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ONE OF THE 18 M-41 Walker Bulldog tanks 'that is bem shipped to Saudi ArJbJreKo'n
' ScUvefJ Brooklyn, N. Y., alter loud Congressional protests temporarily forced halt of their r EXPRESSING THEIR THANKS r Members of wa'zlontel youth organra lions dance an Israel folk dance in Brooklyn . NT., nfi-or learnmtr the government had v-W'ff ihe shipment of 13 M-41 Walker Bulldo:; tanks to Saudi, Arabia. The Zionists had been, picketing the pier where the tanks were to be loaded . aboard ship. ' ( 78 US. Tanks Sail For Saudi Arabia NEW YORK, Ftb. 20 (UPJ (UPJ-Th Th (UPJ-Th freighter Jamts Monroe . lailtd for the tens Middle East today with its cargo of 18 light American tank for Saudi Ara- bia. - U, S. Coast Guard cutters stood by for the departure. The tanks were clearly j visible on the-deck of the freighter. There were no incidents. f A demand for war insurance in the event of possible Reprisals of war hazards by 29 of the 33 crew members caused an eight-hour de delay lay delay in the ship's sailing. Officials of the Hellenic Line, which operates the 7000-ton ves sel, granted war- risk insurance to the crew which was reported to have originally demanded a bonus for delivery of the tanks to the war-jittery area. The M-41 Walker Bulldog tanks were loaded under police guard yesterday after the government lif lifted ted lifted its 43-hour embargo on arms shipments to the Middle East. The United States agreed Aug. K In call Vina C,.,l. ... tives the 25-ton tanks. Scions To Continue -Prcbo Of lateral G:$ Crihry Charge WASHINGTON, Feb. 20 (UP) (UP)-The The (UP)-The special senate committee in investigating vestigating investigating a gas lobbyist's $2,500 contribution to Sen. Francis Case (R-S.D.) decided to resume pub public lic public hearings on the affair after tOflaV. ". ; , The decision to irenew the hear- uigs, which were suspended last week, was announced after a clos closed ed closed meeting of the four-man com committee mittee committee headed by .Sen. Walter F. George (D-Ga.). George said that the first, wit witness ness witness at the new hearings' may be . R Ross, who1 resigned last week as TJ.. S, District Attorney u. it'eoraska. . Ross resigned after it was dis disclosed closed disclosed that he had introduced Lob Lobbyist byist Lobbyist John M. Neff to Sen. Carl T. Curtis (R-Neb.). : Neff, a Lexington, Neb.; lawyer and lobbyist for the Superior Oil Co. of California, had touched off the investigation by offering a $2, $2,-500 500 $2,-500 contribution to Case's c a m m-T T m-T in ,whilejthecnate was. const, tiering the controversial natural gas bill. j J But last week, disclosure of the t a t e Department transaction brought protests from Congress and the Israe l rmlmctv nri u... ident Eisenhower embargoed the au.yiiieui. me emDargo was lifted Saturday. Th daelsion to .rovers the embargo followed official warn warn-mgs mgs warn-mgs from Saudi Arabia that it it-might might it-might refute to renew an agree agree-mont mont agree-mont with th United States for use of th key air bat tt Dhah. ran. some zoo members of a Zionist organization nirkpH th. a i. even before stevedores arrived to wu me ianKs on tne freighter. The pro-Israel demonstration ended without incident after about three nuurs. v .. BBC Fires Famous Symphony, 2 Olhef Staff Orchestras LONDON, Feb. 20 (UP) The BBC has fired its famed Sympho Symphony ny Symphony and two other staff orchestras for striking in sympathy with part-time musicians,, and the u u-nions nions u-nions ar threatening today to ban all 1 .lisic on the nationalized radio-television network after, Feb. 29. ..:-'.-.;.-,.. ,.! British commercial TV and the foreign r.'.dio' Stations rooiilariv heard here are not involved in the dispute. The-BBC'sheduIed symphony telecast yekercra opened on a bare stage,! wiih an unidentified annuuntei .vijiiaiiuy lOOUing on a tin whistle 85s a substitute fo'r tne striking musicians until an al alternate ternate alternate program was srt im Later last night, the nationaliz nationalized ed nationalized network announced that mem members bers members oi the symphony, the Revue Orchestrr and the Northern Va Variety riety Variety Orchestra all have received dismissal notices for staying out in sympathy with the part-time musicians, who are demanding increased pay. , The Musicians' Unjoh promptly ordered its members in 10 other BBC staff orchestras tn hnnri quitting notices today, and warn- ea mat no music will be permit permitted ted permitted on the nationalized air unless the 'spute is settled thin The Musicians' Union warned members of vaudeville and legi-l .tiinteJhcatctunioiiajut-toJ cept jobs, as substitutes forustte v : - .. . : W : Sexton Rites At Coroza Tomorrow Funeral services for Raton E. Sexton, well-known Isthmian who died suddenly Saturday mornine at his home in Bella Vista, will be held at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Corozal Ceme tery Chapel. ; The services will he rondncterf by the Rev. Oscar Olsen of the Balboa Union Church, and will be followed by interment at Co rozal. Mr. Sexton was 70 years old. Mr. Sexton was born in Bush- nell, Illinois, and attended Cor nell and Stanford Universities and th University of Chicago. His first job was in Enid, Okla Oklahoma, homa, Oklahoma, where he served as sur veyor for public roads and rail railroad road railroad lines. '.". ; He carne to the. Isthmus In 1910 as art engineering drafts draftsman man draftsman and reportedly worked un under der under Col. George W. Goethals. La ter he worked as a foreman on tne construction oi tne Baiooa dorks and on fconstrnetlon nf the emergency dams at Pedro Mi guei .ana Miranores locks, tie was also connected with the construction Of the OH Handling plant at Balboa. He resigned from the Canal organization In September, 1915. From that time on, Mr. Sex Sexton ton Sexton was engaged in engineer injr and aviat'on projects in various parts of South and Centra America. - nn nf fhcs wax innstrurf.inn of an nil tank firm or an island off the South American coast. His employes were transported to and from their lobs in a large speedboat. He also built bridees and drove tunnels for aqueducts in various pacts of the United States. ' Between 1929 'and 193ft. Mr. Sexton organized and owned the Isthmian Airways Company. A licensedaircraft transport oi lot. he managed the airline which carried 68,000 passengers between Cristobal and Balboa rturln t.hU seven vear neriod. Old friends recall that he was especially proud of the airline's luo per cent saiety record. . ''' i :,: ' ::-" During this period he built a fishing lodge in the Pearl Is Islands lands Islands and a hunting lodge, 150 miles from Colon, but accessi accessible ble accessible by seaplane. ,? Prir t.h neyt. few vear h was interested In projects in .various parts of tne Americas, in 1937 h flew a. ReeehM-ftft, seanlane to Dutch" Guiana where ifc-was used in a movie, "Too Hot to Handle," featuring Myrna Loy. In 3938.,he snent four months righting and pumping out the Elliot Line's ocean-coin? vessel Chiriqui, which had capsized aw its dock In pearegai. From 1944 to 1947, he and Mrs. Sexton worked for the Creole Petroleum Company; during this period, he was building superintendent in charge of the -erection '.. of the company's townsites and oil pumping and storage facilities. For the past eight years he has spent most of his t'me at his home in Bella Vista and at an island, Taborcilla, just off Chame Point. There he raised limes, and other citrus fruits, nuts and 50 species of watermelon, in addition to flocks of poultry which includ- ed guinea hens. "A uniaue feature of the it- land are the remains of the old Isthmian Airways' fleet of sea seaplanes, planes, seaplanes, which have been set up at various daces nn the "island and used as rain shelters. '. lone oaugnter, Mrs. Gene King. . .7 Alert Zonians n r ivescue Panama Youth In Lake A dramatic lake rescue by three aiert tomans was responsible yes leraay atternoon for saving the life of a young Panamanian boy on his way back to his lake settle settlement ment settlement home near the Gamboa Gun uud wnen nis cayuco upset. The boy, Jose Garcia, was spot spotted ted spotted off the Gamhn riuhhnnca where a group of Army engineers uavHij a jiicmc at me snei- A shout attracted the picnickers wno soon spotted a man s arm waving, while he clunj; with the omer to an overturned cayuco quite a distance from shore. While some of the men ran to cau ior ponce help, two others, Paul Williamson and Scotty Smith, untied a cayuco which was near me snore. Since there were no naddles arnnnH mvprai nth nr tore planks from the floor of the barbecue shelter to serve as pad paddles. dles. paddles. A swift current and strong wind maae a nard for the rescuers to snoye on, and they finally enlist enlisted ed enlisted the aid of the best swimmer a- Vailable. Mrs. ThpnHnro n ,i ; who hopped into the c a y u c a. They also felt her knowledge of Spanish would be valuable. An eve-witness tnriav niH it only due to Williamson's strength 11 .we mo managed to drift uown lowaras tne drowning boy. It was difficult to null him ni.t n th water, they said today, but ificy. unauy manged to lift u water-logged lad into.their fayu co. The almost drowned youth was ireezing cold and later told the group of rescuers that he couldn't nave neio on much longer. He had been floating about two hours down the lake. One of the picnicking engineers William Trost, took the boy home where he. gave him dry clothes and a warm meal. St. Llary's School Ground-Breaking Ceremony Planned At ground-breaking ceremonies at St. Mary's School, B a 1 b o S,' Wednesday morning at 10:30, the Most Reverend Paul Bernier: A- postolic Nuncio to Panama; will bless the ground designated, for the new win? and turn th first spadeful of earth to inaugurate the construction of the building. The contract for this six-room wing has been awarded to the firm of Cesar Terrientes: The building should be ready for use next septemoer Present at ; the ceremonies on Wednesday will be the Reverend Mother Georgina, the Mother Gen General eral General of the Franciscan Sisters of Mary Immaculate, who are con con-struct struct con-struct in e the building. Mother Georgina was formerly Superior of the Sisters m Balboa, and Is at present making a visitation of the houses nf the Franciscan Sis ters on the Isthmus. .... RETURN FROM AFRICA Nigerian cadets honor guard of Nigerian cadets Duke oJ Edinburgh from' a. state uU riuict-ss Anne met their parents at the airport. 1 rl'o. CUINCA L.. VSNTAOS IQUITOSt TROUBLE IN PERU Newsmap locates Iqultos (arrow) where Peruvian armed forces are staging a revolution. The rebels demanded the end of the authoritarian regime headed by President Manuel Odrla. , Peruvian Govt Prepares To Bomb Rebels in Iquitos I.tma. Feb. 20 fUP) The pe ruvianB0vernment was prepar- lng today to bomb the rebel! stronghold at iquitos I at. vrstrrdav Radio Na- clonal, the government radio station, urged residents of I I-quitos quitos I-quitos to keep tuned in to its broadcasts for instructions on how to avoid injury when the government takes steps to put AWM th. 1.HlllAI1- f i Tk raAn etatlnn tntemmted its broadcast of popular music to mane me louuwuig ..hhuduum ,'"': tos. Radio Nacionai will broad cast instructions aimea a voiding harm to residents as a result oi tne measuics which Dr. Shepperd Tells Oi Wife's Potential And Spurned Lovers Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard said to day his wile's Kiaer may u --mong mong --mong her ''spurned lovers and "potential lovers." The convicted wife-slayer made thp. statement in papers filed with the Ohio Supreme Court, which will review his second degree murder conviction. The briefs filed by Paul M. Her Herbert, bert, Herbert, the new chief Sheppard de- tense counsel, onucu ... -what Herbert felt was misconduct ., n: (k. trial mnn re in tne nanuiw i -.-fusal of the jurors to weight the evidence properly. Sheppard also inciuneu "-ment ment "-ment of his version of what hap hap-pened pened hap-pened the night of July 4, 19o4. hie nroffnant wife. Marilyn, was beaten to death in the up stairs bedroom oi meir iiumr m fashionable Bay Village just out outside side outside of Cleveland. Sheppard said his wife had a n-.i.r. .tr.at H added she had many potential lovers and that he knew three of them. A : r?. : t j (NEA Radio-Telephoto) The Roval Family InspecU an from Sandhurst Academy at from Sandhurst Academy at visit to Nigeria, prince Charles the eovernment will take a gainst the rebellious forces. Keen listening to Radio Nacional for the announcements which will oe made every two hours." Government trooDs hav tak en UD nosltionn aroimri t,h inn. gle area occupied by the rebeH forces unaer Gen. Marclano Me Merino rino Merino Perelra. and nlan tn wine out the rebellion within" the next iour days. Military planes have landed men and mechanized V equip-, ment north of th area.. (A United Press dLxnatf h f mi ; '. Eogota reported that an Iquitos radio broadcast heard bia announced the formation of. revolutionary "government Junta" and that the revolt had been joined bv th armv ni. slons at lea and Chiclayo. vine names or the members of the "government .junta" I were not given.) 1 Yesterday morning the gov gov-ernment.released ernment.released gov-ernment.released 35 members of the staff of the daii t d.v, sa, who had been undej arrest Sine ailw T The newsmen were brought back the nltrht Kofnr penitentiary called "El Fronton" vu me isiano or San Lorenzo ana released. President. Mtmi nj.i. ed their release at tha request " ucicgauon rrom the News Newsmen men Newsmen s Federation which went to fwe f'P5iaei w intercede for the Jailed newsmen. Condition Of Ailing Aga Khan Improved CANNES, Feb. 20 fUP) The f'hng AgA. Khan's doctor said last night his patient's condition Was (freatlv imnrniiH an1 j:. counted statements made yester- "f me Aga s attractive wife. Jne Besum, that he was jrtvely The physician, Doctor Jean Mhelein, was summoned 1 a s t Wednesday to meet the Moslem leader when he was flown here in a special plane from Cairo, The Doctor said his patient's state -w a s "almost alarming" when .he arrived here, but since then he has "improved greatly." t The doctor said he called on the Aga once yesterday a nd d id notrfind him in an unsatisfactory state. ; He said the Begum was "upset and l distraught and indicated this probably accounted for her over over-pessimistic pessimistic over-pessimistic report on her h u s s-banc's banc's s-banc's health. The doctor warned, however, that at the Aga's age (79 or 80) he was at the mercy of any ra rapid pid rapid unforeseen developments. Canal Zone Firemen To Protest The hiring of local-rate firemen as part of a plan to consolidate the firefightin g services on the Zone will be protested to Con Congress, gress, Congress, according to officials of the tuciucu a union nere. At a meeting held Saturday, members of Local 13 of the Inter Inter-i i Inter-i tional Associatiou of Fir Fight Fighters ers Fighters decjded that the; will take their fijht "to each individual member of our Congress, and to his constituents,' if necessary." The meeting was called specifi specifically cally specifically to discuss the merger of the, firefighting facilities which was announced as a plan proposed by the Canal, but subject to the ap proval of increased funds which riave BftPII rpfinptfpiT In flirrinir .ones budeet for fisral var incT ; i ottering Plan Big Membership Locals 900 and 907 will not be folded, top-ranking Gor ernment and Civic Employes' Organizing Committee of official ficial official Milton Murray said today.- The financially frail unions will 'try instead t strengthen their situation by large-scale membership drives. Till the two AFL-CIO locals get back on their own feet, GCEOC international representative William Sin Sinclair clair Sinclair will head them as administrator. Local 900's long-time president Edward A. Gaskin resigned shortly before the weekend, with the revelation thatunion membership was at its lowest ebb ever. Murray and Anthony J. Federoff, also from the union's Washington headquarters, have been on the Isth Isthmus mus Isthmus some days looking into the state of the GCEOC unions, which according to Gaskin were behind in their "dues. .-""" Panama Canal Traffic Up in-Last Half Of-1955 Traffic tnrougn tne ranama i,an- 411 OIIUWCU till iiivivjv tw last half of 1955, the Panama Can al company reportea toaay. Tnll nf frafflc fnr the neriod. the first half of fiscal 1956, ex- ceedea tnose oi tne corresponams period of fiscal 1955. tJ.im 4raffirt tffnrlntf .Tulv All. . I1CST """"v. I - gust and September accounted for the increase. fnmmeivial mnA ffnvrnment transits declined during October, November, and December. This was attributed to a drop in the number of tanker shipments from the eastern United States and Canada to Australasia. ; Tm fk flril ii nuuilht ftf fitral All Hi ..a am ...... 1956, the report said, 4083 vessels passed through the Canal, corn corn-oared oared corn-oared with 3947 in the first half of fiscal 1955. Tolls totaled $17, 995,000 in the first half of fiscal 1956, compared with $16,468,000 in the corresponding period the yar before. - Traffic between the eastern U. Pro-West Premier Elected In Greece ATHENS, Feb. 20 (UP) Pro- western premier wnstantine Ka Ka-ramanlis ramanlis Ka-ramanlis squeezed, through to a surnrise- victory over a Commu nist-tainted coalition in Greece's national elections, official results showed today,. ; ..v ..h-. The National Radical Union seats in the 300-member Assem Assembly. bly. Assembly. The Democratic Union, which innliiHwl rnalitinn a th 1 ft and Right,, woo 149 seats, official results showed. B A LUO A TIDES TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21 HIGH LOW 11:00 a mi 4:52 a.i 11:35 p.m Firemen oppose the move be- fit thalii ilvi 1. .nlU.. .j. cause thev claim it is annthpr at. tempt on the part of the Canal administration to economize by displacing U.S. -rate citizens with local-rattra, The plan, if approved, would go into effect sometime after Janua January ry January :' 1 -., : The firemen's statement fol follows: lows: follows: .... ..... "The Fire Department service of the Panama Canal was set up to protect the Jives and property of United States citizen and the investment of the United States in the Canal Zone. Thn livi inrf naT 7n. .... .n..i.. I' . "Tt olu.v. h.. k... ' .3 e i fi ncini-iim- ilary service. The United States Unions scale S. coast and the West Coast "of South America increased. Oil was listed ax th Inn mm. modity westbound during the itc ond quarter of fiscal 1956, but or displaced oil as the leading east east-bound bound east-bound commodity. The reDort crpHitod fhi. fit increase :n South American irn ore production, particularly in tht new Peruvian fields. Brockman To kd Zone Chasl Drive For Third Time Leonard M. rockman norennat programs staff coordinator for the Panama Canal Co., will head the Canal Zone Community Chest for 1956. Brockman's election to the chair- manship ol ,the Chest's boarc1 of directors was announced by P. A. White,' outgoing chairman, follow following ing following board ofiicer elections 1 a s t week. This will be Brockman's tnira term as Chest chairman. H headed the organization in both 1952 and 1953. Other nffirari 1 board include second Vice chair- man wm u. Arey, Jr., secretary Arnold H. Hodgson, and treasurer William JumD. Etei-tinn hf a irer vice chairman, who annually heads me lunu-raising campaign, wiu he accomplished at an early board meeting, it was indicated. . The new officers were elected Feb. 15 at a board meeting held immediately fnllnwins lh Tnm. munity Chest's annual public meet meeting, ing, meeting, at which four new board members, were elected by public vote. ... AH persons present at the an annual nual annual meeting wCre invited to re re-mam mam re-mam as sneetatnrt at thm hnarA meeting elections. Both! sessions wcic hciu in me Auanorium oi tne Drive 5:22 p.m.JWB Center, Balboa. Merger Plan citizen takes anoath of allegiance I 1 a ..... "... and has to protect with his liie.if necessary, the investment of his own government. An alien cannot take this oth nor can He, in con con-science science con-science iulfill it and still rem a in the citizen of another country. "We feel that it is not necessa necessary ry necessary for the United States govern, ment nor any of its agercies ta hire other than US citizens to pro protect tect protect its own interests. Local 11, IAFF, composed of United -Slate citizens insists that in all cases where United States lives and property are involved only US cit citizen izen citizen firemen should be used. ."We shall tak thir ca? to "'' "Individual nieniLrr nf mir'Tnn. gress aad to his constituents if r :' essary." Till PANAMA AMERICAN AN IN'D LrENDINT DAI1I MttSMri r. THE PANAMA AMERICAN I MD rulLUMlD (r rut PAXAM AMIfllCAN MOl, INC, OuCD r HIHON BOUNStVILL III Ittl , MAJtMOOlO ARIAS. IBITOH . T. H THitT P. O. Bo t34. Panam. P. TLtHOKl -0740 IS tlNtJl CAiLt AootfK PANAMWICAN, PANAMA. Cairi Oriet: ia.l?t Cintral AvtNt MTwft ,izth ano 13th iTtrt I FOSIIGN PPRtNTATlVi. JCHUA 8. POWER. INC. 'f J4S Madison Ave. Ni Youk. 117) N. V.,.. . ; mm iect. !. P"MONTM. IH ADVANCr 1.70 t SO ti'lH MOKTH. IM ADVANCf 2 Xrt rej ONC YA. IN ADVANCl ,. 