torn island, on terms that may make true agreement impossible. Makarios conferred with U S Consul Gen. Raymond Courtney be fore delivering his reply to Gov Gen. Sir John Harding. None of the three men would comment immediately on the situation. The principal stumbling block among Makarios' conditions is a demand that local self-government be granted only to Greek-speaking natives under some formula ex excluding cluding excluding the large Turkish-speaking minority, the sources said. The Archbishop also is if U. be demanding the exclusion of Em ish teachers from schools jnow man manned ned manned by pro-Greek faculties and further discussion of British pro proposals posals proposals for control of the insular police force. -.'.- It had been reported previously that Harding had proposed that Britons continue to hold the top police jobs until Greek-speaking re replacements placements replacements can be trained. The nnvernnr Hftnoral hat Vn con-IC0nferring secrety with Makarios for some time, seeking a settle- ' -i-,, HCCm UrOC.U I"!!! aia The charge against a Panama Panamanian nian Panamanian customs inspector of assault with a deadly weapon was dismis dismissed sed dismissed yesterday afternoon in the Balboa Magistrate's Court on a motion made by the District At Attorney. torney. Attorney. ' The defendant, Francisco Correa Garcia, 37, was charged with wielding a knife against a Balboa housewife, Mrs, Nellie Unrah of the -Gavilan area. Correa was represented in court by attorney S. T. Frankel. - The charge against him was fil filed ed filed on Jan. 28 an the complaint of Mrs. Unrah that the defendant had entered her house, grabbed a table knife and went after her in a threatening manner. No reason was given for dismissal. ' ; .; the Bicycle Safety Classes Continue Tomorrow Morning Bicycle riding safety classes will be continued tomorrow mornin t I riace Youngsters who want to attend should bring a slip of paper record- i iL.j- J i u in thetr name and box numfter The classes are beinf conducted by police Sgt. Walter Alves. ncd Gross '..Chapter Readies '''5$ Drive An apnea! to all Federal em ployees to join the Red Cross and assist in the forthcoming national membership and fund drive has ,. ! .1 I . "i is a'rradv ma'-i"? plans f o r! i the annual appeal for support, 1 J H I 1 1 j j j j I GOP Second Term Rumor: Conditional xYes' WASHINGTON. Feb .3 (UP) A report floated in Republican circles today that President Ei senhower might give a condi tional "yes" to the second term question this month without rul ruling ing ruling out a retirement anonunce anonunce-ment ment anonunce-ment later.. 1 The Idea was described by a Republican leader, who would ' not vouch for its possibility but said Jt had come to him from the 'Inner circle of the administration. Assuming a favorable reijort from his doctors in mid-February, the plan would have Mr. Eisenhower saying that he ex expected pected expected to run again. But he could also say that he might pull out later if his work indicated 'that four more years in the White House would be too burdensome for a man who suffered a heart attack last fall. This possible course seemed to be in line with a statement yesterday by MaJ. Gen. How Howard ard Howard Snyder, the President's phy physician. sician. physician. He said Mr. Eisenhower should have 'all the time he needs" to make a second term decision. Hot the Idea did not seem to jibe with Mr. Elsenhower's news conference remark last week that he hoped he would not have to "dllly dally" too long in mak making: ing: making: a decision. v - Although the President's next medical checkup is scheduled in about 10 days, Snyder said no one "who is Just four and one one-half half one-half months past heart at- r f i..i.n D!!ir Lcn RIO DE JANEIRO, Feb. 3 (UP) Vice President Richard M, Nixon announced today the U.S. Export-Import Bank will lend another $35,000,000 to Brazil to expand the Volta Redonda iteel mill, which was the beneficiary of me oanx s iirsc Mun American development loan. ' : Hie new loan will be used to increase production at the mill, wmcn is now operating at a rate ot about 700,000 tons a year. Nixon and Brazilian President Juscelino Kubitschek flew to Vol ta Redonda today for an insoeC' tion of the plant which was one of the U.S. Vice President's last of ficial acts in this country, he re returned turned returned here at 1 p.m. to board a plane bound for the United States. Brazilian Vice President Joao (Jango) Goulart yesterday accept ed an invitation from Nixon to visit the United States ''within the next three months." No specific date was set for Goulart's trip. Nixon came to rio to take part in ceremonies accompanying the inauguration Tuesday of Kubits chek and Goulart. Opposition Candidate Due Says Liberals Have 4-ToA Majority ft. MIAMI, Feb. 3 (UP)-Dr. Victor F. Goytia, working for the past year as a newspaper corres correspondent pondent correspondent in Miamileaves for Panama today to' run for presi president dent president in "the May 13 elections.' Goytia, former President of Panama's Supreme Court, said that he planned to cover the en entire tire entire republic "in a very active campaign to be elected president of the country." "But even if I ln the elec tion," the attorney and author 'Of several books said, "I'm not even sure I'll be permitted to take onice." He sad his party, the Liber, al Party; won the 1952 eler- tions but were "kept out of of office fice office by force by the govern i ment then in power." Goytia, who has been writing; for several Latin American newspapers since his arrival in Miami, said he would prefer to remain here and continue his newspaper work but added, "I feel that I am obligated to re return turn return to my country." He said his party has a 4 to 1 majority In politically-turbulent Panama. ... .- "I am not returning on my own account," he said. "But my party must take part in the election even though the votes mav not be counted." - Dr.-Goytia,-wro-h r'-strln?' of past titles in the Panamanian government, said; he thinks tack is in a position yet to deter determine mine determine his own physical fitness." it taices longer," Snyder said. "He should have more time all the time he needs." He also said the doctors could give the President a "good exposition" about his condition but that Mr. Elsen Elsenhower hower Elsenhower would have to make his own decision. The longer Mr. Elsenhower delays a firm decision, the less the possibility of the open nom mating convention favored by such as Senate GOP leader Wil William liam William F. Knowland, who wants to run if the President does not. Although Mr. Elsenhower in invited vited invited other potential candidates to enter state Presidential pri primaries maries primaries two weeks ago, only Knowland has shown any wil willingness lingness willingness to go into them. Knowland let his name stay in the Illinois and Alaska pri primaries maries primaries and has his eye on oth others. ers. others. y"; Mr, Eisenhower also has been entered in both of those and in New Hampshire and Minne Minnesota. sota. Minnesota. Plans have been made to put his name on the ballot in several other states, too. Four llavy Men In Hospital A(!:r(r Crash ' because fce failff ti turn Put sufficiently on GaiHard Highway when he was overtaking another rar. a Naw enlisted man ant three of his buddies were hos hos-nitalized nitalized hos-nitalized today, two of them suffering' from possible head in-; juries. , The accident occurred last night at 10:45 near the Summit Gardens entrance,- when the private car driven by Gilbert Madrid,' 31-year-old Navy man crashed info the rear of a Pan Panama ama Panama Canal Co. sedan which was operated by Eliot Howel, a 40 vear-old Panamanian. Both drivers lost control when their vehicles collided. Howell's sedari went off the right side of the mad down a sloDine em bankment. Madrid's automobile went to the left and also down a steep embankment, remaining on its wheels with the front embedded in dirt The Navy driver, and one of his passengers, Jerry Kline, were both admitted to Gorgas Hospi Hospital tal Hospital with possible head injuries, Two other passengers, Thomas J. Kleinschmidt and Robert Wright were also hospitalized. Wright Is suffering; from a pos possible sible possible fracture of the ribs and Kleinschmidt with facial lacer lacerations. ations. lacerations. ; Police Investigation Indicates that Madrid failed to turn out in overtaking Howell at excess excessive ive excessive speed. i . there may be some danger for him and his wife to return, "but I don't think I will be assassin assassinated ated assassinated as President Jose Antonio Remon was." Remon was killed in a ma- chinegun burst a year ago. Vice president Jose Ramon Guizado, Remon's constitutional! successor, was later impeached! Llbcrd, Coclillon Parties pfenning Active 7c:!c End Of Pcliliccl Events While the opposition Liberal Party made last-minute prepar-i ations to receive presidential candidate Victor F. Goytia this afternoon in what they hope will be a monster demonstration, the government's National Pa Patriotic triotic Patriotic Coalition Party (CPN) was quietly going ahead with plans for tomorrow's installation rally. .. Instructions were being issued today to the chairmen of the vp centers scattered all over the province on the routes to be taken during their convergence tomorrow afternoon on Santa Ana where"-th -"Mi-tv ! provincial rilrertnrat.e hpariVn 'by Assemblyman Alfredo Ale- LAUGHTER IN THE AIR British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd (left) and U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles enjoy a hearty laugh during a luncheon break in the British British-American American British-American talks at the State Department in Washington. Ike Digs In At Gettysburg Farm To Ponder Peace Move GETTYSBURG, Pa.r Feb. 3 (UP ) President Eisenhower, tak taking ing taking advantage of the quiet of his Gettysburg farm, today contem contemplated plated contemplated Russia's latest ."peace mnvp: '- '.-'?:? 1 '' He. tt Sir TMiU f friTfrihrtirrubiriiir n.TT: y countrii(le snow-covered estate yesterday, af ternoon when Secretary of. Stale John Foster Dulles telephoned from Washington to tell him of a new letter from Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin. Bulganin urged the Pres President ident President to reconsider a Soviet offer to sign a 20-year friendship pact with the United States. When Bulganin first made his proposal in an earlier letter last month, Mr. Eisenhower politely but firmly, rejected it. The President, in effect, told the Soviet leader he could not trust Russia to live up to such a treaty. There was no indication when Mr. Eisenhower will answer the new; Bulaanin letter, but he was not expected to do so before next week. It was almost certain ne would again reject Bulganin's pro proposal posal proposal Otherwise, the President planned a quiet day. He and Mrs. Eisen Eisenhower hower Eisenhower planned to drive to the Ad Adams ams Adams country court house in Get Gettysburg tysburg Gettysburg this afternoon and regist register, er, register, as Pennsylvania residents for the November elections. The President likely will' devote some of his' weekend ;at the farm to pondering whether he should be a candidate in the November j bal balloting, loting, balloting, i ,- Mr. Eisenhower interrupted his slushy drive from Washington to Gettysburg yesterday near Emmit Emmit-tsburg, tsburg, Emmit-tsburg, Md., wnen he spotted a farmer stuck. in a slippery ditch. Here Today; and sent to prison for "compli "complicity" city" "complicity" in the assassination. nicaruo Arms u.c second vice president, now heads. 1 1 TTl 1 the Panamanian government. .Softspoken Dr. Goytia said he has not been in exile. But he charged that his party has not been permitted to take part in the Panamanian government. man Jr., will be installed. Scheduled to speak at the; CPN rally are President Ricardol Arias as party president, presi-1 flentiai candidate Ernesto de laivmo Tinto told ponce tne Daoy, Guardia Jr.. and his runnin2-i Valerio. had been unable to eat mates Temistocles Diaz and He He-racllo racllo He-racllo Barletta: CPN party followers will start converging on Santa Ana plaza at 4 p.m., and it is believed theyj will be equipped for a torch torchlight light torchlight parade at nightfall. The Liberals, who are sched scheduled uled scheduled to gather at Fifth of May Plaza at 5:30 today, also plan to use torches during their demon demon-stratton.Tnlr stratton.Tnlr demon-stratton.Tnlr also -Includes speechmaking by Goytia and others at Santa Ana Plaza. At the Presidenrs direction, one of the cars in his motorcade haul hauled ed hauled the stalled farmer, back onto the road It took the President about two to drive from Washington to the .Getlyuui'E farm. .-. He was accompanied on his drive by his news secretary, James C. Hagerty, the assistant White House physician, and his mother-in-law, Mrs. John S. Doud. ; Mrs. Eisenhower, who had eng engagements agements engagements during the day, joined her husband and mother at the farm last night. The. Eisenhowers will return to the White House Sunday night. French To Send Premier I IdIIsI To Pacify Alria PARIS, Feb. 3 (UP) The new French Cabinet, in its first policy-making session, decided to today day today to send Premier Guy Mol Mol-let let Mol-let to Algeria Monday to try to calm boiling tempers in the North African province. The Cabinet also decided to ask Sultan Stdi Mohammed Ben Youssef to open talks on the future of Algeria's' neighbor, Morocco.' Even as they met: one Paris newspaper' reported?, European workers already had begun to leave Algeria in anticipation of a new "soft policy by Mollet for. the terror-ridden overseas province. There also were re reports ports reports of new riots in the Alge Algerian rian Algerian port of Oran. Leaders of Algeria and Tunisia are in Paris making contacts with the new government, and the Sultan of Morocco is expect expected ed expected shortly. But Algeria, which lies be tween Tunisia and Morocco a- long th Mediterranean ,? ,ik. tv,. ,v,. Coast and, unlike the other two, is considered part of metropolitan France, is the keystone of the -i'h Afri Nortn AIrlcan Problem, Six-Day-Old Inbl Dbs Afc::rd Launch On Way To IhsoilEl A six-dav-oid haby who had a throat infection for several days, died yesterday aboard a launch on Gatun Lake while enroute to a homital. Parents of the child, Mr. and Mrs. Narciso Castillo, residents of for 24 hours and was suffering with some sort of throat infection. The child died while the launch was about midway between Esco Esco-bal bal Esco-bal and Gatun. The body was sent to the Board of Health Laboratory for an autopsy. DALHOA TIDES SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4 K!Ctf "tCW 9:32 a.m. J:29 a.m. 9:37 p.m. J:47 a.m. J 0Jo IL 1 reaty . WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 (UP) British Prime Minis Minis-ter ter Minis-ter Sir Anthony Eden declared today he saw no valut in a British-Soviet friendship pact so soon after such a previous treaty "by Russia yras torn up." Eden at a news conference gave a cold reception to i a s n k I IV. I iL.at a suggestion dv iovier rremier ninoiai cuiganin mui Russia was willing to sign pacts with the United States, countries. Eden said Bulganin's proposal was certainly inter esting and a little remarkable." "I am not oersonallv entirely convinced of the volu of a new agreement so soon sia was torn up by her, Eden said. Eden's reference was to the British-Soviet non-aggression pact which was canceled last year by the Soviet Union. Nixon's 'Traitor' Crack HasrHST- Talking Fight NEW 'YORK, Feb .3 (UP) Former President Truman said today that whenever he thinks of the fact that Vice President Richard M. Nixon has called him a traitor,'. "I not only swear, I want to punch somebody." Mr. Truman told newsmen during his morning walk that although he had known Nixon in Congress he had refused to see him since Nixon so charac-. termed .him., I won't see Him," he said. "It would Just start a fight." Mr. Truman said that when he recently was invited by sen senators ators senators to Join them on the Sena Senate te Senate floor. "I told them I wouldn't come into the Senate with him in the chair. They took him out and put (Senator Alben) Barkley iti.';;,...,v The matter of Nixon was rais raised ed raised when a reporter mentioned that Mr, Truman, had used strong language in a radio and television speech last night re referring ferring referring to charges that he and Gen. George C. Marshall were "traitors." He interpolated into his prepared speech the remark "f.'.lNX'S r,',;,;E"-ri!m bomb bombshell shell bombshell Silvana Pampanini has given a Rome, Italy, court rea reasons sons reasons why she shouldn't return $50,000 in jewels, minks and other gifts to her movie pro producer, ducer, producer, Morris Ergas. E r g a . wants everything back because be says Silvana got the gifts under false promise of msr :' riaj;?. But cv says it ain't so, fc"' 'ise: She rover loved Ergas .&.. lc iz ib.SMaii. siie never asked for them anyway. r f I ! Brenner S UUSSIrD S easing separate 20-year-friendship Britain, France and other after a treaty signed by Rus that If that were true, "this country Is sure in a hell-of-a fix." "I got the darndest wigjln you ever saw from my wife and daughter," Mr. Truman said. "They said, 'I wish they'd cut you off the air when you start swearing like that. I told them Charlie Murnftv wrote-tnai m the speech. You see I'm gettin; lessons from the present occu occupants pants occupants of the White House. I'm learning to pass tne duck. Murphy was a lormer rresi dent Truman speech-writing aide.: Mr. Truman said, of course. neither Murphy for anyone elst wrote that Into the speech.. ... Mr. Truman was asked V by newsmen, as other leading rm-. ocrats were asked vest ; whether there was a plot to &lop Adall E, Stevenson's drive for the Presidential nomination. "If there is, I don't know any thing about it." Mr. Truman said. "I'm not in any conspi racies. I don't work tnat way.- Cenal Reveals Sh!Is In kni-teasiniri DypHcaflng Unlls In a consolidation of Compa. ny-G07ernment functions ap approved proved approved at Balboa Heights yester yesterday day yesterday the Land License activity of the Real Estate Unit will be transferred to the Civil Affairs Bureau, and Printing and Dup Duplicating licating Duplicating units will be transfer transferred red transferred to the Administrativi Branch. The organizational chan:s being Implemented to place tha phases of the Canal operation involved in a. position to mora properly meet actual .; require, ments of the Canal's present present-da da present-da v economv are authorized to become effective on Feb. 12. Both the rrintine; Plant at Mt Hope and the Duplicating Unit at Balboa Heights are to fcs transferred from the Supply T,n T,n-reau reau T,n-reau to the A d m i nlstra t i v Branch. This unit is responsibl-i to the Administrative Assislar.t to the Governor-President. The Land License function of the Real Estate Unit 'Will be transferred from the Communi Communi-ty ty Communi-ty Services Bureau to the Li License cense License Section in the Civil -Affairs Bureau. At the same time the rf.v; sibiliy for licensing spare Company-Government bin' ;''' will transferred t in Division and the Heal F.n Unit as such will be Rboii;'.-.:.- 1 1 V.: THE PANAMA AMERICAN WNtt AMD .U.U.WEO IT THt PANAMA AMERICAN PKUS, INC. (OUNCES .Y KELSON MOUNSCVtU. Ik 1I2 HAMMOOIO ARIAS IDHOH 7. H Strut P. O. Boi 3A. Panama, n. or P. 7iltPHONt 2-0740 9 LlNUl CAKLC AO0tS, PAN AMERICAN. PANAMA Colon Orriet. 1J.I? cintral Avenue .itwicn (2th and 13th Srxti FOOIISN RtrniSINTATIVlf JOSHUA B. POWERS, inc. 343 maoiion Ave. new yokr, I7 n. v. vocal : Pt Month, in """" f 110 2.S9 ', unu-rum in .n.i.n ; 8 f 0 13 00. ' rOtt ONE YEAR. IN IS. 80 24.00 ; tmis ti roun rcauM thi ' XU Mad li is fsniM Ht rMdit The Panama Amtricaa. ':. Uttn jr received gratefully ad or k.ndlW in wholly eonfUf Mid . MINI 1 it row (nrributa letter ion't bs Impatient If doeinl eppeer the Mai ear Lelteri ere published is the srdsr rtciv4, PIctM try Is keep ths krHeri limited to ens poge Ungth. Identify ef ktttt writer Is held In ttrictstt confidence. ,m This ntwipap.r cmumss ns respotiibility for ststsmsnts pinioni -xprii4 in lert.m from reader. THE MAIL BOX PERON'S Sir: I have just .returned from a short stay In the now free country of Argentina and would like to give th people of this country an Insight on the man who ruined it, Juan D Peron. The title ex-presiuent is too' generous fon this fanatic rather a. weak ex-dictator who ruled by force and tear and bribes, the oniv means contained in that twisted mind. .-fJT Influential friends made out well in the old regime. One Jwrge Antonio accumulated 15,000,000 pesos (roughly $7,000,000) III ine lew short years he was "selling''' import permits for cars, television sets and radios. .. ; -Others made out equally well and lived luxuriously, to the txtent that the world lamous Casino at Mar' del Plata expects "a. so percent drop in take this summer' because of a laci of 'Ption money." And neither is Juan D. a poor man. How could anyone with IB sports cars be considered a poor man? publicity is a wonaertul thing and this man had his lion's share. Kvery time a manhole cover was lilted, there was a sign ihat read 'veron cumple;" every time a street received much ceded repairs, a sign read "Peron cumpie." But tnere was never any noise made about the lack of wortnwhlle improvements. Kieven years ago the generators sup supplying plying supplying the city of B A. with electricity .were on their last legs. ; Tnese were never replaced ana mere were many power laii- ures. .'":r"'-'.-:---":':-.- , Can you picture (in a city of.4,000,000) streetcars and track, i less trolleys stopped m the middle of a block, unable to go further because there is no electricity? But, when the power is i restored and the streetcars move again, everybody Is happy, for for-' ' for-' getting tne delay, and the neon lights fiah "reron fcumpte.". I ''his system of rule runs on the same principle apply pressure to the cracking point, then yield a tenth of what was applied. But don't forget to yield! This is what is remember- ed and the crowd says: "Isn't he a wonderful man !' This worked lor ten long years, but once the old boy forgot -to 'yield and the people are no longer his." They can walk down, .the street now with no fear in their hearts, for Argentina is . 'free 'again.'