10,50 14 OO TM,i tS too rCKUM THf RIADHtS OWN COLUMN ITHE MAIL BOX ARMY CIVILIANS' LIQUOR Sir Labor News And Comment Tender Shepherd i. 11 - r ,. : 1-' 1 Tri. i marii. n rpcent tISARCARIB circulars and Memoranda pertaining to procedures and controls governing the sale of alcoholic beverages to Army civilian personnel. It Is understood, according to these publications, that non non-US US non-US citizen employes of the United States Government or Its agencies who do not reside in the Canal Zone, are eligible to purchase reduced-tax-import liquor at designated places of sale under Army jurisdiction in the canal Zone. It la a well-known fact that N.C.O. Clubs and Officers Clubs are the only liquor-vending establishments under Army iiiwriirt.tnn.' in -th canal Zone. It Is also; well known that these service centers are operated for the exclusive entertain-. nient and welfare of non-commissionea ana cummisaiuncu no notary tary notary personnel, their families and guests, respectively. Because of this complexity of procedures and controls, one wonders just where and how may eligible non-US citizen em employes ployes employes of the Army, who reside in Panamanian territory, pur purchase chase purchase the tax-reduced alcoholic beverages? CARIB Form 38 Is applicable for purchases made under Panamanian jurisdiction (from liquor dealers in Panama), but its issue is restricted irom this category of employes which doubtless comprises the large majority of alien (local rater labor in the Canal Zone. The following is cited from a recent USARCAfUB Memo Memorandum: randum: Memorandum: 'Persona eligible to purchase reduced Import tax alcoholic beverages at authorized places of 'sale within the Republic of Panama and only these personnel are to be Issued CARIB Form 38. v Members of the armed forces and members or their families actually residing with them. United States citizen employes of any united States Government agency and members of tnelr families ac- tiiallv with them. "c. All persons not mentioned above who legally reside in i the canai zone. '. In view of these circumstances, we hold the misgiving that unless definite action is taken by the authorities to determine or define a clear policy or procedure whereby these "forgotten" employes may purchase tax-reduced liquor in as convenient a manner as the other groups, Dec. 31 will arrive In a twinkling flash and these eligible persons shall not have enjoyed the lux luxury ury luxury (whisky Is a luxury item) of having bought and imbibed tax-reduced liquor. It Is inconceivable that either the Canal Zone authorities or the Panamanian Government intended to discriminate against these workers, even for ten months. i. For a third strike, it might be argued that products of the Cervecerla Naclonal are sold in all commissaries at lower prices than in Panama, yet the resultant contraband la negligible. j True, liquor is in greater demand and hence more market marketable, able, marketable, but we have supreme confidence in the efficiency of the controlling officials who are, or could be, authorized to limit the purchase of such commodities by restricting the issue of CARIB Form 38, after including non-US citizen employes who reside in the Republic of Panama. Liberty Bells "b. JBfrF PREJUDICE AND BIGOTRY ""This Is in answer to, or rather, In agreement with the letter signed "American." i agree with everything you say, "American," only I think yocr letter was too limited. You spoke of Army wives and Gorgas doctors. That letter from Sergeant's Wife spoke of "foreign" doctors but actually If you read between the lines you will find it goes much peeper than Jhat. she is one of many that jiate anything andr anybody that is "foreign," rather it be religion, colpr, of what' have. you. '. With observation after many years here in the Canal Zone I find that the feelings and opinions of many Zonltes follow along the same lines as sergeant's wife, in regards to anyone or anything foreign. I have never in my life seen such bigotry inaction. Talk about your Aryan race. It makes me almost ashamed to be an American, (U.S, American, that is). I have never seen any people (and I have been to a few other, places) so prejudiced against other people because of color or race Some good examples: The abrupt manner in vft chom8 U.S. citizens will address someone who-is a non non-U.S. U.S. non-U.S. citizen: the way people will stare at a married couple Just because one is not as white as the other one, etc., etc. ' Incidentally, I am a "white," Protestant, U.S. citizen, there there-fare, fare, there-fare, I have no personal axe to grind. J My apologies to those sincere, broadmlnded people among us, of whom there are many, but never quite enough. r Gringos, search your conscience. Un Mundo Sir: UNATTRACTIVE BELLA VISTA I wonder hfim m n IJ lltl?" without advertisements of some sort tacked S-SST-MfAff'SSrf tre; contain as many at lSt Snfal,ner "ne5 by royftl Palms- there must be vl 5 Lf l ref Vree-i0 desecrated. These trees in Bella bank, for th.h ?a?foperiyut wer Planted on the street S SAXffr Isnt thls mi8-U5e of amoS? theSrA ArnSLfih" H?lnchored c;..iu. ------w. -..v ui onaujf maiiKu irecs. , Those of us who have talked over this problem all hope hAtr?St(flaino,f0UVdnt0 8t0p thls Pe of commercialism in trje residential areas of Panama. M. K. W. SIDE GLANCES By Colbroith VICTOR RIESEL EVANSVILLE, Ind. While the White House is quietly trying to contact some of labor's political leaders, there's an influential bloc of Republicans which would rather jaU them than woo them. This angry bloc which believes it's oo the unions' list for purging has come up with some unpub unpub-licizcd licizcd unpub-licizcd moves for a crackdown on labor's political strategists. It is aimed at having the Senate probe the unions, the Justice Dept. jaU their leaders, and the government tear up their union shop contracts if they spend the members' dues on politics. One of the Republicans who would rather work labor over than woo its leaders is this state's Sena Senator tor Senator William Jenner, who was here for the annual Gridiron dinner: Al Also so Also here was Tennessee's Sen. Es Es-tes tes Es-tes Kefauver, who can give you the good-humored impression of running vcTy hard while standing still, Jenner must have been mus musing ing musing Over Kef auvcr'g famed inves investigative tigative investigative technique, since Jenner has a probe of his own in the works. Jenner has Introduced a bill in the Senate (S. Res. 190), which would investigate labor's election electioneering eering electioneering spending. He has asked the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration to authorize such a probe. If it is approved, we may again see sen. Joe McCarthy in action. He is on the committee and would have the right to sit in and Question witnesses. If the committee authorizes the probe, it could look into the per sonnel, tne organizational struc structure, ture, structure, the sources of finances and expenditures of each union which is in politics directly or indirectly. This means ail of them. There's one section in Jenncr's resolution which would rip labor's private sanctums wide open. This is the one which approves going into the "background of principal individuate sponsoring or connect ed with each such organization." Under this section, a senate com mittee could subpoena every labor leader from George Mcany, Wal ter Reuther, Dave Beck and David Dubinsky to local business agents assigned to ringing door Dens, pro viding baby sitters on election day and arranging for as many as 80,000 phone calls during election week (as they did in Oregon). Jenner may yet get this probe on the road. This is a nine-man committee. The four Republicans will vote for it. And a conservative Democrat may be convinced to go along, me uemocrais are as dh dh-tprlv tprlv dh-tprlv sDlit on labor as the Repub iicans. -The feud pivots not only on the Neero segregation Issue, but on the growing influence of the labor people inside the Democratic Hartv itself. Nothing could more graphically reveal this than what happened in Chicago not too long ago. Some Democrats wanted to help ex-ben ator Scott Lucas make a come' back this year by nominating him aeainst Republican Senator Ever ett Dirkscn. Lucas never got the chance. The labor people vetoed him. The Democrats then picked a candidate who reportedly had Dotn labor support and Adlal Steven, son's blessing. This meant that the Democrats wouldn't nominate a man whom, labor wouldn't clear.) So we mav find the irritated con servative Democrats working with the angry -Republicans, another of whom is Sen. Carl Curtis of Ne braska. He. too. is a memDer oi the Senate Rules and Administra Administration tion Administration Committee. Curtis didn't wait for Jenner's resolution, but, with Arizona's Barry Goldwater whom labor now considers Public Enemy Number Oneintroduced a Dill which would jail labor chiefs for using union dues politically, Down in Florida, I saw AFL AFL-CIO CIO AFL-CIO president George Meany al most chew nis traaiuonai cigar in half when he talked of the Curtis- Gold water bill. Meany said tins would wipe out the labor move movement ment movement and he had no intention of sitting by and letting this get any place in the Senate. The Dill provides au sentences and fines for union chiefs wno contribute to political parties in anv fashion. Under section 3 oi son. vurus nrnnnsal. a union could be fined uo to 15.000 lor violating xnq Dan on political donations of dues mon money. ey. money. Union officials involved could get up to a year in jaii or oe unea un m st.ooo or both. For "willful" violations union leaders could draw as high as two years in prison or a fine of up to sio.uw or Dotn. "It doesrTt havt to be Leap Yaar for a woman to pro- "pg5) oii "nw van laasu juu iui vi mother did me! - ii C" ' tl.w ). i .tfiiii. V I lt iiiii W7M Wimm Walter Winchelllrile WASHINGTON-.. Two tragic Oncof Lyndon's favorites in ths deauis in Uie past few days luve past, was sen: Stuart Symington given, pause to those concerned !(D., Mo.. the able ex-secretary of nnu jji-img uie ncAi prcsiueiu oi the Lnitcd, States. the Air Force. Lyndon even talked pnvaie.y about maK.ng syminytoa a presidential candidate if there was a deadlock at Chicago. But not today. Today Lyndon is livid. For Symington made up his own mind on the natural gas bilL He was polite and cooperative with Lyndon, but he didn't fail for Lyn Lyndon's don's Lyndon's persuasive charm. He de decided cided decided to vote against the bill. So an; Interesting thing is hap hap-pcdng pcdng hap-pcdng .in tne senaie locuy, Symington wants to investigate -our slackened air power. He ; knows we have fallen behind Rus Russia, sia, Russia, know this is a danger to tne national security. But he cant get permission to investigate. Lyndon Johnson is chairman of a subcommittee to probe military waste and inefficiency, and he is not probing our slackened air ;w- One was the death nf Ramlninh Paul, one of the nation's greatest lax attorneys and formCr counsel of the Treasury Department. Paul proDaDiy nao wnttea more tax law thMny other single man. Patri Patriotically otically Patriotically he gave his time to Senate committees long after he left the government. A few years ago he had suffered from a heart attack, and last week while testifying be before fore before a congressional committee on economic matters, suddenly slumped forward from a second attack and died within a period of seconds. . Paul was 65 years old. exactly the same age is the president. The second tragic death wan that of Oregon's popular Paul Patter son, Republican, who also had been nursing a heart condition, but who had finally been persuaded to run tor tne senate against Wayne Morses -Democrat. Patterson had not wanted to run. !r FnrthMwrinre. when Svminbton Neither he nor his wife, Georgia, has tried to get Senator Russell of had been well during the past year.'Geoi ji-. chairman of the Full But political pressure mounted. Re-1 Armed Services Committee, to set puoncans were determined to get up a special subcommittee, Russell rid of Morse, who not only had re belled against the Eisenhower ad administration ministration administration but helped elect the first Oregon Democratic senator in 40 years, his former pupil, Rich Richard ard Richard Ncuberger. Among those who applied the heat to Patterson were John C. F. Wiggins, ex-law partner of John Foster Dullcj; Ted Gamble, thea theatre tre theatre magnate and behind the the-scenes scenes the-scenes bigwig of the Oregon GOP: plus Paul B. McKee, president of Pacific Power and" Light. A fev c'ose friend of frail finv- says no. Russell is a close friend of Lyndon's. He knows what th score is. So Symington is stymied. It's highly doubtful there will be any probe of air power at least under Senator Symington of Missouri. FIRED FOR TALKLNG It doesn't pay to express your views against the Benson farm program if you want to keep a job with the government. This what Lovd HoniKe oi rru.ei, THE BROADWAYmOLLYWOOD MIRK Anne Sheridan and her long-time heart (Rudy Acosta of Mexico) are reported asunder. Actor Jacq Mapes inheriting the star. .Ty Power's final decree is due in May. If he weds anyone, it'll, prob probably ably probably be Mary Robles of Vogue. . Dagmar's sister Jean Egnor (Na (National tional (National Airlines" hostess) weds J. Nichols (of Pepsi) at St. Patrick's March 10th . .Talus friends say the Time mag rap was because she refused them an Interview. . The feud between John Derek and Jody Lawrence (his co-star in "The Leather Saint") is the buzz of the Paramount lot. .Thev suspect Ann Miller's latest adorer is Alan Blair: wealthy socialite, .Edw. G. Robinson's new hit. "Middle of the Night," is off to a standing-room-only start. .Kim Stanley, who was elevated to stardom in "Bus Stop" via critics' raves, calls them "a bunch of fatheads'' in Cue mag. : Countess Helen Blanchet de Cha- te:aille, cousin of the Marquis de la Falaise (he was wed to Gloria la Falaise (he was wed to Gloria Swanson and Constance Bennett), will wed Louis Marlowe. TV di rector, at Bordeaux, France, in April. .Spencer Tracy's plastic surgery last weeK was to erase facial scar, .Donald O Connor says he and Gloria Noble wm seai matters before .May v, .Recom .Recommended: mended: .Recommended: June Allyson's article in Motion Picture mag: "Seven Sins No Woma.i Can Afford" . .Passers-by along Park Avenue: Walter Wanger and Jennings Lang. Their last meeting became rage unc headlines. .Cobina .Wright with Virginia Warren (the daughter of tne tniei Justice j ai uic uuiuny hnlh hA.irrm'd UD to here. .The A. Patinos (she's the Duchess of Durcal) have Had It. He's in Mex Mexico ico Mexico arranging the splituation. . Crooner Johnny Parker quietly married a Buffalo phone operator. Ralph Meeker and Janice Rule, who were stage-sweeties Mn 'Pic 'Picnic nic 'Picnic are enniDetinu with the Aca- pulco sun...Betty Reilly is the Le Cupidon lure lor me nexi a wccrs . . Robert Waencr and Dick Haymes' ex-wife Nora lifted eye eye-hrftw hrftw eye-hrftw Huetinff at Hollywood's Villa insiders reoort that those Dean Martin dates with Lori Nelson are strictly business. She's in his next flicker. .Teevee producer D. Wolper, just Unravelled from songstress Toni Carroll, now has tnf Rarhara WhltUlB. .WOR- Mutual newsman John Scott and his wife have a new oaugnicr. Wm. Zeckendorf, the realty ty-, I coon, is rumored dickering for the 7th Avenue block between 52nd and 5 rd. If it jells he may turn u into a huge theatre or teevee pro project, ject, project, replacing the Manhattan Stor Storage age Storage edifice. .You can buy a por portrait trait portrait bust of the Duchess of Wind Windsor sor Windsor from a lady sculptor. The Duch Duchess ess Duchess ordered it months a 20 and then changed her mind. .Ella Fitz gerald's first recordings (for Verve) are in the stores. 31 clicks by Cole Porter. Hand holders at Ricky's: Portia Nelson and Bea Lillie's ncDhew Grant Tyler. Add Miami Beach populars: Zapplef, the Roney Plaza por portrait trait portrait painter, whose likenesses are very real. .In the Hearst ar articles ticles articles on Grace Kelly, her mother mentioned Grace's first serious beau, but not his name. He is Don Richardson of TV s "Mama-' snow. squawked. Period!. .Correction: On the air we reported that two Broadway show writers (who will be subpena'd as Communist party members) were formerly wed to each other. Wed to others. . Eric ernor Patterson tried to protect wash has lust discovered after him, and warned he would havejh annearcd on a television pro-- luetlions mciui mo difficulty withstanding a c a m m-paign paign m-paign against the horseback rid riding, ing, riding, hard-driving Senator .. Morse, One of them was Hugh Barzet, Patterson's legal adviser. But, ob obsessed sessed obsessed with a hatred of Norse, Oregon political leaders would not listen, with them was Secre Fleming, the "Plain and Fancy" i tary of the Interior Doug McKay. lead, and Lynn Dollar, tne et,uuu gal, hold their private quiz shows at Majors Cabin. .Ginny Simms and Dr. A. Huencgardt are a new two-et. He's Selene Walters' usea to-was. .Birdland disc jockey Bob Garrity has chums almost sure he'll marry Bonnie Collins, a mod model el model ; .Evelyn Keyes wears blue undies. Victor Mature's ex-wife and a tennis star are two-doodling. Street scene: Henry Fonda and a baron est leavirie Romeo Salta's as Serge Obolensky and Henry's estranged wife Susan entered. .Piper Laurie and Gene Nelson made ud. .Bar bara Rush and songwriter Bob Merrill are in tuje. .Billy Daniels' troubles include suits by five differ ent creditors .Lena Home broke the Hotel Ambassador Cocoartut Grove's attendance record, accord-i ing to boss G. David Schine. J Sonja Hcnie and Norwegian Nils Onstad duet at Manny Wolf's. . The least amused person who read about M. Monroe's strap-breaking episode was Anita Ekberg who did the same thing for the front pages with her whole frock. .Ar .Arthur thur .Arthur W. A. Cowan, the intl lawyer, has Arthur Murray tutor Maria Green considering his case. Henry Ford bought the Richard Barthelmess mansion at Southamp ton, L.I. It will cost a million to renovate. .Pat lwarsnau, lemme lead in "Mr. Wonderful." just pur chased a mink at Russek's, where she once sales-girl'd. .Singer Di Washington's favorite is the Kev. Russell-Roberts, an Atlantic City minister. . The Rod Steigers are trying a separation -to see what haDDens. .Mary Martin can have the. lead for Irving Berlin's next musical. Based on Alva Johnston's "The Legendary Mizners" . Eradford Dillman of "Third Per son" and Freida Hardring of Roxy's orcss dent., will merge m June Bobby Short's click at the Beverly Clubfis midtown talk, considering hnu 'manv isnnt am flnnnin. Two Dodgers pitching stars slugged WASH DAY BLUIS it out in a midtown swanK spot Shelley Winters, injured Ice-skat-InE.hobbles through he? "Hatful" role with chic black cashmere ho-4 siery. Hides the cast on her rignt shaft. .Jayne Mansfield's thank thank-you you thank-you note to colyumists: "An ac actress's tress's actress's siicess results from the nurturing of many people". RKO insured John "(Duke) Wayne's well well-being being well-being at $30,000 daily while filming his latest flicker. "The Conqueror" . .Gilmore's hatcnicic (a icaor icaor-ablc) ablc) icaor-ablc) is up for a featured dancing role in "Shangri-La," a new' musi musical. cal. musical. Joan Roberts, who starred in "Oklahoma," "High Button Shoes" and ether hits, jMorgctting Broad Broadway way Broadway living quietly at Rockville Center, L. I., a medicos wife. T.J Maree Dow, the only fomme among sixty males backstage at "No Time For Sgts, goes nome soio. saier, she says. .Who taict chorines are dumb? Bea Mastersoi (of "Fan ny") prepares the income tax re turns for the cast. ..The late James Dean (he died six months ago) is still fanmail champ at Warner's . .-.Richard Llewellyn's new novel ("Mr. Hamish Cleave") is. based on the Burgess-Maclcar. spy-scandal. An int'l thriller that would make a great cinema. But local publishers fear Hollywood won't touch it because if it so anti-American. Memo to the ditors: The Mrs. Eddy Duchin Everitt arrest at gun-point in Mexico uty, me Peter Townsend )not Princess Margaret's former beau) raar- riaee to Elizabeth Seal (of the London production of "P a j a m a Game") and the complete details fthe scene and date of the mar riage and the location of the hon honeymoon) eymoon) honeymoon) on Terry Moore's secret marriage to Eugene McG rath were WW skewps. Finally, to clinch matters. GOP leaders got President Eisenhower, who did not realize Patterson's frail health, to make a personal plea. At this point the governor accepted. Forty-eight hours after accenting he was dead of a heart attack. Friends of the President say he was more upset over this than any other recent event, IRISH SENATOR Sen, H u b e r t Humphrey (D Minn.) haS a laueh at Sir Anthony Eden's expehse the otheflay, but Jtden didn t know it. The scene was the Senate floor iust as the visiting British Prime Minister was entering to deliver his address to the solons. As the tall and distinguished Brit Briton on Briton walked down the aisle. Hum Humphrey phrey Humphrey strolled over to redheaded Boston Irishman, Sen. John F. Ken Kennedy nedy Kennedy (D., Mass.), placed a band on Kennedys' shoulder and said. -'John. I'm all for a united Ire land and I know that you are too. Why don't you get up and say a few words about it while Mr. Eden's here?" LIVID LYNDON The backlash of Sen. Lvndon Johnson's revenge against oddo- ncnts of the natural gas bill al-! ready has begun to be felt. ine astute Lyndon, who in one term became one of the most now erful leaders in recent Senate his tory, has his likes and his dislikes. He plays favorites with open-faced cnarm ano abandon. Then he can push a senator or block him, can put him on a key committee or relegate him to the' raetail Dis- trict of Columbia committee. sram. House." BoWke bad been trying to oper operate ate operate art SO-acre potato farm near Prosser, but couldn't make both ni meet and had to quit. He knew the truth of what Secretary Benson had said about tne omitm omitm-ties ties omitm-ties of small one-man farniing. But he got a job with the Kenne- wich Irrigation District near Yak Yak-ma ma Yak-ma on Jan. 2. The job paid $7,500. $7,500.-On On $7,500.-On Jan. 3, however, Bohlke made the mistake of appearing with Miss Virginia Burnside on her television program and spoke out frankly about the difficult problem t h t small farmer faces today. Shortly thereafter, Bohlke wai fired by Reclamation Bureau offi officials cials officials working for Secretary of the Interior McKav. They rfn i him t with Van E. Nutley at, $10,000 an- mally4 - -t- ; "" Then it gets even tougher. Cur- Chatnp l ockv ar .."7. l i" u tM nnarf nr tee-cream U It Deeomes law, ; j t,n0.yA v,n. tin hill. hit at the contracts the unions sign with the corporations. The bill would rip up most of these pacts if the political donation, section is violated. As Curtis puts it, every union would have to prove mat it made no political contribution or did not spend a dollar on any political candidates directly or indirectly in the previous 24 months if -it wanted its union snop contracts to stay in effect. Curtis couldn't' have hit the un unions ions unions harder. Here I want to steal a linn from Sam Goldwyn. unce while discussing the H-bomb, Gald- wyn said, "We got to be careful of that thing, mere s aynamue in it.'' .. ... .N .. ui-... .:u Watcn UUS Iigm uiow mu. U5S53SEJS5Zll fcli laMn til II tv nvrfloe fluv con heor a tot tl In his cor quicker than one In his head. "' at one sitting. . Gil Macuougaia, xan- kecs 3rd baseman, r'.1" an exec post with A. S. Beck Shoe Co. when Father. Time affects his batting. : because one called the other a quit quitter. ter. quitter. "' V Maurice Chevalier took a' new red Caddy to France. It was wrecked the first day. .Rainier ordered that Monacan law repealed which permitted only Grace's folks to attend .the ceremony. Grace MEMPHIS. Tenn. (UP)- Mrs. KathrVn Hewes' husband picked up a sack of clothespins by mistake thinking it was his lunch. He de cided his feet were better able to withstand a. return trip home for real food than his teeth and di digestive gestive digestive apparatus were to cope with a wooden repast. v 1 it uft.up your heart (A Ltnttn feature of the Panama. American, prepared by the Rtv M. A. Cookson Episcopal Church of Our. Saviour-St. Marflartt.) TOLD TO CO HOMI Read St. Mark S.120. Co home to thy friends, and tell them how Brest things the Lord has done for thee.-" ' Tho man who Was told to go home had just volunteered to fol low Jesus wherever lie went. e was the demoniac whom Jesus hrf heatprf in the country of Ger- aseries. During the period of his affiictinn he dwelt among the tombsr-scannr-off-Per'hy-',y his fierce appearance ana ms wild behaviour. Now that he was cured, he would -leave an ana 101 low Jesus. The Words of Josus must have fallen oa his enthusiastic entrea entreaties ties entreaties like a bucket of cold water, 'Go home..." he was told quite simply. The new convert would not be called upon to leave home and follow Christ on His mission missionary ary missionary tours, but it would be his du duty ty duty to follow Him in the routine of every day life. Which is often the harder task. The test of our Christian pro profession fession profession does not come so much in tho spectacular sacrifice as in the daily witness of our ordinary liv liv-ine. ine. liv-ine. It is not easv to return home and live out our decision for Christ in day by day loyalty. - It it easier1 to burn our bridgts ..behind ytjhan itjs to 00 back to thow TasginY'strudurai, to strengthen and rebuild thorn so that thtv can carry life's load. God calls some men to. turnferent. their b.tck on their former way of life and start out in a new direc tion, for most of us, as the Gera Gera-scnes scnes Gera-scnes demoniac, the command COmes to live th nnw lifn in (ha old surroundings, and by the new. ness of that life to transform them in turn. We are told to go home in oraer mat we may tell forth. we are charged to continue to testify to the faith that we have gained when Christ has touched our uvea. -, , Our keeping of Lent should bring us nearer to Christ and to our lov ed ones and friends at home where it is often harder to bear witness to the love of God in Christ that we have professed. You remember me rrouigai son reiurnca m ms home, the same home but witn a difference, because he was dif- Missing Words Answer to Previous Puzzle ACROSS 1 and mouse 4A inthe : face 8 Go tree 12 Exist 13 To the way 14 Japanese admiral IS Legal matters & Wash 57 Musical direction DOWN 1 Net a in the world . 2 Greek war god 3 Last will and 4 Leopards can't - change their 23 An statesman .. 24 Covers ..; 7 O U T 0 M fA i L j. L IfT g R f J L T A NT K A, ij 5 1 e r Tll a u r p f N X A wT 1 H l P, A R C g O "" I T A O A T U. A D" it N "uf"Tr nXc 4 f XT wT ?en5 Ii- g a t ri t t aJw ab: tb'p4 16 Help, man 18 Landed properties 20 Heraldic bands 21 Measures of land 22 Ripped 24 Citrus fruit 26 Hairless 27 Forbid 30 Fancy 32 Argument 34Thitktr 33 Rubber 38 in the lap of luxury J7 Hew and . jet so far 39 Gambling ' game . 