." The idea that Peron raised the standard of living in Ar Argentina gentina Argentina is preposterous. Granted that wages went up, but what good is more money in the pocket if the cost of consumers' items rise an equal amount? Today in Buenos Aires the worker has to pay as many hours for a loaf of bread or a pound of beef as ne did in 1143. And housing in the capital is scarce as hen's teeth. Ah, you say, Peron built apartments for the workers. And iiruresponse I say he built them only where they would show to the best advantage. Highways are the same way, and the only four-lane route I saw was between Ezelza Airport and BA., ,jt4otal o.f 25 miles. v; ';..' s .;,. .'.v- This is nice, but the traffic is so light it is hardly notice able: .the reason for it? impress the visiting firemen. In I contrast, the most heavily traveled ( road in Argentina is be- I tvvccu,j3.n. sua wimiiu, Biia wnai is it." autning out a iwo- Jane, crackediup macadam that would put any ;- country to shame.. ; Education hi Argentina is undergoing a much-needed re re-J J re-J vltallzatlon. Granted that In many governmental positions it J Is better to have one's own men to keep policies in line, but why was it necessary, Juan D., to convert every teacher, in- structor and professor Into a Peronista? Or, if that were im- J possible, to replace him? Was i wQma m taugnt irom tne iirst aay or scnooi ana, so tnai, too, i9 coming generation would know nothing but Peronlsm and 4 nothing of liberty? ' ''" v ! It will take yeara to build up the once-fine colleges and ! universities established generations ago and destroyed in a very l short time by a ruthless fanatic. : ...' : ' Hfottw nthpr" fltrrwIHw onH .M UJ . W V WV, M.4 pllshefl m the past ten years. Jockey Club, complete with the one of the best-collections of rloRln of La Prensa because government; the imposition of martlal law for ten years (this imay be a little hard to comprehend because it denies a citizen I all the .rights and privileges provided by a Constitution); the packing' of the legislative and Judicial branches of the gov government; ernment; government; these and many other things equally, sobering took 1 place in the Argentine, enough to make "a free man tremble I with fear. . ..:.'".:":',. r "- One last series of facts. In 1945 Argentina had a plus trade margin of $2,000,000,000; ten years later this had been changed to a deficit of $1,000,000, and the standard of living was not praised one lota.'.' - I The greatest exports were, and still are, beef and grain, but I the "volume decreased because of a strangling hold over the I commerce by a Peronista organization, and it will, take years to 'build this up again. Does it sound to you like the man in the driver's seat was a good .business man? 1 The people of Argentina are a proud lot. It will take them years to catch up with the rest of the world, but they will do lit even though ten years of progress is hard come by. t And Peron will go down in history as a weak despot who I took what he could and got out. i "; ;- -"". .. ; i ; i . Traveller SIDE GLANCES "I've taught my wife to win back from her half - .., w ... ;h -WT ( v L. Ml it adh own column PROGRESS it so that y'Peron is the father" nitnh fhRtf nrorA wpr fippftm. UUVM ...VJ T.V There was the burning of the finest library In Argentina and fine art in South America; the it dared sneak out acalnst the Bv Calbraith play poker with a little tuck of my pay check every week!" 7i l LaI)or News And Comment By VICTOR RIESEL MIAMI BEACH There may be a moon over Miami but there's little billing and cooing among the labor people here for the first meeting ot their new merged high command. !. They're being asked to take their Dec. 5 marriage vows seriously for better or worse ana some are complaining that they've put a ring in their nose instead of on their finger. Having joined in one federation, they find themselves being asked to support 'strikes and take action which embarrass them. for these would be costly to their own followers solidarity. or no sol solidarity. idarity. solidarity. This is leading to some mignty bitter feuds behind-the-scenes and the discovery that they have a merged but not a united laDor movement. Th WaclinffVimic ctrilr l thp unwelcome guest in the house of lahnr (nr Avimnl. Ths Interna tional' Union of Electrical Workers has gotten no real money or any other support from anyone. This has given the rebel, Mike Quill, some 1400 miles from here, the opportunity to wield a long neeaie. In recent weeks he has been osiiins Wnl ATI, -CIO union chiefs together and talking them into get ting up si,l)UU,UW lor Jim arey s hard hit union. Just before some of the labor leaders went south, Mike came up wun anu-vesung-house strategy for a real electron electronic ic electronic blitz. The Westinghouse people sponsor television's "Studio One." Gi Mibo aiH nnr AFI.-CIO unions wu, the actors, the stage-hands, the electricians, me writers, me piu ducers all make possible the na tionwide tv snow. Wnclinnhniica nrnniirinit mil an worth nt BOods In over 50 factories and doing right well on them despite tne sin m lha nthor n ams. n. ggvs iuiro ...u.. i,:'..lV-'h;. TV shnw Force it off the air. Refuse to handle it .And those lanor men With him UO in New York, having just made indignant speeches against tne company, ur veloped bad cases of laryngitis.' c nf ihn uninn rhiefs said (Wire vi 4 ------ 7 there are contracts and obligations and things. Mike tnunoerea 101 joint action and asked what sort of unity this, was. But the show goes on. ; ti,i lon'f n HI will that blows u.nif nut Thn nlrt CIO crowd here wants to know where tne solidarity is and is interesting useu in an another other another strike which is not getting support from certain unions. That s the $2,500,000 Miami Beach hotel strike. This one has provoKeo oau kninMti Timmip Petrillo and a group of unions which back ho Miller s striking notei aim iu iu-ant ant iu-ant Employees Union. 1 Tha ctrilrs has hppn riinninB since last April 23 and it looks mighty .. ...1.. hmhu;k;iaI like tne striKers, wno aie by injunction from picketing, may .niohratA thplr anniversary on the soup line. The only real sacrifice other labor men nave maue im the strike is to jam themselves into a few union hotels by-passing their favorite watering spots. All worx ana no pmy woum maKc far a Hull PYp.cutive council mcct- ir,rt hut vnn pun still eat and dance in hotels here to ine strains .01 some real groovy tunes provioco h .timmip Pptriiln'a American Fed eration of Musicians bands,' de unit thp smKo. ; .".. -All of which has, struck some sour notes among the strike lead lead-oq oq lead-oq uikn hnlipvn that one word from Jimmy would frighten the hotel owners into settling, mere oceu honvv nrpBsnrp. on Petrillo j-1 in cluding some blunt talk from AF CIO president ueorge meany. But in nine months of striking, Jimmy has not caiica out ms iuum ionc Tnstpnd hp has built A dos sicr of his own, showing that other lsn heen ignoring the strike. He has in that folder some data charging tne AiLry y i-mn traHps with oroviding un i,hn far thn huilHinft of annexes 1UI1 " and other improvements on struck There are more Hatfieid-Mc'Coy thrmieh the loDDies here than squirrel rifles in tne Ozarks all because tne new imag imager er imager puts one uniin in "a position-to call on us new oromcis wi ..v.r and expect the help to be forth coming. , . t,. nnneirlornhle interest bOtn Ala ui wi.v. to the government and to ail in- dustriaiists just now u t are settled. If thc-precedent, is not ..I v... ritirinii. thp.-two -weeks far automatic rallying of all labor gcr will lose some of its impact on the na ion. . ; ie And if the preceocnt o v..v merger will be mighty indeed. ' -: .r :;v' ,,'':.':: '' HEARING TESTS t Tivoe epiAntista. in CO- vcrsny vi wvw--- operation with the Air Force, are Lt,; nnp.vpar study on near- IdaW risk to ground-crew ciuae ncaiuiB n crew members, -followed by test analyses ana joo-assnsuiui-uv parisons. -' 1 HRTHDAY STAMP This !Tra-ccr.t j'ln.p, featuring' the home of Ceorg Washington, Koes on sale at Mount Vernon, Va on Washington's birthday, Feb. 22. Color of the (jtamp has not been announced.. ' -; ' n'j7 It t I HI T I r AH B 1 I W I "V f MI FT t Jr 1 SWWn' mHm SYDNEY. Australia At thegie reckons that the U.S. Govern- risk of becommg what used to betment should be required to pay called an ink-stained wretch, I have fumbled a couple of chunks of in triguing copy from the British press. -. .-. '-'.:: '. (. une. is a striking buuetm tnat quotes a child specialist as saying that he believes all British boys should be informed of the facts of life i.e.. sex. as us guttersnipes put it when they reach the age of 15. Bless yo" heart, honey, I ain't gonna regale .you with now many grandchildren I had when I was 15 in North Carolina, because this is strictly a sociological piece, See me later. The good doc-Dr. teshVHous teshVHous-den den teshVHous-den reckons that little boys should know why big boys marry, and all like that, including the becs. He reckons they peed a Jittla Kin Kinsey sey Kinsey with, the evening cocoa.lahd then, he says, you can take up the awful subject of set. So much for Dr. Leslie Housden, who has specialized in children's problems for 30 years, I bet he don't know that babies are found in hollow stumps, no matter what the other fellows say about cabbages. Then we come to a lovely thing from a Labor Member of Parlia ment, one Reginald Sorenson. Reg, WASHINGTON (NEA) A new substitute for the river valley "authorities" like TVA Tennessee -Valley Authority is now being proposed by the Eisenhower ad administration. ministration. administration. "-;".-. It's a regional or river basin "Water Resources Committee" idea. Call it a WRC for short. rirst proposal lor thesp new agencies was recommended in the President's Water Resources Pol Policy icy Policy Report. It was recently sent to Congress after 20 months of preparation by a Cabinet advisory committee under Secretaries of Interior McKay. Defense .Wilson and Agriculture Benson. In an earlier Hoover Commission report it was' proposed that exist existing ing existing authorities alike- Bonneville, Southwestern and Southeastern Power Administrations be made government corporations. The Hoover report recommended that their revolving funds be taken away from them. All their reve revenues nues revenues would be turned into the U.S. Trcasurv. Their .future activities would be limited to what Congress might approve in annual appropri ations. Without going Into these pro posals, the President's advisory committee tackles the problem from another angle. The new Water Resources Com. mittees it proposes would become the key agencies in a coordinated realignment of federal government functions. They would plan flood control, irrigation, navigation, hy PeterlEdsQn If you want Bourbon at its best call for "GREEN RIVER; America's smoothest whisky. Sold at all heeling bodegrs and bsrs. Buttons'.'.'. Pennants Kinsey And Cocoa By E03 MARK $1,372,000 a year for the mainten maintenance ance maintenance of G.I.-inspired woods colts. A woods colt is the opposite of yard chillun, which is to say Mama and Papa never had a formal right to produce the issue. If that ain't a delicate way of saying it I quit. The Rt, Hon. v Reg allows that there are about 70,000 young uns in Britain at the moment who haven't got any pap, formal papa, .that is, and that somehow it s JEi- senhower's fault. What they did during World War Two under Roosevelt and Truman I shouldn't like to think. In any case, M. P. Reginald thinks the U.S. Gov't ought to cay the subsistence first. and then track down the fathers. and collect. ) One justice dcoatfng an unhail lowed maternity case, in which the unwed mother instituted suit again an American a ir m a n, snorted. That's right, snorted. "The moral," said he, still snort ing, "is that British women nad best be more careful of what they do with American soldiers." I go headlong into Justice God- uatu 9 tuiiici. nuu, 111 uiis lusmuvc, we can make use of our friend Dr, droelectric power, prevention of stream pollution, fish and wildlife protection and water supply for all uuuicauv;,. muuouiai iiu .511111- tural uses',.;! : ; Each committee Would be responsible for neater resource de development velopment development in anyi given drainage area. This could be a small basin like the naughty; Naugatuck in Connecticut, the vast Central Vab ley in California,- or the whole Missouri, Ohio and Mississippi systems. r ' i '- At the head of each WRC would be a nonvoting chairman appointed by the President. Members of the committee would represent each state drained in part by this particular river system, and a representative from each U.S. gov ernment agency involved in its development. This could Include Army Corps of Engineers, Bureau of Reclama Reclamation, tion, Reclamation, Soil Conservation Service, Forest Service,. Bureau of Public Roads, or what have they? The job of the WRC would be to prepare annual work schedules and; budgets for carrying them out. Actual contracts, however, would not be let by the WRC directly. They'd be handled by the coordi coordinating nating coordinating agencies of federal, state and local governments, each oper operating ating operating in its own field. Each local WRC chairman would be responsible to a new bureaucrat , DEVAZE OF IMITATIONS Housden'i suggestion about sex education. Obviously, the British young man does not know what little girls are made of, and vice versa, and the horrible possibilities for population overproduction so engendered, bereft of ring and social status. I suggest the doctor should start a coeducational instruction course, beginning at about age 10 for. both sexes, which the Americans, of course, will be delighted to under underwrite. write. underwrite. We pay for anything. As the first enrollee. I think he should make an age exception in the case of the good M.P., Mr. Reginald Sorenson. Somebody should take Reg off to one side, and tell him all about cross-pollina tion, and why a guy's ears light up when he sees a doll. And then, when we've got him through the tough part, Including Kinsey, we ought to strike nome with the remarkably clear-thinking Justice Goddard s quote. . Brit ish women had best be careful what they do with American sol diers." In other words, it is distinctly dangerous to monkey around with Joe Doaks. Even in England, where all girls are virtuous until betrayed by the Americans. mm in Washington to be dubbed the "Coordinator of Water Resources.." He would hang out in the executive office of the President to give out white House policy direction The coordinator would also serve as chairman of a new.. permanent "Interagency Committee on Water Resources," It would be made up of assistant Secretaries concerned with water resources in the De P8rtments of Agriculture. Army. Commerce, Interior, Health Edu cation and Welfare and the Federal Power Commission. This. would be the ton federal board of directors on water. It would have final authority to de cide what part of every project snouia ne carried our by each agency. ''.,;""'." Over at one side there would be an independent "Board of Review for Water Resources." It would consist of three qualified engineers. They would have no part in plan-J ning a river nasm development. But they would have authority to recommend changes in plans made by the Water Resources Commit tees. Final decision would be left to the President, however. This is the new governmental machinery which the Eisenhower administration proposes to pile on top of the 25 government agencies now handling water problems. Legislation is now being drafted for later submission to Congress. in 1 1 1 (Ml WASHINGTON President Ei Eisenhower senhower Eisenhower didn't reveal his own plans for 1956 but he did some forthright talking on other subjects mainly education during his last conference with congressional Re publican leaders. He was so outspoken that some of his visitors happily rushed to the conclusion that Ike was "talk "talking ing "talking like a candidate" though he reiterated his health concern short shortly ly shortly thereafter at a press conference. "It will be very unfortunate if the school construction bill gets tangled up in politics, and fails to pass during this session of Con gress, ike reminded tne our leaders. "I hope every Republican in the Senate and House 'will work together to prevent this." "How about the Powell amend amendment?" ment?" amendment?" asked House GOP leader Joe Martin, referring to the pro posed amendement by Democratic Congressman Adam Clayton Pow Powell ell Powell of New York that no federal aid for schools should go to states not carrying out the Supreme Court's edict against segregation. "Some of my Republican col leagues have indicated : that they Intend to offer a similar amend amendment," ment," amendment," continued Martin. "I intend to- support it on the floor the idea of denying federal funds to states that do not abide by the ruling of the Supreme Court." 1 "I'm with you 100 per cent on that," replied Eisenhower. The President also : informed the GOP congressional leaders that he wouldn't "quibble" 'Over the difference in his own bill which provides for annual grants of $250, $250,-000,000 000,000 $250,-000,000 over a five-year span, and the Democratic (Kelly) bill which authorizes federal grants of $400, $400,-000,000 000,000 $400,-000,000 a year over a four-year period on a 50-50 matching basis ...1.1. fV. ,1,1a. Willi UIC Bioita. , "I'm not hard to ;et along with nn this nub ret said the Fresiaent. "I think all Of our children are entitled to go to a decent school, r wnn't miihhle over a few millions one way or the other on the subject f duration. Just DnnK me ui bill and I'll sign it. f. REBATE ON GASOLINE Tar wiTards of the House Ways and Means Committee worked over time 10 pass x,isennwwei a viFa to exempt larmars irom mo a-vw .linn fdpral easoline tax. Thairman A IT t Cooper (D., Tenn.) held several closed sessions of his committee, at one of which Rep. Frank Karsten u., pointed out that the measure will save the average farmer about 22 cents a week on the operation of his machinery-hardly worth both bothering ering bothering aboutIn spite of this, Demo Democrat crat Democrat backed the tax proposal s avidly as Republicans. They re tak taking ing taking no chances on political gripes from larmers d .A TTur. McCarthy (D., Minn.) thinks many farmers will ignore the tax exemption, in view of the puny aid it offers. Reason: red tape. .. ..' The tax is actually paid by the refiners and is included in the retail price when the farmer buys his gasoline. So, unless farmers work out a plan for their co-ops to deduct the tax first, they will probably have to pay tne iuu rcui .-u. th.n annlv for refunds. This means time-consuming government red tape which many farmers won t relish, especially for an average of 22 cents a week. Exempting farmers carries tne implication that the federal gaso gaso-t.v t.v gaso-t.v nnw tn be aimed solely at highway users, an idea that will into the airlines, mej evemntions too. Log ging companies in the Northwest that use gasoline-operated saws may also decide to get m line for reAtnone 'of the Ways and Means Meetings, a congressman spoke up for the occasional farmer who has hasn't n't hasn't gotten around to machinery and still depends on old dobbin for his hnrseDower. This poor fellow, it was pointed put, will get no equi-j valcnt 2-cent-a-oag discount on iou- ACROSS I Tomorrow is 57 Banners' 38 Bitter vetch DOWN 1 Solid 2 Take into : . eustody ; 3 Longs : 4 Spiders' Iain' & Native metal Veterans' 4,9 The irmlitict for was signed - that data In -1918 12 Before 13 Must of -poetry 14 British money of account 15 Blue Eagle 6 Operated 7 Limited (ab.) 8 Medicinal quantity 9 Carnivorous mammals 10 Zealous 11 Elevate 16Twisls 17451 (Roman) 18 Slaves 20 Roof edges 22 Hireling 23 Mimic 28 Low sand hill 2T African flies 29 East (Fr.) 30 Compound . ether 32 Approaches 33Fcille 38 Stands for cameras 40 Rbbit 41 Bushmen 42 Deceased 44Vreterar. cf the U.S. forces are honored that date 48 Weird 47 Three times (comb, form) 48 Papal cape Llani (fr.) &3 i-ternity S4 Bestial 19 Service -charge35 21 Fruit drink 37 23 Property Hems 38 S3 Brazilian title In Recognition S Female saint (ab). V "! f ? '- nRYr(jo-iou;:D . ly CREW PSAnSOH - der, for their Is no federal excise tax on oats. NOTE The 2-cent tax on gaso gaso-line line gaso-line is slated to drop to Vi cents a gallon come next April so the average, farmer may get refund of only 16.5 cents a week, instead nf th ?2 ppnt pctimatpd hv Rpn. rcsentative Karsten.,. .... " WASHINGTON PIPELNE Prime Minister : Eden has told his cabinet that England will never agree to stop testing hydrogen bombs until the British first ex explode plode explode one of their own.- Britain all set to explode an H-bomb in Vim Pacific. After Britain has shown the world it too can master this terrible weapon, then,, says Eden, he would be willing to think very seriously of calling off further tests. "ancellor Adenauer has told Moscow he is not interested in a i visit by Premier Bulganin and Nikita Khrushchev. He fears the visit would turn out like the rant Russian visit tn India The new Argentine government has hinted to the American embassy that Argentina will need a big American loan. . .The Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank has just completed a study of 100 banks in MiHitmfcr firm .mat" ih ktuiiv shows deposits have dropped an average of 6V1 per cent. PENTAGON PIPELINE The Joint Chiefs V Staff have sent the. White House a detailed report on the number of troops they could rush to the Middle East in case of war between Egypt and Israel. . .Secretary of the Air Force Quarles'a military aide, Brig. Gen. Andrew Kinney, is in hot water for sounding off about atomic weapons. Kinney claimed an atom bomb exploded 40,000 feet over the jungle would wipe out guerrilla forces below and prevent the Communist favorite form of warfare. This remark didn't set well with Secretary of Defense Wil Wilson, son, Wilson, who likes his generals to keep out of print, .v .Thf Navy has drafted plans for a revolutionary fleet completely powered by atom atomic ic atomic energy which would cost up to $20,000,000,000. Every ship a n d every plane would have an atomic enginYof a design which is now almost perfected and which is fan fan-..n.u ..n.u fan-..n.u efficient. This fleet could stay at sea for years without re returning turning returning to port and would always be in Place to launch a devas devastating tating devastating attack on Russia In case of rnnoressman Vinson 01 war. t ;v"- . i,-m Georgia, has ocnrnm ."." whv the Air Force gives urn. Force contracts without competi competitive tive competitive bids. One deal that Vinson is $W060 to Con Con-Fo,rc?" Fo,rc?" Con-Fo,rc?" r.5R but. so far, LT.sinVeonO.beendeliv- ered. Anawaf to Previous Puzzle Ta ftp A L. te CO.Pr AIM l 5j.A..S!R' p I D N. A. 4 T I N?J Tt oS'p l T a' S. ii ?:ZL?. iiJ" H- ;L J r O L. l "f : i T A L. J C '- 2 W A 3 S jf, J -f ": ' -6 S R s !?" A M T i a' jt tju '2,9 .'' A, -j J"! I N f- P A s T Vy 5 jr V j ;?' jf J jTn j IKL- u I N O Tt'Z A 24 Hindu box for 39 Mariner 40 Detests clothing ; 25 Physpstigmine 43 Opines 28 Number 43 Put off, at 31 Right side printed (ab.) 33 Talking bird . Press , 48 Congers,' 9 Unit of reluctance 50 Brazilian '- macaw 51 Loiter 34 Type of fur Golf mound Poem Ridicule I' I I It IS 16 .a I 11 I.J 111 r" ",. r ,. 7i 2" ZB in 5 15" ... t-TTt- mr ' III In i -T- .... ' T T .. I V 1 '!' -1 i I '. i i Tzzz itzKizztD 'IZZ JZZZZ : zzzl ir.lDAY, I I "Ht AHY 3. 15 THE PAN A Ml AMTRICAJt AN rXDriENTENT DAUT NETTSPAFEH pace Tr: Ey Hon Herbert Browne!!, Jr., Attorney Cental . tne I'nited States FREEDOM of conscience conscience-freedom freedom conscience-freedom cf religion how vital ttese rights are to cur way of It was no accident that relig religion ion religion was the first of the liberties mentioned by our founding fathers In our Bill of Rights. The1 Ion history of religious persecution convinced them of the need for explicit guarantees In our Constitution to protect rreeaom or re religion ligion religion and other . basic rights. NEVERTHE NEVERTHELESS, LESS, NEVERTHELESS, the Con Constitution, stitution, Constitution, as adopted, con contained tained contained no ex express press express safeguards for the freedom of religion. But the Bill of Rights Brownell was Adopted shortly afterwards to protect from government in in-. . in-. terference the conscience, the spirit, and the minds of men. Its First Amendment provides .' In part: "Congress shall make - law respecting an establish establishment ment establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." Our coiats have, construed the Bill of Rights in a way In Intended tended Intended to give freedom of re religion ligion religion the brcadest -scope that could be countenanced in an orderly society. The Supreme Court, In decision, emphasized that "both religion and govern government ment government can best work to achieve their lofty aims, If each Is free from the other within -its re respective spective respective sphere." WHILE TK2 FEDESAL and state governments are forbidden from meddling in religion, how however, ever, however, the question ha been rais raised ed raised frequently in recent years whether they are also barred from cooperating with religious authorities and assisting our religious way of life. Does our Constitution require that the state and religion shall be alien to each other to be hostile, suspicious, or .unfriendly, to each other? Obviously it does not. We are a deeply religious people whose, institutions presuppose a Supreme Being. We have chap chaplains lains chaplains In Congress and In the armed forces. Our coins bear the Inscription "In God We Trust." An act of Congress last year added to the Pledge of Allegiance the words "Under God." The Supreme Court up upheld held upheld a law on the ground that it respects "the religious nature of our people and accomodates the public service to their spirit spiritual ual spiritual needs." r X:V TODAY WE ENJOY the bless ings of freedom of religion loa the fullest sense of the word. We also recognize the corres corresponding ponding corresponding duty of not interfering with the rights of worship and freedom of conscience of others. We have learned how contagious the corroding elf ects of religious Intolerance are. And we have learned from the experience in totalitarian countries that when a nation becomes contemptuous of religion and the rights of man, It Is not long before all freedom Is lost. t rulW FMtun fcrvtM, WuUu IT, D. C LlaiiiwiLii 1 loi.ivl Tc.ics P yin Son To Ci!ho!icihrin Scout Nevs fICiiVI fepp living up o us name, -service g w t company of the 33d Iafantry re- I f 1 1 giment is lending its services fori w'"i"""J IWmjj"! tne second consecutive year Jo the local Boy Scouts of America. Each year a call is sent out by the local zone organization to help transport the Scouts and their en Al B:u!IsI Church Dr. C. Y. Dossey continues his successful revival campaign at LOURDES, France. Feb. 3 UP) A I I f ..il. i. U i ,' ftn-nmrin.au iAuuijiari muuici equipment to their summer took her 6-year-old. ..sort, who is.eampment at El Volcan in the,tne First Isthmian Baptist dying oi teuKemia to tne Koman chiriqui province of Panama An Church, C ri s to b a 1, tonight Catholic shirlne of Our Lady ofjorder in then issued bv the Arm throush Feb. 12. Lourdes today to pray for a mir acle. ... -, .' '. ;-v ., .. AnotherAmerican, family,', was bringing a baby son stricken with the same dread Oiase n tne During January holy place founded by bW berna- company supplied alter series ot. visions in Chief of Special Services, USAR CARIB, and because of the fine record displayed by the company in the past, the unit was delegated again. the two Large crowds flock the Church every night to hear Dr. Dossey, famed TJ.S, evangelist, whose revival campaign started last Sunday. The campaign is high Service lighted by dynamic preachlns. Arm y inspiring song services with two dette after series ot. visions in trucks and a ieeD to haul such e- choirs and nnarteta 185S- , "tquipment as eiectricat wiring, Prayers are offered for the Mrs. Helen Eckman, 34, and ner ladders, pipe and mess hall uten-sick and questions are answer- uu, r..iiiu.r, ui ov. ."" sus to uie encampment, ea by the preacher, staved inside a rented car at the shrine because ;" two continuous nights of. travel have tired the youngster ''and' his mother feared the1 subfreezing weather might harm him. An setback might be fatal. Mis. Eckman said the decided as a Lutheran to go to the Catho Catholic lic Catholic shrine because "all children arc the same to God. Under the supervision of Lt. Freddy E. Turner, tank mainten maintenance ance maintenance officer of Service company, live of the unit's personnel and three civilian volunteers remain remained ed remained our uas at jet vuitan at w.ncn time they repaired and readied vation, the, camp for the Scouts who will "Sated Smiles from the Post GU3liH12la PfCSidClll vi un ivuopb ana jo miles trom The following are some of the topics on which Dr. Dossey will preacn: 4 ,. Tonight The New Birth. Tomorrow God's plan of Sal- Florida Gov. Urges Calm Approach To Fight To Maintain Segregation TALLAHASSEE, Feh. 3 -(UP) Gov.-LeRov. Collins said today he is firmly opposed to mixing the races "in Florida's public schools but "defiance of constitut constituted ed constituted authority"' would only make it more difficult to maintain segre segregation. gation. segregation. Y "I am against any effort to make political capital out of se gregation, I am for the orderly and effective assertion, .of our' rights under' authority of law," ''..iu. ..: j v . .;' : iuiuna auiu. Collins issued a statement ex- rtlainini? his stoiirl nn th mxrroira.l tion issue but his aides said it had nothing to do with the announce-1 ment by Gen. Sumter Lo wry of Tampa that Lowry will run fori .governor on a segregation ticket. j Administrative- Assistant-Joe- Gro-i tegut said Collin's, statement was dictated before Lowry's announce announcement ment announcement at the request of Capitol newsmen, and after the announce announcement ment announcement "the governor saw no rea-J son to change it." Collins did not directly mention action of the Virginia and -Alaba-1 ma legislatures which Calls for a i showdown on the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling outlawing segrega-, tion, He asked for a calm ap approach proach approach to the question. I ' ."Thus far no' Integration has oc oc-, , oc-, cun-ed in our state, and our lead leadership ership leadership has been far more effec effective, tive, effective, than has been the case in many, other states in; which a - great deal mora noise and confu-i aion. 'have' been generated," he said.i.,''i 'v,. -- :.) ' Actually ," when the Issue is agi agitated tated agitated in such manner as to arouse intense v emotional feeling and fur6r,.'th6 stale's abilftv ef effectively fectively effectively to maintain its position Is substantially weakened. This I have sought to "avoid in Florida." Collins said that unless the mat matter ter matter is pursued "soundly" and by legal methods "I fear we will ac actually tually actually lose ground in our efforts to maintain segregation and to car carry ry carry Florida forward." "This is the course our state has been following -he- ald. "it' has proved advantageous. and u.effec: tive. I hope we will stay on this course." v .. : . So far. no tNeeroes have been admitted to white -schools, hi Ficr rida although the state Supreme Court has recognized the right of Daytona Beach Negro Virgil Hawkins, 49, to enter the Uhiver- nty of Florida law school. The court has given the attor ney general's office and the Board of Control until May 31 to make surveys on the effect of desegre- IIi$l3r!iin3 ivid:nis Mi On gation In the universities. County school boards have authority to decide which school a child shall enter. c the same m wo., -iUthe Costa Rkan border, El Volcan I1 I'm vM t t I 'U!iif' Red Action In '55 Kohinndyearnid! Service company members are now, looking forward to the sum mer months when they will once Randv r hi triD ''"she said The other Couple, Mr. and Mrs, En eene Gianna more, of bteuDen ville Ohicsnd heir4- son, Craig would take the mght train from .ParLsUo. the shrine. The .'Gianninwres, both" Catho lics, have r omidence v tnat .laiin wUl make. Craig well: The child lenows that he Is JU, hut does not know that he is doom ed. He nows only that he is going to Lourdes "to be helped by God." tive volcano region. The CatnD is 7.000 fest ahov tea level and has facilities for horse- i The some fellow who will down I a drink without o question will j wont the entire history of the oil l be puts in Ws cor. again play host to approximately 70 Scouts by supplying 10 vehicles GUATEMALA CITY, Feb. 3 (UP) President Carlos Casti Casti-11 11 Casti-11 Armas warned today Commu Communism nism Communism will unnleash "intense and vigorous action" this year to win j I it. L a new ioouioia in ine vesiern and drivers to transport the boys HPmi,nhere -to their vacation camp in the in- rem,spnere' ? terlor of Panama. He said every American nation is threatened. But he believed the Reds can be clocked if the 21 re republics publics republics stand together. ., Castillo Armas, who liberated Guatemala from Communist dom Husband Divorced For Cowboy Tricks i INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.. Feb. 3 (UP) Mrs. Marguerita H i m e s. ination in 1954 and handed Com asking for a divorce after 30 years I munism its first defeat in the A A-of of A-of marriage, said her husband-mericas, said his country still is nicknamed himself "Tex" and! one of the cnie' targets of infiltra infiltra-tried tried infiltra-tried to outdraw television cow- tion and sabotage, boys with a real gun. ; t Then he set up targets alongside! "The retun of the Communists to bedroom wall and fired at them power here is impossible, chow- while she tried to sleep, she told lever, 'he declared firmly juage Jonn MDiacK .r. i.itUl w J .n;b:rl!:n D::!li 32l Rcdiiccd Terms PIIILADELPHIA. Feb. 3 (UP) Judge Vincent A. Carroll has rt rt-uUiva uUiva rt-uUiva uic i,i filial puoiun lerms of Milton and Rosalie Schwartz in i te au, ii 1,11 uea i n iiouess Lions Jean Ostreichcr from a maximum v ii ) tui a nl sijui pnsion to terms of 11 to 12 months in the county jail. Mrs. Schwarti originally had been stnicncca to an indetermin indeterminate ate indeterminate term which could have run as. long as 10 years wnile ner hus husband band husband had received a three to 10 10-year year 10-year term. , Under Pennsylvania law, paro paroles les paroles can only be granted by the state parole board in cases involv involving ing involving state prision sentences. Under Carroll's new sentence, he may maKe the couple eligible for paro- 1a fit anv timet fariill VtaA im posed the original sentence. j - .. .. . The penalties were reduced on re, mmenuation of Dist. Atty.i Victor Blanc and on motion of the vv..u.k. s auuincy. j Mrs. Ostrcicher, 22, a bride of two months, died in the Schwartz i apartment Aug. 24 in wnat the state charged was an abortion at-1 tempt. Her mother, Mrs. Gertrude j Silver, pleaded no defense to a charge of being an accessory be- j fore an abortion. Carroll suspend-! ed sentence in her case, which! means that at any time during! the next 10 years fie can return her to court for sentencing. stitutional government in Guate Guatemala. mala. Guatemala. "We are certain they obey or orders ders orders from abroad." the President said. "Ttheir contacts with exiled Communists in these acts of sabo sabotage tage sabotage include also subversive at attempts tempts attempts such as the plot down last Dec. 31." David Himes Sr. 52. explained guns are his hobby, He said he used only paraffin slugs in the bullets he fired in the house. Mrs. Himes got the dirorce. In an exclusive Interview with United Press, Castillo Armas said Communists "have tried to sabo-l tage every one of the steps we have taken to establish full con-1 Listen to the Caribbean 8th Base-Ball Series with a m Transitor Pocket Radio Receiver. 34-20 Justo Arosemena Ave. .Tel. 3-0281. .j., ..'.' it-.".' i- ,,1. Qfm r '. In '55 Dy US Firms WASIUNGTON,- Feb. 3 (UP) American corporations paid out more in dividends last year than ever .- before in history, the Com Commerce merce Commerce Department reported to to-day. day. to-day. .j :. : a'- The 1955 total, c-f dividend pay payments ments payments -reported publicly by-U. S. companies amounted : to $10,400, $10,400,-000,000: 000,000: $10,400,-000,000: about 12 per cent more than the previous 1954 record, of $9,200,000,000...-,: ; M, -; ii.viuend payments rose steadi steadily ly steadily throughout last year. They were up five per cent in the first three months, per cent in the second quarter, 13 per cent in the third, and 19 per cent in the fourth. The report said dividend pay payments ments payments in December reached $2, $2,-40,000,000, 40,000,000, $2,-40,000,000, compared with $1,900 $1,900-000,000 000,000 $1,900-000,000 in December,' 1954. It said the December, increase was mark marked ed marked by' particularly large extra di dividends, vidends, dividends, -,.;. : Bains "in dividend payments vere rerwrtcd irr 19 of the 20 -in-c -u-y feiuu,. s covered by; Com-! merce DeDartmemVs office of busi-1 nes's economics. . . I vwatk i Direct Shipment low prices lop qualify Band Instruments; and Electric Organs Call for information' William Violelfe Supply m Tel, 3-6318 Box 282, Balboa, C Z. ROI-TAN The famous, mild and V fragrani American CIGAR Comes to Panama Distributors: FRANK'S Amides Tel. 1-1693 r' .-Vvv X i b9 i . X r v-. X" t X -a IV- W XN j . 1 V If ,. VC :,VXV. '- $ rr :it i Vv.X Acclaimed by young America .Xvj . ' '.'."tnw $hterrialional Sterling V. DOUBLE YOUR MONEY FREE TAHITI 18-47 (137) Central Ave.'.. WOODWORK DEMONSTRATIONS '..;-- (::,.:;:. .. Shop Smith as a 9". circular saw . Through the courtesy of SHOP SMITH Manu facturers, Mr. Edward Young, Factory "Expert in Woodwork Art will be in Panama to make expert demonstrations in the use of SHOP SMITH and Ac Accessories, cessories, Accessories, ' DEiMONSTRATION AT O. A.-S. Classes' will continue from 5 to 8 o'clQck today frlday.. Very educational movies ; ; , Lectures will also be' given'. The public in general, Cabinet: Makers and Woodwork Hobbymen in particular,' are. very cordially invited to attend these demonstrations,' and to ask any questions in the use of SHOP SMITH and pro production duction production of any WOODWORK ART. AUTOS O.IPIIROY, S. A. :':: .xX 'X r,,;Mh.y. t -! Phones 3-5381 and 3-5382 38. Ave. Francisco de la Ossa, (Automobile Row) '' k:) i'W , AVAILABLE IN CHARTREUSE -'j BURGUNDY FOREST GREEN. "PINK ( DOVE GRAY YOUR PROTECTION All Universal Dinnerware Is guar guaranteed anteed guaranteed against checking or glaze cracking (commonly k n o w n as crazing or any damage to the glaze or. decorative treatment re resulting sulting resulting from exposure to 'either heat or cold, This does not Include ware exposed to an open flame or to any direct source of heat. Universal Dinnerware may safely be transferred directly from a cold refrigerator to a heated oven. Universal Dinnerware Is regularly tested for one hour under 150 pounds live steam pressure then immersed in 50 degree water a ,test more severe than three years of. hard use. ' BUY NOW ON THE YELLOW BLACK WHITE 20 PC. SET 750 40 PC. SET 15.00 " OPEN STOCK ON ALL, AND ' 37 DIFFERENT PCS. TO CHOOSE FROM. 5ecg::d fLGGn c?-nFT!J-Avc:ui '-' mr- 'W -.M ..'-: ll;...'f;:,- 'Iff- -a "' A'S-i- .- r M ' m 'JV mar mm wvt i mm u.w at it m m j r r mm c m anil l is v -r v vtjy it v 7 Writ lV J l. 2 ... xa I at Ji V yjr LS yt I I SI M 141 4 JLril a Lawn mux) ! KJnXXAVA II ARI C VITU f w'' 4'dJ o u.. cam. cushions... '. TTE LAST .VTORD I SITTING COMFORT! . Swfr Siaikcji dtsadqimhieM vnn in our fhke weekly r.i??L i m "OUR t URNITURE GRACES THE LOVELIEST UOMby I f A'.F FAI R T28 PANAMA AMIRTCAN AS .INDEPENDENT I3A51T MUEPAFES FE20AT, FEE-TART 5. 15SJ ty&$"h-)0 f rem Ferry Trips I ure c: th6. ITcIIs All To 7if3 (tdtk-s Yru Life Adventures By OSWALD JACOBr Written for NEA Strcic XORTU II - AKI7 Q7 J 10713 -v- K8 7 WEST EAST .4 1052 AJ4 V109S V S S 3 2 AK82 QMS J 10 6 4Q43 South 1 3 A 4 Pass 01TH (D) AAQ8I3 VAKJ4 None .' A952 Neither side vu). West North East Pass 2 4 Pass Past 3 4 Pass Pass 4 Pass Pass Opening lead K NEW YORK. eb. 3 (Lr) A 1 34-year-old accountant, who rush-j icd back and forth by ferry be-' 'tween Brooklyn and Staten Island' to placate his two, wives, was, under arrest on a bigamy charge, today. j Frederick 'England, of Staten. Island, married pretty Brooklyn' receptionist Joan Mannis, 23, on Dec. 22. 1953. But his first wite; Gertrude, 30,. whom. ha .married on Sept. 23, 1943, charged she1 never waa divorced. 1 i Gertrude told police her husband: never left her. Joan insisted that; i be lived with her for two months' and had told her he had tome ; doubts about his marital status., .and had made a flying trip to A-" 'labama to straighten out afl'irs.l I Then Englnd, exhausted by re re-peated peated re-peated ferry trips, decided to tell all. Fie confessed to Gertrude, and she told Joan. I Joan went to the police. Theyi arrested England ai Gertrude and .Ronald, 6ua son, looked on. DIMINUTIVE The GEEHN-VEINSD WHITE BUTTERFLY OP A SLAVS OP G i 1 !i i Indiea Yiio Gave F'.XDerts call tnrl.ltf' kind nf hunH 'fytw. T C . .1. I mni.. n jou tan ui.icuver me m a if tit, you can bid a slam. Otherwise, irVft Tft iPrC AVIl you must usually content yourself ; V IW JVIJVJH cautiously wan a mere game bid. . When the hand was actually' Af If f l PAlifSnfA played, West opened the king ofrt' VU KwJlWvliU diamonds, and South realized that WASHINGTON Feb 3 (UP) he had been too cautious. The A mcrci,ant seaman from Calcut Calcut-strength strength Calcut-strength of the North band was,, India, who cave one of his eves to a Jersey City, N. J., youth. appealed to Congress today to let C3'-:i;,J.;'V.: Wl y4 Vfmirh I""Y AND ms rrsATxa pj crnscs vrvsv-rs Tms Soutm American diactob poses as a plant with its LEAF-LIKE LSiaS. Wwsks poVhe ipiani STICK INSECTS Y BKV ASIC THE REAL "N ': 1 my ife-,i' 'y; f; -, "7-. f Ml Jl4 rzzcn$ Aim cis nurza at First" KXARI1L BLQ5Sr3 exactly where it could be used, and there was no duplicated dia mond strength in the dummy oppo him .become an American resi- site the. diamond void in the South j.t h",, The Indian, Eric Joseph, Is a! Tnere, was, of course, no prob- British Subject but nas beca mU. lrm in making the game contract.,. 0 American ships since 1947. i Ihe only problem was to make uUJ now has a temporary Newj many trices as possible. York ,idress wnere the law per-i . The correct technique consisled ; it hl t stay 29 da s between 111 UaUlJl lillW BUUO IV UVTVlVH VOvaRse. : WTiile in a stapieton, staten is- J oiepn lawt, hospital In 1951. r ookedPfor a w learned U)at a fellow patient, PhU Li. f .Snh tZ 29 of Jersey City, was los- ?s. ua..?.tJlc..:ilnB his eyesight as the result of ijinKie trick. This is unusual enough to deserve a moment of our time. South ruffed .ithe opening dia niond lead and 101 tn urcveni me loss 01 a ciuu nti, r r. 1 r..u u. - ., in? nis evesiuni as uiv It was clear tnat -Minn wouiu nave "Ho ... n( nis; to lose a club trick if he handiedi"" plX'n that suit all by itself. The only way D. Sieminski (D (D-to to (D-to prevent this loss was to, rutf Y' A" 1 nt rod uceH bill a club in dummy Since dummy nt nermanentS to ; own ace. ..-r ."! p ,:h now one Bias, eye. casn mree top ncuu, u a ciud irom uuunuj un nc Now South took th king and ace of clubs, after which he was in portion to ruff a thud club with dummy's' last trump.. ' i.iree suns, n ''" -:rv clur, were used to develop the xua tritk. When the clubs broke. South managed : to make all 13 tricks. k Hey Look! 8 Days Till FIRfeMErrS BALL RESERtATIONS " BALBOA 23D2 1 'iff" UUb ' r 1 'k ; I? NO, No! THAT i TOU'Re T&o Tense ii i-t pel iv f Answer to TESTE ft DAY 'S PUZZLE! TAP READ B4CK. WARDS 15 PAT, amdtrakposed! IS APT.' rr "tt LET YOUC FACIAL MU.LS RESUWS TJE!R NORMAL POSrrtOM NOW. Ltrs Try iroNte more fifes-,; ' ;. AGAIN tT X ) Look;. msstcr ? our YeAf-ec- mas y 3 ALLEY OO. Atomic Reaction Si f. T. 8A&ILDI I DUNNO, STRANGER.. THERE MOW, V r SHCJRE SHERIFF, DO FttL THMANV t RK3HT rpttfp? arrow i WELL THEM, LETS SEE IF A SLUG OF a' DOC MILLERS MIRACLE MISERY MEDICINE WONT . J H.I iwr-, 0 V.. t-12 't iri(i ttrviu tBr.TJd. IAMKI BOOTS AND BXR BUDDBf Rough Deal ftl ED GAB MABTU "I'm being polit and letting him pick out hit own' eookieel" I if you' call your husband at work and a person whom you do 'not know answers, Identify iyourself by your last name. Of course, when making a social !call you identify yourself by iyour full name "Mary Smith." i for instance. j But you are "Mrs. Smith" If a 'servant or a small child answers the telephone. i Faltering Philip ifhilip'a Ul la ruled itb brnisea. lTell-won ttepi and nn ha met. ; is .--iv -: '. 'v -...... to'.:! ,;. &patr wenltf lem Wa bona like new. 1 A. Classlffeda, tflrt the rif b( eluc' did vou haoe fckWTmiOG ELSE TO SM? r MRS. SQUE... TOR UH1CM VOO SHOULD E ETEW0rL.V GOOD WW.' ft 1 "POOR LTTTLE ELL1E f(Ot SCOUT ftWPMR. I.RS us jay a 1 1 i i a s '"h. C ATTAIN CAM New Wonder tt UCSUS XUKNEa 1 TG STOUT OF U1RTIU Wit After the Service B WILSON SCKCGGS 6HC GOT UC DUWN3 T6 NlSHT, U?. MARSHALL'. WUST HAV STUMBLED.CONCUSS:ON- TrlEKI KE,WHWA5S;U VaJSlSVlARLEASS? 