40 Places 41 Hebrew letter 42 The stol the show 43 Neptune's 49 Changed col 01 like SI Beginner 82 The old pay S3 Gaelic 84 and feather ; 53 Love (ed 55 Employed 6 Parsee sacred 23 Not the writinis faintest 7 annum S Shop Fuel' 10 Monster 11 Foxes 17 On the line 19 Regions 28 French cap 27 Cellars 28 Solar disk 29 Roman ruler 31 Holding 33 Cooked 38 Fall flowers 40 Fleshy fruits 41 Dug coal 42 The- of perfection 43 Burn 4Tahitian food 46 His spirits 47 All tidy 48 Hebrew scripture SO Romanian coin and l "2 I3 I l 5 b 7 'I a i IQ ,1 : IT H r-- ... r"i. 1 1 1 f i . .,111111 1 mi iAM iimmimimk 'Mu. mm t--- TrnzizZTZ ill t pi 11 I H 1 Lent is tfo TLt.2 to Tc!;o Op Yclt Cress By Bishop Fulton J. Shfen LENT IS the time of the great drama. It is the season when all mention Is focused on you and what you will do about suf suffering. fering. suffering. All year long you are con confronted fronted confronted with, suffering. But Lent Is a special "suffering" season for it is the prelude to the greatest suffering of all time: Christ's death on Calvary. OUR LORD told us. "Take up your cross and ? follow me." He jf did not say, "Take up My ' Cross." Each one of us has his own cross, 'his own suffer suffering, ing, suffering, tailor-made and f mt.fim. built to fit the bearer. Lent is Sheen the time to recognize and em embrace brace embrace that cross. The size of the cross does not matter; it's your willingness to accept it that counts. There is tht cross of death, for Instance, when God takes some loved one home to eternal happiness. Don't fight God over this death. Accept this suffering as a means of turning your thoughts to life after death.: ALL OF US hare the cross of aickne&s, either in our own lives or in others. The tragedy of sickness is not the pain It brings, but the great amount of pain pain-that that pain-that Is wasted. Willingly accept your pain, and find the love of God In your sorrow, i It la typically American to feel 'that only -big" things count. But from the Christian point of view, things become "big" in the way that our wills utilize them. Hence, mopping an office for the love of God is "bigger" than running the office for the love of money. t SUFFERING ITSELF won't bring you to God, of course. A baker and a monk may both get up at two o'clock each morning. Both may not be happy about it. But one may curse God, or at least be annoyed, while the' other offers it up for the love of God. f 60 it Is with all suffering. We can use it or waste it this is the drama of Lent. THE REASON WHY most of us are what we are, mediocre Christians, "up" one day. "down" the next, is simply that we re refuse fuse refuse to let God work on Us. We want to control the nrooe.. Lent is the time to bend our wills to God's; to let Him work on tht canvas of our souls. Since God is a better artisan than you, the more you abandon yourself to Him, the happier He can make you. It is good to be a self-made man. but it is better to be a God-made man. Try It by spending a Holy Hour a day during Lent in prayer and med meditation. itation. meditation. YOUR HEART is in your hands. Only you have the free freedom dom freedom to give It away. To whom will you give yours: to your moods, your passions, your ego egotism, tism, egotism, or to God? Lent Is the time to decide. V i fauliU rutun Imia, ViAinfM IT, O- C Mayor Of Illinois Complains To Ike Of Muzzling At Parley WASHINGTON, Feb. 20 (UP) (UP)-Mayor Mayor (UP)-Mayor Paul Eagan, of Aurora, 111., protested to President Eisen Eisenhower hower Eisenhower that he was mistreated by Civil Defense Administrator Val Peterson at the Mayors Confer Conference ence Conference here last week. Eagan, who spoke out at sever several al several of the sessions, told a reporter he wired Mr. Eisenhower com complaining plaining complaining that Peterson "rapped me down and denied my right of free speech." He said he tried to aske Peter Peterson son Peterson questions at a meeting last Friday, but that Peterson, would . not answer on grounds that Eagan "made speeches" and drove oth other er other mayors out of the conference hall. Eagan said his questions were legitimate. He said he was only trying to find out what should be done a a-bout bout a-bout civil defense for Aurora's 55, 55,-000 000 55,-000 citizens who, he said, "depend upon me as mayor." Th niiestinn nf r'rvil defense was -also debated on NBC's "A "A-merican merican "A-merican Forum of the Air" tele television vision television program by Republican Mayor Norris Poulson of Los An Angeles; geles; Angeles; W. F. Nicholson of Denver, who was elected as a non-partisan, and Democrats Richardson Dilworth of Philadelphia and Ben West of Nashville, Tenn, .All agreed it was the duty of Legless American, Girl Seeks Cure At Lourdes Shrine PARIS,. Feb.- 20 (UP) Nancy Hamilton, 13-year-old girl from Santa Monica, Cal., who is going to the Lourdes Shrine in hopes of a cure for a fatal disease arrived here by plane today. The little girl asked her moth mother er mother too be driven through the Paris streets to see the famous shops. And like any American tourist in France Nancy told her mother... "One thing would love to do be before fore before leaving Paris tonight; would be to go up the Eiffel Tower." She is suffering tfrom a rare in incurable curable incurable blood disease that has al already ready already resulted in amputation of both legs. She hopes that her visit to the famous Catholic shrine will result in a miracle eyre. the federal government to provide overall guidance for civil defense. But they said the public, must be aroused if any program is to be successful. Dilworth complained that t h e federal government is doing "vir "virtually tually "virtually nothing" in the way of civil defense. But Poulson blamed this primarily on the apathy of the public and on Congress which, he said, has provided inadequate funds. West suggested that a statement by President Eisenhower might arouse the public to the dangers of an atomic attack. Poulson said the present pro program gram program of evacuating cities m the event of an enemy attack is not feasible Jor sprawling Los Ange Angeles. les. Angeles. He ,sajd his., .city's, policy is one of "go home and take cover." Key Vesf am Gsrrnan Sfale Voles Today On Crucial Issues DUESSELDORF, Germany, Feb. 20 (UP) The legislature of West Germany's biggest state votes today on a non-confidence move against State Premier Ar Arnold nold Arnold that could have national re repercussions. percussions. repercussions. A vote ousting Christian Demo Democrat crat Democrat Arnold would mean a sharp reduction in the number of seats Chancellor K o n r a d Adenauer's Christian Democrats have in the national upper house or Bundes Bundes-rat, rat, Bundes-rat, where representation is deter determined mined determined by the state government's makeup. v , Adenauer now holds a slim nut certain two-thirds majority with 26 of the 38 Bundcsrat seats com compared pared compared to 12 for the opposition So Socialists. cialists. Socialists. The fall of the Arnold government would pare it to 21 seats and boost the Socialist, who would dominate the hew govern government ment government in north Rhine-Westphalia, to 17. The two-thirds majority is needed to ensure passage of some constitutional changes needed for rearmament. Lit hf lllil.alu 1 i CLEVELAND, 0., Feb. 20 (UP) The man who used to collect it said today the income tax should be abolished. T. Cole man Andrews, who was collector of internal revenue three years until he resigned two months ago, said in a speech before the Cleveland City Club forum that the present law is discriminatory, comiscaiory ana pouueauy un sound. It discriminates against the mid dle class, he said "people with a taxable income from $8,000 to $25,000." It confiscates money that should be used as investment savings to develop the economy," he said. And it aids the cause of Com Communism munism Communism because the present grad- uatea tax law nas oeen nailed by the Reds as "a way to destroy capuausm. v Andrews said the first step to correct the problem was to ap appoint point appoint a bipartisan committee to investigate alternate tax proposals. Until those findings are made, he said, present tax rates should be lowered. Although federal income would be reduced from that source,' he said, the impetus giv given en given to business by such a move probably would offset the loss. Andrews, wno.now is president of the American Fidelity & Casual ty Co., said he had this own ideas about substitutes for the income tax, but was not ready to reveal them just yet. Adlai's Convention Status In Utah Marrecl By Dissent French Pkne Crash Hear Cairo Desert Takes Lives Of 47 ' CAIRO, Feb. 20 (UPV-A four- engined French airliner winging from Saigon to Paris crashed in flames before dawn in the desert south of Cairo International Air port today. Casualty reports varied but at mid-morning A n d r e Decamps, French Consul General at Cairo, announced 47 of the 59 persons a a-board board a-board the plane were killed and 12 survived. The DC6-B airliner of the French TAI (Transports Aeriens Intercon- tinentaux) Company carried 18 chil dren among its passengers, ac according cording according to Cairo airport officials. They said possible engine fai failure lure failure forced the pilot to crash-land in the dark x desert 10 miles south of the airport. The American-built plane broke up and burst into flames. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Feb. 'had closed its doors, even-before M (LP A dispute, quickly re-J its July 28 nominating conven conven-solved, solved, conven-solved, over whether Utah's 12 tion, to other presidential candi votes at the Democratic conven-: dates. tion would be pledgee' to Adlai Stevenson flared here today as Rawlinss. a member of the Na- the former Illinois Governor end-itional Democratic Executive Li US To Es Prc!::d Dy Saute Croup ed a long western tour Lven Stevenson was momenta- Committee, then faced Weilen- mann down a long, green-topped rily confused about Utah's status table and told the state chairman as he finished a two-day Salt: "I am a little amazed at , "KISS OF FIRE" Flames with violence and love. Opening next Thurs- ; day 23rd at the LUX . Jack Palance the outcast known to the frontier as "El Tigia" teaches lor Barbara Rush In this romantic hieh hieh-pomt pomt hieh-pomt in technicolor "Kits OF FIRE." Violent, riramn nf 23rd at the LUX Theatre. .. Advt. t 1 1 A 1 . juaire Liiy visit ana tools off in a snowstorm to ily toward Chicago and take a week's rest His next talk is Feb. 25 in Hartford, Conn. The argument ended with the Utaa Democratic Central Commit Committee tee Committee voting to thank Stevenson for coming here to help them raise funds but promising equal pre pre-convention convention pre-convention attention to. any pfes pfes-idential idential pfes-idential hopefuls. Spokesmen for Democrats in four other western states als at attended tended attended a party breakfast hereXto hereXto-day. day. hereXto-day. Wyoming's national commit committeeman teeman committeeman said his 'state was still "wide open," but leaders from Idaho, Montana and Nevada said Stevenson has the lead there. What was scheduled as a rou routine tine routine meeting quickly became mud muddle dle muddle when A. Wally S a n d a c k, chai man of the powerful Salt Lake County Democratic Commit Committee, tee, Committee, said he "hoped" Stevenson would head the 1956 ticket as he did in 1952. Milton N. Weilenmann, Utah State chairman, told the startled session that the state organization would "do our part" to make Stevenson the next President. After he left the platform. Wei lenmann told United Press he felt Calvin W. Rawlings, Utah nation national al national committeeman, had forced the state to pledge itself to Setenson "too early" and said "it's wrong... I'm going to resign." Weilenmann, who favors Gov. Averell Farriman of New York. later simply decided not to seek reelection as chairman, rather than quit now, when the tiff was stettled. Stevenson, after quipping about the inadvisability of politicianas meeting so early for breakfast talks, said he was "profoundly heartened that Utah will be. ." He paused there, reflected mo momentarily, mentarily, momentarily, and continued" . might be behind me. . it is a source of gratification and will be heartening to all of my followers." Stevenson devoted the rest of his breakfast message to support supporting ing supporting reclamation in general. But he declined to support U t a h's hopes for passage this month of the uppei Colorado storage proj project ect project legislation by saying he was "unfamiliar with the details." About two hours later, Weilen Weilenmann mann Weilenmann told the state committee he was "not happy" about the morn morning's ing's morning's events and felt the state U. you said." Stevenson tad visited Utah, Rawlings insisted, only to help the party raise funds and was not WASHINGTON, Feb. 20 (UP) (UP)-The The (UP)-The Senate Internal Security Sub committee will try to learn how lass, the Russian news agency, serves Soviet power, a spokesman said today. Subcommittee counsel Robert Morris told a reporter the group will question American employes of Tass in public hearings begin- what ning tomorrow to discover how the news agency operates, and its relationship with the Commu Communist nist Communist Party and the Soviet Union. Morris also identified two more witnesses for the first series of asking forOUtrigllt Convention hpaHntrslW Sarh. Cm.ll T.nrio yieuges iuv. -.-!.. Weilenmann thanked Rawlings for the "clarification." Other com committee mittee committee members said they hoped newsmen would not report the party was split. Rawlings said he was "embarrassed" by the dif difference ference difference between himself and Wei Weilenmann. m and Hays Jones. He said .both were employed in Tass' American headquarters in New York. , The subcommittee earlier an announced nounced announced that the first witness will be Harry F5r e e m a n, assistant mar.sger A Tass in New York and its highest-ranking American em employe. ploye. employe. ;... ,v Chairman James 0. Eastland (D-Miss.) said the subcommittee intends "to determine to what ex extent tent extent Soviet power o p e r a t s through the Communist Party in this country andj to what extent other organizations have been de devised vised devised to effectuate its nunose." ! Morris said Americans working for Tass. will be asked "to givf ; us their version of what they do, and what kind of peole are em employed ployed employed there." Several witnesses have already been questioned in closed session. He said the investigation, now planned to last several weeks, may later include the Daily Work Worker, er, Worker, Communist Party newspaper in New York. Morris said some Daily Worker reporters move on to Tass, which . is an official agency of the Soviet I government. SALK IN SNOW-Little Tom Tom-my my Tom-my Woodward, 1958 March of Dimes poster boy, admires a snow-man bust of Dr. Jonas Salk, developer of the polio vaccine. The giant bust was built at Stowe, Vt to help launch the annual drive there. HI-FI RECORD-PLAYERS at Tivoli Ave. No. 16 .... w ''v ' :X-w.Xv '':;v'K'-' -f "' TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR ' CLUB PLAN . 25 cycles your problem? v Permit us to take care of it. Mail Mau Terrorists l!o Longer Present Military Problem NAIROBI, Kenya, Feb. 20 (UP) British troops have killed or captured 88 Mau Mau terrorists in two operations that lasted al almost most almost a month on the slopes of Mt. Kenya, the army announced today. I.t. Gen. Gerald W. Lathbury, British commander in East Afri Africa, ca, Africa, said that as -a result of the operations the Mau Mau strength in the area has been reduced to an extent where it no longer re presenets a military problem. Lathbury said he was withdraw ing troops of the King's African Rules from the scene in conn dence the administration and po lice "will be able to eliminate the few remaining terrorists, ' Military sources said the Mau Maus were so harrassed during the operation that they crawled on their hands and kneews tor days to avoid the bullets of the security forces. Practically their only food was wild nettles, the sources said. f j :. I I i i j, j ' I s iHTiiir-1 Ir Jlfaimii ii I I .TMF. . J y Fine Faceted Ensemble yellow or white. Carved White and ' Yellow Cold, This Week's Lucky Winners : Catherine Brown Gerardo Arias Berta de Aleman Gladys Moreno Belela de Lombana Lena Foote All slips eliding in 9 win. . Oieck YOURS I TAHITI 18-47 (137) Central Ave m (j01i ejQieni :j i lib $ iiM fri;:i; . I .! ' v.- ';,,':',. i.- SHOP RATTAN HEADQUARTERS , .. ... .,; -W mntimt 151 0UR r i.i.-: ..in v .-- .v-., e f f h L ; 7 Ci., y! -. V o. want1 Home of Vertikal Blinds and Plasti- USE OUR EASY CREDIT TEnf.iSl WlffB "OUR tUKNlTURE GRACES THE LOVELIEST HOMES . r.. a,, ,tvm.R -: C .:. '. THE FAXA MA -AMERICAN AX IXDEPEXPEXT D.H MttSPAFKt , : ?Nf'AT,. I"! .I A- -I J rr jr I .-, 1 i i 1 II I.: u. t .-.eve t '.'--'" A"V II.' j.-J II i4 :.v -p flmercan.5 n Far East Area 7y0uld Like More Official Aid t)fvYO UP) Manv Ameri- they fear being implicated in local 7Z, b.winessmcaiBAsii'feelU.S. affairs They are over-caouous. .. Department officials in the They have no policy on business! rould do a lot more to help matters. 1 his is just m contrast &m aceordine to an Asia-wide with the tutude of the British who UTiy conducted bv United Press, help without fear or favor the Brit- j information was obtained ish businessmen. bv iWd Press correspondents "It is my opinion that these rcp rcp-conducted conducted rcp-conducted a general survey in resentaUves do. their very best to Bnia Ccvlon, Fornnsa, Ron3- look after the interests of Ameri Ameri-l'tol' l'tol' Ameri-l'tol' -3'1'' icans here. m But they are only! So'ith Korea Pakistan, Philippines 'human, too. .n, Y'Vfliland I "They are caught in a squeeze. 1 1 ,e survey of representative lis their job to represent the U.S." .ii,e surc oi .hnurMi Bftvrnment and American inter- tint most believed the overall D Via;? done by the officials in Asia was' good. But at the same time, it showed nearly all had sugges suggestions tions suggestions for wavs in which the State Department could improve its sery- jr iu iunivoi inc nrea. . event number of "the -Amen-, ca-is Interviewed said they thought', Bv tish embassy personnel through- j ut Aia did a much better ob . .... i ; tUnn Amxti for bn' isn Dusine.iMiirii man y" f iein officials did on nenau ui A-'-.rlcan firms. 'pre are some of the comments m -e by American businessmen: 'lT.S. State Department person- .i K mnrp helDfUl tO (xt&:s Trua Life Adventures The South Apkiam 3 N U (ox Wi lce 3 e: est; 15 A COKOLS-LOO'.yi6 CREATURE WITH A WIPE STREAK OP immeiTV ... ests at home, or is it to protect; American interests here T h e y probably look after American i interests here as well as their posi- j tion as representatives of a forehjn j power permits mem u no i. Dray Horses Still Proving Valuable; Shoeing 1$ Problem BILLINGS.-' Mont. (UP) Pipntv of drivers have trouble with traffic sienals. but not Art Sage, j r;h ?ne men with infor-jone of a rapidly vanishing breed. , inn advice They ask us fori His horses never get ucmji. ; "They don't take enough interest the ; time. q of those traffic .?!?. .,'", XS " "e" I Z tarTe. V".r bell ui Uk. ; -Thev don't stand up firmly for : right ofr ,n,mldi-av also has other (Mid fna ntxitn .7H f ... ANP MB V 4 Kkrt LIE will 1. 5 ftPPAT .PNATMS. 3H?UNfi' THE OBJECT OP HIS CUKU3ITyrTO OOMB : 'business' as something dirty aiia ,tenc' to apologize for our Dcing around. "", .,u w 1 "When we go to them with a problem, they seem to be more in inclined clined inclined to, take the side of the local people against us." fThev sometimes seem actually afi'l to stand "P r f',,r riwts. I have been agreenblv surprised Wthe support we have been Riven here. But I must say, on the basis of.mv experience around Asia, tne . 'pcop'e here seem to be an excep- f'rThe top people here have reallv gone to bat for us American busi businessmen, nessmen, businessmen, but we still have trouble 'cejting documents handled quickly anfl properly." .u m.. kn ntktiav afflffen Tnem- 'se(vrs to be commerciaUy minded las lhe British. It is a fault of the entire system of the State Depart Depart-'ment 'ment Depart-'ment which never has been geared ,lo foreign trade. The mmemal altjche does the best he can with Aviht he bas." , 1 J -i think they are doing an ex ex-celfcnt celfcnt ex-celfcnt job for businessmen in this Tountry. Tlore' they" hav-shown more practical interest in the prob prob-;pIs ;pIs prob-;pIs of businessmen than tliev .kae In neighboring countries. If fhev were like this everywhere !wl be okay." "About three years ago there fere some quiet complaints from .'American businessmen about the .mhHiv'i very faint-hearted ef forts on their part But our em em-rviatnersnet rviatnersnet em-rviatnersnet sneo v !fcassy representatives now seem very alert to the problems, we !. "I fear our State Department 'people take good care of the big American firms and let the small firms iry to look out for them- SftvRS." ..'"They are unable to help Amer ican tCE SIORf OF MAETTLl WAT a two-horse advantages, c, nn ntnH nut. He 8 IOUIHl uie method of transportation handy more than once in an alley. "I can take that team and turn the dray, and all, square around with 'em? You can't do that in an alley when you're driving a truck. He added that horses can haul goods a lot of places trucks and other vehicles can not, especially on snowy days. But all is not a bale of hay when you're hauling by horse. Sage admitted. Youngsters, with a flair for pranks, from time to time pose problems. Like the time recently .hon thev loosened the lines and released the brake. j Sage, maKing a ueuvci, ... -store at the time, found the horses a couple of blocks away. urnt.... ,.t tn fhA InadmiZ Dlat- form at my next stop and waited for me," he said. "They're smart Saee said nis norsei, v Don. areif't "scared a bit ot trdi trdi-fic fic trdi-fic but a piece of paper suddenly blowing beneath them wm cause trouble.- 1,1 J Bruce tooK, me w-y'-m .1 j- a hr.prainr of the firm, well Temembcrs the tast tame wu , "I happened to see them from my office window as Ihef rounded the corner," he said 1 had to chase them about a half ablock before I could jump on the f back of the dray and stop them. Cook said he keeps the horses .partly out of sentiment ana aa aa-Imittedly Imittedly aa-Imittedly "because they're good ad ad-i i ad-i vertising." And they do their share of the day s wors. utu, in around-the-town deliveries. it tiiov'rp cheaoer to run than any of his 15 trucks, progress is contriDuung to ww m aTi.oi. nron't manv cood black- smiths around anymore who know how to shoe a dray horse proper- 1 UK . JJ ntecKixs a.nd eis nizxv Bidyet Boy Br KZJhRIU. RL0SSS3 7 T P OH. . "My dad says only sissies drive those kiddie cars!" Faltering Philip Philip's life is filled with braises. Tell-worn steps and rags he uses. Repairs would lean his home like new ?. A. Classifieds, tost the right cine' D&B.COULt HAVE' MY AlinvkliMrF A CAY EARtY THIS WEEK 1r T 6UES; (6o-Bur SPENDIN6 TOO MUCH UTELY : ... : I I 1 I I'll6we it to you oj comwtom Toay, June:, react ) v'i .T YOU KEEP iRACkT OF WHAT AS "Rj RAMBLE? "t.. V, . YOU SPEW N A V'EEIC Sr w 1 r iStf i 'A .LATELYj v.. ,. ALLX1 OOF Surgery! ta V. T. DAMUJl --JII'"',llYta' IHKht- SNLnHlNLIKE s: I I WEa,OU CAME TO TW 6ITKN A055 TO TH TMAT WAS THE EMS DID IT A SATlSFIEPOHh, V I RlSHT PLACE, 50N.,.XlTE ERE, HEY.' HARDWARE MOSTMIRACULDUSX AGAIN... CUSTOMER, I ( DOC,.. ITS V WHETS VOUR 5EE? ITS WHERE J STDKE...GOTTA CURE I EVER SAW, THATU. AUVAVS SAY.') AWRJL.-TM nTOOUBLE? I 5URTIN VGOIM' GETSOME BOOTS AND HER BUDDEHI Going Away T EDGAR MASTUI UE CftMTl J fcUO TO "WhWX TO SfW WOO TOR Ml CBE, VCAJV)E 'D0V3E )C.GVtSrTH TOR rjl"1 22252siiii SOOfRE, iUWIW&l VE5, WE'RE VtPWttOG TOR TME SOUTWWEST UMERB W?. CJTTWERS MAS HAA)r ft PO&mOM TOR ME )M OWE Of THE COMPhWIES WUH1CM sr-, WTERtST. M SCOUT ftVJP WR.EM r tJIU. OUST I 10VJE Tf 7 on, m jo too v ffi-ilg&e by Htft &fHKS, Inc. T-Kt. U !t Pat. Oft jj J CAF1AIM .A81 Kell Is Thinking LESLIE TURNER I I1UW IU I li, ha coirl 1 " ' 1 1 1 1 hi rrr" 1 i I r i I r a, ,u ..-t .rvw -"i iliT i IWt5. KELL I 66e5 THE CRlPPLEP CAR HOME, A tOLO TO TAKE 5HftP6i WITHIM FOUR OR. FIVE PNf5 t COOUP G6T AWAY WTH The fortune wmt too 5TUP1P T0 fiRA6.. IF ALL &0P1E5' AREN'T CEWTlFlEP IN THM PLWOE CRA6H1 mitfi:.i .ii.Mirt i 1. 1. ui i. OWLV 5MAKEN uP ft RlT'.'wE'RB HOWE I V 71 -81 J Mr (AV HEAP, LOUI&E- CW, NOW I REViEM 7MEA0y.VR- WW6 FiiEi ra Give iOu A BAR BITURATE M TftTU SLE&P SOUNPWi By MCkHKC yOu WILL FEEL MiJCH -4 -PRISCILLA'3 fOP The Blf Plunge , 81 AL TERMEER MORTI MEEKLE nelpful By UICK CAVALLl vni ?'.IRP i rru UAPPY. T UAVF 'glorious NtWS! r-i TV IT MV BALLET TEACHER J IS QOINCS lO KU I ME IN TCHAIKUVrvia SWAM LAKE a nc k ht vni i SURPRISED 71 IT DIDM'T EVEN KNOW VOU COULD KWlM I 1-27. b, Nt VitTtUr T M Itf f" I MEEKLE. YOU'RE LOOKING PEAkI17... PALE... OUT J h---w,-J "T I FEEL l I .boomer! VniPFNO TOO MUCH TIME INP0CR6 VOUVE 60T TO fiETOtrr MORE TAIP THF tXV DPF AND 6010 THI& APPk&. TELL THEMI SENT I 05:100 1.6. worn . r-1 i - V tA I CAUtU JUR BOARUWO IfOLSt MI J R. W11X1AMR El'GS Bl'NNX You Lose, Sylvester Uke rbat? (that'll be tjvo BrrlX VLVESTERrJ.,. L PUT IT VA CH1SELIN' J ON AAV BUM. IF THIS ACCOUNT..! WAS A AT THE- RESTAURANT, MOMENT YA'DBE Y I'M ( WASHIN' ) WITHOUT VoiSHESil FUKDS! a icyrV I AIN'T AMUSIN5 SOT DISHES TH0U6HT T'WA5H '...rA.BUT THEPE'S k I TH'ZWr MILE 15 V i fcA VfEI? TH' WIENIE7, AN'N ,i -v TH' SECOND FEI? J T w. u.. to w Oo itl 'A 9 om i?w M Martha Deemed -.A HOLE im THE NEWS-SHA lIT f APEK 60 HuBtsy no V rifr -i a VtTuWJ LONGER, VIILLPB HlOOEN u-gav TQP ch PCOisiE FROM H5AAATB VIEW r-1 .jc r3 fiTfifil AT R.tr'.T'il lMWATTl J AT hole in rttC-c" i 14 I V TO TH' WORLP, I 1 BUT IT KJNP I OF PKOVES I w-v voc Kin i TH' WJV V -V v. THANK& E.VE.R BUT WAT.HIW IT I GOT A EVE CW THAT CHALK MARK, BUT AMVWAY MAW 16 AVJEE 1 KIND THAN I DOZENS HAVE SAVEP HIS NEC k BUT HE'S STILL VIOiJ I SAKcApTIC. AMD THFV 6TILL KPEP &AVIW HIM r -.." t v4J "- i 1 .... J TZr FAN'AMA AMIItlCAN AN' INTEFENCENT DAILY NF.1YSPAFF.R face rn ,:nd.iy. nrrt Ar.Y :i i if -and JJij Stall i ts r J. MISS MARJORIE MR- AND MRS. WIDELL REVEAL DAUGHTER'S BETROTHAL TO LIEUTENANT IN AIR FORCE ' : Mr and Mrs. Cart A. Widell of Curundu Heights an announce nounce announce the engagement of their daughter, Marjorie Claire, t Lt. WUIia.in A. Rathbone, ton of Mr Florence D. Rath- bone of Jacksonville, Florida. Mist Widell u a graduate of Palm Bei ch High School, West PaJra. Beach, Florida, and of the University of Florida at Gaines Gaines-vhkv vhkv Gaines-vhkv where she was a past presi president dent president of Zeta Tu Alnna social sorority. She fc presently a mem member ber member of Uie faculty at South boro Elementary School ic. West Palm Bfa:h. i'iordla.