1 mi u l. '5? At 1 .I Y THE PKAL; P-r- I -that was a vecy kcb ( eEZicE(aKT.rrsr j I DOMT kCM HOW TO THAW NQJ, J.7., AND SVEONff AT TrE OFFICE FOe-WELUFOZ INtBYTWia s CLWlWEtE voeccoAsajTYou. SUPPOSE fcESTOPt ATKWCLISFOZA (TV I r 1 1 M I r y at m' cus foz a y i'ilil 1S BBRt V S Vt'li FT. ff? HE POOR McKfcB- AWO WicKEE INPildTRic Hfc HIT Th& JACKPOT. EA6Y...WITH A WEW 97N7HETIC MATERIAL THAT I .virtually WPESTRUCTIPLEi' W by ttfa Wrft tal. TM g. Ut. t ritlSCILLA'S PC? Accepted Oj AL ?tRMEEa ARE .YOU OUT OF J n " 1 BED AT THIS ---iF"- YOU'D BETTER HAVE A OOOD EXCUSE OR IT .WILL Q-O HARD ON YOLl7 1 FORGOT ( TO KJSS YOU J OODNI5H-T SDH. IK. 1M IU ( WE' TH eUES3 GOOD ; rH? aJ II I IN tCS ELNNf QUIT FDLLER1N' WE! VA SOT NOTHIN IN THAT PILE O'OUNK Opportunity Knocks r firtLJ Liha Tbat i rt'. COULD I INTEREST j CSSXS' "cV V V70u ,N A SLICHTLV ' V T I. k-USED VALISE ' iZLy J&Z a. b 7 i rrpf IT PlKEPROCR Y FOR WOVTHS DK.KELLl j IT'LL MAKfr OTHER;1 VoMLV PEDPUs- ItufluT W10TK PK00ft,.WWrf Hk PUT IT THRU THE SWTHBTI& 50 OF ITJ EA!rSwMU4' SrajS? Ti?' DEWElr SOTTA KEEP IT IT 6ECI?ET, AW GUAW V WEAR If OUri 0I5PO6 OF cxr JJs NvNlsrNr -olo stock: V MORT1 MEEKLE All in the Wrists By DICK CAVALLI V I'VE ALWAYS VWNPEKEP HOW XX) CHANdC THOSE THINOS WITHOUT SPILLING- ANY WATER r MINPIF I WATCH f 2 . AltrnTN'TDlT. RIKTVOUV ( THE EMPTY ANP I PICVriN'UPTHEFUa ONE,M3US1VEITAQUia: V FLIP" ITALL INTHE -7 wei5T5-WATCH f6JONE-"TWO A TEUE ASDST CANNOT (SVE HIS BEST PERfOCMANCE WIT' A LOT OF KIBITZERS BKEATHIN' P0WNHI5 NECk MR K1 .ft' 1 71 ..T I fcillfj' I if MAJUM wmix HI Ht Wal TMOSE AW HARD 7 .Tl M?f JX oVATP?-- f COW&yOu'KEf 6HC5TCF 6'JTZOf4 "A U trTY ,fvl gED f4CE V0LJ tt RXSSLUM OP CARV- 6PP Vfl it S THAT ESG PLEASE- r"v Uy'S, NO LETTERS Jjt I THlSMORWIN&A yr-g.. w Jusfrw usual v-l-T IN PACK OF , i i' rnittf i us. i i i 'i i' N5 ' ANP 1 PACK TrIAT WAV UP THIS HIUL ANP KICjHT . UNPER My NO Be HE DOES I rr & ' 'Ttttt ( JJ. lU. A MffcXS AC MAPS -WOT BOBM 5AlXA.5 TV, IUc V,l fi M. THJ PANA5LI AMTTICW A!f rStPENTrXT DATIT KTT7 SPATES fit: FRIDAY, FIXaUARY 3, 1?'S f 07"H If r"l AI 6401 Csncer yH r-if r" rf r-i 1. k-J i Only 3 5 minutes to 1 HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 3 (UP) q Ozark comedian Bob Burns, ho ; cheered the depression years .ct'Q iithe 1930's with his country humor) !jnd his musical "Bazooka" fash-1 "" l ioned from rusty gas pipe and a! t whiskey funnelr died yesterday of d cancer. He was 64. U " 1 1 J. Burns had been io a toma since POD Saturday at West Valley Coramun-j ity Hospital where he was under .. treatment lor cancer oi me-Kia-, ney. Inactive in show business for the past tea years, Burns had been in declining hi the land of eternal spring, via Vx: ilTS A BOY! It' hard to believe, but three-year-old Zbigniew ; iSkalinski is a boy, despite the curly' locks and the doll. But easy ; Ito believe Is bis happiness at arriving in the U.S. The Polish im-! Imigrant Is shown after he arrived in New York City aboard the Navy transport General LangfltU Zbigniew and his family will, live in Boston, Mass. nay Reveals Recc Against Tims, Cc!d jo Save Soldier SEOUL, Feb: 3 (UP)v -The U.S. Armv reealed today the story of a successful race against time and bitter cold to save an iniured soldi soldier er soldier frozen to a mountainside and onlv an hour from death. 7he Army said Pfc. Ronald J. Labointy, of Fort Kent, Maine, was rescued by three soldiers last week after he slipped while climb in? a rugged peak in central Korea. . ,,. Labonty, who had scaled the mountain to take photographs, lost his footing and plunged 65 feet, breaking, his leg... The bitter cold froze him to the cround and his blood pressure dropped so low that p factor said later ne would have died in one hour if he had not b. i fountt.- ...... Capt. Warren F. Leary, of Mount Holly, N.J.; Sgt. Vernon P. Man Manning, ning, Manning, of San Pedro, Calif., and Pvt. Robert J. Leo, of Brooklyn,! N.Y. formed the rescue detail. ........ ill M V i.. I X J! f imM L 1 11 .VW'vj "tharje it to my account" DAILY Flights to San Jose leaving at 10:30 a.m. For information call your travel agent or call 2-3139 just say: toncrd Molars Establishes World Records In 1955 - MIAMI, Fla., Feb. '3 (UP)-The General Motors Corp. established world records for a private manu facturing company in 6ales, earn earnings, ings, earnings, employment, and payrolls in 1955, President Harlow H. Curtice announced today.- Curtice claimed these records for GM: .... 1. Sales totaled $12,443,000,000, up 27 per cent from 1954. Defense deliveries were 7 per cent of total sales in 1955, compared with 14 per cent in 1954.- , 2. Net income in 1955 was $1,189, $1,189,-000,000, 000,000, $1,189,-000,000, 48 per cent higher than . 1954, and 43 per cent above the previous record set in 1950. 3. Earnings were $4.55 a share of common stock. Common share holders received $2.17 a share in dividends, with the balance re retained tained retained for use in the business. 4. The average number of em employes ployes employes on the payroll throughout : i;rf-'in : .-:";:-'s".-.e"j1t'5 S; ealth since he under went surgery three years ago. Burns' wife Harriet, his onetime secretary with, whom he eloped to Las Vegas in 1937, was at his bedside when he died. The humorist's tall tales about his Uncle Fud and Grandpaw Snaz Snazzy zy Snazzy were retold by his fans across the nation. During World War II, American soldiers dubbed the ar army's my's army's antitank weapon after Burns' weird homemade Bazooka. Besides his widow. Bums also was survived by their three chil children, dren, children, Barbara, 17; Robbin, 16, and Stephen, 15. Burns also had an another other another son, Robert, 33, by his first wife who died in 1936, Known as the "comedian with the barefoot voice," Burns came to Hollywood in 1930 after a check checkered ered checkered career that included stints in small-time vaudeville, carni carnivals, vals, carnivals, medicine shows 'and work as a laborer in his beloved Ozark hills. the world totaled 624,000, up 47, 47,-000 000 47,-000 from the 1954 average. 5. Worldwide payrolls totaled $3,127,000,000, compared with $2, $2,-610,000,00 610,000,00 $2,-610,000,00 in 1954. ; Curtice gave the figures at a press conference. Keeps important Business Facts Av Your Fingertips - KARDEX gives you a graphic, running summary of vital facts. . KARDEX calls attention to facts that require action. KARDEX centralizes records, simplifies record keeping. KARDEX pays Its way in efficient ' production, inventory, sales, personnel and accounting control. Tighten up Business Efficiency with Eystems by REMINGTON RAND 7 "L" Street No. 3 Phone 2-0925 SALE!- COLUMBIA Records 1.C0O 12' LP's HALF PRICE! Just in !' TOP HITS! "LOVE ME OR LEAVE ME"... - Doris Day- "16 TONS' O For Records, Hi-Fi anil TV Via Espana and 45th St. Bella Vista -Panami 3-1285 v U M h M leddy Tells u Why,.. J II I h M J ; h 4 j y n 1 H : if 1 ; i :.- ..... ; 11. -WrV 1 1 :,;,,,.: CI mm m m r'7.A WOnnU S I! ai&emaff 1 ; hi' -." ; VttUli.4la;liyiUUIIIUlII7I.MVll?W "Ifs tho world's sweotost, fendorest, crocnoj), plumpest pea r Unifcrm in size, smooth-skinned, never tough like iho c!her i "My Siow Crop Peas grow high fa tho Idaho than ccas grown fa the lorykads. TkhA ta mountains where Act days and cod rights "- rcay peak of fiai Cao.V , make peas sweeter, firmer, far more tender deep-frozen whib .they're f&dry-fccch. si ft I i A y. f f r. "COMPARE $y,.t Snow Crop lima Beontt "Each sweet, tender bean is deep-frozen so fast that it reaches yoa -with all the flavor of Umas fresh from the field. Choose tiny, tender Baby lamas or large,. ....-, . luscious Fordhooks, r whichever you prefer. .'Snow Crop SJrowbwfe! '"They're famoas West Coast' sliced strawberries. Each berry is a deep, rich, scarlet, sun-ripened red , all the way through. So sweet, juicy and - delicious. Great with . sugar and cream or in 'a shortcake." r 4 I J n x iin Jsr i & v r k w NT tor y ... , l ' ......... I mcc::.?a:s mt Snow Crep Coral T2ach tender kernel of my Snow Crop Corn tastes as if it were grown and picked in your own back yard and popped right into tl.o pot. It's all famous variety ' : Gdtden Croes corn . whether Snow Crop fresh-frozen Corn on the Cob or Cut Corn." WW- thai w k J Xaral .. f I w fc fM Mt 4 4 i ) NATIVE NIGlTl satupx ay carnival PRESENTING: PANAMA'S FOREMOST SINGER OF PANAMANIAN MUSIC: MARGARITA ESCALAr O ALSO: A GROUP OF TYPICAL DANCERS DANCING NATIVE SQUARE DANCES, POLKAS, TAMBORITOS, Etc. O ALSO: ORCHESTRA "LOS' RANCHEROS COMBO: "LOS GUAYACANES" TYPICAL "LOS:lNCER0S?::: r O ALSO: ALL TYPES OF NATIVE DISHES NO.MINIMUM.O NO COVER OIARGE O PANCING ONLY WITH COATS OR "CAMISILLAS" R A s .1 i 5 I i A rr.fDAT, mnuAur .3. r: rs'.r i TT.Z F.iNAM.1 AMEf ICA1 AN INDFPEXL-ENT ,RA!lf NZW?rAtT YOUCAfl PLACE YOUR AD AT 14 DIFFERENT LOCALITIES Ml THE CITY '''IlJC T(r or M I J v LEAVE YOUR AD WITH ONE OF OUR AGENTES OR OUR OFFICES AT 57 "H" STREET, PANAMA f L. . 11 ... j t LIBRERIX PRECJADO LCURDES PHARMACY LEWIS SERVICE HOUSEHOLD EXCHANCE FARMACIA EL BATURRO MIMMT'Af E';' 5I1ND1LM I Krert Pa. U tU be Carrarcalila in flnll S j Fm k Ow Ait M 41 re.w Ufevr 7 StrrM -UliALULJl J I rrt Agtnciaa Internal, d Public aciorlei FARMACIA LC.VEARDO FARMACtA ESTADCS UN'.DOS FOTO DOMY FARMACIA "SAS" FOR " fUK Ul fW T Ht 14 Icoent Inm Jim Aimkii t u 1) it l farm III r i2;WOnDS"'::;" '"""" fARMACIA LUX FARf.!ACfA VAN'-DER-DIJS NOVEDACES ATHio '12 WORDS 1 r-; .. Vx J certoaJ STeVU '''' 4tt"'W iulj are A J St (mnl IxiM fl Street fte. U FJpane e. fi y P tl h e a n s h It 1 D il 8 ) t t I t t t : :l ,: ' i fl ti t b' c-v- : a. ) o 1 P C i t ! f t ;l f i : COMMERCIAL & PROFESSIONAL ctAL zase roLTCxtMC DEriTAL-MEDICAL r. C f. tkiatt Of- D D S. (fceaS,a I'aheroi'jt M O jua mo t Jir (pli PIoaaa RETIREMEfff, LIFE EDUCATION INSURANCE jmnwcE TKANSPOSTES f AXTiR. $A. 2-2451 2-25- iimur". (TMnaL an 9 -" f T M'lf ". F. Mf "" URTEPEDIA NACIOIMl (Or. iml4 htm HARIiETT & DUIHI BMI.aOOM DANCP. tTl'DKr -rrACiim txTii. mi I f-aii- Ibaa: Z-431 at Paa.! -! Shicfio El Penama Hotel LOOK You Can Now Buy Auto Auto-mobil mobil Auto-mobil lnuranc by, tela tela-phont. phont. tela-phont. Immediata Cover Cover-Dial Dial Cover-Dial Panama 2-5000 FRED HUDDLESTON. Al.rc:k Trdning Officer To Spssk AIUJ0-J'.'.'3Ccni:r Th rnortthly llludtnlH laik at Ihe t'SOJWB Armed Koreaf Serv Service ice Service Onier on MfJtKlay, at I p.m. will .pretnt Morean Smith, train training ing training off iett In .Survival Traininf at Alhrofik Air Force Bae. Smith will relate W rprncf with thai "Zundapp Mill-American Kxpeditifln." a project npmorm by the department of anthropolojf of t'e florlda State Vnfrmi'r, which wan a nine-month arehaaolo arehaaolo-cal cal arehaaolo-cal and botanical aurvr.y throuh throuh-out out throuh-out Central America. ll will aluo tell of fait trip from Florida to Panama which he made on a motorcycle1 during 1hi acienlific experienca In Central Amwio. An anthtopology graduate from the Florida State Unlveralty, Smith's major interest of atudy i ethnrt-blology. Ha earn U Al Al-brook brook Al-brook Air Fore JaM In 1954 to re-establUH it Survival Training rrogram. f v . On Dee. 1, J9S2, Smith ant a fl low nclcntist, atarted on their nine nine-monthi monthi nine-monthi survey tbrouah Central Am Am-tries tries Am-tries on imall motorcycle, from Tallahassee, FIR. Upon their .ar .arrival rival .arrival in Mexico, they gradually progrofiald to Sari luidrfl de Gen General, eral, General, Cota Rica, then on to Pa Panama, nama, Panama, The journey from Costa Rica to Panama wa made via costal vejsel, cayucO, train and truck ' ' . Dur'ina the scientific trip, they collected Current ethnological ma materials terials materials for museum exhibits and -classroom study Jor Florida Jitate tt ami m 1 i 1 1 1 1 Liiard Doffs Skin To Ekopc Capture Iv.'ASlirNGTO.V -(UP)- A sin sin-I. I. sin-I. ii hfd native to the Patau I, u literally "runs out of its ' whfin in danger, according t't I '"Wiok M. Bayer, Smithson Smithson-i, i, Smithson-i, 1 Jntitutlofl WologlSt.' .. lie lizard, called a gecko, aban aban-c c aban-c its wkin with lightning-like t. i.''ty. The would-be captor is I i holding the creature's, empty .".'l the rest fif ,the lizard rtiha a .iy presumab ly nuking I hid Ir.g place," Bayer said. WAI1TED Young girl for cashier work anil accounting assistance,' r ' lov I Panama co A.A.F. FOR SALE w Household rC SALE; CfUt SbfW rnfr f 5 fn. If., 5 mcit CC-f, r t4 -ti. nt N: 1677 ft., fcr1 Call litkM 4106. C SALIj Mi. Md Ml 4mit tm Mt, ictti c4i fiM.- Ar rWa IjHmu 2- 2lt. Hnm4 CI40-C. -- I-' III .JTL.-l I, I I j ...in., ... t. to $ALIr MMiy yMtb mtHitn; fftlijH cf4H. Jtp. ftn n 5129-A Dr V, f w n 3-6450 Pmmm, FOR SALC'. Uhmtt (imU it pijK t4 kc)i, color Hk, bctirtifut locki like WW Cm $930. !H mII o 1560. f Mihi alk 2196. f CI SALIs Mt Mt ?9oT Wf t U2 t (Uirt.. MiM k,, C5J0-A Qmtyutn, A-2-J064. 101 SALf-K4 Vitrt 3. mftrf4.? Olhf kuhIJ 4r- !, 547-t Cri4 Mijht : FkM 11.5211.: ; FOR SALE; I-iaaaal rward P'tr. tpaakar, tana aaatral, wakawt arytfal $S. Phana Pan ami 2-5430. I, trawa. 1,200 Scouts, Lee ders To Take Pari I ri Se con d Anriuiil CZ Scouted pad es , "for tha Boy IcOuts se fhe mh" it the motto which has been established to advanoa c the sec second ond second annual beoutcapades to be presented in the Balboa Stadium on 1 Sat?? day tvenlng. Ffb. it, i 7;.). -p,.tM- y,-- --;r..... Praa'i v enthe memVr memVr-fhip fhip memVr-fhip of Canal Zona Cvuacil (91, Boy -Ssotrts' of America slightly over 1.200 Scouts and adult lead leaders ers leaders will participate in the 19.VI Scoulcapadet. The prencntation will include tn eiisos -designed to relate "This is tUa Scouting Stor- y." Cuba:, frcotit, explorers and scaut scaut-ers ers scaut-ers have been rehearsing since early January, An episode in early rtheamal that gives promise of being exceptionally spectacular Is entitled "Onward for God and, My Country." Chaplain U F.; Donorf an, RsbW Nathan Witkin, Dean Malcolm McDonald, Chaplain Roy A. Morden and Father John D. Rutledge are collaborating in this phaie of the presentation which will feature special music written and arranged by Victor Herr and rendered by his 45-piece all Boy Scout band. The Balboa chorus of 32 voices wity provide the singing background. Tickets will be sold house-to-house in the Canal Zone by neigh neighborhood borhood neighborhood Scouts. Adults will pay 75 cents for admission, while minors will onlvthsve .(i spend 35 cents to see whlthabacore'ia short time one of toe Scan 20"' maj major or major entertainment events of t h e year, -., . ,;: ;'u-'- The second annual Scoutcapades In the Canal. Zone is beinj under undertaken taken undertaken in conjunction with U. S wide activities during the1 month of February, in observsnce of the 40th anniversary of the Boy Scouts of America. Over '4 million 5 cub scouts, boy scouts, explorers and adult leaders will participate in these activities, especially during the prw4 Feb, -L2r which, has been designated as official Boy Scout WccMrnre--i(Htruw has served over 4 million boys. rohrustv will also mark the Co-Op Ventures Making Big Cains WASHINGTON (UP) More American famlliM tftam ever (before are purchasing snares' In v ntioiis co-op ventures. There were an es timated 13,000,000 family share holders by the end of 1955. Jerry Voorhis. executive director of the Cooperative League of the I'SA, reports that both farm tup ply and urban consumer,, stores chalked up sales records in 1955. The largest regional farm supply co-ops had a four per cent increase in their, billion-dollar, sales. They also modernized five oil refineries and expanded fertilizer Operations. ' 1 In the cities, an over-all Increase In co-op operations wa noted. Plans for low-cost autoifiobilei in insurance surance insurance for teen-agers and bettor coverage for policy-holders were mapped. "., : i ''.'' Year-end gains included i thou thousand sand thousand new credit unions, with the . ailUilwQ.of wiliia Ji.Owi u.eaiu. Hie American Travel Association, ; featuring co-op travel abroad, also wag initiated. FOR SALE Automobile: fC SALE 19S3 CI.IU $.. 4, m rtff t4 Mnrf. N yW Hewt pfool tirn t4 ri ri-4m. 4m. ri-4m. Ar cask fr is $2 J 03 fl kf m4ttti. Ftt. 2 2-2631. 2631. 2-2631. 'rrn.-' PUu 5 FCI JALf : S.kti Tjlko S S-U U S-U iSM Cr. 1953 atef r4i (4 lidNtf top. FiflWKiflf filifiW. CjH Mr. fik Mm. fni 2.1669, talon Mwv. Millrnj itatcrt. v FOI SALIj 1 953 CHrf, SMMr. II, rfutf PU. Iitiomttit tttmt tttmt-mruitn, mruitn, tttmt-mruitn, pwtt krake. ,t4i, ht idjtl tim, iU44 Un, w u cdii. CjN Fium 3-4170. FOR SALE 1951 Paatlac Cat. allaa l-rf., 43,000 miiet, w !, Uather mtcria, aaaercaat. CaH 16-4225 fcatwaaa 6 p.m. aaal I p.m. FOR $ALE-1955 2-1r. Cfca. ratet lal-Arr 2-f aaa, P C. aai rarf.o, law aiilaa. vary faa4 flaoa canartiaa. CaH lal. 2733. FOR SALE: 1954 Ckerrolat f al-Air 4-a'aar, pawar (liaa, imw tirat, rae, tt. Vary faa4 cm. elittea. Saa at 2-A Caca Solrte. Wonted to Buy WANTED TO IUY Scrap laaa'. Wa pay f canft aat paaaa. Meja Meja-lattria lattria Meja-lattria Panama. Phana 3-6122. WANTED Uaa-arfraimJ taM taM-liaa liaa taM-liaa tank la 4 cena'itiea, 3 ar 4 thaauaa) fallan capacity. Tak aphana Panama 2-0421, I r ! a 7 V ir HlGHPOINT In last years "Scoutcapades" re-enactrhent of the history of the -Panama Canal la depicted In the above scene as President Theodore Roosevelt visits the "Big Ditch." On Saturday evenlne. Feb. 18. at 7:15. t,h aecond annual Rcoutcanades will nresent. "This 1 the L'Scotitlna; Storylt at the Balboa wno wui make house-to-hoUsl launching of a new four-year prog- ram, "Onward for God and MytJr., C. Ji Holmes, A. J. Landreth, Country" to help prepare Ameri ca s rxys to Jive in today's world and prepare them to carry their full share in the years ahead. It is designed to give youth an op opportunity portunity opportunity to develop physical (fit (fitness, ness, (fitness, self -reliance, a sense of per sonal responsibility, a spirit of helping people, a willingness to share, an understanding of our gov eminent s democratic processes and a firm spiritual foundation. - Committees responsible- for 'the second annual bcoulcapades are as follows: Director general) K Budd" lUb lUb-ehstlek ehstlek lUb-ehstlek ; scout executive, Franklin Liiatic. ,. ..a Sleerina Committee: Leonard Brockman, Col. John Oberdorf, Comdr. S, S. Knight, Will Arey, Lt. Col. James Lane, E. I.' Ever- son. ":'.-. '. '- .'--,. - Events Planning COmmitteerWil COmmitteerWil-liam liam COmmitteerWil-liam B. Mallory, William R. Price, Sherman Brooks, Al Sloan, Jr., Salvationists Set To Greet Leaders Capt. and Mrs. llea'dley Grant, newly-appointed commandine of ficers of The Salvation Army's Panama City Corps, will be pub publicly licly publicly welcomed at a meeting to be conducted, by. S-Capt. Edward W. nodgson, sectional cancer, on Sun Sunday, day, Sunday, at 7:15' p.m. Religious and community lead leaders ers leaders will bring welcome greetings, and Capt. and Mrs, Grant will be heard for the first time In Pana ma. Accompanied by their two chil children. dren. children. Maxine and Ian, they ar ar-jivcJ jivcJ ar-jivcJ Uik week on Hie Eciua del Pacifico" from Jamaica, where they have served In important appointments for many years. MISCELLANEOUS ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS (OX 2031. ANCON. C.Z. j tCX 1211. CmSTCIAt, CZ. j I-OR SALE 1 BliseelTaneous FOR SALE-T l000-,al. ct ct-prn prn ct-prn fanki, ftccl srrapt, S200 each DtftiUaVa Njcinat. S.A.. 3-1791. OUTSTANDING IARGAIN: F. par tri-pacer FA-22, Spr ca ca-tm, tm, ca-tm, fcett caatfittAa, cerfHkafn. FKaaa Caaipaat T.A.S. A. 3 1110, Acrapaerra Paitilta (Mar (Mar-co co (Mar-co GcUkart), Panama. FOR SALE-1953 mooter. w firat, aiallnt conrfilioa. Pkana 5-169 Gataa. FOR SALE: Chramim aaari am, 30-aal. capacity with plaati, ana" and liihes. Call Panama 3 3-5419. 5419. 3-5419. PANAMA CANAL COMPANY OFFERS FLOATING EQUIP. MENT FOR SALE Scalae bids, lor aptninf io pub public, lic, public, will ba received antil 10:30 a m., Febraary 10, 1956, in the atlica al Superintendent of Stare heatet, lalbaa, for tale of Felice Launch CSPKEY located W the toirth end at Gambaa bridge at . fh Municipal Police Dock, tale tale-phane phane tale-phane 6-124, and Police Launch GUICHICHI located at the lal lalbaa baa lalbaa Launch Landing, telephone 21277. Inrifatioa Na. 226 may be obtained at the above aourcei, r from offtca of Superintendent af. Sfamhautek, ('cpheaa 2 2-IIIJ. IIIJ. 2-IIIJ. ' 'ip us vr"m av pa wH,t "'" Stadium. .Tickets may be obtained -from Canal Zone Soouta, calls jfluring:: the next two weeks. Wes Townsend, Gerald A. Poyle, Major T. A. Kirby. Lt. Col, F. B. Simmons. -'::-. fallM fSrl Wid'ell, George Tul- ly.'noi. '(unaptainri'onovaii, oo oo-ert ert oo-ert Worsley Gerald A. Doyle, Jr., William Taylor, Judge Guthrie Crowe, C, R. Taht, Major T. A. Kirby, Lt. Col, F. B. Simmons, Art Payne, Alex Plotnikoff. Technical Staff: G. S. McCul McCul-lough, lough, McCul-lough, William &- Mallory, Frank ; v The SERVICE DEPARTMENT ' 'PANAMA' OADIOCdnP. Announces to all their customers that ALL RE REPAIRS PAIRS REPAIRS mad In the Service-Shop or in the customer's residence will be on CASH basis (C. O. D.) TOTAL CLOSE OUT of HUNDREDS of sterling, hollow and flatware items "International".' hi f y t -I? rv.ii 1 l ieyr I w. J FOR RENT Apartments ATTENTION G. I.t Jurf hunt mc4ra furaisk4 ayartacats. I, 2 kciifooms, hot. cld viltl, Fbea PaaaaM 3-4941. FOR RENT: La furnitked a a-pMmtnt, pMmtnt, a-pMmtnt, nt couple or rw. A A-anericaa anericaa A-anericaa Mighkan. 4!lk irtt No. 27, Apartment Na 2. FOR RENT; Farniikta apart apart-want want apart-want tnclniiBj rcirifaratar, porck, parler-a'infnf room, kitchen, baa1, roam, tiki, aR tttttnti. $60. Apply 112 Y'a Baluario Porrat, rtaar Reawvall Tkeafer. FOR RENT-2-aaa-raam apart, menf, furaithaa', mww fornitara, piano. 50th Street No. 19, keiiae Farmacla Van Der Diji, $1 10. Phaae 3-4566. FOR RENT: lndpendnt apart apart-mentt, mentt, apart-mentt, ana farnithed, one bad bad-team; team; bad-team; the other 2 bedrooms, an. faraished. Via Parraa Na. 64. Phana 3-1163. FOR RENT:' Stadia apartmerf oppaoite race track; aha room with bath and entrance, auitable for bachelor or couple. Call Pan Panama ama Panama 2-0434 after 2 p.m. FOR RENT Uafarnithed apart apartment, ment, apartment, two bodrooml. two hatha, maid'i room, sittin-dining room, porch, garage. $1 00, at Bella Viata. N. Obarrio Street No. 23. Saa Da Cettro, Avenue "B' No. 9-42. Phono 2-1616 Paaama, FOR RENT: New, modem, well-ventilated 2-bedroom apart menfa with garage and maid's Ouartan. 