- . , Lt. 'Balnbonc is a: graduate of; IUbert J5. Lee Utiih School in .Jacksonville, Honda, and the u u-niversity niversity u-niversity ,oJt" I'Jorjda .at. Gaines Gainesville, ville, Gainesville, wlier wai-a member of the Kappa Ai ha fraternity. He was attending 1 lorida Law School wftea called into : service, a a d presently' is tn rmy Aviation Trailing at Gary Air Force Base, San -Marcos, 'jexas. The wedding will takt place m the early maimer. McLarea-Loflaud Wedding Announced - Mr. and Mrs. Norman McLaren' of Gatun announced the marriage of Uheir daughter.eanette, to Mr. Charles J. Lofland, Jr., of Hous Houston, ton, Houston, Tex. The marriage look place on Jan. 27 at 7 p.m. at the First Presbyterian Church with, Jtev. J. D. McLaren officiating. ; Mrs. Lofland is medical tech technician nician technician at Jefferson Davis Hospital and Mr. Lofland it-a criminal in vesligator for the City of Houston.' . The young couple are at home t tfUMUrcy Drive,; Former Residents Abmubcc Birth of Twins ' Word hai reached the' Isthmus of the birth of, twin daughters on Fb. 6 to Mr. and Mrs. Guy M. Young, formerly of the Canal Stone. The Youngs now make their home In Mobile, Alabama. ; . The babyS have beer named Lin Linda da Linda Lee and Lucy Lee. ; -Mrs. Young will be remembered as th? former Miss Barbara Lav Lav-inghouze. inghouze. Lav-inghouze. 1 mer Blanche Belder. .' turns With Husband T rco Solo ; x Comiri and Airs. Franklin M. B. Hopkins and thejr. three chil children, dren, children, Brack, Camilla and Stephen, irrived recently from Corpus aa-isti, Texas, where Cemdr. Hop Hop-Vmi Vmi Hop-Vmi was n duW with the staff -of the Chief of Naval Air Com mand Advanced Training. Mrs.' Hopkins is the former Blanche Bclden of Cristobal and Colon Joividr. Hopkins, is stationed at, the Naval Station, Coco bet o wlicre ho is tlw new commandit ofiicer of Fleet Air Service Squad ron 105. Miss Char's Eigagement Is Made Known Mr. Harry Yee Chun, Sr.; of BJboa announces the engagement of his daughter, Beverly Grace, to Mr; Charles Joseph Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Francis .Williams of Balboa. LAST ADD SOCIAL Chicken Chow Mein Supper Tomorrow At Gatua Church The Ladies' Auxiliary of the Gatun Union jChurch kas extended an invitation to the public to en- ov7 in Other wide CLAIRE WIDELL LADY AT THE LOCKS Mrsv Frank: G. Millard,, wife, of the Counselor of the Department of the Army, takes a hand at the control board at Miraflo Miraflo-res res Miraflo-res Locks. The Millards were here last week. joy a chicken chow niein supper ia the basement of their church. This is to be held tomorrow with two separate seatings, the first at C p.m. and the 'second at 6:30 Tickets may be purchased from any auxiliary member or at the door. ' Rice and crispy ,noodle; will ac accompany company accompany the chow mein, along with rolls, dessert, and te?. or cof coffee. fee. coffee. ' ; "' Price of an adult ticket is $1.00 and children under 12 will be charged 5j cents. Miraculous Medal Church Will Have Four-Night Bazaar In April v The annual charity 'bazaar of the Miraculous Medal Church in Colon,- will begin Tuesday April 17 and run until April 20, each night from 0:30 until 10:30 p.m. The rrpose of the atiair is to raise funds to help feed some of t h e hungry and ciothe some of the naked of loton. The children will have their day on Friday-April 20 from 1;00 fo 5:00 p.m. Free prizes will be given to the children. will ho tht Pift of free hum in some lucky person wht must be present. Other door prizes will be a tele television vision television set, a 1,000-day clock and a party basket. The affair is being sponsored by the Holy Name Society and the Rosary and Altar Society of the church. i The general chairman is Mr. Alfred Nordstrom. The chairmen Via Espana and 45th Bella Vista. 4; ; aV'l 134, P' or Zvr 5037, rci f t t j of the various booths w ill be an announced nounced announced later. Gulick Wives Give Valentine Social For Ft. i)av'm Wives The Fort Gulick N.C.O. Wives Club held a Valentine 'Social ', last wee V. 1 The Fort Davis N.C.O. Wives were the guests for the evening. The guests present were Mrs. Dor-i is Brill, Mrs. Helen Yoder, Mrs.1 Maudie Russell, Mrs. Mary Du Bois, Mrs. Daphne Murray, Mrs. Phylis Brodsky, Mrs. Delia Sst. John, and Mrs. Dolores Benaro. Members of the Fort Gulick M. CO. Wives' Club who attended were Mrs.' Peggy Duncan, Mrs. Janis Finnegan, Mrs. Daisy Gon Gonzalez, zalez, Gonzalez, Mrs. Clara hollenbaugh, Mrs. Candy Gardner, Mrs. Maria Hanson, Mrs. Connie H s k i n g, Mrs. JVancy Johnson, Mrs. Roth Mangen, Mrs. Lucuie Marrero, Mrs. Mae Pelkey, Mrs. B i 1 1 i w Pryor, Mrs. Louise Sanderson, Mrs. Ruth Screws, Mrs. Ursula Spence, Mrs. Jean Steffens, Mrs. Lorraine White, and Mrs, Joanna York. Guest speaker for the eve evening ning evening was Lt. Col. Leroy Glodell who spoke on his very interesting hobby, The Making of Castanets, which the Spanish Dancers use with great ability. .Refreshments were served by hostesses Mrs. Peggy Duncan, Mrs. Lorraine 'White, and Mrs, Nancy Johnson. Ambassador aikl Mrs. Valdei Feted Before Departure For Post la Chile The new Ambassador to Chile and Mr. Julio Valdes Have been honored at a number of par parties ties parties prior to their departure for Santiago. On Thursday evening the Com Commandant mandant Commandant of the National Guard and Mrs. Bolivar Vallarino joined with Mr. and Mrs. Miguel More Moreno no Moreno in honoring the Valdes at a despedida dinner at the Moreno's home. On Satrrday eviing. the Am Ambassador bassador Ambassador of Chile Admiral Emi Emi-aue aue Emi-aue Laereze Echavarria and Mrs. L-Eieze entertained the former Chief of lmmigratioa and Mrs. Valdes at an mfoimal leceptioa at the embassv, McGrathi Entertaio For Soanish Counle Mr. and Mi'i. Robert McGrath entertained at a buffet supper oh Saturday evening in honor of the Ambassador of ioain ana conae ta de Rabago, who are; leaving ", soon. .-ya,,, j t j -: -i.-..'. li'Dualeji Entertained'.' v Mr. and Mrs. Luis Ei-Uribe en en-iUcrtained iUcrtained en-iUcrtained at a recent dinner hon hon-jlorjn jlorjn hon-jlorjn Mr. and Mrs. Chester Dud Dud-1 1 Dud-1 1 ley, of New York. The Duieys were also honored at c dinner, given by Mr. and Mrs. Rodolfo Burda at their home in Ancon. Minister Observes BIrt day In El Valte The Minister of Government and Justice and Mrs. Alejandro Re Re-mon mon Re-mon were hosts yesterday at a birthoay party at their El Valle home. The occasir;i .wat the min minister's ister's minister's birthday. Darden, Evans Fsmiles Welcome Baby Daughter Lt. and Mrs. Jerry J. Darden, formerly of the Isthmus but now stationer" in Bitburg. Germany, have announcea the birth of their second daughter, third child, there on Feb. 14. The little gui has been named Jody Jay. -i Mrs. Darden,. the former Mar Margaret garet Margaret Grey Evans of Balboa, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J J-F. F. J-F. Evans of Balboa. Lt. Darden, a jet piloftn duty with the Air Force, is a graduate of the Canal Zone Junior C o l l-tege.' tege.' l-tege.' His brothers, Capt. B. A. Darden, and Curtis J. Daden, re reside side reside on the Pacific Side. The baby's paternal granmom granmom-er er granmom-er is Mrs. Benjamin A. Darden of Fayetteville.T. C. Shower Is Given Far Mrs. Reyna Mrs. Luis Reyna of the Atlan Atlantic tic Atlantic Side was honored on Saturday with a stork shower arranged by Mrs. Luis Ducreu and and Miss Vilma Rosania at the home of the former in Colon. Mrs. Reyna is the former Miss Yolanda Van dcr Jijs of Panama City. Bridge Tonight The Ancon Balboa Duplicate Bridge Association will hold its weekly turrnament tonight at the Tivoli Guest House. -Bridge players and guests are welcomed. Golf UU, Tea As customary on Tuesday, tea will be served tomorrow at the Panama Golf Club for wives of members. Map groups make up informal tables for bridge or ca ca-nastJ nastJ ca-nastJ for afternooo play, preced preceding ing preceding tea. Program On Cancer Planned Tomerrow At Albrook Theater The Canal Zone Cancer Com Committee,' mittee,' Committee,' in carrying out its pro program gram program to stimulate people to con con-rult rult con-rult their physicians earlier and more often in order that early cancer may be detected and cur cured, ed, cured, is presenting a program at the Albrook "AFB Theater tomorrow I afternoon at 1:30. The program will include the I showing of a colored film, and a - 4 1 I- J aiscuhsjim session m wuicn vime .11 questions will be answered. Those attending may nring previously written questions tc be answered. ' V 7 "? V. f f ' s ! J:p:r.2ss Oiler A Novel Recips Fcr Shrimp Dish 4. t- K.J ; SEIKO TAKEDA, Japaa Air a portavbie chaTCMJ caoker. By CAYNOR MADDOX NEA Food and Markets Editor Reiko Takeda, a young Japanese igiri, taught us how to cook Shrimpjtail shells on. Combine remaining Ulibachi on a little portable char charcoal coal charcoal cooker. Technically these small charcoal cookers are called "hichirin," but most non-Japanese people find it easier to call them hibachi". -"Miss Takeda. a stewardess for Japan Air Lines, recommends this combination of shrimp and rice. . Snrimp MibMhi One and one-half pounds raw shrimp, 4 cup salad oil, 1 medium onion, grated, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, I clove garlic, finely cnoppea, v teaspoon eacn oregano, basil, ground clave, Vi teaspoon telcry seed, lii teaspoon chui powder, teaspoon sail. BY MRS. MURIEL LAWRENCE TivL oirh riav GralrT C.V mother takes him to school and Ki-ino. im hAx Last year when his father ob- .rt4 h. it u hers.iso there 'mens nth -'ooUoemen at thein"tlon b? the "common" -children traific crossings Now that he's in the second crade, the tolicemen are there. But Gerald's mother still takes cnnce Pany '""y. ouisiuc ouisiuc-him him ouisiuc-him back and forth. When h i s chol contact wrtt them, father protests, she says Gerald! So sJ?e ooes not take this over over-needs needs over-needs protection from sex molest-jJ01.. "etion to defend Gerald ers. hhe reminds Mr, V Of th6' many dreadful stories heard. she's Impatient with her unreasona unreasonableness, bleness, unreasonableness, he'll demand. "Now when did a thing like that ever happen around here?" But hfc wife al always ways always ignores the question to in insist sist insist that her escort is needed to which may arise during the film showing, and have it answered. The questions need not be signed, and they -will be collected in the theater. Every woman at Albrook has been (.sked to attend, and any who hav-j missed the program elsewhere and would care to at attend tend attend ar also most welcome. Dr. W. W. Nichol is to be the speaker; and the film is to Tun for about 45 minutes. The program is being sponsored at Albrook by the Officer's Wives' Club, with arrangements being made by Mrs. Fran Thompson, the ciuds zna. vice president. HOUSEHOLD Modern upholstered 4 piece living room sets ........... .v. .50 : .50 Mahogany dining room otables v and 4 chairs ................ 4.50. 4.50 Modern wardrobes with mirrors inside- .. r. 6AQ j0O Mahogany licoreras with sliding doors. 6.00 6.00 Vanities with large mirror and stool". . . . .... ... . 5.15 575 Complete Mahogany double beds with flowered design .... 4.00 4.00 Kitchen cabinets ............... 4.50 4.50 Double Hollywood beds '(new styles) 5.50 5.50 Rattan Living Room set: 3 pi. sofa, 2 arm chairs 3 tables ......13.50 13.50 Also:-Executive desks, Wrought iron and wicker porch sets, youth beds, folding beds, inrierspring mattresses, chests of drawers, rocking chairs, etc. EASY PAYMENTS HOUSEHOLD EXCHANGE National Ave. No. 41 Tel. 3-4911 We buy, sell and exchange all types of furniture. I 4 Lines etewardeas, prtptxt skrims Shell and clean shrimp, leaving ingredients with shrimp and let stand at least 2 hours. Place shrimp on a grill over hot char coal and broil 5 to t minutes, bast ing occasionally with the sauce. Serve with barbecue sauce and hot rice. Barfetcvt Sauce One and one-half cups chili sauce, Vi cup tomato juice, Vi teaspoon' chili powder, 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, dash tabasco sauce, 1 clove garlic, cup dry wine or water, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, 1 bay leaf, 1 clove. Combine ingredients in a jar. Cover and let stand several hours. Serve with Shrimp Habachi. guard Gerald against serious .threat. she Who is tnrcalened. Gerald's .mother disdains schools. Unable to afford one for Gerald, she lives in Perpetual fear of social contami- of her neighborhood. By supervising his school goings and comings, she reduces the ak llUAb "J LI4IL11C VI OCA 11 IV)- lesters. She takes, it to serve her own weait, unthinBine and selfish wish to keep aim "different" iron his public schoolmates: Like many other overprotec tive parents, she chooses to make outside causes responsible for the action dictated by her own terror of losing social prestige. It's not the way to recover from it.- The sad thing is, she doesn't want recovery. Seldom do overprotective par parents ents parents want to relinquish the fears which enslave them. Before this can- happen, their egotism has to suffer manrvblows. For they have learned to live with their fears by thinking of them as love for their child a "special" pure ana per feet devotion beyond the grasp of commonplace parents luce yon and me. '". To be willing te see this glorious offering as destructive greediness calls on. the strength of a r e a 1 self, not lie ego these people irve by. EXCHANGE D(wn Monthly T!r"',!,p''", Each Botirc for inclusion )n thii roliima jhould submittrd in vp- I Hrmo form and maHrd to one of ? the box numbr Ihltd In "So- I euU aad (hmtivh," mt dfliverrd by hand to the office. Kotirea ( neeiiati cajuioC ke accepted by tele tele-Phone. Phone. tele-Phone. Monday Musirale $ Meets Tonight r The Monday Musicals, will meet I I m a r ..... if" 4 jv p.m., ai me iiunie ui -nil. L. J. Gems. Mr. R(t)ert MacSparran will give a talk on the opera, illustrat illustrating ing illustrating his talk with records of the opera "Madame Butterfly," Art League Meets i On Ihursday I The next meeting of the Canal Zone Art League will be held on Thursday at 7:30 p.m., at the home of Mr. and Mrs. li. K. M or ris, talie San Maitm, Panama. The speaker for the evening will give a brief outline of the back background ground background and significance of inter interpretive pretive interpretive Hawaiiaa dancing. j be talk will be illustrated by some examples of the ancient and the modern dances of Hawaii. Members and quests are wel welcome. come. welcome. Nwtur.l History Society MeeU Uaohiagua't Birthday ine zatnn meeting of this Socie Society ty Society will be held Wednesday, (Wash (Washington's ington's (Washington's Birthday) at the Gorgas Institute, Panama City at 8:00 p.m. At this meeting will be shown two large reels ot movies entitled "Primitive Darien FaU and Present "e pictures were made! Dy Ar. Kicharu H. Stewart of the National Geographic Society, and c. er ur. Matiiew s t er 1 i n gs fourth archeological expedition in into to into the ir'erior of Panama. Dr. Sterling,, Director of the Bureau of American Ethnologv, Smithsonian Institute, is well known to most of our" members, having spoken to us on several occasions. Unfortunately he will not be with us at this meeting, but it is hoped that he will have a 30 page commentary which win be read by Miss Brickman. According to Dr. Zetek, this film is the most complete -ever produced on archeology in Pana Panama, ma, Panama, lt is a copy of i. film which has been shown only once, at the Smithsonian Institution, and was presented to Prof. Alejandro Men Men-flez flez Men-flez of the Panamr. National Mu Museum, seum, Museum, who has very graciously loaned the film to thiL Society. To this meeting members may bring friends who may be inter interested ested interested in joining the Society. rbpS!Tex. Judge Refuses Ageinsl IIY Realtor DALLAS, Tex., Feb. 20 fUP) A district judge refused $.100 mil million lion million damages today to Milton L. Stern, who accused William Zcc Zcc-kendorf, kendorf, Zcc-kendorf, Sr. the fabulous New York realtor with stealing his idea for a multi-million dollar in industrial dustrial industrial development between Dal las and Fort Worth. The decision by Judge Paul Peurifoy ended 12 days of argu- tnAtitsf that anw mirr r CAfi AAlt tH.Jn of testimony in the suit by Stern, II of Toronto and Dallas, and his U Texas industrial ventures. " The suit named Zechendorf, his son, William Zeckendorf, Jr., the firm of Webb k Knapp which they head, and four Dallas men Tod Tod-die die Tod-die Lee Wynne. Sr., Angus Wynne, Jr., A. W. Walker, Jr and Jack Barr, Jr. However, the judge held. that Texas Industrial Ventures was entitled to repurchase within 60 days from Webb & Knapp six tracts of the land a Dec. 29, 1955 letter from Webb & Knapp which indicat indicated ed indicated Texas industrial ventures could buy the land during a 60-day pe period riod period from Jan. 8, 1956. The judge said if Texas Indus Industrial trial Industrial Ventures failed to repurchase the stipulated six tracts of land within the specified time, it was to revert to Webb k Knapp and others involved. Judge Peurifoy held that Stern and his Texas Industrial Ventures! had failed to prove that a contract I existed between them and the -de-Ifendants, and were pot entitled to any damages. The judge 1 ordered that court costs -in the suit be paid equally by the plaintiffs and defendants. 1 The suit was brought by Stern shortly after Zeckendorff and bis Texas' associates announced a pending $10 million deal for a huge industrial development in the Grand Prairie and Arlington area, between Dallas and Fort Worth. ,1 MEXSANAft (ur atrlckly heat or akin Irritation Nexano i mtallcalf powder that relieves, re re-'ehe 'ehe re-'ehe and protects. Anoiner proauut: Mexfam 8km Balm. H.lpi and pro protects tects protects our (kin. 1 ri 1 Msus ttaaMH .l.MaH tjaanna FUNERAL for RALPH E. SEXTON Will b held by the Rev. Oscar 0!sen at Corozal Cemetery Chapel on Tuesday, Feb. 21 at 9:33 a.m. to be followed by interment 4r m Ka $171.00 Round Trip EXCURSION FARE (good for 30 (lays!) Fly Now Pay Later or "Charge it to my acfount" For Information see your mi.m minn'miinni. iinniiniiiinin.maiinl imnin m9mrmmitomnmimimmm '.,,. ENJOY the SUMMER TIME on your Porch or Terrace Special Offer on 20 Garden Furniture : W9wwwj rr-.mm- . - "t , 1 '"'Iffr I ', v- "--J . -Ill MSfclfc-a-a -y, -T1mmhm. Il --"Hi.lniin. .. llHaoWtflf j Yz "Cucntas j . l' I Cornerciales" tj tetity $5X3 II Clio!) . tail!5 (' i itiwp pi v FURN 21902,' 7th Central Ave'.' SERVICES ights Weekly! via LACSA -j, LACSA serves... San Jose Mexico Grand Cayman Havana Miami San Salvador t Puerto Rico travel agent or call -343! nnras J fflESTORb - Tels. 2-1830- 2-1833 'A j Of hey-raayriU-anyiuestioa 5:0x0 at, rnrrxAnr : i"i PACE SIX YOU CAN PLACE YOUR AD AT 14 DIFFERENT LOCALITIES IN THE CITY - i J LEAVE YOUR AD WITH ONE OF OUR AGENTES OR OUR OFFICES AT 57 "H" STREET, PANAMA TO PANAMA AMTItTCAM AN EST FTEX!? EXT DAT1T JCTTrSPAr! a LIBRERIA PRECIADO LOURDES PHARMACY LEWIS SERVICE HOUSEHOLD EXCHANGE FARM AC I A EL BATURRO mtvttT 1 tmt H. U IU U CarrasqaUla Throll No. 4 ...: X Fee ee la On At. Ka. 41 rarqo. Lfrvre I Strt 51lil.uLLil Aeenciai Internal. dePublicacionet FARMACIA LOMBARDO FARMACIA ESTADCS UNIDOS FOTO DOMY FAR MAC I A "SAS" FOR H 1 Lattery Flan H "B" tre. MJ Casual Aveaaa JU Amcacaa Are. aad H ft VUhmiUl A vaa. CASA ZALDO MORRISON FARMACIA LUX FARMACIA VAN-DER-DUS NOVEDADES ATH!S 12 W0RD3 ( Ceatral An. tt 4tb at July Avev J It etreetNo.II V Espafta Ave. . MKDIUM FOR 12 WORDS COMMERCIAL & PROFESSIONAL CANAL ZONE POLYCLINIC DEMTAL-MEDICAL Dr. C. E. Fabreia Dr. '" ft D.D.S. (Georgetowa University) MJl Tlv.II (4th .f J"W,HnjM (apposite Ancon School Playground) . TeL 1-2011 Panama. RETIREMENT, LIFE EDUCATION INSURANCE . JIM RWGE Phone Panams 2-0552 TRANSPORTtS BAXTER. S A, rackets bipp Lear !""-, PANAMA RIDING SCHOOL Rieinfl Jumpint elot.es io.lv I to S .m. PhoM J-0279 "WE will relieve Tour FOOT-TROUBLE coriu, callousses, nail CHIROPODIST (Dr. Scholia trained) ORTEPEDIA NACIONAL It Just Aiosemena Ph. 1-121 MISCELLANEOUS ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS BOX 2031, ANCON. C.Z. BOX 1211. CRISTOBAL. C.Z. FOR SALE Household FOR SALt: Beds from $17.50, Dining Room tart from $25, Mahogany Double Beds with new Mattresses $79. Wardrobe! $25. China Closers $12, Rebuilt and Guaranteed Gat Stove, only $89. Other Bargaini in New and Used Furniture at HOUSEHOLD EX EXCHANGE, CHANGE, EXCHANGE, 41 Auto Row. Phone 3-4911. FOR SALE: Household furni furni-' ' furni-' fur. Living room, dininoj room, bedroom lets. Panama 3-1287, until 4:30 p.m. Most dodI amw fiA nrnr. fully, but there ore some who In In-list list In-list on learning to samba nu LOOK You Can Now Buy Auto Auto-mobile mobile Auto-mobile Insurance by, tele phone. Immediate Coverage.- Dial Panama 2-5000 FRED HUDDLESTON. FOR SALE Real Estate FOR SALE: la El Valla, charm charming ing charming 2-bedraom cottage on love lovely ly lovely grounds in best neighborhood. Completely furnished and equip equipped ped equipped at incredible bargain price of only $6000. Wolff and Co., 5th Street No. 7-29, Phone 2-2388. Domestic Wrangles Cause Car Crashes NEW YORK (UP) Don't argue with your husband. You may be driving him to his death on the highway later. One expert said that emotional upsets may cause as many high highway way highway accidents as careless driving or faulty brakes. Leonarr M. van Noppen, who supervises a car fleet that travels 30,000,000 mlies yearly tor the Universal C. I. T. Corp. said that studies show that thousands ol motorists involved in accidents are physically fit and expert at the wheel. They cracked up because their' emotions overthrew their usual alertness and judgment. "When you know your emotions are at a depressed point, oe extra rarpfnl he said. "Better still. stay out of your car altogether. A motorist s biggest enemies are nis own feelings." He urged couples to avoid do domestic mestic domestic arguments especially in the morning, when one or both may drive to work. Cabana Net Tournament Starts Wednesday At 6 Save on direct shipment Top quality fishing equipment V10LETTB SUPPLY ! SERVICE Panama '3-6318 Humphrey Questions Effectiveness OlSlassen'sJob WASHINGTON, Feb. 20 (UP) -Sen.J Hubert H. Humphrey (D (D-Min Min (D-Min torlav Questioned the ef- fpotitonesa of Harold E. Stassen's job as President Eisenhower's spe special cial special assistant for disarmament. He' added that "significant re milts may vet emerge" from Stas sen's appointment as "Secretary So 'far, Humphrey saw. aiassen and bis crew of disarmament spe specialists cialists specialists have come up with only - one 'major, Idea the so-called "open skies" plan for mutual in inspection spection inspection of ml 1 i t a r y facilities, which President Eisenhower offer- Four summit conference. Humnhrev said this proposal has "run into about the same intransi intransigence gence intransigence from the Soviet Union" as -previous U.S. plans for disarm a a-. . a-. ment and atomic control. He expressed his views In a preface for a lff-page staff study prepared for use by a Senate For For-ion ion For-ion Doiatinns subcommittee on ii! arm a ment. He is chairman of h snhrommittee. which began hearings on disarmament policies recently, with Stassen as the first witness. The staff study, prepared by subcommittee aides,, said Mr. Ei Eisenhower's senhower's Eisenhower's appointment of Stassen was "designed to bring a r fresh approach to a problem which has Ibng been stalematett in. anterna innal lisriissinns." It said this was "a new manifes manifestation tation manifestation of an old administrative nrnrtir. namely, the creation of a temporary coordinating agency to deal with an unsolved problem still under consideration in the old es established tablished established agencies.". On: the record to date, Humphrey said in his preface, "it still re remains mains remains to be seen" whether the appointment "will produce effec effective tive effective results."" "Significant results may yet emerge," he said. Shielding Child May Not Be Good Chicago (UP) Shielding a child from sorrow may not always be best for him, according to Dr. Freda S. Kehm .director of the Association for Family Living here. It may be preferable to help the child, with love and affection, to face i the realities of a tragedy, she added in an article in National Pareht-Teacher Magazine. When a death occurs, she wrote, havirig definite information may be more,' helpful to the child than hav having ing having anxiety over what happened. -'The death of lovedoa u. one of the major calamities that chil children dren children 'face," she says. "Sooner or JaterJ children must learn about death. The fact is there,. and no hid hiding ing hiding or denying will alter it. MaJ.- Leo Hayes will defend his! singles title when the 1 Panama Cabana Tennis Club's second an nual invitational tournament starts Wednesday evening at 6 o'clock on the Hotel Eh Panama courts. The Fort Guhck Army officer has been awarded the top seed ed spot, while Webb Hearne, who lost to Hayes in last year's finals, is No. 2. Wednesday's matches will be li mited to the men's singles. Men's doubles and mixed doubles will start on Thursday evening. Top seeded team in the men's doubles is Hearne and Bill Hele. Maj. and Mrs. Arthur Dreyer were award awarded ed awarded the top spot in the mixed doub doubles.' les.' doubles.' Finals in all events are schedul scheduled ed scheduled for. Sunday evening, starting at 7 o'clock. There will be no matches Saturday evening due to the million-dollar jewel display sponsored by the, First Lady Mrs. Olga Arias. Time schedule for Wednesday's matches are: FOR SALE Automobiles FOR SALE: 1953 Hillman Mini 4-door, duty paid, perfect condition. Juan Pucci, Phone 41 or 198, Colon. FOR SALE: 1953 Studebakor Commander hardtop, all extras. Including five months insurance. Priced for quick sale Phone Balboa 3425. MUST SELL TUESDAY: 1952 Chevrolet 2-door. Original own owner, er, owner, $795. Phone 84-4204 Fort Kobbt. FOR SALE: '55 Mercury two two-tone tone two-tone hardtop, power brakes and steer, Nygan ww tire. Calf 86 86-5239 5239 86-5239 duty hours, 86-6172 after duty hours, Chaplain's Office, Albrook AFB. FOR SALE: 3 1953 Chevrolet. Carryall, back seats removable. Priced right. Phone 2-5027 Panama.- FOR RENT Apartments ATTENTION G. I.I Just built modern furnished apartments, I, 2 bedrooms, hot, cold v a t a a. Phone Panama 3-4941. FOR RENT: Unfurnished apart, ment, two bedrooms, two hatha, maid's room, sitting-dining room, porch, garage, $100. At Bella Vista, N. Obarrio Street No. 23. Sea Da Castro. Avenue "B" No. 9-42. Phone 2-1616 Panama FOR RENT; Nicely furnished apartment including refrigerator, porch, parlor-dining room, bad bad-room, room, bad-room, kitchen All screened. Tiled. $60. Apply 112 Via Bali Bali-f f Bali-f aria Porrat, near Roosevelt The Theater. ater. Theater. ... 6:00 M.D. Franciskini vs. E, 3 Hennquez; oresiyn uuardia vs George Gercich. 6:45 Eugene Frankel vs J. H. Efaflghteridge; Julio Pinillk vs F, H. Ladkv. I ' 7:30 Silverio Melfi vs Roy Glic- kentiaus; Jorge brhardt vs Ramon Ramirez. 8:15 R. B. J. Stroop vs Gordon Bell; Leo Hayes vs Winner Fran-ciskini-Henriquez. 9:00 a. M, JJarrera vs winner Guardia Gercich; George Motta vs winner FrankeL IJaughteridge. 9:45 John Perry vs winner Pi Pi-nilla nilla Pi-nilla Ladky; Hans Omenitsch vs winner Melfi Glickenhaus. 10:30 Bill Hele vs winner Er- hardt Ramirez; Ernesto Pinjate vs Earl Omphroy. 11:15 Webb Hearne vs winner Stroop Bell. (All "players are requested by the tournament committee to re report port report at least 15 minutes prior to time set for match, l his will lacili tate tournament play.) Veteran Hal Terry Leads PAAF League In Hitting New Books "Birdman of Alcatraz," the fan tastic story of Robert Stroud, self-taught bird authority who has endured over half a lifetime in a solitary prison cell and who filled his solitude with the study of birds, is among the books placed in circulation this week by the Canal Zone Library. The book is the first written by Thomas E. Gaddis, former public relations director, who spent sev several eral several years in research and study of the life of the prisoner. The complete list of new books and their authors is announced by the library this week follows: NON-FICTION Understanding Teen-Agers, Landis; Improving Children's Learning Ability, iu vim; Our Christian Symbols, Rest; Wan ted: An Asian Policy; Heiscnauer; Your Personal Insurance Guide, Miller: The Revolution in World Trade, Lubell; The Third Revolu tion. Stern: Management ana read ership. JJraun; Modern nemicai Discoveries, Clements;' Jamaica the Portrait of an Island, Roberts; Trial by. Ordeal, tnessman; mru man of Alcatraz, Gaddis. FICTION Nothing New Under fhe Sun. Bacchelli: The Beckoning Dream, Berckman; Run From the Sheep, Capit; Koxana, l a s 1 1 e; The Call from Calle Moreno, tlo res; An Episode of Sparrows, God God-den; den; God-den; and A Dream of Kings, Grubb. CHILDREN'S BOOKS The Steadfast Tin Soldier. Andersen; The Little Duck Said Quack Oiiark. Barnett: The Bie Joke, Bonsall; Wheel on the Chimney, Brown: Homestead of the Free, Fisher: Horton Hears a Who, Geis el- The Ouarrv Adventure. King man; Trapped in the Old Mine, Seckar; The Yellow House Myste Mystery, ry, Mystery, Warner; The Big Book of Hors Horses, es, Horses, Chase; The First Book of Sea Shells, Cavanna; and Betty Corn ell's Teen-Age ropuiamy uuwe. Society Sends $150 To Grenada For Homeless FOR RENT; Completely fur furnished nished furnished apartment in El Cangrejo, for 2 months. Available and of March to couple without chil children. dren. children. Phone Panama 3-4911, office hours. FOR RENT: Small furnished apartment. Clean and comfort comfortable. able. comfortable. Best residential section. 43rd Street No 13. FOR RENT: 3 rooms in apart apartment, ment, apartment, concrete building. East 32nd Street No. 3 44, down downstairs, stairs, downstairs, Sra. da Cardona. FOR RENT: Apartment 2 bed bedrooms, rooms, bedrooms, living-dining room, kitch kitchen, en, kitchen, mosquito protective. San Francisco. Phono 1464 Balboa. FOR RENT: Spacious apart apartment ment apartment in Bolivar Building, 52nd Street and Federico Boyd Ave. Bsdroom, large living dining room, kitchen, bathroom. Tele Telephone phone Telephone Panama 2-1661. Cc CHOICE LOTS for SALE Army Atlantic's slugging center center-fielder fielder center-fielder Hal Terry, a veteran of sev en years' service baseball, re remained mained remained atop the individual batting figures in the PAAF Baseball League through games .of Wednes Wednesday. day. Wednesday. The Texarkana, Ark., native, who clubbed .362 for Red River Arsenal last season, is hitting at a .357 rate and has been the most consistent batsman in the loop this year. The Bushmaster gardner owns a 17-point margin over run neruo Billy Mills of FortClayton Mills, who drifted completely out of the .300 category for two weeks, banged out six hits in 11 trips dur inff the week to skyrocket his average to .340. Vic Haddock of the leaeue-leading Troopers, is hit ting .338 and shortstop Ernie Lennon of Fort Kobbe is swatting .333. Another Kobbe Llfeliner, first sacker Billy Wood, is the only oth other er other loon regular clouting over .300. Wood went six-for nine during the week and jumped from a poultry .250 to .309. Pitchine-wise. a pair of un beaten Tri-Post Troops own the ton earned run figures. Ken Southard (4-0) has a scintillating 0.90 mark and Harry bimpson (3-0) follows with 1.50. Don Taylor of Kobbe is third (1.69). Navy's Jim King continues to lead in strike strikeouts outs strikeouts with 75 and walks, 46, but Clayton s Ed Monohan, who re recently cently recently joined the club after toil toiling ing toiling with Carta Vieja in the Pa Panama nama Panama Professional League, is the hottest whjff artist at present. Mo Mo-nahan nahan Mo-nahan set a new league record Wednesday by fanning 21 AA batters. Bob Maver. Trooper centerfield- er and cleanup man, is leading in home runs (4, a new league rec ord) and runs-batted-in (18). Joe Tucker of Atlantic is the leading seiper of sacks with 15 in as ma ny games. MiKe tuvera pi tne loop leaders nas n. The season hit the halfway mark Wednesday. Fifteen more games will be played by eacn team and the Troopers will have to hit a ter terrific rific terrific slump before falling from the top rung. Manager Gene Peho Peho-ta's ta's Peho-ta's charges owned a comfortable five-game lead going into Satur Saturday's day's Saturday's action. The .Grenadian Benevolent and Protective Society of Panama Ci ty today reported sending a bank draft for $150.60 to Grenada for the aid or tne isiana s recent nur ripflne victims.. The draft was mailed Friday. The money was the profit from a well-attended concert held on Jan. 2 at the,. Soujourner Hall, a spokesman said. mpaniaJL kl .1 Lt'jLvn Ave. Eloy Alfaro 15-159 Tel. 2-0610 FOR RENT nouses FOR RENT: Spacious 3-bed-room house, bathroom, living room, dining room, kitchen, maid's room with bathroom, ga gang, ng, gang, yard. 14th Street, San Francisco, Via Balisarie Porras. $110. Phone 3-0280. FOR RENT: Completely equip equipped ped equipped vacation h o a t e, available March 3 to May : 2 bedrooms. 2 hatha, living room and dining room, maid's room and bath, 2 2-car car 2-car carport, No. 5 T 1 0th Street, Paitilla. Phone 3-5190. RESORTS Gramlich's Santa Clara Beach Cottages. Modern conveniences, moderate rates. Phone Gamboa 6-441. FOSTER'S COTTAGES. On mile past Casino. Low rate. Phono Balboa 1866. PHILLIPS Oceonside Cottage, Santa Clara. Boa 435, Balboa. Phone Panama 3-1877. Crista Crista-bol bol Crista-bol 3-1673. Shropnel's furnished houses an beach at Santa Clara. Telephone Thompson, Balboa 1772. iz7 J a'2 Prominent U.S. Investors Arrive In Panama p. II i iliililli ill. II II ii,iWUiiM''mulUUIIllilllllllUIMIM II-IIHIIII I II ii'i.-iii I ... 'Ml '"' i T" -V" X -" w" ' ;-mr m " f i "i : ;f I limn II II -.lii.i ii li li nil i I in. i li ill i ii' ill it B" nr.. unit i,. i a nn,.i,i,i,ii,i n .iiii.ii linn Stepping down Braniffs "El Conauistador" at Tocumen Airport last night, the photo above shows a group of 31 industrialists and businessmen from Kansas City, headed by the Honorable. II. Roe Bartle, Mayor of Kansas City. This "Kansas City Commission on International Relations and Trade" have toured the most important South American cities to survey Investment op opportunities portunities opportunities and to inspect already established enterprises functioning- with U. S. capital. Tho group was received today by II. E. Ricardo M. Arias E President of Panama, and durKig their two-day stay they will be entertained by the UjS. Embassy, members of the Panama Chamber of Commerce, and Canal Zone officials. (Mercurlo) Court Allows Wife To Share Husband's HoiiWiihitt LONDON. Feb. 20 (UP) -Alice Beeston was sharing her home a a-gain gain a-gain today with her husband and his mistress under a court order. Mrs. Beeston wept to court yes yesterday terday yesterday to get an injunction re restraining straining restraining her husband from eject ing her from their home so he could live there with his alleged mistress. Mrs. Carmen Gibson. The wife told the court she came home one day to find her husband, who had left her pre previously, viously, previously, back in the house with Mrs. Gibson. Beeston and Mrs. Gibson slept in one room and Mrs. Beeston in another, the wife said, and the women shared the kitchen to cook meals. "Later I slept with her in the back room and my husband slept in the front," Mrs. Beeston said. Uranium Is Where i You Find It Home KALAMAZOO, Mich.7-(UP) Lester Weiss discovered a uranium "strike" in his own kitchen after traveling through several states in a vain search for the radioactive metal. Weiss said his Geiger counter rattled like a cocktail shaker when he placed it near en orange colored water jug which had been in the family for more than 30 years. He said he discovered that pot tery manufacturers had used a uranium compound for decades to put a thin orange glaze on some items. "But, eventually he told me to get out altogether. Judge James Bacter ordered that Mrs. Beeston be permitted to return to the house. But he said she should occupy the ground floor in the future and her h u s band and Mrs. Gibson the top floor. "This sort of thing is very un settling," the judge said. LEGAL K0T1CE UNITED STATES OT AMERICA CANAL ZONE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT, FOR THE DISTRICT OF CANAL ZONE BALBOA DIVISION In the Matter of the Estate of Sarah E. W. Baker . also known as Sarah Evangeline Weeks Baker t deceased No. 9316 Probate NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE la hereby eiven that all ner- sons having any claims against the Es tate ot barah E. W. Baker also Known C U V-..nnnn1lnA W.lra H.Itm Am- ceased are required to file their claims. supported by vouchers, and properly verified, with the tlerK of the united States District Court for the District of the Canal Zone. Balboa Division, at the Courthouse, Ancon, Canal Zone, or with the Executrix, Sarah Antoinette Huff, c0 Van Siclen, Ramirez & de Castro. P. O. Box 124, Ancon, Canal Zone, (No. 1ft 1ft-64 64 1ft-64 Tlvoli Avenue) on or before the 21st day of December 1956, or they will for forever ever forever be barred. Dated at Ancon, Canal Zone v this 20th day of February. 1956. Executrix, LEADING HITTERS (45 or more ABs) Player-Team Terry, AA ........ Mills, Clayton ... 4 Haddock, Troopers Lennon, Kobbe Wood, Kobbe ..... Mayer, Troopers .. Rivera, Troopers ,. Sobkowlak, Navy . Rash, AA ......... J. King, Troopers AB Rv H 2b 3b HR RBI Pet. ,. 56 12 20 4 2 1 11 .357 . 50 '13 17 4 0V 1 ,13 .340 . 71 23 24 4 2 0 9 .338 , 54 17 18 3 0.0 6 .333 , 55 7 17 1 0 0 10 .309 . 58 14 17 3 2 4 18 .293 . 48 18 14 2 0 ... 0 6 .292 . 57 10 18 3 0 0 5 .281 .61 7 17 1 0 1 6 .278 . 54. 10 15 1 0 1 6 .273 LEADING PITCHERS (30 of more IP) Player-Team Southard, Troopers Simpson, Troopers .TayiorKobbe D. King, Clayton Rosario, Kobbe Klslo, Albrooe .; J. King, Navy .. Klussman, AA LUX W 4 3 3 T 4 2 2 2 Pet. 1.000 1.000 .750 -.571 .288 .286 .400 IP 30 38 32 56 65 49 44 SO 21 35 -41 "sr 50 42 75 20 BB 12 18 29 R ER ERA 4 3, 0.90 11 6 1.50 13 6 1.69 19-12 7 2.0 8 20 16 2.57 19 45 19 46 36 15 25 39 18 2.63 2.75 3.68 LEGAL NOTICE TJNITED STATES OF AMERICA CANAL ZONE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTKICT ua in CANAL ZONE CRISTOBAL DIVISION DIVISION-DIXIE DIXIE DIVISION-DIXIE MACHINE WELDING AND METAL WORKS, INC., a corporation. y VS THE STEAMSHIP "JOSEPHINE LaNASA," Her Engines. Boilera, Tackle, tc ; ; . Acsyuiiuciiv CrVTL No.' 2023 IN ADMIRALTY ' LEGAL NOTICE Whereas, on the 14th day of February, 1956, Dixie Machine Welding Metal Works, Inc., filed a libel in rem In the District Court of the United States for the Cristobal Division, against the SS "Josephine Lanasa," her engines, boil boilers, ers, boilers, etc., in a cause of Contract,, Civil and Maritime; . And Whereas, by virtue of process m due form of law to me directed, re returnable turnable returnable on the 6th day of March, 1956, I have seized and taken the said SS "Josephine Lanasa," her engines. boil boilers, ers, boilers, etc., and have her in my custody: Notice Is hereby' given, that a session of the District Court will be held in the United States District Court Room. in Cristobal, Canal Zone, on ne Bin oay of March, 1956, at 10:00 o clock in re forenoon thereof, or as soon thereafter as Court may be In session, for the trial of said premises, and the owner or own own-era, era, own-era, and all persona who may have or claim any Interest therein, are hereby cited to be and appear at the time and place aforesaid, to ahow cause. If any they have, why a imai aecree wiuum not be entered as prayed. Joseph L Kincaid United States Marshal for the -District of the Canal Zone, y DEUTSCH,. KERRIGAjSt.STILE Proctors for Libelant L. S. CARRINGTON Of Proctors for Libelant -P.O. Box 621, Ancon, Canal Zone. 1st PRIZE p""" ,,,m 1 t ' n s r ? FEBRUARY 19th 2nd PRIZE .'3rd PRIZE 176943 i 437698 989117 Present your tickets before Friday Your tickets are valid (or a whole year Keep thera carefully ' I.-$1,400.00 (Accumulated) Cct them luy!ng. TOTAL,.. $2,320.00 2a 240.00 3. $680.00 (Accumulated) fan CaMa Qinja, fan Whnkiuiw 'GhD", dtiU BahA i . ".. i c: J t J t ,:j t: 1 t J t I t ! -4 CAPITOLtO 35c. 20c. In.VUtavision and musical Bob Hone in: 'THE SEVEN LITTLE FOYS" Plus,4 Dane Clark In '-. 'BLACKOUT' T I V 0 L I 35c. : 20c. Resortes in "SOY IN GOLFO" Also: ''"Marga Lopez in: DE CARNE somos' ; Spanish program -"CENTRAL Tli coirs 60c. ; 30c. Week End Release Robert Mitchum Jan Sterling in: "MAN WITH THE GUN" A man who lived and breathed vio violence... lence... violence... his gun was for sale.... nd so. . was his life. ... -, Shows: 1:16, 3:10, 5:04, 6 58, 1:52 LUX THEATRE 60c. ; 30c- DHiVE-IIJ Thcctr 600. 30c. In SuperScope and Technicolor . t Ralph MEEKER Maria ENGLISH J. Carrol NASH in: "DESERT SANDS" CECILIA THEATRE R I O Double in V IC T ORJ A TWO ' GOOD : PICTURES! 35c. JOc. 60c. 30c. The favorite of the public t Barbara STANWYCK FRED MacMURRAY Joarl BENNETT in: Cinemascope IUNY CURTIS in: "THE PURPLE MASK" In technicolor Also the best comedy of the - famous mule: "FRANCIS JOINS THE NAVY" Marlon Brancio in: "DES1REE" Also: Victor Mature in: "VIOLENT SATURDAY "There's Always Tomorrow" All of his iife,,..she had been : "the other woman"... 1:15, 3:11, 5:24, 6:57, 1:53 Z7 CTOLLYJa JUOVfS TV RADIO ( by Ertklni Johnson HOLLYWOOD -4NEA)- Close Close-jps jps Close-jps and Longshots: Movie theater ewners who had to learn how to make popcorn may have to learn how to make movies, too. Or worry about closing their ' doors.' Hollywood's snickering at the idea but the gent who proposed it, Myron Blank, president of the Theater Owners of America, says he isn't kidding'. : f Wailing from the shortage of movies from Hollywood, now nap rilv married to TV, Blank blank-lEtiglish money and making mi' income. Binjf says it's capflal gains from stock sales. Guy Madison will call it a day as Wild Bill Hickok after completion of 13 more telefilms bringing the total in the filmed series to 100. He has 10 per cent of the profits and will be collecting on re-runs, he figures, for the next 10 years. Jack Barmy will tour Europe In tho lata spring and do coupia of TV shows in England. Jack try ing to figura out tha valuo ot jitv.Vtlunlrprt'. "Without fatter flow of pic pictures tures pictures from Hollywood movies will bocom a road-show bosintss sim similar ilar similar to ht stage. Somebody has to make movies and maybo it should bo thaatar owners. IT'S THAT OLD STORY again quality vs. quantity, .. Hollywood laid an egg with quan quantity tity quantity when TV lon?Vrki ever unce Movietown embarked on a program of fewer but better complainpig about Jrod net shortage." f An ovon mort orlou thoatar own.f this before- -If mv$ at homo 5t7 boom year for the sale of films to TV. A few weeks ago it S 750 RKO films. Now Warner Bros, and ABC-TV e discussing the home-screen use of 1000 pre 1948 Warner movies. .U thoso Warner film. : reach TV, theater owners .really will h,vJ something to wail about. uiTMtTr Man wailinSi .biut doll bo MS.JK had her ears -pierced. .... Not in the Script: Sid Caesar .bout weekly ,TV PP""0, "murdering," comedians, as Groucho Marx contends: W viowor Ilk.. P",-.,2; the porformor can at by H 'the material Un't vp to .Unl .Unl-ard ard .Unl-ard sow. w..ks. takes Is a on. show. cinch for tha plot of JACOPT CH CRtDC2r By OSWALD JACOB Y Written for NgA Sareic. NORTH 2 10 4 VQ65 Q10 7 AQJ96 WEST EAST A63 A J 9 8 7 9872 KJ K82 0 A J 96.3 753'. ,484 SOUTH (D) A AKQ52 V A 10 4 3 . 5 4 AK 10 V North-South vul. South West North East la Pass 2 A -, Pass 2 v Pass'2N.T: Pass 3 A Pass 4 A Pass Pass Pass Opening lead 3 Bomb Explodes In Sack Of Railway Msil At NO 'NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 20 (L'P)ibackr to the loading ramp to help A bomb exploded in a sacK ut clear up the mess. railway man irom Lnicago when) "I saw fragments they collect collect-it it collect-it was delivered -to the, post otfice;cd of what blew up," he said. "It todav. iniurimi two cierikS. Insuec-1 looked to me like a screw socket iohehkEIHE! 12,003 Machinists Out On Strike A! Jet Fighter Plants . Put yourself in the South seat for the play of today's hand. You might, incidentally, congratulate yourself on getting to the correct ' ,.,v,(hoi'i' "" i "ui spaues. ii you naa It was all contusion vui "-;v played this hand at game in no- TjAr-Vw Marciano or.n.v. trumo. an nnpmnu Hiomnn This Is HoUywood Mr. Jones: hit role trum?'. an 0Pen'n8 diamond lead edy. The paged Marciano tori saiu tne oooby-trapped pack package age package would have "'sureiy kmeu" tuc local resiuent to whom it was addressed. s fae spread through bail on the loaumg platiorm auer the bomb weni oif witn a 'tremendous boom and a mass o fed name," but it was quickly '.extinguished.' Uamage was muior and inspec inspectors tors inspectors inoicatea they were aDie to identity the addressee and oDtam ciues to ihe sender from tne wrecKajje ot tne lethal package, which was tne size ol a suoe Dux. rusul inspector aosepn J. Zarza uecuiied lo aciail bis lUidings,' out saiu part of tne oomo meciiauism, mciuuiiig. a amau oattery, was saivatjeu. Vietas Leonard Paylon, Sr., and Bouroun Wens, &r.( hUUeied ouros about tne hands and arms and Ouicr injuries wncn the buino went on as incy readied to pick it up Hum the piauorui alier tne man trucK oi' ct tossed it mere, inc sngiit shock of tne pouch hilling Uie piauorm appaieutiy loucntd ou Uiu crude niucnanisin and saved. tne adures'se from death had ue opened tne parcel, z.arza said, as u was, the shield shielding ing shielding provided by other mail in tne oag saved the two clem from serious injury. The deadly inailbag was one of about &o or bO just arrived in ixew oneans aboaru tne Illinois Cen Centrals trals Centrals "City of New Orleans'' train from Chicago. Driver Henry Dixon rolled up with the load about 1 a.m. and started pitching the sacks irom the rear of his truck lo the platform, it was Vail iirst I class nun auuressedo ew ur ur-lcans lcans ur-lcans residents. '', ,. The bags with the bomb was a "pretty. heavy" one, tfayton said, (and when the driver. heaved if. up it landed on a small cart, "The last I remember before 1 Un, ...Attn Hie vauiumuu was umi vreuj ami 1 1 had both started reaching over to grab the bag," Payton said. ! "I don't remember actually touch ing it. "Suddenly there was a tremend ous boom and a mass of" red flume," he said. "The fire gushed un between Wells and me- and Wells and the truck driver dis ano would play a. surpme di o would have enablc(J the dcfentlers appeared behind the big red blob in a new comeoy, .: .a;-" to take the first five tricks. aylDn ""'swepi over ms idno y ".,"" fl"r(,A "esi icaas tne aeuce of dia- "f"us "-,v,,"cu ""i' an over me, 100, ukc a wave, but it came and went so fast that none of my clothing- was set a a-fire." fire." a-fire." ..;': : :';,'' He ran from the spot, Payton added, fearing other explosions, but when none followed and he realized he wasn't on fire be went 1Bea (wiw. .v r."tv nftered""1 we uce ot dia- cy.ine .agency ,Dl""",-r:"ti "us against your contract of the role to Graziano, who epiw.: jour spadeSi 8nd East finesscs th(. The emDarrassniK J3ck ot diamonds to win the first the bell n both of them. trick. East returns a low diamond - June Havert personal appear tQ nis partner.s king and Wc t ,nce with hubby Fred .MacMor- Mmns (hird diamofaH'tl ray on a road tour does not mean, it jS now up to you. What do she says; l'i.Irw you play at the third trick? How back to bemg .jusi wrs. oo you plan to proceed? ray," she U0,'"7 u V V-nor nor V-nor will collect $150,000 for itar- Yon must truniD the third mum! of diamonds, sinco you should be worried about losing a trump trick later em You cannot afford to give away three diamond tricks and also lose a trump. You must now proceed to draw trumps in order to safeguard youri eventual club tricks.. It would be' fatal, however; to draw trumps by j laying down the three top honors, i If you did so, you would then havei to begin on the clubs, East would trump the third club and lead an-1 other diamond to knock out yourl last trump. You would be unable! to get back to dummy for the rest I of the clubs, and you would wind up with only eight tricks. The correct way to draw trumps is to lead your low trump from your own hand and play a low trump from the dummy v. East can win the trick and re return turn return a diamond, but dummy's ten of spades will protect you Irom all harm, You can return to your own hand to draw the rest of the trumps, after which the clubs will all be good, - - Incidentally, notice the Impor Importance tance Importance of preserving dummy's ten PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 20 (UP) ot spades, a you waste mis val--The Brotherhood of Locomotive! "able card when you are giving Firemen and Epginqmen (Ind.) j P trump trick West will be able :t..:..