'Tcraiina" Apartmentl, G Street, El Cangrcja. ;- 9 1 . Cunningham, Col. Earl, Douglas Best, Major Lindemann, Warner Hoyle, Capt. MB..,Zollicoffer Pfcs Hlnman, jof Gryrs:l j Jllusic; VictJiklierr. Promotion: Leonard Brockman, Will Arey Maj Major or Major Arthur Dryer. Stadium Decor ation: Cmdr: Knight, Transporta Transportation tion Transportation r E.N. Stokes. Tickets: Lt Col. Burton K. Phillips. Program: Robert C. Walker. Narrator. Jim Anderson. ; Co-Ordinators. Art Payne, Alex Plotnikoff. Sta d i u m Arrangements: -Gordon Balbirme. of RESORTS Gramlick Santa Clara leach Cettagea. Modcra coavenience. moderate ratet. Phana Gemkee 6-441. FOSTER'S COTTAGES. One aula put Carina. Low to tea, Pkaaa Balbao 1(66. PHILLIPS Ocaaatide Cottaaea, Santa Clara. Bos 435. Iclbaa. Phone Panama 3-1177, Cristo Cristobal bal Cristobal 3-1673. Shrapnal't Iwrniiked kaaMi aa beach at Santa Clara. Telephone TbompMft, Balfcaa 1772. Baldwm't lurniihcd apartmcntt at Santa Clara (each. Telephone Preiack, lalboa 1224. Tenfay Albrfghf Cops Figure Skating Crown Dsspile Pain CORTIXA, Italy, Feb. 3 (IP) tenley Albright 9-year-old Newton, Mass.. lee ballerina, fought off the pain of an ankle Injury yesterday to win the women's Olympic figure skat skat-inf inf skat-inf championship with a brilliant performance in free figures. Miss Albright, first American ever to win the Olympic wom women's en's women's crown, thus completed a U. S. sweep of the two Olympic figure skating; championships. Hayea Alan Jenkins of Colorado (springs, Colo., won the men's; t.itlp vesf.errlnv, Thcsn or the1 I only two gold medals America! has won in the 1956 classic. The attractive New England girl, who became a world cham pion figure skater after recover recovering ing recovering from a childhood polio at attack, tack, attack, turned hi a near-flawless performance In the free figures despite a throbbing pain in her right ankle. 1 Miss Albright had cat her leg above the right ankle on i Jan. 19 while practising tor the Olympics. While executing a maneuver her left skate blade had cot Into her leg. " The comely five-foot six, 128- pound Miss Albright now Is a pre-medical student at Hadcllf Hadcllf-fe fe Hadcllf-fe College In Cambridge, Mass 1 Earlies in the day. Sixten Jernberg of Sweden, a 26-year-old lumberjack who finished second in two previous Olympic cross -coumry ski events, won the gruelling 50-kllometer race against Uie best Russian and Finnish marathon skiers. i Fort Kobbe's Post Softball Tourney Begins This Week "Bases are loaded" at Fort Kobbe aa the Post's 1956 soft soft-ball ball soft-ball tournament goes into fuil swing this week with teams from the First. Second and Pro Provisional visional Provisional battalions 'batting lt up" In the championship preli-, minaries. ; This year's tournament will consist of two parts fcompeti fcompeti-tlon tlon fcompeti-tlon between units within each battalion for battalion cham championship pionship championship and competition be between tween between battalion-winners for the Post crown. The battalion cham championship pionship championship will be a double elimi elimination nation elimination tourney with the Post champions representing Fort Kobbe in the USARCARIB com company pany company level' Softball playoffs. Each team will consist of no: more than 18 men Including coaches and managers. Person Personnel nel Personnel are eligible to play with the units which they, are assigned to only. . Appropriate awards will be made to units winning battalion 'cliampioti&'KTps'aY weli as to the Post, victors." '--- Lucky Stride Plays Lc;i:nniiircs Sunday I AiioCher Taclf Ic T w I light j League baseball game was rained out yesterday aespue the fact that the. "dry season" officially started Dec. 15. Luc. ky Strike and the Junior Col Col-lege lege Col-lege team were the clubs scheduled to see acfon last nltbt. v - . The Lucky Strikers will tan tan-gle gle tan-gle with the American Legion nine at Balboa Stadium Sun Sunday day Sunday at p.m. , ! f L. FOR RENT. Housea FOR RENT: Haute No. 135. laraiiKe4 $100: 2 kearooma, livirtf-aining raom, kttchen, apa apa-ciaui ciaui apa-ciaui rarel ((arrfeal. ''Uibanixa ''Uibanixa-ciaa ciaa ''Uibanixa-ciaa Miraflarc." Pkana 2-1456. FOR RfNT: Chalet, ipacieua f raaaala, aaiat aeiflhbaraaaa!. 3 3-1201 1201 3-1201 or 2-2724. FOR RfNT: Chalet: three tea! rooms, 47th Street, lHa Vitfa. Phane Claytoo (110 office haVrt, after Cwranaa 5111. AVAILAILI MARCH 1ST, far eavea weekts Cattaf a ia Golf Heifhti, with ipaciova jroundl. Completely farnisheol. Three air air-cona'tttonea' cona'tttonea' air-cona'tttonea' fceJroomj; inclutfinf electricity, telephone,' water ( hot-col i, fat. leaJix washing machine. lice lie nt maid 30 day t only lileept maiel aaarten) To Total tal Total turn: $575. Phone Panama 3-2000. - FOR RENT: Chalet: 1 beal beal-beeroomi. beeroomi. beal-beeroomi. parch, living-dininej raom, maid's roam. Via Parraa No. 131, Phana 3-0754. FOR RENT:-SpacioM house. 3 bedrooms, bathroom, living room, dinina room, kitchen, maid's room with bathroom, ejaraflo, yard. 14th Street No. 3, Saa Francisco,. 20 meters from Via elitario Perret, $110 Phone 3- 02(0. '., -'V;,.''. ;,.". FOR RENT: Recently baik cor corner ner corner haute, 50th and 10th Street. 3 bedrooms, maid's ream, ate. Call telephonei Panama 3-3170 or 3-1260. Want The Best In PICK ONE OUT From These Beauties., '55 BUICK Hard top ....... . .$2800 '53 PLYMOUTH Fordor $1300 '55 CHEVROLET Bel Air Tudor .$2300 '53 DODGE Station Wagon $ 875 '52 MERCURY Hard Top ...... .$1200 '51 FORD Victoria Tudor $ 800 '51 PONTIAC Hard Top ........$ 875 '49 FORD Clu Coupe $450 ' O COLPAN Reconditioned O COLPAN Safety Checked O COLPAN Guaranteed WANT TO MEET? -j,-,,., -'--Th '. .- A ccioijYUcnfitccLoa rhx KENNETH Ficlt cp year INVITATION TICICET ASK FOR ED ABBOTT OR FRED MADURO FAST FRIENDLY FINANCING Panama 2-1033 Colon -44 I Position Offered WANTED; Beauty operator. Must speak Enalijh and Spanish, mutt be efficient to do every. thine,. Cerwnda leauty Shop, 2113.; WANTED: Accountant with experience lex 177, Cole. WANTED: Experienced State Stateside side Stateside beauty operator, full or parttime. Condi's leauty Shop, Cocofi Clubhouse. Nary 3112. WANTED: Two girl masseuses, both to work permanently. Call Carunda Beauty Shea, 2113. INTERVIEWS mow bein( held far 'additional sales staff in car and track departments. Experienced men may apply ta Mr. Edd Ab Abbott, bott, Abbott, Celpan Motors. OPPORTUNITY for bilinaual se secretary. cretary. secretary. Apply to Mr, Edd Ab Abbott, bott, Abbott, Colpan Meters, No. 34 Automobile Row. FOR RENT Rooms FOR RENT: Famished larga bedroom for bachelor, private bathroom and entrance, all screened, Idle Vista, $50. Tel Telephone. ephone. Telephone. 3-I64S. FOR RENT: Clean furnished rooms,' maid's service, centrally located. I Street 11-31. Phone 2-1541. HelpVVanted WANTED: Expert Cook, Irini reference. Good salary, Federico , leyd Avenue No. D4-22. UT.iT.iRh Isles 7 J XMhpankOrianizstionpresants CARS? . DINAH SHERIDAN -JOHN GREGS0N- KAY KENOALl MORE :'i m mtnlmtt fimt ' ' '-- The lareest on Automobile Bow 03 I 5 ! lit it! tlsl . I i i V t L 4CM U L 10 Alan L.acid. in: . "in : "Kant S.UITU" Also "10 RTO A LA MtTRTE" ' 'VOL' BANK NIGIITA i Burt Lancaster in: . ".MAN OF BRONZE" "TOMORROW IS ANOTHER DAY". KEiJTL'AL71::cirfl "oc. 40c. CinemaScope and technicolor wees end release . John Wayne Lana Turner in: .. "THE SEA CHASE" Search the seven sras you won't find excitement like this...! SHOWS: 1:15, 3:46. 6:17, 8:50 LUX THSATuE fcOc. : 30c. Week end release The bombshell story of the "Fixer" E. G. Robinson In: "ILLEGAL" He beats any rap till he raps on the door of An?el O'llara. . SHOW'S: 3:07, 4:52, :54, S:5S JOHNNY WEISMULLER NEIL HAMILTON hi: TARZAN THE APE MAY' with Maureen O'Sullivan The fctvst famous musical "FRENCH CAN CAN" : with ... Maria Felix Jean Cabin and Francoite Arnoud Plus: FERNANDEL In: "Ali Boba And The 40 Thieves" Comedy RANK NIGHT $300 Randolph Scott in: TEN WANTED MEN Also Kim Novak in: "FIVE AGAINST THE HOUSE" VICTORIA "CHICAGO M.NUICAl Also- "THE SWORD OF THE AVENGER" Social and Otli Box mrPan a ma tenui 5e Bij Staffers or Box 5037, on f?U cf ny&(f$mni. Jt Jl L hi, I t 'PtMmi 2-0740 or IVUI bU'-MV t tm. any. Ex-President Of Ecuador uonored During urui Visit To Capital Oily wmm ilii wlllll t MISS vAUROIMGUERRAf Oretnlzatlon. will be crewne ' ball m Balboa. fich notice far Inclusion In this ealumn should suhmliit ia tvpe. wrlttrn form and mailed I one ( tht box numhtn listed daily in "So "Social cial "Social and Otherwise," or delivered by hand to the offlte. Notices of neetinfs cannot be accepted by tele telephone. phone. telephone. Mr. Wilkr T Sptak Bdfort Cellcgt Club Study Grvup The. Thursday Morning Study Group of the Canal Zone College I Inh will mppt at thp hnmo nf Mrs tx-fjesiaent oi tcuaaor uaw Franklin K. Van Zandt, 544-A, Cur Flaza Lasso, wno stoppea on m un(iu Heights next Thursday at ranama iur one uay u. .j9:30 a.m. Mrs. John R. Hammond nome to Quito, was guest of WiJl assist as co-hostess. Honor at a dinner given weanes-l ur: Robert C. Walker, Chief evenuig by tnei Auioassador of internal Security, will speak on US Faces Poser Too Much Leisure CHICAGO -(UP W Americans! must learn to live irr a society in which leisure time plays a more important role than working time, according to John W. Fulton, ex executive ecutive executive vice president of the Amer American ican American Music Conference. The "promised four-day week about 1965" will make the who'e- euine use oi iree time a major Cjlovei Call Ca 7 sjror -are f7 SOME women now grown who were brought up in a more formal age would just as soon go outo f the house withoutt heir dresses as' go gloveless. j But what gloves. There seems to be a tendency among women who oDserve me letter, rather than e Ecuador; v!r.Hugo Moncayo, Dr. Qu'ntero Fe is Feted at Many areweii t-ar.s . Minister of foreign Relations Alberto Boyd was host yesterday, La Boca Civic Council becunty trends m this area. Members have been asked to note that the place of this meeting dif differs fers differs from that shown in the year book. iiiauiit.i ... ... national problem, he explained !lne ipir"; 01 u,5 nicetv- t0 consid consid-Studies Studies consid-Studies show that the amount of'er any plece rumpled ragt hat I once a glove as beme better, 7..'' T''.." '"c-uotiai c-than nothing. Its not. Better bare hands than' the gardening gloves some wom-j en frantically seek out before ODen-l ling .the front door. At least- the "Training for such conditions nfi hands re clean. tiv;ities is rising faster than any other segment of the American economy, he .added. at Hotel Ei Panama tor a lunch eon honoring N the Colombian ambassador, i)r. Teofilo Cjuinte Cjuinte-ro ro Cjuinte-ro Fex, who is leaving soon for nis new station in Mexico. Monday at 7:30 p.m. On Weonesaay, Lit. Quinteioi E. L. Fawcett, president of Fex was honored at a luncheonjthe Conai'ess of Local Rate Civic given Dy tne ambassador ofiCouncils and other representa Meets Monday Evening The regular, monthly meeting of the La Boca Civic Council will be held at the study hall cn life must begin now," Fulton said. "The children now in school will face1 this serious problem by the time they reach maturity. If they are not prepared, we will find more and more of the social prob lems arising from the boredom and maladjustment that come to persons with lime they don't know how to use." France and Mrs. Lionel Vasse. Engelkes Announce Birih of Son Mr. and Mrs. Herbert O. Enl Enl-gelke gelke Enl-gelke announce the birth of their first son, third child, on Wednesday at Coco Solo Hospi Hospital. tal. Hospital. The baby will be named Herbert Wood. His maternal grandfather is Mr. Albert Wood of Whlttier.l at the J. W. B. on La Boca Road, vuui., ttiiu ins paternal grana-' Balboa mowier, Mrs. Cristobal. tives of the congress will be in attendance Reports from c o m m i ttees functioning in the council arc anticipated. Balboa Club Meets Wednesday The Balboa Women'i Club will hold their regular monthly meeting Wednesday, at 9 am Mary Engelke of Mrs. Dorothy Stroup will speak about "Interpretative Ha waiian juances." Several of the club member will demonstrate the dances. A coffee hour will precede the meeting with Mrs. Florence Klrpper. Mrs. Bryan, and Mra. of .the YMCA.-USO .Girls Service, iti cueen tomorrow ft, a coronation s MR. EUGENE LOMBARD HONORS LONGTIME PERSONAL FRIENDS OF. LOCAL PRESS . Entertaining at cocktails yesterday, Mr. Eugene Lombard honored longtime personal friends of the Isthmian press at' his Gorgas Road home on Balboa Heights. Others at the small affair included guests from Panama and officials of the Canal. Mrs, Dorn Honored By Mrs. Gray In honor of Mrs. Frances Dorn of HOt Springs, Ark., who is vis visiting iting visiting here, Mrs. Elizabeth B. Gray gave a luncheon at her home In Balboa on Tuesday Guests included the Mesdames Alice Bryan, Margaret Coffey, Margaret Coleson, Caroline De De-deaux, deaux, De-deaux, Ellen Edwards, Jessie Grimlson, of Gorgona, Mary Kelleher, Dora Krldle. Lyda Jonej, Margaret Hibonate or Gorgona, Florence Mallett, Lil Lillian lian Lillian Sneckenberger, Louise Soy Soy-ster ster Soy-ster nd Mary Kate Underwood. A clever autograph book had been made with faces of the la dies mounted on bodies cut from magazines. Each guest auto autographed graphed autographed her "picture" and this was then given to Mrs. Dorn as a humorous memento of the oc casion. , . frnnlzAf.Inn unit resident of rnfllnj,4 r.. Panama, has heen plertprl Queen At I'sn.ium r c-..j. - ,----.) i ptu v.., ouiltlilT fnr lOSft hv the mllitarv nersnn- A vgiintina. r, nel who attend the weekly danc es. ' .,.." : A ; Valpntlna'a rnnji.ii.ki Dance will be held ftt the USO USO-JWB JWB USO-JWB Armed Forces service Cen- ter fin ffTinriaiT f a.ia Aurora It IS vears old and was1 HnliHav riAonratiin. r j.. 'born m Chiriqui Province. She; light atmosphere and' music to" (has had three years of secretar-jthe latest recorded hit tune -iii 'i omulI. vY.icw aivcu wuau iiri v onjuycu. ne young ladles of hobbles were she replied that,the USO-JWB Club have been she r like : dancing- and country sent invitations to this affair music. She also'stated that she A cordial invitation is extend would like to travel and learned to military personnel and vmci iau(iuaB:a. tuupies 10 attend. Rriff. Gen. T.nnl, V trtohtnwpr (CnUnued M P Chief of staff, USARCARIB. and Colon IAWC Plan Card Party Tomorrow Members of the Colon I.A.W.C. are having a dessert card party and fashion show tomorrow at Coco solo Officers club at 12:30.! Edith Brown as hostesses. nusiesses ror tne axialr are Mrs Robert Leigh and Mri, John Gorin. Their committee members are Mesdames Tito Belanger; Frank tanavagglo, Maximo CarrizdJ viutcuo uoiiunguez, victor Doss- man, .luis Ducruct, ivo Ferg none, percy Francey, Augusto Lara, Julia Leignadler, John Craig, Robert Townsend, Ruth Weygand, Chas. Perrot. Jr... nn. ra Hanson and Miss Ada Maryi This is also a reminder for the ladies playing cards to be sure to bring their own cards Miss Guerra'To'Seftit Crowned Tomorrow1 tf At YMCA-USO Ball The annual Coronation Ball of the Balboa Y.M.C.A.-TJSa Will be held tomorrow at 8:15 p.m. Miss Aurora Guerra, a mem member ber member of the "Y" Girls service or- WRONO TECHNIQUE Jadg, Guthrie crow., dull- nr .Si, After "SK man of the committee of man. rfncin V.A.;..'. agement of the Y.M.C.A. win acVVThe cop, SJtffi t i wimwuco, mi. oui a roaring bonfire by uuvmng suowoaus on n. This dance is .open to military personnel their vives and mem members bers members of the Y.M.CA. Girls' Serv Service ice Service Organization. EGG SONG .' DES MOINES (UP) Sug Suggestion gestion Suggestion from a Des Moines cook: fni nprfonr cnflLiwkilA " It also commemorates the 15th, "Onward .Christian Soldiers" once once-birthday birthday once-birthday of the U.S.O. which if yon want rhem mediim-botled,' wag formed at the beginning of sing it twice, for hard-boiled, three World War II. ; times. DcntbaTdcf:::! Ai bMck r hr yew wn backyard, rvnlon rH COPPtHt' IONI. Get rodioni reiorl fan.,' COPPEITONE'ilonelmandcotod kifaf keep compkm!ot yavthM. . y COPflTON tedor n Kquirf, tree), tetian ar proy,', : ?' Sunfofi Oil, toliosW (ream f.'gyBocfors Deodorant Discovery jr. Gloves should be stored and maintained with care if they are" going to speak of their owners as y ladies. They should be washed, 1 cleaned or reolaeed. if necessarv.1 r J If they're white, they should be' eallyw hite. Fingernails should not be poking through the ends of the fingers. I r Dress gloves shouldn't be. used; J for dirving the car and vice versa, I .,. for the black palms and clenched! fingers that the grip of a steering wheel produces are nothing anyone! mmmm wants to shake. I Leather gloves should.be stored flat in plastic or otherwise non-j oil-absorbing c a s e s. All gloves i. should be cleaned, washed or thrown into the housecleaningbin before the fingers take on a curl of their own. ,07 COUPLES! i Tike advantage of the RLM Family Plan , to All EUROPE. Fly together now and save $200 or more? Also your children fly at . big savings! ' Enjoy your KLM Family Flight, : .far. further infermotien: SEE YOU TKAVEt AGENT ar KLM at 21 A 12 Tivoll Avenue, Fonenta. Tel. 2-2331 ar 2 3372. worid'S fmsr airline HUM It Of A I DUTCH vsMjl)odi dirndl (LaAAifLcdi " t'VI riil emu Exclusive DIstrtbuloTf. IRVING ZAPP COMPANY, S, A. 'let. a-!lMfe mwMm MULL Summer time, at work or play, calls for extra deodorant care. Don't risk offending any time! Get full 24-hour protection against underarm odor with MUM. ' : Used erne daily, tfn grant MUM guards against odor bacteria longer -betterl Safe for normal skin and fabrics too! ; M-3 Is the secret! Exclusive deodorant based originally on doctor's discovery contains M-3, which destroys odor-causing bacteria . perspira perspiration tion perspiration odor cannot even Start. Oiio CREAM DEODORANT will Mtdrj tut in tht "rj y i. -iL f .;V'.:f: :: . !v ( n ' tjWa.,! i .. .fc:::t.:F;-:-;S;tef' '-00 -J''" WHEEL OF, CHANCE j It's th wheel of your can' No "matter how careful you are .', .'how well V'.'H you.drlve. There's always a chancei A bad smash up. A wrecked pocket. i ', book. Unless your insurance Is right, and to be sure your insurance is V . right; call: ' 1 - FRED HUDDLESTON Telephone Panama 2-5000 :('n He knows how much you should carry in what types fire, theft, ,r , collision,' liabtlity, basic and extended medical. Have him arrange adequate .r ..... protection for you Y your family, your guests, your pocketbdok. - ALWAYS remember, the wheel .of your car is a wheel of chance. Handle ''-- it with care. Advt. 1 ; f 'i ;-t s SATL'fiDAY, Feb. 11 CORONATION, BALL i The rowrnnof Queen tlzzle I bvMarcela, r Queen of Fantasy, and the beautiful throne by Manuel Ciervides are a fascinating show! , TJie grand "coronation ball, led by the i queen and her lively court, goes on until the early hours. Dress formal or semi-formal. ' ' :.- ; SUNDAY P0LI ERA NIGHT The once-a-year parade of Panama's beautiful national costumes! A. show that you can, ' be part of Mf you've no costume, buy.'a . native-hat 1o join the fun. MONDAY "MAMARRACH0S" NIGHT i 'I he costume -night everybody. loves! Come as your imagination prompts you. . a pirate; a baby. . - a beactt-eomber,,,. but come.and, have iua galore! TUESDAY "COMPARSA" NIGHT The tehlf ie wind-up of the 4-dav celebration when the fun goes on till the dawn "burial of th fish." Youll enjoy iti more, too, if you come with your friends irt a comparsa (a group similarly dressed or in costumes carrying out a theme.) Call our publicity department to arrange special music for your group's entrance. THERE'S M0 FUN LIKE CARNIVAL FUN h. FIESTA, PANAMA-STYLE FEb 11, 12, 13 & 14 pffi!s;::5.'ovER tiie exciti;:5 fou.i i::s!it$ her majesty lizzie From 9 p.m. in the beautiful patio i -I VB'.'.;- 'iADr:'.'cs:PN PRICES " "Saturday Coronation .... $250 per person "Sunday Pollera Night "... .'2.50 per person Monday Mamarrachos . 2.00 per person i ' Tuesday Comparsa Kight .3.00 per person l THREE ORaiESTILSJ!M. , CLARENCE MARTIN'S : LtCHO AZCARRAGA'S"1 QUEEN'S MURQA (BAND) u Come,' join in.the most colorful fun of the year! ... Be a part -of. Carnival every night FUN GALORE! MUSIC! EXCITEMENT! LIQUOR AVAILAELE DY THE EOTTLE A- VI. . 4 I il I Si v A Kirkcby Ho'.i'l . 