-j t.j.. vt to overruff the dummy when East Wednesday against the .'Pennsyty'" a fourth diamond. When you in "Th Buster Keaton Story at Paramount. He'U also receive a "substantial" sum for helping With the writing and development ef the Keaton character.. Preview of things, io come: MGM's planning a drive-m thea theater ter theater fof Australia with a spacious cafeteria and patio from which diners ctn watch the picture. Selected shorts: Phil Harris and Desi Arnaz are the money boys behind a new jjolf course planned for Palm Springs . Bing Crosby and Uncle Sam are clashing over $27,000 in the estate of his wife; The tax boy claim it's ordinary IHl Brcibrbod T;rci:!:n$ Phiily mm Sfrike for a light bulb, and some Kind of bulb seemed screwed into the socket. They also found a bat battery tery battery somewhere that had been part of the bomb." . . Zarza, in charge ot me guard guarded ed guarded investigation, said he could not reveal the intended recepicnt; or the sender as it "might hinder the investigation." .i The crude bomb was wrapped in brown paper and twine and placed in a shoe box, j Zarza said the bomb was made; with a one-cell battery as deton-. ator, rigged to go off when the, box was opened. About 40 letters were destroy-; ed, but Zarza said, "we will dcliv-j er the good mail, although it may not be legible in some cases., 1 v '"We found remains of a dry ; cell battery, a light blub, and frag fragments ments fragments of glass," he said. 'The glass may have come from a bot- itle which contained nmu-si-; ine He said the fragments of wir-: ing and other pieces will, be sent to Washington for analysis. Railroad officials said the train,, about 10 minutes late, makes stops at Memphis, Tenn., and I Jackson, Miss., enroute to New Orleans, The locked mail pouch was nth ped open down the side by the, blast. I US Pilot Plummets 30,000 Feet, Dies Stressed Io Seat TAFT, Calif., Feb 20 (UPj I -The second of two pilots who bail ed out ofa disabled Navy TV-2 jet bomber plummeted 30 000 Tee to his death still strapped to his seat, sheriff deputies said today. Th hnHv nf the unidentified stu-1 dent-pilot who .elected from the plane Friday night along wh the pilot-instructor Lt. (Jp.) Don w Hull-Rye was found tn Wem canyon, about 20 miles south of here. Lt. Hull-Rye landed safely and yesterday was found walking a a-long long a-long a road in the crash' area. J. E. Townc and Benjamin John Johnson, son, Johnson, members of the sheriff's aero squadron, spotted the dead pilot from the air today, called a truck and landed In a field nearby. The Jet bomber was on a traln traln-ine ine traln-ine mission from Tucson, Ariz., to Moffett Naval Air Statiort near; San Francisco with another plane when it flamed out and crashed,! the-Navy reported. YV NEW YORK, Feb. 20 (UpY More than 12.000 machinists went ion strike today against four Re public Aviation Corp, plants with Mony o mon hos token o won for the Unilcd stateg and Uj jllies v Ki mate only TO 'inc and g,,,pA mission fnr tho Air that she Intends to be the skipper Force. The International Association of Machinists walked out at 12:01 day shift tomorr, a.m. afrer reiertin? a rnmnnvl offer to give the 19.000 workers at the four Long Island plants wage increases of five cents and hour. John J. Ryan, vice president in charge of industrial relations, said the plants would be open for the 6 p.m. shift tonight 'and the 7 a.m. The plants are situated at Farm Farm-ingdale. ingdale. Farm-ingdale. Hicksville, Greenlawn and Port Washington. They turn out F84F Thunders! reak jet fight fighter er fighter bombers. RF8IF photo recon reconnaissance naissance reconnaissance planes, the new F105 fighter-bomber and guided" m i s- SllCS. '..'".'" . "TO HELL AND BACK" On Screen this Powerful Hero Tribute Will Pre Pre-Release Release Pre-Release at the CENTRAL Theatre on February 22nd y'.'S, ' 1 verI "To H S W bftttlefleld scene om UJ- wS w?r Sr 'M Back starring Audie MurP-V In "his maSroSwi rf SDf Kd technicolor and in Cine Cine-S S Cine-S February S CCntl'al Theatre ln P"Release JOAN CRAWFORD at Glamorous Best in Suspenseful Romance "QUEEN BEE" Opening next Thursday, February 23, at the CENTRAL Desperate Drive! Joan Crawford sees disaster ahead, as John Ireland's unwilling passenger in "Queen Bee." As a woman who thinks the other woman's man is more exciting, Joan Crawford is said to have one of her most glamorous ancT magnetic roles, in "Queen Bee.", Advt. .smm ay; at youk service cemtev ; THEATERS TOMGIIT! BALBOA 6:75 -8:15 AIR-IONUITIONKD f'i vania Kauroad in support 01 a dispute over working agreements. give up the trump trick in this hand, you must play low from both hands! lLmrZ!& . Tiien. "Boy rrom Oklahoma" DIABLO HTS6:15 7:15 Margaret LOCKWOOD Wendell COHEY "LAUGHING ANNAS'', Tu. "SPECIAL DELIVERY" MARGARITA 6:15 7:50 Itildegarde NETF : Donald WOLFIT . "SVENGALI" Color! Tu. DALLAS" CRISTOBAL 6:13 125 Air-Coadlllonc. . Glerjn JORD Dorothy McGUlRE ". : T R I A L" Tuei. ."THE BIG TIP OFr" PARAISO 6:15-8:20 Eleanor Parker "Interrupted Melody" SANTA CRUZ 1:15 8:10 CAMP BIKRD 6:15 6:10 Ralph Meeker I Silvnna MANGANO "KISS WE DEADLY" I "M A M B O" OFFICIAL LIST OF THE NATIONAL LOTTERY OF BENEFICENCE PANAMA. REPrBLIC OF PANAMA Complete Prize-winning Numbers in the-Ordinary Drawing No. 1928, Sunday, February 19, 1956 The whole ticket has 44 pieces divided In two series "A" & "B" of 22 pieces each First Prize Second Prize 1769 $ 44,000.00 4376 5 13,200.00 9891 $' 6,600 oo Third Prize TRIZES ARE PAID WITHOUT DISCOUNTS OR TAXES Nn 6069 0160 269 mm 469 n:,69 ftKAA : 070ft 0HN9 969 I 132.99 VMM m.oo i:i2.0l 1.12 r.n 1.12.(1 I.12.IW 3zoo.no 111.0 132.00 Nn Prim- No Prim i No Prim i No Priiw No PrlieciNo Prliei.No Prl No Pr(i No Prlwa . m 13?. M 2069 1.12.00 3069 13200 14069 13'00lM69 132 066fl I32.00'7069 132.00 9069 132.00 9069 132.00 1169 1.12.0 2169 IM.nO I ,1169 132.00 4169 I32.0Q !. 1169 '132.00 R169 132.00 IT1R9 1XtM 9169 132.00 9169 132.90 1269 1.12.00 2W.9 l,f'M 3269 1.12.00 1 4269 1.12.00 52(19 132.00 1 6269 132017269 132.00 1 9269 1320 9h 132.00 1369 132.00 2369 I3. 33119 132.00 4.169 1.12.00 ; 5369 132.00,6369 132.00,7369 132.00,9369 132.00 9.169 132.00 1469 132.00 2469 132.00 .1469 132.00 4469 132 Ml i 5469 132 0:6469 132.00 ,7469 132.00 9169 132.00 9469 132.00 1.W9 132.00 2S69 H2.00 3569 132.00 '4569 132.00 5569 132.00 6569 132.00' 7569 132 0 8569 132.00 9369 132 00 1669 132.00 2669 ... 132.00 3669 132.00 4669 1.12.00 5669 132 00 6669 132.00 J669 132.00 R669 132.00 9669 132.00 .1769 44 000.O 2769 2?00,00 3769 2200 0 4769 22O0.O0 5769 220 00 6769 2200 00 7S9 2200.00 9769 22HO.OO 9769 2200.00 1969 ., I32.0 2S69 i 132.00 3669 132.00 4669 32.00 5869 132.P0 6869 132 00 1 7R69 132.00 8K69 132.00 I 969 132.00 169 132.00 2969 132.00 3969 132.W 4969" 132.00 5969 132.00 6969 132.00 TM 132.00 8969 -.- 132 08 1 1969 13I.M ; s Aporoximations Derived From First Prize 1 ' I i t i I t I I 1760 '440 T762 440 1764 440 1766 440 1768 44 77t 440 1773 440 177S 440 177T 440 I 161 440 1763 440 176i 440 1 1767 44 1770 440 1 1772 440 1774 448 ll lit 1778 440 Approximations Derived From Second Prize 1 : .,.-'.':.. I f ' f I : I '3I'- m X m n7 224 3m 229 5378 22 6378 228 7378 220 8378 228 8378 228 4367 110 j 4369 110 4371 110 4373 110 4375 110 4378 110 4380 110 4382 110 4.184 110 110 31 72 118 4374 ,118 4377 110 4379 118 4.181 110 438J 11 4.18J II Approximation? Derived From Third Prize 0891 I! 9882 983 88 ; 88 1891 ' 9884 9SS5 132 I - 98 88 2891 132 3891 98S6 9687 89 88 132 I 4891 132 9888 9889 98 9890 98 88 "' J882 '"". 88 5891 .132 8891 9893 88 i 9895 9894 ": : 98 9898 132 7891 88 j 9897 88 8898 132 99 88 8891 : 132 9819 9900 88 .88 W. B. Woodward Jr., general chairman of the hrotherhood. an nounced here yesterday that the union s 8,500 members had decid decided ed decided to strike after Federal Mediat Mediator or Mediator Michael J. O'Conncll gave up efforts to settle the dispute. Woodward said that H. E. Gil-1 bert. the u n i o n's international president, has been asked to ap-6 prove a striKe order Wednesday at 6 a.m. for next The strike originally was sched- tiled for last Nov. 6 but was call called ed called off. at the request of federal mediators. Negotiations continued i since that time. f Woodward said the main point !i of disagreement was the rail-if rbad's alleged attempt to elimi- nato hostlers, the men who check locomotives before runs. I James W. Oram, a Pennsylva-lj .-nia- vice. preadentlsaidJhc,jinion : g was -attempting f to preserve jobs made unnecessary with the ad-j-i vent of diesel engines. i If you want Bourbon at its best call for "GREEN RIVER America's smoothest whislty, .'.'..'. y m Sold at all leading bocjegas and bars. BEVJARE-OF-ltMTATIONS. Prlze-wfaniBK Numbers of yesterday's Lottery Drawlnn were sold at:. 1st and 2nd in Panama, 3rd in Chirlqul The Nine Hundred whole tickets ending In 9 and not Included in the above list win Forty-foui- Dollars ($14.00) each , The whole ticket has 44 pieces which comprises the two series "A" and "B" ' Signed by: ALBERTO ALEMAN. Governor of the Province of Panamd. Ccd. 47-12155 The Representative oi The Treasury RICARDO A MELENDEZ WITNESSES: Juan Fernande2! L., Ced. ko. 28-1544 Martin Marin, Ced. No. 27-6000 JOSE DOMINGO SOTO. Notary Public. Panama PABLO A. PINEL M., Secretary KJATC. The winning llckett with the last cipher. and with tha two lart MWI t. cmhera apply only Io the Klrsl Prize. The First Pnie and the 2nd and 3rd Prize are drawn separately. The ap approximation proximation approximation are calculated on the First, Second and Third Prizes, tn ca a ticket ithould carry Ihe number of each prize, the holder la entitled to claim payment for each. dravi::g of the 3 strikes j ,' Sunday, February 19, 1956 , : Drawing Number 629 , Fraction First Prize. . . .'. 69 $i,oq J'econd Prize. .... 76 3.00 Third Prize." 91 2.00 Ticket $220.00 60.00 40.00. The prizes will be paid in accordance with the Official List of Panama In the office, of the National Beneficent Lottery litualed on Central Avenue. Plan of Ordinary Drawing No. 1929 which wiU take place February 26, 1956 Divided In two aerie of 22 fraction, each denominated "A" and "B"' FIRST PRIZE I First Prize. Series A and B, of 1 Second Prize'. Sertei A and B. of 1 Third Prize. Series A and B. of 18 Approximations, Series A and B, of 9 Prizes. Series A and B, of 90 Prizes. Series A and B. of 90O Prizes. Series A and B, of 22 000,000 each series S,6O0 00 each series 3..1O0.00 each series 220 00 each series 4,100 00 each series . 66 00 each series 22.00 each aeries SFCOND PRIZE 18 Approximations, Series A and B of 55.00 each series Prize. Series A and B, of 110.00 each series THIRD PRIZE lSApproximationa, Series A and B of S 44.00 each series 9 Prizes, Series A and B. of 66 00 each series $44 0n 00 13.;o0 00 , 6.60000. 7.9'-'0 00 19 5H0 00 11.RX0 00 39.600.00 S 1.980 OO 1,080.00 f.5M 20 1.1U8.00 1074 Prizes Price of a whole ticket ... Price of a" forty-Tom Ih part" TOTAL SM9.732 00 ...$22.C0 -rr. .59-- - . k .. I I - a- a d itiy KE'vrpArr no no at, rr.rrxAsr 3, i:. nn, r hk MOi'e:i earns A- o A -r .-T ..- x. TIT PAX .MA AM.rnTCAV AN INT G. ; o v Memphis Slate, Holy Cross, Marshall, Connecticut Get Cage Bids; Niagara In NIT By TIM MORIARTY NEW YORK, Feb. 20 (UP) Memphis State, Holy Cross, Marshall and Connecticut owned berths in the N.C.A A. basketball tournament today, while Niagara became the eighth team to accept a bid to the National Invitation Tournament. . Marshall and Connecticut auto matically joined the N.C.A.A. par parade ade parade by clinching their respective conference championships during 'the weekend, while Holy Cross and Memphis State were named as "at large entnej. This year's N.C.A.A. champion ships will include za teams, inus, 14 more conference representatives -and seven additional independent teams must be selected before the eliminations get underway on four widely-scattered fronts March 12. Officials of the NIT have a much easier row to hoe. They have been sftttina the lump on their NCAA rivals by signing up independent teams for tne last mree weens and now have only four berths un unfilled. filled. unfilled. Niagara earned its bid on the strength of a 17-5 won and lost record. Among the Purple Eagles victims are Duquesne and Seton ItaH, who accepted early invita invitations tions invitations to the N.I.T. The other nom nominees inees nominees for the Madison Square Garden jamboree are uayton, Mar Marquette, quette, Marquette, Xavicr (Ohio), St. Francis! (N.Y.) and Louisville. Marshall backed into the mid mid-American American mid-American Conference champion championship ship championship when Kent State upset Mia Miami mi Miami (0.), 74-73, Friday night. Mar Marshall shall Marshall now has a 9-1 league record Sid Gordon New Player-Coach Of Miami Team MIAMI, Feb. 20 (UP)- Sid Gordon was the now player player-coach coach player-coach today of tho Miami Mar Martini tini Martini baioball team of tho inter, national League. Marlin general manager Bill Veeck announced that Gordo rt, former star for the New York Giants and Pittsburgh Pirates, had signed to play third base for Miami, : ; Fasrlich SECOND HALF SCHEDULE Tuesday, Feb. 21, Conejos vs. Pumas. Wednesday, Fei. 22, no game. Thursday, Feb. 23. Macaws va. Palomas. Friday, Feb. 24, Ocelots vs. Pu mas. Monday, Feb. 27, Pumas vs. Macaws. . Tuesday, Feb. 28 Ocelots vs. Palomas. Wednesday, Feb. 29, Macaws vs. Conejos. Thursday March 1. palomas vs. Pumas. ; i Friday, Marchi2, Ocelots vs. Conejos.' ,, Monday, March 6, Ocelots vs. Macaws. Tuesday, March 6, Pumas vs. Conejos. Wednesday, March 7, Palomas vs. Macaws. Thursday, March 8. Ocelots vs Pumas. . Ft id ay. March' 9 Conejos vs. Palcmas. Monday, March 12. Macaws vs. Purnas. Tuesday, March 13, Palomas vs. Ocelots. Wednesday March. 14, Conejos VS MSLC&WS Thursday", March 15, Pumas vs; palomas. -v- Friday, March 16, Conejos vs. Ocelots. ,....,.., Monday, March 19, Macaw vs. Ocelots. Tuesday, March 2u. Pumas vs Conejos. Wednesday, March 21, Ma Macaws caws Macaws vs. Palomas. Thursday, March 22, Pumas vs Ocelots. Conejos. Monday, March 26. Pumas vs Macaws. Tuesday, March 27, Paloma vs. Ocelots. Wednesday, March 28. Conejo va. Macaws. Thursday, Maron 29, Puma vs. Palomas. Friday, March 30 Ocelots vs. Conejos. Monday, April 2, oceicts vsj Macaws., Tuesday, April 3, Conejos vs Palomas. Wednesday, Aprli 4, Ocelots vs. Pumas. Fastllch League AH Stars vs. First Half Champions, Balboa Stadium. PJ?yoff' series to start Friday April 6. at 7:30 p.m., Balboa i Muciois uiup raimnas z Jn a Fastlich League contest with only two games remaining, while Miami is 6-4. Connecticut clinched the Yankee Conference Saturday night by ed edging ging edging Rhode Island, 92-90. The U U-conns conns U-conns (6-0) wind up their league schedule against Massachusetts tomorrow night. Rhode Island (5 (5-2) 2) (5-2) also has only one conference game remaining, so has no chance for the title. Holy Cross was" selected for the N.C.A.A. Saturday, then dropped a 71-60 verdict to Canisius. .Howev .However, er, .However, the Crusaders weren't the on only ly only tournament-bound dandies bumped off during the season's greatest "lost weekend." St. rrancis fell before St. Jo Joseph's seph's Joseph's (Pa.) 80-76,' leaving San Francisco as the nation's only major unbeaten team, while De troit surprised Marquette, 72-71 On the credit side, Memphis State sewed up Us N.C.A. A. bid by manhandling Centenary, 101-82, while Seton Hall lookedmore like a good ; "dark-horse'-' bet for the N.I.T. by trampling Villanova, 80- 63. In a possible N.I.T. preview Sunday night, Dayton wiped out a three-point half time deficit and went on to defeat xavier. a-7S Seven-foot Bill Uhl scored 24 points for the Flyers, who posted their 20th victory in 22 starts. Illinois continued its march to the Big Ten crown by dumping Michigan State, 96-76; Southern Methodist downed Texas A&M., 92 92-80, 80, 92-80, to remain unbeaten in the Southwest Conference; Alabama kept its Southeastern Conference record unblemished by whipping Tulane, 79-60, and U.C.L.A. com completed pleted completed a weekend sweep over Ore Oregon gon Oregon State, 72-59, to hold on to first place in the Pacific Coast Confer Conference. ence. Conference. The other major conference lead lead-ers: ers: lead-ers: Utah, Skyline; Houston, Mis Missouri souri Missouri Valley; Columbia Ivy League; George Washington, South- em; iNortn Carolina, a u a n m Coast: Idaho State. ROcky Moun-i tain, Texas Tech, Border; Iowa State and Kansas State (lied), Big Seven. League Saturday afternoon, the Ocelots dropped the Palomas on Corbin McG riff's two bagger with two men on and none out In the bottom half of the seventh in inning. ning. inning. It was a nip and tuck contest throughout with Morgan Schoch holding the upper hand, striking out 11 Palomas. He was tough in the clutch, fanning three men In r row after the tint two bat batters ters batters of the inning reached sec sec-end end sec-end and third. George Barbler struck out nine Ocelots, but was too" liberal with his bases on balls, allow allowing ing allowing 7 Ocelot3 to get on via the pass route. This evening the Ocelots will fllay rhe Macaws. 'Should they topple the Macaws, the Palomas will back into the first half championship, if the Macaws win, the playoff will be held Thursday evenlnpr between the Palomas and the Macaws. The score: .Ocelots McNall, rf . R. Morris, ss j. Engeike, If Ab R H Po A 0 0 0 0 1 W. Engeike, cf J. Morris,- 2b McGriff, ss-c -7-AmmaraU, 3b Thompson, lf-ss Laatz, lb . . Boyett, lb ..... Tubbs. c-rf .... 0 1 scnocn, p Totals 23 4 4 21 4 Palomas Garcia, 3b 4 Pedersfjr, ss 3 Barbler. p ...... 3 : Eastman, cf ..... 3 3nodgrass,.c ..... 3 1' 3 Allen, If 2 Ruiz, rf Sander, lb ... Rathgeber, 2b Total 25 2 5-18 1 Two base hits:- McGriff, Pe clerson, Barbler. Double plavs Tubbs, McGriff, Tubbs. Garcia J aanaers Garcia, stolen bases: J. Engeike, 2, Bovett, 2, Tuibs J., Morris, Ruiz. Pederson. San ders. Left on base: Palomas; e, ; Oce.'.ts, -5. Struck out: by , Schoch, 11; Barbler. .,Bases on balls: off Schoch, 4: Barbler. -7. i ,.,lSaciljeVV,iiclkcL,rass"d, balls: $nodgras8. Umpires: Mohl i Neville and vicz. Scorer; Kiev man,' Polemon Cops Juan Franco Feature Race The Stud Valentino's brilliant prospect polemon yesterday aft afternoon ernoon afternoon raced to his second con consecutive secutive consecutive feature- victory in the $750 seven furlong sprint fcr Class B Imported thoroughbreds at the Juan Franco race track. Jockey Abundio Vergara had the Chilean-bred three-year-old chestnut son of Polo Sur-Sobe-rana fully four lengths in front at the finish ahead of Kadir, Persian countess and Alormina in that order. He returned $3.80 ana $2.80 In tne mutuels. Formful racing in an unevent ful day was the keynote except in the eighth race when little native racer Folletito surprised wun a $69.40 paVoff. Leadine Jockey Alfredo Vasouez aealh was tne winnmgest rider with tnree triumphs. The dividends: FIRST RACE s 1 Rosier $4.20. 2.20. 2 Little Fool $3:20. SECOND RACE 1 Merry Slipper $12.60, 9.20, 3.20. 2 Verticordia 9.80, 4. 3 Beduino $2.60. F'rst Double: ST5.80 THIRD RACE 1 Okiland $3.60, 2.20. 2 Don Popo $2.20. One-Two: $7.40 FOURTH RACE 1 Rina Rot $4, 2 60, 2.20. 2 Ourazalcna W.fiO, 2.20. 3 Redondlta 2.20. itinlela: S5.6Q FIFTH RACE 1 Naranjazo $3.80, 2.40. 2 Valaria $3 40. SIXTH RACE 1 Ornamental star $6.40. 3.20. 2.80. 2 Cascador $6, 5.20. 3 Rlscal SEVENTH RACE 1 Oro Purito $4.80. 2.40. 2.20. 2 Youne: Prince $3, 2.40. 3-Ponton $2.40. Second Double: $15.60 EIGHTH RACE 1 Folletito $69.40, 12.60. 8.60. 2 Arranauln $3 60, 2 60. Fllon $2.80. Ouiniela: $54 NINTH RACE 1 Grey Juan $5.40. 4. 3. 2 Maria Stuardo $4.20. 2.60, 3 Reynold $3.40. One-Two: $26.66 TENTH RACE 1 Polemon $3.80, 2.80. 2 Kadir $3.60. ELEVENTH RACE 1 Tiger's Teeth $3.40. 2 20, 2 20 2 Turf Lodge $2.80, 2.20, 3 Atom-0 $2.20. Nashua Pushes Earnings Over Million Mark NEW YORK, Feb. 20-fUP)- The world's most expensive race horse ran his earnings over the one-million dollar mark Satur Saturday. day. Saturday. .; "Nashua" who cost more than one and one-quarter mil million lion million dollars won more than $92,000 Saturday as he wme in first in the Widener Handicap at Hialeah Park in Florida. The four-year-old won the race in a thrilling stretch finish that saw four horses racing- for the wire almost side by side. Nashua beat "Social Outcast" lust by the length of his head. The Outcast passed him a split second later. "Sailor" finished third, just a head behind Social Outcast, and "Find," Social Out- cast's stable mate, finished only a neck behind Sailor, "r Nashua carried high weight of 127 pounds, compared to 121 on Social Outcast. Even though it wag hU first start since October 0,15. he ran the mile and one Oj quarter in two minutes and two 0i second flat, just one second off Ojthe track record. 4 Jockey Eddie Arcaro says Na Nashua shua Nashua was exhausted at the end of the race. Arcaro adds, "If he could have run another step then he was cheating me," Les Leslie lie Leslie Combs,, who heads the syndi syndicate cate syndicate that owns Nashua, cays, "He withstood a terrific drive coming down the stretch. I knew he was a game horse but I didn't realize he was that eame Combs says Nashua's brilliant run was a fitting tribute to his former owner, the late wiliiar Woodward, Junior. The second-place Social Out Outcast cast Outcast supplied almost as many thrills with his great run at the finish. After running last for nearly a mile, he came tflrough the field like an express train, and caught Nashua Just one jump too late. Nashua now ranks second a a-mong mong a-mong the all-time monev win winners. ners. winners. He needs to win only $48, $48,-000 000 $48,-000 more to top the retired "Ci "Citation." tation." "Citation." ' The Widener was Nashua's 17tiL,yictoryJn 21 start vHeji-as,, uie ouas-on iavorii,e oi me V2, V2,-000 000 V2,-000 fans, the largest crowd in the history of Florida racing. Tofo Ibarra, Ampudia To Try To Regain Prestige Amador Teams For Medalist Distillers Best The 67's shot by the teams of Pulton and Plerson and McGow an and Gross of Fort Amador held up over the week-end to win the medalist honors iu the National Distillers Best Ball tournament being held at Sum mit Golf Club. ; That is shooting good golf on any course but few could see it ithKt.9nriin(r the attemnts of such Isthmian favorites as Mit ten-Beall, Lombroia-Smith, Sew-i dl-stovall. Riley-Dickens. Eder Gallndo, and Jankus-Corsale. But high winds and missed putts over the 9 hole Summit Hills layout resulted In only one team coming with three strokes of tie- ing them. Th Rrazos Brook team of Eder and Galindo had a very good 71 to make them loom as favorites to ena up in ine jumia. This is probably the first or sec sec-nnri nnri sec-nnri time that either of them had played the course and with a little more knowledge of the greens they should be under par in all their matches. Jankus und Al Corsale played evtn par for the 18 holes ana tney too win oe hard to beat, m the ladies flicht Sylva Car penter teamed up with Kay Call, a newcomer to Isthmian golf, and led the way wiht an even par 70 to win the Medalist prize. They have a 3 stroke edge over the team of Peggy Porter and Penny Daniell and 4 strokes over Cleo Burns and Earth Matnie son. There were only 12 teams entered by the ladies but most of the matches will be good to watch and the outcome In doubt to the final holes. The first round matches must be nlaved bv nightfall on the 26th of February, this coming Sunday. In- all but the Men's Championship flight the match- es, will be played with handicaps Three-quarters of. the difference of one-half the combined team handicap is the official way of nguring the strokes to be given or receivedTake one-half of the teams combined handicap and figure 3t's the difference. Sounds difficult but It is really very simple. The. pairings for the first round matches are as follows j LUCKY?