1 4.1.1. reservation early, l Call Max, 3-1-J60 J itjdat, rrr-rA7vT t, r:j f AGE EIGHT TCTZ PANAMA AMTRICA AN IXEEFEXDrXT DAILY iZZT.iYTTl Sociai and Otli enuise Co itinuvJ i e - Farewell Party To Fete Ity-two coeds from the Universi- J Departing Penwomen tf w "'-- -...iii,ly oil Uie A "despedida" honoring thei"1'1 ""u-r "e uuap,tts o artists, Elenor Edwards and Ufc0 Camp Snows, inc., to i Gladys Barnard will be given at!e""er i"c uimmiy iruopi. the home of Mrs. Pat Markum"" e In Balboa Heights on Wednes-!one. oe spcuai guests u day, to which members of the Uit8e Uuj. aiwuh wrm wrm-Canal Canal wrm-Canal Zone Branch of the Na-ial lc, wmortow, ai tne Arm tional League of American Pen:" navy uud a- ron aowoui women have been invited t Mrs. Edwards is movlne with her husband and family to Puerto Rico. When her husband retires next month, Mrs. Barnard is Miami, fionaa. leaving with him. to make their home in Rhode Island. Quen Lii Returning Her Maje&iy, im I, Queen of Cauuvai w nutei ,1 1" aaama re returns turns returns today 10 Panama, alter a denghtiul stav of one week in Indiana Belles' To Attend College Club Tea "The Belles of Indiana," thir TWIN FEVER NILES, Mich. sets of twin calves were born dur ing a 10-day period on the John Foster farm near here. Also returning are her mother, Mis. Suazo, Miss Aura capriles and Mrs. Auorey E, Kline, pub public lic public relations director of the Ho Hotel.'' tel.'' Hotel.'' yueen Liz will be met at the airport by her friends and the hotel Is sending the Queen's Band (Murga) to the Airport so (UP) Threei as to welcome Queen Liz with meir merry music. -J. 02UCiOUS PREPAREO N AM INSTANT -ANO IT IS 100 PURE COFFEE If ITS tOKMtfV. IT MT T it ooe -'ii. i' locale 01 Disfricl Episcopal Service Changed To Panama The possibility of rain has caus caused ed caused a cuange in the pirtee of tqe district missionary service of the Episcopal church, which was fix-1 ed for Balboa ball park on Sunday' alternoon at 4 o'clock. J. ! I: j i ft --K-cBi,:tilii 3 J oil f Looking south for a winter holiday Or a business trip means planning a minimal wardrobe that will pack without a whimper. Ana this, as wise travelers know, means knits and more knits. For those hours of sitting on the plane (left), a front-button knit dress of pebbly silk and wool that looks like tweed shows no muss or wrinkle. For sunny climes (center), I cocktail sheath knitted of orlon, cotton and linen emerges from the suitcase per perfect, fect, perfect, for cool wear. Indispensable for wear under knits (right) i a bra that shows not a bit of bulge. This one molds the midriff to smoothness with nylon and elastic. Christian Dior Eliminates Bosoms From New Fashions PARIS. Feb. 3 (UP)-ChristianiWorn with straight and narrow J Dior took thn bosom out of ladies'' skirt. It is a variation of the "cane- Marking the close of, th 36th fashions today with his new "ar-you" shown by other dressmakers, annual convocation of the mission- row look." f I Full skirts, cut in a new man- ary district of the Panama Canal Dior presented a silhouette; ner, highlighted the evening scens. Zone, the service will be held in- straight and thin as an arrow." As full as the torso is narrow, stead at St. Paul's church, Pana- He flattened the bust and erased' these skirts puffed and swayed ma City, at the same hour pre- the curves which featured his "A" over a construction of panniers, nf nthpr vpa. I hoons ard solid boards. Scheouled as nreachpr, is th .. The fashion leader's showing1 r Fullness often started just under Ven. Mainert J, Peterson, arch- was the highlight of the Paris the bust. ing on a visit with Mrs. Peterson t U firm;y settled the1 ;'iook" for Jamaica next week to take wwch other designers nave ap- IU WMlt WIVES FACE TOUGH TAS SLOWING AGING HUSBANDS K mencan m enu GIVE APPLE BROWN BETTY NEW QUALITY WJTH FRUIT By GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Food and Markets Editor part in tne missionary Camoaitrn being sponsored by the diocese of Jamaica. The office of evening prayer will be used, in which the Very Rev. Malcolm R. MacDonald J Dean of the Cathedral of St. Luke, 1 MeniccUci, an Italian office clerk proached, with high bosom wheth er prominent or flat, high waist, broad shoulder, thin hips. There was immediate reaction.! "An ualy thing," said Marioj wul say the opening sentences. The first and second lessons have been assigned to Archdeacon Ed Edwin win Edwin C. Webster and Archdeacon William L; Ziadie of Costa Rica. respectively. Prayers and grace by Archdeacon Arnold C. Waldock of Nicaragua will precede the ser sermon, mon, sermon, while closing prayers and the blessing will be pronounced by Bishop Gooden. Archdeacon Lem Lemuel uel Lemuel B. Shirley of Panama is mast master er master of ceremonies. Other clerics not officiating will be vested at the service, for which singing will be rendered by the combined choirs from parishes on both the Atlantic and Pacific sides. The Rev. John A. Spalding will direct, with Earl C. Keeney of the cathedral as organist. "Bosoms are important to worn en. What is actress Sophia Lor- en going to do now?" "Then there is nothing left to women,'' snapped Mme.. Christine; Raud. "It's a shame." I Nearly 50 women jammed Dior's plush salons to see his col collection, lection, collection, the most-awaited event of the Paris spring fashions. They j oohed and they aahed, they clapped and they groaned. The silhouette torso line rose straight to the shoulders. T h e waist went directly up, ending just under the flattened bu&t marked by belts and drapes. The main details of Dior's 175 175-rnhfl rnhfl 175-rnhfl collection Carried the major I trends that have appeared in the other fashion collections wmcn opened this week. Star of tne collection was me two-piece dress, called the "cur "cur-cao." cao." "cur-cao." It is a short, flat pullover bolero to tfvo thw Wo to your cofficj tTytw wi i to rank ta usszing discovery thtt 21 ctt irorJng tims, di a square of SATTNA t9 four hot tarch before applying to clothea, Vilh. SATTNA your iron doesn't drag or stick, Cere is no possibility of wrinkling them. EATINA gives your clothes a beautiful glosa Caish, leaving them "like-new." They will smell cesh and stay cleaner longer. toy SAUNA today, n4 yu will nf grMlar at In your Ironing nd btttar mpfantm fci your cteSh. 1 'T mi mum f r ZZ 1 L.. .r r British Probe Charge Chinese Cirl Was Hounded ' HONG KONG, Feb. S (UP) -British government officials said today they were investigating Com Communist munist Communist China's charges that U.S. consulate officials here "tracked and hounded" a Chinese school girl. The Communist New China News Agency, quoting a local newspaper story, said in a broad broadcast cast broadcast that U.S. officials "forcibly subjected" the girl to search Jan. 25, and questioned her about her family. A consulate spokesman refused to comment on the story.' The British Colonial Office here was reported to be annoyed with American methods in investigating passport and j visa applicants. ; , f STILL ON JOB HARTFORD, Conn. (UP) Arthur Lathrop still commutes daily to a bank where he started working at the age of 58. He's now 88. r 8 A L B O A TOM OR ROW l ; When, j! Great iX Talents 7 ) t : V Get Together... 1 IT'S' W I! It Mk Ail U&-4al m CINenuScop l En How can you help a husband "take it easy" when he refuses to admit that he has reached the age when he oueht to start slowinirl we asked Demetria avlor of aown ivew York, one of the best of food That's the question one reader thinker-uppers in the country, to of this column asks, and it is one give us new variations on old- that probably confronts a good fashioned Brown Betty. Her re re-many many re-many middle-aged wives married Plies. as you can see, a requiet to men who don't want to face delicious. me tact oi their age I and COLORI Kelly I; UAN hit tonga from v ! M--M V ALBUM I V DA1LEY !t,yv Lflll liULII IVi .f k - Ciiarisse Gray U ( - LATE SHOWS TONIGHT 10:30 P. M. DIABLO HEIGHTS' I MAR GAR IT A " t hGeHcTi i ?D I "LUST FOR GOLD" It takes a World of tact to make a man recognize that he isn't as young as he used to be without making him feel old. Yet that ia exactly what many a wife has to be able to do. The best thing a wife can do, perhaps, is to try to gradually change a husband's pattern of after-work living, without showing ner nana. Tact Is The Answer She can usually manage to have a few more quiet evenings at home, to shorten evenines out so that a man gets enough sleep, to get him interested in the kind of hobbies and outdoor activities. that aren t too strenuous. Often she can get him away for weekends, which means getting him completely away from his job, by dreaming up short trips and selling him on the idea. ; When women get to the age where they ought to alow down, life usually arranges things so that they can. Their children grow up and their work loads are lightened and they don't feel any need to prove they are still young by in indulging dulging indulging in more violent physical exercise than they should. But a man's work load isn't au automatically tomatically automatically lightened when he hits middle-ag.e In fact, it is often heavier. If his younger companions want to hunt from sunup to sundown, or play 36 holes of golf in the broiling sun or whatever, the middle-aged man doesn't want to lag behind."" .-rr.-- .... So he really needs to have his wife gently and tactfully lead him into gradually Blowing down the pace that kills so many men in their middle years.. ftjA MOVIES TY JLO J- I 11 fcy Inkine Jelhasta. ); I JUDGE CONFESSED NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UP) -Traffic Judge Charles Henchel fined a driver who gave a police man a hard time for ordering his car towed away, then offered this bit of solace: "I wouldn't want anvone to know it, but my car has been towed away twice. I paid." Three-Fruit Berry (Makes 6 servings) One cup firmly packed brown sugar, 3 cups soft bread crumbs, Vi teaspoon cinnamon, V teaspoon nutmeg, 1 large ripe banana, 2 apples, 1 1-pound can whole cran berry sauce, juice and grated peel : of 1 lemon, 3 tablespoons butter ; or margarine. combine sugar, bread crumbs. cinnamon and nutmeg. Reserve 1 cup of the mixture. Peel and slice banana, then sprinkle-with lemon juice. Core, pare and slice apples tmn; combine with banana slices. Arrange alternate layers of the crumb mixture and fruit mixture in a shallow casserole. Spread cranberry sauce ove the top. Com bine reserved 1 cup crumb mix ture with lemon peel. Sprinkle over cranberries, dot with butter. Bake in modate oven (375 dees t.) 30 minuts or until apples are ten tender.. der.. tender.. ....... . pple Banana Betty (Makes servings) Two large cooking apples, 3 firm, yellow bananas; V cup sugar, Vi teaspoon cinnamon, V teaspoon salt. 3 cups soft bread crumbs, 3 tablespoons butter or margarine, melted. 1 Pare, core and slice apples thin. Cut bananas in 44-inch slices. Com bine fruits, sugar, cinnamon and salt Combine bread crumbs and butter or margarine. Place alter nate layers of crumbs and trust in greased baking dish, beginning and ending with crumbs. Cover; bake in moderate oven (375 degrees .) about 40 minuts, or until apples are tender. Remove cover, bake about 5 minutes longer to brown crumbs. Serve hot, with frozen whipped cream. DON'T TELL ANYONE BANBURY. Conn. -(UP) A year after having triplets. Mrs. Ed ward Schlemmer tried to wunnow news that her 19th child had been born. "We just didn't want to have any fuss over this one," sne ex plained. HOLLYWOOD (NEA) Holly-1 wood and GrapeVINE: Humphrey Bogart s smarting unaef a printed quote credited to Herman Wouk, author of "The Caine Mutiny." After seeing Bogart (in the movie) and Lloyd Nolan (on stage and TV) as Captain Queeg, Wouk gives Nolan the nod for ,the best charac characterization. terization. characterization. -The author's reported quote: "It's carious about th. way act ors can b.comt tn. characttr you crttttd. I can n.ver think of Que.g gain without sing Lloyd Nolan." RKO is denying a printed report that Marge and Gower Champion will star in re-makes of the Fred Astaire-Ginger Rogers .fllmusicals. But there's a big movie in the Champion's future since playing the Cocoanut Grove here . The ABC-TV network is in Noel Coward's dog house. A publicity release before the TV showing of his dramatic 1940 war movie, "In Which We Serve," labeled the film "a great comedy." A movi. star who became TV's Mr. District Attorney just solved "The Case of the Type-Casting Jinx" ,'- himself. Always the scoundrel before he became Mr. D. A., David Brian landed his first romantic role opposite Ginger Rog Rogers ers Rogers in "The First Traveling Sales Saleslady." lady." Saleslady." Says Brian: "Once an actor gets hooked up with a type he's in for trouble. I had to learn the hard way." I Martin mnA I Auric mAnmm ml Paramount: A SI Cuddlesburger "wv won't ste.r you wrong" on th." studio caf. m.nu. Cuddles Is th. nam. of st..r emoting with '.m In "Pardn.r." Tht Witnt! Groucho Marx flipped it while reading a cafe menu "Hmm mm Virginia Ham. That's a good name for an actress Not in the Script: At Frascati's: "I told you that Grace Kelly was uiiiuiuuuj, 11 UJ lUUiUii t DUC 5CIU9 down and marry an ordinary mU uonaire like the rest of us?" : This Is Hollywood, Mrs. Jonetj Gtorg. S.ndtrs, in "Death of Scoundrel," begging forgiven!, for being a heel. The doll listening, to his plea is. .x-wif. lit Zs Cabor. r Previewed: Just anything doesn't go, as film fare these days. But; go, go, go to see "Anything Goes.' Bine Croshv. DnnaU flTnnnnri Jeanmaire and Mitzi Gaynor go tot town with the help of Cole Porter' music.- i ,f I . i. Mickey Rooney, who Is replacing Donald O'Connor in the "Francis' series, just concluded another big; deal. He signed with NBC to re resume sume resume his TV career in a new filmed series, "Lucky the Lepre chaum." Mickey won't O.K. sec ond runs on his earlier "Hey, Mulligan" series until the new stan zas bit home screens. Frank Treatment given LeW Ayres' conscientious-objector sta tus during World War II on Ralph; Edwards' "This Is Your Life," has. released more controversial ma-, terial along the same lines;- "Cross roads producers just lensea "Pavement Pastor," starring Jeff Morrow as a real-life minister who fought against the draft and who went to the federal pen in Atlanta for his views. t Selected Shorts: Vic Mature" is getting $200,000 salary outright. nine 9 rtxr nnt nf th nrnfit fa his current "Zarak Khan" starrer . . Dana Wynter is an object lesson in persistence. A couple of years ago she played a small part in "Melba" and landed on the cut ting room floor, wow sne s t ox s nottesi uncoming star . upromy Dandridge as- Cleopatra? The idea's cooking for the screen's "Carmen Jones" in a British movie. ,' SHOWING AT YOUR SERVICE CENTER THEATERS TONIGHT! Balboa 4:30, 6:15, 800 ... IB-CONI)ITIONICI -' NOKtaAN WIS90KI rAAr.XT R'JTHSRFCRa "Tr::LEaSTe:" . REPUBLIC RCLUSl 6:15-7:55 DIABLO TITS Sterling HAYDEN . Yvonne DE CARLO "SHOTGUN ' 7:00 SYNDICATE" GAMBOA "CHICAGO ! fft. -sHorr.T" GATUN 7:08 "DAVT CROCKETT" Sat. "It's Alweys Ult Wether I Sit. HOB MATHIAS STORY" MARGARITA 6:15.7:55 CRISTOBAL 6:15-8:05 Aif-COBOlllOBCa Bob MATHIAS Jeffrey HUNTER Ward BOND Debre PAGET "BOB MATHIAS STORY" "SEVEN ANGRY MEN" Sat .WICHITA Sat. "SEVEN YEAR ITCH" ' p iiiaiMSMBMeMSBM (aWealHBtJaWMW i m MHHaVBBBiBiWHBaa PABA1RO 6:15 8:3C ; "YOUNG AT HEART" SANTA CRUZ 6:15 :1C "UN DIA DE VIDA IE If BOCA 7:08 "ULYSSES" CAMP BIFRT) 6:15 8:35 "PAID TO KILL" I , v.-.,.;'.:. .'.:. ' v. ?W -: :;:--':, : i ' ' rr:: ;- --:-:. :.:'...J y--ti::i'y-y:X''y-': 1 . LIGHT IN THE DARKNESS Caroline PurceU, 9, leaves school with joyous leap on the fifth anniversary of her delivery from blindness. Five years ago, the little girl from a farm near Cum ming, Ga., was said to have cancer, which was making her blind. Doctors said her eyes would probably have to be removed. But charitable persons in Atlanta took her to Mayo Clinic, where re re-diagnosis diagnosis re-diagnosis showed she did not have cancer and would see again.. Today she is a normal bright-eyed 'child, daughter of a tenant Xarmer of Big Creek community near Cummlng. r i, J It' X The dost mil'i for your baby .:.0 VPa 11 The best milk for. your baby Is pare, safe Klim milk. Doctors recommend it because it ia so dependable and easy to digest Fresh-flavored, nourishing Klim) milk helps children grow stronger and healthier . helps infants build sturdy bodies, bones and teeth. Ask for KlimI ...VITAMIN D ADDED , n n i n rn n M i i -I i .... I i ,.,!. wi L J y y "j o O ICMMIG OPi'Q a sGms Ms fi f I VUl VII I W WWW C Vi" W K -w .. "a. ., T1 1 7 7. V rt . 0 ;..d J,J -iyJ -y 0,:7"- 1 J j : i ! I I I H , V i! "II M H '11 U u u S I I in I. J u o M i i U Li U 7 U u u o y ii 1 1 o v.. j7 s THIS GUY'S BEEN HITI-And how he has! A sweeping right I hand drape? Steadmire Gille- son of Fifth Army group into a cortortionist's special dur during ing during bout in Hanau, Germany f End came in the fifth round. 1 ' ? . i. t A I' WORLD TITLE HOPEFUL De- 1 lL 1 Ail. L.ii s scenaani or me iom ceniury I Earl of Leicester,' this 16 16-I I 16-I year-old British girl, Yvonne I Sugden, is Britain's No. I i hope for international honors J in f igure skating. She s senior 1 champion in Great Britain. v - r Vl : U It?"? V'--" ; f n H s 4 .... ii "'M,.... v,, ..o.;l ,y Y'T 'if r I I ' I K I I W' I i ' I ii I Mr l 1 I -'A ; i rvMMA5TIC CREETiNG Cactain'of the touring team of Swiss gymnasts,' ack Gunthard m SCORING LEADER Furman's great basketball star, parrell (left) ereets Penn State gymnasts, Armanao vega, uuoeri ju mu mh pvnwcitcici,. r ujru, wu whw ww, w4 w r.,.w.( ; Jftey an exhibitioli performance Leu' is a Swiss exchange student and Olympic hopeful.., Alley.'on home court. He's averaging over 30 points a game. 4 - ; MARYLAND, THEIR ; MARYLAND;New deal in athletics at the University of Maryland set up this picture as new coaches. From left .are the governor, Tommy Morit, r new head coach, and Bob "Ward, the new assistant coach, f i i 1 SURPRISE! Thi? .i? the scene thaur thaur-prised prised thaur-prised many Viewers rci the : recent feather title fight -between Sandy -Saddler, the champ, and( Flash Elorde in. San Francisco. Saddler reaches for his mouthpiece, an, unusual action for a fighter. .Saddler, who retained his title,' explained that he had lost hls mouthpiece In ;a prey ibus bout when fans threw things in .the, ring jand 'al was swept away at the end of the round. Htstm.-sirtii' Vn 1 1 K 1 ( f'AN IN TKS MIDDLE Rochester's- Jack Twyman, grabs .' a rebound as two Knick players attempt to get in on the (cl. Action is from recent pro cege game in New York.. . FOUL! Recipient of the foul is George Mikan, the great ' pro. star. who. is ffiakipg acomeback' and the guilty one is- I big Walter Pukes. Mikan plays 'with"" the; I.rinncapi'U" Lakers in the National pro loop. Scene is New York City. itii i sin. N :' (iI . Urtt VIM l a : , ii 4 ;i 1 Gill 7'- ? 3 I 1 ; )..'. - J 1 1 It It King Features Syndics. THS PANAM A AFRICAN A.N INDLFENDENT DAILI NEV. SPAFta GMkiiie fcGai'tliy Seeks Seventli-otraigM 0 V Blakemere. JopGonfendersIh$600 Sprint At Juan Franco The Stud Chiriqui's promising: British thorough thoroughbred. bred. thoroughbred. Charlie McCarthy looms the prospective favor favorite ite favorite to register his seventh consecutive victory tomor tomorrow row tomorrow afternoon in the featured $600 seven furlong sprint for Class D imported horses at the Juan Fran Franco co Franco race track. The four-year-old brown son of Nearco-Comie Doll was a Dig dis disappointment appointment disappointment to his owners unti lash Christina JEye when- he scor scored ed scored his flrstVfccal victory. Since then the colt has improved steadi steadily ly steadily and now beasts a string of six more w,ins. ;:. ;, ;: Tomorrow's field, nowever, is by far the toughest Charlie McCarthy has been pitted against since gain gaining1 ing1 gaining1 winning form. Former top top-notcher notcher top-notcher Blakemere, ex-track cham champion pion champion Amorio and unbeaten new newcomer comer newcomer Reynold are included in the seven-horse field. Bradomin, Lexden and Vulcanizado are the ether scheduled starters, Alejandro Ycaza, just back from an; eight-meet suspension, has the tog up on Charlie McCarthy. Bias Aguirre will try for the fourth straight time to bring Blakemere home a winner. Guillermo Sanchez will ride Amorio. leading jockey Alfredo Vasquez will do the boot booting ing booting aboard Reynold. Julio Jime Jime-n&Jr., n&Jr., Jime-n&Jr., as usual, will guide his sis sister's ter's sister's Vulcanizado, Hector Ruiz will handle Lexden's reins and Virgilio Castillo will pilot Bradomin. Reynold, a highly rated Chilean Chilean-fcred fcred Chilean-fcred fouryear-old, was a smashing upset winner last Saturday in his very first local start. In that race the highly totited-Clobe Trotter was a complete flop, paving the way for Reynold's juicy payoff; Amorio returned from a long lay layoff off layoff last week and his performance was not too bad. A little improve- Juan Franco Tips By CONRADO 1 Maruja Gonzaga 2 Double Four G. Trotter 3 Regla Conquistador ; 4 Curaialena Avispa 5 Nacho Don Grau 6 Merry Mason V. River JValley Star Lazy Brook Rtscal Old Smuggler a Tr Dnrla Real 10 Blakemere Ch. McCarthy w .111 11 Joe rouemo . MARGARITA LEAGUE The standings remained prac practically tically practically unchanged this week with only a little change In the won and lost column. The Elks closed the gap pn the Police by taking three points from fourth place Powells, while the Cops ..ft. inKtniT three to the last place Butler and Son. The Navy burned up the al alleys leys alleys bv rolling a 975 scratch eame to take high single game for this half and were good enough in the next two games to take three points from the post Office. Juskowskl of the Navy was high in Class Cwlth a 588 series while Hogan of the post Office took Class A honors with a 550 series. The Aces moved up to be one of four teams tied for last place bv taking two from Wright Bros. 't. i. nl 4-Via fmir dTl- ker of Wright Bros, was high Jn teUn- around that it Is his first time taking this honor. We wl'l have to check the records onj that. See you next week. STANDINGS Won Lost 5 7 ' 9 11 , 12 12 12 12 police Elks 15 13 11 "Navy Powells post Office 8 Aces 8 Butler and Son 8 Wright Bros. ,....... 8 Police Fortner . 189 179 163 Cook .. 123 158' 201 Tully .... 140 138 126 Guest ..rf.lBfl-; 14 Martin . .. ; 1 168 170 31 402 404 448 529 But'i r ar.d Son , I I! . v. : - Conover 170 191 173 Brooks , 141 -133 145 Stroop . 1'T 191 133 'Torotnrl cr "M'-147' Sanders 1 111 145 534 467 41 440 2223 '1 f "0 22 32 741 EC3 Oil 775 21 '9 1 m Reynold nent and he could be a profitable upsetter. - Blakemere has been the runner runner-up up runner-up to Begonia nd Persiflage in his last two outings;;, fl'q should .be a tough nut to, crack. Vnirani7Hn, T.excen and Brado min will be rank outsiders but any of them could return a winner. This race should be thriller from start to finish. Ten other prospec prospective tive prospective humdingers are included on the card.,, , ... ''"A 'k-'y.- IT, ' v 4-1 1 l f .. (NEA Radio-Telephoto) WINS Sverre Btenersen of Norway poles along the Cor Cortina tina Cortina D'Ampezo, Italy," track in the '15-kilometer' eu. .s-rnuntry rare. t.ht second lialf of the 0- Iympic Nordic combined ski e- vent. fitenersen aggregaiea s points in the cross-country and the jomping phase to win the Nnrriip and eive Norwav its sec ond gold medal of the 1956 win ter games. .- v Elks Robinson ,..: 217 ,175 147 Rinehart: 177 17S 138 Kraka J.f. 181 138 i 49 Rudy 165" 174 '175 Bartram v. 170 189 157 -v 890 834 788 1 ''!' Towtlls 539. 40SI 44g 514J 496.. "" Eder1-.- ,. 148 152 174 'lf9 173.167 115 163 145 139 212 167 147 117 96 Wright J, Watson . Nordstrom 496, 431i Dougan . Wright,. C 96 744 707 833 2284 19 38 19 76 763 745 852 23G0 Navr .187 148 -188 168 Turner 154 174 179 .145 143 489 530 588 VanPeit .- 219. .190 Holder- v-VVl8Q .mi Haberthier w 201 -181; 498 B071 i ' Jro&i UHK Devoir;'. 7 Gibson -. Long ,t Brown,. Hogah j, 119 103 118 146 135 140 110133. 164 U2 ,127 178 208 n 168, ,179 340 421 407 437 550 2ins 63 '710 666 779 21. 21 21 .731. 687 800 2218 Aceg 156 163. 12i 172 144 163 Halliday ltcKeown stone-. -v 4-R 479 470 473 521 15S -164 lfil 167.182 124 168 159 194 M'Json Spinney 818 812' 761 2391 Wright Bros. ..':.' "' '.' '''.?.'',' I .' . . 153. -ISfi is'n aao Hicks".. Rantrne . 173 179 202 .554 . .160 153 134 447 . 199 168 167 534 -i-r"43 142153340 828 778 818 2424 22 22 22 66 . 975 860 797 2632 ' 850 800 840-241)0 ,419!Reccia mit7, 'Mitchell- . ' - -....""" .-- w.-. HE'S NOT POPULAR -Lord Clayton tittlcbrook receives a i royal going -oveV from- two opponents -during a four-man dwarf i wrestlTng match at Paris Palais Des Sports, Sky Low;Low. left. ! kicking him and Major Tom Thumb appl.es a facial massage, - Lord Clayton's partner was temporarily out of action at this time Juan Franco Graded Entries P.P Horse 1st Race "1" h Jockey Wgt. iportcd 7 Fgs. FIRST RACE OF J. Jimenez 115x V. Brown 105x A. Ycaza 118 B. Baeza 97x A. Valdlvia 115 R. Gomez 110 1 Gonzaga 2 My Dear 3 Tempestad 4 Firenze 5 Maruja 6 Turf Lodge 7 Gaucha 8 Alabarda 9 D. Duchess 10 La Enea G. Sanchez 115 R. Gamero 110 F. Godoy 105x M. Hurley 113 2nd Rac "Sptcial" 6V2 Fgs. SECOND RACE 1 Brisk 2 Racla 3 G. Trotter 4 Melendez 5 Double f our 6 Bou's Mate 7 Arpegio 8 Dawn Song H. Ruiz 105 R. Gamero 112 B. Aguirre 110 G. Sanchez 115 B. Baeza 103x A. Ycaza 112 J. Jimenez 109x G. Duarte 107x 3rd Rac. "G' Nativti 4'i Fgi. ONE 1 La Pampaninl B. Baeza lOOx 2 Regia G. Sanchez 115 3 Conquistador J. Padilla 106x 4 Asegurada A. Enrique 115 5 Papa Rorra A. Credidio 107x 6 Lady Dancer G. Montero 102x 4rh Rac "D-E" Native 1 Naranjazo 2 Rina ROi v 3 Ika 4 Sh. Time 5 Don Jaime 6 Avispa ; 7 Curazaiefia 8 Radical A. Vergara 119x H. Ruiz 107 " R. Gomez 108 A. Creididio 103x M. Guerrero 106 B. Aguirre 110 V. Brown lllx , B. Baeza 97x 5tb Race "B-C' Native 6 i F91. 1 TnlU R. Gamero 104 " B. Baeza lOlx 2 Valarla 3 Nacho 4 Don Grau A. Vasquez 118 G. Sanchez 117 A. Creididio 107x (Petite 6th Race Imported 7 Far FIRST RACE OF A. Creididio 105x 9 "hit AjfalVrtt T Rnrlriffno? 11R 4 Valley River B. Baeza 109x fv-Empire Magic K. Floreg 115 A Pin Warrrn n DutftA 1 1 Ov 4rJ J 1 1 v nciu Vt wutti vv iiua '7 Y. Prince V. Castillo 115 439 8M. Mason G. Sanchez 118 278.. ... Y 7ih Rate "6" Imported 7 Fgs.Purte $450.00 Pool Closet 4:05 SECOND RACE OF THE DOUBLE 1 1-X&ey SUr B. Aguirre 115 C. Ruiz 112 A. Ycaza, 118 ' H. RuiZ 115 2 Fellac 1 3 Espagirico 14 Dev. Club 5 C. Prince V. Rodriguez llOx 6 La7y Brook V. Castillo 115 7 Reflector R. Gomez 115 8 Amat ' F. Godoy lllx 9 Dixiprlncess G. Sanchez 118 10 Oro Purito O. Vasquez 109x 8th Race "H-2 . ... Imported 6 'j Fgt. Purse $400.00 Pool Closes 4:40 QUINIELA 1 Vedctte A. Creididio 102x 2 Amin Dldi E. Ortega 105 3 Old Smuggler V, R'drig'z 115 4 White Apron B. Aguirre 113 5 Regal Bliss A. Valdlvia J18, 6 Single Slipper R. G6mez 108 7 uoronelino v H. Kuiz 110 1 8 Riscal K. Flores 115 9th Race 'E" Imported ''' ONE 1 Clprodal ,G. Sanchez' 115 2 Fenix A. Ycaza 114 3 Tony A. Vasquez 118 4 M. Stuardo B. Aguirre 112 5 Onda Real H. Ruiz 110 6 Happy Abode R. Gomez 113 7 (Febrero II R. Gamero 113 8 (Mayflower J. Rodriguez 115 1 0th Race "D" Imported 7 Fgs. 1 Bradomin V. Castillo 118 2 Ch. McCarthy A. Ycaza 115 3 Lexden H. Ruiz 105 4 Blakemere B. Aguirre 118 5 Vulcanizado J Jimenez. llOx 6 Amorio G. Sanchez 118 7 Reynold A. Vasquez 115 llth Rate "F" Natives 6 Vi Fgi.Purte $275.00 Pool Closes. ... 1 College Girl F. Godoy 117x 2 .Arranquin A. Creididio 103x 3 Folletito A. Ycaza 111 4 Fuego B. Baeza 102x 5 Joe -- -V; Brown UOx V I COMMENT1 ODDS Purse $375.00 Pool CIosm 12:45 THE DOUBLE Rates good chance S-i Nothing to indicate : 50-1 Returns from layoff 4-1 Figures on form 2-1 Should be close up 3-1 Could upset here 5-1 Returns; good shape 3-1 Early speed only 15-1 In-and-outer 10-1 Returns from layoff 8-1 Furs $500.00 OF THE DOUBLE Pool Cloiei 1:15 Improving steadily 4-1 Unknown quantity 30-1 Disappointment in debut EVEN Has high rating 3-1 Has speed to spare 3-2 Will score soon 10-1 Makes first start 25-1 Still a bit green ;.' 30-1 Fun $275.00 TWO Peel CIoim 1:45 Distance could help Hard to beat here .Jockey only handicap Quits agauist .these ( Has good speed - J)oesn't seem likely 4-1 3-2 3-1 5-1 3-1 25-1 -6'j Fgs.Pun $300.00 Pool Oosw 2:20 QUINIELA Racing to top form ; Could go all the way Early speed only V Nothing to recommend Barely won last 1 Dangerous contender '. : - Will fight it out Blazing early speed ..' 2-1 4-1 15-1 25-1 10-1 .2-1 3-1 8-1 Purs $350.00 Pool Coaci 2:55 Could win again -. 4-1 Showing improvement 4-1 Hard to beat now 'EVEN Will fight it out EVEN Rates good chance : EVEN Purse $450.00 Pool Closes 3:35 THE DOUBLE Nothing to indicate 5-1 .3-1 30-1 . 3-1 10-1 25-1 2- 1 3- 2 . Mrinoir folroi nrA cav Ran well in last" r Could fool some here ITacn't chMirn miinh muii v diiuitu uiuv Usually close up - Should beat these . ,. Post position helps Better chance here Ran well in .return Tougher field here 3- 1 4- 1 4- 1 5- 1 30-1 3-1 15-1 10-1 2-1 25-1 Not in this bunch i Juicy payoff in last, Returns from layoff Usually close up Back in top form Lacks finishing kick Distance to liking Nothing recently .: Rates good chance Last indicates - Could squeeze through Must improve more 10-1 15-1 3-1 3-2 10-1 20-1 30-1 EVEN Nothing to indicate Hard to beat here 7 Fgi.Pune S550.00 Pool Cloiet 5:15 . TWO Ran well in return' 5-1 Could make the place 10-1 Should win again v 3-5 Has strong finish 5-1 Will set the pace 2-1 Returns from layoff 25-1 Rider won't help 3-1 Plenty early foot 3-1 Pune $600.00 Pool Closes 5:40 , Could be upsetter in-i Gets stuff st te-t EVJ.N Usually unpredictable 15-1 Long over due 2-1 Usually in the money 30-1 Depends on improvement 5-1 Could win aeain 3-1 Good earlv soeed 8-1 -Will fight it out 3-1 Hard to bent here 2 1 Could take it all 2 1 Rider only handicap 2 1 : by JOE WILLIAMS No matter what you 'bear in certain unenlightened circles, umpires are just as welcome in Heaven as anybody else provid provided, ed, provided, of course, they are good umpires and William George Evans was one of the best, Billy, everybody called him. For more than 20 years he wore the sombre vestment's of baseball's Old Bailey, and though he later yielded to the vanities of front-office grandeur, he re remained mained remained an umpire at heart. Last time 1 saw Billy was at one of the Florida race tracks, two or three springs back: 1 By then he had retired. His com companion panion companion was a large; jovial, red-faced Irishman Bill Dineen, another old umpire. The nature of the umpire's profession rather tends to a monastic life and closely knit brotherhood. They shun the players socially, but obviously they must meet some very hon honorable orable honorable .people elsewhere, because they never get in trouble. In fact, as long as baseball has been played, no umpire has every been involved In a scandal. This is a proud tradition that at once confers a special distinction, and imposes a serious responsibility on every man who walks onto the field, brooms the plate, glares at the ath athletes letes athletes and majestically bellows: "Play Ball!" One Qf the reasons Leo Durocher flopped in TV at least with this department was his dreadful boorishness. His cracks at umpires were not only monumentally unfunny, but coming from him, of all people, contemptuous. But let's get back to. Billy and see what gives with him Up There. Just as I thought, the celestial cold-stove leaguers (you surely don't need to be told where the hot-stove leaguers are, do you?) are mobbing him. They want to hear some of his baseball reminiscenses. WORKED PERFECT GAME . i Well, it's a good thing they aren't in a hurry, for Billy has a million of them, and since he was exposed' to a higher edu education cation education at Cornell and wrote sports during the off season, he relates them with engaging literacy. t If he should seem to hesitate, it probably Will be because he isn't quite sure just where to start. Billy umpired the first game Walter Johnson pitched in the big leagues. s ' He umpired Charley Robertson's run," no hit, no man reached first game the last perfect fame basebaJJ has seen. lie was the man in blue the onlv an, tnn uhm Nan Lajoie got eight hits (six on bunts) on the final day, trying to beat Ty Cobb for the batting title. : r (I used to lose weight just listening to Billy tell how he ran from one side of the field to the other to make the call on all those bunts.) ;.. - And, of course, Billy worked the 1919 World Series the one the Black Sox sold out to the gamblers except that Billy re refused fused refused to believe it. A thing like that couldn't happen in base baseball. ball. baseball. It Just couldn't. Not if the ballplayers had had as much class as Billy and the other umpires, It couldn't. But they didn't and it did. k '. DAY AN UMPIRE CRIED Billy also saw Johnson win his' first World series game. V But this he saw from the press box, not the field. I mention it here because I believe it meant more to him in an intimate, Jjalf sen! than, any other experience he ever had in base- This was In 1924, when Johnson, after two early failures, came back t beat the Giants in the windup and rive Wash Wash-inffton inffton Wash-inffton the championship. Cheers rocked Griffith Stadium and elated fans all but overwhelmed the veteran pitcher BXf wwds came from Billy. Only tears, big," fat, damp ones that slittiered down his face and scurried I Inside bJs tio I,as f le,arxJm ?f being 8een and jeered at. Johnson was al al-wals wals al-wals ner B1Uy very favorlte Persons. Next to his family, probably the most favorite of all. OUT OF DOORS with V(X Why Can't Any Dog Be a Hunter? , By JOE STETSON . Doo Editor "I DON'T know what he comes from; but he makes a swell squir squirrel rel squirrel dog," aaid Don, describing the little mongrel that took its place at the fireside with his two pure bred dogs.''-''. '.:.';;.'.'.; ; ; With enthusiasm he was 'telling a story that is repeated over and over again in aogaom; we wKe great pains to breed specialists for certain jobs and they are usually rh ones which Derform most sat isfactorily, but every now and then we find a dog doing a good job at a vocation his breed fan fanciers ciers fanciers never intended and cross bred dogs fill, 'the, bill in many places. nirl i-parlers will remember the story of Rosie, the Airedale who quartered industriously, pointed, located cripples wun surprising efficiency and retrieved to hand. Th other dav I was reminded oi it when someone asked where to buy a beagle pup, but prefaced the oiiestion withVWe use our hnvpr n finch nheasants. but we'd like to cet a eood hound for rohVlilc Many a farm lad has done his first shooting with the old farm , the new meeting place of the late crowd! every FRIDAY mldnite to 4:30 a.m. No. 4:30 CLUB this SATURDAY V Ax c ) oft i- V i V I ,1 ,, , .'.'' Ray aho plays 10 2 a m. I i ..I, 6y; h,-'' nd thousands i "le feist dogs with big hearts um meir vanegatea jobs with vengeance. une ,01, my .Maine friends has a sprmger. Yes -it's a silent trail er, UI US DarKS treed nn ran. Not a doe to listen in fnr onJ 9 w r w M 5WW yui b icc or. 10 xear tnrougn the pitch dark woods after with trm hammer heart, but a pelt getter seiaom surpassed. i ; Every, now and then someone comes' up with a pointing re retriever;' triever;' retriever;' A few years ago I receiv ed a series or pictures oi a Labrad Labrador or Labrador definitely on point. Recently a golden owner wanted to know if the pointing instinct of his pointing golden would be intensified by breeding him to a bitch that point pointedif edif pointedif he could find, one. - y . : ,.;;-:-i'.."; -.. .'; True we" expecif to find cer certain tain certain well-developed hunting char characteristics acteristics characteristics in the breeds which we have produced for certain special -purposes, but don't be too surprisod Jit the places where you'll occasic-ally find talent. j Above all,' "never "s'ay no when a youngster asks you if his dog will hunt. There is only one way to find out take him out and try it. S t new "KING e KEYCOARD" plays for -your pleasure with his TF!0 T.l ARRANQUE (Nightcap on the house at . 4:30 a.m.) un., Tues, Wed.. Thurs. Editor: CONRADO SARCEANT. --':i V' .... V;:X: : : : ..... $ ' :l:V.- -. a i'-l 1 ;f l i y 1 .(.,.:. .' , f ". h,',. I x ':..,' I ,- u YOUNG TROPHY WINNERS Police Association Cristobal Branch tropin winners of the eight-year-old boys 25-yard free style in the 1955 Gamhoa Civic Council Swim Meet. First, Henry Shirk; second, Jerry Wilson; third, Dick Ebon. College Cage Scores (Wednesday Night) EAST Muhlenberg 67, Temple 66. Yale 81. Brown 53. Princeton 74, Rutgers 40. Holy Cross 97, Creighton 60. Arniy 75, Albright' 71. uuquesne 88, Quantico Marines 84. Geneva 102. Westminster (Pa Rn Drexel 59, West Chester f Pa ) 47! Aings (ra.) 72, Bloomsburg 68. v Syracuse 96, Cornell 84. Fordham 82. Connectirat. 72. Pitt 78, Carnegie Tech 76. steuDenvuie (U.).80, Lemoyne (N, Y.) 56. Bcthanv (V.VA R8. Thiel .r Akron 84, Juniata 78. Colby 88, Vermont 62. r . Fairleigh-Dickinson 83,, Pace (N.Y 48. Franklin-Marshall 76, Gettysburg 73. Kutztown (Pa.) 65, Trenton Tchrs RR.. Mansfield (Pa.) 70, Lock Haven 66. W. Va. Wesleyan 85, West Liberty 75. Yeshlva 512 Tnrnntn HI Alderson-Broaddus 82, Davis-Elkins 60. Northeastern 67, Clark Mass. 64. Providence 82, Rhode Island 80. West Va. State 82, Salem (W. Va.) 75. Amherst 78, Springfield (Mass.) 59. Panzer 80, Montclair 60, Adelphi 93, Queens (N.Y.) 63. Rider 110, Bloomfield 50. - -Cortland (N.Y.) 93, Ithaca 77. Williams 92, New York A. C, 89. Hofstra 60, Hunter (N.Y.) -46. SOUTH Kentucky 81, Duke 76. Penn State 70, Navy 65. Richmond 66, Virginia Tech. 60, Georgetown (D.C.) 84, St. Josephs 72. Memphis State 106, Murray (Ky.) 72. Miss State 89, Tampa 64. Oklahoma City 81, New Orleans Loyola 66. Miss Southern 62, Louisiana Tech 51. At LA MACARENA SUNDAY, FEB. 5 4:15 p.m. i p'.- -.." W A BRAVE MEXICAN BULLS J PRESEIITATI0J1 OF BETTE FORD . (AMERICAN MATADOR) and FAREWELL OF MANOLO MARQUEZ SHADED SECTION 1st How V...$5.n0 Ikn4 r4 ir KwmM.lN General Admittance ......... !..m) Children 100 TICKETS ON SALE: Iberia Restaurant, "La Concordia'' Pharmacy, Cen Central tral Central Hotel, Hotel El Panama, Tlvoll Agencies, Arte Moderno Jewelry and ' La Juacarena SuHrjng f ot,servaion, alL-Iel.34578. . Baltimore Loyola 90 "American TJ. Elnn 79 Wioh P(nf Kf- Kentucky Wesleyan 100, Rollins 83. Presbyterian 86, Newbery 82. Lenoir Rhyne 115, West Carolina t uumora'bs, catawba 74. 1 Selmont Abbey 109.' Pfeiffer N V. 82. . : Roanoke 58, Lynchburg 48. Fort Knox 89, Villamadonna (Ky.) 83. MIDWEST Michigan State 85, Detroit 78. Dayton 75, Chicago Loyola 37. Adrian 82. Defiance rohio 77. Kent State" 97, Western Michigan' r ... .... . Mt. Union 81, Oberlin 59." -V -1 Otterbein 87, Heidelberg 79. ; Ohio Wesleyan 87, Marietta 69. Washington (St. L.) 69; Valparaiss 59. - Lake Forest (HI.) 76, Wabash 89. Evansville 93,' Butler-77. Indiana State 82, St. Josephs (Ind.) 70. ,' Omaha 65, St. Ambrose (Iowa) 63. Southern Illinois 87, Eastern 111. 83. Dakota Wesleyan 96, Sioux Falls 7.7 .... Milton (Wis.) JO, Concordia (I1L, 66 Northern (S.D.). 73, Yankton 59. t Millikin 105, Illinois Normal 92, : Findlay 96, Lawrence Tech 95. Michigan Normal 78, Albion 68. Alma 79, Northern Michigan 73. Coll. Empori at Kansas WesleyaR, ppd., weather, x ... rt SOUTHWEST V l; Arkansas 74, Texas Christian 72. Texas Tech 113, Arizona State 63, ; Arizona 68, Santa Barbara .53.. ', Lamar Tech 80, Texas Ail 72. :, t ,,FAWEST San Francisco. St.i74. Cal Poly 58i i BROOKE ARMY (TEX) i MEDICAL TOURNEY ' Fifth Army 90, Great Lakes Naval Fifth Army 76, Fort Bliss 45. : f T n PRICES UNSHADED SECTION 1st Row JX50 2nd and 3rd Row ............ 2 Ml C.fiitidl AtiitiitiMiice ... 1.50 S Children 7S tags n.nz:i to Of 1 7? n r- 1 Jilt PANAMA AMERICAN AN INL'EFENDRNT DAILY NEWSPAPER Sweep Will Give Sodaiiien 2-Game Lead Over Smokers i By J. J. HARRISON JR. . The Carta Vicja Yankees, already assured of occupying the cellar of the Panama Pro League race, will meet the front-running; Spur Cola team for the last time this season in a twinbill at the Olympic ' Stadium,... After tonight the Yankees have two more games ' left to play. They are scheduled to engage Chester Chesterfield field Chesterfield tomorrow night in another bargain bill at the Olympic Stadium. Last right, the important game scheduled be between tween between the Smokers and Sodamcn was called off be be-cause cause be-cause of wet grounds. It has been re-scheduled for 3 p.m. Sunday prior to the annual all-star game. In The Le Her Box Mr. J. J. Hanson r. Baseball Writer The Panama American Dear J.J.: As a staunch Spur-Cola (Gal- gos) fan I submit this letter for publication. I would appreciate comments, pro or con. from oth er fans. With the season coming to an end, the $64 question around the league is what is keeping spur Cola on top In the standings, and why Chesterfield hag not walked away with the pennant. On. paper Chesterfield is a Class AAA club and spur Cola is Class A, regardless of their two Dig leaguers. The Sodamen could not have got anywhere without Hector Lopez, but as things are right now, their other major leaguer, vioerv uartce. iiabUltv to The Yankees, who of late have Unke won his first game last the team because of his clown- threatened to become the spoil- Saturday when he hurled five in?, inconsistency and lacka lacka-ers ers lacka-ers for the two pennant con- and two-third innings against dalsikal manner, tenders, will use Billy Harris the- Sodamen and gave up five: .The morale of the Sodamen Is and Ronnie Unke against Vibert hits and two runs. He was re- t a low ebb whenever Clarke Clarke and Jim Tugerson on the lieved in the sixth of the seven-' Pitches. The team undergoes i f P I i mound. Yankee- manager Al Kubskl said this morning he would send Harris agafaist Clarke .and Unke w'll oppose Tuger Tugerson. son. Tugerson. The Sodamen have not announced If Clarke will pitch the first or second game, i In Ms last outing Friday, Har Harris ris Harris beat smokers, 5 to 2, on six hits. The stocky righthander, the Yanks' best pitcher, had been named to go against the Sodamen the previous night but the game was rained out and the Smokers, much to their cha-; jrrin, inherited him the ; next night. This time It Is the other way around. Hair's was set to start in the ralned-oiit Chesterfield-Carta Vleja tilt sched scheduled uled scheduled for last Tuesday, go to tonight night tonight Harris -will face the So Sodamen. damen. Sodamen. It should be interest interesting ing interesting to see what happens in this one. v inning affair by Vic StmkaJ tension and cannot The final score was 7 to 3. Clarke was the starter 1 Mon day in the game the Sodamen lost to the Yankees, 3 to 2. The lefty went only three Innings, allowing six hits and two runs. Tugerson was charged with his tnjra loss. Tugerson has not started a game since Saturday when the Yankees jumped on him for seven hits and five runs. He suffered his second setback a a-gainst gainst a-gainst five triumphs. Since then he has been used only in rrlef. : In other news around the loon manager KUbski ana a party win leave lor a Santa Clara va cation after the Caribbean se series, ries, series, which begins here Feb. 10, is over. Others making the trip will be Mrs. Kubskl and son Gil; catcher and Mrs. Ray Dabek; and pitchers Bobo Hlgglns and Harris. lve th-lr lull support. Clarke has started more than ten games and fin finished ished finished less than half. He has won only the high scoring contests ana lost the close ones. In relief he has been a Joke Get wise or get lost Clarke. You can redeem yourself for you have the physical attributes to be the key to a pennant for your ciud in tne remaining games. Vicente Chin Atlantic Teenage League STANDINGS Teams Buick 2 C.P.0 4 Motta 2 i.R.A 0 Won Lost Si. Louis Seeks Missouri Valley, IICAA Tourney Titles By JOHN GRIFFIN NEW YORK, Feb. 3-OJP)-St. Louis had to share the Mis Missouri souri Missouri Valley Conference basket basketball ball basketball championship last year, and didn't get into th. M.C.A.A. Tournament but this year the Blulkens are out to run away with both the title and the tour ney berth. - The B.US stretched their perfect record In league play to 5-0 last night by rallying from a 13-polnt deficit to beat Wichita, 90-38. That kept St. Louis several lumps ahead of second-place Uu TEAMS PANAMA PRO LEAGUE Chesterlield Won Lost Pet. GB ,18 13 .3S1 17 14 ,51S 1 . 12 20 .375 61 TONIGHT'S GAMES -2- (Olympic Stadium) Carta Vieja (Harris 4-4 and Unke 1-2) , vs. ; Spur Cola (Clarke 3-2 and Tugerson 5-3) Game Time: 6 o'efock LAST NIGHT'S RESULT (Olympic Stadium) Chesterfield vs. Spur Cola (Postponed, Wet Grounds) J PERFECT THRUST ; Former New York model. Bctte Ford makes a perfect thrust between the bull's withers with her iword during a recent bullfight in Mexico City. Miss Ford is scheduled to arrive today for her performance Sunday at La Macarena in competition with Mexican boy matador Manolo Marquez. Lesding Panama League Batters And Pitchers HITTERS Player Team G AB H HR RBI Pet. John Glenn, Spur Cola: . 31 127 46 2-- H .362 Gipp Dickens, Carta Vleja. 30 103 33 3 17 320 Winner Shanti, Carta Vieja. 31 1S3 39 .317 Hector Lopez, Spur Cola. . 31 117 37 H 31 .318 Herman Charles, Spur Cola. 31 112 35 4 24 J1J Ellas Osorlo, Chesterfield, .27 91 28 4 10 M. Clarence Moore, Spur Cola. 31 132 40 13 .303 Bill Queen, Chesterfield. . 31 106 32 4Y, 20 &0Z Tony Bartirome, Carta Vicja. 30 120 36 I v 6 .300 Bill Stewart, Chesterfield, . 31 111 34 4 -' 19 .29 Leon Kcllman, Spur Cola . 31 108 32 8 17 .296 Pablo Bernard, Chesterfield. 31 129 36 13 .27t Dan Porter, Carta Vleja. :.. 27 92 25 1 .273 (90 or more times at bat) 1 1 PITCHERS Pitchrr Team G IP W L ER Pet. Don Elston, Chestrcflcld. 10 58 4 2 22 .667 Jim Tugerson, Spur Cola. ,. 15 (9 5 3 22 .625 H. Robinson, Chesterfield.. . 16 82 6 4 23 .600 Bob Trice, Spur Coia. 12 74 6 4 22 .600 Vibert Clarke, Spur Cola. . 10 50 3 2 19 .600 (50 innings or more) McGloin is adjusting himself very well to the open spaces out in center field while Hytinen Is fast becoming the spark plug of Dockery's Squad. r n.nf hhlnH thi ni.u vZ Oklahoma A. and M. which has ftd f J m a 2 nihyJ.n a 2-l mark. Last year the Bills wm vf.Jfnn'nA'hht? tied Tulsa for the loop will have one of the best receiv- , r. In the Inacrn. after Pt tX "."Z" "-8c uw uu.--, Wednesday afternoon when they. more experience. , l T.S v Motta defeated M.R.A. 6 to 3 scored five runs' in the fourtn to overcome a 3-1 lead M.R.A.' jhe box score: held at the end of the third. G. Hytenin hit a triple Into m.r.a. left field with the bases loaded, white 2b ........ 2 0 10 sian me nrewonss on m meiMarshall 3b 2 1 iounn. Mcuioin, mkas ceni,cr-.MCQi0in c( fielder, got the only other extra 'oibson lb ..... base hit of the game, a double lCabanillos ss .... Into left center to push across .gnder c Ab R H Po the second run of the frame. Inter scoring on Gibson's single to put his team ahead"3 to 0 go go-In? In? go-In? into the last of the third. Fields and Hytinen of Mottas and McGloin and Hall of MJl.A. are certainly playing a good brand of ball for their first year In Teen-age Baseball. Leignadler If Wood rf .... Mayo rf-lf .. Hall p Phillips p ... Totals 2 3 2 3 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 vitation Tournament. Louisville, ranked sixth na nationally, tionally, nationally, had much less trouble romping to a 93-64 victory over Toledo. It was the Cardinals' 17th victory in 18 games and their ninth straight. Cincinnati, which competed in the National Invitation last year, greatly e n h a need its chances of a return engagement l next montn by beating st, Motta Fields started on the mound iFleMs p-2b ...... 