- Kid Gavilaa lost a' disputed decision to Peter Water Waterman man Waterman in London, but it may have turned out to be the break the lucky medal he holds is suppos suppos-ed ed suppos-ed to bring. The International Boxing Club says the Cuban Keed may receive 147-pound re. cognition as a result of his bout in England. CoEch Brs Player's Di!cky llaircul MADISON. Wis.. Feb. 20 (WV Coach Milt Diehl of Marlisnn East High school told basketball piayer uordy Howe today that either he or his duck-tail haircut "has got to go." ither tie gets rid of that hair hairdo do hairdo or he doesn't play on mav team," said the coach. Principal A. J. Barret also took a dim view of Hart's coiffure. "Nobody allows an athlete to compete with thaUtvDe of hair do. Nobody," he said. Dichl told Hart to find another hair-do or find another team bo cause his present style violates a squaa rule But Hart believes he has tl r solution that -will allow him to play without getting a hair-cut. "I'll comb my hair the way t;;c coach wants it to look when I s -n practicing and playing. And I. .1 comb it the other way when i'm not pn the basketball floor," he said.' : ,! The coach said the boy's 1 -cut did not become an issue u late m tne season, when as lie said he hdsn t i. -Hart's-proposal of switch;; j styles. rta Tie With 67's In National Ball Tourney Championship Flf(hi Pierson, Fulton vs Mahone, Lally Eder, Gallndo vs Jack, Dono Donovan van Donovan ; v: 'V Connor, Chadwlck vs Rlggs, Vance :. J. Smith, Lombrola vs Mitten, Beau McGowan, Gross vs perahtie, Engeike i Hlnkle, LeBrun vs Norstrom, Gump. V- Corsale, Jankus vs Bean, Shaw Young, M. V. Smith vs Stovall, Sewell " 2nd Flight Fields, Lanza vs J. Perantie, Drennan Moran, Garriel vs Moynihan, Shlve 'v: Epperson, Eberenz vs Clayton, Hammer Dlffus. MacCoubray vs Judson, J. Clayton Riley, Dickens vs Spencer, Col lins''-.'-: r, Cobb, Stephenson vs Garrison, Har Mills, Kraka, vs Ledbetter, Kfay-j ser : .',: Medinger, Boyd ms W. Coffey, w. wneeier 3rd Flight Montanye., Egolt vs McGinnls, Oliver sumvan, Hazy vs Hardie, wigg Senne, Reid vs Thompson, Bongorni Miller, Kltto vs Thomas, Hen ry v L. Eberenz, Waite vs Stephens, Young blood Hall, Barrett vs McGinn, Mc- Namara '' DesLondes Jr. and Sr. vs Col bert. Larrabee Mathews, Castanada vs Bled- saul, Pylfer 4th FVght B. Coffey. M. Wheeler vs Ess Ess-linger, linger, Ess-linger, Jones Johnson, Anderson vs Bye ;, Serger, Adams vs Wise, Britt J. Salterlo, J. Salterio vs Bye Hayes, Honn vs Simons, Jen Jenkins kins Jenkins . Tettenburn, Jamison vs Bye Bateman, Lima vs Gregg-Pibk-ford Rodgers, Zornes vs Bye . Ladies Flight Carpenter. Call vs Trim, Mon tanye Favreau, Edstrom vs Bye Mathieson, Burns va Dial, Stlrewalt Askew, Judson vs Bye Porter, Daniell vs j. Morris, Greene ". Lynn Jones, Louise Jones vs Bye Hadley, Todd vs Zornes, Cher ry- - i Dtirer, Knuth vs Bye. i All matches must be romolet- ed by 6:00 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 26. Internationa Tourney Gets Many Entries The international tennis' tourna tournament ment tournament to be held at the Hotel EI Panama Feb. 29 to March 4 will become an annual affair, it wax disclosed today by the committee in cnarge or the tourney. The committee arrived at this decision as a result of the many entries, received from players wanting to play here. So far players from seven coun tries have sent applications to participate in the tournament. Ten nis stars from Australia, United States, Denm ark, Sweden, Brazil, Mexico ana mama. will play at the tournament, the first f its kind in Latin America. Panama and Canal Zone win winners ners winners of the local tennis tourna tournaments ments tournaments will be invited to particip participate. ate. participate. The local tournament starts next Tuesday and runs until Sun day night. The international tourn tournament ament tournament will begin right afterwards in Feb. 29. This morning the committee re ceived an application-from June Stack, National Public Parks champion, who hails from De troit. Miss-Stack is only 20, but she bcia-'s one of the strongest forelw U in women's competition ami ratiks 18 among the women amateurs' in the world today. Another entry came 'from ..Ar ..Ar-m m ..Ar-m md Vierea of Brazil. The Brazil Brazil-i. i. Brazil-i. i nun's champion, has been a r !itSpr of the Davis Cup team of 1 s country. He is now playing in Honda circuit. He recently twr.d the Dixie championship a hard fought match from Eu- Iw oylan, the seventh ranking . player. ... Tidiets, for the tournament will j on sale at the Hotel El Pana Pana-, , Pana-, at all banks in Panama and e Canal Zone, at NCO and of- ri clubs on all military posts; -ti at the Fort Amador and Rod Rod-1 1 Rod-1 Golf clubs. Prices will be $"! i- all events. A special Dike of : for all events has been set for! rvicemen. Feb. 26 Two outstandina local bamtam weights who were both TKO'ed in their last appearances, meet Sun- aay at the National Gym in ten-round, 120-pound feature bout. Th glidittort who will b try trying ing trying t rdm rhimttlvct ar Tt Ibarra and Rodolfo Ampu Ampu-dia. dia. Ampu-dia. Both wtro dafoattd on tht mt diti, Dtc. II, en difftrtnt program!. Ibarra was stopped by Byroh Cumberbatcb at the Panama Gym in the seventh round of a sched scheduled uled scheduled ten-round feature and Ampu Ampu-dia dia Ampu-dia was TKO'ed by Claudio Mar Martinez tinez Martinez in the fifth of a six-round semifinal at the Colon Arena. In losing to CumbeTbatch, Iba rra suuered tus only setback in four pro fights. All his wins have been by knockouts, Ampudia, who had at one time was a ton contender for the bam tamweight title, had been inactive for several months when "he took on Martinez. He admitted after the fight he was "somewhat rus ty and should not have fought such a classy rival after his long layoit. Ampudia says since that last bout he has kept in -training all along and is confident he can take care of young Toto. Sunday's aight-round semifinal betwoon Sammy Medina and Black Bill, on paper, could be even more attractive-than the feature. Each of the feather weights hat won his last two fights. This will be their first meeting. Medina decisioned Rafael (The Bull) Brathwaite twice, on Oct. 31 and in a return bout Dec. 12. Black Bill TKO'ed Vieente Worrell Dec. 18, and on Jan. 29, he earned a unanimous decision over favored Manuel Prescott. In the main prelim Enrique Porta, who made his profetiion profetiion-al al profetiion-al debut a victorious one when he decisioned Juan Lexama Jan. 22, will make hit second ap appearance pearance appearance against the tough San Bias Indian Arias Mendez in a match set for four heats. In the curtain raiser bamtam bamtam-weiehts weiehts bamtam-weiehts Melanio Pacheco and Juan Salazar exchange punches in a four-rounder. Lucky Strike, JC In Twiloop Game Tonight PACIFIC TWILIGHT LEAGUE SECOND HALF STANDINGS Team Won Lost Balboa High School American Legion .. Lucky strike Junior .College Tonlcht's Game Junior College vs. Lucky Strike - Tuesday Night's Game American Legion vs Balboa High Thursday Night's Game American Legion vs Jr. College Friday Night's Game Lucky Strike vs Balboa High half Twiloop winners, will meet the C.Z. Junior College at 1:15 at the Balboa Stadium as the Pacific Twilight League enters! tne last week of play In the sec ond half. The Lucky Strikers must win to stay In the second half race and will send their aca lefty Webb Heameto the mound In Qvest of the victory. Hearne has a record of four wins and no lossts for the season. College' with a revamped line lineup up lineup that includes the recent ad addition dition addition to the team of catcher Abdiel Flynn, inflelder Lee Cot Cotton ton Cotton and outfielder Georee Dans- by, upset the favored Balboa High last week 4 to 3 and are an set to give the Luckles a rough night. Lambert Mantovanl will do the hurling for the Collegians ana nopes to Better nis two wins and six losses record at the ex pense or the first half winners, Both ttams have an nnf.sirf chance in the second half and are noying to cut into the Dal Dal-boa boa Dal-boa High Schol lead. It's Ensfsr To VIM Thai FcccIIb XINCINNATI (NEA) -One look Ted Kluszcwuki is enough to car-j anybody. .The National League avcra(?r show that. The big-armed iU'dleg first baseman received 23 Inten Intentional tional Intentional walks last neon, which tOPrtd even 'Terf William' m.rl. Thcywa!kc!UViJliaiiia. mmiL. l' lllllt'S. KluHzewskl was walked 68 times In f 11 last year. Editor: CONRADO SARCEANT 182 Ooys Participate In Successful Dallioa Interclass Trade Meet The starter's pistol cracked for the first time this year in the lo local cal local Interscholastic League as 182 boys took part in the two day In terclass track meet at Balboa. Conducted in three divisions this year for the first time in several years, the meet proved to be a tremendous success. In the Junior High section the Eighth Grade won a smashing vic tory over tneir younger class mates from the Seventh by out- scoring them 238V4 to 93. In the High school section, the Freshmen piled up points in the B League at such a rate that they were able to come out on top with 215 5-6 points. The Seniors finished second, scoring all their points in the League, which they completely dominated. The Class of 56 finish ed with 159 5-6 points while the Sophomores upset the dope by grabing third spot from the Jun iors, 129 to 123 1-3. Only one record was threat threatened ened threatened and that was by Ed Scott in the low hurdles. Scott blazed the 180 yards of lows in the fine time of 23 flat to equal the BUS Intramural record held jointly by Bruce Orvis and Cur Curtis tis Curtis Jeff eries. Scott also won the 70 yd. highs and tied for first in the pole vault with Ken Ful Ful-leton. leton. Ful-leton. His work for the two days earn ed him the Outstanding Perform Performers ers Performers trophy for the .A League. Sinv ilar honors were won by Carlos Mastellari with a double sprint win in the B League, and Herman Wilkinson with two first and a second in the C League. This Thursday the BUS varsity will see action against outside com petition for the first time when thev play host to the team from Albrook Air Force Base. The meet will start at 3 p.m. on the Balboa Stadium track and the public is cordially .invited to attend. There is no admission charge. for this meet." 'v.-f j, ;-V'-"' Other noteworthy performances in the Interclass meet were turn turned ed turned in by Charlie French, freshmen sprint sensation wno won ine cen century tury century in 10.5, the furlong in 24.2, and grabbed off second with a 17 font dIus broad lumo. Biggest sur prise of the meet was an unherald unheralded ed unheralded speedster from the Juniors, Dannv Winklosky. Danny blazed to a 10.4 clocking in his prelimi preliminary nary preliminary heat of the 100, but was nosed out by French in a photo finish- in the finals .where both were timed in 10.5 Winklosky also won the broad jump for the A League with a good leap of 18 ft. 4 in. RESULTS OF THE INTERCLASS TRACK MEET. Feb. 16 and 17, 1956 A League Mile: 1.- Lagassie' (Fr), 1 Schroeder (Co). 3., Nahmad (Sr), time: 5:30.6. Discus: 1. Wheeler (Sr), 2. Tate (So), 3. Sorrell, (Sr), 4. Wills (Jr), 5.,Womble (Fr), 6. Napier, ( JrV Distance: 103 ft. 2 In. Broad Jump: 1. Winklosky (Jr), 2. French (Fr), Sutherland I1' 4. Black (Sr &. irower (So), 6. Smith (Jr) Distance: 18 rt. 4 in..--'..',-vV'-v.".-v. 440 yds: 1. Toothman (Sr), Sprague (Sr), 3. Trower (So), 1 Selby (St), 5. Fulton (Sr) Time: 57.6. Pole Vault: 1. Scott (Sr) and Fulleton (Jr) tied, 3. Galloway (Jr) and Halvosa (So) tied, 5. Corrlgan (Co) and Kennedy (So) tied. Height: 9 it. Low Hurdles: 1. Scott (Sr), 2. Sorrell (Sr), 3. DesLondes (Sr), 4. Curdts (Co), 5- Smith (Jr), 6. Magee (Sr) and Leves (Fr) tied Time: 23.0 (equals BHS Jntra-mural'-record). ' iTrr-rT High Hurdles: 1. Scott (Sr), 2. Galloway (Jr). 3. Curdts (So) and Jenkins (Sr) tied, 5. Magee (Sr). 6. DesLondes (Sr) and Hotz (Sr) tied. Time: 10.8. 100 yds: 1. French (Fr). 2. Wlnkloskv (Jr). 3. Wheeler (Sr). 4. Sutherland (Jr), 5.Fu!iet!a (JD, 6. t Lagassie (Fr.). nme 10.5. t 880: 1. Jenkln3 Sr), 2. Tootn- man (Jr). 3. Lagassie (Fr, 4. Schroeder (So), 5. Fulleton (Jr)J 6. Time: 2:14.2. 220: 1. French (Fr), 2. Wheel er (Sr), 3. Perkins (Jr), 4. Sharp (So) Time: 24 2. Shot Put: 1. Fcaron (Jr), 2. iibJilOJ 11 j 1 bljiiajiU.e One ef Amtrlce'f leading monufacturari of paints offtra excluilve errangtmenti to o nawly erganlxad or en existing firm. The compltte line inclvdt indoor end outdoor home patnft, automotive, locquert, farm end InduMrlal coatings. Our rprtrftotlve will vlilt Inttrttttd partial. WtHt, RICISAD-UVSS, HI fSr), . Morris wr). As curdts (So), Sorrell (Sr) Distance: 41 ft. 71. in.- :r ;;.'- High Jump: 1. Coffey (Sr), 2. Watson (Jr) and Morris (Sr) tied, 4. Leves (Fr) and McNatt (Sr) and Wills (Jr) tied. Height; 5 ft. 2 in. 880 Relay: 1. Juniors (Suther. land, Fulleton, Toothman, win winklosky), klosky), winklosky), 2, Senrios, 3. Freshmen, 4. Sophomores. Time: 1:40.4. Score: Seniors 157 56, Juniort 118 1-3, Freshmen 56 5-6, Sopho Sophomores mores Sophomores 55. B League High Jump: 1. Calvert (Fr), 2. Chanis (Fr), 3. Garcia (8), Hat Hat-ting ting Hat-ting (8), 5. Snodgrass (Fr), and Vaughan (7) tied. Height: 5 ft. Shot. Put: 1. Mendenhall (8), 2. Allen (8), 3. Irwin (8), 4, Wolf (7), 5. Blaskelee (8), 6. Winn (7) Distances: 38 ft. 1 in. 1320 yds.; 1. Pearson (Fr), 2. Riggs (8), 3. Rodriguez (Fr), Toothman (So), 5. Feeney (Fr), 6. Lavender (Fr) Tome: 4:03.7. Low Hurdles: 1. Ryter (So), 2. Ruiz (8), 3. Corrlgan (Fr), 4. Toussieh (Fr), 5. Barbara (So), 6. Harris (8) Time: 16.1. 100 yds.: 1. Mastellari (So), 2, Barbara (So), 3. Barker (Fr), 4. Mendenhall (8), 5. O'Sullivan (Fr), 6. Brunner (Fr) Time: 11.1. 660 yds: 1. Ruiz (8), 2. Pearson (Fr), 3. Toothman (So). 4. Ro driguez (Sr). 5. Reynolds (8). 6. Hanter (8), Time: 1:41.8. Broad Jump; 1. Barbara (So). 2. Chanis (Fr), 3. Ryter (So). 4. Sattinh (8), 5. Toussieh (Fr), 6. Alien (8) Distance: 17 ft. 8 in. 180 yds: 1. Mastellari (So), 2. Barker (Fr), 3. Holt (Fr), 4. O' O'Sullivan Sullivan O'Sullivan (Fr). 5. Eastman (Fr) nme: zu.y. 440 Relay: 1. Freshmen (Holt, O'SnJlivan, Chanis, Barker), 2. Eighth Grade, 3. Sophomores, 4. Seventh Grade Time; 50.2. Pol Vault: 1. Mendenhall (8) 2. Valentine (7), 3. Reynoldi (Fr), 4. Corrlgan (Fr) Height: ft." v....,,-: v Score: rreshmenMST, lighth! 9312. Sophomores: 72, Seventh: C League Shot Put: 1. Bute (8). t. Bel. lamy (8), 3. McKenzla (8), 4 Jenkins (7), 5. Steiner (8). 6. Zerkman (7) Distance: 29 ft. Yi in. ... '. Broad Jump: I. Morrlt (Fr). Brown (88, 3. Bute (8). 4. Chas Chas-sin sin Chas-sin (8), 5. Turner (8), and Rath Rathgeber geber Rathgeber (7) tied. Dlitance 19 It. in. r 660 yds: 1. Umberger (7). 2- Krlsko (7), 3. Jenkins (7). 4. Vincent (7), 5. Rogers (8), 9. Pearson (8) Time: 1:59.3. Low HurdlesJ I. Bettsak (8). 2. Engeike (7). 3. Crawford (7), 4. Green (7), 5. Crook (8) and Dentins (7) tied Time: 17.8. 50 yds: 1. Wilkinson (8), t.. Chassin (8), 3. Amata (8). 4 Scandrett (7), 5. Rathgeber (7), 6. Behar (8) Time: 6.6. 100 yds: 1. Morris (Fr), 2. Wil Wilkinson kinson Wilkinson (8), 3. Amato (8), 4. Scandrett (7), 5. Buie (8), 6 Turner (8) Time: 12.0. High Jump: 1.. Wilkinson (8), 2. Brown (8), McKenzle (8), 5. Rogers (8) and Morris (Fr) and Marquard (7) tied. Ht. 4 ft. 6 in. 440 Relay: Eighth Grade (Buie, Chassin, Betsak, Amato), 2. Seventh Time: 59.8. Score: Eighth grade: 140, Sev Seventh enth Seventh Grade; 73; Freshmen: 22. 1 Final Scores For Junior High Eighth Grade: B League 93, C League, 140, Participation Bonus 5, Final 233 y2.- Sevetnh Grade: B League 10 10-V2, V2, 10-V2, C League 73, Participation Bonus 10. Final 93. Final Scores For High ScJiool - Freshmen: C League 22, -B --League-127, A League 56 5-6, Part. Bonus 10, Final 215 5-6. Seniors: C League 0, B League 0, A League 157 5-6, Part. Bonus 2, Final 159 5-6. 1 Sophomores: C League 0, B League 72, A League 55, Part. Bonus 2, Final 129. Juniors: C League 0, B League 0, A League 118 1-3, Part. Bonus 5, Final 123 1-3. : Outstanding Performers A League Ed Scott (Sr) B League Carlos Mastellari Gn C League Herman Wilkin an (8). Ireedwey, N.w Y.rk 1, NT. DesLondes (Sr), 3. Coffey t ! o x d y, .. r r r. u a u y :!. i?:s tus paxa'li a 'mi can an ixrrrrxrrNT pailt. Nr.w?FArra ' 0 ff a V I J IT A ' f f f j r ? ft r WJ M i i Via -' df . SOMEBODY CATCH HIM Here-goes Bob Satterfleld, heading for the canvas. This is nothing unusual for the Chicago heavy heavyweight, weight, heavyweight, the only punching bait that hits back. IOI-. WILLIAMS I v irr-T-r ' ...t reasonable." .. Thi. eame, marking ft resumption of relations after a lapse nrniJrThS W e held in Michie St- '!fu"i?Selt Potafc-.The comely little horseshoe seats onjr m lino and obviously never was Intended as the site of the re re-SSil SSil re-SSil It wSri Knate'd simply because Army did not want Army find it infinitely" more profitable, to makethe lonr trip te nn Arbor to playMlchigan than to Stay home and Use the Stadium: We'd like to see Mayor Bob's pitch succeed but we are afraid he's eoin aout it the wrong way. Topping and Webb "re the men he should be writing letters to. They fix the Sta Stadium dium Stadium .fees. v,:;';.'-v,; r V" 9 :' ':'' v I THE THOUGHT HADN'T OCCURRED to us before, but the 'fact' 'that Connie Mack had to break up two great ball clubs because he couldn't sell them at the box office would seem to question' his business competence, ingenuity, showman showmanship, ship, showmanship, or whatever you wish to call It. "The fans got tired seeilig Us win so often," he once told us in specific reference to his '1914 clubt Maybe Philadelphia fans are lunny that way. Most everywhere else the fans tire only of losers. The Yankees have won' 14 championships in the last 20 years and, having added Maurice McDermott to their pitching staff, are prohibitive favorites to win again this year. The cry. "Break up the Yankees," has often been heard but it was never provoked by fan ennui. .. x Later Connle was to say he dismantled the 1914 champions because of dissension. Some of his stars had tempting offers to desert to the newly organized Federal League and their in indecision decision indecision was reflected in their play. That fall the A's were beaten in four straight by the graves. More than once, in raking through the cold ashes of that one with Connifi, we wondered if he wasn't holding back something. ..something he couldn't bring himself around to putting in words. Privately, he had little respect for the Braves as a ball club. He felt if his team had played its game the sweep would have been on the other foot. And for a while he made no attempt, to hide his disdain for Chief Bender; the Indian led the AL. pitchers that -year but the Braves found him a soft touch and knocked him out of the vital first game in less than six innings. ACTUALLY CONNIE'S S5COND display of calculated van vandalism dalism vandalism did not involve a championship club. The A'a had fin finished ished finished second to the 1932 Yankees after winning three straight. The degression was on, park renovations took $800,000 out of the club's surplus and player salaries 'were at an all-time high ...so Connie decided to play it safe. In two years he hit bot bottom tom bottom and to all practical intents and purposes was through for good. Connie stayed on after his two older sons had taken over direction of the club. From all accounts he wasn't exactly smothered by filial gratitude and consideration. Once he was overruled when he named an unemployed sports writer as the club's press agent. Another time his coaches, including Al Sim Simmons, mons, Simmons, a personal favorite, were fired without his knowledge. "Longevity at least has this recommendation rit gives yon a lot of .time to study the fads and foibles of the human animal. NATIVE also at 75 at HOME DELIVERY n Opposite Panama RR Station Telr-2-056 -2-0359 o, .( Pin Town: "Do you . LIQUORS discount i" 1-1 M I By JIMMY BRESLIN NEW YORK (NEA) When somebody hits Boo Satterfield on the chin, it sounds as if a brick just went through a plate glass window. And when Sattcrticld lands one on the other guy's head, customers grab for their coats and a referee proudly displays his knowledge of basic mathematics. That's why it is a downright shame that Satterfield's Feb. 21 bout with Harold Carter at Miami Beach televised. i Satterfield is, of course, the Chicago heavyweight who consi considers ders considers it overtime if a fight gets past the fifth or sixth round. Since i March 19, 1945, when he belted cut one Young Mitchell in one round, Satterfield has been strict strictly ly strictly anv I-knock-him-out-or-somebo-dy-pick-me-up fighter. Satttrfit Id has bn in only 20 fights which went the distance in a career which is now in, its 12th year. Any time he fights, you've got to be ready for KO action at any place along the route; Take the July night in 1953 when he walked out to meet Bob Baker at Chicago Stadium. Baker fired a couple of hard punches and Satterfield rocked back. He looked at Baker and then threw a right hand. They carted Baker off on a shutter. . Or take his fight with John Holman back in January. Satter Satterfield field Satterfield had stiffenend Holman twice before, but this time around the referee got tired watching Satter field pick himself on tne noor so he stopped it. One way or the oth er, you have a lot of fun watch ing. In his career, Satterfield has been knocked cuckoo 13 times. In return, he's knocked 31 guys dead. Fourteen of his fights iiev r tint thrnneh thfi first round. while (hp avprase television tianriv jif toriav has a safetv-first. 'act-later tinge to his style, Sat terfield is the otner way arounu. Dapper, 30-year old Bob has been used as a proving ground. He's the guy you must beat to establish yourself. But he's a dan dangerous gerous dangerous trial horse. Par for the course calls for you to stiffen him. But if Satterfield gets going, your seconds usually wma up straining backs t derrick you on me can vas. Tiiro U enmpthins about Sat terfield that intrigues this depart department. ment. department. How, you wonder, does it feel to be knocked out all those times: And how is it that batter- liem, enaoweu mm sum ing ability, doesn't have the goods to take one himseu; 'c fatP hesavs. "I try my best in a fight. Sometimes the law of averages caicncs up wun me and I get knocked out, Don t .A mo what it ferls like. Man, I wasn't there. If I knew what was going on, do you tmnK i a let somebody keep hammenn on MY HEAD? , t .... "urhon I oof knocked out. 1 11 just be going along and then next thing-1 know, I'm back in my enrnpr with mv robe on and the fight is over." His manager, ancient Ike Bern Bernstein, stein, Bernstein, however, thinks differently. "He has a bad habit during " tw savg. "He thinks dancing with a girt until the sun comes up is as gooa as rou rou-work." work." rou-work." When Holman stopped Jiim, H enoea, prooaoiy iui pects of a Satterfield shot at the 1 mu... Hina Aifan big-time money, mcy ".5, inillKlllB VI nil" mo m r L poncnt for Rocky Marciano before it. The day after the KO, however, tilings weren i s in the International Boxing Club offices at cnicago oiaumm mn. a pair of sun glasses covering his eyes and a glum look on his face. Wo Dig money cuiuih up now. he said, "and a man in side there has a brick on- my check." i x A "brick on your check," .for iw who have not found out how unfriendly credit can be become, come, become, is a lien. It seems that for all of Satterfield's thrill produc ing, the price never nas uccu right. v r-, t,. itnaa ffainst I Stlff- punching Carter. It's bound to be belt lt belt good fight.. With Satterfield, it always is. ':'"" : 1 BACKSTOP Homer Shell Shell-nut nut Shell-nut of Atlanta s Jordan- High has a choice seat as he tries for a rebound. Opponent Earl! Shell doesn't have a chance to; "bo up" with-him- as km he'af got a Shellnut on his back, i iff C.Z. CHAMPION AND RECORD HOLDER Bob Connor, 17-year-old Balboa High School senior and swimming champion who set a new C.Z, record for the 400 meters last July by breaking Alan Ford's record by 4.5 seconds. Bob will be enter entered ed entered in the 220 yd. event at Gamboa Wednesday. In a recent time trial by coach Pettingll, Bob was .3 of a second off the C.Z. record for the 220 so if Bob is in the groove Wednesday, he could set a new record for the No. 1 event on the program. Governor Seybold Honorary Referee For Gamboa Meet Governor John S. Seybold has accepted the Gamboa Civic Coun-i cil's invitation to be the honorary referee for the council's fourth an nual Invitational Swim M e e t which will be held at the Gamboa Pool February 22 at 3:00 p.m. Sponsored by the Gamboa Civic Council, conducted by the Division of Schools jnd sanctioned by the Metropolitan Association, of. the A. A, U, it is expected that the meet will be the most successful .one held to date. Trophies for all the events have been donated by Atlantic and Pa Pacific cific Pacific side civic, community, and fraternal organizations, The officials for the Meet: Honorary Referee Governor John S. Seybold. Chairman of Meet Charles Connor. Presentation of Gricscr Awards to Outstanding Boy and Girl Swimmers- P. A. White. Referee Byrne Hutchings. Starter Walter Mikulich. Chief Judge Luke Palumbo. Judge Bob Engelke. Judge Roger Michel. Head Timer John C. Fawcett Timer John C. Fawcett. Timer Ted Hot. Timer Charles Magee. Timer- Paul Moscr. Timer Ross Anderson Clerk of Course Mrs. Charles Connor Recorders Mrs. John Pettingill Only Bragg Seen Able to Top Warmerdam Mark By HARRY STOECKEL MERCED. Calif. (NEAV The world's outdoor pole Vault record of 15 feet, 7 inches, which was set by Cornelius (Dutch) warmer warmer-dam dam warmer-dam ill 1942, isn't expected to be broken this year. That's the opinion of Warmer- dam and J. Flint Hanncr, head track coach at Fresno State Col College lege College and the man who guided Dutch through his collegiate car eer. ..j.... .: -.- The way they see it, Warmer Warmer-dam dam Warmer-dam did such a thorough job of lifting the pole vault record that it might prove tougher to break than the four-minute mile did. "If Dutch had vaulted with the steel alloy poles they use today," Hanner says, "he would have gone over 16 feet for sure. He used a bamboo pole, you'll remember, and it had a lot less spring to it." Hanncr and .Warmerdam agree that if his mark is to beaten, Don Bragg, the 19-year-old Villanova student, will be tho one to do it. The Rev. Bob Richards, America's best-known pole vaulter; has come closest to Dutch's record so far with a 15-foot, three and a half half-inch inch half-inch effort but Bragg is rated ahead of him in the future book. "He is bigger," Flint says, "He stands 6-3 and I like height in vaulters. His hands are Jiigher on the pole when he starts up. A lit little tle little guy has to make it up in spring." "i In college, Warmerdam was an even six feet. Now 40, he. still hauls down the battered bamboo pole the record-setter from its garage rafter perch and gives his fovr- wi-end daughter a xliance to see pop fool around at his old epecialty, Mrs. John Fawcett Dispatchers Frank Marczak Frank Riley Custodians of Awards- Mrs. Da vid Ellis H. F. Genncr Coordinator of Entries Henry Leisy. St. John's Frosh Templed Lapchick To Take Over NEW YORK (NEA)' One in inducement ducement inducement St. John's University had to get Joe Lapchick to return as head basketball coach was its hot freshman team. It is regarded as the best unit to perform at the Brooklyn school in many years. And in Allan Seiden, a six-foot backcourt op erator, the Redmen frosh have one of the most exciting-to-watch ballplayers New York has pro' duccd since Bob Cousy. Seiden was on, of the prize catches of last year and when he went to St. John's along with four other crack scholastic stars The outlook for the Brooklyn school became oright. Lipchick inherited this ma material, terial, material, plus the bulk of this year's varsity, including Mike Parenti, the big man. :'::'::-:-:-yi I a , i P"tch Wamcrdam '.When not working his 10-acre ranch near here, Warmerdam as assists sists assists Hanner with the Fresno State trackmen.' As the man who made the pole vault popular in this country, Warmerdam is al always ways always asked about his record and who will be the first to top 16 fCCt. -.:;'' With anybody in track, you see, cracking Dutch's mark is the real "toiighie" left for the trade to beaUXJliicr iccords.. ai iailini all over the place. But nobody has -come close to his so far. Pacific Softball League By GILBERTO TIIORNE Final First Half Standings V L CB Glud Agencies ...... 11 I American Lesion ... 5 5 5 26th Engineers- ..... 5 6 5 Vi uerveceria Signal 3 9 8 Next five games: Monday. Feb. 20, American Le gion vs. Glud Aeenclts. Tuesday, Feb. 21, Pan Liquwo vs. Si?nal. Wednesday, Feb. 22. 2fith En gineers vs. American Legion. Tnursday. t en, 23, uiua Agen cies vs. pan Llouido. Friday. Feb. 24. Signal vs. 26th Engineers. Friday's Results Olud Agencies 201 000 03 3 5 Signal 010 000 01 1 1 Bill de la Mater won his first game of the season, when Glud Agencies beat Signal 3-1 to -fin ish up the first half of the Pa cific Softball League. Bill.'in bitchiniT his first cam of the season, gave up one hit ana one run in tnree innings and gave the ball to Fritz Che Che-nev nev Che-nev who held Siena! hftlevi and scoreless through ths final four innings. Grba of Signal gave up 3 hits and 3 runs, The second half of the season begins on Monday when the American Legion faces the "Stars." Game time will be 4:43 p.m. The box score: Glud Agencies Ab R II Po E E. McArthur, If . 4 0 1.4 0 De la Mater, p ... 0 2 (I 0 0 F. Cheney, p 0-0 0 1 0! D. Lacy, cf 4 1 1 2 0 Pescod, lb ....... 3 0 1 8 0! Foster, 2b ........ 3 0 0 0 1 ; B. Lawyer, c 3 0 0 2 0 C. McArthur, rf .. 2 0 1 1 l1 V. Melant, rf .... 1 0 1 1 0; Giavelli, ss 2 0 0 0 1 Husted, ss 1 0 0 1 0 Catjett, 2b ...... 2 0 0 0 0 MMz, 2b ........ 1 0 0 1 1, Totals 26 35 21 i Signal J. Hill, ss ........ 2 0 0 0 V Stewart, If 3 0 0 4 0 Wirth, cf ........ 3 0 0 2 Oi Matsomoto, 3b ... 3 1 1 10; Heary, 2b 3 0 0 1 0 Mohn, c ...... ... 3 0 0 4 0 Voltatina, lb .... 3 0 0 8 0i Bouk, ,rf 2 0 0 0 0 Grba, p .......... 2 0 0 1 0 1 24 1 1 21 1 Stolen bases: De la Mater. Sacrifice hits: Cheney. Three Three-base base Three-base hits: Pescod. RBI's: Pescod 3. Bases on balls off: De la Ma Mater ter Mater 0, Cheney 1, Grba 2. strike outs: De la Mater 1, Cheney 1, Grba 4. pitchers' records: De la Mater, 1 hit, 1 run, 3 Innings; Cheney, 0 hits, 0 runs, 4 Innings; Grba, 5 hits. 3 runs. 7 Innings. Winning pitcher: De !a Mater. Losing- pitcher: Grba. Umpire; Metheny. Time: 55 mln. There will be a meeting at the Pacific Softball League park on Friday, Feb. 24, Immediately after the Signal-26th Engineer game. All persons concerned ari urged to attend. Fleck Maps Plans For Open Defense TJAVENPORT. Iowi, (NEA) Jack Fleck feels he will be at the top of his game when it is time for him to defend his Unitef State Open title at Rochester's Oak Hill Countr; Club, June 14-17. "I have probably played fewer rounds of golf than any chamoion." neck says, cut I plan to play in as many tournament as possible this spring to bring my game to a peaK. Fleck not only has played little since winning the Open, but his background a late starter in pro professional fessional professional golf, service hitch and working at golf clubs, rather than piayma for them eives him limited playing background, When compared to the top names on the tournament trail. Todot Fnconfo .35 .20 In Cinemascope Humohrev Bogart In "THE LEFT HAND OF GOD" Plus Joan Collins in "ADVENTURES OF SADIE" JW-v IDEAL .20- .10 John Payne In "Ninety Nine River Street" Elvira Reyes in --GENGHIS KHAN't- r NAME'S THE SAME loe Graboski of the Philadelphia War Warriors riors Warriors does just that as he latchet onto ball with one hand and then wraps the free one around Ray Felix of the Knickerbockers. km' tW5r-r T t V.J r ti W P. UNITED FRUIT COMPANY Great While Fleet New Orleans Service S.S. --S.S. s.s. 1 s.s. s.s. s.s. s.s. s.s. "ATENAS" ,.......,.,..i..,.. Fe' "MARNA" e a. "MORAZAN" J!"? ,f "S1XAOLA" ""J u '"TELDE" ; ?Iarc! ; "YAQUE'' .Marcn ia ''MORAZAN'" -March 25 "SIXAOLA" ........April 1 Also Handling Refrigerated and Chilled Cargo New York Service S.S. "SAN JOSE" . S.S. "PARISMINA" S.S. "CHOLUTECA'' ......... S.S. "FRA BERLANGA" ..... S.S. "MMON'' S.S. "CANDIDO" ........... S.S. 'METAPAN" ........... S.S. "COMAYAGUA" ........ Weekly sailings of twelve passenger ships to New York, New Orleans, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle. ... Special round trip fares from Cristobal to New York. Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle. To New York $240.00 To Los Angeles and San Francisrco ....$270.00 To Seattls $365.00 TELEPHONES: CRISTOBAL 2121 PANAMA 2-2904 vox N.A..-..-vyafjyy"'''""f PmWKtn nssaass -Mffitet w lllVMvi a UA'tta sua ff .1 Americas with fast and service. WLTKLY bEKVICF. FROM NEW Y0KK 1 TO WEST COAST OF SOUTH AMERICA 5 S.S. "SANTA LUISA" ....'..Due Cristobal, C. Z Feb. 22 J S.S. "SANTA RITA" ........ Due Cristobal, C. ., Feb. 29 WEtKI.Y SERVICE FROM THE 5 WEST COAST OF SOUTH AMERICA TO NEW YORK S.S. "SANTA MARIA ....... .Sails Cristobal, C. Z., Feb. 21 S S.S. "SANTA MARGARITA" Sails Cristobal, C. Z., Feb. 2 FROM U. S PACIFIC & WEST COASI CENTRAL AMERICA rn BAI.KOA AND CRISTOBAL C. Z. S.S. "SANTA CRUZ" Due Balboa. C. Z., Feb. 24 S.S. "SANTA fE" ....Due Balboa, C, Z., March 13 FROM CRISTOBAL AND BALBOA, C. Z. TO I HE WEST flAST CE.NTRAl AMFRICA & U. S PACIFIC S.S. "SANTA CRUZ" 7. . Sails Cristobal, C. Z., March 3 'Balboa only v' PANAMA AGENCIES CO CRISIOBAL: 2131 Z135 PANAMA: 2-0556 0557 Opn Nightly fram 1:00 p.m. ROULETTE T 21 (BLACKJAUKr -J CRAP TABLE POKER SLOT MACHINES BAR SERVICE 4lr-Csntlllond Kilsr Arrives Cristobal Arr,v" Cristobal ...........Feb. 20 Feb. 27 ...Feb. 27 . ....... ; ......... .March $ ................. ..March U ...... .............March 14 , March 19 ....March 26 frequent ' i e 15 NATO Powers Powers-:: :: Powers-:: For Top-level r SiHfzry Brief ins PARIS, Feb. 20 (UP) Mem Members bers Members of 15 NATO powers met here today for a lop-level mili military tary military briefing which may lead to complete reorganization of the Western Alliance. Some 150 civilian and military representatives of the 15 naiions are taking part In the meeting, due to last until Feb. 27. They Include land, sea and air commanders from all NATO commands stretching from Tur Turkey key Turkey to the Atlantic. In addition, the three mem members bers members of NATO's permanent standing group In Washington U.S. General J. Lawton Col Collins, lins, Collins, Britain's General Sir John Whitelev and France's General Jean Valluy have flown herei specially for the meeting. Main problem facing the con conference ference conference Is the fear by many too military experts that the NATO alliance ts out-of-date in terms of atomic warfare. This belief is based on the fact that NATO forces are still largely operating with the weap weapons, ons, weapons, organization, and methods of World War Two, and must be drastically overhauled If they are even to fight an atomic war. TODAY .75, .40 2:00, 4:00, 6:30, 9:00 P.M. The secrets of the strange sion on H the Hill! 11 imi mm M M G M Mrtaytwt IVIM 1LIU flCTUBl -HTfo v M-O-M M OOLMI n CL7 WEDNESDAY Not since Scarlett and Jeze Jezebel bel Jezebel has the Smith produced such a woman! uamms ' Mevrtftf RICHARD C3AN DANA WYNTER CAMERON MITCHEL with Sidnty llackmcr froducd, Otrvcicd and WrlHM for ft Sent by PHILIP DUNNt CiNemaScoPe: COlO by DE lUXf l Ih. onci, of JTfPf.OPHONlC SOUND 1 r c' S Actually . photographta I 4 Senlhlsndl jT jo S Ctntory-fM Bin I "Let the people 31st YEAR Ike Offers Excess Foodstuff ) o Aid THOMASVILLE. Ga.. Feb. 20 (UP) President Eisenhower to day awaited response from West ern European nations to his of fer of American surplus farm com- moaiues. The Chief Executive announced yesterday that this nation was ready to make surplus agricultur al products available to the coun countries tries countries of Western EuroDe now suf fering one of the most cruel win ters of the century. Such details as whether the commodities will be given or sold and the quantities to be involved depended first on the desires of the Western European nations and a determination of their needs. Tha Presidant't dramatic of of-ftr ftr of-ftr applitd, for th present,', at laast, only to Western Europa and not to countries bthind tho Soviot Iron Curtain. From Scandinavia to the Medi Mediterranean, terranean, Mediterranean, Western Europe for more than three weeks has been gripped by an historic cold wave. Hundreds of lives have been lost and crops destroyed by floods. heavy ice and snow. The President noted yesterday that France alone has lost about one-third of her current wheat crop. Howling blizzards swept across northern Europe again today, causing a North Sea collision of two British ships and coating the , X X ' (NEA Telephoto) FORE! President Eisenhower tees off at the Glen Arvin Country Club In Thomasvllle, Ga., in his first game of golf ) since being stricken by a heart attack last September. r (arwsatj.w-iB RIDING THE COURSE President Elsenhowe? ie.ftf 'tli his first game of Rolf since his i -- -- an electric M INDEPENDENT ? knout the truth and the PANAMA, R. P, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1956 Suferng Wesf ! ice bound continent with fresh. layer of snow. 1 The death toll in Europe's bit- terest cold wave in modern histo history ry history soared to at least 723 as Mr. Eisenhower offered U. S. emer emergency gency emergency aid. Mr. Eisenhower offered to make U.S. surplus farm commodities available to western Europe in a statement expressing America's "deep felt and sincere concern." in Belgrade, Yugoslav govern ment officials disclosed that Rus sia had allotted approximately $11,- 00 for aid to flood suiters in Yugoslavia. Soviet Premier Niko Nikolai lai Nikolai Bulganin sent his sympathies, Belgrade added. Tht most dramatic cold wavo accidant occurrtd in tha blinard blinard-throuded throuded blinard-throuded North Sta, w h a n a small British coastal vassal sank aftar colliding with a 7,000 ton freighter which almost cut it in two. Six of the 21 crewmembers of coaster Colohester drowned follow following ing following the collision with the freighter City of Sidney off the British coast. The survivors were rescued, by a sister ship. The blizzard cut visibility to less than 10 yards in London, l he heavy snowfall extended across the channel to northern trance. Snow also fell in Sweden and in Id mem heart attack, travel o'i, Ivl v.uu, 4.uiiioaruic, ua.. in golf cart. -' '.-V 'm t country is safe Abraham Lincoln. V Italy, where the cold spell has caused an estimated 10'4 million dollars damage to fruit and flower Jail Keeper Held For Lelling Seven Prisoners Escape : LAREDO. Texas, Feb. 20 (UP) i Jailer Roberto S. Hernandez was held In his own jail today on charges of helping seven pri prisonersthree sonersthree prisonersthree of whom are still at large escaped bv smuggling them hack saw blades for $55. District Attorney E. James Ka Ka-en en Ka-en said Hernandez, 38, admit admitted ted admitted during a lie. detector test last night his riart in the plot. Ka Ka-zen zen Ka-zen said Hernandez apparently was the only one besides the pri prisoners soners prisoners who knew about the es escape cape escape plan. Tevan rangers planned to take another jailer to Austin today for a lie detector test, concern- 'rur a tallbreak last Nov. 5 by itwo Milwaukee brothers who. took Part In the escaoe earlv last Saturday, Kazen said the second test didn't necessarily mean that the jailer was suspected, but was an effort to "clear up the Novembsr esraoe." Four of the prisoners who broke out Saturday were Captur Captured ed Captured later in the day north of La Laredo redo Laredo by border patrolmen using an airplane and an automobile. The three others still at large were believed in Mexico, since 'ail keys taken In the break were found near the baseball park of Niievo Laredo, Mex., across the Rio Grande from Laredo.' Hernandez told authorities Rf Rf-ter ter Rf-ter the break that he was lured to the cell block by the prison-! ers felo-nlng illness. Ke said they seteeri him through the bars andi choked and threatened to kill him unless he surrendered his keys. COMING OUT This black five-dollar stamp honoring Alexander Hamilton goeson sale at Patersftn, N.J., on March 19. Likeness of Hamilton was reproduced from a photograph of a painting by John Trum Trumbull. bull. Trumbull. The painting is from the Mellon collection in the Nation National al National Gallery of Art, Washington, if? nil I" ft I ijj!!jm ! : i s J i a 4 ' I i ,7 r- I l t i it Af Vf'" v. !.,.r 'I i f t .,..::.'::,.-! . j If ' ; TICKETS for the Carticr Jewelry Exhibition were given to the presidents of the Rotary and Lions Clubs, Dr. Pedro L.n. -.e Drin and Jacobs Maduro by the J1rfc Lady of Panama, Mrs. -OlRa-A-ie-Ai-i.-who rnStimnt iht-fnlt Vnrrin 4 smmiiAM,'l bU-xi'lUUail.. wlU wlU-take take wlU-take place In the patio cf v-,ir El Panama at 8:30 p.m, nrxt Baturday, jts purpose Is to collect funds so that id. ., :..m children may receive the Calk vaccine, NEWSPAPER O FIVE CENTS Europe crops along the Italian Riviera. In France, Germany and Aus Austria, tria, Austria, massive ice jams piling up since mid January touched off floods and threatened bridges and ounuings along the banks. In Franca, Troops dynamittd n let jam thrtatoning woodan bridgo ovtr tha Stint Rivtr at Mtlun, south of Paris. 1 he blast shattered a stained glass window in famed Notre Dame Cathedral, down the river. showering choirboys at morning mass wun glass. in Austria, a floating mass of ice eased slowly down the Danube toward Vienna. Along the same river, jn Passau, Germany, floods caused by the ice-jam spread for mnes on either side of the river. Villagers at Mandela, in central Italy found the shoes and post-bag vi a posiman wno nas Deen mis sing for three days. Police said he may have been eaien bv wolv es driven down from the mount ains by hunger. Mixup In Passenger Lisls Causes False Marine Death News EL TORO MARINE AIR STA TION, Calif,, Feb. 20. (UP) -A Marine court of inquiry met to day to investigate a tragic mixup in passenger lists that caused nextrof-kia to be told incorrectly that their Marine relatives J had been killed in a plane .crash. "We want to see that nothin. like this ever happens again, said Maj. Gen. Clayton Charles Jerome, commanding general cf Marine aircraft from the West Coast to Hawaii Forty Marines died in the crash Friday of the transport near Niles, Calif. Six listed separately as crew were identified correctly and their relatives notified. How ever, passenger lists somehow were switched and relatives of Marines on another flight in the five-plane convoy were told incor incorrectly rectly incorrectly their Marines had been kill killed. ed. killed. The Marine Corps released a correct list today. The court of inquiry a briga dier general and two colonels- took testimony under oath, Je Jerome rome Jerome said. Its hearings will last at least several days, he said. "Speed is not the essence in this type matter," Jerome said. "We want to get all the facts of how such a tragic mixup occurred that is, how the wrong passenger manifest became attached to a flicht plan, "Above all, ve want to know whether if it was the fault of ouri"monster fish." ; Several persons system or of an individual.", 'reported seeing it splashing about; Many Marines who were not on the ill-fated plane reported their families did not belive them when they telephoned to say they were all right. The relatives had benn notified of the deaths officially The transports were en route from El Toro to Alamed?., Calif Naval Air Station with 160 Hawaii Hawaii-bound bound Hawaii-bound troops when the crash 6c curred. WWffllWWW'iWW ' A" Segregationist Raises Cry Of 'Carpetbaggers' SAVANNAH. Ga.. Feb. 20 (UP) A segregation leader who also has a strong voice in allotment of Georgia education funds told the student body of a Nesro state col lege at the weekend that "carpet baggers" are again trying to di divide vide divide the South and that blood shed may result. Some 900 of the 1.000 Negro stu dents at Savannah State College heard Roy V. Harris through po litely and applauded wjien he fin- snea. Thtrt was no obvious boycott, picktting or any othor dtmons dtmons-tration tration dtmons-tration although tha Nationl Assn. for tht Advanctmtnt of Colortd Ptoplt had dtnounctd Harris's appaaranca and calltd for pro pro-fast fast pro-fast by tha studtnts. NAACP Itadars havo calltd Harris a "damagogut." Harris is a member vt the State board of regents, which governs the Negro coliege here as well as other units of thte Georgia u niversity system. He Is one of the founders of the States' Rights Council of Georgia, a pro-segregation group, and was one of the first to protest Gerogia Tech s appearance in the bugar Bowl against a Pittsburgh Negro player. Harris spoke here at the invita invitation tion invitation of Dr. W. K. Payne, presid ent of the institution, for the de dication of a group of new build buildings, ings, buildings, He said Negroes of Georgia should be proud of their race bacausa it has madt mora prog prog-rass rass prog-rass in tht 90 years tinea tha Civil War than at any ptriod in its history baforo that conflict. "We can live together as two great- races, each maintaining its own pride and each its own integri ty," Harris said. "So long as we do the hope of the future will be bright. But with strife, turmoil and bloodshed, the hope of the future is dismal. He traced the so-called carpet bagger period of the reconstruc- venturesome" people came to the nun in liir nuuiu wiicia m is u reeion "for the sola purpose oi enriching themselves and taking advantage of the members oi your race, Now, Harris said, modtrn-day "carpetbaggers" are back "with tha tarn old promises... thay coma soaking your aid to return to tho eld days of bitterness. "White neoDle. of this state will not voluntarily surrender tneir way of life. They will fight for its continuance and preservation, Harris said that meanwhile the state is working hard toward making education facilities equal for all. regardless of race. He not ed that the quality oi instruction :nd educational opportunity is tar upcrior at Savannah state trom what it was two years ago. Police Con Thames For Red-Eyed Fish LONDON, Feb. 20 (UP)- A po police lice police launch searched the Thames River in front of the h6uses of Parliament last night for a One man told police the "fish" was between 25 and 50 feet long. Another said it had "big red eyes." The police reported "nothing un unusual usual unusual sighted." F. W. Squire, pierman on duty at Westminster pier said "no fish can live in the river here, owing to pollution." .Head thA,BERtf FSE A Church EnBlandeArgymlPn"a!d Church L i.rince? Marga"t will leave thlngllcan Church to become a. Roman Catholic is false and "ifthnnJ foundation. The Princess and (Queen Mother are shown above leaving the London Casino after viewlnz a movie. Oft-Married Tavern Keeper Leaves 40 Wills, 16 Wives HOUSTON Tp M m mm . t,W Ji. J Lawyer Percy Foreman is trv- '8 io get a mite tor a widow from the estate of a man whose hobby of writing win was pnirmli. cated by another hobby of getting uiomcu ana aivorcea. Foreman helipvnc th3t ih left 30 or 40 wills and was mar ried is or 16 times. foreman's client is Mrs. Sheila r rice. Who IS 19 and h hnn.u. colored hair. She the death three weeks ago of Ray rnce, oa, a tavern, operator. He left $11,000 in the bank. The Internal Revenue ServiVn sena his tavern after his death to satis fy a 524,800 tax lien. Mrs. Price still thinks she may get some money. "He left an estimated 30 or 40 wins." foreman sa d. "He had a naDit of writing wills for anyone. He did it just for fun. "Price left Sll.OOO n the bank ana is supposed to have a lock box full of $100 bills somewhere, out, we naven t touna it yet. Ht was a strange man," the widow said, "but I loved him dearly. Marriage and wills were nis bobby. That Is. until I came along.. He told me we were ma r- neu longer man i e caa oeen j i ... married to his former wives.; She went to work for him m February. 1953." as his cashier. and they were married the same month. She said that in March, 1954. he told her that he had in dulged himself in his hobby and divorced her. So, she said, they were married again in Richmond. Tex. She said that before her husband died Jan. 23, he told her he had divorced her jgain. She said she had a lawyer check and h told her that her husband bad gotten a divorce in February, 1955. Nevertheless, she tnmKs s n e has the best claim to being Price's widow. She said the only contenders for the estate so far, besides herself and the govern 1 II Y TODAY 0.60 0.30 SHOWS: - 315, 4:42, 6:44,8:45 P.M. BARBARA STANWYCK : . FRED MCMURRAY JOAN BENNETT - -in 1 "THERE'S ALWAYS Tononnovr Blie had been "THE OTHER . WOMAN" ! X story on par? 9 ment, are her husband's brothen ana a daughter. v, Jhty llav! filed one 6t will, her husband dashed off, fo, pro probate, bate, probate, she said, but she has had Foreman file a protest to it Envoys Begin Talks On Refurning Saar Region To Germany PARIS, Feb.. 20 "(UP)- Repre Repre-sentatives sentatives Repre-sentatives of France and West Germany met here today to dis dis-cuss cuss dis-cuss terms for returning to Ger Ger-many many Ger-many the disputed Saar area which was all but annexed by France af after ter after each of the two World Wars. .French Foreign Minister Chris Chris-nan nan Chris-nan Pineau and West German Foreign Minister Heinrich von Brentano nresided at tha nnonin session of negotiations expected to uiag on ior weeKS. i . There is little doubt that France Will DOW to the will nf tha QaoK majority that voted in October for reunion with Germany, but Pi Pineau neau Pineau will seek to drive the hard est Dargam possible in return for secession of the territory; The negotiators Un wilt fata ur other pending problems in an effort to "clean up the French. German file" as a preliminary to a new drive for European unifies. tion. The Saar Basin, with its rich reserves of coal and steel, has been one of the principal bones of contention hrtwepn Franra a n it Germany since the end of World . France trnvarnpri the Saar nn. der a League of Nations mandate for 15 vears.aftpp tha first trraat war, out when the saarlanders were given an opportunity io ae ae-cide cide ae-cide their own future they voted overwhelmingly to return to Ger Germany. many. Germany. CENTRAL 0.60 0.30 7 SHOWS: 1:16, 3:10, 5:01, 6:58, t:5Z p.m. ft r' '1 51( Mm Jla. |