3 1 for Mottas with Panchcz taking over the duties when the young pitcher showed signs of weaken weakening. ing. weakening. Hair, tocina: the rubber for M.R.A., did a fine job until the i unn wnen ne ran into trouble and had to be replaced by Phil Phillips; lips; Phillips; ; -4 'Wow : Uncanto .35 20 Double in Cinemascope! James Caenev in LOVE ME OR LEAVE Anne Baxter in -'BEDEVILLED" ME" Udo IDEAL 20 10 "King of the Texas Ranters" Chaps. 3 b 4 "PASSKEY TO DANGER" Cattle Kate k Daltons Gang Hytinen c-ss 2 Sanchez ss-p 2 Bruce 3b-cf ...... 2 Weigle lb 2 Humphrey c ..... 1 Deaklns rf 1 Tompkins If HakansOn cf .... 0 Pabon 3b ........ 2 Camacho If ..... 1 Mason 2b-rf ..... 1 V John's, 93-78, at Madison Square i Burlv blond Phil Wheeler poured ia i n i t ,n 37 Pinw ana did brilliant re. 18 13 'bounding for the Bearcats, while1 MiltA Purent.l Rt Tnhn'. n.lthl 29 points. 1 3 National champion San Fran 6 0 elsco, relentlessly dr'vlng to to-0 0 to-0 2 ward a nerfect season, trie for 10 its 42nd straight victorr to.' 7 0 night against Loyola (Calif.). 3 It And the only other perfect 0 0 record amon major colleges, 0 0 a 14-0 slate belonging to St. 0 0 Francis of Brooklyn, will be on 0 0 th line against Creifhton. Totals 18 6 3 18 6 tures. U.C.L.A. risks its 4-0 P.C.C ' imark against Washington, while Summary: Base on balls off: Utah risks Its 5-0 Skvline rernrd Fields 2, Sanchez 3, Hall 9, Phil, against Colorado A. and M. i litis 1. Struck out bv Fields 4 I : i isancnez 3. Han 4, 2-base nits McGloin.. 3-base hits: Hytinen. Winning pitcher: Sanchez. Los. Ing pitcher: Hall. Umpires: ' "1 wwlVAy.;..wwv:..,...v.,. . V .:v.y.;..v.y.::::;.';; vl-. j j i 'i- ,-.! j i j f J 1 i t 5 i : .. f -i ::: .. f -s 1 r -A : V 1 ; J v ?' y t Lane, Messer and Johnson. er: F. Pinto. Scor- IM.R.A. 3 Motta Score By Inn'i,,p 003 0003 001 50X-6 Vote For Your All-Stars The annual pro League all-star game between local and foreign players will be played at the Olympic Stadium Sun Sunday, day, Sunday, Feb. 5 at 3 p.m, Participants, who must play the first three Innings, will, be chosen by the fans. Pitchers will be named by the man-' agers who will also be selected by the fans. Fill in the coupon shown below and place In urus lo located cated located at entrances of the Olympic Stadium. LOCAL FOREIGN .lb. .2b. .3b. . is. .If. cf rf. .mgr. Let your troubles go up in smoke with a WINNER Norwegian skier Hallgelr Brenden ; shoots to toward ward toward a spectacular victory in winning the men's 15-kllome. ter cross country Olympic race at Cortina D'Ampezzo, Italy. Brenden finished the 5.3-ml!e course In-4-mlmttef-39 second.? one of the fastest 15-kilometer times ever re recorded... corded... recorded... .,. VVhen,7yoyr lady love tosses you a bouquet, flowerpot ond oil don't let it bother you light up a RALEIGH. For RALEIGHS give you such great smoking enjoyment that you forget your worries and woes. RALEIGHS, you see, are made from the best-grade imported tobaccos, expertly blended to give you a real smoke! So let your troubles go up in the smoke 'of a RALEIGH... the cigarette that's so yery pleasant to smoke. rTi n o n a iS f V .Read sicry cn par 2 11 Humphrey Says Dollar Buying Power Healthy WASHINGTON. Feb. 3 (UP) Treasury Secretary Georje M, 'Humphrey said today there has been "no significant loss in me buying power of the dollar" dur during ing during the three years of the Eisen Eisenhower hower Eisenhower Administration. Furthermore, he said, the Ad ministration has halted a 14-year intlationary trend that saw the .value of the dollar decline from 100 icenU In 1939 to 42 cents In 1932. HiimDhrevIs 'statements were made to the joint congressional committee which is studying Pres President ident President Eisenhower's recent report to Congress on the state of the na na-lion's lion's na-lion's economy- , Cnmm ttee Chairman raui n linHIUlfe Vimu man u. DOUglaS (U-Ul.t WaS expetieu IU " 1 1 -. a 1U.1 hA Prpsident's estimates on the Ration's personal income for this . fj 1 :, riminloai la. an earner iiemmn, contended that" the estimate that personal income in 1956 woo.10. rise about JtO billion to $312.5 bil bil-Jion. Jion. bil-Jion. assumed-"no growth In the economy at all and even some dec line." He alsol'jakl that if this fore fore-fcast fcast fore-fcast were befna out "nearly five million" persons will be out of work. But Budget Director Rowland R. Hughes, before the committee at the time, defied the forecasts! Were gloomy., He said the esti esti-maiP maiP esti-maiP whirh foresee no change m the level of corporate profits $43 billion must be conservative. . Testimony made public yesterday by a house appropriations sub sub-pommittee pommittee sub-pommittee disclosed "that Humph Humphrey rey Humphrey has warned Congress that gen general eral general government spending will continue to increase despite the Administration's best economy ef- iorts. ... ., Humphrey said he hoped de defense fense defense costs could be lowered ev eventually entually eventually but that the cost of gov government ernment government services generally will ."probably increase." , Humphrey f-aid that if you look looked ed looked forward 20 years and envision envisioned ed envisioned the big increase in population and services required, "it is clear ive will have to have more people, nd we will have to increase our expenditures in spite of11 the efficiency we can put in. Mr.X ! CAMBRIDGE,' Mass., Feb. 3 3-(UP) (UP) 3-(UP) The mysterious "Mr. X" who offered a year ago to match Massachusetts Institute of Tech Technology nology Technology 1955 alumni contributions 'dollar for dollars" is Alfred P. Sloan Jr., chairman of the board of General Motors. . vrr off'"' 't at an ali'mn' d'n- ner last night said Sloan, of the c : of '!).), n ad given $ji3,o)0.in j'i"jp hp? on"'h"'H h" ether alumni,- Total gifts reached $l,0J0,0OU. v" BUCKEYE TAXES '.. COLUMBUS, O. (UP) Total (axes paid by Ohioans for state and local government are about $1,445,000,000 a year, according to Tax Commissioner Stanley J. Bow Bowers. ers. Bowers. This figures out to about 50 cents day per person for the Ohio population. ww MWliiWo qtavHliB m 1 ii i In --0: JAUNTS AN "ef fif people I J 41st xEAB WASHINGTON, Feb., 3 (UP) .. ., tu.on, t or. on. .,.. kkore rirtitr tiw rmpn ."with s atomic bnmbs eadv to retaliate imme l41m Ala Annlnct VtnmjilftnH nf n pnflmv nUnr-klmr this cnun- - o .trv. It also disclosed that inter ceptors guarding A m e r lean MAKC3 j;!3TORY-Word't champion torn grower -iff 16 year-old Lamar Ratliff of Bald Bald-win,. win,. Bald-win,. Miss. He harvested 304.38 bushels of corn from a single, acre of land, first person in his history tory history to achieve such a tre tremendous mendous tremendous yield. His feat has been likened to 'tracking the sound barrier, running the four four-- - four-- minute, mile or conquering Mt. Everest. He used an eight-year-old mule to do IM culti--vating and grew 25,850 stalks of corn.": Farm Journal, Inc., pre presented sented presented Lamar with $1000 for the feat,-His father, Paul, also got $1000 for coaching the young 4-H?er, Lamar above displays two ears of his corn..' 0.75 0.40 Shows: 1:30, . 3:45, 6:15 9:00 p m.. 11; U'S r 'imp ssb i., Elbbber I .. W-l v 'Witj; Mto..', -' linMMni MM VISTA mi mm x ft Am,, v 11 5 ih wond( of toiLHtOrHONi SscUNU v. AND STUNTS"' A; CinemaScope bhort! INDEPENDENT know the truth and the PANAMA, R, P., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1956 Fighters Have A-Weapons .cities soon will be armed1 with Insiv.hm. n,,lea n?B!innri. fnr lico ofrotncf lnrt(nr knmhnr. The Air Force high command said the danger to the Ameri American can American civilian population of acci accidental dental accidental nuclear explosions in the air or on the ground Is "es "essentially sentially "essentially non-existent.", Discussing "the weapons car carried ried carried in aircraft," Gen. Nathan F. Twining told a let age con-, Pference ot 1000 government mil itary and civil aviation leaders that ."Instant readiness means survival." The air chief of staff said "it is only common sense that what, ever weapons our afr force uses must be readily available." He said the air arm had been in "the nuclear bomb business" for more than 10 years and has develooed safety features mak making ing making the chance of accidental detonations "so remote as to be incalculable.,,, 1 MICHIGAN'S FUTURE GRAND. RAPIDS, Mich, -r (UP) Michigan some day will pass Florida as the nation's No. 2 fruit and vegetable, state and challenge California for top position,' two Michigan State University horticul horticultural tural horticultural experts predict. Ike's Specialist Seeks Whale's Heartbeat LOS ANGELES, Feb. 3 (UP) -President Eiscnnower's heart specialist,' Dr. Paul Dudley White, sailed yesterday on an expedition to record the heartbeat of a giant whale with the hope his studies will help him to learn more about the human heart. . The famed Boston consultant left aboard aircraft manufactur er Donald W. Douglas' yacht, Do Dorado, rado, Dorado, for Scammon Lagoon, .half way down the lower tamornia Pe"isuJa M. .... ,. S t.-- xne expedition." sponsored oy, Mai inn 1 2aio t a 1 ft Vnninlv lias becn hailed as the greatest whal whaling ing whaling saga since "Moby Dick." "My goarls to make an electro cardiogram of a gray whale In its natural habitat." Dr. White told well-wishers as the S3 foot Dorado Prepared to leave from Lbs Angeles harbor,- WHALE HIDEOUT ; - "We chose the shallow -waters of Scammon, Lagoon because in early February 'that becomes the lferC43i Ii 0 T HE) DAILY country is tafe" Abraham. Lincoln. nvading Bombers "Handling and carrying ord ordnance nance ordnance from bullets to A-bombs ...is not and will not be a maj major or major problem" In safety, Twining said. Twining spoke at a confer conference ence conference called by the Air Force As Association sociation Association to study noise, hazards, traffic control and airport prob problems lems problems In the jet age.. , Oen. ,Earle E. Patrldge, chief of the Continental Air Defense Command, revealed the plan to Soviet Consulate In Pretoria Put Under Guard JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, Feb, 3 (UP) Police put the So Soviet viet Soviet consulate in the capital city of Pretoria tinder guard after a threatening phone call yesterday. The government yesterday order ordered ed ordered all Russian diplomats out of the country. Officials said the call was made to police, not to the consulate it itself. self. itself. The government has given the Russians until March 1 to close their consulates in Pretoria and Capetown, where the legislature sits, and leave the country. t haven for hundreds of female gray whales who come south to calve. It offers a rare opportunity- to heartbeat hunters." The 40-foot wha'es weight up to 50 torts and Dr. White a g r e e a there was an element of risk in involved. volved. involved. He explained that a special type harpoon is fired into the whale and copper wire runs back to a seasled in which is contained a telemeter which radios the sound of the beat to the yacht where it is recorded on an eiecirucaiuiu- mAMn ear" Dr. White said the purpose in recording the heartbeat of t b e largest mammal' in the world is to chart the relationship, of size to heartbeat intensity and speed. "There is much about the hu human man human heart action we do not under understand stand understand and these studies may il illuminate luminate illuminate points about variance in heart sizes," he said. , tj ',-- TO TAKE 10 DAYS The expedition was expectel to last eight to 10 days. Another boat, .the Scripps Institute rese research arch research craft TB441, is now in the Arabs Will Refuse To Have Big-Tvo Diclalo Settlement WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 -(UP) Eieht Arab nations served not ice today that they will refuse to let the United States and Britain dictate any settlement of their dis-J pute with Israel. ; The Arab stand was outlined to ; Assistant secretary of State George V. Allen by Lebanese Am Ambassador, bassador, Ambassador, Dr. Victor' Khoury. The envoy told newsmen he represent represented ed represented seven Other Arab states-Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Ye Yemen men Yemen and Syria Khoury, who-spent 30 minutes with Allen, said he, referred parti particularly cularly particularly to any Middle East deci decisions sions decisions reached by President Eisen Eisenhower hower Eisenhower and British Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden during their three-day conference here. In a communique at the end of the conference, the President and Eden accused Russia and her satellites of increasing the "risk of war" between the Arab states and Israel by shipping arms to Egypt. : : To "miligate that, risk," they Invited France to see w what could be done to prevent aggression either by the Arabs or Jews. These, talks presumably will go into the advisability of sending United Nations forces into the demilitarized buffer zones be between tween between Israel and her-Arab, neighbors.-";-.-- :; t ; Khoury said he did not voice any objection to any specific point in the Anglo-American plan. But he added: ,- "No discussion can bind us un unless less unless we agree. . we believe that any. policies, pursued in our area which are not. accepted by us will' not be a. factor' for stability in the area.." 1 . He emphasized Ihe unily of all Arab states "on the problem of 1 Palestine." KEWSPAFER nvi CEMS equip Interceptors that streak through the American skies with atomic weapons. He said the time was "not far off" when the planes would be so armed. Voice Of La After 1833 BUENOS AIRES, Feb. 3 (UP) f Argentine nation and of the de- A free La Prensa resumed its mocratic ideal and liberties place today among the great new- which we have invariably defend defend-spapers spapers defend-spapers of the world. ed, Last night, editors and report-l ers ended years of waiting and weeks or preparation, printers locked up the final page and edit editor or editor and publisher Dr. Alberto Gainza Paz had presses rolling on the first edition of the newspaper whose voice is resuming after 1,833 days of dictator-imposed silence.-. In one of two editorials prepar prepared ed prepared for the fiest edition of the news newspaper, paper, newspaper, Gainza Paz declared: "After more than five years of forced silence we return to take our place In journalism and re renew new renew our labor in service to the lagoon making preparations for the arrival of the Dorado. Dr. Carl Hubb of the Scripps Institute of Oceanography at La Jolla, Calif., left two days aeo with the earlier party for the lago lagoon on lagoon nearly 500 miles south of here. Also accompanying the expedi tion is James Jenks, a veteran whaler who will direct the opera tion of firing the harpoon with crossbows into the whale. Jenks accompanied Dr. White on previous expeditions in 1952, 1953 and 1954 when he studied whales off Alaska as well as south ern California but never recorded the heartbeat of the gray whale. - Dr. White said he wanted to make clear to "whaie lovers," if there are any such persons, that the whale suffers no serious in jury from the harpooning and heart studv. The scientists run a greater risk from the thrashing monster, he pointed out. Dock Strike CANBERRA, Australia, Feb. 3 (UP)-Government efforts to end the 11-day-old dock strike broke down today with no hint of a settlement. Labor Minister Harold Holt met for five hours with repre sentatives of the overseas and Australian shipowners, the Austra Man Council of Trade Unions, and the Waterside Workers Federa tion, which called the walkout of 7,000 dockers. SHOWS: 3:07, 4:52, 6:54, 8:56 0.60 0.30 L U Warner Bros. '. in hi Maiinfl t,mT naw rol I .-' V- LT. .COL. L. C. WOODS, U.S. Army Caribbean Special Services executive officer, (back,' mid mid-f?L f?L mid-f?L d .LU RDert D- Henke, Fort Clayton Officers'- Club,. nod approval as. six of the 32 . Kf l 8lne sma11 "view before their first USARCARIB performance last night. The "Belles' will be in USARCARIB for seven performances. t ' i (U.S. Army Photo) Prensa Speaks Again; Presses Roll Days Of Dictator-Imposed Silence "The recapture of liberty and the enjoyment of the essential rights of man reoav the efforts and sacrifices which are necessa ry to put our country back on the track to rehabilitation. ." The story of the reborn La Pren Prensa sa Prensa is one of loyalty and persist persistence. ence. persistence. The voice of La Prensa was silenced on a pretext on Jan. 25. 1951, by the regime of Dictator Anti-Segregalion Backers Accused Of 'Super Group' Hopes WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 (UP) A Democratic supporter of the school aid mil today accused Negro back backers ers backers of a proposed anti-seereeation amendment of wanting Congress to make Negroes "a super-group aDove everyooay else. Rep. Cleveland M. Bailey (W. Va.) made the statement at a pub public lic public hearing of the House Rules Committee. He appeared as a wit- ncss to urge the committee to clear the bill for House debate But Committee Chairman How Howard ard Howard W. Smith (D-Va.) said South Southern ern Southern states would not benefit from the federal school-building pro program. gram. program. He said Congress would bar aid to 'school districts where pub public lic public schools are segregated. Smith noted that Rep, Adam Clayton Powell (D-N.Y.) is plan planning ning planning to offer such an amendment on the floor and that it has the announced support of House GOP Leader Joseph W. Martin Jr. (Mass.), Bailey said the Powell amend amendment ment amendment may not even be offered. Then, he launched Into a sharp criticism of its sponsors. He said the Supreme Court ruling against segregated public schools gave Negroes "equality" wrth other groups. "Now they want "iis to pick them up as a super group above every everybody body everybody else and write punitive legis legislation, lation, legislation, into this bill." he asserted. "The legislation has no business in this bill." ' X WEEKEND RELEASE"" W T 1 r- fn 1 -li Juan D. Peron. The newspaper was turned over to the Peron dominated General Confederation of Labor (CBT), and published by a CGT- owned corporation called EPASA starting Nov. 19, 1951. In appearance, it resembled the old La Prensa. In content, it was a sham. When a revolution overturned 12 years of Peron dictatorship last year, freedom returned to the country. A series of decrees By provi provisional sional provisional President Pedro E. Aram Aram-buru buru Aram-buru returned the newspaper to its rightful owners, the family of ur. uainza raz. 1 The famous editor,- who fled first to neighboring Montevideo and then to New York, came back to Buenos Aires after nearly five years of exile. He finally entered the portals of the" two buildings of La Prensa last Dec. 21 and reclaimed the newspaper founded by his grand father 87 years ago. La Prensa has been in the found ing family for four generations, including that of Dr. Gainza Paz's sons, except for the five years reron neid it by force In that time, a tradition' has grown up. Loyalties are fierce Such a loyalty is that of sixty three-year-old Juan Parina, who etitMrf irAfl ihA laire rf OAnoAtiehln 9nrt tprrm, tn rp,J..rn .. fn h job as office attendant and door man for Dr. Gainza PaZ, He de fied Peron and lived to serve La Prensa once more. 1 it takes aoout l.uoo such men and women to put out La Prensa. They work in two buildings 14 blocks apart in the heart of Buenos Aires. Executives, report ers and the business' office are In the main building on the Avenlda de Mayo. Compositors and press men and the rest of the mechan ical staff are in the printing plant at Chile and Azopardo streets. The first day's press run was uncertain but Gainza Paz prom promised ised promised it would he enough to satisfy all requests fori .copies..1 from throughout the world. The free La Prensa has a "new look" with a changed front page makeup. Instead of the traditional classified advertisements it once used, the front page now is de devoted voted devoted to international, national and local news. The first issue runs 24 pages, twice the normal expected under A Y "CENTRAL- IN COLOR AND r' 'AND the daily newsprint quota of 33 tons. Before 1951, La Prensa had a circulation exceeding 400,000 daily and half a million on Sundays. On Jan, 1, 1935, a 60-page issue sold 746,569 copies for a record. The EPASA-pubUshed La Pren. sa circulation was reported at zuu.oou to 220,000 daily just before 1. ... I. 1. ,. the revolution which overthrew feron last September. After that it sank to 160,000 daily until- it ceased publication when Aram buru's decrees were issued. Congress Regislers Strong. Opposition To Poslal Increase WASHINUTUTV eb. 3. (UP) President Eisenhower's request for a penny an ounce increase in first class and air "mall rates ran into strong opposition in Congress to today. day. today. House Democratic ... Whip C a r I Albert (Okla.) told United Press: "I don't think there's a chance of passing any such bill." However, members, did not rule out the possibility that Congress will act on Mr. Elsenhower's other requests for increases in postage rates on newspapers, magazines and third-Class mail. ' The president" asked Congress yegterday to raise postage on first class letters from 3 to 4 cents an ounce and to boost airmail rates from 6 to 7 cents an ounce. These increases, rejected by Congress in each of the past three years; would account for 311 mil million lion million dollars of the 405 million dol dollars lars dollars in rate boosts proposed by by-Mr. Mr. by-Mr. Eisenhower. The President also recommend recommended ed recommended a 77 million dollar annual in increase crease increase in third-class mail and two successive annual increases of 15 per cent in postage on newspapers and magazines. The latter would yield 17 million dollars the first year. . v ,i Sen. AS. Mike Monroney (D. Okla.), a member of the Senate Post Office Committee, said that a "readjustment in third class 'junk mail' rates might be help helpful.'' ful.'' helpful.'' SHOWS: 1:15, 3:46, 6:178:50 0.750.40 -. CINEMASCOPE ; 111" i ;; U |